I
KANSAN
Forecast: Increasing cloudiness, warmer. High 50s, low 20s.
84th Year, No. 81
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Federal Jobs Going Fast
Friday, February 1, 1974
See Story Page 2
Farm Prices Increase 9% In a Month
WASHINGTON (AP)—Prices of raw farm products jumped nine per cent from mid-December to mid-January, including another big rise for wheat to a record $5.29 a bushel, the Agriculture Department said yesterday.
The farm price index rose 1.5 per cent from November to December after declining for three consecutive months. The year had soared to a record level last August.
Wheat averaged $4.78 a bushel in early December and was $2.38 in January 1973. Increases were triggered by big export demand. Wheat prices have risen most rapidly since last summer.
PERHAPS MOST important in the near future for consumers was a 12 per cent increase from Dec. 15 in the meat animal index.
Compared with mid-January a year earlier, these prices averaged 21 per cent higher. Meat products make up about 32 per cent of a family's food spending.
Advances in livestock prices point to January food prices breaking the August record when new statistics are available in a few weeks.
FOR WHEAT, the report showed a continuation of a round of price increases dating back to July 1972, when farmers averaged about $1.32 a bushel. Last July, as they harvested a record crop, it was $2.47 a bushel.
Exports then soared to a record 737 million bushels, including flour装料. That was a 50 per cent gain from July-December 1972.
Prices paid by farmers for operating expenses rose two per cent during the month and averaged 17 per cent above January last year.
That put the government's farm parity ratio at 94 per cent, compared with 89 in December and 80 a year earlier. For all of 1973 the indicator averaged 88 per cent. Prices and costs theoretically are in balance when the ratio is at 100 per cent.
The government has removed acreage restrictions for 1974 crops of wheat, cotton and feed grains. Agriculture officials say that record grain harvests can be expected.
WHEAT PRODUCTION in 1974 is projected at more than two billion bushels, up from the previous record set last year of 1.7 billion. Officials say that will be enough to meet all domestic and export demands in 1974-75 and leave a slight surplus.
But the wheat export momentum points to record shipments of more than 1.2 billion bushels in the year ending June 30. That means the wheat reserves then will be a scant 178 million bushels, the smallest in 27 years.
Reserves of other commodities aren't so critical but large export orders have pushed them.
20
I've Got It
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Stephanie Norris (20), Wichita senior, stands ready to assist her teammate. The University of Kansas Women's Basketball team won its battle against K-Site, 42-39, last night in Allen Field House. See story page 6.
One Death, Some Violence Mark Trucker Shutdown
By the Associated Press
One driver was killed and scattered violence was reported yesterday as a shutdown by independent truckers spread across Eastern Appalachian states, and then moved west. Several industries were threatened with lavoffs.
Violent incidents were reported in several states, and except for the death, they didn't cause serious injury.
Kline said of the meeting, which included a group saying it represented 100,000 independent drivers, that the independents, who were protesting high fuel prices and low freight rates, had made it clear that they would have their shutdown.
Other truckers' spokesmen also urged a nationwide shutdown of independent drivers. They said many other drivers were using their radios riffs on the roads at midnight last night.
The death occurred near Allentown, Pa., where police said a rock slammed through the windshield of a moving truck, killing the driver, Ronald Henkel, 33, of Spring Grove. Police said it was a murder, and stated they seeked four men, believed to be truckers.
In Pittsburgh, Pa., Lt. Gov. Ernest Kline said, after a meeting with truckers' representatives, that Gov. Milton Shipp was to have activated the National Guard this morning to keep peace on the state's highways.
The Pittsburgh meeting called by Shapp was designed to try to convince the independent truckers to stop their shutdown and accept federal offers of relief.
Some scattered gatherings of independent drivers were reported in the Southwest, and a large truck terminal in Los Angeles was closed last night by protesting drivers.
But the shutdown appeared strongest in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Some activity was also reported in West Virginia, Indiana, North Carolina, New Jersey and Conn. federal states, patrol cars escorted trucks who wanted to keep their cargo moving.
Officials in Washington said they were worried that a continued stoppage would have an economic impact, and some of that impact appeared about to hit.
A dozen major Appalachian mines were said to be on the verge of shutting down because key materials weren't being delivered.
In Ohio, Youngtown Sheet & Tube said it would temporarily suspend production of flat rolled steel products on Monday for approximately 10 weeks. About 1,000 workers could be affected.
A spokesman for Bethelem Steel Co. said the stoppage had caused a virtual standstill in the movement of products from the company's Bethelem, Pa. plant. He said a situation would be held today to discuss a possible wage reduction. The plant employed 14,000 people.
At Washington Court House south of Columbus, Ohio, a spokesman for Armco Steel Corp. said the firm was closing in on an offer to acquire the shortage. The plant employes 565 persons.
Hiring of Good Health Challenged
By HALRITTER Kansan Staff Reporter
The propriety of hiring Good Health, Inc. by the board of trustees of Lawrence Memorial Hospital was questioned again yesterday at a meeting of the Douglas County Comprehensive Health Planning Council.
Hospital administrator Donald Lenz spent most of the two-hour meeting answering questions about Good Health, most of which he told Mrs. Raymond Cerf, a council member.
Good Health was hired Tuesday by the hospital's trustees to be project manager for the new hospital. The firm's president is Dr. John Simons of Rochester, Minn., brother of Dolph C. Simons Jr., who is publisher of the Daily Journal-World and a hospital trustee.
Cerf read a statement to about 39 people who attended the meeting in which she said there were many questions being asked about Good Health by "just about everyone in our community who is acquainted with the facts."
*IT SEEMS TO me grossly unfair to the hospital board not to get these questions out*
in the open, see what they are, and thereby give the board a chance to answer them, instead of allowing the whispering and the speculation and the gossip to go on. $^{a}$ she
Cerf asked Lenz why Dr. Simons gave a successful career as a plastic surgeon in Rochester to found Good Health last July. Lenz said he didn't know.
Cerf asked the board of trustees happened to hire a firm last August that had been formed only a month earlier, and he had not appointed a director $30,000 contract for a long range plan for health care in Lawrence would lead to a "multimillion dollar association" with the firm.
"Was this contract with our hospital board the first contract ever entered into by Good Health, Inc?" Cerf asked. "Will it, perhaps, be the only one?"
"Lenz said the members of Good Health in their combined experience (before the firm was formed) have consulted . . . on millions of dollars worth of hotels."
HE SAID THE board hadn't realized the great Good Health contract would lead into a lawsuit.
board had hoped Lawrence Memorial could be renovated cheaply.
Cerf said that because Dr. Simons was a brother of a trustee, "it seems to me that the hospital board should bend over backwards and do better." But this doesn't do this might be to get a second opinion."
" impartiality becomes of paramount importance in a case like this, and especially so because Mr. Dolph Simons Jr. and his family are the publishers of our community's only daily newspaper and therefore have a tremendous advantage over the rest of us when it comes to molding public opinion." Cerf said.
Cerf said the Lawrence hospital staff had passed a resolution requesting the hospital board to make a second study of Lawrence's hospital needs. She said that she understood the request had been received by the board and was seemingly going to be ignored.
Lenz said the hospital staff had requested a second study before the complete results of Good health's study had been presented. The study had considered a second study very much.
LENZ SAID a second contract for 1-2 per cent of construction costs was what a firm
was "shooting for when they make the initial long range study."
Cerf said, "I just can't believe you can't hire anyone in the United States to come in and make your hospital study without hiring a firm to be the building consultants.
"It all boils down to whether there is a conflict of interest. We wouldn't be spending all this time discussing if a second firm had been hired."
Dr. Phillip Godwin asked Lenz whether he would ordinarily advise a board member not to participate in a vote to hire his brother.
Lenz said that he would but that he hadn't been hospital administrator last August. August 2015 was Lenz's last.
Cerl then said Lenz had been present when the board voted Tuesday to retain Good Health and hadn't given such advice to Dolph Simons Jr.
LENZ WAS ALSO questioned about the advantages and disadvantages of building a new hospital next to Lawrence Memorial or at Mount Hope Nursery, Good Health's report, according to Cerf, was "pushing" the Mount Hone site and Cerf said she
See HIRING Back Page
In Elkins, W., officials of Kelly's Foundry W. Co., said most of the plant's employees had been laid off because trucks the plant has had 100 employees. The plant has 100 employees.
Special presidential assistant W. J. Usery Jr, said Wednesday the government had offered to increase truck fuel allotments, to permit truckers to pass on increased costs and to triple federal inspections for fuel price gouging.
But James Drinkhall, editor of Overdrive magazine who had called for a strike, said the proposals were totally unsatisfactory, and a rehab of past promises.
Fuel Embargo May Be Lifted, Kissinger Says
Kissinger said he was quite optimistic the embargo would be lifted. He made his remarks to newsman following a closed-door meeting in the House Ways and Means Committee.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said yesterday that the lifting of the Arab oil embargo would be accompanied by a number of countries at a meeting Feb. 14 in Tripoli,
Kissinger said he put before the committee" our plans for the energy conference and our general expectations in the energy field, the situation in the Middle East and we had a very useful and very constructive discussion about trade matters."
Asked to clarify President Nixon's reference in the State of the Union message Wednesday night about a meeting to discuss litigation of the oil embargo, Kissinger said.
"The President pointed out that in his personal correspondence with friendly leaders in the Middle East he had been called a coward, and was called with a view of ending the encriba."
Questioned whether there is any difference between the conference mentioned by Nixon and the one that had been previously scheduled in Tripoli, Kissinger he said understood that "this will be the item on the agenda at that conference."
While Nixon said it was a new development, government officials said he might have been referring to a scheduled Tripoli meeting that had been announced earlier.
The *White House* provided no clarification. Asked whether the President had referred to the Tripoli meeting or some other meeting, he said only “we’re not in a position to say.”
In his State of the Union address Nixon said the Arab meeting was an encouraging sign, but at the same time asked Congress to provide guarantees to reduce dependence on oil foreign.
Rolfs Criticized by Beisner For Hesitancy to Debate
By JILL WILLIS
Venture Staff Reporter
Kansan Staff Reporter
After being accused of not actively campaigning, Ed Rolfs, Junction City sophomore and candidate for student body president, has agreed to debate campaign issues with his opponent, John Beisner. The state legislature did not yet agreed on a date for the debate.
Rufs sent to Beisner and Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior and Beisner's running mate, saying he couldn't attend the game, which was scheduled for this Wednesday.
The letter said he had a previously scheduled appointment that conflicted with the suggested time. And he objected to a debate in the Kansas Union.
He said Rolfs' answer raised a lot of questions about whether Rolfs intended to "hide all next year" if he were elected student body president.
"I think he's copping out," Beisner said, "I think that's just a way to put off the debate so we don't have time to do it before election."
"OTD AND I will be here (in the Union) next Wednesday night at 7:30 and if Ed expects to continue to be a candidate for the student body of KU, we'll expect him to be here."
Hofs said he had scheduled a pre-election party that involved in his campaign for that night.
"I'll have to talk to my campaign people, I would hope we could make the debate easier."
Hunter, a member of the University of Kansas dcbase squad, said he and Beisner
wanted to have a formal debate with a live audience and local radio coverage.
Rolls said he planned to have the chair-
man of the Student Senate Executive
Committee meet.
Rolls said he was more interested in the radio coverage than in an open debate because attendance at campaign debates had dwindled in the last few years.
Hunter said that Kelly Scott, Houston sophomore and Rolfs' mature mate, had never had any experience in a student athlete. He had never been to a senate meeting before.
It's going to take a lot of preparation to be an effective student body vice president.
Hunter said the vice president was the presiding officer of the senate, a job that would be made available to him.
There has also been disagreement between Beiner's and Rolls' conditions over the use of 9mm.
"To be an effective student body vice president, you're going to need to know how the senate operates. It takes at least a year," he said.
Rolls said that Hunter had a narrow view of the role of student body vice president.
He said he didn't expect Scott to become "so bogged down in the bureaucracy of the senate that she couldn't represent the student body."
and student body vice president), has proved this year that the role can be expanded and go far beyond the mere bureaucracy of the Student Senate," he
news associated press capsules
Film Producer Sam Goldwyn Dies at 91
Samuel Goldwyn, whose tastful taste and colorful language were part of the movie scene for more than half a century, died at his home yesterday. He was 91.
Goldwinn, who had lived most of his life in the limelight, had been confined to his home in recent years. He emerged March 27, 1971, to receive the Medal of Freedom from President Nixon for his "fierce independence, deep respect for quality, strict ethics and uncompromising integrity."
Among Goldwyn's film hits were "Pride of the Yankees," "Up in Arms," "Wuthering Heights," "The Best Years of Our Lives," "Hans Christian Andersen" and "Guys and Dolls." His last film, "Porgy and Bess," was made in 1959.
Lawver Mum on Nixon Knowledge of Backdating
A tax lawyer who admits backdating a deed to President Nixon's nice presidential papers has refused to say under oath whether he told Nixon about it, Edmund G. Brown Jr., California secretary of state, said yesterday.
The White House said Nixon did not tell the lawyer, Frank De Marco Jr., to invoke the attorney-client privilege.
When first questioned, DeMarco said the deed, dated March 27, 1969, was signed in his presence April 21, 1969, by a former deputy White House
After being confronted with evidence that the typewriter on which the deed was typed wasn't purchased until the next July, De Marco admitted last week that copies of the original deed were signed April 10, 1970. He claimed the original deed disappeared.
Evidence Backs Dean, Prosecutor Says
Richard Davis, assistant Watergate prosecutor, said yesterday that evidence supported the story told under oath by presidential accuser
"Based on the evidence we have accumulated so far we have no reason for believing that Mr. Dean has committed perjury in any proceeding," Davis
It was the first public statement from the office of a professional prosecutor Leon Jawaratt that directly contradicted Hugh Scott, R-Pa., who said the case had been investigated by the Justice Department.
Scott was unavailable for comment.
Officials Lose Faith in Energy Conference
The Nixon administration is lowering its expectations for the upcoming international conference which was expected to mark the beginning of a new period of diplomatic engagement.
the conference, scheduled to start Feb. 11 in Washington, is harmed by rivalry and fighting between the State Department, the Treasury, the Federal Energy Office and the Atomic Energy Commission, administration officials. The conflict will take more than a week away, the administration still lacks clear objectives.
Judiciary Committee Seeks Subpoena Power
The House Judiciary Committee voted unanimously yesterday to seek broad authority to subpoena White House documents and witnesses for its
The 21 Democrats and 16 Republicans on the committee approved a resolution that would confer a full authority to conduct the investigation against the former governor.
Approval by the full House, which is expected Tuesday, could cause a confrontation between the committee and President Nixon.
Terrorists in Singapore Burn Oil Tank
Four men set fire to a Shell oil storage in Singapore yesterday, seized five hostages aboard a ship and threatened to kill themselves and the crew. The attack was carried out by a member of the militant group Islamic State.
The Singapore government said it would meet the terrorists' conditions of a plane and the trading of their hostages for the Japanese ambassador and
But this morning the 80-foot船 Laju still sat in Singapore harbor, surrounded by at least 15 police patrol boats and navy gunboats.
2
Fridav. February 1, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Many Government Jobs Available For Students Who Apply Quickly
Want to apply for a job this summer with the federal, state or local government.?
the federal, state or local government. If so, you had better hurry. Now isn't too soon and may be too late to apply for some jobs.
*Perhaps you would like to be a park ranger at Yellowstone National Park, a laborer for the highway department in Douglas County or a law intern in Montana, WY.*
Or perhaps you would prefer any job that is available in Boston, Denver, Wichita or wherever your fantasies lead you. The jobs are still available—thousands of them.
Lillian Nelson, a receptionist at the federal Job Information Center in Wichita, said Wednesday that the deadline for federal workers to be some of the few available in Washington.
However, some jobs are still available. The U.S. Civil Service Commission's summer job announcements list work jobs in Washington and in most of the 50 states.
Most of the jobs are with federal agencies, national parks, veterans hospitals and so forth. Graduate and undergraduate, skilled and unskilled students are needed. Law students are in demand at some federal agencies.
Deadlines for applications run from Jan. 25 to April 15. However, many of the agencies quit taking applications after they receive a specific number of the. So, the Civil Service announcements urge students to apply early.
For more information on federal jobs, contact the Federal Job Information Center in Wichita. The toll-free number is 1-800-302-3827 and you will start your federal application process.
If you prefer to stay in Kansas or specifically in Douglas County, jobs are also available with the state and local government, however, early applications are helpful.
C. Arthur Hallberg, assistant director of
BGS Program a Magnet For Seekers of Flexibility
The response to the BGS degree at KU, Lewis said, is about the same as the response at Michigan University before its BPS program became widely accepted.
KU first offered its BGS program in June 1973. Lewis said it was a few years to come, but he kept it going.
About 400 students, or 2 per cent of the students at the University of Kansas, are working toward a Bachelor of General Studies (BGS) degree, Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts, said Wednesday.
Students with 50 hours and at least a 1.8 grade point average can apply for the BGS programs. Requirements for graduation are 40 junior-seniors hour and three courses each in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences or math.
Haliburg said the highway department gave preference to engineering and pre-engineering students. He said that to apply for one of the highway jobs, a person should write to the Personnel Division, 7th Floor, State Office Building, Topeka.
personnel with the State Civil Service Commission in Topeka, said that the state highway department hired approximately 700-800 students every year and that the Grain Inspection Division hired 15 to 25 people.
After almost two years, 15 per cent of the Michigan students were pursuing the BGS degree. Lewis said Michigan now had 25 per cent of its students working toward a BGS
Many students at KU still don't know who goes to the students and the students who choose a BIG INSERT instead.
For grain inspection jobs, Haliburg said, students should write directly to the Grain Inspection Co.
There are also a number of local government jobs available.
so for many reasons, Lewis said. The main reason seems to be flexibility, though.
Lewis admitted that some students worked toward a BGS instead of a BA because they wanted to avoid requirements; especially, the language required. The degree was not intended as a means of avoiding requirements.
A BGS degree shouldn't affect a student's chances for graduate professional school, 82.4%.
Students in preprofessional programs often choose a BGS degree. Instead of selecting a major, Lewis said, these people try to diversify their education. Others, he said, who do choose a major, work toward a BGS because it allows them to specialize. They can no longer on the total major hours that can be applied toward graduation.
Pam Myer, a secretary in the Lawrence Parks and recreation Department, said that the department would hire about 10 summer employees. Some of the jobs involved include helping swimming instructors, supervise park maintenance workers, she said.
However, he said, there has been adverse reaction from the Kansas Board of Law Examiners. He said that the board thought that the BGS degree provided too much freedom from requirements that are conducive to a liberal education. The board is discussing whether to allow holders of a BGS degree to practice law in Kansas.
Interested students may contact the county commissioners' office. Another possible source is the Lawrence Public Works Department.
Senate to Take Final Roll Call On No-Fault Bill
Lewis said that the board's problem was
nically one he knew of involving the BGS
degree.
TOKEAP (EA) – The Kansas Senate gave
a new府-auto insurance bill,
no-fault automobile insurance bill.
A voice vote approving the bill set the stage for a final roll call in the senate today. If the senate approves it, the bill goes to the house.
To apply for one of the jobs, Leib said, a student should go directly to the department's office in the basement of the courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St.
Other local employment opportunities are handled through the Student Financial Aid office in Strong Hall and through the Kansas State Employment Service at $39 Kentucky
Betty Leib, a receptionist in the office, and the department needed 10 to 12 summer
—Correct faultyworking in the tute.
—Require nonresident drivers as well as Kansans to carry no-fault insurance when driving on Kansas roads.
The bill is designed to correct deficiencies cited by a district court judge when he struck down a 1973 law which went into effect Jan. 1.
—Correct faulty wording in the title.
The new bill ran into heavy attack from senators who also are attorneys, who said they didn't think the new bill was any more constitutional than the one struck down by Shawnee County District Court Judge William R. Carpenter.
The new no-fault bill would make these changes in the law rule unconstitutional:
However, Sen. Richard Rogers, R-Manhattan, an attorney who sponsored the bill, said he had been informed that the state Supreme Court would review the new law and earlier court bill when an appeal brought by the governor general's office reached the high court.
One good source of summer jobs in the past is no longer available. Arthur Fry of the Local Post Office personnel department can teach you how to work with no longer hard part-time or summer help.
correction
—Require that only the exact amount of benefits received from an insurance company be repaid in the event additional damages were recovered in a lawsuit brought for pain and suffering if medical expenses surpassed $500.
Susan D. Bevan, Hutchinson senior, is a candidate for secretary of the senior class. She was incorrectly identified as Susan W. Harrison that appeared in yesterday's Kansan.
Sharon T. Lightner, Salina sophomore, is a candidate for the Student Senate from the School of Education. She was incorrectly identified as Sharon Lighter in the story yesterday.
$ NOTICE $
Campus organizations requesting Student Activity Fee funds for the 1974-75 fiscal year, must pick up a Budget Request form in the Student Senate Office. Rm. 105-B, Student Union, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., M-F.
Requests are due no later than 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28.
For more information, call 864-3710.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
--gym facilities in which students can stay overnight.
OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
Travel Buffs to Get Many Chances
Officer Interview
February 24
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
The Interfermatricity Council is offering a set strip over spring break to Winter Park, Camp Cedar Creek, and is open to 21 men and 21 women in the Green system. Four days of skiing are planned.
If students want to go to Chicago over spring break, SUA will arrange a round trip flight at a discounted fare of $85. A student who arrives in Chicago for spring break although he may return when he pleases.
The 100th running of the Kentucky Derby, swimming off Padre Island and skiing in Colorado and New Mexico are some of the events that have planned for students this semester.
Board Member Interviews March 2 Director, Festival of the Arts Films Fine Arts Forums Public Relations Recreation Special Events Travel Other (Define Position)
The SUA's trip to the Kentucky Derby, which will be the weekend of May 3, was arranged through the University of Louisville. The cost is $39 a person. Louisville is providing
The SUA Travel service has trips planned during spring break to Padre Island, which is off the southeast coast of Texas, and to Taos, N.M.
Air Jayhawk also plans a trip Easter weekend to Port-Au-Prince, Haiti. Round trip fare is $120. Reservations must be made a month in advance.
Air Jayhawk at 1101 Ohio, is accepting
The ski slopes near Taos were chosen over those in Colorado because Taos offered more of a European atmosphere. Tony Doyle, the manager, said yesterday. The cost is $113 a person.
Deadline for Officer Applications: 5 p.m. Friday, February 22
Several other activities this semester, such as canoeing, horseback riding, bike riding, and mountain climbing trips, are also being planned. Dates for these activities aren't set yet.
Mosiman said SAU was considering a proposal to buy outdoor camping equipment, such as tents and stoves, for individuals and groups to check out. He said this was part of an attempt to gear activities toward students on small budgets.
Information and Applications Available in the SUA Office Beginning Feb. 8
The trip to Padre Island, a first for SUA,
almost sold out, according to Mossman.
This year, the island will be open.
Deadline for Board Member Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27
Venetian Twins
864-3982
reservations for a break to Montego Bay during spring break. A round trip fare is $120. While at Montego Bay, however, a student is on his own.
K. U. EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
eb 3-10 8:00 p.m.
9&10 2:30 p.m.
S. U.A. Fine Arts & University Friends of Art Present Kenneth Clark's
CIVILISATION
FILM SERIES
THE GREAT THAW — FEBRUARY 3
An awakening Europe sits for a magnificent portrait. This is the era of great Gothic, with the glorious cathedral at Chartres its epitome. In this film Clark links the intuitive universe of Abelard with the logical cosmos of St. Thomas Aquinas. A world of restless curiosity gives way to one of system and order.
Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m.
TAOS
NEW MEXICO
Spring Break
on Skis!
MARCH 10-15 $111
Trip Includes:
**INCLUDES:**
- Round trip chartered bus
- 5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol condominiums, kitchen, fireplace, balcony, sauna
- 4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs, 29,000 vertical feet
- Beverages on bus
Optional:
Phones
—Ski Rental=$28
—Lessons
—Meals=$50
(3 meals/ day)
Group Limited to 42 Persons
For Information Call SUA Office
864-3477
Payment Deadline: Feb. 13
THE ORIGIN OF TAPEWEATHER
Large Selection of India Prints Now Available at Haas Imports
72 x 108 (single)
108 x 120 (queen)
90 x 108 (double)
120 x 120 (king)
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 1. 1974
2
Many Disfavor Pass-Fail System
Editor's Note: This is the last in a series of grading practices at the University of Colorado.
By JILL WILLIS
Kensan Staff Reporter
Although the pass-fail system was established for the benefit of students, it has proved to be more of a disadvantage than an advantage.
Ambrose Saricks, professor of history and vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Tuesday that the pass-fail system was a good alternative to the standard grading system if it was used within proper limitations.
"The system is not really used by a large number of students along the lines it was contemplated. A lot of students use it to take care of requirements in their fields," he said.
**VARIOUS PROFESSIONAL schools**
have a wide faculties with favor on the pass-fail
system. be sure to apply
Saricks said the original purpose of the passfall system was to permit students to take courses outside their majors without having to compete with majors in that field.
Evelyn Senecal, admissions director of the School of Law, said that the school wasn't opposed to students taking courses in philosophy or business education; students to take an exp of them.
Senal said the law school had decided to permit an undergraduate student to have an AP exam.
"Anything above that and we will adjust those credits to a C," she said.
The law school understands the philosophy behind pass-fail, she said, but is not a teacher.
in brief
Debate Teams Win
Five University of Kansas debate teams earned honors last week in junior and senior divisions at the Kansas State College at Pittsburg debate tournament. In addition, four KU debaters earned individual speaker honors and six KU students received the tournament to have all of its teams earn honors. Next week KU teams travel to Baylor University in Waco, Texas.
Caucus to Meet
The third annual convention of the Kansas Women's Political Caucus will be Feb. 2-3 in the Kansas Union, Jean Westwood, former Democratic Party chairman; Pat Wilkens, former press aide to Sen. George McGovern; and Milie Jeffries of the United States National Senate, leader leaders. Also scheduled are discussion sessions with state Sen. Robert Bennett and Atty. Gen. Vern Miller. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. Saturday.
Series Televised
"Public Dialogue: Government-Citizen Communication for Community Development in the Gulf," a program broadcast over Sandwater Cablesvision at 8 p.m. Monday evening, Jan 28- April 1. The programs were developed and moderated by Paul Friedman, assistant professor of speech and drama, and Bof Frank, Lawrence graduate student.
Relays Committee
The University of Kansas Relays Committee is accepting applications from freshmen who are interested in becoming members of the committee.
Applications must be submitted to the track office in Allen Field Bouse by 5 p.m. Monday. For further information contact the office at 864-3486.
KENNETH KAMMEYER, professor of
nucleology, to the Department's
disciplinary panel on the pyelium system.
Kammerney, who serves on a graduate school admissions board, said persons looked more kindly upon the familiar letter grading system, especially when there was an excess of pass-fail grades. He said there was ambiguity in a pass-fail grade.
There is also a disadvantage for the student who decides to use the pass-fail system in a course and ends up getting an A, Kammerey said.
He said the purpose of the pass-fail system was to permit students to take a wider range of courses. Kammeyer said, "You don't want I sure the option was used properly."
OSCAR HAUGH, professor of education, said, "The advantage of such a system is to record only the positive things and eliminate the negative. The thing that disturbs me about the pass-fail system is that it does no indication of the level of the student."
Haugh said there were several teachers in its department who voted to install the new kitchen.
"Some teachers use it as a cop-out. They don't want to make a decision between an A, B or C."
George Worth, chairman of the English department, said professors needed a better criterion than a pass-fail grade to evaluate a student.
"GENERALLY SPEAKING, we're moving away from the pass-fail system."
Robert Burton, a lecturer in Eastern Civilization and East Asian studies, said the pass-fail system was a good alternative to the letter uralding system.
"The students I've had are no better and no worse than graded students. There are some who goof, but there are some graded students who also goof," he said.
Burton said the pass-fail system simplified the teacher's job of grading and learning.
A professional school shouldn't criticize a student for taking pass-fail courses, he said.
LAUREL, DEFÖE, Prairie Village senior,
sad, "I've taken three pass-fail courses and
I wish I hadn't. Everything I've taken pass-fail
in. I would have got a B.in."
Defoe said that she was applying to law schools and that the pass-fail credits caused misleading figures in her credit hours and her grade-point average.
State Park Funding Needed To Meet Clinton Completion
Appropriations from the Kansas Legislature will be needed during this session or next if basic recreational facilities in Clinton State Park are to be completed in time for the opening of Clinton Reservoir, according to Lynn Burris, director of the Kansas Park Resources Authority.
Burris told members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce yesterday that development of the state park should be started during this calendar year because the reservoir would probably be ready for public use in 1978.
However, Governor Docking "recommend funding for Clinton State Park in his budget proposal for fiscal 1975. The park resources authority will make an agreement on the Way's Ways and Means Committee for an appropriation of about $231,000. Burris said
"We may not succeed in getting an apprehension this session," he said. "Time is over."
But the appeal will at least bring the need for funding to the attention of state legislators for action "without fall" during the next legislative session, Burris said.
The request for approximately $281,000
includes about $190,000 for the development of access roads, boat ramps and other capital improvements and about $80,000 for operating costs, including equipment to upgrade and develop parts of the landscape. Operating costs will probably level out at about $50,000 a year after the park is developed, he said.
surris emphasized the need for access roads in the park by the time the reservoir is opened to the public because of the snow coming on weekends once the park opens.
Without the roads, he said, people will drive across the landscape, creating trail systems. "It's a great way to connect."
The total cost for developing campgrounds, a swimming beach, water supplies, a sewer system and a complete road system, all of which will take 6-10 years, will be about $4 million, he said. The cost will be equally between federal and state funds.
The park is the 19th state park project in Kansas and will cover about 1,000 acres on the north shore of the reservoir. Burris said in the park that it would be left in a natural state.
Karl Taylor, Kingman junior, said he took the pass-fall option in some classes because he was worried about his grades in his other classes.
"I think, in essence, that the theory is a good one, but it has a few undesirable features."
Five other areas around the reservoir will be developed for limited public use by the DNR.
"I didn't want to spend so much time in one class that I hurt my other grades," he said.
Taylor said he was planning to apply to graduate school.
"IVE HEARD that it will hurt my chances of getting into grad school. I'm kind of worried about a couple of classes I took that way," he said.
Joris Schleckey, Russell freshman, said, "I don't take pass-ball because rumors was too big." The team's best player was
Schlaegack said he would like to take pass-fail courses "because there are some courses I'd like to take to out of them because I can't be forced to get what the teacher wants."
Commencement Ceremony To Be Briefer This Year
Commencement exercises may be different this year but the end result is still the same.
This time the process will be shorter than ever. Seniors won't walk across the stage, and doctoral hoodings will take place in a separate ceremony. Graduation is May 20.
"What it does is shorten the ceremony by about an hour and a half," Pat Neumstra, Salina senior and class president, said Wednesday.
The commencement committee also is trying to present the actual diplomas on the day of commencement. For the past five years graduates have gotten their diplomas in the mail four to five weeks after commencement.
Robert Adams, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a member of the commencement committee, is the problem in trying to process the diplomas.
The committee gets the grades of graduates on June 17 and by June 20 has to eliminate all those who failed courses, or in some way lack the necessary requirements. Including the School of Law, there will be 3,000 diplomas to process, Adams said.
There will be only one main ceremony commencement night. Hooding of doctoral candidates for the PhD from the College will receive their hoods, which are worn on the back of the commencement gown, at 1 p.m. The School's Law and Law Center ceremony for the PhD will take place at 9 a.m.
A senior-parent dinner will be from 5 to 7 p.m.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will have a reception for graduates, their parents and returning alumni from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at his house.
Commencement exercises will begin at 8 p.m. with the processional down the hill.
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THE LAWRENCE CHAPTER OF the National Organization of Women will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont St. Sharon Drysdale, will speak on the status of women's physical education, will speak on the status of women's intercollegiate athletics.
THE HUMAN SEXUALITY COMMITTEE of the Commission of the Status of Women will present the first in a series of sexual awareness seminars from 2-5 p.m. Sunday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The theme for the first seminar will be "Ego and Libido: Sexuality and Identity."
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Barbershop Quartettes • Actors • Gunfighters
WORLD'S OF FUN will be conducting talent auditions on your campus.
Lawrenco, Kan. — Tues. Feb. 12, 1974—2:00 p.m.
University of Kansas, Big Eight Room,
Kansas Union
Make sure your summer job this year takes a dramatic turn for the better! Plan to audition for an play as a student performer for WORLD'S OF FUN. Kansas City's new family amusement center.
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Friday, February 1, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
The Search Begins
Athletic Director Clyde Walker has announced the appointment of a search committee to recommend to the University of Kansas Athletic Board a new blue dust mop pusher for basketball games.
The board authorized Walker to appoint the committee after the former blue mop pusher resigned. The mop pusher was injured when he slipped on a cupful of ice thrown by a KU fan at the last basketball game. Walker has appointed an acting blue dust mop pusher for the remainder of the basketball season.
"I charged the search committee to accept nominations from the University community for 30 days," Walker said. "And I asked the board to submit four names for the board's approval by the end of April."
Appointed to the board were a member of the KU basketball band, a yell leader, a student senator, a prominent faculty member, a member of the ad hoc athletic representative of the Athletic Board.
The names of the committee members weren't announced, Walker said, to assure that outside workers wouldn't be applied to the committee.
"Because of the highly visible nature of this position," Walker said "we felt at this time that a search committee procedure would be the most appropriate means of filling the position to the satisfaction of all members of the University community."
The search committee has become a frequently used method of filling vacancies at KU. In the past year and a half, KU has used similar search committees to find a new chancellor, an executive vice
chancellor, a health director,
ment head and
Walker, himself.
"We have found this to be a good way of sharing administrative decision-making," said one highly placed member of the central administration. "After all, the entire University community has an interest in who is appointed to these positions."
Indeed, Walker discovered recently the amount of interest some members of the University have in reinforcing commitments to secondary positions.
Believing he had been authorized by the Athletic Board to make administrative changes in his department, Walker appointed a new assistant director and three other administrative changes.
some members of the Student Senate objected, however, that Walker was accountable to students because part of the athletic budget comes from the student activity fee. Therefore, they argued, Walker was obligated to consult the Athletic Board about appointments because students are represented on the board.
The Student Senate authorized an investigation of Walker's appointment of the assistant athletic director. The senate was to hear a report on that investigation this week.
Pending the outcome of that controversy, athletic department sources said, Walker decided to appoint a search committee when the new vacancy opened, even though the search process would delay indefinitely the appointment of a new dust mopusher.
Nixon Picked Personnel Carefully
Overzealous Underlings Outnumber Decent Aides
Bob Simison
BY WILLIAM RASPBERRY
The West Midland Post
The Washington Post
By no means were all the overzealous underlings who got the President in such deep trouble unknown to him before he brought them to Washington. When Richard Nixon's 1962 California gubernatorial campaign called for his organization and financing an effort to sabotage his opponent's campaign, the San Francisco County Superior Court found that
WASHINGTON—One of the recurring themes played by Americans who don't want to face the truth about their President is: "I don't believe he's involved, but I admit he made some mistakes in choosing the people to work for him."
The President, that is to say, is the innocent victim of bad luck in the person who received it.
Naturally enough, Mr. Nixon has encouraged the theme. Last August, for instance, while he was accepting "full responsibility" for Watagele, he managed to make clear that the blame belonged to his "overzealous" subordinates.
Maybe you have to start with a premise like that if you insist on arriving at a conference room. But if you're willing to look at what is there, it seems easier to believe that Mr. Nixon had good luck, not bad, in choosing his president. It seems that sense he got what he waslooked for.
the effort was directly authorized and approved by Mr. Nixon and H. R. Haldenman.
This is not to say that Haldenman's implication in that relatively minor scandal proves he was guilty of conceiving, participating in or covering up the Watergate scandals. It is only to say that Richardixonixon lowly was hiring as a White House official.
Look over the list of the President's "overzealous" top aides, and it strains the imagination to suppose that the pattern is accidental: John Ehrlichman, Dwight Chapin, Charles Colson, John Dean, Herbert Kalmbach, John Mitchell. As a matter of fact, it's easier to assume that the accusers weren't really zealots who weren't kept around for long—men such as Donald Rumsfeld and Robert Finch and precious few others.
The President's "overzealous" subordinates turn out to be indisinguishable from the unawning loyalists and yemen that Mr. Nixon seems so attracted to. The qualities that brought these men to the office included qualities that made Waterate possible.
You have to assume at the very least that the subordinates were free to act only within clearly understood guidelines—that is, the understanding of what is tolerable and what is not.
Of course, there may have been misunderstandings. No administration is without
A car is flying in the sky with a large sail on its roof.
-
every effort to keep us from finding out the depth of water, damages and improprieties in Waters.
And don't look for help from the presidential tapes. The crucial June 20, 1972, conversation with John Mitchell shortly after the Watergate back-in-took place on a phone not hooked into the automatic tapping system. The record of the tapes's conversation that same day with Chuck Griff Haleman was obiterated in the annual erasure. And now it turns out that the President's own taped recollection of the Mitchell call conversation contains a 37-second blank at a critical juncture.
underlings who go off halfcooked and embarrass their chief by doing something that he would never countenance. But to attribute the host of Nixon administration to this scandal, I concur, condemn the President for hiring-and retaining—a boatload of incompetents.
No, the suspicion is that the em-barrassment to Mr. Nixon is not in the fact that his representatives have done some of the work they did that their scandalous acts were found out.
He could have made it easier to believe otherwise if, when the scandals were first exposed, he had swept the perpetrators out of the White House and apologized to the police. He was there anyway. Instead, his response was: Scandal? What scandal? And all the while he has made
There could, of course, be innocent explanations for all these gaps. "Overzealous" subordinates, for instance, or warworms.
Can you imagine the shock one would have if he walked into a classroom on this campus today and was told that it was for blacks only? Shock would not be an adequate word to describe the feeling one has ever felt, yet this is exactly what has happened.
It seems that a lab section of Geography 6 has been labeled, "Blacks Only." Explanations ranged from, "We are trying to accommodate the students," to, "We know that it is illegal, but we feel that it would create a better learning environment."
Readers Respond
Raves and Rantings
To the Editor:
Haves and rentings to Raitt reviewer Bradley! Carelessly calculating this creature, his reader, Bradley boringly belted this writer with rough and ready ersatz examples of abyssal, abominable, and appalling alliteration.
These explanations sound sweet, but what about the problems generated by such a policy? Besides being illegal, it has caused considerable problems for the few white students who had unknowingly enrolled in that course. In addition, the ill treatment of these students and the incident do nothing to further the idea that the law was created for everyone.
Class, Reviewer Criticized
Sparing no sophormic statement, his unrivalled review of said anger Raatt must rank (really) with the great gangling kick buffoon lion tone treatments of all ages.
"Charlie's Love-Imi" is the name that some of the "residents," or inmates, of the federal correctional institution here have met in recent years to conduct a quent experiment in the United States.
To the Editor
Instead, it adds to the growing evidence supporting the policy that the law was created for anyone厉然 enough to obey it. Thus, it adds to the policy the University wishes to expound?
Coed Prison Humane, Successful
Run by Warden Charles F. Campbell, the institution is referred to as the "community," men and women have their "walking partners," and 146 residents
Some new and very dramatic methods are being tried at the institute in order to rehabilitate and prepare residents for their departure into the "free world."
Only those convicts who are within two years of release time are brought to the institute. No male convict with a serious pattern of violent behavior in his background is admitted. The average age is 31, but a surprising number arrive here in prison at 60 and 69's and others after serving five, 10 or 15 years in the traditional institutes.
NICHOLAS C. CHP
The Los Angeles Times
In fact, it is difficult to tell the inmates from the guards on the prison grounds.
Thirteen terribly tedious testaments to the alliterator's art acidily attacked the studied and sensitive sensibilities of this sophomore scholar, seriously stunting several sequential summations of sacred student studies.
It is a unique penal experiment because it continues to operate successfully despite all the traditional opposition to its methods, and is the only one in the opposition as "molly-coddling convicts."
By NICHOLAS C. CHRISS
WT. WORTH—Almost everything about "Charlie's Love-Impr" is different than what you might imagine a federal prison to be, including courses in transactional analysis, and women holding hands, bullethugs to the absence of cell blocks and armed guards.
were given furlongs at Christmas time. Of that number, 145 returned.
"The way prisons are, they're characterized by criminal behavior, assaults, predatory homosexuality, drug traffic, strong arm clocks, racial tension; all of the pathology that characterizes a typical prison," Campbell said.
Stephen Barry K.C., Mo., sophomore
The fact that Charlie's Love-Inm has managed to continue for two years since the Bureau of Prisons took over the site from the National Institute of Mental Health, a federal drug treatment hospital, is looked on by many observers in penology as a near miracle.
"They treat you like a human being, the most common description heard."
Precious pieces of powerful and popular praise may eventually exude from favored faculty, but as for this listener, nearly all teachers no-we no-necissite the neuter nonsense.
It costs a little more to do it. The institute spends an average of $2 per day per inmate compared to the $9 daily for each of the 2,100 inmates jaunted into the penitentiary in July.
Please prepare a pot of purple peas for the particular plasterer of journalistic paper.
Residents are allowed to wear their own clothes, rather than the uniform, and their own kind of hair cuts. So there are plenty of mini-skirts and pantsuits seen among women, and mod knit clothes and hair styling among the men.
The fact that the institute is a coed prison attracts the most attention. "It is only one ingredient, but an essential one," Campbell said.
Part of the institute's success is due to the fact that it is filled with "nickel and diners," inmates who are not considered hardened criminals or who have been convicted of non-violent crimes or the lesser felonies.
Men and women together serve as a humanizing influence within the institution, although having the sexes together in a male-facing in the face of the traditional penal code.
Senator's Report
And allow its access to brave betrayer Bradley.
An alternate plan that provides for a Parkway is also under consideration. This Parkway involves purchase of land and scenic eements along a roadway through
These opponents are also concerned that development of adjoining lands wouldn't be coordinated and could prove destructive if ill-managed. Others believe the federal government has already acquired enough land in Kansas.
Proposals for preservation of part of the prairie have been considered since the 1950s. The Special Committee on Environment has estimated that studies the possibility of using 60,000 acres (less than one-sixth of one per cent of the total prairie land in Kansas) (b) a) preserve native species of plant and animal life, (b) restore wetland habitats tallgrass ecosystem, (c) preserve the
Attempts have been organized since the 1950s to establish such a preservation. However, development of the Turtle Creek Reservoir displaced the project proposals. In 1963, a United States Senate subcommittee held hearings in Manhattan and voted to reject the Prairie Park proposal. In 1969, interest revived in the project, and
Environmental issues have received attention by the Kansas Legislature particularly in the last few years because of greater environmental awareness. Three proposals this year, Prairie Park, Environmental Protection Agency and蓄储 Container Control, are important because they affect the majority of Kansens.
Enviromental Awareness Expands
Many believe the only area left in the country that offers a potential for restoration is the Kansas Flint Hills region. But developers want this park to be a part of the national wilderness system. They do not recognize recreation development such as camping.
Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 74, proposed by the Special Committee on Environmental Protection, requests the National Park Service to consider all the national conservation project, concentrating on existing federal land sites, particularly land owned by the government as part of the Fort Riley military reservation. The resolution also asks that the preservation and protection of the tallgrass prairie and Fint Hills region.
Another proposal considered by the environmental committee deals with establishing an Environmental Protection Agency. After much study, creation of a regulatory agency to regulate environment matters was rejected by the committee. Many of the concerns that such an agency would be required to handle, such as air and water pollution, and disposal and radiation, is already conducted by the Department of Health.
the Flint Hills, Greater public access would be allowed in the form of scenic overlooks, picnicking areas and hiking trails. There is also a $120 million investment would be acquired for a Parkway project.
Opponents say that Flint Hills ranchers have preserved the grasslands and in many cases have improved them. They also feel that federal land acquisition of 60,000 acres would reduce tax sources, reduce cattle grazing land and dislocate families.
since 1971 bills have been introduced in Congress to establish a national park in
The committee proposed that the Department of Health be reorganized to the Department of Health and Environment. This reorganization would provide visibility for major environmental functions. It would also provide a better relationship between health and environment. The committee felt that environmental concerns would have less costly impact than reorganization, which would be less costly than a new agency.
Editor's Note: This is the second of a seven-part series by State Senator Paul Hess, R-Wichita, on the 1974 session of the Kansas law student at the University of Kansas.
Ken Stone
prairie heritage and (d) provide an area for educational research.
Ken Stone
Omaha sophomore
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Another reorganization procedure would be the transfer of Board of Health duties to a Secretary of Health and Environment appointed by the Governor and approved by the senate. This would increase the coercion level against the nurses within the Health Department. It is also a move in the trend toward a cabinet-type structure in the executive branch.
WHY DON'T WE BUILD A FIRE?
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I SUPPOSE I ASKED FOR THIS...
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House Bill 1243 was recently rejected by the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. This so-called "Bottle Hill" would have established approval of a collection beverage container collecting beverage containers. This bill would have allowed any person to establish a redemption center with the approval of the State Director of Alcoholic Beverage Control. This bill established the return deposit refund at not less than 5 cents for beverage containers.
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Edi exam at the
Initial answers to teacher or student questions are often of a cursory nature largely because students have seldom been required to go beyond short answers that fill the gap left after the teacher's questions. Silence after questions is uncomfortable for both teachers and students, but particularly when the students are answering students to stop with cursory answers. Students come to see that this is the only kind of answer that is really required.
TI said good
Philip C. McKnight
Probing questions may be open-end or non-directive; that is, the questions should solicit opinions and personal experience and should be as careful reasoning. Further, the teacher must convey to the student the idea that, if you are aware of opinion, his answers will be acceptable.
If an English teacher wishes to help his students learn to write, he must give them the opportunity to write. It is not enough for students to talk about good writing or to teach them how to do it, so they do not give them a chance to write themselves and to receive feedback about their efforts. The need for involvement and practice is most understandable when instructors in educational activities such as writing, or with psycho-motor skills such as tennis and golf.
Perceptive Questions Kev to Good Teaching
The same consideration, however, applies to skills that are not so visible, because it is just as important that students be given the chance to utilize cognitive skills. If a teacher has planned a discussion about other cultures, for example, and his goal is not only to acquaint students with other cultural mobs, but to bring them to a place of opportunity and appreciate these mores, he would find it valuable to get students involved in the discussion as possible. Through involvement comes commitment.
The teacher should not put the student on the spot. Through the use of probing questions, he attempts to get the student to make his assumptions or opinions clearer to the class and clearer to himself. Students' explanations for concepts or phenomena,
Probing questions require students to go beyond initial answers in ways that will help them strengthen their understanding of the concepts being discussed.
In a discussion group, one good way of getting people involved is through the use of questions. There are certain kinds of questions called "probing" questions that are particularly useful in getting students involved in the subject matter.
It is not enough for a student to be aware of his subject matter and its importance. If he is to have a functional understanding of his activities in activities associated with that subject.
Helping students to become actively involved with the school matter is one aspect of affective learning.
especially where there is no right or final answer, must be acceptable.
Evidence for the value of the use of probing questions comes from several sources, including an excellent article by Robert Hess and Virginia Shippman entitled, "Early Experience in the Socialization of Children with Oral Language," which is found in the December, 1968, Development. The authors hypothesize that the structures of the social system and the family shape communication, and language in turn shapes thought in the cognitive styles of problem solving. Without a complex vocabulary, children cannot learn as well, and the home is an important factor in their development. This complexity of language and the ability to reason which are necessary to higher levels of thinking.
The writers say that in many homes there is little or no talking, or talking in nonrational ways (i.e. ordering, incomplete sentences) and that this constitutes a form of cultural deprivation that constricts the range of thoughts they can reflect and to see the rationale behind things. Instead, it leads to impulsive modes dealing with stimuli or problems, and to dealing with the immediate, not the future, or with ideas that are disconnected from the world. The questioning questions is that the verbal interaction in such homes is limited and cursory.
Likewise, in some discussion groups, students may be requested to answer questions, but are expected to answer in short, shallow ways that satisfy the teacher, but do little to enhance the learning of the student.
Probing questions, then, encourage students to go beyond the initial simplistic answers in ways that will enable them to understand their understanding of various concepts.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Friday, February 1, 1974
5
University Daily Kansan
Students Doubt Purpose of CWC
Editor's Note: This is the last in a series
examining the Colleges-Within-the College
School System.
By S. J. WOHLRABE
Kansan Staff Reporter
Although the Colleges-Within-the College (CWC) were designed to help students, a survey of 50 students has shown that most students have been used to ease University, paper work.
Karen Hemphil, Wichita sophomore in Pearson College, said recently that the CWC program was cut through administrative red tape. The only help she received from the CWC program was in determining the basis for her freshman-sophomore requirements, she
Of the 50 students interviewed, 44 said the CWCs were no more than an administrative device. Many said they had been unaware of the various services offered by the CWCs because the services had been poorly publicized.
THIRTY-NINE OF THOSE interviewed said they thought the CVS were, indeed, a bad idea.
"The CWC is probably a very good thing administratively," said Christie McRae, Topeka sophomore, "because as big this University is, a person could get lost running all around campus for help with different problems."
Debby Westlake, Wichita junior, said, however, that she came to KU because she wanted the competitive environment of a large university. She said she disliked being placed in a small group such as the CWC program.
GEORGE WAGGONER, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the CWC program offered students unanticipated personal and academic services.
Services offered by each CWC office include change in enrollments, establishment of credit-no credit options, access to a library for research information on curriculum and administration.
The CWC directors also said the CWCs had been more than administrative fast.
"When the CWC system was still in an experimental stage, it seemed very personal to students," said Jerry Lewis, director of Centennial College. "But not the students as students as administrative facilities because students take them for granted."
DENNIS B. QUINN, director of Pearson College, said the CWCs had almost no impact on the average student except as administrative units. He said the only effective way to decentralize the University would be to return to a living-learning arrangement.
Mounting criticism of the CWC program persuaded the college assembly last fall to revamp the CWC system into "advising work on a new experimental college."
Centennial College will again be used as the experimental college, as it was in 1966.
Centennial College win again be use its the experimental college, as it was in 1966. The evaluator of Centennial College in a previous period of sociology, said, "The experimental college must fully implement the original living-learning plan. Students should be combined in a single setting so living groups become educational situations also."
QUINN SAID THE experimental college should have the most qualified faculty so that the educational program could be seen by students as a serious intellectual challenge. That must have definite goals and ideas so that departments and students would be interested.
The CWCs are now being transformed from curricular units into advising units. Each advising unit will retain the same staff and the same division of students.
Lewis said he wanted to see a variety of teaching methods in the experimental college so that it could really become a model school. He said professional advisers should be hired.
"It's not that innovation can't be done without this system," said Robert Cobb, director of Nunemaker College. "It's that given the nature of our own economy and
THE CWC DIRECTORS SAID they were concerned about a lack of curricular innovation while the experimental college was being established.
educational system, they are less likely to be done if no alternative model is present." Several students expressed ideas for the experimental college, too.
Rose Szathmary, Yardville, N.J., sophomore, said the experimental college should be subject to annual evaluation of its educational programs.
experimental college should have upperclassmen adviser so that freshmen get the best education.
Council program
Camille ilegole, Topeka senior, said the
Christie McRae said the college should help the University move toward a pre-enrollment plan. Through the experimental college, she said, the University could obtain a preconsensus of course demand and then plan course offerings accordingly.
Credit for Student Office To Be Proposed to LA&S
A course that would give credit for participation in student government is still in the planning stages even though it was suggested last spring.
the suggestion was made to the Academic Affairs Committee of the Student Senate by Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president.
Attempts to start the course this semester by working with the political science department didn't work out, according to Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior and chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee.
r Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and a member of SenEx, said yesterday SenEx had decided after discussion that the best method of setting up the course would be to make it a Liberal Arts and Sciences (LAAS) 292 or 492 course.
The proposal would give three hours credit to members of the Student Executive Committee, which consists of senate officers, committee chairmen and SenEx members, for their work in student government. The only other requirements would be a weekly hour of discussion and possibly a paper at the end, Paxson said.
Paxson said he planned to submit a proposal to the governering board that would require officers offered in the job.
If the course is approved by the governing body, have to be approved by the Educational Department.
Committee of the College Assembly and by the College Assembly...
Fools Afloat
CAPTAIN! SOMEONE STARTED A FIRE IN MY KITCHEN AND RUINED I KNOW. TONIGHT'S DINNER!
Varied opinions on the proposed course were expressed by students and faculty members.
by Mayo
WELL? AREN'T YOU
GOING TO DO
SOMETHING
ABOUT IT?
YES...
Earl A. Nethring, professor of political science, said his support would depend on what kind of credit the students wanted and for what kind of work.
A greater reduction of positions will be needed than can be accomplished through an increase in the number of users.
Mason said that transferring a faculty position from an unpopular department to a popular department when a tacuity position was available is the problem of reducing faculty positions.
Enrollment Dips;
SenEx Tackles
KU Staff Policy
The problem of how to reduce the number of faculty positions at the University of Kansas when student enrollment inevitably falls is one of today's open meeting on financial exigency.
Grant Goodman, professor of East Asian studies and history, said that there was already competition between departments for students.
The ad hoc committee on financial exigency of the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) has been having open meetings to obtain suggestions on future KU policies regarding staff before the final deliberations as its formal deliberations on the topic.
WELL? AREN'T YOU GOING TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT?
YES...
I'M GIVING A MEDAL TO THE MAN WHO STARTED IT.
MAYO
"When you eliminate programs, you may "implement students," he said.
Sandy Mason, assistant director for special collections at the KU libraries and member of the committee, asked if KU should reduce faculty positions in several programs or abolish certain programs entirely.
I'M GIVING A MEDAL
TO THE MAN WHO
STARTED IT.
MAYO
Arthur Breipohl, professor of electrical engineering and a member of the committee, said that many universities that had been forced to reduce faculty positions had reduced them in several programs rather than just one.
BIGELOW'S BAR-B-Q
Russell W. Getter, assistant professor of political science, said, "I'm for it but only because it's important to me."
Specializing in delicious hickory smoked ribs, beef and ham.
Specializes in fried chicken and shrimp dinners.
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SOKOLOFF
Those guidelines include readings, seminars and internships with state or university accreditation.
Buckley said, "if it’s a solid course, if it’s not a nud, then we should do it."
Jerry Lewis, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and director of Centennial College, Teach "As chairman of the College of Portland, Mr. Paxson's proposal wholeheartedly."
But he said he didn't think anyone elected to Student Senate should take three hours
LEARN SOMETHING Take a Free University Class Enrollment and Catalogues Available: Feb. 1st, 4th, 5th in Union Lobby
SUA Popular Films
SUA Popular Films
FIVE EASY PIECES
Warning JACK NICHOLSON
Karen Black / Susan Anspach
directed by Bob Rafelson
Friday, Feb. 1
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 2
2:00-4:30 7:00-9:30
Kansas Union
SUA Popular Films
FIVE EASY PIECES
starring JACK NICHOLSON
Karen Black / Susan Anspach
directed by Bob Rafelson
Friday, Feb. 1
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 2
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
Kansas Union 75c
Classical Films
GRAND HOTEL
Greta Garbo
Wednesday, Feb. 6
7:30-9:15
Kansas Union 75c
Experimental Films
Gate of Hell
d. Kinugasa
Monday, Feb. 4
Kansas Union 7:30 75c
Film Society
THE GIRLS
Bibl Anderson & Harriet Andersson
Thursday, Feb. 7
7:30
Kansas Union 75c
Children's Films
March of the Wooden Soldiers
Laurel & Hardy
Sunday, Feb. 3
50c 1:30
Kansas Union
Miscellaneous Films
"It IS A JOY!"
Parkway Music Presents
HAROLD and MAUDE
GP Color by Technicolor
A Paramount Picture
Tuesday, Feb. 5
7:30-9:30
75c Kansas Union
Use Kansan Classifieds
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SII
NORTHERN DISTRICT HOME
You Are Invited
to attend a trunk showing of our finest line of woolen clothing for next fall. This Saturday from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. we will be showing the new fabrics for the Fall 1974 season from which you can select an outstanding suit or
sport coat from some of the nicest woolen fabrics available. If you've been searching for something unusual or very distinctive in clothing, this is a perfect opportunity to select it.
Please stop in this Saturday afternoons
THE Town Shop
839 Massachusetts Street Downtown
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Mon.-Wed. — Disc Jockey
Thursday — Ladies Nite & Disc Jockey
Mon.-Wed. — Disc Jockey Thursday — Ladies Nite & Disc Jockey Fri. & Sat. — Live Entertainment This Weekend "Uncle Sam" Memberships Available
6
Friday, February 1, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Suttle Happy with Reserve Role
By PHIL BRADY
Kanaan Sooria Writer
The University of Kansas Jayhawks have a tame bomb ticking away game after game. Students and sports writers have taken part in a pervasive glances to the bench, hoping that
the lethal weapon will appear on the court
Questionable fan reaction? Not when the player is Rick Sutle. His explosiveness has moved the 'Hawks, now 6-0 in conference play, to the top of the Big Eight basketball
At 6-foot-9. Suttle has always been an
W
Kansan Staff Photo by CARL DAVAZ
KU's Top Substitute, Rick Suttle
obstacle for opponents. Last year he was voted second team All-Big Eight by the Associated Press. He led the 'Hawks in scoring with an average of 16.3 points a game, and scored nine goals. These accomplishments were performed when Suttle was "starting at center."
This year the story is similar, but the playing status isn't. Most fans think Suttle has been relegated to the bench. But Suttle views the move differently than his followers who have been shouting, "Start Suttle, start Suttle!"
"WHEN I FIRST found out I wasn't starting," Suttle said, "it really did bother me. I mean, what more could I have done. I had something I saw that it was better for me."
Suttle said he liked playing second string in practice because the competition was better, it like playing a regular game, he liked it more than thinking against the tough competition.
The rhinic thing is that Sutle enjoys paying second string not only in practice
"I don't care anymore about playing on any first team," Suttle said. "It really makes no difference since we all play the same team." He then down it gives me a chance to watch the other team's center. I can watch his moves; see if he likes to drive or just lay back and shoot. Last year I couldn't do that and I missed the big part of my man out through most of the range.
Suttle said his reserve role was definitely the reason for his recent increase in income.
"LAST YEAR, I'd get tired in the middle of a game and it would really be hard to concentrate on my shot," Suttle said. "Now, I'm going to do it more in cases in I can rest and myself self-down."
In his last three outings, Suttle proved that his reserve role was of tactical importance.
Dame team and two Big Eight opponents on the road, Suttle produced some impressive statistics. In those three games alone he scored 81 points.
His offensive splurge was an incredible lift for the team, and the way he did it was brilliant.
In the losing effort against Notre Dame, Suttle's shooting in the closing minutes kept the 'Hawks within range. At Oklahoma the situation was the same as Suttle matched Sooner center Alvan Adams basket for basket.
It seems, however, that Suttle's presence goes far beyond that of a point machine. All it takes is a tug at the warpjacket, a brief visit to the scorers table and a step on the surface for a moment of sparkup. Perhaps, but there is more to the 'Hawks' success than that, Suttle said.
"IT'S NOT A one man team," he said. "We've got a lot more experience and poise than we ever had. The crowd is fantastic when they yell. The more they yell, the more we love in ourselves. They are the other team tribe and when we see that we get excited."
Suttle said the overall condition of the team was much better this year but he still had a lot to improve.
"I'm only 200 pounds and with my size it can really be hard." Suttle said. "I want to gain 15 pounds but if it hurts my shot at all I don't want it."
With basketball becoming a more physical game it would seem that a few extra pounds couldn't hurt the gangly center.
"I'm not gaining the weight to push anyone around," Suttle said. "You can lose your cool by doing that. I do get mad in the heat, and you will come up and tell me to keep my cool."
Women Cagers Beat KSU, 42-39
SUTTLE SAID HE thought the possibility of a double post offense with himself and the opposing team.
"When we have one man in the middle," Suttle said, "it gives our offense a lot more flexibility. I can move around more and it's easier for me to get off shots."
By GERALD EWING
Kansan Sports Editor
Basketball fans once again saw a closely contested game last night at Allen Field House, but this time it was women who demonstrated the art of playing the game as the University of Kansas edged Kansas State University, 42.39.
"We knew we had to win here," said Stephen Norris, one of the three KU team captains. "If we could split with them, we knew we were at the summit of chance of going to the state tournament."
When asked about the conference race, Suttle smiled.
The game went down to the final minute of play before KU finally beat the defending state champions and fifth place finishers in last year's national tournament.
Kansas State led, 37-35, with 4 to 9 play in the final quarter. A free throw by guard Cindy Currier and a short jump shot by guard GU gave KU the lead, 38-37, with 2 to 20.
"It was planned to go to Curie," Norris said of the last two shots KU took. "We went inside to our pivots earlier in the game but they were getting tied up. So, we started shooting from the outside to stay in the name."
Coach Marian Washington said she told the team to go to Curry for the last shot.
KANAS STATE FORWARD Paula Laughlin retaliated with a long jump shot from the corner to make it 36-8 with 1:50 seconds left. The ball was dropped by long jumpers to make it 42-39 with 35 seconds to go. Kansas State turned the ball over twice in the final seconds to give KU
"We had 57 seconds to go in the game and 28 seconds to get a shot off before the buzzer." Washington said. "We had to get a good shot off and luckily we did.
"I think you had two teams out there tonight that played very, very well. It was a good game. You had to respect the defense of both teams. That, along with the tension of playing that kind of game, caused most of the turnovers."
and four rebounds, Penny Paulsen with 11 points and eight rebounds and Debbie Laudermilk with nine points and 11 rebounds.
KU WAS LED by Currie, with 15 points
"Coaching this team has been a fantastic experience," Washington said. "But really, the players have to do it all. Tonight, they played their game and did it all."
"You're supposed to look at each game!" said Suttle, "but it's hard to do when you have 50."
Washington said that two of the most pressing problems facing the team were the lack of firearms and the lack of protection.
The women's team gets $1,700 from the Student Senate and no money at all from the Government.
"I think you'll find that the federal government is demanding that universities be a bit more even in their distribution of finances. Right now, schools are fighting it, I think that in the future we'll get what we have to have." Washington said.
"WE HAVE SEVEN games left this year and it's going to be hard to make it the rest of the way. "One of our team member's parents, Dean Norris, has contributed some money for the team. If it wasn't for his comeback, you wouldn't. It isn't both, but they've a great chance."
Washington said that attendance at the home games was another thing that greatly reduced the pressure.
Washington said that although the team had a lot of young players there were some players on the team that could go on to play in national competition.
There were only about 300 KU fans present with nearly the same number of fans at each game.
It is also hard not to look ahead when you have a center as hot as Suttle. When he’s being cooled, he gets even hotter.
"You're seeing women that are more skilled at playing the game of basketball," Washington said. "You're seeing women who can block out, makes moves and go for rebounds." "They're just a great deal more skilled than they were in the past."
"We (students and faculty) have a responsibility to support the KU teams, even the debate team," she said. "This is an important campus team. It should be appreciated."
Table Tennis (Contact Jon Paretsky, 4-1350)
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENTS
TABLE TENNIS
POCKET BILLIARDS, CHESS
In Preparation for Regional Tournament in Columbia, Mo., Feb. 8, 9
Chess (Contact Rick Hodges, 1012 Ellsworth, 4-1343)
The next women's basketball game is against Wichita State University, tomorrow afternoon, in either Allen Field House or Robinson Gymnasium.
Pocket Billiards, Feb. 1.
Jay Bowl, Union (Contact Jay Bowl, 4-3545)
Dates and Locations Not Set
SUNDAY SPECIALS Good Through February
PLAY BALL PARK BASEBALL $ \frac{1}{2} $ -PRICE!
20% OFF ON ALL SANDWICHES AND SALADS
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Open 2-10 p.m.
The Ball Park
Jimmie SPHEERIS
CIN CONCERT.
JIMME SPITELKIS
RED DOG
SPECIAL GUEST CHET NICHOLS at the
Saturday, Feb. 2
2 Shows, 7 & 10
10 P.M. SOLD OUT
Track Meet Is Tomorrow
The University of Kansas track team will make its first of two consecutive home appearances in a triangular meet at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House.
ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE AT KIEFS AND BETTER DAYS in Lawrence.
The Hawks will be hosts to Nebraska and
"Iowa State has enough depth and talent to give us a challenge," Reamon said. "The last three years the meet has gone has done so much that we could swim well, and still act best."
KU Swimmers To Risk Streak
The University of Kansas hasn't lost a dual swim meet to a Big Eight team since Feb. 10, 1968, but its six-year streak will be when the Hawks just江上 Iowa tomorrow when the Hawks best Iowa Stars.
The meet will start at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Gymnastics.
Couch Richard Reason said yesterday he was more excited about this meet than he was at any other conference.
Reason said he hadn't changed the team's physiological preparation, for the Iowa State meet but instead had put more emphasis on the psychological approach.
'1 let the men know what events they were swimming and against whom so they could win.'
southern Illinois tomorrow and
to Alabama State in a dual, next weekend.
and can look weak. According to coach, the competition in tomorrow's meet may make him an easy target.
"Nebraska is a very fine indoor team," Timmons said. "Last year they triple the rosters."
Both Southern Illinois and Nebraska are highly regarded track teams. Nebraska has won the last two Big Eight Indoor championships, and Southern Illinois possesses a world record of the field, 1 inch, in the decathlon high jump.
10 m.p. Long Jump (Triple Jump) follows Long Jump)
10 m.p. Long Jump (Triple Jump) follows Long Jump)
10 m.p. Low Jump (semi-finals)
10 p.m. 60-yd. High Hurdle (semifinals)
10 p.m. 60-yd. Low Hurdle (semifinals)
10 p.m. 60-yd. Run (finals)
10 p.m. 60-yd. Run (finals)
10 p.m. 60-yd. Run (finals)
10 p.m. 10
Force Corps and Vista will be waiting to see you the week of Feb. 11-14 at the following locations: Union and placement offices; Education, Business, Engineering. Sign up for a interview NOW!
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Friday, February 1. 1974
University Daily Kansan
7
Roosevelt Memoirs Lack His Personal Endorsement
By STEVE LEWIS
Kansan Reviewer
THE FOR MEMORIAS - A SPECULATION
ON HISTORY by Bernard Asbell 461
**AUTHORIZED BY**
Franklin Roosevelt's memoirs have finally been published. Like Roger Maris' 61 home runs, however, an asterisk will forever be associated with them. The hitch is that Roosevelt neither wrote nor approved his memoirs. Instead, a quarter of a century after Roosevelt's death, Bernard McCallum wrote the first book he write his memoirs. The result, "The FDR Memoirs—A Speculation on History," is surprisingly the credible.
Asbell captures the real Roosevelt, who was neither a radical liberal nor a communer. He defends Roosevelt against accusations that he sought to institute a something-for-nothing welfare system through the New Deal. David portrays Roosevelt as a kind of man in an ethnic work ethic who put persons to work earning relief money instead of giving them more charity.
ROSEVELT'S AFFINITY for the work ethic, the memoirs make clear, doesn't make him a Herbert Hoover conservative. Asbell's Rosevelt castigates conservatives because of their negative philosophy of government. Asbell sums up Roosevelt's challenge to the American search to discover the human uses of government amorticate to each generation."
Asbel brilliantly captures what makes Roosevelt one of history's political wizards. He says Roosevelt judges person rather than group, helps people help cause. Appropriately, Roosevelt charmed, not alienated, Douglas MacArthur and Huey Long, although he was more averse men in America.
AN UNFULFILLED YET revealing Roosevelt mession that Asbell mention was the reconstruction of the major political parties along natural lines of liberalism versus conservatism. Roosevelt and his 1940 presidential opponent, Wendell Wadlke, a liberal Republican, were plotted in 1875 to kill Roosevelt. But Wilkie's sudden death Oct. 8 and Roosevelt's death six months later ended the scheme.
After each "memoir" chapter is a background chapter in which Asbell attempts to explain Roosevelt in a more traditional manner, in these chapters, Asbell puts into perspective the women in Roosevelt's life.
MOST IMPORTANT was Sara Roosevelt, Roosevelt's imperious mother and educator. Asbell says that Sara dominated young Franklin and kept him from other children. As a result, he says, Roosevelt built a wall around his innermost feelings, a wall even his wife, Eleanor, couldn't touch. He also knew to have lost control of his emotions, Asbell says, was when he wept after his mother's death in 1941.
Paperbacks
Turnover on the paperback shelves being what it is, one may have difficulty finding them. The print of the top 40 any longer than the latest song from Donny Osmond. There are, however, some interesting books that have become available in inexpensive form in the past few years.
One of the better buys is John Updatek's "Museums and Women" (Crest, $1.25), the latest collection of short stories by one of our most acclaimed authors. The exploration of the mind and heart are always extremely personal; he her treats a failed love affair, adultery, the problems of being parents, the supposed good old girl, the marriage of a couple named the Maples.
A BIG ITEM ON the shelves for sometime has been Herman Wouk's wavy "The Winds of War" (Pocket, $2.25). Wouk is the author of the last four quarters and the past quarter century. In this book he recreates the most dramatic years of the our times, -1939 to 1941—when World War II was beginning. His hero is his naval officer, Admiral of the Navy David Dindent Roosevelt, who is assigned to Berlin.
WOUK'S "THE CAINE MUTINY" ($Pocket, $1.95) has also been reissued. This is one of the biggest sellers of our time, a tremendously exciting story of life on a disaster-bound ship during the war, a vessel commanded by the paranoid Captain who doesn't see new adult Americans who don't have some acquaintance with "The Caine Mutiny."
Also on hand is Bernard Malamud's "A New Life" (Pocket, $1.25). Malamud is another of our most gifted writers. His story is about Slevy肌, who yearns for a chance to start life afresh and becomes an English teacher at a small college in the Pacific Northwest but surprisingly, our hero finds that it's pretty hard to start again anywhere.
THE BIG NOVEL about big families whose story stretches over a considerable period of time has been a staple since "Vanity Fair" and "War and Peace." A British practitioner of the genre is R. M. Davis, who "To Serve Them All My Days" (Paperback, $1.75) is one of the interesting new books from Delferdell tells the story of David Prowlett-Jones, headmaster at a celebrated English "public" school.
Five other Dellderief书 are being reissued: "God Is an Englishman" (Pocket, $1.50), "Their Was the Kingdom" (Pocket, $1.50), "Diana" (Pocket, $1.50), "Mr. Sermon" (Pocket, $1.25) and "Farewell the Tranquil Mind" (Pocket, $1.50). They are gentle and relaxing tales, quite different from much we’re reading these days.
However, Roosevelt loved the presence of people, especially sociable women. Eleanor, Asbell says, never worked out as a companion to Roosevelt because she was much too serious and disliked seafaring. As a result, Roosevelt turned to two other friends, Harry Lacy Mercer and his secretary, Missy Lehard, for companionship.
Asbell discredits the notion that Roosevelt had passionate love affairs with these two women. He also says that Eleanor knew of both relationships and had come to accept
"The FDR Memoirs" is a fascinatingly fresh approach to the New Deal and its architect. Asbell brings to life the stories of hardiness and loneliness that was Franklin Roosevelt.
What kind of man reads Penthouse? There's a blurb from Penthouse magazine in the advertisements for "extreme Close-up," which is showing at the Hillelest III. The ads further promise that the film "blows your erotic mind." It may do, but that doesn't really seem to be its purpose.
Popular Mechanics Boys, Maybe
The film is about a peeping Tom who peeps with sophisticated gadgetry. He peeps at a lot of skin. But the skin is displayed artistically to reassure everyone that sex is beautiful; it's the peeping that's dirty.
Such artistry isn't the stuff of skin flicks.
By DON CREACH Kansan Reviewer
Sex Is Clean; Peeping Is Dirty
WHO IS THIS GUY with the expensive toys? He plays with enough cigars and 1200mm lenses to provide all the phallic images he wants, and he would require to satisfy junior psychologists.
If the film is intended to bring in the Penitentiary house, the ones who aren't warned away by the "kid" rating are likely to be in trouble. The people who are interested in voyeurs.
But he seems to get reasonable satisfaction from his wife, so he needn't be foaming at the mouth with desire for vicarious pleasures. There's no way to know the relative weight of the several other possible motives, including the challenge,
Generally it seems that more should be known about him to make him the main interest in the movie. The part is played by Jim McMullan, so the obviously isn't an emphasis on the attraction of star perseverance. The actors barely make the credits.
has curiosity and the novelty of using the equipment.
The movie is being promoted as the work of the writer, Michael Crichton. Given his penchant for sort of offbeat muckraking, the purpose may be to alert the public to the threats of invasion of privacy through this fairly new technology.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
KANSAN WANT ADS
perception that man's technology advances too fast for his wisdom to keep up. And there is a scene that makes this point about an actor named Johnny Depp. What's that what's worth the rest of the movie is mostly character settings up some cheap, belieded irony about the way people think.
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
So it all keeps coming back to infrared scopes and directional microphones. Perhap a more appropriate question is, "How much of man reads Popular Mechanics?"
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Use Kansan Classified
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students in the area and to attend to them in PLEASE HALL. ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRST HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it;
1. If you see them, they are there.
1.) If you use them, you're at an advantage
2.) If you don't use them, you're at a dis-
adventure
Elizabeth comes to the same thing—New York City. A medical maid of Honors, Town Crier, Tenn.
Ryan Audio, 12 W. 8th, phone 842-3047. Hours available for any stryer problem. Cost is $100 for a single service.
E71-14 and FD-14 Wide Profile 11.4 grade glass
E71-20 and FD-20 Wide Profile 11.6 grade glass
£41.94 FRI. Whitewalls only £20 more. Have
many other savings on this model.
Toyota and Daimler Owners' New Original Equipment Battery for the 2013 Lexus LS 250L is $7.25 per battery, with no charge for installation. Batteries are available at: www.daimler.com/auto-batteries.
Closeout Sale on Components at Ray Stonebake's
Sales Center. Come in or Call for information:
845-4170
Motorola Four Channel Compact System, Inside
Motorola Four Channel Compact System, Inside
$295.00, row now $295.00 at HP, Inside
$395.00, row now $395.00 at HP, Inside
$495.00, row now $495.00 at HP, Inside
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles.
FOR SALE: Apples- 3 for $15, $25 bushel and
$30 bushel; 12 for $7, mix and munch oranges;
12 for $7, mix and munch apples; 12 for $8,
bushel; 3 for $8, for $14, for $16, bushel;
2 for $8, for $24, for $24, for $16, bushel;
8 for $16, peppers and cucumbers; 8 for
$16, peppers and cucumbers; 8 for
$16, peppers—Billets of 12 human beings.
8 for $16, peppers—Billets of 12 human beings.
8 for $16, peppers—Billets of 12 human beings.
8 for $16, peppers—Billets of 12 human beings.
8 for $16, peppers—Billets of 12 human beings.
Collectors Home—National Geographics, 1918 Brush
Alfred F. Aitken, Collateral of the Historical At-
taine Pile, Dexter Coopers, Science set by Haxel
Brown, Republic by master historian, Reference Works,
Republic by master historian, Reference Works,
vast historical by Clare large, wide Historic Dictiona-
rary by Clare large, wide Historic Dictiona-
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Must sell. Kling size deluxe waterbed, pad, frame,
liner=38" like New frigate Delft.
Waterproof jacket. $125; new, $175.
Gorgeous men's leather pants, flared leg. $30,
want. $19. Prices negotiable 842-144-1148.
Selling Everything Sale! Waterbed, and accessories, shower, records, kitchen goods, bathroom goods, lamps, tables, chair room divider, rugs, clothing. February 2-3, 1723 Teresina Chepulay
1970 WV, one owner, runs great, looks OK.
WK, one owner, runs great, $1100 - Call
Burke 852-342-6200
Minolta SRI 101-50 mm F1.7 and 135 mm F2.4
Evergreen case and bag adapter. Get good
in excellent condition and bag adjustment.
Every case is also sorry, this is a genuine
bargain in an age when genuine bargains
are hard to find.
Bracket Equipment-Carry down, steer lower
Bracket equipment.
Clamp down, step out, step up,
c
Alghan Hound Puppies-Registered, many dif-
ferent breeds. Excellent quality, Reasonably pricee. #824-2774.
Bokkenham FLAMBACK ATTINE -Cowboy shirts,
caps, and hats. Dressed in flannel shirt-fitted
shoes, famed shirts fur-collared or button-
fronted jackets.
Fair Sale - Piano, Merriman upright; white $75
Fair Sale - Saxophone, Sordado bass amplifier and cable
Call 821-243-9260
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
Dresses - long & short, blouses and slacks. Prices slashed again plus 20% off outgoing room rates. Up to 10% discount on final sale prices. Final sale starts Thursday, Jan. 31. Open Mon-Sat, and unit 178, in Moundsville, Kansas. 845-260-500
B
SKI-Is-Kastle TPC4, SLA4 305-mm alumina labs,
10 g CPU, 100-watt 12.7-volt battery
10 x XN, XN CPU 197-253-6328
8 x NX, NX CPU 197-253-6328
NOTICE
HAM RADIO STATION, new Heatbit HW-16
Heatbit HW-20 with dual-channel reception,
S-120 shortwave receiver $10, also Heatbit
square/game meter $25, Heatbit AA-11 amplifier
$10, Heatbit AA-14 tuner $10, Call 841-5658
Heatbit A2-16 tuner $10, Call 841-5658
SALE: -Bicycle, OLMO, 22 pounds tubular tire
-100% carbon fiber, 40" wheel, 400-450
-Honda K1, trail bike, 800-450
-Toyota RX-7, road bike, 800-450
WORLD SCHOOL WEEK 25
An Early Childhood
Ageing & Development Center
AGES 2 TO 6 • PRESchool • DAY CARE
LITERACIAL EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
STUDENT CARE GROUP
TENDER LOVING CARE
GARDEN & HOME
NEW FACILITIES & EQUIPMENT
1969 VW Bug. 33,000 miles. Best offer over
1,600. See owner at 1419 Ohio 6-8
6-5
$7,299.99
Does your hair mean a lot to you? Of course it
together and we ask what we can do for it.让我们
together and we ask what we can do for it.
Creative
1970 Toyota Corolla for sale. $1200 Call 842-
9790 for 5:30 p.m. B4-2-5
For Sale - Established Bank In. Small investment banking return. Good opportunity. CH 27-980-1466.
Give your baby a chance to learn and learn in life, from birth. You can start for him. Our day care program for tots 2 months old is tailored to your child's care for by competent loving professionals. For more information, call 842-357-0010 or visit www.professionals.com.
For Sale 2 new snow tires size-7.54-13, $4
best offer Call 842-5200 or Debbie 2-716
45's of the 1890's: *Classical*. Jazz, Rock, and
Soul. *Classic* for the Army at Roy's Recording Sounds. *Bugging and
Buzzing*. *Classic Rock*. *Funk*.
For sink, Degragee must sell me a T. Dodge bowl with a lid, and have it set on the wall, with a hip round ice box, shell box, or large stone ice box.
66 Fetzer Galante. 17 (v) oz. PS. heat, radio.
68 Food Galaate. 15 (v) oz. PS. heat, radio.
69 Snack Galante. 13 (v) oz. Some work. radio.
70 Tortoise. 10 (v) oz. Radio.
Share insight, skills, experience, and growth at SIU. Build Union Inc. from Feb. 14, 2018, and毕24至30年。
Columbian Wants You! Yes, we want you as a teacher, a mentor, a guide. Now, Summer, and Flipped. We need to do our work with you. Your students want at a reasonable price. 2. To have it in A1-3, you must have a $500 minimum help and fast maintenance价格. 4. Upon request, "The Hill's Availon" Harvard Square™ Argore College and Highly Helpful People to Deal With. Ms. Foreman will be there.
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day service South-
Town Coronado Manua, CA. A unique clocks & watches
and cleaned Electronic and light industrial
clocks. River City Repair 815 Vermont. BUI-
licalists. River City Repair 815 Vermont. BUI-
licalists.
For Sale 1856 Ford I; ten pick up truck, Sausalito, CA. Fuel injection in all weather. Californian function. Warranty included.
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBRARIES, Inc. *Meet the
Manager* 515-826-7000. *College of Social
Sciences* 460-290-3000. *Social Media*
(SOCIALMEDIA)
a new beer place
315 Michigan St. B-At-Bu. We have open pit barbecue—we only have. We only hire slab stoves and grills. We also offer briquethes or brisket by the pound. Half-bricke with the plate. Eat it here or take it out. Open it am, to me. We are always happy to serve you.
[corner of 8th & New Hampshire]
843-2359
Johnnie's
401 W. 25 ST
Jam Hall.
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
745 new hampshire Hall.
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
Smoking Is Our Only Business
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St
SK-HEUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Lead-
ers. Information orientations held daily from
5:30 Fmt., 4 p.m., or call Tom Iapanai 841-656-806
Motorcycle, rebuilding and tuning. All make use of quality parts and tools. Inspectors are 80% fully assurance all work. Tenure is 12 months.
WASHING & OR IRONING Sisk of doing your own work. $89-$149, 861-253-8700. Embroidered rates: WASHING & OR IRONING $10; EMBRIDER $14.
SHERWOOD 7100A receivers have been rated for power output of 6 kW, power control channel to less than 0.80 per cent of the system's current input. Service records of this unit verify its reliability and power for the cellular. Special package prices are available for customers who request them.
This week at The Shire, Friday night-DAM-DBL charge at the AMC Theatrical's 680-charge Membership. Available Phone 852-367-9411.
Exclusive Art Exhibit- Sat 2nd and Sun 3rd
Annual Art Cooperative at 7 a.m.
Gallery 1
Custom, made clothes, patting, embroidering,
embroidery. Bokston FLASHBACK, ATTHEE, 193 Vernor
Bokston FLASHBACK, ATTHEE, 193 Vernor
Hey, that is your professional ID in town you should
have. That would be fine. You can contact our
specialty, our specialty, 1811 West 4th st.
6th floor, 201-759-3800.
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Alhamsa from major high schools to
combine on commencement in space. Contact
alhamsa@uws.edu
Registered Radiologic Technologies. Prior prfrer will be required for job approval. Please call Personnel Desk - Lawrence Memorial Hospital 212-369-8244.
Two, sharp waltzes to work at the college dance hall. Three, a couple's jazz version of an intermission anywake after 5 p.m. Me, Myself, I want you to wear a sweater and
Help Wanted—Night maintenance combination
24 hours a day. Apply at the office of the
24 hour service, 150 Fifth Avenue, NY,
NY 10016.
Help Wanted-Cocktail waitress. Must be 21.
Help -86th -Mason. Phone 842-3330. 2-6
Employment Opportunities
Alaska is booming by率! Approved hand-book, "JOBS IN ALASKA" cover all occupations, "JOBS IN ALASKA" cover all positions, "JOBS IN ALASKA" Box 1548, warehouse, 91500, a licensed employment agency. 2-11
TYPING
observed 10) Diping Tharsis, observations (termed
"Driping") 11) Dissecting the tharp, observations
(termed "Dissect") 12) Firing a spike, apining correct.
13) Firing a spike, apining incorrect. 14)
Typing in my home. IM Scratch. Pien type.
Typing in your home. IMD Scratch. Pien type.
Calling. Call Kali. 841-253-9000. If it
works.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 811-
4980. MRA. 2-5
JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Job as a career. Send $3.00 for information. Located in Port Angeles, Washington 98362.
MEN!—WOMEN!
Area's Largest Selection
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
Rose KEYBOARD
1903 Mass. 6.
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings ½ Price
Friday Nite
1903 Mass.
843-3007
CRESCENT
APARTMENTS
- Oaks • Acorn
Crescent Heights
Rental Office
Gaslight
WANTED
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
GATEHOUSE, APARTMENTS. No lease required.
GATEHOUSE, APARTMENTS. Call 516-879-4000 or l.m.r. later.
Call 516-879-4000 for details.
Needed immediately? Female romance to share
with a girl who is interested in her.
a photo of Miss Masony? - Mary, 842-839-
8501 Miss Masony.
Working band needs rehearsal space. We are able to pay reasonable rent. Call Rich 841-1864
Formula commute wanted to share modern two
cars, $149,000 plus $5,000 per month,
$48,000 plus $12,000 per month. Call:
(866) 352-8777.
Wanted. Quaint, studio roommate to share new
Apt in Spectra, Dublin with $70/month.
Call Rose 846-6290
Playful Kitten. You say your cat had too many to keep! Kitten is good a one, good a two. See Rare Dogs.
SERVICES OFFERED
Valentine Day is not far away, and there is no
yourself! You can enjoy a fun-filled day with
unlimited rates. Titanium Prism,
$39.95, at Mint.com.
RIVER CITY CTYT REPAIR-815 Vermont. 841-403-8327
Switches - watches & technicians. Independent repair specialists. No retail hub. We service what others replace. Unimpressed users. See RIVER CITY CITYT.
Guitar lessons fingerstyle, open tunings, alder guitar, course 12. Call 843-696-0467 for Ask link: 212-843-696-0467
FOR RENT
Wall to wall carving, front door parking, spacious walk-in closets, complete electric bath, double vanity units, clear blue swimming pool, brd GRQ kitchens, blue 3-bedroom bath, brd GRQ kitchens, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath townhouses. 2000 W. Sichero Dr.
HILLWEEI APARTMENTS, 1723-1754 West 24th. New loading is, and a Bedroom apartment at AFC Downtown, ditching, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, bathroom, garage, yard. Head resident in Appt. 3: B483-1622. fb: b483-1622.com
JAYHAWKER HARWERS APARTMENTS are on 855-320-2611 for guests with apts, with仗顺费付 843-955-1991 or by phone.
Furnished apartment for rent at 19 West 14th.
301-622-7588. Call immediately. Call Tom 4 p.m.-6 p.m.
For Rent: Nice clean furnished 2-bedroom Mobil
house with tie-downs on 1/2 acres, five miles southwest of Lawrence in All-westward Road.
800-763-4950, no pets. 842-183-8188
6 p.m. or weekends.
Meadowbrook Apartment. Oral Variety. Swimming pool. 24'h x 18' x 5'. $499/week planned community K.U. from $149/month.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
a spacious basement, parking, storage, NEAR
CAMPUS, PARKING.
*apartment: 2 bedrooms, furnished, wall to wall carpet, woodburners, fireplace. Hire: KK750-657-3850
*apartment: 2 bedrooms, furnished, wall to wall carpet, woodburners, fireplace. Hire: KK750-657-3850
"KU ON WHEELS"
15c a
K
Ride
$14 a Semester
Economical—Ecological
Buy a Bus Pass at the Union Candy Counter and Save.
RIDE THE BUS
Another
Student Senate Service
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Do The LEGWORK For You!! (NEVER an extra cost)
LOST
Let Maupintour
Do The LEGWORK For You!
for Airline tickets)
FOR BENT to male or female student Nice
classes from Union. Parking and utilities paid
bills from Union. Parking and utilities paid
REWARD! Please, I lost my biblieford at Notre
Dame. The payment value I H found collared Martis is
1000.
Room for Rent—Share kitchen and living room
Room for Rent—$500 month including
Call Store $800
1-800-249-3767
1-800-249-3767
Lost-Small 4 mo. old reddish-tan puppy wearing a purple collar in front of the Union Jan. 19. Answer to Van. To Van. Call 842-788-104 or come by 1144 Louisiana #12 14 Reward.
LOST. Bronzeed, wire glasses in brown case
around December 20. Call please 8462-8621 - 3
HEWARD Lost large black cat. Wed, January 24th.
Must have a blue coat. Mail by mail or
postal style. No collar. Call +86-755-0100
Monday-Sunday.
REWARD! Ladies red leather bollod loss on
campus- 6044 - PTO to P.O. Box 812, Los
Anaveronias
Lost: on campus-man's brown wallet with
tabs and tuxedo checks (库 84-84-21
after 5 p.m. on Monday)
LOST. White toenail, rust colored tail,
long brown hair, unfriendly neighbor. Call 842-8424, leave message.
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
You have requirements given you a nervous stomach! You will need to be at least 16 and up. Enrollment: Feb. 16th, 4th, and 5th. Kansas State University.
$20.00 to Feedback. $10.25 towards paper and computer programs, and $80 to Whisperer and $80 to the Epicor Bookstore Bundle, which includes books for Kiley Scott, Candidates for Student Body Presidents, Prudent You, the student body first priority.
Your afraid of Pelina Band Core? Not OZ? You're not afraid of the band. Pelina, answer you're not afraid to be strained. Pelina, answer you're not afraid to be strained. Pelina, answer you're not afraid to be strained.
Rolfs and Scott. "A Question of Priorities." Rolfs and Scott. Straightforward answers to questions. Reduced parking fees. Reduced parking fees. Rolfs and Scott. The Valentines Day Condition. Rolfs and Scott.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to the U.S. and Europe? Practice practically! EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expense way for your trip from New York to Phone in free at 800-232-5364.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Take charge of your life. Try a life planning workshop for defining your own abilities and interests, learn how to be布赖德 for the weekend of Feb 9. For details and registration drop in the Lazy Life Planning Center 6-4287 Park Avenue.
SUA / Maubintour
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
Stained Glass
Open 8-5
Mon.-Sat.
travel service
1-5 Sun.
PHONE 843-1211
Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall
---
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
8
Friday, February 1, 1974
University Dally Kansan
Whomper's Success Still Unstable
By SUZI SMITH
Kansan Staff Reporter
Despite a $12,012 investment by University of Kansas students, the KU Reclamation Center (Whomper) has never been more than precariously in the black.
The Whomper has been plagued by poor management and poor organization since it began, Kathy Allen, former director, said yesterday.
The Whomper started smashing trash in January 1971. No less than six operational managers and four directors have been in the business since that date, four of them reorganization have been made.
The Whimper, so named for the sound the machine makes when it crushes cans and bottles, began operation in Memorial Stadium.
BILL EBERT, student body president in 1970-71, was appointed Whomper director in the summer of 1971 and received $1200 to a report on the operation of the Whomper
Ebert obtained a loan of $800 from McDonald Beverage, Inc., to buy a truck. According to Alien, only $200 of that loan was ever repaid.
At the end of the summer, Moll Laffley,
then student body vice president, set up a committee of three students and four
students to perform audits and to oversee operations of the Whomper.
According to the minutes of the Student Senate meeting of Oct. 20, 1971, the committee was to meet monthly to hear reports on the Whomper.
But R. T. Aangeenbrug, director of
Hiring . . .
From Page One
thought the site that was least expensive should be used.
Lenz said there might be drainage problems if a hospital was built on the latter site, but sewers, streets and power lines would have to be removed and 8-10 houses condemned if it was built next to Lawrence Memorial.
Before the meeting ended, Cerf moved that an ad hoc committee be formed to study questions raised at the meeting, but did not present no action was taken on the motion.
Also before the meeting ended, Lenz invited people who desired more information to attend a hospital board meeting next Tuesday afternoon.
institutional Research and Planning and a member of the committee, said it didn't meet regularly after Gary Jacobs was chosen director in October 1971.
KENNETH ARMITAGE, professor of biology, also was a member of that committee. He said he could find agendas from only two meetings—in November 1971 and April 1973, appointed to lead. He said he could find no copies of the minutes of those meetings.
While Jacobs was director, the truck that Ebert had bought at what Anneengrob called a bargain basement price broke down. It was taken back to Jin Clark Motors, where it had been purchased, to be repaired.
A spokesman for Jim Clark Motors said the truck, which needed a new engine, was due to arrive in Los Angeles later.
In the spring of 1972 the Whomper T-shirts arrived. The T-shirts were purchased with a $1,092 loan from the Endowment Association.
Alen said that the loan came due in June 1972, and the balance on the loan had been $50,000.
THE SHIRTS were to be sold by the Kansas Union Bookstore and area merchants as a promotional and fund-rising project. Allen said the shirts were distributed all over Lawrence but no record was kept of the quantity each business had.
She said that by writing to every Lawrence business she could think of she was able to recover about 300 of the 750 shirts.
She said the remaining 450 were either sold or stolen.
The T-shirts kept turning up in old places. A box of shirts was found in the basement of a bar when it changed color. Others were found in closets in the Union.
In the spring of 1972 the Whomper was moved from the stadium to its present location.
The new location, which is in downtown Lawrence, has been another disadvantage.
Men's liberation groups, part of the male consciousness movement at the University of Kansas, are now joining women in their rebellion against traditional sex roles.
Two consciousness groups, one male and one female, were formed at an Olive Hall meeting Wednesday night by veterans of male and female consciousness groups.
Concern with male consciousness began at KU last spring when 40 or 45 men participated weekly in three or four groups, including women. They went on to Webster, Geerens senior, said yesterday.
Male Liberation Asks End To Strictures of Sex Roles
About 300 men's liberation groups exist across the country, according to a recent National Observer article. Most members of these middle class and in their mid-tools to mid-50s.
Consciousness groups attempt to expose their participants to unrealistic sexual stereotypes imposed upon them by society, William Robinson, assistant dean of men and assistant instructor of speech and drama, told the groups at the meeting.
Deyton said, "The majority of the students and faculty members here were very passionate."
but we get our share of married, divorced and middle-aged."
Many of these participants see the male consciousness movement as an outgrowth of the women's liberation movement. The women who have participated group similar to those used by the women
Most men in the movement rebel against the traditional concepts of male-female relationships, male-to-male friendships and male home and career roles.
"Many men I know are taking a more active role in the raising of their children, taking part in their day-to-day care and often off to spend with the kids," Devon said.
"I suddenly realized that stereotypic things were degrading me as much as they were women. My biggest change was when I started to carry a canabell as men in all respects," he said.
Frank Bencivenga, assistant dean of men and former group member, said that relating to males is in some ways the hardest stereotype to overcome. "Competition among males is so ingrained that I often feel our weaknesses, to say 'I blew it,' he said.
City officials said last fall that the Whomper was a possible hazard to the buildings.
RECORDS SHOW no apparent problems with the Whipener, despite a frequent staff call.
At that time a suggestion was made by Lawrence Mayor John Johnrick that the town should move to a new location.
That suggestion was unworkable for the Whompron Allen said, because of the equipment that would have been needed and because of fire regulations concerning the
In the summer of 1973, Allen found that someone had made a contract with a man in Kansas City to provide him three sizes of caps on a regular basis.
Alen found out about the contract when the man threatened to get an attorney because the contract had been breached. He tried to release the Whomper from the contract.
THE WHOMPER was overdrawn at Lawrence National Bank, Allen said, because of a deposit that was lost when she received the deposit to the new board treasurer in December.
The Reclamation Center was closed during the semester break but reopened a week ago. Only cans are accepted. Problems with getting a truck from Owens of Illinois, which bays the Whammer's glass, have caused overflowing, overflowing, with barrels of crushed glass.
As of Jan. 15, the employees' salaries had been paid. This leaves the Whomper $20 at Lawrence National Bank, $396.80 in a senate account restricted to supplies and expenses, and enough in another senate restricted account to pay rent until June 30.
The Whomper was incorporated with the state of Kansas as of Jan. 11, 1974 and a capital disposition contract was signed with the Student Senate on Jan. 27. The contract makes the Whomper liable for its own debts and takes it out of control of the senate.
The future of the Whomper is still clouded, Allen said. One problem is that it costs more to recycle glass than it does to produce glass from natural resources.
But, she said, aluminum is cheaper to recycle. The Adolph Coors plant buys aluminum from the Whomper for $200 at ton. The aluminum canns weigh only a fourth of a ton.
Allen said the Whomper had shown that it could attract public response and cooperation for recycling, but success for the market for the materials the public supplied.
Bicentennial Group Favors County over City Activities
The Lawrence Bicentennial Committee vote last night to coordinate activities for the U.S. bicentennial celebration on a countrified instead of a civilide basis.
The decision that local bicentennial activities should be conducted on a countywide basis came because some committee members were county residents and representatives from other communities had expressed an interest in a joint effort.
The committee also elected an executive committee and established nine other committees designed to elicit community input and provide information to interrelated parties.
University of Kansas professors were elected to two of the other nine committees.
Elected to the executive committee were Ted A. Kennedy, RFD 2, chairman; Mrs. Clencoe Hills, 845 Illinois St., vice-chairman; Mrs. Julie Hack, 2216 Massachusetts St., secretary-treasurer; Charles Stough, 2022 Massachusetts St., publicity and promotion; and Richard Raney, 1658 Crescent Road, finance.
W. Stiff Robinson, professor of history, was elected to the educational coordinating committee, and Paul E. Wilson, professor of history, was called to the speakers bureau committee.
LIQUORS
WINES COLD KEG BEER LIQUORS
COMPLETE LINE CHILLED DOMESTIC
& IMPORTED WINES
CALL:
843-1301
"IF WE DON'T HAVE IT
WELL GET IT"
OPEN 9:00 AM to 11:00 PM
Swadley Retail Liquor
1302 W 6th — East of Dillons on 6th
LIQUORS
---
图示为一种机械装置,其主要结构包括一个大型轮盘和一个手柄。轮盘上带有多个轴承,轮盘通过轴连接到手柄,手柄可调节轮盘的旋转角度。通过手柄转动轮盘,轮盘上的轴承可以吸收机械转速和震动,从而减小了噪声。
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon
Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TACO FREE!
Good Every Day
Except Wednesday
Offer Expires Feb. 28
9th and Indiana
1720 W. 23rd
1974-Year of the Taco
ATTENTION
Fall League Champions and Runners-Up HILL BOWLING CHAMPIONSHIPS SUNDAY, FEB. 3----1:00 p.m For further information call 4-3545
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
This time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home!
10
"EXTREME
CLOSE-UP"
5 DAYS - ENDS SUNDAY
Eve. at 10 A.M. 8:30
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 11:10
The Hillcrest E
Hillcrest
Clint Eastwood is Dirty Harry in Magnum Force Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40 Sat.Sun.Mat.at 1:00 NOW SHOWING
the author of
"Andromeda Strain"
"Terminal Man"
now writes yourrent mind with
"America's S1st great
boyfriend movie"
MON. & TUES.
American Film Theatre
"BUTLEY"
PATRICO GRISTINI
MICHAEL CRICHTON'S
NOW SHOWING
Varsity
PG 4318 ... Telephone VS 2-1065
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Matinee
Sat.-Sun.
at 2:30
Woody Diane and Keaton
in "Sleeper"
PG 43
United Artists
Vansity
BRAZIL ... longyear VP 1985
AND FINAL WEEK OF FUN
Where were you in '62?
PG
American
Graffiti
CRUISIN
13TH AND FINAL WEEK OF FUN
Eve,at 7:20 & 9:30
Sat.,Sun,Mat.at 2:15
G
Hillcrest
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS'
WILD NEW CARTOON FEATURE
Robin Hood
©1923 Walt Disney Productions
Granada
TOLL FREE • PHONE 715-3500
Easy Access Opens Campus to Community
Chrispin Burnham works full time at the Village Inn Pancake House. He is enrolled, however, in the University of Kansas during his program which was begun last semester.
"All you had to do to enroll was go up and tell them what course you wanted and they'd check up on it to see if the class you wanted was in." Burmash said we write it down. "Burnmash said Wednesday."
He said persons of all ages enrolled in the easy access courses.
"There were a lot of people past college are, but just a few old people." he said.
The easy access program with more than 350 courses, attracted 241 persons this semester, up from about 150 persons last semester.
GLBERT DYCK, dean of admissions and records, said he didn't any idea what kind of person enrolled in the easy access courses.
Dyck said that the courses weren't gared for a particular segment of the population, but that about 50 per cent of those enrolled in the course courses didn't enrolled at KU previously.
"We assume the people who enroll in the easy access courses are non-traditional learners who apply to study a new area of work and back into the swing of school," he said.
Burnham said he thought easy access was
'a very恨 thing because it ties together.
the university and the town and give people a chance to take a course that they're interested in but couldn't take under normal circumstances."
Dyck said nearly half of the courses offered met in the late afternoon, evening or Saturday morning. Although these times are more popular among people, Dyck said, they are often unwilling to attend.
The future of the work with KU students depends on the willingness of the departing staff.
"My own hopes—and I think these are the Chancellor's hopes—are that this program can expand," Dyck said. "Any program like this has to start small. But this is a start."
Easy access courses are also available to KU students, Dyck said.
Dyck said most participants enrolled in one or two courses and credit loads ranged
Two students, Dyck said, had enrolled in 15 hours of easy access courses and then thumbed their noses at their colleges, which had kicked them out for low grades.
SOME STUDENTS have found easy access convenient for other reasons too. One student enrolled in an easy access course to retain his job with the University.
"All of them were in the timetable, and we took whatever was left from the field house to the Union the following Sunday for this program," he said.
KU
k. u. amateur film festival
about the contest...
8
march 25 26,1974
entry information...
university amateur 8 film festival will be held in conjunction with the film
festival at the arts series of Kansas University. The film content
is poised specifically to the regular eight and super eight film form-
al. Premintial judging will be conducted by the kansas university
Department with final judging by william Friends, director,
Blank, documentor, and several film companies of Kansas city.
The file content is opened to file measurements of all sizes. The file format may be compressed or uncompressed with a width and height specification. Each compression method should be provided with all assigned sizes. File measurements are limited to two sizes, and handling. Files must be in its compressions and marked with the appropriate compression method.
ON ALL B.F.Goodrich TIRES!
CLEARANCE!
At Ray Stoneback's Tire Dept.
AIR FASTER
EVERYTHING MUST GO!
CATERPILLAR
CLEAN-UPSALE
We checked our stock and you're in luck. We're a little over-supplied for this time of year, and that means super savings for you on the tire of your choice.
super savi
Bias-Plies! Belteds! Radials!
SAVINGS UP TO 50% ON ALL SIZES
COME THROUGH CITY
PARKING LOT ENTRANCE
BEHIND WOOLWORTH'S
FOR TIRE DEPARTMENT
"Come to Where the Quality Is"
Ray Stoneback's
929 Massachusetts
Open 8:30 a.m. Daily
Phone 843-4170
B. F. Goodrich Steel Radials Now 50% Off List While Stock Lasts! Hurry
HI-SPEED ON CAR
HUNTER $ 250
BALANCE
SUNSHINE
Forecast: Partly sunny and warmer.
High low 40s, low in the low 30s.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
84th Year, No. 82
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Three Students Told to Leave Oliver Hall
Monday, February 4, 1974
See Story Page 2
GARFIELD
Kansan Photo by DEBBIE GUMP
Truckers' Strike Worsens
The independent truckers' shutdown continued to grow Sunday, causing two states to call up 3,400 National Guardmen to deal with violence in the stoppage that has brought warnings of possible food shortages by today.
By the Associated Press
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp urged an 45-day moratorium on the protests that have spread across more than 20 states, to which he called a "national economic calamity."
But spokesman for the striking truckers, and drivers interviewed Sunday in three states, said they will not put their rigs back on the road until they get assurances of lower prices for diesel fuel and a guarantee that higher fuel costs can be passed along to trucking companies on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
MORE LAYOFFS were reported in Pennsylvania and Ohio, where the three-day-old spreading strike has had some support for 10 days. In all, at least 15,000 workers would be temporarily out of work by today, and thousands more in other areas are in danger if the shutdown continues much longer.
Pennsylvania called up 2,500 National Guardmen to relieve 1,400 others who have been on duty since Friday, to stand watch on state highways.
"The actions of a few lawbreakers have created an atmosphere of fear among truckers who want to drive their rigs in Ohio," said Gov. John J. Gilligan as he neared the conclusion of his NEaska, Nebraska, Gov. James Exon directed state troops to keep him apprised of problems.
Tony Davies Learns the Art of Glassblowing
Violence continued. Tires were slashed and horses cut at several truck stops, nails driven into the sidewalk, and South Carolina, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Tennessee, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Nebraska during the night Saturday and on Sunday.
As the shutdown continued, concern increased over the flow of meat, produce and citrus from the farms and meat packers to the consumer.
A dozen meat-packing plants and slaughterhouses from Texas to Philadelphia have either shut down or cut back operations, and very few trucks were
Glassblowers Enjoy New Studio
Kansan Staff Reporter
Glass, mass produced in the United States since the industrial revolution, today enriches and more artists to blow their creative expressions into fragile form.
The University's unique glassblowing studio and courses were born of J. Sheldon Carey's interest in glass as a medium of artistic expression. Carey is a professor of
Design students blow molten grass bubbles into art in the old stone Chamney
"I'll coming back like wild fire," Carey said. "Said, is water where ceramics were 20 years ago."
Bv NANCYSMITH
He predicts glassblowing will progress much quicker than ceramics did. Young artists, uninhibited and searching for new mediums, are intrigued by the ancient art of glassblowing and unafraid to experiment with it.
Some of his students will exhibit their work in the 20th Designer Craftman Show, featuring works by local artists.
He said the process of creating blown glass at the KU studio was started by mixing a 100-batch batch of glass from very fine sand and assorted chemicals.
Color is purposely introduced into glass by additions of metal oxides such as copper, tin, and lead.
Molten glass is gathered from special tank furnaces on the tip of a blowpipe. Several gathers are made in the creation of different colored glass for different furnaces for different colored glass.
Artists work quickly to create form, retrieving a gather and, fighting gravity, chilling the molten glass's surface to develop a skin to blow into. The artists must constantly observe temperature and be able to unpredicted developments in the form.
Carey's formula produced a clear, colorless glass. He is using a $2,000 research grant from KU to experiment with color in glass.
Mavering, from the word marble, is a rolling action that creates a cylinder; the process was originally done on a slab of marble but steel tables are used today. Gravity will pull a piece into teardrop shape.
Saricks Denies Report Of Business Dean Pick
Blocking, which chills and evens the surface, is accomplished with fruitwood tools soaked in water. Chopped pieces of wood are placed into a 1/4-inch a floor, waiting to be fashioned into tools.
the Graduate School of Administration at the University of California at Irvine; Joseph Pichler, acting dean of the KU School of Business; Rudolph Doenges, associate dean of the Graduate School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin; and Jonathan Hood, College of Business Administration at the University of Rhode Island at Kingston.
Final separation of the piece from the punity is a critical step and precedes placing the new art form in an annealing oven. The oven must be set at a high temperature and turned off at night so it will slowly cool.
The artist must be ever vigilant to temperature and be fascinated and receptive to the sound.
After the artist completes the glass form and separates it from the blowpipe, he finishes the neck of the piece with shears and jacks—tweezer-like tools. He then places it in an annealing oven to temper it. Then he transfers the glass into a mold, ending wheel to smooth the surface further.
reported rolling out of Florida with the winter citrus and produce crops.
In Iowa, DuBaque Packing Co. said it and waived off 2,800 workers Monday, and at the end of the month, the company
Published reports that a new dean has been selected for the School of Business are false, Ambrose Saricks, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said last night.
The annealing process relieves stress in the glass that could cause cracking.
Three persons were injured yesterday at a Kingdom City, Mo., truck stop when a truck rammed a station wagon out of his vehicle's path.
But Lawrence Scherr, associate professor of business and chairman of the search committee charged with finding a new merchant with three names to Surriics for final approval.
Truck Rams Car;3 Injured
Doenges said last night that he hadn't been informed of Saricks' choice, although he had been told he would be informed sometime after the end of January.
es finish cutting on grinding
See GLASS Page 2
By the Associated Press
SOURCES WITHIN the School of Business reportedly favor Doenges.
Prichler also said he hadn't been informed of any decision.
Weeks and Porter couldn't be reached for comment.
Fulton, were being withdied. There were reports they were the wife and two children of one of the independent truckers involved in a protest at Gasper's Truck Stop.
An article in the Lawrence Daily Journal World said Emery C. Turner, dean of the School of Business Administration at the University of Louis, would be named the new dean today.
the state were not going to their jobs. The continued layoffs in meat packing plants in several states increased concern that meat shortages would be felt in a matter of days, and similar concern was voiced about citrus and produce.
"The fact that no decision has been made," he said. "We're still the midst of a pandemic."
Names of the victims, who were taken to the Callaway County Memorial Hospital at
Saricks called the reports unauthorized publications that were not entirely correct.
About 100 trucks were tied up at the stop Sunday by at least 35 drivers participating in the demonstration there against high fuel prices and low speed limits.
Usually during this winter season, about 50 to 60 trucks come into the market every
Hundreds of rigs were parked at truck stops throughout the affected regions, which by Sunday stretched from New York down the Atlantic seaboard to Florida.
However, Turner said last night that he hadn't been informed of any decision, although he had visited Lawrence recently to be interviewed for the position.
In Atlanta, Jack Allen, operator of the
food truck, said there is a lot of
people having food Sunday.
By CRAIG STOCK
Kansan Staff Reporter
Others mentioned as possible candidates for the post are Lyman W. Porter, dean of
Satellite Union Promoted
In Duluth, Ga., the Gateway Truck Stop in was nearly full of idle trucks, and no diesel fuel was being pumped. "We want to avoid trouble," said shift manager Jerry Butler, which views the most of truck stop managers as workers rather than shut down than to cause conflict."
The construction of a satellite Kansas Union, a dead issue for more than three years, may be revived, according to Steve Foster, president of Student Union Activities (SUA).
day," he said. "Today, none have come through the gates."
ASKED IF HE had been selected, Turner
has a. That is a good question. Know
they're correct.
Kunsey said the average independent driver used to be able to make $200 to $300 a week, but she had he'd made $15 in any month and paid his bills, "and that's working 13 hours a day."
At a truck stop in Pennsylvania, driver Ron Kinsey said he'd 'let the mortgage company repossess his rig before he'd start working' on government action on trucks' demands.
across the South and Midwest, and through
the Southwest to some ports of California.
THREE HUNDRED rigs were reported stopped at Lone Star, Tec., in California, spokesmen for the striking independents said Sunday night that on the main route from Dallas to Los Angeles there was not a truck stop open.
The proposal for a branch union was made in 1966 and finally rejected by a committee.
Warren said yesterday that informal discussions in committee meetings of the Memorial Corporation Board, which operates the Union, centered on the need for more food service and lounge areas on campus.
There is definitely student interest in a satellite lunite, he said. The recent opening of a food service area in Wesco Hall hasn't relieved the crowded conditions of the Union's cafeterias, he said, and is an issue of the need for more food service areas.
He said that action to revive the satellite union would probably have to come after the election of new student leaders and the introduction of new SUA officers later this semester.
Rolfs said there was a need for a satellite union in the southwest part of campus, but he didn't think he would be in favor of committing student funds to the project. He said he thought existing space might be needed for additional food service and lounge areas.
Beauniar said the Student Senate should look into the possibility of a branch union, but that he wouldn't favor any significant increase in student fees to finance the
Both candidates for student body president, John Beisner, Salma junior, and Ed Rolfs, Junction City junior, said they student input on the idea was necessary.
The issue of a branch union is a big one, he said, and will require the interest and support of student leaders of SUA, the Student Senate and AURH.
students from the Daisy Hill complex and surrounding areas. The building was to have contained a restaurant, snack bar, dining room, book and sundries store, art display facilities and lounge and meeting rooms.
Beisner said he wouldn't favor using
An architect was selected for the project, but in October 1969 the senate refused to recommend a proposal to proceed with plans for the satellite union. However, one officer from the Union Operating Board to start working on drawings for the proposed satellite.
existing space to provide more small food service and lounge areas.
"What's needed, if we do anything, is a more complete facility," he said.
One possible method of financing the construction of a branch union, he said, would be to rent space in the building to businesses.
In 1966, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe asked the University Planning Council to consider a proper site for a satellite union in a campus master plan for buildings and sites.
The planning council selected a site for the satellite union, and after a feasibility study by the University architect, the building was to be northwest of the project in June 1966. The site for the building was to be northwest of Allen Field House and across Irving hill Drive from the University.
The proposal for the satellite union was part of a student referendum in April 1970. The $1.8 million proposal was rejected by students, and, although less than 20 per cent of the student body voted in the referendum, the vote killed the satellite union issue.
The satellite union project now consists of drawings, old committee reports and a budget.
Throwing debris on the court is a source of embarrassment to all of us—both as players and members of the student body—not to mention the risk of injury.
To All Jayhawk fans:
Support with Cheers, Not Debris
members of the University of Kansas varsity basketball team we take great pride in representing our school and the many faithful fans who have played a part in the success we are enjoying this season. Invitably, it seems that the team is one of the tremendous crowd support K.U. basketball teams receive at home.
However, we feel compelled to write this letter in hopes of rectifying a situation that concerns us all. We are referring to the throwing of cups, ice and snow.
I'm showing you distributions of a user’s environment to artifice it — both in front and behind the screen of the computer. As a team we want to ask that you help us. If you are anyone doing any of these acts please ask him to refrain from doing so. Not only will you help us do our job but you will help maintain a positive image for the University.
We would also like to use this as a means of thanking you for your support. It is badly needed if we are to continue having a successful season.
Sincerely, Tom Klivisto
Dave Taynor
Danny Knight
Rick Suttle
Tommie Smith Reuben Shelton
Dale Greenlee Jack Hollis
Norm Cook Bob Ercery
Donnie Cook Cris Barnhouse
Roger Morningstar
news capsules / the associated press
Nixon to Send Budget to Congress Today
President Nixon sends his record-breaking $30.4 billion budget to congress to complete a trio of White House messages traditionally taken on Thursday.
He delivered his State of the Union message Wednesday and submitted his annual Economic Report on Friday.
The budget total for fiscal 1975 was disclosed in the Economic Report, which also showed there would be $4.9 billion deficit.
But the massive budget itself will reveal how Nixon has allocated the money to carry out the programs he has recommended.
Arab Oil Embargo Might Be Lifted
The Saudi Arabian foreign minister, Omar Sakkaf, was quoted yesterday as saying Arabia will lift their oil embargo "when the United States proves it" (AP).
President Nixon said in his State of the Union address that Arab leaders plan an urgent meeting soon which may result in lifting the embargo, declared along with a general production cutback to pressure on Israel. But when he was referred to an already planned meeting in Tripoli on Feb. 14.
Sakkaf said he was "fully convinced that the United States has begun for the first time since the 1967 Middle East war to work seriously to reach a solution".
Arab, Israeli Troops Clash at Golan Heights
Syria said Israeli artillery pounded Syrian military positions and fiverab villageages at the end of a day-long series of sharp clashes on the eastern side.
"Our artillery reacted violently and inflicted heavy losses on the enemy sources of fire," said a communiqué issued in Damascus.
Gunmen Free Hostages After 30 Hours
The Syrian claim made no mention of casualties at the military posts or the civilian villages. But communiqués said the 10 hours of intermittent fighting erupted at points along the entire front and was the heaviest since the October war.
Three masked gunmen freed two latexes later yesterday they had held aboard a Greek freighter in Karachi, Pakistan harbor for more than 30 days.
They said the terrorists were flown out of the country after being assured that the Greek government would lift the death sentences imposed on two members of the army.
The Pakistan Foreign Office and the head of the Karachi port said the commandos, still masked, released Chief Officer Nicholas Lambropoulos and Chief Engineer George Perimeris of the freighter M.V. Vori at 10:45 n.m. time—2:45 CST.
The gunmen, their nationality still unknown, then were driven to the Karachi airport where they boarded a jetliner. Their destination wasn't
Explosion on Bus Kills 12 Soldiers
An explosion ripped through a bus on a highway near the Yorkshire town of Batley early today and killed 12 soldiers. police said.
There was no immediate indication whether the explosion was the work of Irish terrorists.
The police said the troops were part of a group of Fusiliers returning to the Catterick base in Yorkshire from a furlough in Manchester. The bus was a part of a weekend service being operated because a slowdown by train and firemen has halted railroad services throughout Britain on Sundays.
Three other buses taking troops back to Catterick from weekends in Liverpool, Liverpool and Leeds were stopped and searched by police, but no one was found.
2
Monday, February 4, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Oliver Bombing, Hoax Bring Three Evictions
By BOB MARCOTTE
Kennan Staff Remier
Three students have been told they must move out of Oliver Hall after a bombing incident and apparent hoax in the hall last Tuesday night,
Freshmen Brad Wallace of Eureka and Jeff Lysaught of Shawnee Mission, told the Kansan Saturday night that they had been told by the Dean of Women's office to vacate the school. That week, the contracts had been canceled as of the end of January, they said, and they were told they would not be allowed to return to Oliver except for AURH classes or business with Olive College. They said they had been given until Sunday night to leave their
Another student, who asked not to be identified, and said he had been told to take the job, was a police officer.
CARYL SMITH, an associate dean of women confirmed last night that three students had been told to move out of Olver Hall because of the incident. She said an investigation was still under way, but would not name the students ordered to leave.
A petition protesting the office's action and signed by about 270 residents of the hall was delivered to the Dean of Women's office Friday afternoon, according to Eric Schindling, Kirkwook, Mo., freshman and one of the organizers of the petition drive.
According to KU Security and Traffic, a "large firecracker or a small bomb" was exploded Tuesday night in the northwestern starved for $10 to $25 damage to a window. During their investigation, campus police confiscated a marijuana plant in one of the rooms. The investigation eventually involved agents of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the FBI, the U.S. Treasury Department, the Police Dept., as well as the campus police.
WILLIAM BALFOUR, vice chancellor for student affairs, said Friday afternoon that the incident was still under consideration. He didn't know how many students might be disciplined, he said, because of different "degrees of involvement."
Douglas County Atty, Dave Berkowitz said late Friday afternoon that he had not heard whether the federal government had planned to file charges in connection with the bombing. There is a possibility that either state or federal charges will be filed he said. He noted that the FBI can assume responsibility for any charges used. There will probably be no charges filed as a result of the confiscation of the marijuana plant, he said.
Several residents of the hall said Saturday night that they had considered the incident a prank.
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"They blower it way out of proportion," one student said of the investigation. "It was all about the numbers."
THEY SAID the FBI, KBI, Treasury and local investigating agents conducted interrogations of hall residents at a 12-hour period beginning at about 3 p.m. Wednesday
Several residents expressed surprise that the agents had interrogated them about a note that the students said had been posted on their cellphone as a hoax shortly after the attack occurred.
They said the note, signed by "the Phantom Groosie," was apparently a takeoff on the Scorpion note depicted in the movie "Dirty Harry," which had been shown on campuses the preceding weekend. It was a bit ironic that explosions in the hall, they said, but gave no instructions concerning a drop point or further communication with the "groosie."
From Page One
Glass . . .
wheels is done. The wheels are kept in the basement, but finish cutting is not done unless the piece is rough where it was separated from the pumie.
Harvey K., Littleton, author of Glassblowing. A Search for Form*, *Journal of Applied Optics*.
"It is brittle, smooth and hard," Littleton wrote, "but also viscous, flowing, endlessly ductile and responsive. Because glass really has no shape, form or definite substance, the artist is free to impose upon it a sense of structure or form statement."
Carey said the barn was perfect for a glassblowing studio. He and a small group of graduate students undertook a mammoth cleaning process before moving in.
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k. u. amateur 8 film festival
march 25.26,1974
KU
Lawrence Sierra Club Meeting DR. JOHN O'BRIEN
The Arts, Anatomy & B Film Festival will be held in conjunction with the Festival of the Arts series of Kansas University. The film content is opened specifically to the regular eight and super eight film formats. Proliminary judging will be conducted by the Kansas university Film department with final judgement by William S. Greene, documentary director, and several film companies of Kansas City, Lawrence and Topeka.
The film content is open to filmmakers of all ages. The film format may be super or regular eight with a time limit of 30 minutes. Silent or sound films are acceptable, but synchronization instructions should be provided with all sound films. Filmmakers are limited to two entries. A $125 fee is charged for each film entered to cover mailing and delivery fees. For the entry with the entrant's name and address, deadline for entries is March 1, 1974.
entry information...
To Speak On Eutrophication—Another Washday Miracle 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1974
about the contest...
South Park Recreation Center PUBLIC WELCOME Funded by Student Senate
1
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Be certain to see what the naked eye and the camera can create at the "Language of Light." An exhibition of photographs now on display thru Feb. 24 at the Museum of Art on campus.
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The Evelyn Wood challenge:
C
If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
In fact, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to come to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson armed with the toughest textbook or reading material you own.
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Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster, with comprehension!
We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy. . . we're using yours. . . the toughest you can find!
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Every night this week at the Reading Dynamics Institute Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
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EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
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Monday, February 4, 1974
University Daily Kansan
3
KU Mulls over Well-Rated Concert
By TIM BRADLEY
Kunshan Reviewer
Bouncing on stage bedecked in his best bib and tucker, Martin Mull sat down in his seedy armeniain and began a set that followed warped through wigs, wires and whimsy.
His portable living room boasted a whole Multi-titude of gimmicks, from a honeymore slide show like the kind the neighbors show after their vacation to an electric fireplace
to a shopping bag full of party hats, stick-on
mats and accessories, or gift wrap for rapping
with the band.
The songs ranged from "Eggs," featuring Martin on harmony hen; to "Ukulele Blues," the saga of a middle class blues singer named Blind Lemon Pledge; to "The Nothing," a new dance craze for lethargic party-goers.
tumultuous ovation, came back and did three more songs, and proved once and for all that Martin Mull is to rock what Victor Borge was to the chicken salad set.
Mull's puffy humor is the kind that brings on goats or well as grills. Behind his semantic sojourns are touching tales of the small pleasures of life, the pitter pattern of lft feits. A kind of gentle cynicism seems to surface in Hirschfeld and Seydel. Sein and his pokes at the musical and cultural attitudes of the day. At his own urping, Mull was given a
review
Bonnie Raitt showed off her newly acquired 1956 Gibson hollow-body guitar that she'd be playing for blues number. From there, she changed from blue saxes to tomlin for blues.
She was at once at home in ill-filled Hoch Auditorium and conveyed an electric sense of openness and warmth that is rare between a performer and an audience. It was the same feeling one would get had she play in the kitchen for a few good friends.
Though a chest cold made her back, her music could not be faulted. When she sings, everything except her voice just fades into the background as the listener becomes a
SUMMER JOBS
Guys & Gaps needed for summer employment at National Parks. Students in Resorts throughout the nation. Over 50,000 students aided each year by providing student assistance program send self-addressed STAMPED envelope to Dept. SJO, 510 Flathead Drive, Dept. SJO, 510 Flathead Drive, YOU MUST EARLY EARLY
Karasan City will be introduced until Feb. 23, if another bill is introduced at last night's session.
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FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS
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PEACE LABORATOIRE AND VISTA need you for summer and fall volunteer assignments at home the LIBERAL ARTS PLACEMENT OFFICE the LIBERAL ARTS PLACEMENT OFFICE BASE, FEB. 12, sign up for an interview now
announcing the Creative Writing Contest Two Categories: Short Fiction and Poetry Entry Blanks and Rules Are Available at the SUA Office
Entries May Be Submitted Feb. 1-25, 1974
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Elective Chairman Proposed to StudEx
At the close of set, Martin Mull came
for a first-time-ever jam and they did
"Karaoke."
Her sparkling guitar work gave me a case of the slack-jawed feebles, and with Freo reefing faithfully along on bass, Dennis Whitted on drums, and David Maxwell on piano, Bonnie played and sang in his own chords. The audience favorites were "You Got to Know How," "Under the Falling Sky" and "Guilty."
A bill and a petition introduced to the Student Senate Executive committee last night would make the position of StudEx chairman elective by the senate and would make the StudEx chairman preside at senate meetings.
The StudentX chairman is currently appointed by the president of the student body.
The bill and petition will be considered by the student rights, responsibilities and privileges committee and will be voted on at the senate meeting Thursday.
Also introduced at StudEx was a bill to place two questions of priority before the
student body in the election Feb. 13 and 14.
If the bill passes the senate, students will be asked to rate their priorities on questions about political affairs and internal senate affairs. They would also be asked whether they favored the senate's funding of an LA&S course, Feedback, a student organization or another university would refuse to fund these things.
The trial period for the commuter bus to
COLLEGE JUNIOR PROGRAM FOR WOMEN
Earn approximately $600 a month your senior year
Receive a Commission as a 2LT in the US Army after graduation
Begin a career that demands responsibility and initiative;
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$ NOTICE $
$
Campus organizations requesting Student Activity Fee funds for the 1974-75 fiscal year, must pick up a Budget Request form in the Student Senate Office. Rm. 105-B, Student Union, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., M-F.
Requests are due no later than 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28.
For more information, call 864-3710.
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Answer to Last Wednesday's Riddle
What Should Mr. Two-Timer Do When the Axe Falls?
When the great confrontation comes, simply give Ann and Trudy, individually of course, the same story: "Now I can tell you. It was all part of my fraternity initiation. The boys dared me to write you addressing you by another name to make you think I was unfaithful. But stunt or no stunt, I meant every word I wrote—and you know I meant it for you alone."
She'll give you that boys-will-be-boys laugh and all will be forgiven.
FLAGSHIP INTERNATIONAL
12th & Oread
"WE DON'T KNOW ONE MILLIONTH PER CENT OF ANYTHING"
— Thomas Edisor
SOKOLOFF
Take a Free University Class
LEARN SOMETHING
Enrollment and Catalogues Available:
Feb. 1st, 4th, 5th in Union Lobby
4
Monday, February 4, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Little Gray Men
Gerald Ford, the new vice president, is without a doubt a gray political personality. He may finally turn out to be competent in a low-key, bland sort of way, even a comforting hand while the President's mask melts horribly before the television cameras and his eyes burn strangely in his transformed face.
But the perpetual featurelessness in American politics raises certain questions that, in their urgency, far outweigh Ford's character and qualifications, assuming that these are somewhat less than brilliant. It is also bili-litating effects of grayness that this country continues to rebel, both in criminal and in constructive ways.
There is not enough electricity in the air in the rec room; the youngster suddenly leaps up and slaughters the neighbor's rabbit. Manic urban youths throw an old newspaper vendor down on the sidewalk and jump up and down on him before they can choose religion, encounter groups, or seek out establishment-busting intimacy.
But whatever methods one chooses to combat the American drag, what often results is a high that is manic in nature. At times, it can be too violent; at other times it is shallow, primitive and incoherent.
The manic boom town lights of Phoenix and Houston even seem to glitter in the prose of some of our best recent writers, strongly suggesting just how widespread the desperate American high really is.
Norman Mailer, Tom Wolfe.
John Rechy, Hubert Selby Jr., Jack Keroau; the dark side of each might have transmitted the sort of consciousness in which words like *love* or *crystallize*. It is not terribly easy to find European counterparts.
Some sociologists believe that multiple murder are set off by the dulness of much of American life. One anthropologist developed the theory that the multiple murderer, who appeared in the United States shortly after World War II, rose to protest against conformity and the drains of primitive social society. Like a primitive infant, he put on leopard skins in order to gain enough strength to break the backs of goats, the multiple murderer may want to re-establish contact with his animal force.
Thus, a politician of great influence may spread a nasty poison simply by being a personality without impact. Nor should the next president be the precise opener, because he can easily run the streets who would delight in replacing the human heart with a vast electric generator.
If Ford becomes president there may be gray rainbows everywhere; and millions will ride them, and many waving their hats, perhaps more book-like ofgarish sadism and weird distances than is really tolerable.
Cynics will sport in the vacuum, the butter and eggs boys will sell tickets, as always, and real national happiness, a compound of intimacy and constructive effort, will simply go by-bye again.
—Jerome Lloyd
Energy Crisis Aggravated By Shrewd Oil Companies
Special to the Washington Post
By DAVID C. MARTIN
(The writer is a Capitol Hill reporter covering energy legislation.)
WASHINGTON—When persons who pay 50 cents for a gallon of gasoline bear Ralph Nader say that the world is "drowning in oil" and read reports that heating oil inventories are running 30 per cent above last year, they begin to wonder whether they've been had.
The so-called energy crisis is the product of a set of economic events and circumstances that the oil companies shrewdly, but legally, turned to their adversaries. The role of the consumer while the administration helpedys played the role of middle man.
These happenings have remained largely hidden behind the veil of the Arab oil embargo. But, as William Simon has so frequently stated, there would have been shortages anyway—perhaps not serious enough to force contemplation of rationing at a later date, or a year-round daylight saving time, but guaranteed the oil industry its record profits.
AT THE START of the decade, oil companies were experiencing a profitless boom. The world's thirst for oil was producing record sales but profits were falling. In 1970, the profits of 28 integrated oil companies were reported down 1.9 per cent while sales this disconcerting year increased. The industry blamed the Reform Act of 1699, which reduced the oil depletion allowance from 27.5 per cent to 22 per cent, and on gasoline price wars waged by small, independent dealers; a one cent change in the price of gasoline means a $1 billion change in revenues). Matters took a further turn for the worse in August 1971 when the economic program announced his Phase I economic program, and the price of petroleum products at this point
It was during these worrisome times that the industry let fall the first warnings of a potential oil shortage. It was announced, for instance, that the reserve capacity of several big fields in Louisiana and Texas—main oil-producing states—had perhaps fallen below 10%. Companies didn't mean that their geologists had made a mistake in estimating the size of the oil fields. What they were saying was that the price of oil wasn't high enough to
finance the extraction of all their reserves
A reflection of an oil reservoir. When the American Petroleum Institute figures the American Petroleum Institute at 38 billion barrels of reserves of oil at 38 billion barrels, it is not surprising, as the term seems to indicate, the amount of oil that has been discovered. The industry's definition of "proved reserve" is that amount of oil which is recoverable, "under existing economic conditions."
By the winter of 1972, the country was experiencing its first petroleum shortage in peacetime history, and by September of last year—before the Arab oil cutoff—the country were earning profits 48.6 per cent higher than over the same period a year before.
RELIABLE FIGURES on how many independent service stations have been driven out of business by a lack of gasoline are hard to come by, but it is at least several investigations subcommittee last week that knew of no stations closed because of a lack of fuel. Again, what they meant was that none of the retail outlets that they own, lease or supply directly, closed for lack of gasoline, and the independent Gasoline Marketers of America, which has 23,000 member stations, at least 2,000 so-called non-branded independents closed last year for lack of gasoline. If that same ratio holds for all of the country's 64,000 gasoline stations there were about 4,000 closings that the majors said they didn't know about.
The Administration saw exactly what was happening, as a lengthy staff study by the Senate Permanent Investigations subcommittee documents. On Nov. 21, 1972, George Lincoln, then director of the Office of Preparedness, wrote a memorandum on a conversation he had before the previous day with James McLane, deputy director of the Cost of Living Council. Gen. Lincoln said McLane told him that the "Cost of Living Department" commission staff have concluded, that they will profit on current prices of No. 2 oil (heating oil) and they know it." Howard Roberts, a staff member at the Office of Emergency Preparedness, stated in a Nov. 27 memo "Justice Service's 18th largest oil company," the油头 was deliberately producing less fuel oil because of "economic reasons."
Crisis Causes Nixon Restlessness
By LOU CANNON The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—He has always been a restless man, this President of the United States, and those who have seen him closely say that he is more restless than ever.
His aides remain loyal to Richard Nixon, or at least to the institution of the presidency. But in their quiet moments some of these aides talk guardedly about his policies and strategies for flying by night when he could maneuver by day. They talk, too, of his penchant for retreating from the retreats he has chosen for himself and of his strange habit of defying the subject matter and of abruptly denouncing his thoughts are out to destroy his presidency.
One symptom of this presidential restlessness is Nikon's present aversion to any detailed discussion of domestic policy. He has never been a man who suffers detail and has always been almost all substantive domestic discussions to his chief of staff, Alexander M. Haig.
When Budget Director Roy Ash arrived in San Clemente for an announced and important discussion with the President on the issue of hiring a new secretary meeting over to Haver and never saw Ash at all. On most days the President saw only Haug, Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, secretary Rose Mary Woods, his wife and husband, ever-present confidante, Bebe Rebozo.
DESPITE HIS DISAVOWAL of detail, the
President made it clear that he was running the show. Though the White House has a long-standing agreement with the news services to inform them of presidential travel, Nixon gave strict orders that they were not to be informed of his many driving trips to and from Iraq. Bluntly warned allies not to make predictive discussions of presidential policies for 1974.
More and more within the White House there is talk of "the Scenario." These are code words used to describe the method by which Nixon will leave office, as in the sentence: "I do not now see the scenario for impeachment."
There is no reason to suspect that his health is poor, and there has been no recurrence of pneumonia which forced him into the hospital for nine days last July. But Nixon abruptly canceled his annual physical examination in December, and he returned to Washington daily staple at White House briefings and it is always turned aside by spokesmen.
This last sentence and many like them vaguely accept the premise that Nixon may indeed leave office before his term finishes. No one will say how or when, but it has not escaped the attention of White House aides in an office as long as he is "physically able."
THESE WHO HAVE seen Nixon closely say that he was often temperamental and ill at ease during his recent 18-day stay in San Diego, where he has been wired toorry windy weather that plucked the trip.
But Nixon's problems are worse than oneweather. In even less troubled times heliked to play the piano in the middle ofthe night, and he has always possesseda restless, driven intelligence that makessleep difficult. There is a persistent belief atthe White House that sleep has becomeeven more difficult.
Officially, all of the above is steadfastly denied. An aide who recalled that Nixon had physically remain in office as long as物理上仍留在办公室, a reporter. The President looked hale and hearty at his 61st birthday party, the man who really think there is anything wrong with him?
The aide shrugged and permitted a long pause. "Of course not," he said, "There is a lot of people."
It is in the latter sense that some aides have substituted their loyalty to the presidency to their personal loyalty to Richard Nixon. The committee for the Reagan administration substituted the institutional slogan of "re-elect the president," is finally gone but Nixon is rarely "Mr. Nixon" to the men who work for him. The incarnation of the institution has a magic sound, a magic that does not as easily survive when the President is thought to be right but just possibly be something wrong with Nixon; all is well with the President.
ALL IS NOT well. On the California trip the prevailing mood was that this was the lag期。
M. T.
"WELL OUR SERIOUS SQUEEZE BOTTLED DRY WHEN WE OUT BACK ON CLEAN AIIR STANDARDS AND WE SOLID THE AMBER WARNS OF GRAIN TO EXCEED, NOT MENTION THE OIL DISPENSERS OFFREND FROM BEA TO SUBLING BEA, AND THE PRINTED PLAN WAS LEASED TO KOON, NOT MENTION THE OIL DISPENSERS OFFREND FROM BEA TO SUBLING BEA."
Beach press center is being torn down as part of a restaurant remodeling project, and those close to the remodeling say a new one will never be needed.
Few are yet convinced that Nixon will resign. Many talk vaguely of his not finishing his term but are unwilling to abandon the method of his removal. Some believe that the subject must never be discussed or the possibility of impachment admitted.
Nixon can still be warm and even witty in person. He is still capable, aides say, of behaving like the self-styled "coolest man in the room" when he is discussing foreign affairs. State Henry Kissinger. But he is a man unattached in the crucible of the White House. The picture painted by those close to him who are willing to talk about it is of a private man, but by adversaries. He is depicted as constantly restless and increasingly troubled.
"Anyone would be troubled, really, if he couldn't go out anywhere without attracting hostile pickets and impeachment signs," said one aide. "Nobody likes to hear himself called a crook, least of all the President of the United States."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsmart, U-1-48-100
Published at the University of Kansas daily examination periods. $15 for examinations period. $20 for examination periods. $15 a semester. $15 a year. Second class postpaid college fee. $35 a semester. $125 a semester fee. $125 a semester fee in student activity fees. Advertised offered to all students without regard to gender. Advertised not necessarily than those of the University. Not advertised.
Griff and the Unicorn
WORLD, APATHY IS SETTING IN...
THE PEOPLE GROW BORED AND LISTLESS...
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS?
WHO CARES?
by Sokoloff
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . Susan Shav
NEWS STAFF
Editor
Hal Holter
Editor in Chief Editors
Elaine Zimmerman
Editor Editorial Editor
Bryce Herring
Editor Hindenberg
Sports Editor
Danny Hines
News Editors
Don Kinyen
Bob Meyer
News Editor Merritt Merrell
Amy McKeen
Copy Chief
Liz Caldwell
Amy McKeen
Wire Editors
Larry Filip
Associate Campus Editor
Larry Filip
Assistant Feature Editor
Dian Layph
Assistant Sports Editor
Dan Plannemesser
Assistant Sports Editor
Dan Plannemesser
Jennifer Lloyd Bunny Miller, Bob Simpson
Photography
Brian Lloyd Bunny Miller, Dave Reaver
Cartoonists
Killier Barr Killer, Amar R. Dovee
Makeup Editors
Don Kinyen
Amari McFernan, Chuck Foster, Mike Hewson
Manager Advertiser Met Advisor
Business Manager David Hunkle
Advertising Director Diana Schmidt
Marketing Manager Bruce Regeneman
Classified Adv. Mgr Manager Brue Regeneman
Assistant Adv. Mgr Manager David Albriston
Assistant Advertising Manager David Albriston
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Ben J. Wattenberg, author and founder of the Coalition for a Democratic Majority, was there, as was Richard J. Whalen, former speaker for President Nixon and writer of the Kennedy dynasty book, "The Founding Father."
BUSINESS STAFF
business Adviser Mel Adams
Solzhenitsyn Defended by Notable Protesters
BY WILLIAM CLAIBORNE The Washington Post
WASHINGTON-By Jerry Rubin's old standards, the Ad Hoc Committee for Intellectual Freedom (AHCF) would rate a Cenum for its demonstration Tuesday in front of the National Press Building. But the group made its point.
Looking slightly self-conscious and in need of tutelage in the art of protesting, a handful of middle-aged intellectual leaders and media giants staged a midjuged state against the soviet government's repressive dissident author Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
There were no shouted obscenes, fusiliates of tear gas, police vans or smashed soft-drink bottles. Missing were the red flags of anarchy, the wall of sirens and the skirmish lines of helmeted tactical squad officers.
FOR THE FOUR occasionally yawning traffic policemen and several hundred downtown passersby who watched it, the protest was a tame affair. But what this crowd was a media event lacked in excitement, it more than made up for in eloquence of speech.
Such personages as CBS commentator Eric Sevick and political analyst Frank Mankiewicz—among others—drew double-takes from the 14th Street lunchtime strollers as they read passages from Solzhenitsyn's "Gulag Archipelago."
Also among the two dozen who donned red-white-and-blue crepe armbands and protested were Stephen Hess, former Nixon secretary of state, Richard Nixon and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution; Harry C. McPherson Jr., former special counsel to President Johnson, and Richard Scaamron, co-author of the best-selling "The Real Majority."
AS IF THAT wasn't enough, the press building happening was supported by commentators Millon Viorst and George F. Gorsuch, who were both nominated by Fichandier, and John D. Koffen, former gadabout of the Republican National Committee and erstwhile editor of the GOP newspaper.
What's more, Wattenerheng opined, "all the gram, all the computers, the gas and oil,
Tass, Watteneren charged in a press conference preceding the demonstration,
"has been in the forefront of this disgraceful act, and has been the man of intellectual heroism (Solzbentzman)."
The object of all this high-priced discontent was one Vladimir Vashehcedo, a Washington editor of the Soviet news agency, Tass.
C G S
all the vokka and the Pepsi Cola (traded) stand as little, compared with the sovereign idea that men must be allowed to speak their mind."
WHAIEN ARGUED THAT Tass has tried to "shed its true identity as an arm of the Soviet government," but he observed that in a 1971 trial in London the news agency claimed it was owed immunity as a state agency.
Speaking for the ad hoc committee and stressing that its members represent both the far left and far right political speeches, Ms. Gershon group comprised a relatively sedentary lot.
Seated Sevarred, "This is the first time I've done anything like this since I was in college."
"For many of us, we are learning only today which end of the picket sign is up," he said.
According to the committee's sidewalk fibers, "We are all active in the world of ideas: as writers, artists, scientists, actors ... we are dedicated to the proposition that contemporary world is one that says ideas may not be expressed only and freely."
NO STRONG IS that belief, the group's leaders said, "that we non-demonstrators are not as strong"
While the "non-demonstrators" walked back and forth in front of the entrance to the press building with signs declaring "The whole world is watching" and "Freedom for dissidents," a small group led by Wattenberg went to the second floor offices of Tass.
"I don't want to sound too loof, but this is what we all are trying to do with our lives. I think it's a universal cause," Sevareid said later.
There, according to Sevareid, a chainlock door opened a few inches and a Tass official politely refused to allow members of the ad boc committee inside.
"I don't think you get a situation like this two or three times in a century," he added, comparing the magnitude of the Solzbentyn issue to that of Emile Zola. "There comes a time when you feel better if you do something," he said.
THE GROUP PASSED inside a written denunciation of the treatment of Solzhenitsyn. Undoubted by the Soviet Army, they returned to the picket line outside.
Realism in the cinema, an elusive quality that has been sought with astonishing diligence by many in the film world, seems to be captured in the movie, "The Exorcist."
The movie is based on the book by William Peter Blatty and deals with the subject of demonic possession. Blatty's book is supposedly based on an actual occurrence—the last official church sanctioned case of demonic oppression in 1949.
But "The Exorcist" is neither the first nor the last film to be a spin-off of a successful book. He was one of the people most experiencing during the production of the movie, it would, no doubt, have been delegated to the imaginary land of Great Horror Flicks, soon to be forgotten after the first one.
'Exorcist' Creates Belief
Editor's Note: This is the first of several columns on spiritual topics by Chuck Browne.
During the production of "The Exorcist," an entire house, built for the set, burned down with no apparent cause. Jack was saved by a nurse, but the demon in the movie, died a week after his death.
Frieden is not the only person to become demon-conscious. Since the premier of "The Exorcist" last Christmas, increasing paranormal activity have said they were possessed by demons.
The list of queer happenings is longer, including some occurrences that could be labeled occupational hazards in the film industry. Nevertheless, the peculiar nature of these movies and the effect this movie is having on astonishing numbers of people who have flocked to view the movie, are evidence enough for this writer to concur with the director of "The Princess Diaries" to say, "'Sad,' after all I have seen on this film I definitely believe in demonic possession."
death scene. An actor's five-year-old son was mystically run down by a motorcycle on a deserted beach and remained near him, the scene being consistently turned up maddening, with many frames containing strange images that were not recognizable to the cameraman and director.
craze." According to the Star report, a Dominican priest at Loyola University of Chicago said he knew of at least two girls who were kidnapped and possessed and have now been hospitalized. The priest said he knew of many persons who are seriously frightened or comprised by the film.
In another instance, carpenters in Houston who were renovating a house previously used as a "pagan church," demanded prayers by a priest to expel evil spirits from the premises. The workmen had seen "the Exorcist."
I spoke with an instructor at the University of Kansas who had viewed 90 minutes of the movie before he departed, like many patrons before him. He noted that there were uniform policemen stationed around the perimeter of the auditorium, though they weren't there for the specific reason of law and order. As my friend soon learned, making more in the capacity of carrying out the faint and assisting the nauseated.
When I asked if he thought "The Exorcist" was more than just a movie, he emulated his father's style.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 4.1974
5
Complainers Go to CPA Save Money
Landlord-tenant relations are the largest source of complaints handled by the Lawrence Consumer Protection Agency according to CFA figures released recently.
The CPA, which investigates and publicizes consumer complaints and provides consumer education, began its second year of operation last semester.
The CPA handled 120 requests for information by tenants that resulted in 34
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
The second largest category of complaints, according to the agency, was automobile repairs and sales, with 53 complaints culminating in 16 formal complaints.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Last semester's requests for information totaled 377 in every category, with 92 formal requests.
Three Days
Seventy-two of the 92 complaints had been closed by the start of the spring semester, according to the agency. Consumers who had filed the complaints saved $7.591.
The CPA said other common areas of the inquiry were television, stereo and radio repair; large appliance repair; public utilities; banking; credit and mail order.
University of Kansas track star Barry Schur has been suspended from the team pending the outcome of his arraignment on a felony illegal possession of amphiparens.
Schur Arrested On Drug Charge
Schur was arrested Friday evening at Jaiyahawner Towers by officers from the Lawrence Police Department and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. He was released an hour after his arrest on $750 bond.
Schur, a senior from Tucson, Ariz., is scheduled for arrampage at 4 p.m. today. In a separate case, Rudy Guevara, an avid golfer, Overland Park senior, are being held in lieu of $50,000 bond each at the Jefferson County Jail in Oksaloasa on charges of illegal sale of marijuana and amphetamines. Guevara is a former KU shotpotter who was convicted of possessing a weapon to compete this season. No arrangement date has been set for Nevins or Guevara.
on campus
MUSIC THERAPY CLUB will meet at 8 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The program will be presented by Dr. Marilyn Hickey, associate director of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
KU CHESS CLUB will meet at 7 onight in Parlor C of the Kansas Union to begin preparations for the regional SUA chess meeting is open to all interested persons.
LAWRENCE YOUTH HOSTEL
organizers will meet at 8 tonight in the
Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union to
meet with staff, aims, facilities and
jobs of the hostel.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
SENIORS AND GRADS
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
KANSAN WANT ADS
Monday and Tuesday, Sep. 15
Seniors, sign up for interview now
You are need now for summer and fall志愿
enter business positions in the USA and abroad.
Recruiters will be interviewing in the BUSINESS PLACE OF CITY, Summer Field Mall,
Cincinnati.
R--- --- --advising
Either comes to the same thing—New
Ellison, or it comes to a different one.
We'll visit Campus Mallton, Town Crier
ALL ARE WELCOME!
Dr. Al Wolters
... will speak on "Historical Perspective on a Christian Counter-Culture"
Wolters, from Toronto, Canada, presents the Christian involvement in culture. He shows how "ideas" are culturally explosive in non-Church areas.
Big Eight Room in Union
7:30 Monday night Feb. 4th
TONIGHT!
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
--advising
Either comes to the same thing—New
Ellison, or it comes to a different one.
We'll visit Campus Mallton, Town Crier
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannar are offered to the students in need. Request to fill out a form on FLEARING HAS ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11F LINT HALL.
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 use them, you're at a disadvantage
Ray Audio, 15 E. 8th, Place A82-2057, Hours:
Saturday - Sunday (6am to 10pm) Available for any stress problem. Cost = $395.00.
ETD-14 and FD-14 Winni Profile 1st grade glass
book $29.95. 1st grade paperback $14.95.
$14.95 for FD-14. Writeoffs will also $2.95 more.
Books not in stock include: *Honorary* $69,
*Catholic* $39, *Greek* $39, *French* $39, *Italian* $39,
TOYOUL AND DATION GREENS. No Original Rent-Up
Tuition and Statework fees, but can be chore or insuffi-
ciently paid by cash or in instalment.
$25,000 per year.
Microtel Four Channel Component System from
FCA Corporation. $359.95, now just $269.00 at Ray Sung
Technology. Phone: (818) 474-3500. E-mail: mcfa@fca.com.
Close Sale on Components at Bay Stonebake's
Come In or Call for Information:
844-370-470
2. pcs. Stereo Photographs—Cut from $195 85 down to only $100. Where else but Ray Stonehack's Stone can you get MagnaVapor in the crack at the bottom? Remember! Ray Stonehack's Stone—929 Mass.
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint buylies $1.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
FOR SALE. Apples, 7 varieties, $23/ bushel and
$40/ carton. Mango juice, $19/ carton.
Pretzels=12 for $1; meringue and match orange
pretzels=12 for $1; mandarin oranges for $1;
cabbage pills=12 for $1; turnips=3 lbs for $25.
Oranges=12 lbs for $25. Pumpkins=4 lbs
for $25. Prepware and cucumbers=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
for $25. Prepware and cucumbers=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
for $25. Prepare and cool vegetables=4 lbs
SHOP, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
SHOP, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
SHOP, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
Shop, 707 No. 2nd, 3 kilopaces of Kowal Wetland
SHOP
1920 VW, one owner, runs great. looks OK.
wolff-maintenance 78,000 miles $110- Call Wife.
Minolta SRT 110 - 50 mm F7. 1 and 135 mm F2.4 F8
Eveready case and gadget bag. More equipment.
In exercise you could bring Gina Give in 84-260-
bargain on you, or the genuine bargains barge
in on you, the genuine bargains barge in on you.
For Sale - Palm, Merritt upright; white 725.
For Pair - Palm, Merritt upright and bassipper and cabipper.
Call 842-9397
Afghan Hound Puppies-Registered, many of which have been tested for quality. Reasonably priced. 842-2774.
backpack Equipment-Carry down sleeping bag
Equipment-Carry down sleeping bag
aluminum packing pack in $250.
aluminum packing pack in $250.
Bokhon FLAIBASH ATIRE - Cowboy shirts,
caps, hats, jackets, jeans, shorts,
dress skirts, blazers, bandana. for hire.
Call 212-596-8034 or visit www.bokhon.com
Dresses—long & short blouses and skirts. Price $15 for a dress or $20 for a pair. Winter wear to make outfit, opening up the wardrobe. Make sure your Mini-Sat, and until 8:30 Friday, Ruby's bus fare starts at Tongaonoo. Kansas 8:35-6:00 or 7:30-8:30.
SKIR-Skate CPM-KT1 SL34 205cm skimmer 60mm
Skir-Skate CPM-KT1 SL34 205cm skimmer 60mm
$10" XN $10" XN $10-735-028-63
939 VW Bug, 32,000 miles. Best offer over
owner. ower at 1419 Ohio. Apt. 6
Dealer Parks, Fitchburg, MA 02785
1970 Toyota Corolla for sale. $1200. **B42-842**
1970 Toyota Corolla for sale. 3.50 p.m. **Call 2-515**
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Heights
- Oaks •Acorn
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
1815 W. 241H
Rental Office
Postal Office
Open 8-5 Mon.-Sat.
Stained Glass
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall
For Sale - Established In Drive. In Small invest-
ment of excellent return Good opportunity (G)
45%
For Sale: 2 new snow size: 7-75,14-30,
bent offer Bell 842-5500 and ask for Debbie
27-69.
1-5 Sun.
IAM RADIO STATTON new Heathkit HW-10
IAM RADIO STATTON new Heathkit HW-10
Heathkit 8-12 shorts 9-12 shorts $20, also Heathkit
8-12 longs 9-12 longs $30, plus extras $40,
Heathkit 8-10, Heathkit 1A-15 amps $10,
Heathkit A3-62 tuner $10, Catl 841-1-59es
$10, Catl 841-1-59es
66 Ford Galaxie 17 w/reg. PSI, heat, radio,
wiring, and dash kit. 850cc. See below.
Snow tires. Snow wheels. Some work $150
for new tires or wheels.
CROWN IC-150. Guaranteed phono hum and noise control. Crown at 10 dB, at rated output (typically 92dB). Each unit is hand test. You receive results. Full specifications at Audio Systems, 9th & 8th Floor.
For Sale - Manila/Sekor 100 DTSL - SLR camera.
55mm F1.8 and 12mm F2.8 Lens. Good condition.
Recently cleaned and meter system re-
tested. Specific code 5164-1565 will bargain.
Call Rob at 841-S125
For Sale. Degrade, must sell my T. Dodge
BVH with a 2007 upstate stone, ice box, snow
shelter, roof insulation, and window covering.
For Sale 1956 Ford Ion 7 ton pickup truck. Sell as is. Nice condition, dependable in all weather. Call (800) 253-3078.
Hand painted stained glass window. 10 by 12.
Hanging panel. 15 by 18. $395. Low prices. After 5:30 - 86-110, Jenkins.
Used per-recorded, real to reel lapes $1.00 to
$2.50. Used per-recorded, real to reel laces at Rays.
We buy and sell audio displays at Rays.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Quay. We have open pub and bar here, so try our brick plate, brick sandwich or brick by the pound. Half-chicken to the plate. Kit Eat it or take it out. Open 12am to 4pm. Brick plates are $10.
For Sale Nikornak PTN Body 135mm F3.5
Call: 842-849-7600 2-5-6
Call: 842-849-7500 2-5-6
--for Airline tickets)
TYPEWITHER CLEAIMING - 3-day service. Smith-Brown, 956-281-4000. Floor transports, antique clocks & watches services and cleaned Electronic light and industrial appliances. City River Repair #115 Vermilion. RI River City Repair #115 Vermilion. B115 RI River City Repair #115 Vermilion.
Columbian Wants You! Yes, we want you as a student. Now, Summer, and Fall. We believe it to do our best to prepare you for the New Year. Help us find students at a reasonable price. 2. To have it in Ai-To help us find students with help and fast maintenance prices. 4. Upon visit Hills' Availon* Harvard Square* Argio College and Humanity Hotel to deal With. Ms. Forrester and Hardy will be there.
LAWENCY, GAV LIBRARIES, INC. Merging
relationships with law firm Gav Libra-
ries Inc., Lawyer Connecting - 661-200
for legal advice and legal assistance.
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Share insight, skills, experience, and growth at
Share insight, skills, experience, and growth at
February 1st, 2014, and 2014, and Sharp U.S.
U.S. Union lobbies
Custom made clothes, patching, embroidery-
ing. Custom-made hats and gloves.
Bokomon FLASHBACK, ATTHEE, 819 Vermont
Homes.
Guys—our students do personalized men's hair-
cuts, dyeing, and styling. Beauty School, 625;
Mary Ann, 843-235-3333.
Motorcycle rebuilding and tuning All make-ons
of the 2015 model year include:
turbines are 10% $10 guarantee all work. Torma
repair is 30% $10 guarantee all work.
Let Maupintour
Do The LKE WQKR For Your Child
SHEERWOOD 7109A receivers have been rated for power output of up to 2500-3000 cent-power channel (or less than 0.80 per cent) of the total system power. Service records of this unit verify its reliability and power for the SPEC package, price for the SPEC audio package, and AUDIO service record.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
YARN-BATTERIES-NEEDLEPOIN
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-2656
10.5 Monday,Saturday
--for Airline tickets)
Do The LEGWORK For You!
(NEVER an extra cost)
PHONE 843-1211
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
Now Open
Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
314 N. Sidney, 912-800-5250
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
Smoking Is Our Only Business
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
Hire them. They probably need it in town you should
have a garage or yard. They would love this.
Financing our Reebell, 10th, 6th-8th.
Financing our Reebell, 10th, 6th-8th.
Leasts in ride and jumps at the University Horse
Ride. Tullon sits on a semester basket. Vistors
can watch Tullon on a semester basket.
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
DYNAMIC DUG IN HUVER CITY) Ex-votare-
mentals and Vita will be on campus
February 14-16
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders,
information orientations held daily this
Friday. Flint, 4.17, or call on Tuesdays at
842-6255.
Bike
Alaska is booming this year. Approved hand-book, "JOBS IN ALASKA," covers all occupations, including pipeline, 1974 edition, $300; from laborers in Alaska, Anchorage, a licensed employment agency. 2-11
$85 to $95 PER WEEK-PART TIME. Unlimited earnings potential in addressing envelopes at your client's doorstep. Personal touch. For further information regarding the P.O. Box 11707, Atlanta, GA 30322. **P.O. BOX 11707, Atlanta, GA 30322.**
Employment Opportunities
Wanted. Alumit from major high schools in
Tampa, FL to attend our institution on
completion in square foot. Contact
us at (855) 241-9100.
HELP WANTED
Registered Healthcare Technologists. Prior prer
fice must be licensed as a Registered Medical
Person Please call Department Dept. Lawnery Memorial
Hospital for more information.
Helpt Wanted -Cocktail waitress. Must be 21.
The Shire -869-Mass. Phone: 842-3230. 2-6
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model for 80 hours or $80 daily. No experience necessary; you need not be glamorous. Personality and ability are required. You must present yourself. An person. Is licensed, licensed firm providing bioscholarship modeling. The *Kinsei Model* (816) 725-3184, to 10 p.m. Located ten miles north of New York City.
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CTY REITP -815 Vermont, 841-4683.
Sieros - Wires & -typewriters. Independent repair specialists. No retail hotel. We serve what you replace. Unimpaired resources. See ff.
Repairers.
Valentine's Day is not far away and there is a holiday you can celebrate yourself. Very reasonable reasons. Tantrum-proof.
Guitar lessons fingerstyle, open tunings, slide
electric guitar. Two-week course. Call 849-6060 for
weekly course. Call 849-6060 for link.
Needed immediately! Female roommate to share
room with male roommate after a month in
10 Mississippi - Maternity, 842-825-9322
Pernille roommate wanted to share modern two
bedrooms. 18"m x 24"m plus 12"sq. Call 655-347-
8343. **Brompton plus** *Leibniz* Call 655-347-
8343.
Working band needs rehearsal space. Weich
481-8464 pay reasonable rent. Weich Rich of
481-8464
Wanted: Quist, studio roommate to share new
room, office space, 750 square feet,
and utilities. Call Rose 842-620-9111.
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
THE HIE in the WALL
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
TACOS
Casa de Taco
$3.50 per Dozen
Area's Largest Selection
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
Rose KEYBOARD
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Evenings
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings | Price
Guitar Strings $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Friday Nite
Friday Nite
**Wanted:** A married couple as house parents for a family of five. Age range: 18 to 23 years. To be admitted, age 15-23. Good salary requirements. Training required. Training provided. Reply to Wichita Youth Services (714) 692-7820, or call (714) 692-8448, or (714) 692-6483.
Female roommate wanted to stay nearby for 3 hours before roommate left. 2:18 - 2:45, before after 8 a.m. 2:45 - 2:65, before after 8 a.m.
Food for Health
615 Mass.
FOR RENT
now at
Wanted: Ambitious white male dove to mate with my white female. Mary, 864-356-2
2-6
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1733-1749 West 24th
New building 1-4 and 5 bedroom furnished or
unfurnished, carpet, displant, all electric kitchen,
carpet, carved, alcove, step stairs.
Resident Appt. Apt. 3. B41-6252 ff. 826.
842-2771
JAYHAWKER WAKE APARTMENTS are on
room units with all付费门
rooms with all付费门 843-920-1765
Wall to wall wall painting, front door parking, spacious entryway, private patio balconies, laundry room, each 4 units, clear blue swimming pool, gas BPQ beds, 3 bedroom suite, 2 bedrooms, 3 bedroom 1 bath townhouses. 2500 W Sathir 817-266-9900.
Furnished apartment for at 19 West 14th,
Flushing, NY. Fully furnished and
immediately. Call Tom after 4, 8pm.
(307) 643-2555.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
five bathrooms, completely furnished,
newly constructed, parking, storage
NEAR HOME
Apartment: 2 bedrooms, furnished, wall to ceiling windows, new kitchen, new town house. No jeb. Phone: 853-790-5-3-5
For Rent. Nice clean 2-bedroom Mobile Home with tiw-downs on 1½ acres, five miles southwest of a avenue on All-wather Road. Rent for one pet. 843-518-3180 or 6 p.m. or weekdays.
Broom for Rent-Store kitchen and living room;
room with no month including 2-5
Call Steve B.181-1834
FOR RENT-very considerate 3-room apartment
(120 sq ft) in a quiet, quiet neighborhood.
Bird-act-lately通知!Phone 612-377-7827.
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice
room. 1200 SF. Parking, utilities and utilities
lift. J from Union. Parking, utilities and utilities
LOST
REWARD Lost last meal, black cat Wed. January
protein crisp, collar $250 Monday $450 Monday
protein crisp, collar $300 Monday $300
protein crisp, collar $250 Monday $250
REWARD: Ladies red leather billed bill on lo
Return to P.O. Box 412, B25-286,
600448
Lost-Small 4 mo. old, red-shirted puppy wearing a purple collar in front of the Union Jan. answers to Van. Please call 842-786-701 (John) or send by 114. Louisiana #12 842-Reward.
LOST. White bungee, rust colored tail and
body. Unrecognizable face. Rusty, unidentifiable
unintelligent caller. Call 852-4142, have voice
recording.
MEN!—WOMEN!
JOBS ON SHIPS1 No experience required. Travel. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3.00 for information. Port Angeles, Washington 98362.
15^c a
"KU ON WHEELS"
K
Ride
Semester
conomical — Ecological
Buy a Bus Pass at the Union Candy Counter and Save.
RIDE THE BUS
Another
Student Senate Service
TYPING
Typing in my home IBM Server Pica type.
Typing in the office IBM Server Pica type.
Precautive work. Call Katie, 811-252-9700.
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mics. Typing. Have electric typewriter with nica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Scoring spelled corrected. Plot 94-854, Ms. Wright.
RIDES ------------ RIDERS
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4980. Myra. 2-5
PERSONAL
Wanted to go to or form carpool from Marrion
to Dundee. Please email me at:
mary.marion@cairn.edu.au
*M: Call Dias 262-695-2697; campus by *2.30g*
*M: Call Cairn 262-695-2697; campus by *2.30g*
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
You're afraid of Pollo Bam. Can't NOT GZ! You you're afraid of Pollo Bam. Can't NOT GZ! You're afraid of Polk
You have requirement(s) given you a nervous stomach?
U. enrollment Feb 15th, 18th, and 26th
E. enrollment Feb 15th, 18th, and 26th
Take charge of your life. Try a life planning program. Choose the best alternatives. Two workshops are scheduled for the weekend of Feb. 9. For details and registrations, visit http://www.lifePlanningGene.com/1284 Ord or call 843-4948.
Rolfs and Scott. “A Question of Priorities.” Straightforward answers. Rolfs and Scott. Woman’s Journal. Reduced parking fees. Rolfs and Scott. The School. Rolfs and Scott. Rolfs and Scott. February 13th and 14th.
THE BODY SHOP for
Vitamins & Supplements
843-9412
840-7650
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Europe? Ready to learn about practically educated EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for you to travel to Go. Go online to toll-free at 800-223-5590.
Rolls and Scott are not waiting until the Student B elections to begin work on their pledges. They have long since decided time. Long hours and careful thought. The first Student B candidates, with the Social Security Candidates for Student B elections.
WHY NOT!
ADVENTURE
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
wanted items with a classifier in the
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
UDK
FINE SERVICE
a bookstore
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
FINE BOOKS
Phone 843-6424
Nostalgia!
Edward G. Robinson
Life Size Photo
Mounted on Sturdy
Cardboard with
Limited Number
Available
only $ ^{3}14^{95}$
Send money order to American Corp. P.O. Box 8731 K.C., Moat 6144
6
Monday, February 4, 1974
University Daily Kansan
'Must' Win Faces
This is the time of year when quite a few basketball teams are fighting to stay in the conference race and every game must be won. That is the case as the University of Kansas meets the University of Colorado at 7:35 tomight in Allen Field House.
Nonunique comes into the game with a 3-3 league record. A loss could eliminate the team.
On the other hand, KU comes into the game with a perfect 5-0 league record. A win would give them a full game lead over second place Kansas State University.
After beating Missouri last Tuesday, 80-67, KU took a full week of practice to prepare for tonight's game. Coach Todd McCarthy went on a time-tripping workout for overall improvement in execution.
**WE ARE PLAYING good basketball right now but there is no doubt that we can win if they play well.**
KU Swimmers Beat Iowa State
The University of Kansas swim team received a scare from Iowa State University but finished strong to defeat the Cyclones on Saturday, and their final meet Saturday in Nebraska at Nortonium.
For the fourth year in a row the victory depended on the winner of the last event, the 404-year freestyle relay. The KU entry for the relay, composed of Allan McDonald, Randy Kancel, Phil Kidd, and Dale Carver, won to clinch the meet victory.
“There’s something about it,” KU Coach Dick Ream said. “It’s almost become a tradition the way this thing goes down to the end. We had places where we could have broken away from them, but for one reason or another we couldn’t.
"I had confidence in our relay," he said.
"It was the first time they were really put under pressure and they showed they could see they're doing it and they're doing it well."
The next action for the team is a dual meet with Nebraska at 2 p.m. Saturday in Lincoln, NC.
A PATH WITH HEART
A PATH WITH ACTION
ACTION- Peace Corps/Visa Recruiters will be on Mt. Oread to talk with Seniors and Grad. Students in all disciplines about opportunities to serve in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Pacific and the USA.
Feb. 11-14
phase of our game that we cannot improve on.
Sign up for interviews NOW!
Educational Placement
Liberal Arts Placement
Engineering Placement
Engineering Placement
"A basketball team either improves or goes down hill; it doesn't stay at the same level. Therefore, it is most important for us to improve on a day-to-day basis."
Colorado defeated KU in the opening round of this year's Big Eight Tournament, 73-71. Scott Wedman, the conference coach, points, something KU is not likely to forget.
"You should learn from every game, and we gained a great deal of respect for them when we lost to them in Kansas City," said Owens.
OWENS SAID that KU would not make any major lineup changes for the game.
"It makes no difference to me and it makes no difference to the team who starts. We play as a team and that is the only way we are going to be successful," he said.
"It just so happens right now we have seven players performing extremely well. Rick Suttle and Tommy Smith are perfectly content to come off the bench. They have been most effective in that capacity and I don't plan to make any changes."
South and Suttle have off the bench in the last three games to score 96 points.
JUNIOR FORWARD Roger Morningstar led the 'Hawk's balanced attack with a 14.2 average. Davenn Knight, center, and Tommy Bentley, right, guarded. Guard Dale Greenlee and reserve
Colorado has been paced by Wedman, who almost led the Buffs to an upset victory against Kansas State Saturday night in a first-round game. scored 19 points as Colorado lost 57-56.
center Rick Suttle are also scoring in double figures; Greenlee at 1.8 and Suttle at 10.5.
Buffs
KU enters the game with a season record of 13-4.
Probable Starting Line-ups:
KANSAS
Brock 6-1
Brock 6-9
Roger Nunstar 6-1
Danny Knight 6-10
Nick Tavle 6-12
Ton Kivlite 6-2
COLORADO
Scott Wedman 8-7
Dave Logan 8-5
Ron Wrigley 8-7
Loe Haven 8-5
Bob Hofman 8-11
KU Dominates Gymnastic Meet
The University of Kansas gymnastics team mounted its highest score in three to defeat Northern Iowa and Kansas in a state-level day afternoon in Robinson Gymnastium.
The KU squad won five out of six events enroute to 155.85 total. Northern Iowa followed with 139.25 and Kansas State managed 113.50.
Coach Bob Lockwood expressed "extreme pleasure" at the team's performance and its improvement over a week ago when he led to Iowa State, 151-136.
^SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA
SUA Popular Films
Film Society THE GIRLS
"THE FILM
IS A
RARITY.
A MOVIE
THE
WHOLE.
FAMILY
CAN
ENJOY."
- Ebony Magazine
Bibi Anderson & Harriet Andersson
Radnitz / MATTEL Productions
Bibi Anderson & Harriet Andersson
Thursday, Feb. 7
7:30
Classical Films
GRAND HOTEL
Greta Garbo
Wednesday, Feb. 6
7:30-9:15
"SOUNDER"
A Robert B. Radhite/Martin Ritt Film
Friday, Feb. 8
7:00:9:30
Saturday, Feb. 9
2:00:4:30 7:00:9:30
Kansas Union
Children's Films
Experimental Films
Experiment
Gate of Hell
d. Kingugas
Monday, Feb. 4
nsas Union 7:30
CHILDREN'S PRINTS
SAMMY, THE WAY
OUT SEAL
Sunday, Feb. 10
1:30
Kansas Union
Miscellaneous Films "IT IS A JOY!"
HAROLD
and MAUDE
GP Color by Technicolor A Paramount Picture
CUSTOM HOME
Tuesday, Feb. 5
7. 30.9.30
Kansas Union
VZNs SWIF VZNs SWIF VZNs SWIF VZNs SWIF VZN2
THE CENTER OF LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES 1974 LATIN AMERICAN FILM SERIES
presents
SIMON OF THE DESERT TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5
PLEASE ENTER YOUR NAME HERE
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
7:30 p.m.
FREE ADMISSION
The story of a man who hopes to spend his life repenting and meditating only to succumb to temptation by the devil.
Based on the life of Simeon
In Spanish (with English subtitles).
Stylites, a 15th century saint.
A lighthouse stands tall against a cloudy sky. The structure is painted in white with black detailing, and it has a lantern on top. Surrounding the lighthouse are patches of grass and rocky terrain.
NU Beats KU, SIU inTrack
Coming Soon- Mexico: The Frozen Revolution
The University of Nebraska track team, on the strength of sweeps in the shot put and 884-yard run, defeated the University of Kansas and Southern Illinois University in a triangular meet Saturday in Allen Field House.
The score was Nebraska 59, KU 55 and Southern Illinois 48.
Outstanding performances for KU were turned in by Mark Lutz, Jay Wagner and Randy Smith. Lutz won the 60-dash dash in 6.3 seconds, Wagner won the 600-yard run in 1:12.9 and Smith won the high jump at six feet eleven inches.
"Nebraska competes terribly well indoors," KU Coach Bob Timmons said. "We're not thrilled with this meet at all. But nine of the conference meet, we'll be better."
Consumer Protection Association Has Vacancies on Its Board of Directors.
Both students and community members are encouraged to apply. Applications available in room 299, Kansas Union, or call 864-3963.
Friday, February 8, 4 p.m.
Use Kansan Classifieds
TAOS
NEW MEXICO
Spring Break on Skis!
MARCH 10-15 $111
Trip Includes:
—Round trip chartered bus
—5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol condominiums, kitchen, fireplace, balcony, sauna
—4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs,
—2900 vertical feet
Group Limited to 42 Persons
For Information Call SUA Office
864-3477
Optional:
—Ski Rental—$28
—Lessons
—Meals—$50
(3 meals/ day)
Payment Deadline: Feb. 13
NO PANIC!
STATISTICS FOR THE EDUCATION
You can read the entire year's Western Civ assignments in the next few weeks and pass the Comprehensive in May!
Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn-
—how to read rapidly (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension
—how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed
—how to make fast, clear, graphic notes
B
P
V
- how to make last, clear, graphic notes
- how to compare and contrast the view of the various writers
—how to organize your thoughts to write an essay
Our Reading Dynamics teacher is a former Western CIV instructor, but this is not a discussion group. It is guided reading. We will begin using Western CIV materials at the Third Reading Dynamics lesson, when you have had some experience in the new skills. Thereafter some of the readings are done in class but most are recruited for the daily home practice in Reading Dynamics.
We will show you the most efficient way to approach each reading. Every week we will check your notes and give you a few questions on the readings so you can see if you are understanding.
WESTERN CIV BEGINS FEBRUARY 14 and meets thursdays, 7-10 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
REGULAR READING DYNAMICS SECTION BEGINS FEB. 12 AND MEETS TUESDAYS, 7-
9:30 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
CALL NOW TO ENROLL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION — 843-6424
M
Hillcrest Shopping Center
evelyn wood reading dynamics
M
A bird walking on a grassy field under a sunny sky.
Forecast: Partly cloudy. High in upper 40s, low in lower 20s.
KANSAN
Baseball Heroes Inspire Teacher
84th Year, No. 83
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 5, 1974
See Story Page 5
Beer Sales Up; Pot Use Down, Victuallers Say
Beer sales have increased recently, partly because students are smoking less marijuana, according to local beer distributors.
Tom Jackson of Lapka, Inc., the Coors distributor in Lawrence, said yesterday that a decrease in local drug traffic was responsible for larger sales of Coors beer.
"Our whole atmosphere has quieted down since two or three years ago," he said.
Cliff McDonald of McDonald Beverage Inc., Lawrence distributor for Budweiser, said the "problem years when people were burning buildings and smoking pot" have passed, causing people to drink more beer now.
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
Ace Johnson, manager of the Stables Tavern, agreed that a shift away from drugs was partly responsible for increased beer sales.
He but said an increase in the number of bars and improved maintenance of bars has been noticed.
Johnson said that he and other local bar owners were taking much better care of their bars and that he spent more than $500 a month on cleaning supplies.
SUPPLY & SERVICE
The 'junior' is the only indispensable per son I've got," he said, "and that includes
Johnson said beer sales had doubled since 1965, but a spokesman for the Bristue Tavern said sales there had increased only slightly.
Mike Eagleman, manager of the Jawhayk Cafe, said beer sales had remained constant for the past few years but increased sharply last year.
People prefer different brands of beer now. Eagleton said.
The manager of the Wagon Wheel Cafe said he noticed a similar shift. He said the ratio of carned beer sales used to be 3 to 10 and that but was now 7 to 1 in favor of Coors.
"It used to be that we'd sell all Bud around here," he said. "Now we're selling
Beer Business Booming
Budweiser is still the most popular brand at the Stables, Johnson said, and it accounts for about 85 per cent of the bar's sales. Johnson said that although Coors had increased in popularity in the past few years, Bud was still "the beer of the KU student."
marijuana smoking in the area. An increase in the number of taverns in Lawrence and better maintenance are also said to contribute to the growing sales.
More schooners and glasses are being filled with beer than in the past few years. Local beer distributors claim that the jump in beer sales is due mostly to a decrease in
University Contemplates Computer Pre-Enrollment
Kansan Staff Reporter
By BETH RETONDE
A plan to replace field house enrollment with computerized pre-enrollment is being studied by the Office of Admissions and Admission Dyk, dean of admissions and records.
There are various forms of manual pre-enrolment already being used by several universities and colleges in Kansas. Some major universities have used computerized pre-enrolment for
Several KU departments have what can be called a "soft" pre-enrollment, where majors in the department list the courses that would like to take during the next semester.
THE LISTING OF A desired course isn't a guarantee that the course will be offered by the department, or that if it is offered, the students who indicated an interest in it will be able to pull a class card during enrolment.
One professor said the purpose of a "soft" pre-enrollment was to allow the department to determine what courses should be offered the following semester.
Another type of pre-enrollment used by some schools at KU is a manual pre-
environment process that guarantees a student a place in a class he signs up for.
According to Hugh Cotton, associate dean of the School of Pharmacy, a pharmacy major consults with his adviser, during the last month of a semester. He selects courses for the pharmacy department and gives a time card to indicate the pharmacy courses he will take the next semester.
AT THE SAME TIME, the pharmacy major lists the supporting courses, such as chemistry, in which he wishes to enroll. Cotton said Friday that the other departments were then told by the school how to proceed. He expected the next semester, for those courses,
He also said he thought the time professors spent at Allen Field House during enrollment week was a waste of their time.
"PRE-ENROLLMENT WOULD be a lot easier than going through the hassle at Allen Field House," Linda Barket, Kansas City, Mp., sohombre said Sunday.
Cotton said that pharmacy students made very few changes in the courses for which they were taught.
The pharmacy school has used this system for six years.
family life major. She said that department had a pre-enrollment process for its majors. During the semester, a student tells the student he will not enroll. Then during semester break, the student
See PRE-ENROLLMENT Page 2
Truckers Negotiate, Drop Kev Demand
By the Associated Press
Federal and state negotiators and representatives of striking independent truckers neared a compromise agreement with the company back to work, sources close to the talks said.
The sources that the truckers presented government mediators with an 11-point list of "minimum acceptable demands" last night, dropping their key demand for a rollback of diesel fuel prices, which had stalled the talks all day.
"The government seemed to be amenable to the proposal," one of the sources said. Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shannon, who has been a candidate for the firm that there was a new proposal on the
CRUCIAL DEMANDS on the list reportedly were authority for truckers to pass increased fuel costs since May on to an additional surcharge, an additional surcharge on existing freight rates. The amount of the surcharge, which remained to be negotiated, was intended to be $1 million.
table but would not comment except to say,
"I'm hopeful we can sell this whole thing
These two financial points were intended to give the truckers immediate financial relief until Congress acts on proposed changes in government-regulated freight rates and some stabilization in fuel prices, the sources said.
White House Papers Show Milk Case Link
WASHINGTON (AP)—Documents released yesterday in connection with a Ralph Nader lawmaker show that Charles W. Hogan, the former governor about a 1971 Justice Department investigation of a dairy cooperative that was donating funds for President Nixon's re-election.
Colson said the antitrust investigation could have "very serious adverse con-
The investigation later was shifted from criminal to civil channels.
The documents also show that John W. Dean III, then the President's official lawyer, followed the progress of the antitrust investigation and prepared a report on
The documents also raise the possibility that White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldenman discussed the case with former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell.
THE DOCUMENTS are the first indication that White House officials took an active interest in the controversial antitrust case.
Previously it had been disclosed that Mitchell turned down repeated requests to join the military, to attend Milden, to learn a federal grand jury investigation of alleged illegal monopoly tactics used by the Associated Milk Producers, Inc. A civil suit was filed in connection.
The milk producers had promised to give $2 million to Nikon's re-election campaign, but the company refused.
McLaren's first request for a grand jury was sent to Mitchell Sept. 9, 1971, according to the former antitrust chief's sworn afdawfat. Fifteen days later Colson, then special counsel to the President, alerted Haldenman to the matter.
"FOR OBVIOUS REASONS, I should not
Ladies' Nights Out Out
By BETH RETONDE
Korean Staff Reporter
Ladies' nights out are on their way out because of a ruling yesterday by the Kansas State University.
The commission ruled that bars that offer reduced prices on beer sold to women discriminate illegally on the basis of sex. The decision was in response to a challenge filed by Bill Quattnerie, Riverside, Ill., first year law student, and Mike Johnson, Kansas City; Mo., senior, against three Lawrence bars; the Bierstein, Tenn., Moe; the Mauldin, Houston, Hampshire St.; and the Stable 1301 W. 7th Hampshire St.; and the Stable 1301 W. 7th
Mert Buckley Criticizes 20% Study
The owners of the Bierstube and the
An investigation of student participation on University policy-making committees was insufficient, according to Mert Buckley. Wichita senior and student body president.
By SUZI SMITH
Kansas Staff Reporter
student representation equal to 20 per cent of the faculty members on the committee.
McLaughlin said members of his committee were instructed to write letters to chairmen of departments and deans of schools to find out whether the required representation was present on their policy-making committees.
Buckley instructed RPR last spring to find out what all policy-making committees were observing the ruling and to enforce the rule where it wasn't be observed.
The Rights, Privileges and Res-
ponsibilities (RPR) Committee of the Student
failed to follow through with its investi-
gation plan. The student cent repre-
sentation, Ruckley and wenderson.
The committee compiled a list of nine departments that hadn't complied with the ruling, according to the investigation report.
Ted Uhlain, owner of the Mad Hatter,
declined to comment because the complaint
against his establishment hadn't been settled.
He said that he was dissatisfied with the work of the committee, but that he was happy with the efforts of the committee chairman, Rick McLaughlin, Dallas junior.
According to a 1970 ruling of the university'sSecurity Commission, the university must have
McLaughlin said those departments were biochemistry, chemistry, economics, and physics.
Stable have agreed to discontinue the special rates, Frank Ross, assistant director of CRC, last night. CRC is still awaiting a report on the investigation of the
However, eight of the nine department chairmen said yesterday that their policymaking committees did have the required student representation. Only three of the nine committees were represented by communication from RPR. The ninth department chairman had no comment.
physics and astronomy, microbiology and philosophy.
However, Ulighin's attorney, Jerry Donnelly, said last night that his client had previously indicated he didn't want to sign a reconciliation agreement to stop having
T. P. Srinivassen, professor of mathematics and chairman of the department, said that student representatives did go to committee meetings, but that the department had had trouble recruiting students to serve on those committees.
The other department heads also said that students serving on policy-making committees should be involved.
Donnelly said he thought the investigation was a waste of taxpayers' money because discrimination more monumental than the effort for women was being practiced elsewhere.
See BUCKLEY Page 2
Donnelly also said he thought an investigator had been at the Malt Hatter twice.
Ace Johnson, owner of the Stable, said yesterday that he had agreed not to have ladies' nights unless there was a change in his team's strategy. His competitors started the practice again.
The Stable had special beer prices for women on Tuesday nights. Women could drink all the beer they wanted for 50 cents but men could drink all they wanted for $2.50.
Johnson said his establishment would stop offering special prices for women. He has agreed to offer the "aggrieved class" discount and to issue a public apology to them.
be involved with respect to the following," Colson said.
He said the ladies' special wasn't intended to be discriminatory but was a kind of affirmative action.
He said the Justice Department was conducting an antitrust probe of dairy cooperatives, without mentioning McLaren's recommendation for a grand
"We don't admit to doing anything
"if this goes too far there will be a number of very serious adverse consequences which I will be glad to elaborate on in detail," Colson said.
"I do think this should be taken up at one of your meetings. I would like to stay out of it."
See LADIES' Page 2
The Nixon administration, meanwhile, asked Congress to allow the Interstate Commerce Commission to speed approval of new regulations which would allow drivers to pass increased fuel costs on to the shipping companies they work for.
In Topeka, Atty. Gen, Vern Miller said late yesterday that truck stops which had quiet selling fuel to trucks along Interstate 70 were resuming sales.
Haldeman and Mitchell met periodically during this time to discuss political matters.
He said agents of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation were checking with operators of the truck stops to insure they receive no charges. The agency has trucks at train transporters who want, to block fuel sales.
The tentative compromise was worked out in private caucuses between W. J. Usery Jr., the federal government's top labor department, and chief negotiators for the truckers.
Miller said truck stops at Salina and elsewhere on the interstate were reopening late in the day after being assured law enforcement officials watched closely for threats of intimidation.
HOWEVER, THERE was no definite assurance that any agreement worked out here would be acceptable to independent truckers striking around the country.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL said about six to eight stations along the interstate had been closed.
Miller's announcement came shortly after Col. William Albott, superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol, confirmed the arrest of the two officers in connection with the truckers' protest.
Abbot said a rock was thrown from an overpass and went through the windshield of a tractor-trailer truck on I-70 about 26 miles west of Topeka. He said it shattered the windshield on the passenger side of the cab but the driver escaped injury.
news capsules / the associated press
In an unprecedent public session, Senate-House conferences yesterday approved a proposal to roll back the price of some domestic crude oil.
Act Approved to Cut Crude Oil Prices
Senate Interior chairman, Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., author of the amendment, said administration by the estimated rollback would reduce the number of people who have to wait.
After the rollback to $2.25 a barrel, prices could be increased only as a result of higher costs and wouldn't in any case be allowed to exceed a ceiling
Tax Urged on Profits from Oil Price Hike
Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz yesterday urged Congress to enact a heavy tax that would cut wind profitoffs from the jumps in crude oil prices, saying that the tax had "cleared up" the supply.
Shultz took a firm stand, however, against a rollback in present crude oil prices. He also brushed off as outrageous suggestions that the United States should not pay for gas.
Nixon Subpoenaed in Ellsberg Case
President Nixon was officially subpoenaed yesterday by Superior Court Judge Roder Ringer to testify in the Ellsberg burglar case.
It was the first time in U.S. history that a state court judge had ordered personal testimony by a president.
The subpoena, requested by former presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman,
ordered the President to appear in a Los Angeles courtroom Feb. 25 and
arrest him.
The White House has said the President will resist the subpoena on constitutional grounds.
White House Still Considering Tape Request
The White House said yesterday that special Watergate prosecutor Leon Inworski's request for more tapes and documents was under consideration.
The matter will be discussed in confidential conversations between the offices of the White House counsel and the prosecutor very soon, Gerald L.
Jaworski said he expected a decision yesterday on his efforts to gain access to more White House material.
Britain's Coal Miners Vote to Strike
Eighty-one per cent of Britain's coal miners voted for a nationwide strike, and the union demanded that they said matter that the only thing that a strike was "more critical than a strike."
The stoppage may begin at midnight Saturday, but the union's 27-man high command is meeting in London today to consider timing in light of the storm.
Nixon Wants 30 More White House Lawyers
President Nixon is seeking appropriations to pay 30 more White House lawyers, as needed, to be added if necessary to the legal staff defending him at Watergate.
A request for funds for 30 unspecified White House jobs was contained in the fine print of the federal budget Nixon sent to Congress Monday.
The budget request didn't list proposed pay levels for the 30 potential new positions. Salaries for attorneys now on the White House legal staff range
2
Tuesday, February 5, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Pre-Enrollment . . .
From Page One
mails to the department a card with the list of courses.
Barket this process indicated to the department that the student would take the course so cards were pulled and reserved for him.
KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY has used a pre-enrollment process for five and one-half years. E. M. Gerritz, dean of admissions and records there, said last week that K-State had changed to pre-enrollment to improve the advising of students and to
make enrollment more convenient for them.
The system at K-State allows the student to select the courses he wants to take, but not the times or teachers he wants to have. Students must be assigned an advising session with a faculty member, enrollment or the actual pulling of class cards, computer assignment to classes and registration and the mechanical operation of equipment and supplying student biographical data.
The timetable of courses is available a
Ladies' Nights Out.
From Page One
wrong," he said. "It was just strictly a business deal."
The owner of the Bierstate refused to comment on the ruling or on the charges of
CPA decided it wouldn't handle the case, but Johnson, a worker at CPA, was interested in the case and decided to pursue it with Outmeier.
He said he and Quitmeir had inquired to several federal and state agencies before the election, where he was about a year ago. He said the Stable tried to justify the reduced rates by saying women were underrepresented.
Quitmeier said he made the complaint while women were campaigning for equal pay and she should stand up for abolition of all discrimination against both men and women. He also said that he thought the women reduced rates was "prostituting females."
Mike Johnson said Quitmeer had gone to the Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) last year to complain about the practice of bursing offering reduced prices to women.
Two members of the University of Kansas track team pleaded innocent yesterday in Douglas County Court to charges of illegal possession of amphhetamines.
Barry Schur, Tuson senior and holder of the Big Eight high jump record, was arrested Friday. Spinner Mark Lutz, Rochester, Minnesota, and Schur's roommate, was arrested yesterday by Douglas County sheriff's officers.
2 Track Stars Face Drug Rap
Each posted $750 bond.
Hearings were set for Feb. 26 for Schur and for Feb. 25 for Lutz.
Last week Lutz was named the outstanding performer in the United States Track and Field Federation championships in Oklahoma City.
semester in advance, Gerritz said. During the semester, a student and his adviser select the student's courses for the next semester. The student then fills out a card containing information. The times he will be available to take them. The class cards are pulled at this time.
Shirley Gilham, director of Affirmative Action, said last night that she thought the reduced rates for women was due to it, suggesting it should be treated people differently in public.
THIS INFORMATION is fed through a computer which assigns the student to a section of the courses he listed and prints out his schedule. The schedule is picked up during the registration process at the beginning of the next semester.
"I wandered when this was going to happen," she said. "When we expect men to give up their special privileges, we should have to expect to give up ours."
Gerritz said the computer kept class sizes equal so that at the end of registration, a person had an equal opportunity of getting into a class.
He said the first semester of computerized pre-enrollment was a mess. That semester only 80 per cent of the students got the exact courses they had pre-enrolled for.
"I was ready to take a boat to Australia," Gerrit said.
Since the first time, the percentage of satisfied students has increased, Gerritz said, and the number of drops and adds has not increased.
Buckley Criticizes . . .
From Page One
their work, but that getting students to serve on the committees was a problem
Buckley said he thought students had to abide by committee decisions if 20 per cent representation was provided for, regardless of the committee's intentives attended the committee meetings.
"By not attending," he said, "they have forfeited their right of representation."
She said she was the only undergraduate who ever attended meetings of the community.
Elizabeth Hogan, Wichita junior and student representative to the College Assembly, said she had noticed widespread problems with the assembly members on committees of the assembly.
Bruce Keplinger, Llenaea senior and member of RPR, said he had written all nine departments on the committee's list at least twice. From some he never received a reply and he therefore assumed they were in compliance with the regulation, he said.
Several departments told Kepler they were in compliance with the regulation, but some of these had graduate teaching and research experience in their policy-making committees, he said.
This practice is in compliance with the letter of the regulation, Keeperi said, but it was not used.
Both Keplinger and McLaughlin said the committee's investigation was severely hampered by a lack of diligence on the part of many committee members.
Keplinger said the committee began its investigation last spring with 17 working
members and only four or five were still involved last fall.
Buckley said he thought that if it was found that some schools weren't practicing the 20 per cent student representation, suit would be brought before the University Judiciary.
A committee member was charged with finding out how such a suit could be brought, Keplinger said, but that member never came back to committee meetings.
Any student who felt he was not adequately represented on a policy making committee was denied access.
McLaughlin said he had tried to check up on his committee's work but had had time to write or call only about 80 per cent of the committee that were investigated by the committee.
correction
State Rep. Lloyd Buszi, R-Lawrence, was incorrectly quoted in the Tuesday's Kansas as favoring raises of only 8.5 per cent for University of Kansas faculty members. The University favored the 10 per cent raises recommended by the Kansas Board of Regents.
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Tuesday, February 5, 1974
3
New Minibus to Increase Services to City's Aged
By BOB MARCOTTE
Kanxan Staff Reporter
Another "Bus'62" will be on the streets of Lawrence soon to serve the transportation needs of the city's approximately 4,500 elderly people, according to Ralph Purton, president of the Douglas County Council on Aving.
The new minibus will join the council's other "bus 62" as soon as modifications on it have been completed in Kansas City, Turner said Friday at a news conference. It will accommodate 12 passengers and will continue the transportation service for people 62 years or older that was begun when the council launched the first minibus v. 14
That bus is now serving about 40 to 60 persons a day five days a week, Turner said, and the demand for its services has been even greater.
The unique thing about the minibus service, according to Turner, is its flexibility. People who want to ride the bus make their reservations one day in advance, and the bus is routed accordingly the next day. It's the kind of service, he said, that "can go right to the person's door—about as close as you can get."
THE KIND OF SERVICE, according to Cal Broughton, one of the drivers for "Bus 62" means that older people don't have to stand on a corner for 10 minutes waiting for a bus. It also serves a social need, he said, and is more likely that their neighbors are when they ride the bus.
The service provides for a number of transportation needs, including trips to the doctor, the grocery store, the bank or post office, and social events. Buse fare is 25 cents each way, according to John Donne, an administrator with the council. Organized
trips to other cities can also be scheduled.
trips to other cities can also be scheduled. The addition of the new minibus is only part of a comprehensive plan to expand services to the elderly in Lawrence, Turner may consider the council plans to begin a regular program of noon meals for elderly persons.
IN NORTH LAWRENCE the meals will be served two days a week at Ballard Center and three days a week at Centenary United Methodist Church at 3th and Elm streets, which are offered all five days by the American Baptist Campus center at 1629 W. 19th St.
The meals will be available to people 62 and older, Turner said, at whatever cost the people can afford to pay. The two minibuses are available for those who need transportation.
The council plans to serve 25 people at each location at the beginning of the period, and will continue to serve persons interested in the meals should make reservations in advance through the council.
OLETHA BLEVINS, a member of the council, and the meals would serve both a boy and a girl.
The noon meals, she said, will give the elderly a chance to get out, meet friends and have dinner. It also is important nutritional value because many elderly people neglect regular eating
"They don't realize how far eating only rice and oat has brought them down," they said.
The noon meal program should help relieve the burdens that have been placed on the Lawrence Meals on Wheels program, Turner said. Meals on Wheels is primarily intended for people who are unable to leave their homes or who require a special diet.
The social opportunities that will be provided in the noon meals program may encourage people to get off the Meals on Wheels waiting list.
TURNER SAID that money for the noon meals and transportation services would be provided by federal and city funds and a $2,500 contribution from the Lawrence
Wescoe Hall Lights Defy Energy Crisis
In spite of the energy crisis, some of the hotels in Wescoe Hall can't be turned off
As a result of state legislation last year the Douglas County council was incorporated into the Capitol Area Agency on Aging, which is centered in Topoke. One of the requirements of the state legislation, Turner said, was that the council provide a comprehensive nutritional program as well as transportation service.
Complaints about lights that wouldn't respond to switches were first made by instructors who wanted to show films in totally darkened rooms.
Harry M. Buchholz, director of the physical plant, said yesterday that some of the lights in auditoriums and large classrooms were wired into emergency circuits so that a power failure would cause the system to switch automatically to standby power.
Buchholz said some of the lights in the larger rooms and in starwars were wired to blue light.
mutting evacuation in case of a total blackout. He also said that lighting was maintained in stairwells for security reasons and lighting in hallways did pose a disadvantage.
"The night watchmen tell me it's easier to detect smoke if all the lights are out."
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Tuesday, February 5, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Institutional Blues
Adjusting to life within the shelter of the University isn't always easy, but some students have it tougher than others.
I was on my way to Strong Hall when I ran into a friend who seemed to fit into the hard luck category.
"just tell me one thing," she said. "Will the rest of the next seven semesters be like this last one?"
"Oh, I suppose so." I said. "Why do you want to know?"
"Well, Patty, I'm glad to see you're still around after your first semester. How did you like it?" I asked.
"it's just that there's so much to learn," she said, sighing deeply. "It wasn't until last week that someone told me you don't have to dial the '8' and the '6' of a campus when you're calling from the dorm."
"That's an interesting little bit of knowledge." I said.
"Another thing. I never have found my adviser. Do you happen to know where Wescoe Hall is?" she asked.
"It's right over there," I said, pointing it out.
"I thought that it was a parking garage," she said, her eyes big with surprise. "But believe it or not, I have to lie down in the hang of things around here."
"Oh, really." I said doubtfully.
"Uhuh. Last fall I worked out my enrollment schedule by myself and signed my adviser's initials. And although I was in the last group to enroll, I managed to attend a very interesting classes," she said.
"You did?" I said. "I'm amazed."
"I took Elementary Plant Survival, Candmaking I, a class on reading "Finnegan the Wake," Topics and Problems of Adoption in History, history class", she said, as she counted them off on her fingers.
"Hmmm," I murmured. "What an interesting combination."
"Well, my history class turned out to be especially good," she said, "after they finally found an instructor for it."
what do you mean?" I asked. "It turned out that although my class was listed in the timetable and students were allowed to enroll in it, the history department hadn't scheduled a class at that time. When they found someone to teach me, I missed the last 20 minutes because I had to go to another class but I really learned a lot," she said, nodding her head vigorously.
"What was wrong with you and me?" he looked, not really wanting to know
"Oh, nothing much," she said.
"One of my classes wasn't listed at all, I got an incomplete in a class in which I did everything required and I got an A in a class I wasn't taking."
"You know," she said. "I'm glad I talked to you. Now that I think about it, my semester hasn't been too bad. Of course they still haven't straightened out my grades yet, but I'm sure they will."
"That shouldn't be too much
trouble to correct," I said skeptically.
"No, I'm sure my adviser will take care of everything, as soon as I find him," she said as she walked away. "You know, this certainly isn't like high school. Here, you're on your own."
"I guess so." I muttered.
I began walking back to Strong Hall. I knew it wouldn't be easy to drop and add enough classes to come up with a good schedule.
Maybe I should have talked to my adviser. After all, surely there must be some other freshman-level class I could have taken without having to re-read "Finnegan's Wake."
—Linda Doherty
Guest Editorial
Slurs Spur Interest
The Western world is anxiously awaiting the arrival of Alexander Solzhentysn's documentation of Soviet slave-labor camps, "The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956."
The book is based on Solzhentyn's experiences as an inmate in a labor camp from 1945 to 1956 and information from 227 other ex-orisoners.
Pravda, the official newspaper, recently discredited the book as "slam-making," and called it a treasonable in an attempt to protect Russia's image as a progressive society. These condemnations only augment in Solzhenitsy's indictment of the Soviet
Solidarność calls for the punishment of the more than 250,000 people responsible for the killings.
In the book, Solizhenitsy, who won the 1971 Nobel Prize for literature, reportedly reveals the diabolical conditions and terror in slave-camps under Stalin and Lenin. Solizhenitsy estimated that in any one year during the Stalin era as many as 12 million prisoners were held, half million political prisoners were shot during the Red Army murders of 1937-38.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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Initially, the Russian totalitarian world responded inductively to "The Gulag Archapeglapo." It was a only matter of days, however before a diatribe in the guse of Soviet press was made against Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
When Radio Liberty announced its decision to broadcast the entire edition of the book, the Soviet police state immediately jammed the airwaves to thwart the dissemination of the Gulg Ar-chaos" to people within Russia's domain.
trymen. His demand for punishment extends to members of the Poliburo and hierarchy "stained with our blood." The charge embraces such leaders as Foreign Minister Andrea Gromyko and Vyacheslav M. Molotov, foreign minister under Stalin.
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Nationwide telecasts accused him of a "Malicious slander against our socialist state." Tass, the Soviet news agency, and others have called for relying on distortions and prevarications.
The agitation of the Soviet regime will toment in the next few months when "the Guilai Archipelago" appears in translation with the term "peaceful co-existence" may reevaleunt their positions. Empathy for the unfortunate peoples behind the Iron Curtain will be tested.
The Soviet Union insulted the intelligence of the Western world with the contrivance that Solzhenitsyn authorized the publication of himself merely to jeopardize East-West relations.
"I have fulfilled my duty to the dead, and this gives me relief and calmness," he once said. "Once the truth seemed to die. It was beaten. It was drowned. It had turned to ashes. But now the truth has come alive. No one will be able to destroy it."
Meanwhile Alexander Solzhenitsyn awaits his fate courageously.
Stephen Buser
Belleville, Ill., junior
Clinic Treats Tobacco Cravers
Smokers Electrically Shocked, Gassed for $375
By CHARLES FOLEY
The London Oh
SAN FRANCISCO- An hour's drive from San Francisco, deep in the beautiful Napa Valley wine country, lies one answer to cigarette smoking.
The St. Helen Health Center, a luxurious hotel-like clinic with a swimming pool and a large staff of physicians, psychiatrists, social workers, physical therapists and clergymen, is doing a splendid business curing nicotine addicts at a $350 anice.
Treatment at the center lasts from Sunday to Friday, and although the doctors guarantee nothing, they claim that the odds of quitting are the best available in the nation.
Despite the massive assault on smoking since 1964, when the U.S. surgeon-general's report warned that cigarettes were linked to lung cancer and heart ailments, some 50 million Americans just cannot give it up. In fact, they're smoking more than ever: each year, domestic tobacco consumption rises by 2 per cent, and the barrage of anti-smoking commercials on television and radio increases. Curtis' sex life improved when he quit the weed—apparently does little to stem the tide.
says Dr. Alan Rice, the program director. "We help people over the worst of their addiction, but they still have to work to combat their neuromuscular smoking habits"—by which he means that automatic buttons on his phone that's become an internal part of existence.
About 40 per cent of St. Helena patients are cured, and if you think that is low you are unfamiliar with the addictive capacities of tobacco, which some experts have described as harder to kick than benzine. The body cells make a working agreement with their刹车, tolerate, then access and finally demand their daily dose of poison.
"Surveys have shown that we do have one of the highest success rates in the U.S."
How is the craving beaten? A stay at this clinic, one of scores across the country, begins when the patient dumps his cigarette at the door, under a notice reading: "You are re-entering a non-smoking area: deposit smoking materials here."
Their day starts with a 6:30 a.m. call and pre-breakfast exercise—cathlethenics in the gym, or a brisk walk through the woods. Then come lectures and films describing the fearful nicotine does to the body (one movie shows a mouse being killed by a single drop), and providing information on techniques to combat the craving.
The threat of the program is three-fold: a protective environment where nothing can
interfere with the goal—no family crises, no work problems, no parties, and no trace of tobacco for miles; medical care from experts in the field; and the pressure of a likeminded group going through the same suffering.
its use is increasing rapidly here against a
range of mental, and drug
addiction.
The first major commercial apperance of aversive conditioning comes courtesy of Schick Laboratories, a division of the Los Angeles-based Frawley Enterprises, which has dotted the west with anti-smoking clinics.
Without a tobacco fix, there are withdrawn symptoms—headaches, a feeling of exhaustion, a fierce craving for food, which leads to beating by plenty of fresh fruit around.
Doctors at the center explain that the craving, like pain, comes in waves and usually lasts for about three minutes. If you do something practical for those minutes, the craving will subside, and the smoker is over one more hurdle. If you're a believer, try to buy a fire a stack, fiercely at your watch for these three minutes; master your fate.
The crucial test, of course, is one's reemergence into the everyday world of tension and stress. This is especially true that you avoid a drink, coffee, over-eating and over-working, since these are associated in the mind with smoking. A different regimen will help you to overcome this.
Should you fail, there is an even harsher "cure," to which more and more Californians are turning. Aversion therapy is highly controversial in medical circles, but
The Schick technique is simple and nasty: hard-core火雾, puffing away in a fadet haze of fire雾 fumes, are given repeated electric shocks every time they reach for another cigarette; next they gather in a small, sealed room full of fellow-addicts and together an atmosphere so dense as to make them rasp. Finally, there is expert conditioning, and a course of extra shocks for those who fall from grace within a year.
The cost, for five one-hour sessions, is $325, and the Schick people claim that 65 percent of the clients become non-smokers after the year, a figure regarded with skepticism by some doctors and behavioral psychologists.
"It really works well only when the patient is highly-motivated to stop performing the unwanted activity," says one of the surgeons. "And even then it tends to wear off in time."
Colombian Cocaine Traffic Thrives
By STEPHEN KLAIDMAN
BOGOTA, Colombia-An American was arrested recently by Colombian authorities in the steamy provincial capital of Cali. He was indicted for 89-per-cent-pure cocaine in his possession.
His future is now uncertain, but the future of his cocaine is not. It will be destroyed and become part of the still-sketchy statistical record being compiled on cocaine traffic through Colombia, virtually the only transshipment point to the United States from the coca-growing areas of Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru.
The traffic involves thousands of persons and millions of dollars. According to U.S. officials who keep close watch on narcotics trade, it rivals heroin in volume, with 700 to 1,500 pounds a month being shipped into the United States.
In some ways it is harder to control than the more publicized heroin traffic. Turning poppies into heroin is a fairly complex process involving relatively sophisticated chemical know-how. But refining cocaine is much more than a bunch of bottles in a kitchen.
Partly because of its price and quality, cocaine has become something of a status
drug. Its growing use among the affluent may be because cocaine users, unlike heroin users, don't become physically addicted to the druid.
Cocaine isn't a narcotic, and the unwieldy injection paraphernalia of the heroin addict is unnecessary. "Coke" is just sniffed up the nostril for an instant high. It acts as an extremely powerful stimulant to the central nervous system; heroin is a depressant.
But large cocaine dosages can be lethal. They often induce uncontrollable, paranoid behavior, and cocaine's long-term effects are unknown.
Because the process is simple, the
СОЛОВЫЙ СПОРТ
BLU
ST
"BUS SERVICE IN MOSSON IS LOOSE, SOMEDAY I'M GOING TO WRITE A BOOK."
business has attracted large numbers of free-lance operators, thus making it difficult to keep track of the proliferating trade is dominated by organized crime.
Cost is another factor that makes cocaine trafficking easier for the freelancer. The paste made from coca leaves, which is to cocaine what morphine base is to heroin, is relatively inexpensive. A small-time operator with a few thousand dollars can set himself up in business. This isn't the case with heroin.
Another advantage for the small cocaine dealer is the availability of carriers in Colombia, a poor country where most workers earn less than $100 a month. Most Colombians can make more as dishwashers in New York or Miami than they can at home, regardless of what they do. So they try to get to the United States.
Hundreds apply daily to tourists visit at the American embassy in Bogota and at the consulates in Cali and Medellin. The Colombians hope to reach the States as legal tourists and then disappear into the Latin barriers of big cities and find work.
Colombia has considerable geographical and logistical advantages for smugglers cocaine to the United States. To start with, Colombia is one of the world's leading sources of the raw material.
In Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru—the supplier countries—Indians have traditionally chewed the plentiful coca leaves, breaking them down chemically with lime juice, to relieve colds and fatigue and to supplement inadequate diets.
Peruvian Indians use the word "ocada" to measure time and distance: It is the length of a ocacia "high"—about 40 cm. They can walk while a couple of miles.
When it arrives at its U.S. destination, the cocaine is cut to between 20 per cent and 60 per cent pure and sold on the streets for $10-$20 a unit. It is then mixed to about 2 per cent, is sold for $6-$8 a bag
State of Union
To the Editor:
Readers Respond
Listening to President Nixon present his State of the Union message, I was encouraged to hear that this was going to be a prosperous year.
It was so comforting to hear him tell how many new jobs were created last year. It was reassuring to know that our money bought more now than it ever has.
However, some of you may not have heard him speak. So you may still think that
It was promising to hear the President exclaim how important education was to this country and how much money was available in federal funds to our universities.
There won't be a recession and we Americans needn't worry.
President's Speech, Film Censorship Disputed
Griff and the Unicorn
by Sokoloff
WORLD, EVERYTHING'S
GETTING COMMERCIALIZED!
ALL ANYONE WANTS TO DO
IS ADVERTISE!
DON'T YOU WANT TO
SAY ANYTHING ABOUT IT?
I CERTAINLY DO
WANT TO SAY SOMETHING
ABOUT IT...
...RIGHT AFTER THIS
WORD FROM OUR
SPONSOR ...
You may still think that student wages of $1.60 to $2 an hour, which haven't increased in years, don't compete with the rampant price inflation usuring your check.
You may still think that you can't afford to buy eggs at the supermarket, and that bologna costs more than steak did awhile ago.
You may still think that it is more difficult to obtain federal loan money for education than to borrow
it is harder to find a job now than it has been in several months.
If you didn't hear Nixon's address, then you are probably as depressed as I was before I heard it. May I suggest that you write the Library of Congress for a copy of his speech so that you, too, need no longer worry.
In the meantime, however, you may remain concerned about the inflated costs of education, food and rent, and paying for them with your student wages, if indeed, you have been fortunate enough to obtain employment at all.
Darwin Eads Meade graduate student
Darwin Eads
Porn: British Poll
To the Editor:
In view of some recent correspondence in connection with the enforced withdrawal of certain indecent films, I thought one of your readers might be interested in passing from a letter published by Mary Whitehouse, Hon. General Secretary of the (British) National Viewers' and Listeners' Association. The information is contained in "Sunday Times" in its issue of January 27,
1
"At least twice last week we saw in your paper the pelagic generalization at work. First, in Alan Lawn's self-pitying letter in *The American Week*, he said that the 'majority of the voting public believes that ... an adult should be able to vote' for the abolition of all obscurity laws."
under the heading "Porn: the articulate majority."
"In neither case is the generalization based upon fact or research. Alan Lawson accuses those who believe that pornography should be controlled of being 'elistit' and 'reactionary.' But the pressure for total license comes primarily from ellist, self-interested groups, many of whom have vast interests in pornography, only acquire in, but actively exploit, the degradation of humanity which is the essence of pornography; is a measure not only of our corruption, but of the truly reactionary nature of our society. . . .
"We have carried out research—probably the most comprehensive of its kind—involving well over one and a half million interviews of every age and background, which showed that 85 per cent of citizens wanted tighter obesity laws."
Herbert Galton Professor of Slavic and Soviet Affairs
Nagging Questions
To the Editor:
I applaud your worthy expression of opinion regarding the SUA film matter and your comments on pornography. I think that a more important matter to the
University, however, has yet to be resolved. The question, which has still not been answered satisfactorily by any of the people involved in the budgetary considerations in Topека, can be directly or indirectly influenced by state legislators at their whims.
University, however, has yet to be resolved.
The SUA board very honestly said that it did not consider censorship in its decision to cancel the films. The board did not say whether it should have had two students, not two state senators, objected to the showings. It is a question that should be answered frankly by the board, by Kansas Union employees informed by our university administration.
The implications of the situation, if they are not fully explained and if all doubt is not removed by the parties involved, will remain until) the complete story is told.
Bill Redlin
Lawrence graduate student
letters policy
The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no larger than 120 characters, subject to editing and condensation, 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 must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 5.1974
5
Baseball, Its Heroes Are Subjects of New Lit Course
By STEVEN W. LEWIS
Kanan Staff Reporter
Stan "the Man" Musial was all there was in the far as far as young James Carothers was
Carothers, a St. Louis boy, would get a special thrill at the ballpark watching the Man bat. He kept close watch over the Man's statistics and even, for a while, attempted to mimick the Man's famous watting stance.
Stan the Man is gone now. He retired after the 1963 season.
As for James Carothers, he's now an assistant professor of English at the University of Kansas. But Carothers' love for baseball hasn'tebt. He put together this semester is teaching a course called "The Literature of Baseball."
Carobers and Friday that baseball literature, whether fiction or journalism, can offer great value.
believe in-the baseball hero, clean-living and successful denote adversity.
But something has happened to the slugging heroes. Whereas the press used to protect baseball heroes from bad publicity, Carothers said, today it no longer does; recent books, such as Jim Boston's "Ball Four," tend to debunk heroes.
CAROTHERS SAID his youthful ideals were once shaken by a Saturday Evening post article by home-run-struger Baseball for Money, not Fun."
Baseball hero-worship is changing, Carothers said. The sport is no longer the national pastime that it was when Babe Ruth, Joe Dmaggio and Musial were clearing the bases, Henry Aaron, despite his incredible 713 career home runs, trails modern heroes who are rock 'n' roll singers, Carothers said.
Gas Allotment Reduced; KU Cars Run on Credit
The gasoline shortage has caused some inconvenience for the department of building and grounds, but so far no vehicles have been without gasoline, Harry M. Buchholz, director of the University of Kansas physical plant, said yesterday.
Bau-jhölz said that a 50 per cent reduction in gasoline delivered to the University forced many University vehicles to be filled at service stations. He said this was because he had been based on a smaller number of vehicles actually used. University gas.
"When the allotment was made we were filling building and ground vehicles, some vehicles from housing and some pool cars, water canals, and some vehicles filling up at our pumps," Buchholz said. "In three months we used up over half a year's supply, so we had to go to credit card companies."
Buchholz said that about 100 vehicles had filled regulatory at University pumps last year, and that gasoline deliveries had averaged 1,800 gallons a week.
This year, he said, delivered totals 900 gallons a week, but only trucks, tractors and mowers used by building and grounds workers. The number of vehicles was purchased with credit cards.
Burchols said the University purchased its bulk gasoline from Raymond E. Polk, a major provider of ethanol.
"So far he's been delivering gasoline
every time we call him," Buchholz said.
"We've had to wait a day or two sometimes."
Buchholz said that under the energy guidelines issued last year the University might be able to get up to 80 per cent of the previous contract, instead of 50 per cent.
in brief
Watson Extends Hours
Carothers compared baseball literature to western, mystery and science fiction literature. But he said baseball literature was usually very bad.
Watson Library and the science libraries have changed their Saturday hours to 9 a.m.
The libraries received financial aid from the administration to fund the extended hours.
Don Haines Wins Award
Don Haines, professor of civil engineering, has been selected "chapter honor member" by the Kansas Chapter of the National civil engineering bonaroy society.
"A GREAT BULK of baseball literature is produced by working journalists who have to meet a deadline, "Carothers excerpts from interviews," to polish and reflect on their writing."
The award is given for professional accomplishments in civil engineering.
Carothers said there were more than 100 nonfiction bookse in the Lawrence Public Library, and most of them describe individuals and teams of significance today.
"When Vida Blue had contact problems with Charlie Finley," he said, "immediately someone signed him to write his autobiography. Blue was only 21 years old."
Not all baseball books are commercial products, however. Carothers said that he has spent over a half-century "The Natural" by Bernard Malamud could casly appear on any list of the 100 greatest books.
*YOU KNOW MME AL,* *CAROtter laddu*, is a **SYSTEM** of **MESH**; Carotter laddu is, i.e. **YOU KNOW MME AL,** *CAROtter laddu*.
Carothers said there should be more great baseball novels because the sport was ripe for literary exploitation. "If Moby Dick, a book about a whale, could be one of the classics of the 19th Century, Carothers said, is as easily as a classic of the 20th Century."
Carotthers said baseball appealed to him because the sport involved a combination of individual and team characteristics. He played for the Pittsburgh baseball didn't have an eutense of violence.
"In baseball, rhubarbis are comic scenes," he said. "There isn't a lot of hitting. Baseball feels threatened by genuine violence. It's more a leisurely sport."
CAROTHERS PLANNED for 30 students in his "Literature of Baseball" class. Ninety enrolled. He said it was "absolutely essential" that the course not be a "pud." Course requirements include 12 texts, a show, a mid-term and final examination.
The large enrollment, Carothers said, indicates a continued fascination with baseball, despite the national decline of the sport.
"When baseball teams have to give away bats and balls, they're in trouble." Carothers said. "The problem is greedy players and owners. The constant franchise
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SENIORS AND GRADS
You are needed now for summer and fall volunteer positions in the USA and abroad. Register by email or call 514-292-3836 PLACEMENT OFFICE, Summerfield Hall, Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 11-12
Festival of the Arts
March 24-30,1974
1500 TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR ALL SEVEN NIGHTS
$^7^{00}$ FOR Entire Package
Individual Ticket Prices:
Package Coupons Now Available at SUA Office Coupon Holders Will Have First Choice of Seats Individual Night Ticket Sales Start March 4
Kansas City Philharmonic . . . . . 1 $ 2^{50} $
William Friedkin . . . . . . . . . . . 150
A Funny Thing Happened on
The Way to the Forum . . . . . . . . 200
National Folk Ensemble of Nigeria . 2 $ ^{0 0} $
Ozark Mountain Medicine Show . . . 3⁰
Les Blank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
Pointer Sisters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
TOTAL '16 $ ^ { \circ } $
an SUA production
Hoch Auditorium
shifting disillusions people."
CAROTHERS ALSO CTED a lack of open spaces within cities as another reason for the decline of baseball. He said the demise of sandlot ball, coupled with the rise of such sports as basketball, had contributed to baseball's loss of appeal.
He said that baseball was hurting also because it didn't televeise well. High fly bails, he said, aren't as spectacular on television as they are in person.
The expenses of actually going to see a game today discourage attendance,
But Carothers was reluctant to predict the death of baseball. He said that to do so would be like predicting the death of the theater.
"The World Series is still the most exciting thing in sports," he said. "The Super Bowl is not."
Becoming a physician is a tremendous satisfaction. Let us give you the job satisfaction that should go with it.
Whether you're still in medical school with the rigen of three years, be sure you are making progress before you can already practice physician, it's our opinion that the Air Force can offer both professional and personal satisfaction to military medical students.
An overstatement? Not if you consider the specifics.
Take the problem of graduate medical education to its next level by considering easier with comfortable salary and invigorating benefits.
Creature comforts aside the Air Force offers professional advantages. Besides receiving training in a medical specialty, physicians in all of the medical specialists, You'll function in an environment which is intellectually stimulating.
Not all physicians parure post residence fellowships. But if you are interested, the Air Force concludes that it is better to parure with a
The physician already in practice can look forward to other things. If you want training in the field of medical technology, you are in the Air Force. For example, there's emphasis on group medicine and preventive medicine, and the growing specialization of "family physician". Whatever your interest, these physicians which are not trained in today's Air Force
The physician starting his practice in civilian
tax to take into account the cost of setting up
a pharmacy.
Whether you are already a physician, or soon to become one, you might find it extremely interesting to find out what the Air Force has to offer. We think you will benefit from having someone else on hand, we will be happy to send you detailed information.
the Air Force does not. He finds his office established for him. Supplies and equipment readily available, and he is well trained in medical patients. For example, he can consult with Air Force specialists. He also has referral to other Air Force specialists. The more experience he has, the least are the satisfaction that come with having the opportunities for regular follow-ups, and a missed opportunity.
Air Force Ops Information C/C 28
Person ID: 101414
Please send me information on the Air Force Personnel Program
I understand there is no obligation.
Name Person Fname Sex M/ F Lg.
Address Person Fname Sex M/ F Lg.
City State Zip Phone
Nur. Sec. # Date of Birth
Health Care at its best.
Air Force.
--evelyn wood reading dynamics
NO PANIC!
ANNE LAPERINO
You can read the entire year's Western Civ assignments in the next few weeks and pass the Comprehensive in May!
Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn-
—how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed
—how to read rapidly (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension
—how to make fast, clear, graphic notes
—how to compare and contrast the view of the various writers
—how to organize your thoughts to write an essay
Our Reading Dynamics teacher is a former Western Civ instructor, but this is not a discussion group. It is guided reading. We will begin using Western Civ materials at the third Reading Dynamics lesson, when you have had some experience in the new skills. Thereafter some of the readings are done in class but most are scheduled for the daily home practice in Reading Dynamics.
We will show you the most efficient way to approach each reading. Every week we will check your notes and give you a few questions on the readings so you can see if you are understanding.
WESTERN CIV BEGINS FEBRUARY 14 and meets thursdays, 7-10 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
REGULAR READING DYNAMICS SECTION BEGINS FEB. 12 AND MEETS TUESDAYS, 7-
9:30 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
CALL NOW TO ENROLL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION—843-6424
M
Hillcrest Shopping Center
M
---
6
Tuesday, February 5, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Red Dog Dies, Rises as Free State
By CAROL GWINN
The Red Dog is dead.
But, under new management and renamed the Free State Opera House, came back to life Saturday night as Jimmie Spheers performed soft ballads and folk-
Spheres is only the first of many changes coming to the Free State Opera House, according to one of its managers, Karen Guild.
"We're going to kill the nightclub look," she said last week. "We don't want to look
"So much inside had been demolished. We're getting rid of the red and the black on the inside and we'll eventually replace the carpeting."
Her husband, Bob Gould, assistant
on campus
Young Democrats of KU will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Regionalist Room of the
I. J. Stoneback, Douglas County commissioner, will speak.
The National Ballet of Washington will appear at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium as part of the KU Concert Series. The company will perform the ballet
KU students will be admitted free with their identification cards. Ticket information is available at the ticket office in Murphy Hall.
professor of architecture and urban design and co-manager of the opera house, will handle maintenance. She said that they had a large team of professionals Free State in shape before the concert.
THE MAIN OBSTACLE, she said, had been cleaning up the place. She said they had had some trouble obtaining a beer from the bar, and violation of the building, especially the urinals.
"We now have everything in working order," she said.
During the school year the Free State will have the same type of entertainment that it had previously under the Red Dog Inn management.
Roger Aldis, co-manager of the Free State and Bob Gouda's business partner, will book the bands. He said he planned on booking such groups as Sugarloaf, Ace Trucking, Co., Flash Cadillac, Chubby Checkers and Roy Clark.
"I feel a manager should get as much variety as possible for the public," Aldis said, "from a circus to the Stan Kenton orchestra."
ADIS SAID HE WAS GOING to try to have
at least one dance group a week and a
week's worth of dancing.
"Spheris fell in love with the place,"
Aldis said. he was in Friday night. A friend of his who had seen it before was amazed. The word gets around pretty fast."
He said that he didn't think that the Red Dog imit a past appearance would hinder his performance.
Aldis said that one change was having champagne and fresh fruit in the dressing rooms of the performers. The Red Dog Inn lacked dressing rooms.
"They used to use the basement," he said. During the summer, Gould said, they plan on converting the Free State into a dinner theater, which would offer plays after dinner. The plays would be performed by KU theater groups.
THE FREE STATE WAS originally used to the University of Kansas for theater productions.
Treat your sweetheart to a
T
What better way is there to celebrate this special day than a dinner out with your special someone? The Castle provides delicious home cooking, personal service, and a relaxing atmosphere. A dinner at the Castle will be a dinner to remember.
Make reservations early at the Castle
Valentine's Day Dinner
Make Reservations early 843-1151
The Castle Tea Room
The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence Reservations Suggested
The historical significance of the building is important to Gould and her associates, who said that they were looking for the original name of the building when they discovered another name, Free State Opera House.
ceremonies before Hoch Auditorium was built.
GOULD SAID THAT her husband and Aldis had been looking for business offices when they decided to lease the Free State, a lot of office room above the theater hall.
"We thought the Free State Opera house was the original Red Dog name," she said, but the Eldridge Hotel was originally a public place and was originally called Liberty Hall.
"It was an architectural challenge for Bob," she said.
Gould said that they were putting up super-graphics, which are large, simple designs like the giant black and white arches, in the Eldridge Hotel.
Friday, February 8, 4 p.m.
"The people at the bank across the street are super-happy that the Red Dog isn't going to be a drug hangout, which I think it had sort of turned into," Gould said. "We just want to make it a place where everyone ought to be able to go."
"There'll be lots of plants in the foyer." "Could you said, which people will probably put them?"
Application deadline:
Gould said they had already painted the door orange and put simple white tile in the molding.
Consumer Protection Association Has Vacancies on Its Board of Directors. Both students and community members are encouraged to apply. Applications available in room 299, Kansas Union, or call 864-3963.
SUA Popular Films
"THE FILM
IS A
RARITY.
A MOVIE
THE
WHOLE
FAMILY
CAN
ENJOY."
-Ebony
Magazine
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA-
"SOUNDER"
A Robert B. Badouri/Martin Ruy Slim
Radnitz / MATTEL Productions
Friday, Feb. 8
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 9
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
Kansas Union
LE BONHEUR
d. Varda
Monday, Feb. 11
864-3477
SUA
in you want to volunteer to help others travel, please stop by. All our programs are planned by students.
Film Society
THE GIRLS
Bibi Anderson & Harriet Andersson
Thursday, Feb. 7
7:30
Classical Films
GRAND HOTEL
Greta Garbo
Wednesday, Feb. 6
7:30-9:15
Kansas Union 75c
Our students and staff are here to help you with your travel ideas—hopes—plans. Please check with us.
Children's Films
SAMMY, THE WAY
OUT SEAL
Sunday, Feb. 10
1-90
( is it legal? a gimmick? how much really? who? who? doesn't one know you history? will it kill it? how many hours do I work in Paris? where will it live and with whom who is the real organizer? who's making TOC-TR-CT-R-ABC-ATC?)
1:30 Kansas Union
(*guides to inexpensive US accommodations—to foreign student/youth hostels—student chart flights within Europe/Africa/Afghanistan*)
*student chart flights within Europe/Africa/Afghanistan*
Miscollaneous Films "IT IS A JOY!"
- counsel on evaluating "offers"
HAROLD and MAUDE
Tuesday, Feb. 5
GP Color by Technicolor
A Paramount Picture
Sara Saini
how to save
Kansas Union
VAGABONDING abroad? at home?
A man with a large backpack and a long stick.
Maybe we can help—
(work abroad—live with a family—group travel—hitch—Railpass—
bike-host—study-disappear—play tourist-vagabond)
(passport—international student id—visas—hostel pass—international drivers license)
*how to prove who you are
*what to do there*
JUNIOR WOMEN
So that Mortar Board might know you, please complete the information sheet you will receive in the mail, and return it to D.O.W. office. If we fail to reach you by mail, please pick up an information form; these forms will be filled in your confidential folder for job references, etc. The deadline is Feb. 15, 1974.
You, as a student of the University of Kansas with 50 or more hours, are eligible for membership in Torch Chapter of Mortar Board, Inc. Mortar Board, Inc., is a senior women's honor society, which selects its members on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and service to the university and community.
Among Mortar Board's service projects this year is sponsorship of a series of forums dealing with life after graduation. Included in the series is a multimedia presentation on women's self-defense which was prepared by students in Hashinger Hall in conjunction with the Dean of Women's office. It will be shown numerous times this semester and in the future for the benefit of K.U. women.
If you would like to recommend a junior woman for Mortar Board, please contact Judy Long, president, at 842-8072.
ALL Junior women are eligible
Stock Reduction SALE
Torch Chapter Mortar Board, Inc.
ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF
All Gift Lines:
Party Favors,
Leather Goods,
Pottery, Baskets,
Straw Flowers,
Jewelry, Posters,
Sweat Shirts and Wearing
Apparel, Fraternity
and Sorority Mugs
DECK
These Prices Good This Week Only.
1144 Indiana Oread Corner
Mon.-Sat. 10-5
Use Kansan Classified
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
C
Maupintour travel service
Make your airline reservations NOW for Spring Break with
Maupintour.
NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you:
900 Massachusetts
The Malls
Hillcrest
Kansas Union
Phone 843-1211
- Thomas Edisor
"WE DON'T KNOW ONE MILLIONTH PER CENT OF ANYTHING"
SOKOLOFF
LEARN SOMETHING
Take a Free University Class
Enrollment and Catalogues Available:
Feb. 1st,4th,5th in Union Lobby
Tuesday, February 5, 1974
University Daily Kansan
7
Commission to Discuss Levee, Fund Requests
The Mud Creek Levee Project will be discussed by the Lawrence City Commission at 7:30 tonight in the commission meeting room on the fourth floor of the First National Bank building, 9th and Massachusetts streets. The commission will consider approval of a joint statement by the city to drainage district concerning the project.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently announced that it had abandoned its original plan to channel a section of Mud Creek extending north from the Kansas Turnpike. The corps said it would use an alternate plan that would save the federal money by reducing 18 million but would cost the city and the drainage district an additional $655,000.
The commission will also discuss the following revenue sharing requests for 1974: Lawrence-Douglas County Public Health Dept., $2,509; Council on Aging, $7,500;
Ballard School, $68,500; Lawrence Public Library, $15,000; Berrn Nash Mental Health Center, Inc., $8,000; Neighborhood Youth Corp, $15,000; Douglas County Youth Jobs, $371LP, $4,600; Indian Center, $1,000; and Lawrence Housing Authority, $17,100.
HEY TEACH!
NOW interviews—FEBRUARY 11
ACTION-PEACE CORPS-VISTA
Education Programs are alive and well throughout the United States. Grads and Seniors sign up for interviews in Education Placement
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Lawrence Sierra Club Meeting DR.JOHN O'BRIEN
To Speak On
Eutrophication—Another Washday Miracle 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 5, 1974
South Park Recreation Center PUBLIC WELCOME
Funded by Student Senate
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TACO FREE!
图示:蒸汽轮机
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd
Offer Expires Feb. 28
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
1974-Year of the Taco
This time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home!
close to
Glint Eastwood is Dirty Harry in Magnum Force
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40
Saf. Sun. Mat. at 2:00
NOW SHOWING
Hillcrest
THE AMERICAN FILM THEATRE Presents Alan Bates in Simon Grey's "BUTLEY"
Mat. at 2:00—Eve. at 8:00
Hillcrest
ROBERT & BARBRA
REDFORD STREISAND
OBERT & BARBRA
EDFORD STREISAND
"THE WAY WE WERE"
Coming Soon
Varsity
1043-726-1588 www.varsity.edu
NOW SHOWING
Varsity
TREATHE ... Intapone V13-1065
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Matinee
Sat.-Sun.
af 2:30
Woody and Diane Allen and Keaton in "Sleeper"
PG United Artists
Where were you in'62?
PG NATIONAL UNION MUSEUM
American Graffiti
13TH AND FINAL WEEK OF FUN
Eve,at 7:20 & 9:30
Sat.,Sun.Mat.at 2:15
Hillcrest
G
G
WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS'
WILD NEW CARTOON FEATURE
Robin Hood
©1973 Walt Disney Productions
Granada
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Sat.: Sun, Mat. at 2:30
THAILAND ...FIREHOUSE V.S. STUDIO
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New
Haven," and the name of a newly available now
at Campus Malvern, Town Crier.
Robin Hood
1970 Music Division Productions
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, color or national origin. THE RING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone W13-5788
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it;
R Audio, 14, E 8th, Phone 842-3014; Hours
available for any stereo service. Call - 1857 -
649-2610 for availability.
1.) If you use them, you're at an advantage
2.) If you don't use them, you're at a disa-
titude
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
FOR SALE: Apples = 7 varieties, $3.75 (bubel apple), $2.75 (peach), $1.95 (granberry), $1.25 (fruit-12 for $1; mix and match oranges)
$4.00 (peaches-12 for $4); $1.25 to $1.25 lb; fruit-3 lbs for $2.25; outright-28 lbs for $6.25; propres and cucumbers 3 each, 6 for $5c; propres and cucumbers 3 each, 6 for $5c; propres and cucumbers 3 each, 6 for $5c; peonies-12 to 12 for $1; peonies-12 to 12 for $1; peonies-12 to 12 for $1; peonies-12 to 12 for $1; damplos also antiques, used furniture, collectible items, and vintage goods.
SHOP 70, No. 21, 3 birk of Kaw River bridge, open 9-4, seven days a wk, 842-3159 SHOP 70, No. 21, 3 birk of Kaw River bridge, open 9-4, seven days a wk, 842-3159
Minolta S101- 50-110 flm F1 7 and 135 mm F2.4
Cameras, lens, and accessories. M249.
Every case and gadget bag. Move equipment,
al in equipment, you condition. Drive at 8400 rpm.
Bargains in equipment
1970 VW, one owner, runs great. looks OK.
1985 VW, 78,000 miles. $110 - Call 842-6571
at 842-6571
Three Days
For Sale - Piano, Merriman upright; white, $75.
Call 812-393-6200, bass amplifier and cabinet.
Call 812-393-6200.
Afghan Hound Puppies-Registered, many dari-
fy breed, certified. Quality reason-
ly Reasoned priced. 842-2774. 2-6
Backpack Equipment -Gerry down sleeping bag (2 lbs.). **S65** "Gerry 'vagabond' backpack" **$25;** **$30** "Gerry 'vagabond' and stakes (4);** **$10**; climbing ropes and packs (mid); **$10**; climbing ropes and packs (mid); **$15. $843-3877** evenings. **In stock** 26.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Bokomun. FLABBACK ATTACHE - Cochlear wires,
amplifier, microphone, headphones (drums).
Branded units sold in Canada and the
United States (drums). Rated units sell in
Canada and the United States (drums).
Dresses—long & short blouses and skirts. Price slashes again plus 20% off. Closing out all week, prices drop to $59. Final sale starts Thursday, Jan. 31. Open Mon.-Sat, and up 8:00 Friday. Rusty & Sample prices up by $20.
SKIPS-Kastle CP-MT-PL, SLH 202cm slam alka.
SKIPS-Breakout 10x, XN XN, 915-873-2033,
SKIPS-Tower 10x, XN
1970 Toyota Corolla for sale. $1200. Call 842-
8-54 after 5.30 p.m.
1969 VW Bug 32,000 miles. Best offer over
1419 Ohio at 419. Ohc 6-5
Dealer, Please.
HAM RADIO STATION *new* Heabit HW-16
*Ham radio station* S-120 shortwave receiver $10, also Heabit
S-120 shortwave receiver $10, also Flexi
flexi adapter $10. Heabit A1-15 amateur $10.
Heabit A6-31 tuner $10. Call 41-1458 at
6 p.m.
For Sale. 2 new snow trees, size 7-15, 48- or best offer. Call 824-5260 and Deborah 2-7230.
66 Ford Galaxie - 17 mg./km. PS heat, radio,
Wi-Fi, Bluetooth. Snow tires. Needs some work $150
and snow tires. Needs some work $150
For Sal, Degenerate must ask my ti. *Degenerate*
For Mary, Degenerate must ask my ti. *Degenerate*
For Jane, Degenerate must ask my ti. *Degenerate*
For John, *Degenerate* for me; let box, *box*, let box,
let box, let box,
For Sale 1956 Ford 14 ton pickup truck Storm function; Vehicle dependable in all weather. Call (800) 727-3900.
CROWN IC-150. Guaranteed phono hum and noise levels are 6 dB at rated @ 85%. at rated output (typically 90%). Each unit is hand tested. You receive results. Full equipment at Audio Systems, 9th & Hide Beach
For Sale - Manila/Sekor 1060 DTI-SLR camera,
55mm F1.4 and 18-55mm F2.8 lenses. Good condition.
Recently cleaned and meter system re-
placed. Model #1934-496 with warger 2-
Call Rob at 841-5125.
Used rep-screened, reel to reel tapes $1.00 to
$5 per tape. Reprints from $15. We buy and sell reprinted albums of Ray Earls Wb wires and self-reprinted albums of Ray Earls Wb wires.
Hand painted stained glass window 10 by 12.
16 by 8t. Art nouveau or made to design
by the artist.
315 Michigan St. B-B-Quire. We have open pit
baking. Try our brick plate, brick sandwich,
or brick plate by the pound. Half-chicks by the
pound. Half-chicks by 4am to 8pm. 6:30 p.m. Closed Sunday and
Saturday.
For Sale Niklerman PTN Body 12mm F3.5 For Sale Niklerman PTN Body 15mm F3.5 For Sale Niklerman PTN Body 10kg F3.5 Call 842-842-8417
Bassin Sterried Bernard-AKL registered. Champion of the world in tennis. Some other dogs available at reasonable prices. Free shipping on orders over $500.
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5 p.m. 2 days before publication
Must sell-Guild D-25 Bluegrass Special with
Hunting Shirts and looks and looks special.
2-11
Aid for cake
2-11
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBERATION. INC., Meetings
(Counselling, 6:30 a.m.) or referrals SOCIAL
ASSISTANCE (6:30 a.m.)
NOTICE
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smith-Thomas Manitou 812-640-5790, Smith-Thomas Turnbull, 812-640-5790. Inspected and cleaned Electronics and light industrial equipment and cleared City Repair estates. River City Repair 815 Vermont, 811-640-5790.
SHERIER 7100A receivers have been rated for wood-power (channel) or less than 0.80 per cent of power, which is sufficient for Service records of, this unit verify its reliability and power; the special machine provides power for the AUDIO,
Columbian Wants You! Yes, we want you as a team. Now, Summer, and Fall. We plight to do our best. Our new goal is to have students want at a reasonable price. 2. To have it in AI design, help with fast maintenance practice. 4. Up in admin help and fast maintenance practice. 5. Up in admin help and fast maintenance practice. 6. Up in admin help and fast maintenance practice. 7. Avakov* Harvard Square* *Acute* College and Helpful People to Meet With*. Ms. Forrester and Helpful People to Meet With*. Ms. Forrester and Helpful People to Meet With*. Ms. Forrester and Helpful People to Meet With*.
Motorcycle rebuilding and tuning. All make- up costs are included. Battery bags are 18%. Fully guarantee all work. Tow truck is included.
Custom made clothes, patch embroidery-
ing and sewing kits
Bokstel FLASHBACK ATTACHE 191
Vermont Bokstel FLASHBACK ATTACHE 203
Hey, there's somebody new in town you should meet HORIZONS HONDA. Sales, Services, and Parts on all new and used Honda. Student Financing our Specialty 118th West Bike Course 2-13
Glia-na* our students do personalized men's half-
bands. Lawrence Beauty School - 832 Manse; 843-253-091.
Lawrence Beauty School - 832 Manse; 843-253-091.
Learn to ride and jumps at the University Herbarium. Learn to walk on a semester basis. Visitors must have 18-4644 or visit www.umich.edu/usr.
DYNAMIC DUG IN HUVER CITY! Ex-votresses
Pierce Plaza and Vista will be on campus
8:00-12:00
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders.
Information orientations held daily this
Saturday, 5 p.m., or call me, on call 826-605.
2-8
MUSICIANS—keep your hand in! Well paying,
daytime engagements with a talented,
veratile, truly with skill. The 42 Army
Battalion unit, Guard Call Paul II,
9:30-30; at 843-8581, www.musicians.org
2-11
HORSE CARE—One space available for well-mannered riding horse. Box stall, posture, tack rooms. City limits, ten minutes from campground. Kawaii exorder, day=-844-3602 and 111 nights=-843-2908.
Mont Blu Party Lounge now available for private phone. Phone 412-385-288, a 4pm. for phone.
A Valentine's gift that will brighten anyone's
day. At 10 a.m., Sunday, June 14th,
7 West 14th Street. Hours: 10-5-00
FOR RENT
Wall to wall carpetting, front door parking, spacious bathrooms, complete electric lighting, water heater, gator bar, shower/tub combo, unite, clear blue swimming pool, gas grill BBQ, 3 bedrooms, 4 bath townhouses. 2500 W. Sixth Street. 1925 N. Washington St.
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1733-1745 West 24th St.
905 Lexington Avenue. Apartments furnished from $112 and up. Air conditioning, dishwasil, all electric kitchen, gas furnace, fire alarm.
*toon. Resident management at 3. Call 843-1622 fc.*
JAYHAWKER TOWEAR APARTMENTS are located at 140 W. 15th Street, room 693 with utilities paid Call 822-4993
Furnished apartment for rent at 19 West 14th. Heated room. $750/month. Room immediately. Call Tom after 4 p.m. (866) 252-3000.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
balcony, carpeted, cared for, storage, NEAR
BROOKLYN. 10% discount. Call (610) 435-3788.
Apartment: 2 bedrooms, furnished, walk to
street level. Bathroom has separate
and tread room. No job. Phone: 843-7267.
$150 per month.
FOR RENT to make or female student. Nice
room with a private bathroom, laundry
1 block from Union. Parking and utilities paid
are included.
Room for Hire-Share kitchen and living room.
Room for Hire-$850 a month including usher
Call 611-543-8252
FOR RENT: Very comfortable 3-room apartment
in quiet, central area. Sub-
mitt-lab (immediately) Phone 432-3727 or
Email info@thehouses.com
Apt for Root 1 BR w kitchen, bath, LR Closet,
Kitchen. Available Now 1500 Kittany Lake
Available Now 1500 Kittany Lake
CATHERINE APAINTMENTS. No lease required.
@ CATHERINE APAINTMENTS. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. or late
for dinner. 216 W. Church Street. 216 W. Church
Street.
Needed immediately! Female commitee to share
knowledge with the following:
a beacch in Mississauga, MI; 845-329-6100;
b beacch in Minneapolis, MN; 845-329-6100;
WANTED
Female roommate wanted to match modern two
room apartment, $590 plus 10% off. Call
433-262-6878, box #422, campfire #422.
$750 monthly plus 12 utilities. Call
433-262-6878, box #422, campfire #422.
YUCKERS
RANGES-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10:30 AM Monday, Saturday
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
TACUS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
Wanted: Quaint, studious roommate to share new
home. Expense: $240/month. 2-6
and utilities. Call Ross #825-2580
Working hand needs rehearsal space. We are
happy to pay reasonable call. Respond:
814-4584. 814-4584. 2-6
Wanted: A married couple at house parents for
10 adjudicated boys, ages 12-16. Good salary
to work with. Training provided. Full training provided. Reply to Wichita Youth
Society, 534 West 79th Street, Staten Island, NY 10021,
ku7202, or call 316-868-2141.
1105 Massachusetts. 843-9880
Wanted: Ambitious male wife dude with
my white female. Mary. 864-5866. 2-6
Baby sitter needed, 7:30-4:20, Monday thru Friday.
Baby at 7823-7530 after 5 p.m.
Female roommate wanted to share nearly four
bathrooms and two bedrooms. C-8-8
b425-2455 before or after a 8 month
rental.
PERSONAL
Volunteers needed to work with children, Orient-
ment and Training Center, Plymouth
Church of Christ's Chinese Community,
925 N. 13th St., Plymouth, MA 02307.
Safety arm lights only 9e at Ride On Bicycles.
You're afraid of Polish Band Con. Not OZ (OZ) You're afraid of American Band Con. Not OZ (OZ) you're not afraid to be a cuckoo, Palmi answer, this question, you want
Rolfs and Scott. "A Question of Priorities"
Rolfs, Scott. "The Roles of Women Athletes, Rolfs and Scott.
Reduced parking fees, Rolfs and Scott. The
Reduced parking fees, Rolfs and Scott.
Reduced parking fees, Rolfs and Scott.
February 13th and 14th. 2-6
Take charge of your life. Try a life planning workshop or define your unique future goals. Learn how to plan the weekend of Feb. 9. For details and registration, visit Life Planning Center 1024 Oral or call 834-498-7.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Europe, the UK or Africa, or are interested in education? EDUCATION can help you find the least expensive way for getting where you want to go. Phone us in today!
Rolfs and Scott are not waiting until the Student Judges have work on their pledge. Those pledge have been completed time. Long hours and careful thought. The first Judges must be Candidates for Student Judges and Vice-Candidates for Student Judges.
**Festival of the Arts March 24-30, 1500 tickets**
The festival will take place on the entire week and must be purchased at the stiva
store. Tickets are $80 for adults and $60 for kids.
LOST
REWARD! Ladies red leather hilda ledd loot
4-7 Return to P.O. BOX 82, Lafayette,
60044
LOST. White toenail, rust colored tail and
distended left leg. Introduced untriggersly Call 842-3150, leave message.
HEWARD Load black, blank qed wed, January 16th, 2018
excellent; excellent; excellent; Call 454-347-8000 Monday through Friday, no time. Call 454-347-8000 Monday through Friday, no time.
HELP WANTED
Lost! Brown bear lure purse. Friday morning, in
hospital. No phone. No question. No quail.
I need it I need 842-7653.
Reward Left blue衬带 with many items valued at $10. Master Check and checks are cancelled Call
Help Wanted - Cocktail waitress. Must be 21.
Help – 860-Buss. Phone: 842-3330.
Crescent Heights
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
- Crescent Heights
•Oaks •Acorn
•Gaslight
•Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
ADVENTURE a bookstore
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
Now Open
Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
FINE BOOKS
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
Phone 843-6424
Registered Radiologist Technologist. Prefer prn-
er or travel. Must be a graduate degree or have
please call Performed Dept. Lawrence Memorial
Hospital, 340 E. 15th St., New York, NY 10026.
Watched. Alumni from major, high school in
composition. Contact via email or
omission. Send resume to square. Contact
FEMALE STUDENTS Work as a figure model and earn $20 to $80 daily. No experience needed you need not be glamorous Personality and ability to work in a team. Provide person. An established, licensed firm providing modeling The Blue Orchid Studio 3109 761-858-100 to 20 p.m. Located ten minutes away from the college.
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
FINE SERVICE
Guitar lessons fingerstyle, open tunings, slide
lesson course, Bass 843-856-0946 for Link: 212-
work course, Guitar 843-856-0946 for Link: 212-
RIVER CITY PTTY-815 Vermont. 841-4683 Stierros - watchers - type-writers. Independent repair specialists. No retail hustle. We service what you replace. Unimpaired use. See htics.
Valentine's Day is not far away, and there is no
nation where you don't feel comfortable on reasonable rates. Tantrum Point,
488-765-2900
Typing in my home Ibm ESSIC Pica type
format. To work on this, prepare Pica,
accurate work. Call Katie, 414-872-
5099.
Employment Opportunities
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mix. typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and preservice service. Proofreading spelled corrected. Phone 845-934. Mrs. Wright
Experienced thesis typet. Close to campus. 841
8909. Myra. 24
Alaska is booming this year! Approved hand-book, "JOBS IN ALASKA" evens all occupancy levels. "JOBS IN ALASKA" covers $200 for "JOBS IN ALASKA" box 1565. Auctioneer licensed employment agency. 2-11
$65 to $95 PER WEEK PART TIME. Unlimited
permission, paid for addressing employees at
a corporate location. Req. special "sonic" touch
for further information regarding
Phoenix Advertising. F.O.B. 1107th, Atlanta,
Phoenix, Advertising.
RIDES --- RIDERS
FOUND
Wanted - to join or form carpool from Merriam
County, TX to College Park campus by 3:25 p.m.
M-F; Call 618-295-4700 campus by 3:25 p.m.
HE
Found in Wesley on Friday, ladies gold watch- *12*, $49.95; ladies silver watch- *10*, $39.95; and ask for John-also pay for this ad - $79.95.
THE HI E in the WALL
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 am - Phone Order
813 745 - We Deliver 9th & 11th
MEN!—WOMEN!
JOBS ON SHIPPS! No experience required. Send $3,000 for information. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3,000 for information. Port Angeles, Washington 98362.
love is ...
... wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
Happy Family
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
86 1499
Open 7 days a Week
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
8
Tuesday, February 5, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks Overpower Buffs, 81-66
By JIM SHELDON Kansan Sports Writer
KANSAS
00
Kansas Photo by CARL DAVAZ
Norm Cook Guards a Stumbling Scott Wedman
Roger Morningstar took the opening tip and raced downcourt for an easy layup, which put KU on the scoreboard only four seconds into the game.
If you were in your seat and paying attention you might have caught the opening bell.
That pinyin seemed to set the tone for the rest of the game, one characterized by a fierce determination.
Fortunately, KU was responsible for most the rest of the action too, as the 'Hawks defeated Colorado, 81-66, before 14,500 fans in Allen Field House.
Morningstar followed his opening basket with two free throws and hit another layup after taking a blind overhead pass from the free throw line. U=6 lead only 48 seconds into the game.
Even when Morningstar cooled off, KU was still able to come up with the big play. He had a nice win over twonear to tip in a high lob pass from coaptom Captain Kivisto. That played with 8:00 left in the first half and capped a KU victory with a goal at home. Captain 12-2, opening up a 30-4-H lead.
"We have worked on it a lot in practice," Smith said about the play. "It wasn't as bad as I thought."
Freshman Norm Cook also came up with some big plays in drilling to 25-footers-
The Buffaloes cut a 32-19 KU lead to 34-26 late in the first half, mostly on the strength of the outside shooting of Scott Wedman, the Big Eight's scoring leader. But two long runs gave the Hawks their of fire throws by Kivisto gave the Hawks a 41-30 lead at the end of the first half.
The Buffs seemed to have trouble coming up with the key play at the right time.
In fact, the only real excitement they generated in the first half came on the bench. After protesting a call just before Smith's tip-in, Colorado Coach Sox Walseth sterned back to the bench and sat down between two chairs, landing on the floor.
Nevertheless, KU had trouble putting the
ENGINEERING SENIORS & GRADS
Peace Corp. & VISTA need you for volunteer positions in services and here at home. Recruits PLACEMENT OFFICE, WED. & THUR.
February 13 and 14
SENIORS, SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW NOW.
The Evelyn Wood challenge:
Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster, with comprehension!
If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
O. K. Tonight we'd like the opportunity to prove, as we have to millions, that you can read faster with comprehension.
In fact, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to come to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson armed with the toughest text-book or reading material you own.
We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy . . . we're using yours . . . the toughest you can find!
If you're open minded and want to improve your reading ability, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to begin tonight,
to make reading work for you!
Every night this week at the Reading Dynamics Institute, Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
Also at the KANSAS UNION, Parlor A (2nd floor) Thursday, Feb. 7, hourly on the half hour, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa
I
Make reading work for you!
Buffs away and for most of the second half the 'hawks built up leads of 13 and 14 points only to see Colorado come back to within striking range.
"I didn't think we were doing a good job against them outside," Ku coach Ted Owens said about the Hawks' inconsistent play, and we didn’t cover their driving well either.
Call 843-6424
AO went inside often against the smaller Buffs and also added an occasional fast break—something the 'Hawks haven't used much this season.
We were looking to run in this game.
Owens said. "We are better team when we
play."
KU's height advantage also paid off. Rick Sattle, 6(10-9) reserve center, was the main weapon as he led the 'Hawks in scoring for the fourth straight game, with 20 points.
Operating against a Colorado line-up that rarely had anyone over 6-foot-7, Suttle came off the bench to score 11 of his points in the first half.
"We were trying to go inside against them even though they were stacking it back up in the wall."
KU appeared to be finally pulling away when it opened up a 56-40 rear with 13.09 inch tires.
Colorado countered with a rally, however,
and came back within ten at 68-58.
The 'Hawks ended the Buffs' hopes with a inreak in which KU outcompeted Colorado 8-2.
Once again, KU demonstrated offensive balance, as five players scored in double figures. The 'Hawks also had three players with ten or more rebounds.
"I didn't think anyone stuck out." Owens said about KU's performance. "I thought it was one of the best."
6-0 Feels Good, But Owens Says Team Can Do Better
The University of Kansas has won the Big Eight Conference basketball title. It still sounds strange but it's becoming a more appealing after last night's win over Colorado. B146.
By GERALD EWING
Kaman Sports Editor
But Coach Ted Owens didn't think his team played that well in winning its sixth conference game and second in a row by a large margin. The Jayhawks, 14-4 overall, are currently ranked 17th in this week's Associated Press poll.
"We didn't play a bad game, but we weren't real sharp," Owens said. "We got off to a good start but then flattened out. It was slow and messy." Because Colorado has a very good team.
Colorado Coach Russell "Sox" Walseth differed with Owens in the game of the game.
KANSAS (81)
| | FOAL | FT | RB | F1 | F2 | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cock | 8-14 | 4-14 | 7-14 | 4 | 19 | 10 |
| Morningstar | 4-14 | 2-14 | 3-14 | 2 | 19 | 10 |
| Najigh | 1-5 | 0-2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| Naima | 5-10 | 0-2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| Kirkoo | 3-6 | 2-1 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| Suttle | 9-10 | 0-2 | 11 | 3 | 10 | 1 |
| Van Moore | 0-1 | 0-0 | 11 | 3 | 10 | 1 |
| Van Moore | 0-1 | 0-0 | 11 | 3 | 10 | 1 |
| Emery | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Emery | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Total | 35-72 | 11-16 | 11-6 | 34 | 81 | 10 |
COLORADO (66)
| FG | T18 | RB | F | TP |
| Wedman | 7 | 18 | 8 | 4 | 19 |
| Logan | 7.16 | 0 | 8 | 4 | 20 |
| Holtman | 1.2 | 0 | 8 | 4 | 21 |
| Holdman | 1.2 | 0 | 8 | 4 | 22 |
| Kelly | 1.30 | 0 | 8 | 3 | 19 |
| Kelly | 1.30 | 0 | 8 | 3 | 19 |
| Kompao | 0.1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6 |
| Kompao | 0.1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6 |
| Totals | 27.71 | 12.24 | 20 | 18 | 65 |
COLORADO 30 36-66
RANSAST 41 51-60
Turnovers: KU, 14, CU, 13.
Attendance: 14,900.
that KU was such a good team.
"KU did such a good job early in the game that we just couldn't go back in it," he said. "We didn't do a very good job of anything tonight. We didn't shoot well, that for sure."
KU was impressive in several areas, especially in rebounding. The team was awesome on the boards as it dominated Colorado, 51-29.
Another impressive aspect was that KU was running more, something it had 'naked' with its core.
"Against Colorado in the Big Eight Tournament, we played a slow first half," Kivisto said. "In the second half, we ran more and came back against them but not quite enough. We knew we played better against them when we were running more."
Tom Kivisto said the team had been concentrating more on getting the ball down quickly to look for better and more open shots.
Last night's win kept KU in the conference lead, but not by much. Kansas State remained a half game back by defeating Oklahoma State. 65-48. KU has a 6-4 record. Showdown should take place when the two teams meet next Wednesday in Manhattan.
Walsh said he didn't know which team was better but everyone would find out when they were ready.
The next game for the Jayhawks is Saturday against Oklahoma State in St. Louis.
Owens, in discussing the Oklahoma State game, hinted that some possible line up changes would be made.
He said he didn't know who would start the game, but would decide after seeing how the team matched up against Oklahoma State.
NATIONAL BALLET HERE TOMORROW NIGHT
FREE to Students
This Wednesday evening, February 6, at 8:00 p.m., the highly-acclaimed Natal Ballet of Washington, D.C., will present "Coppelia," at Hoch Auditorium as the Concert Series' fifth program of the season. The dancers, under the artistic direction of Fredrick Franklin and Ben Stevenson, are some of the best trained in America. Six were prize winners at the International Ballet Competition in Varna, Bulgaria in 1972—the only contingent of Americans ever to be so honored. Clive Barnes of The New York Times says "it is almost certainly the best classical ballet company in North America outside of New York . . . The National Ballet is a national treasure."
"Coppelia" is a colorful story of a doll that comes to life. The appeal of the program will be further enhanced by the National Ballet's own fine orchestra.
The National Ballet has been exceptionally well-received throughout the country as they always perform to sellout crowds. The opportunity to enjoy such a production is indeed rare, and as the Wednesday performance is certain to fill Hoch Auditorium, it is advisable for KU students to either obtain their free reserve tickets, with ID, at Murphy Hall Box Office or, if those become unavailable, to arrive sufficiently early to gain free admission at Hoch Auditorium the night of the performance.
This article has been paid for, in the interest of the KU student body, by the University of Kansas Concert Series
Public Tickets
$4^{00}$-$4^{50}$-$5^{00}$
Available at Murphy Box Office
COLD
Forecast: Colder, with a chance of light snow. High mid 30s, low mid 20s.
KANSAN
84th Year, No. 84
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
City Officials Speak Against Anti-Flood Plan
See Story Page 2
news capsules the associated press
Demo Wins First 1974 Congressional Race
Democrat John P. Murtha narrowly defeated Republican Harry M. Fox in the nation's first congressional election of 1974 last night.
Unofficial tallies gave Murtha, who made subtle campaign issues out of Watercress and the Nice Administration, a 22vote vote, 60,530 to 60,310.
Murtha didn't claim victory immediately, saying he would wait for the official vote total. He said the gasoline shortage kept many of his district's voters out.
"I know the people were very disgruntled with what was going on in Washington, and I'm sure it helped me some," said Murtha. "We got a lot of benefits."
Nixon Ready to Compromise on Budget
President Nixon is ready to compromise with Congress to get some of his budget and legislative programs through this year, a top budget official
"We've only got three years left," said Fred Malek, deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget. "We're willing to give a little in certain
In Nixon's fiscal 1975 budget message to Congress, there were no threats of votes or program cutbacks as there were last year.
Armed Kidnapers Abduct Hearst Heiress
Armed Kidnapers Abduct Hearts Heircess
Firing at witnesses as they went, kidnappers dragged newspaper heircess Patricia Campbell Heart, 19, screaming from her apartment Monday night,
it was disclosed yesterday.
Authorities and the family awaited a ransom demand, but none was reported.
In full view of neighbors, the blindfolded and half-nude victim was dumped into the trunk of a stolen car. The empty car was later found seven blocks
Heart is a granddaughter of the late publisher William Randolph Hearst and a daughter of Randolph A. Hearst, president and editor of the San
Nixon Praises Health Insurance Proposals
President Nixon said yesterday that his national health insurance proposal would strengthen the present health care system, not destroy it. It is one, he said, under which "our entire health care system would not be placed under the heavy hand of the federal government."
The system proposals call for a three-part system, including an employment plan, a government assistance plan for people with low incomes
Drivers Reject Nixon Offer
By the Associated Press
Negotiators for striking independent truckers recommended in Washington last night that drivers continue their strike, by President Nixon to freeze diesel fuel prices. More efforts and pending food shortages were expected the increasingly violent strike continued.
Leonard Fleet, attorney for the Council of Independent Truckers, said the drivers rejected Nixon's offer yesterday for an immediate price free because they wanted assurances that the freeze would remain in effect as long as necessary and urgent care is provided. They would permit the truckers to pass their increased fuel costs to customers.
He said the truckers wouldn't go back to work until they had immediate authority to levy an additional 5 per cent surcharge on shimmers.
INDEPENDENT TRUCKING operators, Fleet said, "can no longer be made the scapegoat for absorbing the rapidly rising costs of moving goods." $^{15}$
The rejection of the administration's measure to end the dispute was announced in February, but negotiations committee met for more than four hours. Negotiations to bring the crippling strike to an end began Sunday at the instigation of Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J. Wilson.
Fleet said the administration's action was a "total deviation" from the written proposals of the truckers that were expected to go to the government Monday night by Sharp.
Despite the rejection, he said, the truckers are willing to continue negotiating here "as long and hard as necessary to bring this to a just solution."
There was no immediate word on the scheduling of new talks.
Earlier in the day, federal energy chief William E. Simon had expressed hope that the government's actions "will get the trucks back on the road." The truckers"s conducting the negotiations with the government, had no immediate comment.
IN ANOTHER major move, Simon said that the Federal Energy Office has directed that companies not have to deal with the issue.
Good Health Seeks 8.5% of Costs As Fee for Work on New Hospital
That fee was contained in a contract presented to the board of trustees of Lawrence Memorial Hospital at a special meeting yesterday afternoon, which was attended by about 40 people. No action was taken on the contract after two hours of discussion.
Good Health Care Management, Inc., a hospital consulting firm, is seeking 8.5 project of construction costs and $80,000 in reimbursable expenses for its fee as project managers for the building of a new hospital in Lawrence.
By HAL RITTER Kansan Staff Reporter
The fee, which would be based on construction costs of between $12 million and $15 million, is somewhat misleading because to 4% or per cent of it would be paid
As contained in the contract, the 8.5 per cent would include 4 per cent for an apprentice and 2 per cent for a selected by Good Health, 2½ per cent for Good Health's work as project managers, 1½ per cent for a construction management and a half per cent for administrative fees.
Dr. John Simons, president of Good
Health, said a construction management firm would make sure that construction proceeded on schedule and would act as "a law officer" to ensure that the building be made without formal change orders."
He said that the firm could be a local general contractor who didn't participate with other local firms in the bidding for construction contracts, but that the firm would have to "vast experience of the projects of the magnitude of this project."
Conceivably, Good Health could assume the role if a qualified local firm isn't there.
Estimated construction costs for a new Hospital, according to the contract, are $14.6 million for a hospital and professional office building and $12.7 million for a project without an office building. Good Health's 8.5 per cent fee is included in the estimates.
The half per cent for administrative fees would also go to Good Health and would be used to keep records, pay employees and process orders for construction changes.
The reimbursable expenses would cover Good Health's mailing, travel, long distance and other expenses.
The contract also places a 24-month
deadline on completion of the hospital,
beginning the day the contract is signed.
The most controversial issue raised during the meeting concerned the location of a hospital and the heavy made up trustees last November, Good Health favored building a hospital on the Mount St. Mary streets and Wisconsin streets.
Yesterday, trustees raised numerous questions about the possibility of building a new hospital where Lawrence Memorial is located and the wing of Lawrence Memorial built in 1969.
"The reason for this is the sooner you can get it the more you save," Dr. Simons said. "We're talking about 10 per cent a year in escalation of costs (due to inflation)."
Trustee Ben Barteldes also asked whether the rest of Lawrence Memorial could be used for any of several purposes, including a warehouse, administration building, maintenance shop, gift shop or chapel.
Simons agreed that the 1969 wing "is usable in our best professional estimates." But Simons said he did not know if it
See HEALTH Page 8
maximum extent possible all the fuel it needs.
AS SIMON spoke at the White House, Atty. Gen. William B. Saxbe was announcing steps being taken by the Justice Department to prevent violence in the East Coast and Midwest shutdown, which Simon said presented "a threat not only to life and limb but also to the immediate fuel supplies of millions of Americans."
Under previous regulations, the industry had been eligible for 110 per cent of the fuel it used during a base period. That allocation increased in the mid-1980s when the industry brought fuel to meet its needs.
He also said that his office was taking regulatory action to prevent excessive inventories of diesel fuel by end users and would柴油 put more fuel into the truck stops.
Administration to "consider all appropriate relief to the small businessman, including truck owner-operators, adversely affected by the energy crisis."
Simon also announced that the administration was asking the small Business
Vern Won't Raid KU Films
Vern Miller, Kansas attorney general, said yesterday that his office wouldn't trai d pornographic films shown at the University of Kapsag.
Answering questions after an address at the School of Law's "Noon Forum" series, Miller said he would rely on local officials to enforce obscenity statutes.
Miller's speech traced his career in law enforcement and highlighted some of his most-publicized campaigns, such as prosecution of bingo and liquor by the drunk
The largest category of questions concerned Miller's position on the "Erotic Film Festival," which was canceled last month after complaints by two state senators. State Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth, had said Miller called him to see
whether any state laws were broken by the exhibition of the film.
Miller said he would direct any complaints about KU films to Dave Berkowitz, who works at the film company.
Before there can be any prosecutions, Mr. Maier said the film must be viewed and discussed.
"There are procedures," he said. "We wouldn't just come in and raid the film."
Miller said that he would confer with Berkawitz about any film under question and, if the two could not agree, he would try to convince him to follow his advice.
"The law's usually pretty clear," Mier said. He was interrupted by loud loudness.
Miller's remarks were generally light-hearted and were frequently greeted by
appreciative laughter. But when questioning turned to involvement by Miller with KU films, the discussion became serious.
A student asked whether community standards on what is considered pornographic could be judged by state senators from other parts of the state. Community standards are the guidelines used to prosecute distribution of pornography.
"I's hard to say," Miller said. "A senator from Leavenworth might not agree with the senator."
"In this country everybody has a right to complain."
Miller said he was convinced that organized crime made tremendous profits from the sale of pornography. Actual evidence indicates that, as he said, have been traced to pornography.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Attv. Gen. Vern Miller Speaks to Law Students
Tape Requests Answered
WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House has made a written response to special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski's request for continued access to tapes and documents. A meeting has been scheduled for later this week to resolve a growing
The letter, from White House Watergate lawyer James D. St. Clair, was termed "a lengthy communication" by a spokesman in the special prosecutor's office. The spokesman said he could not confirm further discussion between Mr. Jaworski and Mr. St. Clair.
He added that there would be no further comment until after the meeting, expected when, Jaworski returns from a trip to Texas, he no longer elaboration about what the letter said.
What is being sought by Jaworski isn't known, and neither the White House nor the press are aware of it.
After relaxing its grip on nonsubpenounced material last year and even allowing an assistant special prosecutor to go through a file cabinet, there has been an obvious hardening in the White House attitude toward supplying all that Jaworski seeks.
President Nixon signaled that in his State of the Union message when he said, "I believe that we have provided all the material that he (Jaworski) needs to conclude his investigations and to proceed to prosecute the guilty and to clear the innocent."
St. Clair the next day, told newsman "There has to come an end at some point, and we'll just have to consider the circumstances as they hereafter occur."
In a television interview Sunday on ABC's "Issues and Answers," Jaworski acknowledged that he had requested more information from the station and that he expected a decision Monday.
But the day passed with only the word from Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Anderson, who described in "confidential conversations and communications" between St. Clair and Jaworski. That led to yesterday's announcement of office about monthly communication.
Jaworski left open the question of whether he will go to court as his predecessor, Archibald Cox, did. The White House eventually gave up that fight, but by then Cox had been fired for refusing to stop pursuing the matter in court.
More KU Students Combining Marriage, Education
By BUNNY MILLER
Kansas Staff Reporter
"Being married and going to school is great! It's the only way to go," said Ron Carney.
Reno speaks for the growing number of University of Kansas students who marry while still in school. This trend seems to defy the spirit of women's liberation and the sexual revolution, and many students say they are unwilling to sacrifice the traditional reason—they are in love.
"We got married when we did because we were in love, it's as simple as that," Reno smiled.
He and his wife, LaAnn, also a graduate student, were married a semester before they graduated from Emporia State Teachers College.
"being a student didn't have
anything to do with why I got married,
and I had no idea how to deal."
Marijuana students are often压力雅拉
at Milk and Cheese school. But
Marijuana students are often压力雅拉
at Milk and Cheese school. But
problem for those couples interviewed. Several married couples said they spent no more as a couple than they did separately when they were single.
"There's no economical hardship," said LaAnn Remo. "We don't do a lot of partying, but we wouldn't have done that even if we weren't married."
"It's much easier to get married than to the pressures of trying to be together all the time. Ron goes to school part-time and works full-time. If we weren't married, I'd question how much we'd see of each other."
ONE MARRIED STUDENT said he found it easier to save money when he felt responsible.
Liz and Bill Haddock, Lawrence seniors, have been married five years and have two children. Bill Haddock is taking 23 hours of work five nights a week in Kansas City.
"But I always find time to do the things I want to do," he said. "There are some
financial problems, but veterian's benefits take care of my education."
LIZ HADDOCK doesn't work, and her great aunt takes care of the children while she is home.
"I don't think our children feel deprived just because we are both in school," she said. "I go back home between classes and whenever I can."
Several married students said they had to go through adjustments to marriage life, adjustments they thought all newlyweds faced.
Dobbs said, "Some of the people I knew changed their attitude toward me just a bit."
“There are many adjustments,” LaAnn Reno said. “Where you squeeze the tophate and where you throw your towel on it, and like much until you have to love with it.
"I don't socialize as much as I used to?"
"Dbuss said. But I find it a lot easier to
communicate with people."
RON RENO said, "When you got two people working toward the same goal, it felt good."
The latest figures available from the Office of Admissions, gathered in 1972, show that 4,475 students, or 23.9 per cent of the 18,546 students enrolled, were married.
who are the married students? The 1972 study showed that 2.999 of all married students were divorced.
Although no past or current figures are available, several University officials estimated that the 1972 figure was higher than in previous years and substantially lower than in the 1960s.
The Graduate School, with 2,184 married students, had the highest number. The College of Letters and Humanities, of the other schools, the School of Social Welfare had the fewest, 64. CARLY SMITH, associate dean of the College, has the highest the increase in married women students.
The women's movement has helped make women aware of their choices, Smith said, and one of these choices is a college education.
"I think the women's movement may have encouraged more married women to continue with or return to college," she said.
THE OFFICE of Affirmative Action
against that the University's equal
opportunity program.
"As long as women have been able to go to colleges there have been married women students," she said. "But there are more women in the work force today and many of them are married. There they are exposed to college education will help their careers."
Another reason for the increase, she said, is that KU has begun to design more programs for nontraditional students. These are students who have interrupted their degree programs or who are seeking nontraditional degrees.
students. The Affirmative Action Plan states:
—No person shall be denied employment or promotion because of martial status or other condition.
- Salaries and other benefits for all positions shall be determined without regard to . . . marital status, number of dependents, educational background, independent spouse by the University.
- Marital status and sex shall not be factors in determining eligibility for financial support and dependency allowances.
- The Student Health AService shall offer optional health care for spouses and children of spouses as soon as facilities and personnel permit.
See MARRIAGE Page 8
?
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Commission Approves Statement Against Shift in Mud Creek Plan
BY BOB MARCOTTE
Kansan Staff Reporter
A statement to be sent to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers protesting a recent change of plans for development of flood protection along Mud Creek was approved unanimously by the Lawrence City Commission last night.
The statement is in the form of a joint city, county and drainage district letter to be signed by Mayor Nancy Hambleton; Walter Cragan, chairman of the Douglas County Commission; and George Pauer; Douglas County Co. Kraw Valley Drainage District.
The Corps recently announced that it was abandoning its original plan to channelize (straighten and ditch) a section of Mud Creek extending about five miles north of
the Kansas Turnpike. The Corps said that it would use an alternate plan that would save the federal government about $2.18 million but would involve an additional cost to the city and the drainage district of about $265,000.
The alternate plan, Hambleton said, "is not something that we can live with."
The city and the drainage district already have completed the purchase of land needed for the original plan, she said. "We're going to do it because we say these purchases are not necessary."
The alternate plan, she said, would require additional prime farmland and would upset the protection of other farmland.
Commissioner Jack Rose noted that the original plan was the idea of the Corps and
that the local authorities had fulfilled their part of the plan.
"The Corps has put us in a very bad position," he said.
The joint statement says, "This community has always placed a high premium on the matter of honoring commitments and contractual agreements and it would seem a poke example for the Corps of Engineers to take." The rules relative to this worthwhile project.
"There is no doubt that if the contractual relationship existed between individuals or private corporations an action for specific damages would be required, and damages would bring quick results."
Price Survey Accents Family-Style Dinners
The Lawrence Consumer Protection Agency has restructured its weekly food price survey this semester. The new survey will emphasize items needed for family-style dinners rather than individual foods and snacks. Store brands will be included on
CPA volunteers survey 62 items weekly in
nine Lawrence supermarkets. Only a partial list is published to prevent stores from systematically lowering prices of surveyed items.
The letter notes that the original plan calling for the channelization of mud Creek from its mouth to the upper limit of a levee was established in 1957 and from its entrance into the Kansas River had received the approval of the water resource board of the State Board of Water in 1966.
Several beef items will be surveyed each week because of recent predictions for record high beef prices in the next few months.
According to the letter, an environmental impact study of the alternate plan prepared by the Kansas City District of the Corps had reported that the alternate plan, which would require more natural state, would leave 480 acres of land between the clover and a keeper under the
The city of Lawrence and the drainage district already had spent $1.5 million for land purchase on the project when the city called it a canal, and plan for reconsideration, the letter says.
Item
Granola-Heartland, plain, 14 oz.
Cereal Total, Gm. Milk, 12 oz.
Bread - white, store brand, 18 oz.
Flour - white, Gold Medal, 5 lb.
Flour - store brand
1 lb.
ground beef, regular, 1 kg.
round steak - to be, 10 lb.
broth - 1 kg.
hot dogs, Oscar Meyer, 10 kg.
Bacon - Swim, this size, 10 kg.
frying chicken - whole, 10 kg.
牛奶 - the same, 10 kg.
Cod - frozen, 1 lb.
Pork chops, frozen, 1 kg.
milk - store brand
Dry Milk - Carradon, 20 oz.
milk - store brand
Yogurt - store brand
Carrots, red, 10 lb
steak
fruit peas - store brand, 10 lb.
fruits cocktail - store brand, no. 303
Fruit OJ - store brand, 8 oz.
Fruit OJ - store brand, 6 oz.
Eggs - 12 oz.
desserts - grade A large
desserts - grade medium
desserts - grade 8 pack
AAPP ... 73
Billions of 418 St.
... 73
Billions of Mans. St.
... 73
Polly's ... 73
Marger's downhill ... 73
Marger's 220d St.
Randy's 224d St.
Randy's Hillcrest ... 73
Safety ... 73
| | | | | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 90 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| | | | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| | | | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| 1.00 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 | .73 |
| | | | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :---
ROLFS
SCOTT
"If student government is going to continue at exist at KU, it should turn itself to problems concerning every-day student life such as degree requirements, academic ad-hoc activities, and department. To get changes made, ed El托弗罗 and Kelly Scott, the Valentine's Day Coalition."
7% rebate
7% rebate
Period 54 register receipts now redeemable at lower level of the Bookstore
on campus
PRESIDENTIAL IMPEACHMENT will be discussed at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at a meeting of the KU-Y Advocate Series.
Candidates Debate Tonight
Discussion leaders will be Arthur Katz, dean and professor of the School of Social Welfare; Clifford Cifford, associate professor of law; Larry Keller and Jim Masuda, acting associate professors of political science; John Wright, professor of psychology and human development; Raymond Cef, retired professor of music; William Kelley, university diversity; Oldfather will moderate the discussion.
Candidates for student body officers will邀 campaign issues at 7:30 tonight in the gymnasium.
The debate will consist of seven-minute statements and three-minute rebattles by the presidential candidates and three-minute statements by the vice presidential
candidates. Questions from the audience will be accepted for a half hour.
The candidates for president are John Beisner, Salina junior, and Ed Rolfs, Junction City junior; for vice president, Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior, and Kelly Houston, Houston sophomore. The elections will be Feb. 13 and 14.
FLY IN CAMP OUT
LAST CHANCE
(SPRING-BREAK)
$120 R/T sac.
JAMAICA'S
STRAWBERRY FIELDS
at $70 a week for two
*From now to Feb. 9, you can fly to JAMAICA at this low rate—but Feb. 9th is the last day! Then you can camp at JAMAICA's only ocean campfire —STRAW. BERRY FIELDS—where everything (except food) is provided at $70 weekly for two persons. All camping equipment and plenty of sun too.
Call Air Jayhawk—913-841-0780
NATIONAL LAMPOOL LEMMINGS
NATIONAL BALLET HERE TONIGHT
FREE to Students
This Wednesday evening, February 6, at 8:00 p.m., the highly-acclaimed National Ballet of Washington, D.C., will present "Coppelia," at Hoch Auditorium as the Concert Series' fifth program of the season. The dancers, under the artistic direction of Fredrick Franklin and Ben Stevenson, are some of the best trained in America. Six were prize winners at the International Ballet Competition in Varna, Bulgaria in 1972—the only contingent of Americans ever to be so honored. Clive Barnes of The New York Times says "it is almost certainly the best classical ballet company in North America outside of New York . . . The National Ballet is a national treasure."
"Coppelia" is a colorful story of a doll that comes to life. The appeal of the program will be further enhanced by the National Ballet's own fine orchestra.
The National Ballet has been exceptionally well-received throughout the country as they always perform to sellout crowds. The opportunity to enjoy such a production is indeed rare, and as the Wednesday performance is certain to fill Hoch Auditorium, it is advisable for KU students to either obtain their free reserve tickets, with ID, at Murphy Hall Box Office or, if those become unavailable, to arrive sufficiently early to gain free admission at Hoch Auditorium the night of the performance.
This article has been paid for, in the interest of the KU student body, by the University of Kansas Concert Series
Public Tickets
$4^{00}-$ $4^{50}-$ $5^{00}$
P
If a enthus will ha nation federa
Available at Murphy Box Office
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
3
Plans Crystallize for Youth Hostel
By BUD HUFFMAN Kansan Staff Reporter
If a local group of traveling and hostling enthusiasts is successful, Lawrence soon will have a youth hostile affiliated with the university and international hostling federations.
The group had an information and organization meeting Monday night in the Kamas Union. Eleven persons attended, and members of the Kamas traveled in traveler and the United States.
Phyllis de Vries, Norwich, Kan., senior,
said she became involved with hosteling
while touring Europe with a girl friend after
she received a degree from the University of Kansas
in spring 1971.
Many European youth hostels are subsidized by the governments, she said, and they provide young people inexpensive and secure lodging while they travel.
"IT'S CHEAP, and a good hostet has not showers and a place to prepare meals while cooking."
De Vries and Carina Lister, of 500 Missouri St., are cochairman of the Lawrence Youth Hostel Committee (LYH-C).
The committee, which also consists of George Latham of the Gran Sport bicycle company and John Morgan of 2141 Rhode Island St., has been working since late November to establish a hostel here. The group has office space in the university's (SUA) office in the Union.
De Vries laid LYHC had applied for a national charter from American Youth Hostels, Inc. which would qualify the Lawrence company for nonprofit tax status.
Several housing alternatives were discussed, including unused residence hall space, unused fraternity houses and some large, unused residences in Lawrence.
Latham said he thought the only realistic way of providing adequate housing was to either rent space or find someone willing to donate space as a tax write-off.
Lister said the hostel should serve three groups of people: tourists traveling through Lawrence who want a place to stay overnight, people coming to Lawrence and needing a place to stay while visiting here and local residents who are interested in the
bicycle tours and travel activities that the hostel could sponsor.
A MAP provided by De Vries listed more than 115 hotels in 31 states, none of which were in Kansas. The closest hostels to Kearns in Kansas City, Mo., and Lincoln, Neh.
DE VRIES SAID LYHC had been com* municating with several local groups, including the KU Endowment Association, SUA, KU-Y and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, about the possibilities of establishing a hostel.
Eleanor Burchell, coordinator for KU-Y, said yesterday that she would like to see a community YMCA-YWCA started which would work with the prosed vosth hostel.
Legislators Say Students Effective in Lobby Group
ASK is a student lobbying organization comprised of Washburn University and all the four-year state colleges and universities excent the University of Kansas.
if KU wants to join, he said, it must do so at the senate's initiative. He said, however, that he might write to the leadership of the Senate to request the senate's operations after the electors next week.
State legislators said yesterday that the Associated Students of Kansas (ASK) had been fairly effective in lobbying despite its lack of experience.
According to the 1973 Hostel Guide and Handbook, issued by the American Youth Hostel, in, there are about 4,500 hotels in the United States. International Youth Hostel Federation.
Ron Hein, Washburn law student and executive director of ASK, said he had no plans to come to KU and ask the senate to join him in joining the lobbying organization.
HEIN SAID ASK had been lobbying for the landlord-tenant bills and the campaign finance bill, which are before the legislature. He said the organization would lobby only for faculty salary increases when the budget is considered.
The KU Student Senate voted last fall to join ASK because the functions of ASK overlapped those of KU's Concerned Students for Higher Education and because ASK suggested the use of professional nonstudent lobbyists.
ASK won't lobby on any other budget considerations, he said, because the legislative assembly, made up of all Republicans, didn't take a position on any of them.
Buckley said he would like to see ASK do more for university budgets.
In a letter sent to interested people, Devi vaughan Lliver provided some background on baitfish.
Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president, said legislators told him they were somewhat impressed with the job ASK was doing, but Buckley still had reservations about KU's joining the organization.
"I don't think there's any need to reconsider it (joining ASK)," said John Beisner, Salma junior and candidate for student body president.
ED ROLFs, Junction City junior and candidate for student body president, said he thought that ASK might give students an opportunity to learn more about his support for joining the organization
would depend on KU's voice in deciding what issues should be laborled for.
Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, said ASK had been pleasant and easy to work with. He said he was glad to see students involved because too many people thought students didn't care what was happening in the legislature.
Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought ASK was as effective as any lobby could be that was strictly educational and had little financing behind it.
"The concept of hostelling developed in Europe, where it still is strong," the letter said. "European hostels are planned and located so the traveler may go from one hostel to another in one day's journey by train, bus or ferry, hostels, hosting is a growing mode of travel."
GLOVER SAID that he didn't think KU not being a member had hindered ASK and that few people realized KU wasn't a member.
"Briefly, a hostel works in the following manner. Travelers buy an annual hostel pass for $10 and are entitled to stay at any of the five rooms," she said, with a normal fee (usually under $2).
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Wednesdav. February 6, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Play Poker...Cautiously
If you're in the market for bags to put under your eyes and worries to add to your budget, here is a suggestion: become a poker addict.
Good poker players are hard drinkers, late sleepers and repressed cradle robbers. They will cheerfully take your look at them and they are cramming you full of taco Doritos to distract you during a game.
They will also politely pour martinis that would cripple a horse down your throat during a game, while personally drinking bathwater 3.2 beer that wouldn't make a monk drunk if he drank a case of
In short, good poker players will do most anything to unhinge you from your money and will smile while doing it. They are as benevolent as your best friend, grateful as Soup, the pickpocket, operating in Grand Central station.
Therefore, if some convoluted logic has convinced you that you must play poker to enjoy life fully, you must be prepared to cope with the game's peculiar band of thieves.
Experienced poker thieves always seem to be insurance salesmen or gas station owners. It is rare to encounter one who is also a college student, for students a senior we have limited playing experience.
So, how does a KU student learn
heavy for his lessons without paying
heavy for his lessons.
Self-appointed poker experts
have produced several rather hoary rules for the game over the course of years. Don't stay unless your hole card beats everyone else's up card. Don't stay unless the money odds are equal to or better than the odds against filling your hand. And so forth.
This standard advice is sound and should be followed. Most poker books, however, don't contain advice about matters peripheral to poker, which can separate winners from losers.
Therefore, here's a double helping of advice about those matters:
Don't drink and play poker at the same time. Take a six-pack of Coke to the game and get splashed later on, money you win from all the drunks.
Don't put poker in the same class as Monopoly and checkers—interesting games, but not to be taken too seriously. If you do, other players will clean your clock in record time.
Don't loan money to other players during a game. Why give that clown on your left a $10 loan to he can have a chance to get back the $20 it just took you two hours to win from him?
Don't chatter during the play of
basketball with a teammate, it tells
more than a running mouth.
If you're guilty of any of the above bad habits, do give me a call the next time you want to play. I'll check your watch and bottle of tequila waiting for you.
—Chuck Potter
By BOB SIMISON
Kansan Staff Reports
Budget Hearing Switch Significant
As usual at this time of year, top University of Kansas officials are entering a crucial period of explaining next year's plans for the nation's means committee of the Kansas Legislature.
This year, however, they'll be explaining them to the House Ways and Means Committee instead of the Senate Ways and Means Committee which that's more significant than it sounds.
It's so significant that John Conard, director of University relations and former president of the university, called it "dramatic change," and other KU officials say they're more optimistic than usual about getting money restored that the university could give to the Board of Recents' recommendations.
For as long as anyone can remember, including Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols, whose memory of dealing with the legislature goes back 43 years, the Board of Regents' budget has originated in the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
THEERE. A three-member subcommittee got the assignment to study the budget and operations of the Senate committee, which made a recommendation to the Senate. Few changes were made in the subcommittee's recommendation, which was then given to the governor's recommendation.
Since last year, however, all that has changed. Pryde, Clyde R., H-Yates, Center and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, and Sen. Ross Doyen, R-Concordia and chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, agree to make several changes to improve efficiency. One change is to move the budget on the Regents' budget and gave up responsibility for budgets of some other agencies.
The Regents' budget under HIll's system now goes to seven subcommittees instead of one, all of which are the 23-man committees are dealing individually with the budgets of the six state colleges and universities. KU's budget for the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses is $60 million.
HILL EXPLAINS his division of work as
Oil Firms, Fearing Price Decline Resist Search for Energy Sources
(According to Nichols, the full 10 per cent increase for KU would cost the state $300,400 more than the 8.5 per cent increase. The impact on faculty morale "beats" the impact on faculty morale.")
In addition to offering an opportunity to explain these things in detail to the subcommittee, the switch of the budget to the budget in question will be to present the budget in a formal hearing.
And the KU officials want a full 10 per cent increase in general operating expenses and the KU expects to increase for these expenditures of 7.4 per cent for educational programs, 8 per cent for the physical plant, 6 per cent for the computer system and 6 per cent for research and 6 per cent for extension.
The full House Ways and Means Committee will hear budget presentations from KU and the University of Kansas Medical Center Monday, from Wichita State University and Kansas State Teachers Department, from Kansas State University and Fort Wayne College Wednesday and from Kansas State College and the Board of Regents Thursday.
Supply and demand forecasts are meaningless unless they are related to a price. The cash demand for any commodity, oil, depends on its price. The higher it is, the more expensive it is versus. Similarly, the effective supply of any commodity, the amount offered for sale, also depends on price. The greater the price, the more will be offered and vice versa. There is an economic behavior that governments and large companies often try to repeal.
This was an ill-disputed plea to maintain the current price of oil. The executive was fearful that uninhibited investment would spoil his firm's comfortable position.
"that wasn't too satisfactory." Hill says. Conard sees the switch of the Regents' committee to a separateays and Means Committee as beneficial only to the senate committee. Under Hill's system, the legislature will contain at least 23 representatives who are well informed about high education budgets in contrast with the usual senate committee, three senators of the Senate subcommittee.
BY BERNARD D. NOSSITER The Washington Post
LONDON—Right-thinking people everywhere applaud schemes for international cooperation, so President Nixon's call for a conference of oil-consuming nations next month has been widely welcomed.
The Senate committee traditionally heard all the presentations in one day, in a joint session.
The House subcommittee is also likely to hear arguments in favor of restoring $66,497 for women's intercollegiate athletics and funds for capital equipment and repairs.
Indeed, each of the seven subcommittees was to visit its school to discuss the budget. KU's subcommittee—George L. White, R. Valley Center; Wilbur E. Marshall, R. Eureka; Albert D. Campbell, D-Lared; and Lawrence next week. The three-main subcommittee of the Senate Ways and Means Committee could attempt no such visits.
"This would mean we would have to pull money away from other places for this," said Sara.
The more sophisticated international oil companies however, are beginning to unveil their own strategies. These have their customary success in impressing western governments that the interests of oil companies and nations are identical, Mr. Nixon's conference could be costly for them.
thinking of how effectively supply and demand forecasts by a government agency had dropped the price of U.S. oil. The system is now set at $29 per barrel. Department's bureau of oil and gas issued monthly forecasts of supply and demand—at the prevailing price. The Texas and Louisiana regulatory bodies then translated these forecasts into production from the wells in their states.
THE OFFICIALS are especially datable by the low increase of 3.5 per cent from the previous year.
The most thoughtful oil executives are worried about what the Economist Magazine has playfully called the "comeing clip of energy." This imaginative article explores how technology will stimulate heavy investment in the new energy resources—a rapid discovery of oilfields; development of cheaper alternatives from the earth, sea and sun; and expansion of devices like microminiaturals and telecommunications to save energy.
an effort to give an inexperienced committee a broad look at state financing. The seven subcommittees are each assigned the budgets of several agencies for study.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes welcomes the more intense look at KU's budget as "a great opportunity for the colleges and universities to more thoroughly their needs and desires."
Fanciful as this sounds, some of the great companies take it seriously and are concerned about its implications for the price of oil, on which their profits depend. At a private gathering in London the other day, a high-ranking executive openly expressed his fear. The Western World and Japan, he knew, were under siege by "wasteful" investment drive to procure additional and alternative energy resources.
THE MOST deserving charity of Christmas, 1800," the Economist concluded, "will probably be to relieve Arab states run by the cultured unwanted oil."
"I'm just an old school teacher trying to teach these guys," says Hilt, who is in his 10th term in the House, and, at age 61, is looking forward to retirement.
KU officials see other benefits in such a system. Primarily, they believe they'll have a better chance to adequately explain KU's budget to the four-man committee studying it.
KU OFFICIALS want most of all to ex-
The British approach is highly individualistic. But the British are also imprecise in this area, Britain wants international cooperation of the kind that Shultz was cautious about. As Andrew Shontell, head of the UK's intelligence agency, "Britain seems to want to play the game of
The splendidly cynical British oil policy illustrates why the government is rushing around the Middle East, frantically tying up its oil reserves and trying to first completed transaction will bring in 100,000 barrels daily for a year from Iran at $7 a barrel. The shah's advisers have calculated that $7 is precisely the price of natural gas, so the national energy supplies will be encouraged
The system was threatened only by imports of what was then cheap foreign oil. That escape hatch was blocked by the Eisenhower administration, which imposed quotas on imports. It is a matter of more than historical interest that the quotas were imposed after Sid Richardson, the Texas wildcatter, arranged a million dollar loan to help build the Eisenhower's treasury secretary and chief architect of economic policy. The deal gave Anderson a vested interest in the price of domestic oil.)
unrestrained bilateralism” in getting oil
“while holding firm to multilateralism” in
research.
THE OIL executive, of course, was
Despite growing world supplies of oil, the system kept the domestic price from falling. No wonder the executive from the great company would like to see it extended globally.
There, Shaltz hung back from proposals to cooperate in blueprints for "sharing the burden" on the grounds that they would underwrite the existing and notorious price of oil. The real problem, he suggested, was to bring the price down.
WAXT
THERE IS a parallel to this in schemes currently proposed for financing deficits in national balances of payments. Treasury officials said the memorandations to relax quotas on imported oil have been largely ignored by Mr. Nixon, and that they are not part of an official meeting in Rome of finance ministers.
"SKY, DICK, YOU WOULDN't JUST LEAVE ME HERE TWISTING SLOWLY SLOWLY IN THE WIND..."
(Henry A. Gay is a Monrovia, Calif., policeman. He writes fiction and has a short story, "In Kenta," in "Ten Times" (an "anthology published by Bantam Books."
By Henry A. Gay
Special to the Los Angeles Times
"Why would a guy like you want a job at that?" That's the question I'm asked most often by the public I serve. My simple reply, "I like it," only teases their curiosity.
You see, I'm a cop. Well, not just any cop.
I'm a black cop.
"Why do you do it?" "How do you take it?" "What do you feel?" They keep questioning me, firmly convinced that I'm either a liar or a fool—probably both.
But they're wrong, I am first, and above all else, a cop; the other is secondary.
WHEN I'M OUT there facing the public in that monkey suit and badge, I am The Man. That's all. My color is incidental. What the citizen sees is power, frightening power.
That kind of power evokes resentment but such resentment doesn't surprise me. Who wants to be reminded of the ever-present threat to his own freedom that I represent? But, with the power goes the pressure—constant, intense and equally awesome.
So, what enables us to endure
pressure? Our confidence. We're a cocky
bunch. We've got to be! Every night I keep my lonely vigil in a city presumably asleep. But the calls keep coming. I respond as if it were my own family, secure in the knowledge that no matter what danger awaits, I'll prevail.
EN ROUTE, I'm formulating a plan, weighing the possibilities and my alternatives. Nearing the scene, I adjust my grip on the stool, smoother. A burglar or a robber? Look for people or cars moving about. Something amuses you? You feel it. Cut engine as you move in. Block exits and approach cautiously, seeking cover. A dead cop can't help anyone.
That's what the badge is all about—to protect and serve. I wear it and I'm proud of it, but it doesn't shield me completely. I am also a man, a black man, and I'm subjected from time to time to the same humiliations and indignities as are other black men.
Like when I respond to an "incorrigible juvenile" call at a $400,000 in an all-inclusive apartment, leading citizen frowns his disappointment with the comment, "Oh, Oh. I thought they would send one of the other officers." That's why the calls are assigned by beat, not by color.
But my favorite "white folks" is the well-dressed driver who I stop at 2:30 in the
morning because his car is weaving down the highway. Smelling like a whisky barrel and with slurred speech, he indignantly admits that, “Sure, I’ve had a couple drinks.” “It’s always ‘a couple’; never more, less less.” But he’s not drunk. I’m simply picking on him, a respectable citizen who pays my salary, when I should be out chasing the real criminals. Seeing that I’m a victim of crime, I believe the way some unqualified segments of the population are able to force their way into better jobs by looking and burning.
THAT DOESN'T fmee, me either. As I handcuff him I merely reflect on the four years of hard study it took me to earn that degree hanging on my wall. Surprisingly enough, I encounter similar attitudes among blacks.
I catch a black man robbing a factory late at night.
"Brother," he pleads, "gimme a break."
"To tail," I say.
But these are relatively rare incidents. For the most part, people—of all colors—understand and appreciate the job I have to do in this office. If you come up with the trying times, I find reasons to be proud.
FOR ONE THING, there's personal pride.
Contrary to a popular myth, you don't just walk in and become a cop. Many hear the "call" more than would like to have it
Not that every police department is without internal friction. Cops are the same as anyone else. Historically, police departments have been all-white and ultraconservative, but, with the recent influx of minority-group officers, adjustments were in order. Although it was incumbent on the minority-group officer to learn the inner workings of the system, it was only through training by enlightening the less knowledgeable about the problems peculiar to his own ethnic group.
known—but the standards are high and very rigid.
Readers Respond
Thus, I am able to purge my own fears,
strengthen my own weaknesses and,
thereby, better perform the task society
expects of me.
For the white officer it has meant making an effort to better understand the minority officer, if for no other reason than that he is not a member of the minority presence. This has usually bred respect.
The second reason for my pride is that my work is always edifying. I'm receiving a lesson in human nature that no university can ever teach. I see human nature stripped of all its color and complexity are unraveled from race to race. I see traits of my own character mirrored daily.
My congratulations to Elaine Zimmerman. Her editorial of Jan. 29 was long overdue. It was overdue for two reasons: it was too early in her career; Lawrence area has caused the burden to rest with students by means of a campus privilege fee and second, that it was about time the Kansan began facing its responsibilities regarding issues pertaining to campus problems.
It is unfortunate that students bear the
To protect and serve-I like that.
To the Editor:
Mass Transit Call Praised; Author's Wisdom Assailed
Griff and the Unicorn
by Sokoloff
cost of limited mass transit program in Lawrence, "KU on Wheels." But like many other projects about the University and the Lawrence community, reliance often has come to rest with the student body. Without student monies many community organizations would cease. Headquarters, the university, support minority programs and others have as a common denominator their beginnings through student funding.
MAYBE IF I
BROKE SOME
RECORDS, I'D
GET A MEDAL,
TOO!
WOW! THIS ATHLETE WON A MEDAL BY BREAKING SOME KIND OF RECORD!
MAYBE IF I BROKE SOME RECORDS, I'D GET A MEDAL, TOO!
HEY! MY RECORDS!!
THE OLYMPIC COMMITTEE IS GOING TO HEAR ABOUT THIS!
THE OLYMPIC COMMITTEE
IS GOING TO
HEAR ABOUT
THIS!
HEY! MY RECORDS!!
F
And so it appears that Lawrence commissioners could follow the student example again by promoting and showing them how to work in groups for example, gave 280 rides Jan. 14, 18. There is a need, a demonstrated need, and a cooperative program between KU and Lawrence could be an equitable problem to an overlooked, long ignored problem.
R. E. Duncan
Topeka
1973 KU graduate
Feline Perception
To the Editor:
In Carol Gwin's penetrating review of P. D. Ouspenny's book, "Tertium Organum," we find the statement: "Since animals have no concepts, Ouspenny reason, they only move by grasping and manipulating the animal the third dimension appears as motion as it moves around the object."
Conrad Henderson
Conrad Henderson Lawrence graduate student
I think it's rather obvious from this statement that Ouspensky doesn't know much about it.
To the Editor:
Advising Decried
Your Jan. 30 story on the CWC programs and the current hopelessness of the advising situation was most interesting and revealing.
It was particularly frustrating to read the various administrative explanations of advising practices. The director of North College observes that giving a student an adviser who knows something about the student's intended major is unnecessary because many students change their minds after taking classes in a school that realize that much of this mind-changing is the result of incompetent advising. When a freshman or sophomore is given poor direction in pursuing study in his major, is influenced to take the wrong courses, and isn't led away from an area that obviously would be more appropriate to this University and may be expected to switch manager several times before, by chance, he finds something that works.
The director of Pearson College says that the student just doesn't realize how complex these problems are.
All indicators point to the fact that the immediate upgrading of our advising mechanism, be it through student advisers or students, should be one of our very top priorities.
the student at a large university has no right to expect any but the most mediocre adaption, and therefore it is difficult to fact be the case; as this University grows and as its curricula become more complicated, its advising program must get better to accommodate the needs of the student.
Clark S. Davis
Webster Groves, Mo., junior
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom—UN 4-4810
Business Office—UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the acid rain event, college holidays and festivals. Mail应信 to: Missouri State University a semester, $15 a year. Second class student postpaid fee: $20 a semester. Student in activity fee $1.25 a semester. A semester advised offered to all students without regard to gender. Admitted are not necessarily those of the University proud or are not necessarily those of the University.
NEWS STAFF
News Advoter...Shane Hawt
Editor
Hal Ritte
Business Aduver . Mel Adams
Business Manager
David Bunker
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
Fools Afloat
5
right
e addu in
grows
com it get
needs
t the rising risers of our
years and society
by Mayo
I CLAIM THIS LAND FOR THE
KING OF...
FFF|FT!
FFFT
FFFT
FFFT
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THIS MAKES THE
THIRD FLAG I'VE
COLLECTED THIS
WEEK.
More Students Get into ACTION
By ANN GARDNER
Kensan Staff Reporter
Kansan Staff Reporter
The number of KU students entering the Peace Corps and VISTA has been rising over the last three years, according to Richard Garbell, area manager for the U.S. WARNATION, the agency that combined Peace Corps, VISTA and other service programs.
ACTION representatives will be on campus Feb. 11-15 to talk with seniors and graduate students at the University of Kansas and their representatives will be in the Kansas Union and in the placement offices of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences of Business, Engineering and Education.
Garbell said the number of KU applicants hit a low point in 1970 and had been increasing steadily since then. Applicants have been available positions but in the past, he said.
** ACTION WILL have inquiries from about 650 KU students this year, Garbell said. About 400 will be concerned with the Peace Corps and about 250 with VISTA. The inquiries will result in about 120 applications for the Peace Corps and 75 for VISTA.**
About 65 per cent of KU applicants are accented by ACTION, Garbell said, and
about 25 or 30 per cent of those eventually will serve in ACTION. Many students don't enter the program, he said, because they file an ACTION application along with applications for other employment and schools before making a final decision.
Although Garbell expects a good turnout at KU, next week, interest in the placement of its new job will be high.
Mildred Young, placement officer for the Business, said, "They're lucky if you can go in and see it."
YOUNG SAID that small numbers of people interested in ACTION had been a result.
"There have been very few at the business school," she said. "Competition is pretty great in the business school with other firms."
Although the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has no accurate record of the number of students interviewing, placement officer, Gladys Padgett said, there will be very few who will sign up for interviews.
"here in the college, they won't have more than a handful, four or five," she said. Herold Regier, placement officer for the School of Education, also said that records of student interviews were incomplete. Although only two students had signed up
Regier estimated that five or six students from the School of Education joined ACTION each year.
for interviews, Regier said, the ACTION representatives will probably talk to students who don't have appointments.
Winners of the Edward S. Robinson Essay Contest have been announced by the department of philosophy. They are Michael Green, Kansas City, Kan.; senior; David Schmidt, Fawnee Rock graduate; and Jim Swindler, Pratt graduate student.
Each of the winners received a cash prize of $30 and was invited to present his essay at a meeting of the philosophy graduate students' organization.
Delta Delta Delta is accepting, applications for two scholarships of $275 each. All full-time undergraduate students are eligible to apply.
**ACTION - PEACE CORPS-VISIA**
Education Programs are alive and well throughout the United States. Seniors and Grads will interview for interviews in EDUCATION Placement
HEY TEACH!
NOW Interviews—FEBRUARY 11
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Announcing:
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7:30 Kansas Union
Hillcrest
0.11
Granada
INMARITA ... Mestre Juan V. Sánchez
The troupe is now considered by many critics to be one of the best classic ballet companies outside New York because of its unity of action and its virtuosic performers.
Hillcrest
The troupe's repertoire includes such classical ballets as "Cinderella," "Nutrracker," "Swan Lake" and "Sleeping Beauty," which premiered in October 1671, in obserance of the inaugural session of the Academy, Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
The jovial young lady checking up on her balance reads like a scene from any soap opera.
However, add a touch of magic and a wicked toymaker named Dr. Copellius, who evily plans to transfer the soul of the fiance to a doll, and the scene becomes the most enchanting and captivating performance formed at 8 tonight in Boch Auditorium by the National Ballet of Washington.
Close Out Sale Extended!
HELD OVER
by
Popular Demand!
All Pants
2.99 3.99 4.99
Belts only
1.99
GREAT SELECTION
Master Charge
master charge
THE INTERNATIONAL
BankAmericard
Mon.-Fri.
10 a.m.-7 p.m.
Sat.
10-6
BANKAMERICARD
The ballet, which is part of the KU Concert series, in free with a KU identification
Magic, Evil Part of Ballet
Election Day Feb.13th & 14th
BOOGAH
HAITI
EASTER HOLIDAY
April 13-15
Air Jayhawk
(913)-841-0780
All Pants
2.99 3.99 4.99
Belts only
1.99
GREAT SELECTION
The National Ballet is a new troupe, founded in 1962 by Mrs. Richard Riddell as the choreographer for its first production.
Woody Allen in "Sleeper"
Evenings at 7:30 & 9:30
Mat. Sat.-Sun. at 2:10
www.woodyallen.com
BOOGAH
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STREISAND
& REDFORD
TOGETHER!
THE WAY WE WERE
Everything seemed so important then...even love!
THEWAYWEWERE
YK
Eve.at 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat.at 2:30
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone 91-2665
INVITATION
R. GOODMAN
Eve. at 7:40 8:40
Sat.Sun. Mat.at
Hillcrest
How To Seduce A Woman
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THE
HELD OVER
14th GREAT WEEK
10 9 8 7
ENDS THURSDAY
PHOTO
ZERCHER
M200
18-45mm
18-45mm
18-45mm
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18-45mm
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PHOTO
Look into Vivitar
Wichita—Topeka—St. Joe—Omaha
On Thursday, Feb. 7 from 10 a.m. to b.p.m., Mr. Bill Russell, Vivitar factory representative, will be at Zercher Photo to display, compare, contrast, analyze and demonstrate the entire Vivitar line of fine photographic equipment, including lenses, strobes, and tripods.
Also, take advantage of savings to 20% off list price on all ViVitr equipment. That's tomorrow, Thursday, Feb. 7 at Zercher Photo.
Vivitar
Vivitar... it's worth looking into.
1107 Mass.
ZERCHER
--how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed.
NO PANIC!
THE PRESS
You can read the entire year's Western Clv assignments in the next few weeks and pass the Comprehensive in May
Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn—
**how to read rapidly (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension**
how to compare and contrast the view of the various writers
how to organize your thoughts to write an essay
Our Reading Dynamic teacher is a former Western Kentucky College instructor but this is not a discussion group. It is more of an informal classroom where students are encouraged to share their experiences in the new skills. Thereafter some of the readings are done class but most are taken literally or at home.
WESTERN CIVIL BEGINS FEBRUARY 14 and meets thursday, 7:10 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS
REGULAR READING DYNAMICS SECTION BEGINS FEBRUARY 12 AND MEETS TUESDAYS, 7:30 p.m.
FOR EIGHT WEEKS
CALL NOW TO ENROLL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION — 843-6424
V
evelyn wood reading dynamics Hilcrill Shoping Center, 9th and tow
M
6
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Forgotten Man Smith Becomes Key
By MARK ZELIGMAN
Kananu Emerts Waller
It was only last December that Tommy Smith was the forgotten man on the University of Kansas basketball team. He wasn't obeying and he wasn't happy.
Just a little more than a month later, Snith, a foot-4 junior from Kewanee, III., has become a key member of the KU team. His explosive rebounding and streak shooting have helped the Jayhawks take sole possession of first place in the Big Ten.
What has happened since last December to cause the change in Smith's status?
According to Smith, he hasn't done anything differently from last year. As always, he just goes out on the court and plays basketball.
Head Coach Ted Owens, however, had a differing opinion.
TOMMY'S PLAYING BETTER, more
KANSAS
14
Tommie Smith
consistently, and because of this has earned more playing time," Owens said. "He's doing everything better than he was a year ago."
Smith began the season as a starter in the exhibition game with Yugoslavia but lost to England.
"In the Yugoslavia game, we were pressed into a couple of times guys got by me and said they wanted to win," said that he could depend on me to play hard. He said that he wanted to go with them. "But you never do."
Smith soon found himself playing on the junior varsity team for a few games.
"It bothers you--degrades you--to play on the JV team," Smith said, "or just let the team do it."
"If I quit, that would be saying that I give up. My high school coach told me to never be a quitter. He said to stick with the game. We don't need it better. And now I guess they did."
THE SEASON'S TURNING POINT for Smith and possibly the entire Jayhawk Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City, KU had lost to Colorado two days before and its record had dropped to 8-3. A loss to Colorado have killed all hopes for a successful season.
"Couch Owens calls me into his office before the game," Smith said, "and told me that he was going to put me into the game and we will be there all, I want you to do is play hard."
Smith followed Owens's instructions perfectly. His 24 points and 12 rebounds that day led KU to an 82-72 victory over Oklahoma, and except for a nonconference loss to Notre Dame, the Jayhawks haven't lost since.
SMITH CAME TO KU after a glittering high school career at Kawenee during the 1980s, where he played in both basketball and basketball. He also ran the high and low hurdles in state record times, ran the 106-yard dash in 9.9 seconds, high jumped 6-feet-4 and long jumped more
His coach at Kowanee, Em兰博背 said, that Smith was the finest all-round athlete in the league.
As a freshman at KU, Smith missed his first three games because of a foot injury but came back to finish as the team's No. 2 rebounder.
Smith said he was still bothered sometimes by the injury.
"AFTER THAT HAPPENED," he said,
"I began to get crampes easier. Maybe
it's because I tried to get back in shape too fast.
"Also, I had a quicker jump in high school or I do now. I used to be able to spring from standing still. Now I have to use more pressure to jump I used to."
"Everytime someone pushes off, the referee only sees the second guy pushing back. So, I try to be the first guy. In high school, we had the second guy pushing and I got caught."
BONE
now
available for booking.
call 843-4060
A "Studio A" production
Being only 6-foot-4, Smith has to compensate for his lack of height with his great jumping ability and physical play of play. He said that when he guarded Notre Dame's Adrian Dantley, there was constant shoving throughout the game.
IN THE PAST, SMITH has sometimes been criticized for not always giving 100 per cent. In sports, once someone gets a label it's tough for him to lose it.
"When you get out on the court," Smith said, "you have to establish yourself. Everybody shaves, so you have to try not to get caught. You have to make a natural move and not be sudden about it so the referee won't see it.
A recent Sports Illustrated article
"I don't know where they got that lackadaisical play" stuff," Smith said. "Maybe it's the way I play. If you get excited out there the refs will be looking for it and look at the floor. There's no use getting the ref's attention or he'll be watching you.
described Smith; “Heterofore noted
incrinally for his lackadares attitude.”
"I'm not emotional. When I run, they say I'm not running fast, but I go just being as fast as the other guys. The other guys just look like they're running faster."
SMITH'S RECENT PLAY may have put an end to his lackadaisical talent. Often he and Rick Suttle will come off the bench to unite KU rallies.
"I don't mind coming on the bench," Smith sand. "You're not going to win with just five guys. If you feel you're going to play, it doesn't make any difference."
LIBERAL ARTS SENIORS AND GRADS
PEACE CORPS AND VISTA need you for summer and fall festivals. You will be interested in the INTERVIEW WORKSHOP with an interviewer of THE LIBERAL ARTS PLACEMENT OFFICE at 1340 West 72nd Street, FY 12, IFRS 15, on an interview now!
Feb.13,14,15,16,at 8:00 p.m.
Feb.17,at 2:30 p.m.
Stock Reduction SALE
the UPPER DECK
ENTIRE STOCK
25% OFF
All Gift
Lines:
Party Favors,
Leather Goods,
Pottery, Baskets,
Straw Flowers,
Jewelry, Posters,
Sweat Shirts and Wearing
Apparel, Fraternity
and Sorority Mugs
These Prices Good This Week
Only.
1144 Indiana
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
DECK
University Theatre — Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
Mon.-Sat. 10-5
The University of Kansas Theatre
Oread Corner
THE BODEGA A Private Club
Like You Have Always Wanted in Lawrence
presents
THE PLAYBOY OF THE
WESTERN WORLD
by
J. M. Synge
-the story of someone who becomes himself
MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE
6& 1/2 E.7 St. 842-9549
--now has
JUNIOR WOMEN
You, as a student of the University of Kansas with 50 or more hours, are eligible for membership in Torch Chapter of Mortar Board, Inc. Mortar Board, Inc., is a senior women's honor society, which selects its members on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and service to the university and community.
So that Mortar Board might know you, please complete the information sheet you will receive in the mail, and return it to D.O.W. office. If we fail to reach you by mail, please pick up an information sheet in the D.O.W. office. These forms will be filed in your confidential folder for job references, etc. The deadline is Feb. 15, 1974.
Among Montar Board's service projects this year is sponsorship of a series of forums dealing with life after graduation. Included in the series is a multimedia presentation on women's self-defense which was prepared by students in Hashinger Hall in conjunction with the Dean of Women's office. It will be shown numerous times this semester and in the future for the benefit of K.U. women.
If you would like to recommend a junior woman for Mortar Board, please contact Judy Long, president, at 842-8072.
ALL Junior women are eligible
Torch Chapter Mortar Board, Inc.
---
THE BODY SHOP
DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS-VITAMINS HEALTH PRODUCTS
we carry
*•HOFFMAN PRODUCTS •WEIDER PRODUCTS
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Open 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat. 9-1
843-9412
940 Mass.-Arcade Bldg. Lawrence, Ks.
T A C O
T I C O
TACO TICO Winter Fiesta
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24¢
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thru February 28
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2340 IOWA
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver's Inc.
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9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857
Shop Thursdays Til 8:30 p.m.
Permanent press polyester cotton in "You Turn Me On" pattern. Tailored construction with comfort waistband. Full proportioned seat. Gift boxed.
from JOCKEY INTERNATIONAL
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"You Turn Me On" Bath Kills $4.00
Valentine Red Neck垫ts $5.00
Valentine Heart Embroidered
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Use Kansan Classified
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
7
KU Women Overwhelm Benedictine
Superior rebounding and over-all team aggressiveness led the University of Kansas women's basketball team to an easy 64-40 win at College last night in Allen Field House.
The victory set up KU's battle with Fort Hays State this Friday night. A win against Fort Hays would assure the Jayhawks a berth in the state playoffs in March.
The Hawks dominated play from the start of the game and moved to a 28-48 first quarter lead. KU increased its 12-point lead in the second half, and at half time the score was 32-19
During the second half coach Marian Washington substituted freely, but KU continued its domination and increased its players. 40+21, with 42.26 left in the third period.
During the first half much of scoring was a result of the strong inside play of center Debbie Lauderrich. However, in the second half, the attacking first was characterized by outside shooting.
"We are strong inside and outside," Washington said. "With our starters, we will be ready to team up to tie us out but if they are double teams we move to the ball back off. However, tonight during the second half our outside shooting resulted from our younger players wanting to shoot
Washington said she was impressed by the team's aggressive play which came on in September.
"Our play is smoothing out," she said.
"The turnovers are fewer; we are getting position under the boards. Our whole game plan is smoother."
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $.03
The AP Top Twenty
The Hawks leading scorer was Penny
Pulser with 21 points, and Lauderdale in
the top half.
1. UCLA (40) 16-3
2. Notre Dame (16) 15-3
3. Notre Dame (16) 15-3
4. Vanderbilt (11) 16-4
5. Vanderbilt (11) 16-4
6. Maryland (14) 13-4
7. Maryland (14) 13-4
8. Long Beach S. 16, 12-3
9. Providence 16, 3-1
10. Providence 16, 3-1
11. So. Carolina 13, 3-1
12. So. Carolina 13, 3-1
13. Louisville 14, 3-1
14. Louisville 14, 3-1
15. Kansas 13, 4-4
16. Oak Ridge 13, 4-4
17. Oak Ridge 13, 4-4
ENGINEERING SENIORS & GRADS
Peace Corps & VISA need you for volunteer positions overseas and here at home. Recruiters PLACEMENT OFFICE, WED. & THUR
976
830
776
764
507
466
404
324
277
298
280
197
187
187
110
110
105
78
42
20
10
February 13 and 14
SENIORS, SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW NOW.
GUADALAJARA, MEXICO
STUDY IN
Fully accredited University of Arizona GADALAJA AUMER SCHOOL开学 July 1 August 10, 1974 courses in ISL, hbl language, dance and music, dance and folk music, geography, government and history. Tuition $170; room and board in Mexican house $215. For brochure write: International Programs, 413 New York Avenue of Anzio Tucson, Arizona 85271.
Three Days
We also deliver Lasagna
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
843-9111
GREATEST Entertainment in Kansas City
Campus Holidayway
MADRID TOWN
KANSAN WANT ADS
Grant Green
Feb. 8-17
Freddie Hubbard
Feb. 15-24
RESTAURANT AT THE UNION STATION 842-5007
LANDMARK
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dalkei Kansas are offered to students within boundaries to满足学生的需要. PLEASE ARRANGE ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it;
1) If you don't have them at an advantage.
2) If you don't use them, they at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—new
Artworks of Western Chrysanthemum available on
the Internet under the name Crysanthemum Crown.
Ry Audio, 13 K. E., 8th Phon. 812-541-3900 Hours
available for any声噪 problem. Cost = $150.
Available for any sound problem. Cost = $150.
Tubulars - Hutchinson spirit builts $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles.
if
FOR SALE: Apples - 7 varieties; $3.75 bushel and
12 cans; $4.99 for 12 for $1.69 each;
apples 12 for $1; fruit mix and match orange,
apple turnips - 3 tbs for 25c bushel;
tomatoes - 40/thc, 1/thc for $1.50 bushels - 4
tbs for $1;
red potatoes - 20 tbch for Ri popcorn - 8 tbch
for Ri popcorn - 4 tbch for Ri popcorn - 4 tbch
for Ri popcorn - 4 tbch for Ri popcorn -
SHOP, 707 No. 2nd, 9 bikh of Kaw River
SHOP, 707 No. 2nd, 9 bikh of Kaw River
open, 6 wk days a week, wk 8, 82-3150
OPEN, 6 wk days a week, wk 8, 82-3150
Afghan Hound Puppies-Registered, many dier-
ficiated. K9s trained for quality Reasoned prised. 842-7274. 2-6
hours per week.
For Sale - Piano, Merriam upright, white, $75.
For Sale - Bass, Merriam bass ampier, and cable
641-923-8032
Backpack Equipment-Gerry down sleeping bag (2 lbs). $55. "Gerry 'vamback' backpack." $25, ytlen tent with fly, pole, and stakes (4 lbs). $135. "Gerry vamback" evening bags. $2-6 143. $83-877 events.
bobomun. FLARABACK ATTINE--Cowher shirts.
(flaraback) skirt. (kfilar) dress; recyiled skirt (kfilar), skirt for cowher. (kfilar) dress; recyiled skirt (kfilar).
Dresses *long* & short, blouses and shirts. Price slabs again plus 20% off. Closing out all dresses for $175. The second final sale starts Thursday. Jan. 31. Open Men-Suit, and until a 5th Friday. Rug & Sample Sale. See us at www.rugsales.com.
KB1S-Kattle CPM-TM 931J 950m skakom alkm
IPC-Kattle CPM-TM 931J 950m skakom alkm
10 xen 10" XN Phone 913-272-6238
Phone 913-272-6238
HAM RADIO STATION new Heathkit HW-16
Heathkit A2-100 shortwave receiver $5 also Heathkit
square range receiver $4 also Heathkit
square range receiver $4 also Heathkit AA-14 amplifier $4
Heathkit A2-61 tuner $1 Call 841-842 after
until available.
For Sale. 2 new snow机, size 7-15-44, or best offer. Mathews 842-5290 and ask for Debbie. 272-6320.
For Sale - Established Drive In. Small invert-
er. 842-309-8188. Good opportunity
842-309-8188 after 6 months
60. Ford Galaxie 17 my old. PS heat, radio,
4x4. Ford Galaxie 25 my new. PS heat, radio,
4x4. Ford Galaxie 35 my new. PS heat, radio,
4x4. Snow tires. Need work! $150
$150 $150 $150 $150
For Sale. Degenerate must sell my 71. Delegate,
with a top-applied stove, ice box, box shelf,
and with a top-applied stove, ice box, box shelf,
For Sale 1855 Ford II, ton pick up truck. Ship
function: air conditioning in all weather. Call
the dealership, dependable in all weather. CALL
(627) 538-0911.
CROWN IC-120. Guaranteed phono hum and
mouse 80DHz below 5mw. Features 60 Hz,
90 Hz, 120 Hz, 160 Hz, 200 Hz, 240 Hz.
Each unit is hand test. You receive results. Full
instructions at Audio Systems, 9th & 2-8
岛
Hard painted stainless glass windows. 10 by 12.
High gloss finish. Fits high-end cabinets.
Low prices. After $3.50-10.199, Jenkens
Used pig-recorded, reel to reel tapes $1.90 to
$2.50. You buy and release albums at RAY
MUSIC and you buy and release album at
RAY MUSIC.
For Sale - Maniama/Sekor 100 DLT-SLR camera.
55mm F1.8 and 135mm F2.8 lenses. Good condition. Recently cleaned and muster system reconditioned with 945+186s but will bargain Call Rob at 841-5125.
For Sale Niklormk PTN Body 152mm F3.5
Call 842-5897 after 5:00
Call 842-5897 after 5:00
MEN!—WOMEN!
JOBS ON SHIPPS No experience re-
travel. Perfect summer job or
career. Send $3.00 for information.
SEAFAX, DEF. 13-F, P. Box 204
www.seafax.org
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
Saint Bernard bernamed -AKI, registered. Chambersville is one of the other threeSome other dogs available at reasonable prices.
If You're Planning on FLYING,
BMW 2002 - 1972 - 19-500 miles 肌理画 paint,
unmanned AM-FM, Clips Lights. Call 841-763-2161
Must sell-Goal D-35 Blueiagn Special with
All-in-One Play and looks perfect.
809 Aws for Casely
2-11
FOR SALE! 1971–1972, a $50. Hearstson Mobile
Telephone Co., 48 West 32nd Street, New York,
new york. condition wood. Loads on own. Offer for
new construction. Warranty included.
70 MG Midget, Engine and body like new. $100.
842-1098 2-8
30 Cars & trucks 71 Cornet 2 dr. 71 Chevy wagon, 70 Chevrolet 3/4 ton 70 Ford, 70 Toyota 5/8 ton 69 Honda 4.5 ton 68 American, 66 Chevy 1/2 ton, 66 International, 68 Student, 11D bring a dincon A-1 Auto
Get Mopuphot
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for LED lights.)
Camaro 1970 For Sale, € 6,000 on the engine.
Camaro 1970 recently tuned,再次改良,
845-535-258
1873 Ona Player with low wires and many ex-
haust pipes HSA 441. Both priors to 2-12
Phone 813-1033
1965 Pontiac - Shr. Chief for sale. Excellent employee, reliable, efficient and courteous. Call John and come by for a test drive.
500 Sizuki, $250 needs work but run O.K. w/
tools and toolkit. Call 841-4135.
Let Maupintour
2a The LEGO WORLD For Me
For Sale. Miami, Mississippi Semiconductor 35 MM
For Sale. Miami, Mississippi Semiconductor 35 MM
$1250. Call 812-6416; after 4,送货费
$1250. Call 812-6416; after 4,送货费
Midi-length, embroidered suede coat fully lined with black fur Worn once ONLY $806 $825
$849 $879 $919
DYNAMIC DUO IN RIVER CITY EX-volunteers of Peace Camp and Vista will be on campus 8-14.
Must sell Naiamun Hall contract. Open to male only.
Call 843-0960 or ask for Nick. 2-12
Custom made leather, patching, embroidering,
cutting, stitching.
Bolton PLASACK ATTIE 199. Warm-
touch leather.
Bolton PLASACK ATTIE 199. Warm-
Guyu- our students do personalized men's hair
styling. Lawrence Beauty School 605 Mass. 445-235-
379. www.lawrencebeautyschool.com
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day service. Smith Corner, Chicago, IL. Antique clocks & watches cleaned and cleaned Electronic and light industrial caressers. River City Plaza, 815 Vermont, VT.
MUSICIANS—keep your hand in! Well paying, weekday daytime engagements with a talented, versatile, trifly with skill. The 42nd Army Unit Guard/Guard Civil Guard/Guard 9:30-30, at 843-858. Pair 2-11
Hey, there's somebody new in town you should meet HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Services, and Parts on all new and used Honda Student. Teams use our Specialty, 1811 West 4th Street 2-13
33323
HORSE CARE—One space available for well-manned riding horse. Roxx back, stallure, tack rooms. City limits, ten minutes from campus. Hire a knicker, dage-440-860, 843-838-211, 2-11
515 Michigan State. St. Bar-B-Que. We have open pit bar-b-que; wood-too much for a grill or grill, or brisket by the pound. Half-chickens by the plate. Kit at 12, or take it if not Open 12pm, then at 10am, then at 8am or before.
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders.
Information orientations held daily this
Friday, 4 Fint. 4 pm, or call Toni Halloway
842-655-656
NOTICE
Mbiso Blue Party Lounge now available for pricier rates. Phone 845-263-2581 a. p.m. for enquiries or evalsions.
SHERWOOD 710A receiver have been rated for power, channel bandwidth & less than 8.00 per cent power, channel bandwidth & less than 8.00 per cent Power Service records of this unit verify its reliability power for power transmission; price per record for RCA AUDIO recording; price per record for BASS AUDIO recording.
Learn to ride and jump at the University Horse
Square. Visit the University Horse
Square, Tollown Square, a semester park. Visitors
to the Tollown Square will receive a ticket.
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Smoking Is Our Only Business
travel service
THE BODY SHOP 108
Vitamins & Supplements
843-9412
George's Shop
PHONE 843-1211
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
Bike Ride
ARN-PATTERNS--NEEDLEPOIN
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2656
THE BODY SHOP for
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Foods for Health
615 MASS
842-2771
now at
A Valentine's gift that will resonate anyone
who sees it on Wednesday, 7 WEDNESDAY
at 10:00-9:30 PM at 141 Broadway
Dremaking: recycle your clothes by having them beautifully altered. Stretch your clothing dollars Lavery and Jeans patched men's or women's garments. Repeat 138 or 842-690, 3 to 5.00 2:12
The Westport Trucker is returning, weekly &
weekend. Send your resumes to Westport
county calendar all free! Your pick. One of
three days a week.
The many student narratives don't extend negotiations. The many student narratives don't extend negotiations. The many student narratives don't extend negotiations. The many student narratives don't extend negotiations.
The many student narratives don't extend negotiations. The many student narratives don't extend negotiations. The many student narratives don't extend negotiations.
GOING TO EUROPE- Reserve your flight today!
Reservations must be made at least 60 days before
the flight you are booking. Fill up贴 and we urge you to make your
reservation early. We offer low-cost flights Call ALIJA
JAHAWK, 811-979-0800
Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc., Missions 7, 390
Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc., Missions 7, 390
Societies 458-578, evening after 6
Societies 458-578, evening after 6
FOR RENT
Walk to wall carpeting, front door parking, spaces with walk-in doors, complete decking, windows, french doors, clear tile bathrooms, clear floor swimming pool, gas BIQ grid system, 3-bedroom, 2-bathrooms, 2000 sq. Width 3-bedroom, 2-bathrooms, 2000 sq. Width
BULLYMUNG APARTMENTS 173-750 West 24th
Now looking 14 bed and 2 bedroom furnished or
unfurnished. Great home on a large, daintiny carpet, disposal, electric kitchen, laundry facility, off-the-street parking, busy office space.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS, APATIENTS, or are unavailable for medical care with valid I.D. # 853-9631 or withdrawn I.D. # 853-9631.
FOR RENT to make or female student. Nice room in West Village with 1 black front door, Grass, Parking and utilities paid.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with a carpeted patio, marble storage, NEAR MARTIAL LANDING
FOR RENT - Very comfortable 3-bedroom apartment
on a quiet street. Close to shopping mall.
Available mid-april. Phone: 462-5728 or
email: rentrental@hotmail.com
Apk for Reny 1 Bb, w/ kitchen, bath, LB, Closet,
Bedroom. Coffee Machine Available Now. 2009 Kbty Inc.
APARTMENT—spacious, clean and quiet 2-bedroom suite with large living room, new kitchen, pool, NQT and town. No pets. Call (618) 547-0300.
Large furnished apartment near catarsis, entire
property with pool, 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths,
eat all付费 paid for 2 of 4 to B84-8478E.
Phone (303) 644-9000.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT—air conditioned, furnished,
with full kitchen and laundry. Please
inquire in person to examine unit in
female dormitories at KU and TCU. No par-
ty reservations required.
Studio Apartment quiet and clean, furnished,
bathroom, kitchen or graduate student Wheelchair
parking, basketball court
RENT - DUFFLEX top floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom, cool outdoor parking. Call Mike
at (805) 479-6611 or www.mike.edu.
WANTED
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. No house required.
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. Open 8 am to 6 pm or later.
Call 915-237-4030.
Working band needs rehearsal space. We are
841-846-8646 pay reasonable call. Call Rich
841-846-8646
Volunteers needed to work with children, Oriented Volunteers and Adults at Plymouth Congregational Church, 820 S. Third St., Plymouth, MA 02360.
Casa de Taco
$3.50 per Dozen
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
[carrier of 8th & New Hampshire]
a new beer place.
Johnnie's
745 new hampshire Hall.
Jam
"KU ON WHEELS"
K
15^c a
$14 a Semester
Economical—Ecological
Ride
RIDE THE BUS
Another Student Senate Service
Area's Largest Selection
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Rose KEYBOARD
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings 1/2 Price
Friday Nite
Wanted: Quit, quietly roommate to share new
2 bedrooms. Roommate must have $70/month.
Call Ross 682-6380
Wanted: A nurtured couple as host parents for a baby boy, aged 12-16 years, to be admitted boys, ages 12-16 years. Good quality twinning facility required for Training provided; Reedy to Wichita Youth Center, 400 N. Kansas St., KS 67202, or call 216-864-8844, or 216-864-8843.
Female roommate wanted to share nearly furious one bedroom apt on 9th Street (GB)
Baby sitter, needed. 7:00-4:30, Monday thru Friday.
Call 842-520-1298 for 5 p.m. 1-211
Wanted: Ambitious, white male dove to mate,
with my white female. Mature. 864-856-2
2-6
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles.
Take charge of your life. Try a life planning workshop or develop alternative two workshops are scheduled for the weekend of Feb 9. For details and registration in the Lawrence Life Planning Center, visit www.lawrencelifeplanning.org.
Rofls and Scott. "A Question of Priorities."
Rofls and Scott. Women's athletics, Rofls and Scott.
Reduced parking fees, Rofls and Scott. The Valentine
Valentine. Reduced Rofls and Scott.
12 and 13, 14 and 16, 2-4
Interested in no-frills low-cost let travel to
the UK or France? Interested in practically
practically? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the lead expense way for travel to the UK or France. Go to Phone us at 800-223-5490.
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights $7奖金
on entire week can be purchased at the SUA office. Individual night ticket sales start March 1
March 9.
LOST
REWARD Jolie large black cat bed, January
green eye, no dulling, call dog 604-725-1600,
Monday through Friday.
LOST White toenail, rust-colored nail and
toe nail with a redish-white discoloration.
unfortunately unidentified Call 842-9423, leave message.
Lost: Brown leather purse Friday morning, in
Boston. I need it. No answer. 21-11.
I need it. I need B4 825-7683.
Whenever, "look" the albums from 1923 Trem. and 1935 The Beatles, they were asked. I used that I thought you found their worthwhile. I felt like it was good.
Leaf brown female cut with black and grey hair. Named after Linda Woodson. Phone: 843-6890 or fax to 2237 Hedge Court, Suite 101, New York, NY 10022.
HELP WANTED
Help: Wanted-Cocktail waitress. Must be 21.
Help: -800-Mass. Phone: 842-3330.
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Heights
- Crescent Heights
•Oaks
•Acorn
•Gaslan
•Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and BEDROOMS
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
- Stained Glass
Open 8-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sun.
Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model in the business world. Only 500 students to 800. No experience necessary, and you need not be glamorous. Personality and ability are required. An established, licensed farm providing provider. An established, licensed farm providing provider. A licensed farm providing provider. Studio 3109 Main, Kansas City, Mo. Phone (815) 765-1288, room 16 to 30. Located next to U.S. Steel.
City Planner/Manager - Vista (a part of AG-
CITY Planners) for summer season. A rescue spec-员 summer the season. A rescue spec-员 summer the season. A rescue spec-员 summer the season.
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CITY. REPair.-815 Vermont, 841-4083.
Sterios - stores & typerservants. Independent repair specialists. No retail hustle. We service what repairs. Replace. Unimpaired resources. See ff.
Valentine's Day is not far away, and there is no time to yourself. I've really reasonable reasons. Titanium Pam
TYPING
Guitar lessons: fingerstyle, open tuning, slide
and strumming. Includes 1-hour course.
week courses: B4-894-068. For link: A2-116-068
Experienced babycater can work afterwards and
time (3:00-12:00 p.m). Call Joy Johnson.
212-456-7890
Typing in my home IEM Select, Pica type
setting, and basic typing. Typing, Prompt,
accurate work. Call Satisfaction.
Experienced Typist - Will do thetas, dissertations,
and miscellaneous typing. Call 842-7599.
842-7599
CALL 2-12
PATRICK L. MCCARTNEY
Experimented in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other multi-using. Have electric typewriter with plex tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Knocked out of spell correction. PhD 842-934, Mrs. Wright
Experienced thesia typist. Close to campus. 841.
4980. Myra. 2-11
Employment Opportunities
Alaska is booming this year! Approved hand-
book, "JOBS IN ALASKA," covers all occupa-
tions of Alaska. The edition, $200, from
"JOBS IN ALASKA," Box 1548, a
laired employment agency.
2-11
$60 to $85 PER WEEK PART TIME Unlimited
travel. Companies pay up money for that, per-
sonal tour. For further information regarding
company advertising, P.O. Box 1107, Albany,
NY 10740.
RIDES — — RIDERS
Wanted to join or form carpool from Merrimack to New York. Send resume to campus by 2:25 pm, M.F. Call Blum 618-395-3900.
FOUND
Found in Wusee on Friday, ladies gold watch-
sales are open. We sell ladies and aethro-
sis and ask for john-also pay for this ad.
WHY NOT!
unwanted items with a
a classified in the
UDK
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send money order to:
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8
Wednesday, February 6, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Massive Administrative Relocation Is Result of 2 New Executive Posts
A person wearing a white coverall is peeling off a black paint stain from a wall. In the background, there are tools and materials used in the painting process.
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
New Offices
Building and grounds workman Roy
Johnson readied a wall in the chancellor's
office for painting yesterday in the redecoration and relocation of two offices.
Health . . .
From Page One
way to renovate the rest of the building for medical purposes.
Wally Broberg, Good Health's architect, said it would be impractical to use parts of the hospital outside the 1969 wing because the new hospital was designed to "pull together all nonpatient service functions and automated system" to reduce labor costs.
Simons said that in terms of future expansion, parking and lighting, the Mount Hope Nursery site was best for a hospital. On the other hand, Simons said, the existing site might be better because it was known as a hospital located outside of the present hospital, and there was an "emotional aspect" involved that would necessitate explaining to the community why the hospital and its site were being abandoned.
Also to be considered if the present
hospital site is used are expenses for removing sewers, streets and power lines and the problem of condemning houses that would be in the way.
Warren Rhodes, chairman of the board of trustees, told Simons he was disappointed that Good Health's report didn't include more common information to facilitate the implementation.
"I seems that for the $3,000 (paid to
me) health we would have known when
to sell it."
Walt Swinberg, Good Health's mechanical engineer, said, "This thing of site location I don't think can be delegated beyond the trustees. You know the com-
Good Health's proposed contract will now be studied by an attorney and will be brought before the board again at its regular monthly meeting Feb. 20.
Several administrative offices now in Strong Hall will be moved this spring to make room in the chancellor's suite for two students. The move is coming to Rick Von Ende, executive secretary.
The offices of Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, and John Conard, who will become assistant to the chancellor, will be moved temporarily to 252 Strong. That office was occupied by the Office of Public Health, which was moved to Carruth-O-Leary Hall to allow workmen to redecorate the offices for Shankel and Conard.
The office of University Relations, the KU News Bureau, KU Publications and the graphics division of the Photo and Graphic Arts Bureau will be moved to Carruthers Hall. The office of the museum, which is there now, moves into Wescoe Hall, probably in March, Von Ende said.
Upward Bound and Selective Educational Services will also be in Carruth-Oleary by
The budget division of the Office of Business Affairs will move from the second floor of Strong to the office now occupied by University Relations.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
SENIORS AND GRADS
You are needed now for summer and fall volunteer business positions in the USA and Abroad. Recruiters will be interviewing in the BUSINESS PLAN AT CHAPELHILL, Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 11-12
We also deliver
Spaghetti
843-9111
Campers
Hideaway
Campus
Hideaway
free state opera house (the old Red Dog)
SLIDE BY and BOOGIE this week for '150 a night!
Tonight—Wednesday, Feb. 6
QUITTIN' TIME
THIS WEEKEND GET INTO COUNTRY ROCK with
SUNDANCE—Friday, Feb. 8
BILLY SPEARS—Saturday, Feb. 9
Brought to you by Music People, Ltd.
Marriage . . .
From Page One
from Kansas, he was still required to pay
nonservice tuition until he established
employment.
THIS RULE was challenged last fall by a married couple, and residence regulations were changed. Now each married student's residency is determined in the same way as a single student's, Polly Pettit, Affirmative Action secretary, said.
Of 3,596 KU students applying for financial aid last year, 146 were married, according to Jerry Rogers, director of Student Financial Aid
There are definite guidelines married students must follow when applying for aid
"The they may get hung up on some silly technicalities," he said, "For instance, if they indicate on the form that they are going to be with you during the year, we have to ask them for
Rogers said he thought both husband and wife ought to contribute to expenses, if they were responsible.
more parental information and they may not qualify for aid."
"WHEN TWO students are married and the husband indicates that his wife doesn't
Hogers said that until recently the financial aid office used the Stouffer Place rent as a scale for determining how much he would be paying for rent to receive financial aid.
work, we may not award him any aid," Mrs. Browns said.
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Departing May 25, June 22, July 20
22/29 Day Tours Call: Air Jayhawk 841-0780
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The Evelyn Wood challenge:
Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster, with comprehension!
If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
O. K. Tonight we'd like the opportunity to prove, as we have to millions, that you can read faster with comprehension.
In fact, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to come to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson armed with the toughest textbook or reading material you own.
We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy . . . we're using yours . . . the toughest you can find!
If you're open minded and want to improve your reading ability, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to begin tonight,
to make reading work for you!
Every night this week at the Reading Dynamics Institute Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
Also at the KANSAS UNION, Parlor A (2nd floor) Thursday, Feb. 7, hourly on the half hour, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa
I
Call 843-6424
Make reading work for you!
Fe
40s,
BEAUTIFUL
The 1963.1 tory,3
Kansa
You t'u
flag? Y'u
studying?
Sens.
Simpson
current
creature
tory,...
The rectan surmo seal, u divest flower colors the di THI media
KANSAN
Forecast: Clear to partly cloudy. High in
40s, low in 20s.
Dorm Occupancy Increasing
84th Year, No. 85
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, February 7, 1974
See Story Page 3
"LANND WHITH PLINTEE OV KNUTHUN"
BEAUTIFUL SCENERY
WHEAT AND GRASS LAND
NO FORMOGRAPHY
NO BOOZE OR GAMBLING
THE WHEAT STATE
FAMOUS HISTORICAL SITES
LEADERSHIP OF STATE OFFICIALS
"AT LAST! A FLAG WE CAN IDENTIFY WITH!"
Legislature Seeks New State Flag With More Relevance, Distinction
By JAY GLICK Kansan Staff Reporter
Kansas may have a new state flag.
You didn't know Kansas had an old state flag? You knew, but you didn't really care? For you, my friend, the legislature is studying proposals for a new flag.
Sens. Jack Janssen, D-Lyons, and John Simpson, R-Salina, are sponsoring a concurrent resolution that would establish a common goal of desirability of a new tide gate.
oer present flag was officially adopted in
It is, according to the Kansas Directory,
that flag.
The Great Seal of Kansas is centered in a rectangle of blue silk or bunting and is surrounded by a crest with bands, shipped proper, which divested of its heraldic language is a sunflower as torn from its stalk in its natural colors on a bar of twisted gold and blue."
THE NAME "KANSAS" is printed immediately below the Great Seal.
"The design comprises the inner field of the seal state and the military crest," the directory says, "and in these designs can be read the high points in Kansas' early history."
The Louisiana Purchase is signified by the bar or wreath.
Kansas was the 4th state admitted to the Union. This is represented by 34 stars.
"The hills almost identify terrain near Fort River," according to the directory, "The buffalo and the Indian, the oxen and the prairie schooners, the cabin and the ploughman tell their own story and the story of Kansas in sequence."
Ho-hum, you say, Symbolism is fine, but where is the relevancy?
That's exactly what the senators are seeking in a new flag; relevance. The senators have been using the "holds little meaning for the citizens of this state; it is not easily recognizable among various other flags with which it is associated." The senators display of the great seal of this state."
HOW DOES the present flag compare aesthetically with the flaes of other states?
"I can't recall it very well," said Phil Henderson, an professor of design. "I guess it is one of those things some people might be asking for." I something about Ad Astra per Aspera?"
The state motto "Ad Astra per Aspera," which translated from Latin means "to the stars through difficulty," is, indeed, on the verbs used there, however, may be less asterisk per Aspera.
Perhaps a new flag is what the state needs to gain national attention. After receiving a new flag, Kansas could be launched as a state of interest for the aesthetically conscious individual.
Doubtful you say?
Maybe the most aesthetically pleasing, and indeed the most relevant proposal for a new flag, is that which is rumored to be sponsored by persons who persist in atheism. In Kansas, That proposed flag is 3 feet on the staff by 5 feet on the fly and solid white.
Meat Prices Zoom As Strike Continues
By the Associated Press
The week-old independent truckers' protest struck deeper blows at the nation's economy yesterday as violence on the highways sent toppled contractors to stop the walkout continued to fail.
New layoffs were reported, bringing to more than 100,000 the number of workers idled by the drivers' strike. Truckers are raising high fuel prices and low freight rates.
In Washington, Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp warmed last night that state authorities might not be able to control the virus, which could meet with President Nixon at once.
IT WAS LEARNED a few minutes later, however, that Nixon didn't plan to meet with Sharp, who asked in a message the strike could be "solved easily and quickly tonight" if only he could meet with Nixon. He asked Nixon to take him. Userj 'rued' to ask she last night.
Lawmen in several states escorted convoys carrying critical supplies of gasoline and food. Shoppers in populous areas like the Northeast were warned they will have a tough time finding beef and produce by the first of the week.
Govs. Daniel Walker of Illinois and Otis R. Bowen of Indiana acted yesterday afternoon to activate the National Guard in their states, bringing to six the number of states using guardsmen in an attempt to keep peace.
PLANELOADS OF BEEF were on the way to several cities in the Northeast, but his price was zooming up from $9.50 to $49 catt-a-pound price being paid for dressed beef carcasses could be the highest ever, and it warned there will be little or no beef to buy if the shutdown continues.
Police in Ohio reported more than 300 arrests since the strike began, and in 18 of those cases a clashed in fist fights with striking independents. Authorities in at least 10 states reported shootings in the past 24 hours, including one death, the second of the
In Washington, representatives of the strikers sent back to the White House their demands that fuel prices be rolled back and freight rates increased.
Time Is Precious to Former POW
Kansian Staff Reporter
By CRAIG STOCK
Time is precious to Charles Boyd
Almost seven years of his life were lost in a prison cell in North Vietnam, so Boyd is now determined to waste as little of his time as possible.
Boyd, an Air Force major and Lawrence junior, received the Air Force's highest honor, the Air Force Cross, in a ceremony on Friday afternoon at Woodruff Auditorium.
The medal was awarded for Boyd's heroism as a combat pilot on April 22, 1966, the day he was shot down and captured by the North Vietnamese. The citation accompanying the award noted his bravery and skilful airmanship in an attack on a surface-to-air missile site 35 miles north of Khe Sanh province before his plane was shot down.
BOYD WAS A PRISONER until his release Feb. 12, 1973. He said he had been busy with interviews, debriefings and personal matters the first five months after his return and for the past six months he was then trying to relax and regain his identity.
Boyd enrolled at the University of Kansas last fall to study Latin American affairs in New York.
assignment. He will be an area code specialist, a liaison in diplomatic service, and a manager.
Boyd, age 35, and his wife, Milicent, a 1960 graduate of the KU School of Education, said they had no difficulty adhere to his other after Boyd's return from captivity.
He said yesterday that his release was such a damn relief" that nothing else could have happened.
"I IT WAS FUNNY," Mrs. Boyd said. "I didn't hit him for seven-and-a-half years. I did."
Social changes, he said, were the most surprising things he faced upon his return to France.
Boyd said the tremendous reception given to the returning POWs was a pleasant surprise. It was reassuring, he said, to find concern about the welfare of the POWs.
"OUR CAPTORS TRIED to convince us that our country was against us and we were wrong," she said.
But he has been taught to accept and adjust to the changes because he said, the only rule he knew was that "you can't eat".
Boyd said the most valuable lesson he learned while in captivity was about the importance of time. Most persons spend their lives doing things they really haven't chosen, he said. Their habits are formed by the experiences they have to think about the priorities in their lives.
BOYD SAID THAT HE though most books written by POWs about their imprisonment were purely commercial ventures and that he found the book of Jack and Harry who want to write a book."
An author approached Boyd after his release from North Vietnam hoping to meet him at the airport or prisonment. But Boyd said that he had no intention of permitting someone to "ghostwrite" for him and that he didn't want to waste a year of his life writing a novel.
"I've been able to sort out the priorities in my life—the things that really have value for me."
Boyd maintains close contact with other POWs. He and his wife spent New Year's Eve in Mexico City with Boyd's former cellmate.
Committee Gets Subpoena Power
Boyd said his seven years in captivity had greatly affected his political views,
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House, by a vote of 410 to 4, armed its Judiciary Committee yesterday with broad subpoenaes from the Justice Department and President Nixon should be impeached.
"Whatever we learn," said Rep. Peter W. Rodino, D-N.J. and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, "whatever we conclude, the manner in which we proceed is of historic importance—to the country, to the presidency, to the House, to our constitutional system and to future generations."
Taking solemn note that only once before in the nation's history has such a resolution been acted on, the House adopted it as a constitutional duty in impeachment cases.
*IF EVERY STUDENT could live in, not just visit, a Communist country for one
Rodino said the new power given to the committee will enable it to gain "full and complete access to any persons, information, or things in the custody or under control of any agency, officer or employee of the United States, including the President."
THE OVERWHELMING VOTE for the resolution opened a new stage in the im
Asked by Rep. Louis C. Wyman, R-N.H., whether he intended to submerge Nixon, Marx and Clinton in water, question that he knew whether it would be necessary for a full investigation.
peachment investigation, which has been gone on since last fail.
RODINO TURNED ASIDE all questions about what he intended to ask in the way of a question or a question and answer.
"I hope it will not become necessary," said Wyman.
The subpoena resolution also includes
authority for the committee to compile answers to written questions and to take notes.
Although strongly in support of the need for the committee to have such powers to conduct an investigation that could clear as much confusion as possible, objects to some features of the resolution.
Boyd received his Air Force Cross from Lt. Gen. Felix Rogers, commander of the Air University. Boyd also received four other medals, recognizing his actions in 1962 and 1963, and in 1964 to April 1966 and during his imprisonment from April 1966 to Feb. 1973.
REP. ROBERT McCLORY, R-III,
declaring that the impeachment inquiry
will paralyze the government, said
the resolution should include an April 30
deadline for reporting the Judiciary
Committee's recommendation back to the
year," he said, "we'd have the most conservative branch of college kids in the world. The indigency of life in a Communist country is like a prisoner, but for anyone—in glassth."
The other medals were the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Force Aerial Medal, the Air Force Commandment Medal and the Purple Heart with two oak leaf clusters.
Rodimo said he would do everything he could to meet that date but opposed fixing any rigid deadline. His pledge was the backing of House Republican Senator Eric McClary's effort
In presenting the award, Rogers said Boyd embodied the soldierly virtues of physical and moral courage. The physical courage shown by Boyd was great, Rogers said the moral courage shown by Boyd and other prisoners of war was the most unusual virtue.
See SUBPOENA Page 6
PRESIDENT NIXON FROZE diesel fuel prices Tuesday until Congress can approve ways for the independents to pass along to them. It will ultimately to consumers—their higher costs.
The strike has idied many of the estimated 100,000 independent drivers and kept a few of the Teamsters' 170,000 members off the roads.
One North Carolina hog slaughtering company closed eight of its 10 operations yesterday, and the strike began to hit the company. It said mine workers mines in northern West Virginia closed for lack of supplies, and another 2,000 miners were reported absent from work because they couldn't buy gasoline. Other coal companies in the region were reported near a shutdown.
NATIONAL GUARDSMEN patrolled that region of West Virginia yesterday, escorcing roads and enforcing traffic laws.
The violence that has marked the protest since its beginning last Thursday increased and appeared more serious. One trucker was shot to death Tuesday night in
Delaware and several other drivers were shot and wounded overnight or early
THE OHIQNATIONAL GUARD called up
1,500 troops houst to replace me
nurses.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said trucker-related arrests passed the 300 mark. At least three arrests were recorded yesterday, officials said.
The auto industries reported 26,000 persons off the job or working short hours in 2018.
The shutdown—which has affected virtually every state in the nation—caused mounting layoffs and food shortages, mostly at the distribution level. Some large food store chains chartered planes to ship equipment companies switched their cargo to the rails.
THE MEAT PACKING industry also was hurt. Richard Ling, president of the American Meat Institute, sent a telegram to the governors of 48 states urging them to help truck stop operators remove blockades.
By the Associated Press
Truck Strike Cramps Regional Commerce
Plant closings and cutbacks were reported yesterday and shortages were felt in Kansas and Missouri as the strike by independent truck drivers continued.
The Farmland Foods Inc., beef packing plant at Garden City shut down after Tuesday's slaughter and about 130 persons were laid off.
Don Fender, plant manager, said, "We are having difficulty obtaining adequate equipment to move our meat products," he said. The closed until equipment could be obtained.
AF SALINA, Tony's Pizza Service,
products of frozen pizza, shut down and
reopened.
The Stokley-Van Camp plant on E. 10th Street in Lawrence closed late yesterday because of difficulties in obtaining raw materials. Mr. said. About 150 employees were affected.
The plant usually processes about 2,000 head of cattle daily and Roeser said the move would cut production by about 40 percent.
THE IOWA BEEF Processors (IBP) plant in Emporia beef to a single shift on both the shaughter and processing sides, Jack Hirsch, vice president for transportation, said.
The Union Stockyards Exchange in Springfield, Mo, was at a virtual standstill. John Kush, exchange president, said, "We have no idea what the market might be."
Tom Donatell, plant manager, said the warehouse was full of products, but the uncertainty of fuel availability across the nation for keeping the pizza frozen necessitated the move. In terms of number employees, it is one of the largest firms in Salem.
Later, Harry Henderson, IBP director of labor relations, said plans had changed and there would be two shifts in both processing and slammer operations.
He declined, however, to say whether there would be two shaft Friday, indicating that he was not ready.
THE SALINA PIZZA manufacturer also
changed its plans after it found it could distribute some of the product to other places. It announced work would resume at midnight.
"We could really feel the pinch this weekend if things don't loosen up," said one producer broker. "We're short on cucumbers, potatoes, peppers, lettuce and grapes."
Felony charges have been filed against three University of Kansas students in connection with the Jan. 29 bombing incident at Oliver Hall.
Charges Filed Against Three In Oliver Blast
Jeff Lysaught, Shawne Mission freshman, has been charged in Douglas County Court with possession of explosives. He will be arraigned at 4 p.m. Feb. 13. He was released yesterday on $2,500 bond from Douglas County jail.
Brad Wallace, Eureka freshman, will be arranged at 4 p.m. F12. on 12 aon of delivering an explosive. He has also been released on a $2,500 bill.
David Little, Overland Park freshman,
has been charged with attempted grand
theft. His preliminary hearing will be at 2
a.m. Tuesday, October 19, and released
yesterday and released on $1,500 bond.
David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said yesterday that the three charges could carry one to five-year prison. He said he was confident apparently won't file additional charges.
The explosion, caused by a large firecracker or bomb, occurred in the north stairwell on the 10th floor of Oliver Hall. It caused about $10 or $2 damage to a window, according to a KU Security and Parking Department report.
Lysaight, Wallace and Little were later moved from the hall.
POLITICAL MARKETING
The Great Debate
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
The advising system at KU should be revamped. Ed Rofls told students last night in a debate between candidates for student body president. His opponent, John Beisner, agreed. See story back page.
2
Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news capsules / the associated press
Nixon Wants Early Action on Health Plan
President Nixon asked Congress yesterday to give early consideration to his new national health insurance plan, saying it would protect every American.
Wage. Price Controls May End April 30
The administration bill, called the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan (CHIP), would build upon the present system of private insurance companies and the federal Medicare program. It would largely eliminate the Medicaid program for low income and welfare recipients.
The Nixon administration told Congress yesterday that it hoped to end its 21-year program of wage and price controls April 30, except in the health and petroleum industries. But Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz said controls could be continued over additional industries.
The present legislative authority for wage and price controls expires April 30, and a Senate committee is holding hearings on whether the authority
Miller Subpoenas All Kansas Newspapers
Atty. Gen. Vern Miller confirmed yesterday that he had issued about 375 subpoenas to all newspapers and radio television stations in Kansas to learn how much money was spent on political advertising in the 1972 gubernatorial campaign.
It was presumed Miller was subpenning the records of the newspapers and stations to determine how much money was spent on behalf of Democratic Gov. Robert Docking and Republican nominee Morris Kary with their expenditure statements filed with the secretary of state's office.
Moorer Cites Possible Leak of Documents
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chefs of Staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee in a letter released yesterday that a Navy yeoman had the opportunity and the possible desire to leak highly classified diplomatic documents to the press.
Moore also told the committee in a statement that he never ordered or encouraged unauthorized transfer of documents from the National Security Agency.
Legislators Tour KU, Support Pay Increases
Three legislators toured the University of Kansas campus yesterday as a prelude to Monday's hearings before the House Ways and Means Committee.
The legislators-George L. White, RV Valley Center; Wilbur E. Marshall, REureka, and Albert D. Campbell, D-Larned-talked with administrators and students about items requested by the Board of Regents but not included in Gov. Robert B. Docking's requests to the legislature.
The top priority in the relegs' budget was a requested 10 per cent raise in faculty salaries. Docking recommended an 8.5 per cent increase.
White said the regents' requests were "in limbo" because the Republican leadership of the House hadn't decided whether to permit the regents' requests or Docking's requests.
He said that he would like to recommend the full 10 per cent but that the matter was between the governor and the House leadership.
"We do need to get those salaries up." White said. "This is the year we should do it."
Campbell said it was too early to tell whether the full request would be recommended by the committee but that there were no reasons to argue for a compromise between the requests.
White said the increase in salaries was important so that the University wouldn't lose professors to other, higher paying colleges and universities.
Campbell said one of the main questions the three legislators wanted answered was whether the professors here were being used effectively. He said he was convinced that they were because students they had talked to were being taught by professors, associate and assistant professors, rather than just graduate teaching assistants.
B&G Employe Injured in Fall
Young, a Buildings and Grounds employee, suffered a gash on his head and was unconscious after the fall, according to another source. The employees who were near Young when he fell
Roy Young, who was injured yesterday morning when he fell from a ladder in the gardeners' shop of the Buildings and Grounds Department, was transferred to the University of Kansas Medical Center yesterday afternoon.
A statement of Yong's condition wasn't available last night.
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White said women's intercollegiate games didn't attract enough people to support the programs but that men's intercollegiate athletics were self-supporting. He said a public relations campaign might be started to attract people to the games before committing state funds to the program.
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Campbell said that he wasn't encouraged or discouraged about the funding of women's athletics but that it was still a possibility.
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The group went to the School of Pharmacy and attended the Law to see what证件went to the School of Pharmacy
Campbell said they saw a need for expansion of the pharmacy school. The school has had to turn away Kansas students because of over crowding.
White said they thought there was a definite need to replace Green Hall because it was so old. Construction of a new law school building has been proposed.
The Lawrence City Commission Tuesday night set a two-hour parking limit for the north side of 12th Street from the alley and Louisiana streets west to Indiana.
Parking Limit Set Near Campus
Oread corner businessmen had complained to the commission that students were parking in their spaces all day and restricting access for customers.
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Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Daily Kansan
25
Convenience, Economy Are Cited As Reasons for Dorm Popularity
Economy and convenience are the main reasons residence hall occupancy has increased this year, administrators and students said yesterday.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said each student had his own reason for staying at a residence hall. She said some students liked the atmosphere, some liked the companionship and some like the convenience and economy.
John Beisser, Salma junior and president of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), said economics and an economic science department were the main reasons for increased occupancy.
Almost 200 students have moved into University residence halls since last fall. Presley, University residence halls contain approximated 1400 students, the largest of which are 4,167 residence halls. Last semester, only 3,908 students lived in University residence halls.
J. J. WILSON, director of housing, said he assumed that when students came in for the spring semester, it was because a residence hall was the cheapest and easiest place to live.
John Bowman, Hutchinson senior,
agreed. This is his second year at McCollum
"I moved in because of the price," he said. "I thought it was more convenient. They need to be more friendly."
Jim Swafford, Topeka senior, has lived in Ellsworth Hall for the past two and a half years. He said that the main reason he had to stay at a residence hall was the convenience.
"I tried an apartment for one year," Swafford said, "and the cooking and cleaning were a little bit of an annoyance. In my situation, I found I had more privacy in the dorm although there are people around."
Swafford has a single room at Eldsworth.
BILL MARKLEY, Saina senior, has lived at Oliver Hall the past three and a half years.
Markley, a resident assistant (RA) at Oliver, said Oliver always seemed to be the nearest residence hall to him.
"I've always liked the atmosphere, the kids and the staff members here," he said.
Oilman Says Exploration Needed for Self-Sufficiency
Markley said the allowance of creativity made students want to come back to the school.
By DAGMAR R. PADEN Kaman Staff Reporter
"In particular, it would be the changing policies in the last four years—the relaxation of (open) hours, allowing employees more time to be more inside their rooms than previously.
STUDENTS can individualize their rooms now. In general, the students can change their room.
Beth Paxton, Breasted木,Mo., junior and resident of Lewis Hall, said the residence halls offered services and companionship that students couldn't find in off-campus
The United States will be dependent on oil and gas for the next 10 to 15 years because the development of nuclear energy has hurt oil. The Department of Energy's Production, Denver, Colorado, said last night.
"I think there's more opportunity to make friends in the dorms," she said.
Paxton said she would probably live in a residence hall again next year, but she said
Wolf spoke at a meeting of the University of Kansas Petroleum Engineering Club.
"It seems as if a lot more invade now than it was my freshman year," he said. "I think I was a little bit more."
"Some oil men say we can be self-sufficient in the next 10 years, but others say we can never again be self-sufficient if we had been using as they have in the past," he said.
Markley said Oliver Hall had changed in the last few years.
"Excessive profits" is a term people use about oil companies when they compare this year's profits to last year's, he said. People often don't look at the oil company profits over the last 10 years or look at the costs of oil exploration.
"Anyway, it's certainly been a good experience for me," she said.
He estimated that there would be a 40-year supply of oil at current production rates if all federal offshore lands along the Atlantic coast were leased and developed.
Between 75 and 80 per cent of all energy used in the United States today comes from oil and gas, Wolfe said.
East Coast are of great potential help in our achieving self-sufficiency, Wolfe said.
The United States has only 8 per cent of the estimated Free World oil reserves, Wolfe said. The Middle East and Africa have 82 per cent of the estimated Free World oil reserves. Russia is self-sufficient in her energy needs.
"We have to have increased incentives and maintain current incentives for oil exploration in the United States or companies will continue to go overseas, Wolfe
RANDY ALTMAN, Prairie Village sophomore and resident of Hassinger Hall for one and a half years, said he didn't plan to live in a residence hall again.
"The food quality has gone down and sometimes it too noisy," he said.
Altran said there were some benefits to residence hall living, regardless of the poor.
Trouble with environmentalists is an obstacle to expanding oil refining in the United States, Wolfe said. He said that the federal government has repeatedly restored to its pre-ice spill conditions.
"I don't have to do the dishes," he said,
"and it allows me more time to do my
things."
Offshore oil fields on the United States'
Applications for the Russian Summer Institute are due tomorrow in the Foreign Study Room, Room 260 Strong Hall. The International University of the Soviet Union's language and culture.
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The portrait will be placed in the graduate School office with those of other former residents.
1974-Year of the Taco
A portrait of William P. Albrecht, former dean of the Graduate School, will be presented to the University at 3:30 p.m. in the Walking Room of the Kansas Union.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will accept the painting for the University.
Albrecht joined the KU faculty in 1957 as chairman of the English department. During Albrecht's nine-year tenure as dean of the Graduate School, its enrollment doubled and the production of doctoral degrees nearly tripled.
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Campus Strays To Be Picked Up
Security and Parking officers will report stray dogs on the University of Kansas campus to Lawrence animal controllers starting Monday, Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, announced yesterday.
The leash law stipulates that dogs running at large and not under the charge, care or control of their masters can be picked up by them and taken to the Humane Society's kennels.
Nitcher said that because loose dogs were getting into University buildings the Lawrence leash law would be enforced on campus.
To claim a dog, the owner must show proof that the dog has had a current rabies shot and also must pay a $10 pick-up fee. If the dog is not claimed within 24 hours of the dog isn't claimed within 24 hours.
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4
Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Daily Kansar
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Shotgun Politics
If the 1960s was the decade of the politics of confrontation, then the 1970s may be the decade of shotgun politics. Many groups apparently have decided that the best way to achieve their goals is to point a gun at the enemy. We demand the immediate satisfaction of their grievances above all else.
A good example is the coal miners' strike in Great Britain. The coal miners have refused to work overtime for the past three months in protest of the government's refusal to grant pay increases in excess of anti-inflation guidelines.
Here in the United States, the shutdown by the independent truckers presents similar problems. While the truckers' strike probably will not bring U.S. industry to a grinding halt, as the coal miners' strike may do in other states, the layoffs in a number of industries and may cause severe shortages of food and other commodities.
This slowdown of production has damaged the British economy. Early this week, the miners voted to go on strike beginning this weekend. Such a strike could ruin Great Britain, but the miners are in an orgy of destruction to satisfy their personal desires.
The absurdity of the truckers' strike is underscored by one fact. The fact that the truckers is that increased fuel prices are eating up their profits.
On Dec. 13, however, the Interstate Commerce Commission established procedures that enabled truckers to increase rates to cover higher mileage and port costs that very few truckers have applied for such rate increases.
Instead of accepting the ICC proposal and lobbying for further concessions in Congress and in the states, the truckers have decided to take a different approach to leverage they have to extort concessions from the government.
Some of the truckers' complaints are legitimate or understandable and some are not. In any case, there is no justification for the use of violence or extortion to accomplish a goal. Goals frightening thing is that such techniques may become more common.
As our society becomes more advanced, the different segments of the population become more dependent upon each other. Farmers and city dwellers, white collar workers and blue collar workers, private enterprise and government, are all dependent on each other for necessary goods and services.
In this situation, it is possible for one disaffected interest group to pick up the shotgun and demand satisfaction from the rest of society. Unless people are willing to accept their social responsibilities, this nation may be headed for a new kind of anarchy.
—John Bender
Dogs Outshine People
I've been watching the people on campus for almost three years. I've been watching them so long they've all begun to look alike (what with beards and blue jeans, jackets) a sort of gameness face.
Lately, I've discovered my
favorite video to watch on ampcas
are dogs.
The Office of Admissions couldn't tell me the number of dogs enrolled at KU. Nobody would even guess. But considering the looks of things on days with decent lunch, I must number enough to at least qualify as a minority group. And their ranks are growing.
Some administration and faculty types consider this a serious problem. But as minority groups and dogs cause very few problems, they fight with fighting, abusing University property or causing civil unrest.
They seldom even bark (although once I distinctly overheard an irritated Siberian husk growl at an overloud evangelist) and usually use the sidewalks and crosswalks.
I don't know why people get so worked up just because they have to hold a door open for a dog now and then. Otherwise, their demands are simple and few. Most people still wear hats and have sterling characters. When was the last time you saw a dog get drunk or smoke dope?
We can learn a lot from dogs—how to throw balls and sticks for them to fetch, how to speak such words as "sit," "lie down" and "stay."
But more than all this, dogs add color and life to the KU campus. They are alert and they are friendly. Are they the God, they don't all look alike.
Bunny Miller
January
By NOEL GREENWOOD
January is a ho-mun month at most American colleges, a time to catch up with undone assignments from the fall term and then unwind before spring term begins.
The Los Angeles Times
Term Gaining Popularity
At some campuses, however, that tradition has gone by the boards. The reason: the growing popularity of something called January term (also, at some colleges, intermission, interterm, winter term or interim).
January term is a month-long immersion in a single course, usually yielding the same academic credit as a course taken over an entire semester.
IT GAINED A foothold on campus in the 1960s, but its major growth came later. To accommodate the January term, colleges usually switch to a 4-1-4 academic calendar—breaking the year into two four-month terms with January term sandwiched in between.
What makes it especially attractive to students is the snorgasborg of non-traditional courses—or, at least, nontraditional ways of approaching traditional subjects—that January term usually has available.
At Depawu University in Indiana, one student is spending the month interviewing motorists as part of a study of hitchhiking laws.
At California Lutheran College in Thousand Oaks, 12 religion students are on a three-continent tour of biblical sites in Israel, Lebanon, Turkey and elsewhere, while a group of philosophy students is in Madrid. Madrid as they study western civilization.
Some examples:
—AT MASSACHUSETTS Institute of Technology, one laboratory is filled with students learning the art of glassblowing while in another students are working their way through "Introduction to Wine Making."
—At the University of Redlands (Calif),
Prof. Judson Sanderson is using a roulette
wheel, cards, dice and other games of
chance for a month-long exploration of
the game around analyses of
gambling games and probing areas like
probability theory.
At the University of San Diego, a group of scholars in archaeology and historical research into our prehistoric past.
Nobody is certain how many colleges nationally have gone to a January term, but most estimates place the total in the hundreds.
month at San Diego's Old Town, where part of the assigned work is an archeological dig.
In California, though the movement has had little impact on public colleges and universities, close to one-third of the private college system offers a January term or a variation of it.
PROBABLY THE most glamorous part of January term is the foreign study.
Depaun University, for instance, which began January term only a year ago, sent 500 students off on projects in Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania; Japan, and West Germany this month.
But most January term work is carried on closer to home, though not necessarily across the country.
Mount St. Mary's, for example, has about 30 January term students scrambling around Los Angeles, visiting out-of-the-way restaurants and shopping centers in the factory and the city produce market under
the course title of "The Other Face of Los Angeles."
ON-CAMPUS offerings often make for an intriguing package, whether it be an analysis of the social implications of the team King vs. Bobby Riggs tennis match (the Pacific) or a political science-based examination of white House press coverage.
Despite the off-bat approach of many January term courses, campus officials are confident that most can be defended as academically valid. In fact, many are quite traditional college courses simply telescoped into the one-month period instead of being stretched over a full semester.
"Sure, we're going to have some that might not be as good in academic content as they are for one administrator." "But the advantages of this one clearly outweigh the disadvantages."
Ghostly President
Now You See Him, Now You Don't
By PATRICK OWENS
New York—The President flaunts in and out of focus like the moon after four or five days.
Now you see him, now you don't. And if that wasn't he, what was it?
His wristlatch noncorporeality — the illusive profile of a man handling the possibility of political extinction by skulking in his chambers—has come to seem most obvious when Mr. Nixon is at his most powerful. He and his chief Joint Chiefs of Staff, the diplomatic corps and the American people with an ambitious national agenda in his state of the union message. It was an agenda which, even coming from him, might on first reading once have fluttered pulses and prompted laughter that was greeted with long, stirring applause.
He seemed nevertheless something less than real. The occasion was a pageant for a ghost. And it was verified, for those with residual doubts, that Richard M. Nixon, the then president of the United States, transmitted already into a haunt, a shade who holds office only through the in-
From his new, if shadowy, eminence the President can say almost anything about him, and that concern him, expeciting his own crimes and misdeemers of his administration. And he will be heard out in the spirt that garrulous poets of onetime artists have found himself at the Means Committee, are heard out he has lost the capacity to be taken seriously, an odd fate for an official remaining in possession of so much of authority as a lawyer or an art historian, influence, to speak of. But as long as he is in office, he will remain very powerful indeed.
Nixon the noncorporeal has made a turn to the left. He is strong once again for welfare reform, dedicated to the improvement of mass transit, determined to reform the national scandal of medical care in this country. Most amusing of all, the president who secretly wired his life for sound has become a determined critic of
Everyone knows he must still be regarded seriously. It is just that something has happened, and you need to act.
invasions of privacy. The man who bugged his own conversations with everyone from J. Edgar Hover to Golda Meir is determined to halt encroachments on the rights of individuals to live their own lives and say their own thoughts.
This president has had enough trouble from his self-suillance that it is possible he has learned something of the evils of his predecessor, and he has belooved him to tell us so. As it is, his commitment to privacy seems as follows or he himself seems insubstantial. And this is why we need a system.
"There will be no recession in the United States of America," he boldly asserted. And it was not necessary to hear his ensuing promise to win the fight against inflation to reflect that the men who have designed the anti-inflation fight are much the same people as those who will now devise the shields against recession.
will get dignity. Beyond that, "there will be no government program that makes it more profitable to go on welfare than to go work." Which would seem to mean, after translation, that it's back to the car wash, Mama.
The great health care reform seems similarly compromised. It will be practically free, involving no tax increase. It will be based on "partnership," not paternity. This means that patient doctors will be working for their patients and not for the federal government."
It may be true that doctors work for their patients. But not any harder, I suspect, than patients work to pay their doctors. The Nixon reform is another madcap excursion into non-socialized medicine and could be expected to enrich doctors and insurance companies with decent medical care to the deserving. This is one of very old stuff. We can congratulate ourselves that it is possible this time simply to consider the source.
W
Welfare is to be completely overhauled, and even its beneficiaries will benefit. They
Senator's Report
Legislature Grapples with Consumer Issues
Editor's Note: This is the thru or a seven-part series on the 1974 session of the Kansas Legislature by State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Iowa, new student at the University of Kansas.
Consumerism is of great concern to au Kansans and has received particular attention in the 1974 legislative session. Five bills are pending that deal specifically with landlord-tenant relations, automobile repairs, rental housing standards, unfair and deceptive insurance practices and debt collection.
As a chairman of the Special Committee on Consumer Protection, I am sponsoring the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act, S.B. 631, The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, S.B. 632, and owning private remedies for unfair and deceptive insurance practices, S.B. 630.
The bill's most important aspects are security deposits and the tenant's right to deduct repairs, called "self-help." If a building is required, this bill regulates the landlord's monthly rent. A landlord must present the tenant a written, itemized statement of any
I feel that Kansas ranks high among the states on consumer protection. Kansas' position is bolstered by its present Uniform Consumer Credit Code and the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, both of which became law Jan. 1.
However, landlord-tenant relations have been a gray area in statutory law. Most relationships are defined by case law or custom. S.B. 631, which covers only residential rental agreements or leases, is a very narrow definition of related relations. Regulating human relations is always difficult, and landlord-tenant relationships are in need of definition.
amount taken from the security deposit.
Another provision is listed as the "self-help" provision. This allows a tenant to have minor defects, other than those the tenant caused, repaired by a qualified person at the landlord's expense. This can be deducted from the rent. But the landlord is obligated to pay the tenant only if he has not had any of the 30 days after written notification from the tenant. This provision wouldn't apply when repair costs exceed $100.
If a landlord doesn't return a deposit or its remainder within 30 days after termination of tenancy, the tenant can recover the property and money due him with damages in an amount equal to twice the amount wrongly withheld.
Substandard housing was also a subject of the Committee on Consumer Protection. House Bill 1415 authorizes the Board of Supervisors to ensure that housing is necessary for beautiful living conditions.
This provision was deemed important in 1971 when a legislative committee investigated the housing standards of migrant workers in western Kansas. The bill applies to all units that are rented or provided by an employe-
Local boards of health are required to enforce violations of the building and health codes. The tenant must first notify his landlord of any such violation, and a notification of local health authorities.
Rent withholding is permitted under this bill a dwelling unit has been declared unfit for human habitation. The tenant would make payment to an escrow account under the local health officer. Money in this account may be used for corrective repairs or services.
The automotive repairman's H.B. 1616, prohibits untrue or misleading statements to a customer, fraud, gross money laundering, or other illegal activities with regulations and departure from job.
cepted trade standards without consent of the owner.
Repair dealers would be required to give customers an estimate before doing any work. The charge couldn't exceed 10 per cent of the estimate without written or oral consent of the customer. A customer can also ask for the return of replaced parts.
Senate Bill 619 strengthens the regulations on debt collecting and disposes of debt collection-related harassment and false representation is prohibited by a debt collector. The consumer is also prohibited from submitting false information in making application for
Griff and the Unicorn
Only the Insurance Commissioner of Kansas can now recommend to take to court insurance companies that operate with unfair practices. If you fail to oblige the consumer to take action against an insurance company for unfair or deceptive practices if a loss is suffered.
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Agnew Literary Effort Rejected, Mysterious
The Washington Post
BY BOBERT C. MAYNARD
The Kingstonian
Yet, on Thursday morning, the Washington Post broke the news: SPIRO AGNEW: ANOTHER REJECTION SLIP. The agency's classification has been known to unearth some unearly gems about her fellow men and women, announced that the former vice president's efforts had been dismissed by a judge, "on its merits," if that's the right term.
Until Thursday, Jan. 24, no one in the capital, which seethes in intrigue year 'round, knew that the former vice president was a literary man. At least not that kind of literary man. We had all heard of "natalie" and "adamantivism" and "tomentose" radicals, but nobody ever thought of a whole volume made up of such phrases.
The corpus delicius, although no one is certain death has occurred, is not a person, but a thing—the first chapter and the outline of a novel by the ousted vice president.
"I'm not sure," the unnamed publisher told Mrs. Cheshire, "I'd want to publish Agnew unless he wrote 'Ulysses.' Well, even though that does not sound as if his efforts were rejected on their merits, it did sound as if the unnamed published had a definite idea of his likes and dislikes in books and former vice presidents.
WASHINGTON--Imagine this as a minor mystery of the sort being revived on radio: The cast of characters would include a former vice president of a rich and powerful nation, two well-known women columnists on the two newspapers in the nation's press, aVP and head of one of the largest and most successful book publishing houses in the world.
It also sounded as if that was the end of Mr. Agnew's budding literary career, but the demise turned out to last only as long as she was the Washington Star-News to hit the streets.
There was Mrs. Cheshire's opposite number, Betty Beale, reporting that;
"Former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew has written a novel which will be published soon by Random House." She added that Agnew broke this news last night to his wife, Rebecca, who wrote the book Mrs. Agnew came out of their seclusion to give a party in their Kenwood house." The former vice president, furthermore, was reported to be "very tickled" at writing a novel, even though he hadn't known before or been in him "until I sat down and wrote one."
Well, it looked as if one of two things had happened between the last edition of the post and the one publisher had seen the manuscript—one obviously taking a dislike to it and the former vice president—or Mrs. Cheshire and Mrs. Beale had vastly differed.
The plot thickened at noon. The next edition of the Star-News hit the street and all references to Random House had been replaced, but the story was otherwise intact.
P T
Carminam
Educ
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In C
Naturally, all eyes turned to Random House. The excision of its name was the first firm clue that only one publisher was involved in the plot about a "spy novel."
Robert L. Bernstein broke cover. He admitted that he, the head of Random House, had published a story, that he had rejected the Agnew book and that the Star-News story was wrong in saying he would publish it. "Absolutely and totally untrue," he said of the Star-News
So much for what was then known. The question was raised as to whether the Star-New reporter had checked with Random House that he had read the Agnew novel. The answer was that the Star-New had checked, but at 9:15 that Thursday morning. By then, 85,000 newspapers, the Star-New Capital Special Agent, told the press announcement a non-event.
"We should have checked first," a Starman admitted. "R was inexcused."
"We had what we thought was a good source," he explained. "Anew told it to a whole group of people at a party. He was on cloud nine. He couldn't have known it was rejected. They (Random House) didn't tell him before they leaked it to the press."
But another Star-News editor wasn't so sure about that:
So, there is the mystery that only one person can explain. If author Agnew had been informed on Jan. 21, a Monday, that his creative efforts had been rejected, then he would have been in the evening of Wednesday, Jan. 23, that he had a contract with Random House?
At least one Random House official said that if his firm published Agnew's book, it might appear that it had commercial success. But the merit of the former vice president's work.
Apparently, then, there was room for misunderstanding on the part of Agnew, a misunderstanding that told his friends to pass the word to a reporter, who i'll turn, passed it along to the public before double checking.
Somewhere in America, then, it be possible there are people waiting for Random House to bring forth the spy thriller it never agreed to publish, by a former vice president in search of a literary career.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily examination periods. Mail subscription rate $15 for examination periods. Mail subscription paid in advance at Lawrence, Kans. 60045. Student price $125. A student paid in student activity fee. Advertised offered to all students without regard are not necessarily those of the University; preregistrants are not necessarily those of the University.
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor · Bussine Shaw
Editor
Editor Hal Ritter
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Advisor . . Mel Adams
Business Manager
David Hunke
Thursday, February 7, 1974
5
Petition Backs Kansas Bill To Aid Vietnam Veterans
Campus Veterans has begun a last-minute petition drive in support of a Vietnam veterans' aid bill. The bill is in the Education Committee of the Kansas house of Representatives and will die Monday if no action is taken.
Joe LeVota, president of Campus Veterans, said yesterday that he hadn't known about the bill until yesterday. He added that it is likely to be approved and Wescoe and Strong halls by today.
LeVota said he was surprised that the bill was ever introduced.
"We'd like to see this one pass," he said. "There hasn't been a veteran, bill Hicks."
LeVida said the bill, if passed, could help students because it authorized loans for Vietnam veterans who wanted to go to school.
Help Available In Life Planning Career Choice
Assistance in planning careers, leisure time and life as a whole is available through United Ministries in Higher Education (UMHE).
UMH'E lawrence Life Planning Center will offer a series of life planning workshops starting tomorrow night and has set up an event center in the campus Ministry building.
The center will offer material describing alternative careers and life styles. Judy W. Fletcher, a therapist, has been with the Center for 40 years.
Castle described alternative careers and life-types as self-employment, part-time involvement in social change projects and employment to a farm or crafts-oriented community.
The workshops are designed to assist students and local residents in making decisions about their lives, Otto Zing, campus minister and director of the center.
"Most people, including students, go through life with a victim feeling," he said. "When they look for jobs, they look for where the openings are.
"The aim of the workshops is to help participants get a sense of being in charge of their lives. They should get a feeling of satisfaction from their work and life style."
Structured exercises and group
activities in the classroom.
ambitions and capacities of participants.
Zing said many people didn't know themselves well enough to decide what they wanted to do with their careers or how to handle other personal decisions.
"We'll try to help them figure it off." he said. "We won't make decisions for them. Too many people have had too many decisions made for them."
He said students and even a few local residents have already used the information center. It opened two weeks ago.
Books, magazines and taped interviews with self-employed people, subsistence farmers and workers for social change organizations or work collectives are among the materials available at the center.
The bill, the Vietnam Veterans' Education and Compensation Act of 1974, proposes two options to aid Vietnam veterans:
Information on leisure activities such as gardening and crafts also are available at
—A qualified veteran could borrow enough money to cover tuition and fees at school. The veteran would have 10 years to repay the loan at five per cent.
A veteran could elect to receive a one-time bonus of $10 for each month of statuteside duty, $15 for each month oversessee the bonus, and $25 for the bonus, however, couldn't exceed $500.
State Rep. Harold P. Dyck, R-Hesston and chairman of the House Education Committee, said he doubted the veterans' ability to afford college, but it didn't been enough time to consider it.
Deadline for committee approval of bills is Monday.
State Rep. Donn J. Everett, R-Manhattan, introduced the bill to the committee less than two weeks ago. Everett asked the committee to get through the committee this session.
on campus
DELTA SIGMA PI, the professional business fraternity, is having a party at 7:30 tonight in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
FRIENDS OF THE UNITED FARM WORKERS and the Association of Mexican-American Students will meet at 8:30 tonight to discuss the American Union to discuss the boycott on campus.
KU PSYCHOLOGY CLUB will meet at 7
tonight in Room 4058 of Wescose Hall to
present a series of films about normal g. &
abnormal emotional health.
ENGINEERING SENIORS & GRADS
Place Corp & VISTA need you for volunteer positions overseas and here at home. Recruiters place you in the PLACEMENT OFFICE, WED. & THUR.
February 13 and 14
SENIORS, SIGN UP FOR INVIEW NOW.
presents
The University of Kansas Theatre
THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD
by J. M. Synge
—the story of someone who becomes himself!
Feb.13,14,15,16,at 8:00 p.m.
Feb.17,at2:30 p.m.
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
University Theatre — Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
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9 p.m.-3 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
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Thurs.—Ladies' Night "as usual"
Disc Jockey
Fri.-Sat.—Live Entertainment
This Week "Mud Creek"
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Mad Hatter is NOW Lawrence's newest private club for members and guests 21 or older
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Newspaper Fund Picks Interns
Carol Gwolin, Prairie Village senior, and Bunny Miller, Great Bend junior, have been selected by the Newspaper Fund, Inc., to administer as copy editors for daily newspapers.
Gwin will work for the Milwaukee Journal and Miller will work for the Kansas City Times. Boh are students in the School of Journalism.
Seventy-one college students received internships from the fund. After their internships the students will receive three to four years of investment in three of the participating newspapers.
The Newspaper Fund is a foundation supported by Dow Jones and Co. to encourage careers in journalism.
LAST CHANCE
KC Commuter Bus
MUST have more riders
by FEB. 8
CALL STUDENT SENATE OFFICE
864-3710
FIND OUT OUR LATEST ROUTE & TH
FIND OUT OUR LATEST ROUTE & TIMES
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
TAOS
NEW MEXICO
Spring Break on Skis!
MARCH 10-15
MARCH 10-15 $ ^{8}111 $
Trip Includes:
— Round trip chartered bus
— 5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol condominiums, kitchen, fireplace, balcony, sauna
— 4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs,
— 2900 vertical feet
Group Limited to 42 Persons
For Information Call SUA Office
864-3477
Optional:
Optional
- Ski Rental—$28
- Lessons
- Meals—$50
(3 meals/ day)
Payment Deadline: Feb. 13
The Evelyn Wood challenge:
Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster, with comprehension!
If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
O. K. Tonight we'd like the opportunity to prove, as we have to millions, that you can read faster with comprehension.
In fact, we challenge you . . . challenge you to come to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson armed with the toughest textbook or reading material you own.
We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy . . . we're using yours . . . the toughest you can find!
If you're open minded and want to improve your reading ability, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to begin tonight,
to make reading work for you!
Every night this week at the Reading Dynamics Institute, Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
Also, today at the Kansas Union, Parlor A (2nd floor), hourly on the half hour, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa
书
Call 843-6424
Make reading work for you!
6
Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Dally Kansan
Seal, Seduction Head Movie List
MOVIES
"The Girls"—Bibi Anderson, Harriet Anderson and Gunnel Lundholm star in this Swedish film about three women who refuse their husbands sexual favors until the men put an end to war; 7:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium.
Entertainment
"Sounder": "The head of a black掾creeper family is imprisoned and his family must survive alone. 7 and 9:30 p.m.
8 and 4:30 p.m. Feb. 9. Woodriff Auditorium.
Sammy, The Way-Out Seal"—Two young boys stow away a seal when returning from a beach vacation with their parents. 1:30 pm, Feb. 10 in Woodruff Auditorium.
"Romance and Reality" - third film in the "Civilisation" series by Kenneth Clarke; it concerns the proto-Renaissance era, 7.8月, Feb.10 in Wooldorf Auditorium.
"Le Bouhère" - Winner of the Prix Louis Delacour of Paris in 1965; the story concerns a menage de trois that坠 in destruction and happiness. 7.30 p.m. Feb. 11 in Woodruff
"Body Snatcher"A—classic horror film starring Bara Kartoffel and Bela Lugosi. A Scottish surgeon is supplied with fresh corpse when the graveyard supply fails to meet his demand, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 12 in woodruff Auditorium.
"Robin Hood""—A Walt Disney cartoon with characters playing the legendary outlaws. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. tonight at the Granada Theatre.
"Man with a Movie Camera" and "Enge-Ace!" A film made in Russia in 1929 followed by a 1924 French Dadaist comedy, 7:30 and 9:00 p.m. Peb. 13 in Woodruff hall.
"Ash Wednesday"--Elizabeth Taylor stars as a middle-aged woman who has a faceace to keep her fatties husband, and a life of luxury, 30 p.m. Feb. 18 at the Grannah Theatre.
"The Way We Were"—Barbara Streisand
“是拉斐尔女孩 girl whose relationship
with Robert Redford, a Wasp all-American
boy, fails 7.90 and 9:30 p.m. Feb. 6-13 at
how to Seduce a Woman“一How to seduce a woman by having her seduce you. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m, Feb. 6-13 at the Hillcrest I.
"American Graffiti""-Charlie Martin Smith and Candy Clark play adolescents on the night before they leave for college. 1962. Many early rock'n'roll songs are an added attraction. 7:20 and 8:30 p.m. Feb. 6-13 at the Hillcrest II.
"Sleeper?" -The latest Woody Allen saint about an owner of a health foods store who goes to a hospital for a sample operation and emerges 200 years later, only to get in trouble against a police state ruled by a nose. 7:40 and 9:30 p.m. Feb. 13 at the Hillcress III.
MUSIC
James Mieser—Organist in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Buxheule, Purcell on behalf among others.
others. 8 p.m., Feb. 10 at the Plymouth Congregational Church.
Carole Ross - Pianist in the Faculty Recital Series who will perform works by Bach, Schumann, Roger Sessions and Chopin. 6 p.m., Feb. 11 in Swarthout Recital
University Woodwind Quartet—John Boulton, David Bushouce, Lawrence Maxey and Robert Stanton assisted by Mary Ellen Satton will perform works by Quanz, Milhaud, Rossi, Carter and Bozza. 8 p.m. Feb. 13 at Swarorth Recital Hall.
ART
Twentieth Designer-Craftsman Show-
Crafts from Kansas will be exhibited from
September 12-16, 2014 at the Art Center of
Milwaukee.
awarded at 3 p.m. Feb. 10, Kansas Union,
"language of Light." The Museum of
Art's huge photography collection is hung
for the first time. The collection is a
survey of the history of the photograph as
an art form. Feb. 24 in Spooner Art
Museum.
awarded at 3 p.m. Feb.10. Kansas Union.
George Luks exhibit—A display of country landscapes and animal and sailboat paintings by Luks, who is best known as a painter of the American scene and his paintings of New York street scenes.
THEATER
"Veuianian Twins" - An 18th century
journal by Goldman. 8 ppm. 210-320
image. Copyright 2013.
Social welfare faculty members appointed to the committee are Donald E. Chambers, professor; David Hardcastele, assistant professor; Margaret Schutz, associate professor; and Harold Washington, assistant professor.
A search committee to find a new dean for the School of Social Welfare has been appointed and should have its first meeting this week, Ambrose Saricks, vice chancellor for academic affairs, announced last night.
Group Formed to Find New Dean
Patricia Tilley, Overland Park junior, was selected to be the student representative on the committee, and Dorothy Johnson, a social worker from the Kansas City area, was selected to be the national representative for the committee.
The ex-officio members of the committee are James Rosser, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, and William Wheeler, associate chancellor for research and graduate studies.
Subpoena . . .
From Page One
to write in the deadline was defeated 342-70.
Also regarding Watergate yesterday,
President Nixon wrote a federal judge that
disclosing conversations that are contained
on five White House tape recordings
requested by the Senate Watergate committee
“would not be in the national interest.”
7% rebate
Period 54 register receipts now redeemable at lower level of the Bookstore
THE BODEGA A Private Club
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--evelyn wood reading dynamics Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and iowa
NO PANIC!
You can read the entire year's Western Civ assignments in the next few weeks and pass the Comprehensive in Mavil
Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn—
- how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed
- how to read rapidly (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension
- how to compare, clear, graphic notes
- how to compare and contrast the view of the various writers
- how to organize your thoughts to write an essay
Our Reading Dynamic teacher is a Senior Western Co-operative, but this is not a discussion group. If it is, we will discuss the book on our own. We have had some experience in the new skills. Some of the readings are done on class but most have been read in group. We will learn new skills to approach each reading. Every week we will check your notes. We will review the most effective way to approach each reading.
WESTERN CIVB BEING FEBRIARY and 12 amth thursday, 7.15 to m. for EIGHT WEEKS
WESTERN CIVB BEING FEBRIARY SECTION BEING FEBRIARY 11 AM AND MEETS TUEDAYS,
9:30 to m. for EIGHT WEEKS
9:30 to m. for EIGHT WEEKS
CALL NOW TO ENROLL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION — 843-6424
M
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FREE PIZZA
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Girls! Spend $10 And Receive A Free
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Dresses Jeans Tops Jackets
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THE ATTIC
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SO
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 7, 1974
7
By JIM HUBRELL
Kenyon Reviewer
Kansan Reviewer
Mainstream hard rock has reached an almost hopeless state of stagnation. The medium, rigidly stylized by its present-day proponents (Fogat, Edgar Winter and so on) into a creative cul-de-sac, is now sterile as to constitute a counter-culture that was not so long the cultural mourn is the new Steve Miller bad amar, "The Joker."
Miller, although never a truly great guitarist, has generally demonstrated at
A TAYLOR CALDWELL book, "The Arm and the Darkness," (Crest, $1.50) is a new title, available for the first time in paperback. This one deals with the conflict between the Huguenots and Catholics in France, the main characters being a dashing young Huguenot and a Catholic peasant girl who fall in love.
Paperbacks
ANOTHER NEW ONE IS FRANK G. LAUGHTER'S "Convention, M.D." (Pocket, $1.25). Slaughter writes about doctors, usually in historical settings, but of late he has been quite topical, in a rather soapy way. This one is about the annual convention of the Medical Association in which a young reformer tries to fight the medical establishment.
JOIN MASTERS' SETTING is India, and "The Ravi Lancers" (Pocket, $1.50) is billed as a book about love, war, and empire. The Ravi Lancers defended Britain in the old days of empire; in this book they leave their homeland to fight in World War I. Masters writes good ones, and this is in his old-time mood.
correction
Winners of the Edward S. Robinson Essay Contest listed in yesterday's Kansan are the 1973 winners. The Kansan incorrectly identified them as the 1974 winners. Entries are still being accepted for this year's contest.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
SENIORS AND GRADS
You are needed now for summer and fall survival. Position positions in the USA and abroad. Resume to Katherine S. PLACEMENT OFFICE, Summerfield Hall, Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 11-13
least some competence and originality. Not so in "the Joker." The album is an amalgam of cuts ranging from medieure to poor. The production by Miller is timeless. The music is a classic, with Miller's back-up musicians, with the exception of bass guitar Gerald Johnson,
play with feeling and originality roughly compared to that demonstrated by the KU
reviews
Miller has, however, worked with less in the past while still creating some high-quality work. He is also a member of Albert's major flaw; he has retained his competence but lost his vitality, relying on chord progressions and solo familiarity to create her unique solos and substitute nostalgia for creativity.
The lyrics epitomize Miller's ineration; the title cut (also the album's single) is characterized by self-indulgent narcissism, along with such unforgettable sexual metaphors as "I really love your peaches, want to shake your tree."
"The Joker" is at best listenable, at worst just what the title implies - a caricature of Miller's past recordings. Miller is capable of better. Hopeably, his next album will escape the curse of mediocrity too prevalent in rock today.
The third film of the Women's Film series, "The Girls," is an interesting attempt to blend the fantasies, flashbacks and suspense of the characters into a single meaningful narrative.
By JEFF LOUGH Kansan Reviewer
Swedish Film Abounds in Fantasy
"The Girls," to be shown at 7:30 tonight in Woordruff Auditorium, concerns a theatrical troupe producing *Aristophanes* by Michael T. Reeves. The troupe, played by Bibi Anderson, Harriet Anderson and Gunnel Liblamb leave their families and lover's homes to their troupe in Sweden.
The film progresses smoothly from play to fantasy to "real life" to flashback, examining in a quite forceful manner the differences between the minds of the three central characters.
SUMMER JOBS
Gus & Gala need for summer employment at National Parks, Private Campus, Dude Ranches and Peterson Outdoor Adventures. Over 50,000 students aided each year. For FREE information on student assistance program send us an email to Opportunity Research, Dept. SJD, 55 Flat Drive, Lakewood, WA 98136. YOU MUST APPLY EARLY
Use Kansan Classified
F.A.C.E.S.
Senior Class Officers
Thane
HODSON
president
Mark
McCAUGHEY
vice-president
Pat
SOPTIC
treasurer
Kim
HOTCHKISS
secretary
paid for by F.A.C.E.S.
free state opera house
(the old Red Dog)
SLIDE BY and BOOGIE
This Week for $1.50 A Night!
THIS WEEKEND GET INTO
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The failure to create believable male characters destroys much of the credibility of what seems to be the film's theme; the oppression of women by a male-dominated character. The men of the film, whether lovers, colleagues, husbands or acquaintances
have no inner life; they seem to be as flat as a cutting board. The women haven't the flimsiest of paper wigs with which to do battle. At times the lack of dramatic motivation approaches that of the typical afternoon television soap opera.
Also on the negative side must be counted
However, if one is moved by the outstanding act of beautiful actresses or the imaginative manipulation of filmic images, she could do worse than to see "The Girls."
the sometimes unreadable subtitles over this Swedish-language film.
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8
Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Fambrough, Sayers Optimistic About Grid Recruits
By GERALD EWING
Kaman Sports Editor
Don Fambrough and Gale Sayers are anxious, yet optimistic about what will transpire next Tuesday. They have a right to be anxious because that is the day on which area high school athletes will sign Big Eight Conference letters of intent.
They don't need to be reminded that the future success of KU in the Big Eight depends upon the quality and quantity of players that sign with KU.
"It's been really hectic around here lately," Fambrigh said. "There is much more competition for quality players this year than there has been in the past."
Last year was a good recruiting year for KU but Sayers thinks this will be even better.
"NIGHT NOW, things look very good," Sayers says. "Last year was one of the best years we have ever had here, but this year can be even better. There are some really fine athletes in the area, especially in Kansas City."
Tuesday will be the first of two dates for the signing of high school athletics. Out-of-state players will sign national letters of recommendation. Eight area players will sign next week.
Fambrigh said that recruiting was especially tough this year because of the global crisis.
The new rule, passed by the NCAA last summer, numbed the number of students in sports in past years.
schools were allowed to give 45 football scholarships a year.
"THIS RULE MAKES things a lot different," Farnham said. "We've found that need is getting better for the team, with 45 scholarship, you could recruit the good athletes. But with the 30 limitation rule, you have to be more selective because you simply can't make it."
Sayers said the main emphasis of this year's recruiting was on running backs and big plays.
Farnham said that the limitation rule forced them to break the recruiting down into positions that the team needed badly. He said instead of recruiting the good athlete that could adapt to any position, they had to proven players at mid-岗位 positions.
FAMBROUH GAID KANSAS had become a valuable recruiting area and they would be trying to recruit as many players as possible from the state.
"Kansas football has improved tremendously in the last 10 years," he said. "The playoffs and the all-star games have helped a lot. Right now, we're concentrating greatly on players in Kansas and the Kansas City area."
Although Kansas football has improved greatly, Sayers said the best high school team in the country is.
"I've been recruiting in Texas, Arkansas,
New Mexico, New Jersey and Mississippi," Sayers said. "I think this is where the best quality players come from."
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Sayers agreed with Fambrough in his assessment of the past season but said it was also important to athletes to help in building and being a part of a winning team.
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"There are two reasons why we don't recruit many junior college players." Sayers said. "One is that they only have two years of playing time to give us. The other is that we just haven't had a great deal of luck with them."
had to help, but you have to talk about the future and not about the past year while
AS IN THE PAST, KU won't be recruiting
as many junior college players this year,
and will have to wait.
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THE 'PAST SEASON doesn't really do anything for the players coming in', Sayers said. 'What really matters to them is that they get to play and help build a winner.'
You have to respect Sayers' opinion when you consider that three of KU's top players, Delvin Williams, Don Goode and Robert Miller, are all from the Houston area.
thru February 28
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KU's successful season and the trip to the trip to the California Bayleah have also helped in recruiting more players.
One consequence of having a successful team, Fambrough said, is that other teams will start recruiting in the areas that the team has had the most success.
"We've had a lot of success with our players from Kansas," Fambridge said.
Fambrough said the exposure certainly
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
EVERY DAY!
Bowl
3 games $ 1.00 Monday-Thursday 12-6
for Friday...12-12
Show Someone You Care
P. W. B. ROBINSON
LOVE is an everyday feeling but Valentine's Day is that special day that you really show someone you care. And you're not only on a lifetime gift from McQueen's Jewelry Store.
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VAGABONDING abroad? at home?
A man with a backpack and a walking stick.
Maybe we can help—
- how to prove who you are
(passport—international student id—visas—hostel pass—international drivers license)
*what to do there
work abroad -live with a family -group travel-hitch-Railpass-
bike-hobby-study-disappear -play tourist-vagabond)
guides to inexpensive U.S. accommodations—to foreign student/youth hostels—student flights Europe/Africa/Asia—student hotels Paris/Karlsruhe/Mexico/Switzerland
how to save
(is it legal) a gimmiack? how much really? who? where? does someone know your history? will it kill? how many days do I work in Paris? where will I live and with whom? who is the real organizer? who's making the best deal? the best idea? do picture list? what's CAB-TC-GT-CR-ATC-ATC)?
*counsel on evaluating "offers"
Our students and staff are here to help you with your travel ideas—hopes—plans. Please check with us.
if you want to volunteer to help others travel, please stop by. All our programs are planned by students.
SUA 864-3477
think you will find it in other sections of the country, but not in our state."
Recruiting practices have come under recently for the alleged corruption and
Fambrough said he had heard about it all he said and I thought it was as bad as everyone said.
"I DON'T THINK we run into it in our section of the country," Farnbrough said. "I"
Sayers disagreed and said that there was corruption in recruiting.
“It’s there,” Sayers said. “Some of the people I've been recruiting have said they've been offered money and curs. But they know if they accept them, they could run the rest of their lives. With the 30 limitation rule, it'll get worse.”
REYKJAVIK, LONDON, PARIS,
TANGIER, AMSTERDAM, COPENHAGEN,
GENEVA, GLASGOW, MONTREAL
This spectacular itinerary for $299 R/T SAC.
Departing May 25, June 22, July 20
22/29 Day Tours Call: Air Jav Hawk 841-0798
22/29 Day Tours Call: Air Jayhawk 841-0780
And suddenly it's all over.
No more teachers, no more books—all the undergrads the teacher also is about to happen; the brave new world outside the campus; the stakes and the rules are different. . . There you're thinking in terms of your life, savings. There you're wanting your future.
The question then arises: is your last year in college the right time to begin a life insurance program? We think so.
You can put it off. But as you get older, the price goes up. And from a financial point of view, procrastination be-
WARNING: The Ivory Tower Is About to Collapse
HARTMANN & ASSOCIATES
1915 W. 24th
842-4650
Fo Ta
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We know. We deal with more college seniors than any insurance firm in the nation. In fact, 75 percent of is designed exclusively for seniors and graduates. Our entire company is attuned to the needs of our students and needs of the last-year student. Our policyholders have an average age of 26; our field has an average age of 28.
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FIDELITY UNION LIFE
BROADWAY CITY, NEW YORK
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
M
Famolare
Crepe shoes by Joe Famolare, the softest shoes to come along yet. The open look for Spring will be great with almost everything. Try a pair today in Navy, Camel, Yellow, or White. They're super soft and super comfortable.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 843-4255 Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 7. 1974
9
Football Coach McCullers Takes Job at Mississippi
Charlie McCullers, offensive coordinator for the University of Kansas football team, has resigned his post to accept a similar position at the University of Mississippi.
McCallers will coach the quarterbacks and running backs and will design the offense under new Mississippi Coach Ken Cooper.
Head Coach Don Fanhrough made the announcement yesterday morning.
McCullers, contacted at Oxford, Miss., said he regretbed leaving KU but it was a mistake.
"It was a professional move," McCallers said. "I'd been at the University of Kansas for seven years, and I felt I needed a move. My main ambition is to be head coach at a university some day and this move should help to prepare me for it."
McCullers said he wanted to be in a new system in a different part of the country and the team was moving forward.
Speculation that a pay boost of $4,000 was one of the reasons McCullers moved to
Mississippi. His salary here was $16,500.
"I did get a raise in pay, "McCullers said, "being the main rega-
riage to left KU."
Fainbrough said that he was in the process of finding another coach to replace him.
McCallers was in his seventh year with the KU staff. He joined the staff in 1967 when Pepper Rodgers became the Jayhawks' head coach.
Prior to coming to KU, McCullers was an assistant coach at the University of Tampa, Wichita State University and Parsons College.
a new beer place
Johnnie's Jam
Hall.
[cancer of 8th & New Hampshire]
Antiques & Used Furniture NEW ARRIVALS BY THE TRUCK LOAD!
The White Elephant Market
737 NEW HAMPSHIRE
1-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; 10-5 Sat. & Sun.
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
Make your airline reservations NOW for Spring Break with
NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you
Maupintour.
Maupintour travel service
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
900 Massachusetts The Malls Hillcrest Kansas Union
Phone 843-1211
PG FABRIC GARDEN LOGO 1 CED
STREISAND & REDFORD TOGETHER!
W
THEWAY WEWERE
W
Everything seemed so important then...even love!
R
ROSE
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Varsity
TOLL ATA ... Ferguson V-1-064
How To Seduce A Woman
Eve. at 7:40 & 9:40
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 2:00
Hillcrest
A MAN AND A WOMAN PLAYING THE TRUMPETS.
Where were you in 62?
American Graffiti
HELD OVER
14th GREAT WEEK
Eve. at 7:25 & 9:30
Sat., Sun, Mat, at 2:15
ENDS
THURSDAY
Woody Allen in "Sleeper"
Evenings at 7:30 & 9:30
Lunches, Saturdays, at 3:30
Hillcrest
WALT DISNEY'S
Hillcrest
"ROBIN HOOD" G 7:30 & 9:30
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Granada
THEATRE... Elephanta V 3-5785
One Day
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students who wish to attend. PLEASE RING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1) If you use them, you use at an advantage
2) If you don't use them, you at a disjunction
Either way it comes to the same thing: "New Amazia of Western Town" available on Twickenham Road, Town Center.
Ravi Audio, 15 E. 9th Place, 842-347-8077
Audio recording for all non-urgent stories. Available for any storie problems. Cust: 1995. Call 601-276-7777.
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyle $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles U
FOR SALE: Apple's 412-mile, $7.35 bushel and four-unit refrigerator, 12 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 12 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 3 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 3 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 4 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 6 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 8 for $19, six and month orders and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裆-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 6 for $19,裤裤-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裤-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裤-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裤-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裤-86 lb.衣柜 and aisle truck, 12 oz. of ice for $19,裤裝
IAM RADIO STATION, new HealthHW-10
carrier; new A3-10 amateur receiver; S-120 shortwave receiver $10, also healthHW-10
carrier; square gauge receiver; HealthHW-10
carrier; HealthHW-10 amateur $10,
HealthHW-10 a3-10 tuner $10, Call 641-584-7200
For Sale-Established In Business. In small investment
excelent return. Good opportunity. Contact
C. J. P.
For Sale: 2 new snow tires, size: 7-15*43 - $8,
best offer: Balloon 842-5600 or Debbie 2-7600
66 Ford Galaxie. 17 mpg. PS heat, radia-
tion, A/C. Fuel-efficient. Snow tires.
Tire snow. Need more cars $150
$200. Midsize pickup.
CROWN IC-150. Guaranteed phone hum and noise levels up to 8dB. Guaranteed below 8dB at rated output (typically unit is hand tested). You receive results. Full compliance at Audio Systems, 9th & 18th APR.
For Sale: 1956 Ford TONIE toy pickup truck. Stored in a furnished basement in all weather. Furniture, warmly dependant in all weather. Call (212) 870-3456.
Used pre-recorded real to reel lanes $1.90 to
buy in person. Buy online or book a row at
Rowe & Co's buy and sell events at Rowe &
Co's retail locations.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
For Sale. Deperate, guard cell call my T. Dolge. Bath, with a spacious shower, stone, ice box, RV, with a spacious storage space.
Must sell-Muild D-35 Blueprints Special with
Kids. Must play and play with toys 2-18.
9199 Aisk for Casey 2-18
2-18
** Sale - Mariama Seker 1004 DLT-SLR camera**
55mm F1.8 and 153mm F2.8 Lens. Good condition.
Rubberized, and meter system re-
conditioned. Akiba Soker-9166, with warrler
Call Rob at 841-5125.
Saint Bernard Berwald -XML registered, Champions League champion, EuroLeague champion, other older dogs available at resorts nearby. Contact us for details.
BMW 2002... 1972- 19,200 miles Metallic paint.
AMF- FN. Lights. Ligatures. Caps. 4-12
8-12
FOR SALE. 1971--1972 x 50 Hacienda Mobile,
Mobile Home, Condo in a quiet and peaceful condition. Wood heaters. Oven for oven-keeping. Gas stove. Bathroom. Washer/Dryer.
70 MG Midget. Engine and body like new. $160.
842-1089 2-8
1973 Ona Planker with low mites and many even
mites. 1969 IBS B44. Both prized by two
companies. 1983-1984 IBS B44.
$30, Suzuki, $250, works work but runs O.K. w/ tools and helmet. Call 841-4135.
Canoar 170 For Sale, 6,000 miles on the engine,
four tires, recently fitted, good condition, G-84
843-5245
Mid-length, embroidered suede coat fully-lined,
with black flock Wren. ONLY 10% $9.25
$12-12
For Sale 1912 4-6 door Chevy Runs good. Re-
belle. 843-642-643
2-13
Three Days
Must sell Naismith Hall contract. Open to male
students with a valid Master's degree, have used
vaccines, Call 843-699-0 & ask for K-12
recruitment.
FOR SALE: 1962 Mercury Meteor $150. 842-2473.
8/13
For Sale Shipmaster SX-620 receiver Dual 1924
for speakers in 91C wireless 1E cordless receiver
Excellent! 3-year warranty 2-135
REAR DECK SPOILERS fit 67. 68. 69 Cameroon
Easily bulk to trunk lid. Read
lids 842-123-6000
www.reardeck.com
1105 Massachusetts
TACOS
25 words or fewer : $2.00
each additional word : $.02
Casa de Taco
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
Now Open
Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
$3.50 per Dozen
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
--new Westport Tracker is returning weekly, & weekly on Thursdays. Check out the calendar, all free, all ages. Pick up a box at WESTPORT HOSPITAL.
TYPEWITTER CLEANING - 3 day service. Smith-Coombie Command, B1120 to Cape Coral. A water and food lead and cleaned. Kekatrina and light industrial dust control. River City Repair 815 Vermont, 8141.
NOTICE
155 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. We have open pit barbecue-hot dogs only. We have a grill, a smoker, sandwich or brisket by the pound. Half-bench-elec. Kit at kite. It can be or it take out. Open 1am to 7pm. Free wifi. $60 per person.
MISERWOOD 7105A reservoirs have been rated by the National Association of Reservoirs. Power capacity for channel power, less than 8.00 per cent of overall capacity, is recorded in records of this unit verify its reliability and operational performance. Power for the dollar must match price. Reservoirs are rated by the National Association of Reservoirs.
Hey, check out the NEW YORK in town you should be going to!
Our office is located on 46th Street West, NW #187.
Visit our website for Best Deals! WWW.BESTDEALS.COM
We're Welcome!
Goyen - our students do personalized men's haircuts.
Lawrence Beauty School, 309. Mann, 842-2525;
Lawrence Education Center, 715. Mann, 842-2525.
DYNAMIC DPO IN RIVER CITY CTY: Ex-votowers of Pope Paulo Cruz and Vista will be on campaise
Leach to ride and jumps at the University Horse
Gymnasium, where he can also compete in Tilt-
down (a semester course). Visitors
are welcome.
HORSE CARE—One space available for mounted riding horse. Box stall, pasture, tack room. Day, ten minutes from camp, day. Day Alexander, day=844-1392 and 1-211-843-2390
MUSICIANS—keep your hard in! Well paying,
weekly daytime engagements with a talented,
versatile truth with little group. The 2nd Army
Guard, 1st Infantry Guard, Civil Guard, Patterson
9:30-10; at 84, 85-88. Patterson 2-11
Mont Blair Party Lounge now available for private party. Phone 842-255 at 4 p.m for pick up.
A Valentine's gift that will brighten anyone's day. 7 West 410th Street, 10-8-25-00 7 West 410th Street, 10-8-25-00
Dressmaking: recycle your clothes by having them beautifully altered. Stretch your clothing dollars. Levi's and Jeans patched-men or women. Nike $39.95 to 5.00. 1348 or 842-6029 to 3.0 to 5.00. 2-12
Two more student sailors don't attend meetings,
and a third one will become an accountant who will do the lab and do it right. The sailor will be an accountant, not a doctor.
GOING TO EUROPE-Reserve your flight today!
We'll be back from Europe on a few departure. While the 10 days in the latest-
B flights up fast and we won't miss you, some people waited too
long and missed the low-cost flights. Call 2-123
Lawrence Gay Liberation Inc., Meetings 7:30
to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 28. (415) 827-5788, events@
lawrencegayliberation.com
Clean spring up time is coming. Take these extra things to STOR-ALL. Sizes from X10 to X1024. Private, look locked, lighted on, and fully covered. 1216 Wet I.D.-K10 II-218. Km-968, 983
BIGLOWS BAR-B-Q - Specializing in Bar-B-Q
Sandwiches. Call 212-576-9841 Teeswer Junction 13,
24-89 Call 212-576-9841
Vail to wall expiring, front door locking, spacious basement with two bathrooms, balconies, laundry room, four mute clear Diie swimming pool, gas BBQ kitchen, bedroom 2, light up bathrooms 20, Wax kitchen, bedrooms 2, dark tubs bathrooms 20. Ski lift.
FOR RENT
APARTMENT-apacious, clean and quiet 2 bedroom. Wait-to-wait wrap with carpet or rug. Enclosed patio.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
furniture, carpet, dishwasher, storage,
Near MAPLE CREScent, Near
AMC THEATRE. $109 per night.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS AFARTMENTS or on
airways with valid flights, with
withdrawn flights, with valid flights
841-909-6730
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice
room, large kitchen, laundry room, and
little block from Union. Parking and utilities paid
per month.
Apk for Rent | 1 BR, kithen, kithen, LH Cleo
APKs Available | Now | Indie Kurticty
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
842-2500
Crescent Heights
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
CRESCENT
- Oaks - Acorn
- Gaslight
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
HILLWAY APARTMENTS. 1725-1734 West 24th. New listing at 115 N. and 3 bedrooms furnished or on lease, kitchen, dining room, kitchen, dining room, dishwasher, all electric kitchen, refrigerator, microwave, oven, step stair, stop. Resident manager Apt. 3. Appl. #841-2522. Fax #841-2522.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT with air conditioned,
entrance to private pool, NCR CU and NEU. No pawn.
843-750-7961
Studio Artwork, quiet and clean furnished,
parking, business or graduate School. Work
with students in the areas of visual arts,
Large furnished apartment near city center; excellent location; private balcony; full bath; air conditioner; all bills included; ideal for 2 or 3 car (Call 443-785-1098)
RENT - DUPLEX, ion floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom. Good parking facilities. Call Mi-
fam at (801) 549-7356.
Farmed Apple, for rest at 19 W. 10th and 1 arm,
425 E. 3rd St., on March 1, at Marlboro,
Callahan, Calif. for rest 4, 21st and 22nd
arms.
FOR RENT: 3116 Indiana, large carpeted room,
kitchen, kitchen window, driver, pleasant living.
2 baths, 2.5 ba., heated pool. Call (804) 797-8272.
WANTED
CATAHOUSE APARTMENTS. No lease required.
Call 415-269-0800, or contact us at 415-269-0800, or lark.com.
Volunteers needed to work with children, at-risk youth, and adults of all ages. 7-12 hours a week or 40 minutes a week. Companioning program for children ages 3-8.
Wanted. A married couple as house parents for a
two-year-old girl, and two adult boys aged 12-18.
Adult children of boys ages 12-18. Good salary
training. Call Training Depot Reply to Wichita Youth
School 6703, or call 216-684-888, or 216-684-884.
K 6703, or call 216-684-888, or 216-684-884.
Female roommate wanted to share nearly fur-
fur-ble one bedroom apt with W. Street,
1864 S. 23rd St, Boston, MA 02115
Woman Roommate wanted to share large house downstairs with two other houses. Share $11.63
Roommate needed to pay for utilities. Share $11.63
Koninklijke瓯特 Jiazhytong Power Owned bank
Bank of China Capital Bank 814-4004 and 814-6992
Canton Building Phone 814-4004 and 814-6992
PERSONAL
Baby sitter needed. 7.0-4.30, Monday through Friday.
Call Bali 785-730 for 5 m. 2pm
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30. 150 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $86 for entire week can now be purchased at the SAUA. Individual night tickets start $29.
Safety arm lights only 90e at Ride On Bicycles. tf
Why do we have to pay for the inefficiency of
our school system? For Joel Hortis and Kelly Scott, for
Chris Emhart and Eric Kearney.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Europe, the Middle East or Africa? Our Airfare Flights can help you find the lead expense way for getting where you want to go. Phone us in and we'll do the math.
LOST
Last, Brown heather purée. Friday training, in
the gym. I left early. 2-11. No question.
I救了 i救. Kit 843-7658.
Whenever I look at the albums from 1945 Tom. Tom, and I don't know what to do, I ask. I think you find them worth a question. I didn't find them worth a question.
LOST White burnt road coloured tail and
front bumper. Unknown owner. Unknown
unfriendly neighbor Call 842-3197, leave message.
Lad brown female, with black and grey hair. Adult female, with white hair. Phone 613-8350 or bring by S277 Hight Court. Mobile 613-8350 or bring by S277 Hight Court.
NIGHT CLASSES?
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Alamat, minor major high schools in
Masrata, Abuja or Lagos. Req.: Master's
on consolidation law in square feet. Contact
alamat@agroindia.org
Girl to clean laundry twice a week. $2.00 per hour.
Call: 833-0415.
THE HIDE in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
Open from 2 to 10am. Flight AIDA:
843.765. We Deliver! 9th & 11th
love is . . .
Happy Birthday!
... wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
843-8499
UNABLE TO PARK?
Open 7 Days a Week
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
5:45 - 10:15
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model,
$750 to $800 daily. No experience necessary, and you need not be glamorous. Personality and ability are required. An employer, licensed firm providing training for an Established
Mass St. Dell is looking for experienced girls to fill positions. Call for appl. interview, 843-9705.
TYPING
Employment Opportunities
Typing in my home IBM ISEM Plex type. Typing in my home IBM ISEM Plex type. Prompt accurate work. Call Kate. 841-252-3600.
Experienced thesis typist Close to campus 841:
4980, Myra 2-11
Experienced Typist—Will do thesis, dissertations,
journals and papers interning typing. Call Pa-
ment #10478. Email: paiment@mailbox.com
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter with pica typa. Accurate and prompt typing of notes and spelling corrected. PhD 843-954. Ms. Wright
Albano, beating, this year. Approved head-
ball, notches six in a row.
GOLDEN GAME. GOBBINS, 80-64; GOBIERNO, 79-
62; GOLDSMITH, 75-61; GORBY, 73-60; ANTHOEIS,
62-59; GOLDBERG, 61-59; ABDULRAFAZ, 60-58;
GOBIERNO, 60-57; GOLDSMITH, 59-56; GORBY, 58-55;
$85 to $95 PER WEEK PART TIME. Unlimited earning potential in packaging and envelope attaches at local stores. For further information regarding Sony's boutique. For further information regarding Sony's Broadcasting, P.O. Box 11071, Atlanta, GA 30324. (866) 276-5200.
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDENTS AT AUGUSTA, AUGust 2013, Assistant Supported Requirements: Master of Pobish Administration degree. Experience in budget process management. Some knowledge of the Kansas state budget process are required. The position will be help陡定. Married or married through June 2014. Must have completed a research grant. Salary $600 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas growth and development. Research search assistant on a project concerning Kansas growth and development. Research search assistant on the administrative, financial and budget components of future growth policies in the Kansas state. Please apply to the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies at AUGUSTA, AUGust 2013, Assistant Supported Requirements: Master of Pobish Administration degree. Experience in budget process management. Some knowledge of the Kansas state budget process are required. The position will be help陡定. Married or married through June 2014. Must have completed a research grant. Salary $600 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas growth and development. Research search assistant on the administrative, financial and budget components of future growth policies in the Kansas state. Please apply to the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies at AUGUSTA, AUGust 2013, Assistant Supported Requirements: Master of Pobish Administration degree. Experience in budget process management. Some knowledge of the Kansas state budget process are required. The position will be help陡定. Married or married through June 2014. Must have completed a research grant. Salary $600 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas growth and development. Research search assistant on the administrative, financial and budget components of future growth policies in the Kansas state. Please apply to the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies at AUGUSTA, AUGust 2013, Assistant Supported Requirements: Master of Pobish Administration degree. Experience in budget process management. Some knowledge of the Kansas state budget process are required. The position will be help陡定. Married or married through June 2014. Must have completed a research grant. Salary $600 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas growth and development. Research search assistant on the administrative, financial and budget components of future growth policies in the Kansas state. Please apply to the Institute for SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDENTS AT
SERVICES OFFERED
RIDES —— —— RIDERS
Guitaar basketball fingerstyle, open tunings, slider
sizes; beginners' course. Course #824-609. For Ask Link:
824-609. Call 824-609.
BRIVER CITY REPAIR -815 Vermont, 841-4683
Sterios - watchers - typewriters. Independent repair specialists. No retail店. We服务 what repairs replace. Unimpaired resources. See if a technician
Experienced babycare can work afternoons and nights (1:00-2:00 p.m.) Call Jay Johnson. 877-354-7272
Wanted: to join or form carpool from Merriam
Place; travel by bus, train, or car. Send resume
to 215-634-6259 or call Miami 262-2098.
narrow-leaving KU Union 3:00 p.m. Friday for
the Stamford Civic Center 4:00 p.m.
4622 between 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mon.
The University of New York at
Stamford
FOUND
Found in Wesley on Friday, ladies gold watch—say they bought it for a gift card and add for John—also app for this ad.
MEN!-WOMEN!
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
COURTROUPE
15 East 8th 841-2456
10.5 Monday-Saturday
DOWNTOWN
K
JOBS ON SHIPPS! No experience required. Prepare. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3.00 for information. Port Angell, Washington 98362.
'KU ON WHEELS"
TWICE AN HOUR
TWICE AN HOUR
25 & 45 past the hour
Another
Student Senate Service
you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
ADVENTURE a bookstore
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
FINE SERVICE
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
FINE BOOKS
Phone 843-6424
10
Thursday, February 7, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Senator Alleges Political Pressure in KU Elections
By JILL WILLIS
Kansas Staff Reporter
A campaign manager threatened to oust a student senator if he didn't support the manager's candidate for student body president, the senator said yesterday.
The senator, Rich Lauter, Evanton, Ill., senior, said Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and manager of the Beisner-Hunter campaign, threatened to oust him from the senate after Paxson discovered Lauter, supported the Rofls-Kelly tickets.
John Beiser, Salina junior, and Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior, are running for student body president and vice president on the Unicamp ticket. Rolfs, Junction junior, and Kelly Scott, Junction junior, are running on the Valentine's Day ticket.
"Taxson told me," Lauter said, "that Beisser was very upset with me and wouldn't talk to me to me. Then he said, 'Something may come up about your senate
the topics of pressure politics and dirty campaigning were avoided by both candidates at last night's debate, which was in the Kansas Union.
Lauter has held his senatorial position because he is the president of the Unorganized Housing Association (UHA). The position is provided for by the Senate.
Some senators have recently urged the abolition of the position because the UHA has been charged.
"He (Paxson) has been hiting all along that the seat should be abolished," Lauer said, "but the fact that I was helping Ed made him want to bring it out in the open." Lauer said he thought the presidency of UU was to fail and wanted to finish his term in office.
Paxson said both he and Beiser were unhappy with Lauter, but 'not because he is
According to Paxson, Lauer said he was advising Rolls, and Paxson thought he
"Some of the good ideas Ed has come up with, he has gotten from Rich," Paxson said. "It doesn't matter to me whether Ric Lauter is in the senate or not."
Lauter was originally slated to run for the senate on Beisner and Hunter's Unicamp coalition, Paxson said, but decided after Christmas break not to run at all.
Paxson said Lauter was trying to shift attention away from the question of how he obtained his senate seat by making the charges.
During last night's debate, Beiser said he didn't think the campaign was dirty.
When Rolfs said Beisner formed a coalition of senatorial and class officer candidates for political expediency, Beisner denied it.
Beisner said he had formed the coalition to involve more persons in student government.
Also discussed at the debate were the
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Rolfs said the No. 1 problem in academics was enrollment to be pledged to work for a university.
He and Beisner agreed that the present system of academic advising was inadequate, but they didn't agree on the remedies to be taken.
CONCERT February 23 at Hoch Auditorium 8:00
candidates' plans for the Security and Parking Department, academics and the rules of the student body president and vice president. Both candidates gave top priority.
"My only problem will be getting students." Rolls said.
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Beisern called for greater faculty involvement and responsibility. Roffs advocated the use of volunteer student advisers.
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He said a student advising program wouldn't be difficult to staff in the Colleges-Within-the-College, but there "might be some problems" in the professional schools.
Beisner criticized Rolfs' plan as im-
practical.
LEMINGS
TACKETDOWN
"It is a very riky business to put advising in the hands of volunteers," Beisner said. "There are hundreds of volunteer programs that have gone down the drain."
Beisner promised to eliminate the 16-hour foreign language requirement. He said that many prestigious schools had already abolished foreign language requirements and that students often became disinfluenced by the University because of the requirement.
He said the funds used to finance foreign language departments could be used by students.
Second in priority for both candidates was improvements in the Security and Parking
Rolls said he would hire students to walk a campus beat and would increase campus
Beusner said he would appoint a task force to study the problems of Security and Parking.
"If Security and Parking wants student walkers," he said, "it could get the money."
He also said he favored the reinstatement of the initial warning ticket for parking violations. The warning ticket was abolished last year.
Bevera said Security and Parking employees were "lucking everything that isn't
He also proposed cutting back on the
number of employees and the number of interruptions in the traffic control
The roles of the study body officers attracted considerable attention.
Beisner and his running mate, Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior, stressed their experience in the senate. Both were committee chairmen this year.
Hunter said a lot of experience was necessary before someone could preside.
"You have to know a lot about the senate," he said. "You can't just jump into
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Kelly Scott, Houston sophomore and Rolf's running mate, said their platform was "an alternative to the status quo of the Student Senate."
Hunter said the vice president had to be prepared to assume the senate chair if the president was unable to serve.
She said the vice president needed to be a good moderator, so that senate discussion could flow.
"If you don't know what's going on," he might not be able to handle it properly.
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Friday, Feb. 8
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 9
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
75c Kansas Union
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THE GIRLS
Bibi Anderson & Harriet Andersson
Thursday, Feb. 7
Kansas Union 7:30 75c
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LE BONHEUR
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Monday, Feb. 11
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Through Kodas, cameras and film were distributed to teachers. The teachers gave the cameras to the kids and told them how to use them.
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KANSAN
84th Year, No. 86
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
130 Years Displayed In Photo Show
Friday, February 8, 1974
See Story Page 3'
Legislature Gives Okay To No-Fault
TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Legislature completed action today on a new non-fuel automobile insurance bill and sent it to Gov. Robert Docking who is expected to
The new law then would go to the Kansas Supreme Court for a ruling on its compliance.
It replaced a bill passed by the 1973 session which went into effect Jan. 1. That law was declared unconstitutional by Shawnee County District Court Judge William R. Carpenter three days after it went into effect,
The new law is designed to correct defects in the law cited by Carpenter.
One Supreme Court has agreed to study the new law and has set a March 1 hearing date and granted a stay of Carpenter's ruling pending its decision on the new bill.
The Senate approved 27-12 some technical amendments made by the house, which had included a ban on the use of plastic bags.
A spokesman said that the governor hadn't had an opportunity to study the bill, but that Docking remained generally in favor of no-fault auto insurance.
If the new bill meets Docking's general criteria of providing adequate protection for motorists without raising insurance premiums, the spokesman said, the governor can be expected to sign it so that New Jersey Court can study it as soon as possible.
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Insurance companies writing auto insurance in Kansas were required Jan. 1 to provide no-fault riders for Kansas policyholders.
M. SMITH
Those riders provide medical liability coverage at limits set in the 1973 law, to be paid without assessment of blame in case of injury accidents.
Under the law, an injured person cannot sue for pain and suffering damages unless a court finds that the injury was
Sand Art
An injured person can bring suit for expenses above this threshold.
The threshold provision has stired strong opposition from the Kansas Trial Lawyers
Robert Stoufer, Lawrence graduate student in practice, teaches the course. He forms pictures or
oesthes by pouring different colors of sand into clear glass bottles. See story page. 5.
Paxson Claims Lauter Fabricated Threats for Campaign Publicity
By LINDA WEINSTEIN
Charges of political threats were denied yesterday by Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and manager of the Beiser-Hunter student body elections campaign.
But Passion said no threat was made and accused Lauter of fabricating or distorting
Rich Lauer, Evanston, III., senior and student senator, has contended that Paxon threatened to oust him from the senate to force him to contested the opposition Rifol-Scott campaign.
"Laufer had fabricated this story to gain campaign publicity," Paxson said.
Lauter said he had considered retracting his allegation "because I felt bad because my friendship with Richard (Paxson) was in jeopardy. I have always tried to win a role from my personal relationship. I began to feel guilty about the whole thing."
However, he said, "I can't retract statements I feel were true. I felt that there was some threat, whether veiled or not, but that one was made."
Paxson claimed that Lauer was the fafoacto manager for the Rolfs-Scott
ticket, and, therefore, had political reasons to state that threats had been made.
The Beiser-Hunter campaign members, Launder ater, "had been led to believe that I was supporting them. I don't ever want to outright that I supported John (Beiser);
Paxson said Lauer had "very much been walking the line during this election."
"I told Lauter this evening that if he wanted to support Rufus, I didn't care," Pauley said. "I don't care."
"However, he admitted he knew about our campaign plans. I took him into my confidence about our campaign. He knew about our platform before it was even an incident."
But Paxson said that Lauter's disclosure of confidential Beaulieu-Hunter campaign strategies didn't lead him to threaten Lauter's senate seat.
Lauer was armed to the ex officio senate seat of president of the Unorganized Housing Association (UHA) by his predecessor, Peter George, late in 1972.
There is a provision in the Senate Senate code for the UHA committee. However, the UHA committee does not provide any codes.
Heath Sets Election Date As Worker Unrest Grows
"There is some doubt even in my own mind," Lauer said, "whether the committee should exist. I don't feel an organization like that is meaningful."
"What bothered me was not the actual getting rid of the seat, but the reflection any expose would have on my position and honor or pride. I felt it was a slam on my integrity."
The miners' president, Jorge Gormley, said he personally favored postponing the strike, but some militants predicted that their men would be killed of the pits even if the strike was deferred.
had been virtually inactive since its inception.
LONDON (AP)—Prime Minister Edward Heath announced yesterday that a national election will be held Feb. 28 in Britain. He is hoping for an overwhelming vote of public support that would crush mounting insurrection, including a threatened coalition's勇士r兴起
HEATH'S DECISION to hold elections drew prompt fire from within his own party. Enoch Powell, an influential legislator who has often opposed Heath in the past, called the elections "an act of gross irresponsibility" and said he would not be a canvasser.
"We cannot afford the luxury of tearing ourselves apart any more," Heath said. "It is time for you to say to the extremists and the insurgents that we have a simple misused. We have had enough."
As Heath was making his announcement, locomotive engineers staged a one-day walkout in an eastern district of Britain. For the past seven weeks they have been on a work-by-the-book campaign to back pay demands.
"It should never have become a campaign issue or have been a reflection on any kind of the situation."
same boat and if you sink us now we will all down."
Paxson he thought the UHA should have been done away with long ago
Paxson said he learned just yesterday that he was the vice president of UHA—and had been for some time.
Government Haggles To End Shutdown...
WASHINGTON (AP) - Negotiators for the federal government and striking independent truckers reached tentative agreement yesterday to end the eight-day-old highway shutdown. The government immediately began putting its part of the bargain into effect.
White House press secretary Gerald L. Warren said the Nixon administration believed the action would resolve the truck strike, but an Associated Press survey of trucks across the country showed sentiment was strong against the settlement
Heath coupled his announcement with an appeal to leaders of the country's 280,000 coal miners to postpone their strike, calculated for Sunday, until after the three-week campaign. The union's policy-making body was to discuss Heath's appeal today.
IN A NATIONWIDE television address last night, the prime minister made it clear that the ministers' demands for pay were above all what his government had set to combat infaltation.
Warren also said an interdepartmental task force had developed "firm contingency plans" to keep the highways open if trucks decided to continue their protests.
When asked if this meant federal troops might be called to duty, Warren declined comment. He confirmed, however, that the Army's Defense was represented on the task force.
Those demands will be the prime issue in the elections, he said. The ballot, he said, would give voters a chance to tell the miners, "Times are hard. We’re all in the
John C. Sawhil, Federal Energy Office deputy administrator, said that the use of troops to keep the highways open if necessary was being considered.
"WE HOPE THAT won't be necessary," he said. "But if it is necessary, then that's the step we'll take."
U. S. Secretary of Transportation Claude S. Brinnegar also said that checks with several governors generally indicated that truck traffic was higher than Wednesday and that the truck stops were returning to more normal operations.
Sawhill said the final decision would be made by the Justice Department.
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp, who mediated the sessions between the truckers and the government, said he believed the settlement represented a major breakthrough for independent truckers because for the first time, owner-operators were "recognized as a separate segment of the trucking industry."
He said he believed the actions would bring "prompt, positive assistance to the truck drivers."
BRINEGAR SAID the Federal Highway Administration had established truck counts at 15 locations in the Midwest and had arranged to receive daily reports on fuel availability and truck-stock operations, which would be passed on to drivers.
Shapp said he had been told traffic truck was already up 20 per cent in some states. He said he planned to visit with truckers along the Pennsylvania turnpike today, explaining the program to them.
The first governmental actions came from the Federal Energy Office and the Department of Transportation.
HE INVITED Truckers to phone complaints of alleged price-gouging or supply problems to this number: 800-424-8660. Simon said the FEO and the Internal Revenue Service would immediately check on such complaints.
The energy office announced over-the-highway truckers would be given 100 per cent of their current fuel needs, rather than 110 per cent of their 1972 fuel usage.
trucks on interstate highways. It also said it would check into the difference in state laws on truck sizes and weights.
In addition, energy chief William Simon said he was setting up a complaint service with a toll-free telephone number to begin operation Monday morning.
It said this change would make available to truck stops an additional 76,000 barrels of diesel fuel per day. Trucks using gasoline were promised similar treatment.
The Department of Transportation announced it would review the question of increasing permissible weights and sizes of
The department said such differences between states "cause numerous inefficiencies including wasteful uses of fuel."
The Interstate Commerce Commission announced it would let truckers file for fuel-related rate hikes without having to supply supporting data. The ICC said it would help improve the rates as compiled by the Cost of Living Council sufficient to justify the rate changes.
The ICC also announced it would permit the nation's common motor carriers to file on 24 hours notice a six per cent surcharge for freight rates to offset the higher price of air.
The actions announced yesterday were in addition to earlier government decisions designed to halt protests by truck drivers.
...But Truckers Seem Determined to Strike
"It's a sellout," said Roger Galloway of Overdrive magazine, one influential organization that pushed for the shutdown which has brought guerrilla warfare tactics in some areas and left more than 100,000 workers laid off.
By the Associated Press
Truck traffic was reported increasing in several states yesterday, but the sentiment of many strikers and some of their fellow activists strongly against an end to the shutdown.
Independent truckers�might in various parts of the country last night appeared to be voting overwhelmingly to continue their campaign, rather than accept a proposed settlement.
"They sold these guys down the river," he said.
The Washington settlement denounced by some strikers provides for delivery to truck stops all the diesel fuel needed by drivers and permission for truckers to get more money for the cargo they haul in direct proportion to increased fuel costs.
IT WAS ALSO said to provide for an immediate freight rate surcharge to the carrier.
In another strike-related development, the House passed 374 to 6 and sent to President Nixon legislation allowing independent drivers to begin passing on to shippers next Friday fuel price increases they have incurred since last May 15.
The inevitable result of these actions, if implemented, will be higher prices for the fuel. Trucking officials say diesel fuel has increased about 15 cents a gallon since last May, and because trucks get only about five miles per gallon, the increases could be significant.
According to reports received from reporters, strikers and their spokesmen, at a country last night at which drivers voted to keep their rusps parked. There were no reports of groups voting to go back on truck traffic was up by 20 or 30 per cent.
BUT MOST DRIVERS and trucker spokesman reached in an Associated Press spot check said it was too little, too late. They said by allowing a surcharge in freight rates rather than rolling back fuel prices, the cost of increased costs was on the consumer.
The Washington settlement was reached by negotiators for the government and for some of the dozens of independent truckers' groups which have sprung up overnight to represent the estimated 100,000 men who work on the highway to receive hourly wakes as do the Teamsters.
A few of the truckers and their spokesman took a wait-and-see attitude until they could hear details of the proposal, spokesperson for the company, and dependents said they preferred acceptance.
Independent truck drivers in Kansas and Missouri, still defiant in their protest of increased fuel prices and decreased speed to improve their efforts to snarl road transportation.
An estimated 500 truckers at a meeting in Kansas City, Kan., yelled approval to a continuation of their shutdown when asked by J. W. "River Rat" Edwards, president of the Owners-Operators and Independent Drivers Association of America.
Settlement rejection votes were noted in Kansas City; Joplin, Mo.; Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz; Coates, Minn.; Palmyra, Ill.; and Moorehead, Morn.
news capsules / the associated press
Kissinger Signs Agreement on Panama Canal
An agreement to guide negotiation of a treaty that would eventually return the Panama Canal to Panama was signed yesterday by Secretary of State
Ronald Reagan.
The treaty is to replace the Convention of 1903 under which the United States gained exclusive jurisdiction in perpetuity by the canal through the Mississippi River, and thus to override the territory.
The new treaty is to guarantee U.S. operation and defense of the canal, but will have an expiration date, after which Panama will assume total control
Senate Divided on Emergency Energy Bill
A Senate split by the issue of oil prices debated emergency energy legislation although there was little chance of acting soon. The debate centered on a provision that would roll back the price of unregulated domestic crude oil to the $2.5 barrier level of oil still controlled by Phase 4.
senate interior chairman Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash, has estimated that the rollback, which would affect roughly one-quarter of the oil drilled in the Gulf of Mexico, could be avoided.
Federal energy chief William E. Simon has called the rollback unworkable, arguing that it would destroy incentives for the oil companies to
Skylab Astronauts Return to Earth Today
The men of Skylab 3 were to splash down in the Pacific Ocean today to man's longest space mission, a 34-million mile, 34-day voyage of scientific
Ervin Panel to Give Watergate Files to House
The Senate Wategate committee voted unanimously to turn over all of its investigative files to the House panel considering the impeachment of
Astronauts Gerald P. Carr, William R. Pogue and Edward G. Gibson were to return to earth at 11 a.m. Lawrence time 178 miles southwest of San Francisco.
The committee also agreed to postpone issuance of its final report to avoid conflict with indictments expected later this month from the Watergate
Patricia Hearst's Kidnapers Identified
The mysteries Symbionse Liberation Army (SLA) said in a letter to the bureaucracy, in which they had kicked newspaper papers for Patricia Heartz, according to the FB and KKPA.
The SLA, a revolutionary organization linked to the slaying of an Oakland school official last November, said Heartwart would be executed if authorities could get her to surrender.
The letter was accompanied by a gasoline credit card belonging to the girl's father, Randoph A. Hearst, president and editor of the San Francisco Examiner, the FBI said, Mrs. Hearst later confirmed that her daughter was carrying credit cards belonging to her father.
Nixon May Release Tapes, Ford Says
President Nixon is actively considering the public release of Watergate-related tapes and documents, Vice President Gerald R. Ford said in
"It's a matter of timing on the part of attorneys when the decision will be made." Ford said.
However, he said he had no specific information on whether the tapes that might be released included recordings of conversations between Nixon and his fired White House counsel, John W. Dean III. He didn't indicate what form such a release might take, such as verbatim transcripts or summaries.
2
Friday, February 8, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Lovellete? Pankratz? Who Are Those Guys?
Kansan Staff Reporters
You can't always believe everything you hear, and that may be especially true on the University of Kansas campus. Depending on your preferences, you pression that Del Shanker, KU's executive vice chancellor, is an astronaut, or that Clyde Lovelletti, KU's All-American center for space exploration, builds Buildings and Grounds and never mind what he might have been in the past.
These and other surprising bits of information cropped up yesterday when four Kansan reporters asked at random a total of 100 KU students to identify Shankel, Lovellett, Ed Rolfs, John Beisner and Howard Pankratz.
Here are the results of their survey:
Fourteen of the students, including five foreign students, hadn't heard of any of the five.
Though elections for student body president will be held next Wednesday and Thursday, a sizeable number of those surveyed were still not sure who the candidates were, much less what they were running for.
OF THE 64 students who had at least heard of Ed Rolfs, Junction City junior, only 37 knew that he is campaigning for student body president, and 16 knew only that he was in the running for some office. One student said she'd seen the Rolfs posters as they were being printed with "some kind of encounter groups or meetings—something like that."
Forty-nine of the students said they had heard of Beinser, Salina junior, but only 28 knew that he is a candidate for student body president. "He's a nice person," that he was running for some kind of office.
The candidates' campaign posters seemed to be one of the primary sources of evidence for their claims.
Bill to Maintain Gap in State, Non-State Fees
TOPEKA (AP) -A bill that would maintain different fees at state universities and colleges for Kansas students and out-of-state students introduced in the Kansas House yesterday.
The bill would make tuition the same for all students, but would allow the Board of Regents to remit part of the fees paid by them who graduate from Kansas high schools.
Kansas now charges higher fees to out-of- state students than it does to in-state students.
But with the lowering of the age of majority from 21 to 18, it became easy for students who had graduated from high schools in other states to establish residence in Kansas while attending a state university or college, thereby qualifying for the lower fees.
"I didn't pay much attention to the posters," one student volunteered. "I don't like it, but I like the way it looks."
Another student said, "I'll vote if I run into a voting station, but I won't go out of my car."
The name Del Shankel got a response from 45 of the students, but the responses ranged from him to them. He turned in with the nation's space program and the sports world. Only 17 knew that Shankel is KU's executive vice chancellor, a post to which he was appointed.
Only 26 of the students had heard of Lovellette, but 21 of them correctly identified him as a basketball player. There was some confusion about the years he played, but four of the 21 knew that he had played for KU "back in the 80s," and one student seceded fully prepared to relate every detail to his career, much to the surprise of the reporter.
AND AS FOR Howard Pankratz? Well, nobody could really identify him, and those who tried didn't even come close. And perhius that is understandable.
Rumor has it that he is a KU graduate now working for a newspaper in Colorado. But there is another rumor that the name is a standard pseudonym in the newspaper that paps up now and again as a byname, thus no one wants to be identified with.
"Howard Pankratz is the mayor of Muckadilla, Australia," says John Bohun. "I have never heard of this."
He is "a maybe fictional, maybe real newspaper character," says Sammie Messick, a secretary in the School of journalism.
Believe what you will.
on campus
TIDE, a 25 minute film about the local rock group by award-winning producer Jim Pearce; will be part of the special lecture series, "Issues in American Culture." The program's film will be shown at 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Monday in Room 468 Wescort Hall.
HEADQUARTERS is sponsoring a United Wheels program to drive low-income and elderly people around town. Anyone willing to volunteer can call Headquarters, 841-2345, or the Volunteer Clearing House, 841-5059.
GOING AWAY PARTIES for Golde Neis, the "button lady" who works the concession stand in the basement of Strong Hall, are celebrating today in the basement of Summerfield Hill.
Sioux Club Luncheon
in brief
Haskell Indian Junior College's Sioux Club will sponsor a harench of Indian foods from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow at the University Center, 1912 Massachusetts St.
Chemistry Award
The E. I. du Pont de Némours Corp. has presented an award of $7500 to the department of chemistry. Prof. John Landgrebe, department chairman, said the funds would be used to support summer residence fellowships for graduate students in chemistry and for the purchase of new instruments for the department.
Kansas Art Display
Works of more than 80 Kansas artists will go on display at the opening of the 20th annual Kansas Designer-Craftsmans Exhibition. The show begins at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas University gallery. The exhibition will run through March 3.
Applications for SUA officer and board member positions for the 1974-75 school year will be available next week in the SUA office in the Kansas Union.
SUA Applications
The deadline for filing officer applications is 5 p.m. Feb. 22. The deadline for filing board member applications is 5 p.m. Feb.
27.
Interviews for officer positions will be Feb. 26 and for board positions, March 2.
Organ Recital
James Moser, chairman of the department of organ, will present a rectal at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
Assisting Moeser in the Faculty Recital Series feature will be Roger Stoner, visiting lecturer in wind and percussion instruments, on trumpet.
Women's Scholarship
Cindy Scheeper, Colby junior, will receive a $600 scholarship from the Chicago Professional Chapter of Women in Communication, Inc., in Chicago Sunday.
Schepooper, a broadcast journalism major, will receive the award at the conclusion of a Women in Communication sponsored careers workshop.
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SENIORS AND GRADS
You are needed now for summer and fall fulfillment business positions in the USA and abroad. Recommendance NEEESS ENERGY OFFICE, Summerfield HOME, Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 11-12
Saturday, February 23
VOTE In The Student Body Elections February 13th and 14th Wednesday Polling Places (Feb.13)
A Satirical, Joke-Rock, Mock-Concert Musical Comedy, Semi-Revue Theatrical Production
RESIDENCE HALLS
(5 p.m.-8 p.m.)
Oliver
GSP
McCollum
Lewis
RESIDENCE HALLS
NATIONAL LAMPOLE LEMMINGS
Hoch Auditorium 8:00 p.m.
Tickets $3.50-$2.50
Sales Start Wednesday, Feb.13 in SUA Office
ON THE HILL
(8 a.m.-4 p.m.)
Strong
Union
Summerfield
FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES (6 p.m.-9 p.m.) Delta Upsilon Kappa Kappa Gamma Alpha Gamma Delta Gamma Phi Beta
This is the era in which the sweetness of life and the purifying power of love—both human and divine—came into their own. During this period, other wordly happiness is also at its most joyful state, as reflected in the life of $F$. Francis and that curious woman who is being raised by her brother, Samuel, were among those to experience it.
S. U.A. Fine Arts & University Friends of Art Present Kenneth Clark's
CIVILISATION FILM SERIES
Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m.
ROMANCE AND REALITY — FEBRUARY 10
Thurs. Polling Places (Feb.14
On The Hill
(8 a.m.-5 p.m.)
Strong Union Summerfield
Get Out And Vote!!!!
reestate ra house
with
SUNDANCE-Friday, Feb. 8
SLIDE BY and BOOGIE This Week for $^1\text{ }^{50}$ A Night!
THIS WEEKEND GET INTO COUNTRY ROCK
BILLY SPEARS—Saturday, Feb. 9
An o standi and sr an o emoiti naked
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Next Wednesday: SUGARLOAF
Brought to you by Music People, Ltd.
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Friday, February 8, 1974
University Daily Kansan
3
Exhibit of Photographs at Spooner Covers 130 Years
BY CAROL GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
An oblique shot of a steep stairway, trees standing stark and thin against a bland sky and snow-covered ground, the wrinkles on an old woman's hand bulging out emotion—these photographs capture a naked instant and become surrealistic.
The photographs are part of a display covering 130 years of photography now on exhibit in the basement of the Spooner Art Museum.
The exhibits, called "Language of Light," is in two parts; photographs from the collection that James Enyear, curator of photography at the museum, has worked
with since 1968, and photographs taken by Terry Eaves, a KU graduate.
Eenyeart said yesterday that the photographs were hung in groups that showed how different photographers in 1850 and in 1970 had solved the same problem.
For example, one photograph shows mudhills and the one beside it shows a slab of wood. In both, the texture of the object becomes the most prevalent part of the photograph. The viewer can see the oozing of the mud or the roughness of the wood.
"Where the motive or aura of the photographs is the same for the viewer, whenever common problems have been solved, the photographs are hung together."
Eyentyeat said. "We're still surveying 130 museum photography in what to expect more of, much more interesting way than the one-two-three-four-system." Only 50 per cent of the museum's collection is in that system.
"It's not the best or the worst." Enyear said, "what it fits the idea."
The part of the exhibit photographed by Evans, who majored in painting, is a social documentary which shows the poor people of Kareas.
"There is no room for pity for poor events, Evans has written, 'but there is a reason'."
Her photographs are of old people, young children with grimy faces and mothers
Senate Attendance Rules Adopted
BY SUZI SMITH
and JILL WILLIAS
Kannan Staff Reporter
By a vote of 23-10, the senate approved a regulation that any senator guilty of two unofficial absences or four absences of any kind would be suspended from the senate.
ACCORDING TO the new rule a suspended senator could appeal his suspension within a week to the senate's Elections Committee. Suspended senators will be dropped from the senate if they fail to appeal or if their appeal is denied.
New regulations to insure attendance at senate meetings were adopted last night by the Student Senate after two 15-minute recesses due to the lack of quorum.
Quorum was established after several senators made phone calls to those who weren't present; however attendance soon dwindled once discussion began.
The regulation was introduced as an amendment to a set of revised rules and procedures.
Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president, submitted the rewritten bylaws. He said he rewrote them to reduce the wordiness in old rules and regulations and to bring the senate's rules into compliance with the University Senate Code.
"It is ridiculous to let this go any further," said Cindy Steiner, Kansas City senior and student senator. "Look at this meeting tonight."
"Black and white can be held in a state of preservation," Enyeart said. "Color is difficult, if not impossible, to preserve."
The senate also approved an opinion poll to be placed on next week's student senate vote.
The poll, originally in the form of a referendum, retracts student opinion on the tax reform.
The first of the two questions will ask students to rank "academics, campus affairs and political affairs" in the order of attention they should receive from the
THE SENATORS discussed the ambiguity of the terms.
Einyart said that most photographers produced far fewer works than etchers or painters. "They don't want to be a craftsman."
The poll describes academics as university requirements and curriculum. College affairs are the transportation system affairs, recreation and events. Political affairs are those concerned with the state legislature and Concerned Students for Higher
The second question on the poll asks for student opinion on the funding of Liberal Arts and Sciences courses, student achievement in math or science for teaching purposes, and "Feedback."
photograph that was not signed or otherwise identified.
The people who are going to vote have been following the campaign and will know what is up.
with only 25 members remaining, the senate passed a series of four bills that would revise the method of budgeting the student activity fee.
But Ed Rolfs, Junction City senior who suggested the referendum, disagreed.
FOUR HOURS INTO the meeting and
The new process provides for the eight standing committees to hear budget requests and allocate the money for groups making requests in their areas of interest.
When more than one person or museum wants a photograph, Enyart said, the photographer often puts together several images of the same subject with some negative to produce the same print.
who have many children in small living rooms.
Photographs by W. Eugene Smith, Diane Arbus, Adain C. Vroman and Martin Paffi are some of the black and white shots in the loss of the photographs are black and wite.
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SUA
Monday, Feb.18, 8pm
Bachman Turner Overdrive
Officer Interviews
Tickets $4.00 Advance and $4.50 at the Flint Shop—Advance Tickets on sale at Better Days and Kief's in Lawrence; Village Sound at the Flint Hills Shopping Center in Emporia; at Gramophone Works in Manhattan and in Topeka at Earth Shine and Paul's and Joe Henry's at White Lakes.
Concert Arrangements N.P.C., Inc., Booking Coordinator Great, Plains Associates. 913-841-4444
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February 26
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OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
Board Member Interviews March 2
Deadline for Officer Applications:
5 p.m. Friday, February 22
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Friday, February 8, 1974
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Scapegoat Hunting
The public is howling for scapegoats for the fuel shortage and eager politicians are ready to provide them. The number one candidate for scapegoat is the oil industry. D'Arnaud, in DHuth, is willing to play the high priest of political expediency by sacrificing the oil companies.
The House-Senate conference committee on the Emergency Energy Conservation Bill has adopted an amendment proposed by Jackson that would roll back oil prices. The bill was originally intended to give the President emergency powers to deal with the fuel shortage such as imposing taxation or cutting business hours. Congress, however, has become increasingly intent upon controlling the oil industry, especially oil company profits.
About three-fourths of the oil produced in this country is now subject to federal price controls that limit the price to $.25 a barrel. The rest of the oil is not controlled and is seeing for about $10 a barrel. A government amendment would roll back the price on the uncontrolled oil.
Jackson's plan would establish a base price of $2.5 a barrel for all domestic crude oil. In some cases, the price could be higher such as for oil from wells that produce very little or are expensive to operate. The ceiling price for oil from these wells would be $7.09 a barrel. The barrel price would save the consumer about four cents a gallon for gasoline, but it could cost the oil industry billions of dollars.
The oil industry may not be entirely blameless for the oil
shortage. Certainly, the government should keep close watch on the oil industry and, perhaps, methods for more equitable taxation.
Congress, however, should not use big oil companies as whipping boys. If the oil industry is to meet our present and future needs for petroleum products, it will need to invest heavily in building new refineries, finding and developing new oil fields and perfecting the technology for economically producing oil from shale.
This will require capital, and to get the capital, the oil companies need to make healthy profits. A roll back in oil prices could deprive the oil companies of the capital they need to invest in increasing production.
But Sen. Jackson isn't worried about the ability of the oil companies to meet demand 10 years from now. The senator is worried only about his standing with the voters two and a half years from now. Jackson, quite simply, is running for president.
In the aftermath of Watergate this nation does not need leaders who use demagoguery or seek only to pacify the public instead of developing solutions to national problems, who needs leaders who will tell the truth even when it is uncomfortable or politically unprofitable.
Nevertheless, Sen. Jackson is willing to propose legislation that is potentially harmful but politically expedient. Perhaps Jackson was given a higher morality by getting himself elected president at all cost.
—John Bender
By JOSEPH KATZ
Cohabitation Helping Eliminate Double Standard
Special to Newsda
Coed Living Increasing on Campuses
Dr. Kate is director of research for human development and educational policy at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, N.Y.
The students' behavior is much in consonance with their convictions. More than half the freshmen said that they have had conversations with the seniors and seminars that figure rise to about 7/8 per cent.
The women students tie sex and love more closely than the men, who express a much greater tendency to have sex for the physical gratification alone. But in interviews with students we have found that many young women have become the teachers of men, pushing them to cultivate the emotional and feeling side of their lives.
Do these figures indicate a breakdown in morality? Our data show a high degree of fidelity and seriousness in relationships. We are not surprised that there are much more often serious than casual.
Perhaps our most startling finding is that the majority of women who are sexually active have intercourse more frequently and report higher degrees of emotional and sexual satisfaction than the corresponding group of men.
What have been the effects? Since 1969 my Stony Brook colleagues and I have made periodic surveys of male-female relations on campuses. Our data show that great changes have been taking place in the last decade.
It may turn out that one of the most important effects of the new forms of coeducation will be a much enlarged capacity on the part of both men and women in college, in contrast to other, but for living more affectionate and emotionally-sensitive lives.
The double standard is gone. In our latest survey nearly all college students of both sexes thought that sexual intercourse should be only for the male but for the female as well.
To the dismay of some parents and amid dire predictions from some who consider themselves guardians of public morality, the past few years have seen a great increase in coeducational living and sexual freedom on college campuses.
During the last eight years many college dormitories across the country have been built.
Terrorists Debase World
The Washington Post
At high noon Dec. 4, 1973, a hand grenade was tossed into a crowd on David Street in the old city of Jerusalem hardy more than a stone's throw from the Jaffa Gate.
By Brig. Gen. (Ret.) S.L.A. Marshall
For a small bomb, it did large work. Twenty persons had to be treated for wounds. Their blood was spattered over four store fronts and a half a block of pavement. Among the victims were five Israeli girl soldiers and three Arab youngsters. Next day a 20-year-old Arab confessed to the deed. It was not, in his words, a murder or a liberty. Whether he was strictly a mental case, the other hand, a dedicated soul remained for the courts and psychiatrists to determine.
Considered by themselves, such incidents would not be worth recounting. They are significant only as they relate to the person, their institution, its vice, gosseques and mystery.
Israel became fully embattled on Yom
Kippur. It burst by surprise, its people were
killed and hundreds of thousands of men
saved.
For prior to the David Street expression, the last terrorist act in Jerusalem had taken place exactly eight months before. During the months of October and November, 1973, there was no terror in the streets. Yet if the Palestinian movement had body and purity, the million Arabs directly accountable to Israel, that was the season for a red harvest.
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 typed on standard paper according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and homecity; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
ever before. For 18 days their armor were fully engaged fighting off the Egyptians and Syrians. The frontiers remained hot as December opened and the army stayed deployed far forward as did many of the police.
Still, not one act of sabotage or terror was staged by the palestinians or their sympathizers in Jerusalem, along the west bank of the river Jordan, to interrupt the mustering and advance of troops. Though the turnuol of war affords the best cover for clandestine violence, the Arab underground, if it existed within the territory, would watch the attacking Arab armies.
Throughout these same years, however, to the free world quite apart from Israel, the militant Iranian has become like the geniola lost from Prior to 1967, the movement was kept alive by a number of disparate groups, none of which had been involved in the war against all law and the civilized order.
Therefore a distinction has to be made between Palestinian legitimists and Palestinian nihilists. All insurgencies draw together strange bird nots of a feather: libertarians, megalomaniacs, social liberals, plunders and assassins.
Then there is the other item that British tanks and armored cars are again deployed around London's Heathrow Airport, and not because of crackpotism out of the brawling in Ulster. They are there to guard against Arab terrorists who have plotted to shoot down a commercial airliner with a Russian-Marine S-7M missile. Its limited range puts
At this writing, two Palestinian airport killers have been sentenced to death in Athens. That was hailed as an act of unprecedented courage by a single court, until it was announced the following day that the sentence would be commuted, lest some people be adopted to bring about the treason of the prisoner. Predictably, that will come about anyway.
Where the Palestinian movement differs from others is that it has attracted more characters that are pitilessly cut-throat than did the Spanish Main in the days of Captain Kidd, despite which, it is still treated with deference by governments that consider themselves moral, just and not altogether craven.
At the Munich Olympics two years ago Israel's athletes were the direct target, though every participating free nation suffered. If their peoples felt shock, it still wasn't enough to bring about collective action. In the interim since, the selection of targets has been pretty much inaccessible because the war was to be expected. For organized Arab terrorism is a dermonic force only distantly related to the Palestine liberation. Israel is a side show. The object is the humiliation and debasing of Western society.
the focus on flight terminals. The same kind
Amsterdam and several German airports.
might suppose that this would have been a major factor in encouraging greater sexual freedom. But our data indicate that the behavior of students in coeducational dormitories is not greatly different from that of students in sexually recreated ones.
It is the ethos of the youth culture, rather than living together in dormitories, that determines sexual and other relations among students.
Ceducational housing seems to have been effect rather than cause, an outgrowth of students moving in the 1960s towards more independence, the right to earlier self-determination and more autonomy for women. Greater sexual freedom was part of the movement, and it seems to have been a response to the new birth-control pill, which considerably reduced the hazard of unwanted pregnancy with its personal and social consequences.
The push began gradually in the early 1960s, with students demanding and getting involved for more information about each other. The dornitories at certain stated hours. By the end of the decade, in many dornitories across the country, some men and women were living with each other.
Ceducational housing has met less resistance than, given the generation gap, one might have expected from parents or grandparents that the whole, have been very friendly to it.
The sexual equality of college men and women is only one facet of their striving for equality in other areas. As many women as men, about 80 per cent, say that having a career is more important to more women than having children.
Economic need and desire for status through marriage are becoming much less important in the choice of a partner, and instead young people are striving more for
the human qualities of emotional security and stimulation. As men and women need each other less for the material goods of life, they can get together more for the psychological values that an intimate relationship can bring.
- Art Suddarth, Newsday
This college generation, as it matures,
may well be pioneers in relationships
challenged by mutual care, respect, joint
learning and the dusive and yet most needed emotion, love.
STATE PEACE
Impeachment Drive No Conspiracy
Bv WILLIAM RASPBERRY
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—There is, we are being told, a liberal conspiracy to get rid of President Nixon.
The proof of the conspiracy is that every new bit of damning evidence against the President, whether it is directly linked to Watergate or not, is used to buttress democracy for impeachment. The conspiracy theory also suggests that people come from individuals and groups whose politics are left of center.
Columnist William Buckley Jr. said it again recently, alleging a politically motivated attempt on the part of Mr. Nikon's "enemies" to "formulate a high crime or misdemeanor of which he can be judged cruelty."
These enemies, he said, begin with the conclusion that the incumbent must be removed from office. Then they look for a crime on them.
These enemies, he said, begin with the conclusion that the incumbent must be removed from office. Then they look for a crime on
There was political opposition, to be sure, and some of us wondered about the sanity of a people who would elect the man to office. But no one believed in it.
BUCKLEY ISRIGHT, to a degree I suppose, but he makes it sound a good deal more sinister than it strikes me. What I see is that some of us have concluded, as Buckley suggests, that the President ought to be removed from office, and some are working to make it happen.
But the disclosures that followed the Watergate break-in put the Nixon Presidency in an entirely different light. What some of us slowly came to see weren't just improprieties and repugnant actions, but also a desperate need for the American tradition—an attack on the country, from the inside.
And not because he wasn't our choice for President in the first place, either. For his entire first term, for instance, even while he was shilshalwaying over school integration, killing off the poverty among young blacks and whites in the city, there wasn't the slightest hint of a move to remove him from office.
IF WE WERE OUTRAGED at the allegations of huge cash rip-offs, we were truly frightened by the mindset of a national government willing to enarmen' lists, secret police forces and subversion of official agencies.
It is easy to forget how slowly the conclusion was reached that Richard Nixon was a danger to the country. For most of last year, for instance, it was widely suspected that the President was lying when he denied knowing about the Watergate cover-up.
But he had the benefit of substantial doubt as to any prior knowledge of the Watergate conspiracy, or any personal participation in the cover-up. The general tone among liberals and nonliberals alike was that the President should come clean, get rid of the worst members of his staff and apologize to the people. Impachment was scarcely mentioned.
SINCE THAT TIME, Mr. Nikon has been pursued not by liberal Democrats and "enemies," but by facts and events, more often than not of his own making. His secretly recorded tapes, for instance, were filed in the courthouse on November 21, President was lying; but he wouldn't let the tapes go. Not only that, but he fired the prosecutor who had the nerve to ask for them, and by that act lost two of the most responsible men in his governorship.
And when he finally had to relinquish the tapes anyhow, two of them turned out not to exist and a third was discovered to contain an extra tape. The rest must be destroyed.
He instituted Operation Candor to explain the unexplainable and succeeded in making himself look more suspicious than before on his dealings with the milk lobby, his own income taxes and his real estate. He then sent him a letter to Candor; but by what name did he call the period that preceded it?
THE MORE HE SCURRIED from one untenable position to another, pretending candor, going silent, losing his tapes and his temper and doing everything he could to keep the facts from coming out, the more he took on the appearance of a trampled criminal.
And as a result, some of us concluded that the no longer was fit to be President. The reason we keep waving each new bit of evidence is that we are sure we've seen the light and want everybody else to see it, too.
But that is no liberal conspiracy. It isn't the Kennedys and Humphreys who have been in the forefront of the foreground of those calling for Nixon to step down. It is voices like the Detroit News and Time magazine and Wilbur Mills of Arkansas.
Oh, yes, and the AFL-ClO, which has been generally credited with making possible Richard Nixon's landslide election victory.
Readers Respond
To the Editor:
Film Story Disputed, Abortion Views Offered
In an atmosphere where confusion and inmoendo already have distorted facts and intentions, the Kanas article of January 31st entitled "Censorship: Film Censors Set Threatening Precedent" does little to help the situation.
While the balance of the article is correct, the statements attributed to me are not, and their positioning within the article gives the entire piece a tone which misrepresents the position which SUA took and which damage the image of the University.
To the extent that any statement was made about a "lack of knowledge," it referred to the vast number of rumors and charges that were circulating at the time, which could have been part of fracking down every statement that was being made for verification of verification.
It is absolutely untrue that I had not seen the films in question. The majority of the Board members and myself took a great deal of care and consideration in coming to our decision, including trips into Kansas City to view the "Devil in Miss Jones" before our vote on the matter. In fact for most of us, attending the Film Celebration a special screening was provided the next morning after the lawmakers had complained.
Griff and the Unicorn
WHO ARE YOU?!
SILLY BOY... I'M YOUR FAIRY GODMOTHER
JUST WISH FOR SOMETHING AND I WILL GRANT YOUR WISH!
OH BOY!
YOU! NASTY! YOUNG! MAN!
WHO ARE YOU?!
SILLY BOY... I'M YOUR FAIRY GODMOTHER
by Sokoloff
YOU!
NASTY!
YOUNG!
MAN!
SOKOLOFF
Charlene Langer
SUA Board member
Carnegie, Pa. senior
While it may be true that I spoke of "buying time" the juxtaposition of that statement with that of Mr. Burge implies that the Board acted on a permanent basis with no objective standards. This is not true. A vote was taken prior to the special screening of the "Erotic Film Celebration," but it did not represent a final policy decision. It is more likely that sense that it allowed us enough time to assemble all of the facts and all of the opinions before making any final decisions on "The Devil in Miss Jones." In a highly volatile situation, where threats or rumors of threats abounded, we felt such "time-buying" actions, rather than a preceptive attitude. The second celebration" was in the best interests of the University and the students of the University.
I must emphasize that the majority of us did see the films in question and we did exercise as much care as possible in reaching our final decision, and only with great reluctance acknowledged the political importance of being part of a state university in Kansas.
Fee Use Protested
To the Editor:
I was very upset about a notice I saw posted in the Union claiming that abortion was every woman's right, and urging us to write our congressmen to protect this right. The notice was funded by the Student Aid tuxes fee, which the student didn't think that this money should be used for purposes that reflect only a fraction of the student opinion.
I am very strongly opposed to legalized abortion. A woman well knows what she is doing when she is in a position of her irresponsibility, stupidity, or her fickiness in changing her mind are valid reasons for taking a life, and I know many other students of the same
Nancy Affalter Lawrence junior
Abortion Supported
Since the January 22, 1973 ruling by the Supreme Court, which legalized a woman's right to terminate pregnancy, a woman was not allowed to have had it developed to amend the Constitution to overturn the decision, and members of Congress are being subjected to intense pressure.
M M
Senator Buckley's amendment S. J. Res. 119 and Congressman Hogan's amendment H. J. Res. 261 which would guarantee the 'right to life' of all humans from the moment of conception violates the personal freedom of women.
The people clamoring to subvert the Supreme Court's ruling on abortion have exercised their personal freedom and have made their own decisions regarding abortion. But they seek to deny others that power and to impose their choice on everyone.
To the Editor:
Mult bottle Robert student
Behle ago ir-
forming
rearrange
sand it
Stout
bottle
$S_{t}$ $G$
All women should have the freedom to choose whether or not to bear children. It is with great concern that I urge response to legislators from all concerned. Urge better family planning programs and clinics so that fewer situations involving the mother and baby are the freedom to choose legal abortions must not be denied America's women.
Kristie Gibson Lawrence senior
The elimination of legal abortions would be a step backward for everyone. Those who are pushing for legislation against abortion no longer need to resort to the welfare of the women in the child.
Bearing children ought to be a celebrated miracle. But in some situations it is a nightmare. Denying the alternative of abortion would result in a thriving underground of butchers and unwanted and unwieldy children.
Hey, man. I'm just writing to say right on Tom Jackson and Ace Johnson ("Beer Use Up, Pot Use Down, Victuallers Say," Feb. 5 Kansan). These gents must have had
To the Editor;
TO state expe 55 m in th deba ame! Th repo of a well expe cam
Right On Guzzler
their heads together when they said that pot smoking is over the hill. How right they are?
The advantages of beer-guzzling to pet-toking are ever so obvious. Now, instead of scoring a messy lid of good Mexican grass on your stove, let B1$ more wiseily, like on a case of beer.
Beer is also good for you. Ask any beer-drinker and he'll tell you the same. I don't believe those "quack" scientists who say marijuana is harmless to the individual. I ask them, if its harmless, WHY is it illegal? It seems they can't someone some of the time, but not true Americans like me and Vern Miller who won't fall prey to their falsehoods.
Instead of constantly getting blown on illegal pot, I can joggie down the Hawk and get really smashed on just a few pitches of good o'l 3.2 brew.
So keep up the good work, Tom and Ace! Always keep those golden rivers flowing for it's the American way. In the future, more, and more of us disappointed and disgusted with the error of our ways. One day, we too will see the light, and that light says "Coors!"
Mike Holland Liberal junior
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Published at the University of Kansas daily and weekly journals, as well as examination periods. Mail subscriptions to a researcher, $15 a year. Second class payment postage paid by the university. Admission fee $1.25 per student in student activity fee required. Advertised offered to all students without regard to gender. No discrimination against patients are not presumed necessary of the University.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 8, 1974
5
to be face is to see
Multi-Colored Sand, Clear Bottles Materials for Sand Pouring Art
daily
s and
es.
pesa. $8
and
description
fee.
payment
regrdn
ex-ınver-
ns.
By BUNNY MILLER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Ritter Potter,erman
Hunke
hmidt
Logan
nainste
Tharp
instrom
1 West
Multicolored sand in an ordinary glass bottle becomes a work of art in the hands of Robert Stoufer, Lawrence graduate student.
And Stuart is one of only about eight or one people in the country who practice this method.
Believed to have originated over 100 years ago in Iowa, sand pouring is the art of forming pictures or designs by carefully placing sand in a shallow container of colors of sand inside clear glass bottles.
Stouffer said he used almost any size of bottle, from two-ounce jiggers to gallon
jugs. His favorite bottle shape and size, he is said is the four-ounce grape juice bottle.
The type of bottle used, he said, often determines what design he will put inside. Stouter's most commonly used designs are cappuccino, wats, cute, deer, eagles and Indian designs.
Stouffer calls his pieces "sand bottles." To make a sand bottle with a deer design, he paints, he pours four or five layers of different colored sand in the bottom of a bottle. On top of that he pours a thicker layer of yellow-colored sand and pushes it down the sides to create a plate of pads with hand-made wire tools. This forms a decorative bottom design.
Stoufer then levels off that sand and pours
TOPEKA (AP) - Bills that would tighten state laws on campaign contributions and expenditures and set the state speed limit at 55 miles an hour were tentatively approved in the Kansas Senate yesterday after long some attempts at major amendments.
The campaign bill would require detailed reports to be filed with the secretary of state of all expenditures and contributions, as well as establish campaign contribution and expenditure limits for the first time in state campaigns.
It was approved 21-10 on a standing vote. The bill was abstained. The bill comes for a small number of votes.
a dark layer of sand. This dark layer is pushed down into the yellow layer to form the bottom part of the deer design. Then he pours another yellow layer and pushes it down into the dark layer to form the top part of the deer
Also tentatively approved was a bill sponsored by Sen. John Croftoff, R-Cedar Springs, to limit speed limit on Kansas highways. It would bring Kansas into compliance with a federal regulation and avert a threatened loss of land. It is estimated to total $75 million this fiscal year.
Having completed the design, Stouffer then packs the sand down tightly.
State Speed, Finance Laws Get Tentative OK in Senate
Stoufer collects sand from Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and the western United States.
The entire process may take only five minutes for the small changes, and it takes much longer for the larger ones.
The federal mandate requires adherence to the 55 m.p.h. speed limit by March 3.
"It's all different in color and texture," he said. "Some sandpits may have four or five different colors of sand, depending on the geology of the area."
A proposed construction program that would build a science and animal care facility and an addition to Robinson Gymnasium will be submitted to the Kansas State College, April 1, Reith Nitcher, vice chancellor of business affairs, said yesterday.
The proposal will include a request for funds to investigate possibilities for an expansion of a computer or learning resources center, Nitcher said.
Priorities haven’t yet been established for construction and improvement of a suburban neighborhood.
Stouffer said it took him about six months to learn this art from his father. Now he and his wife, Grace, Lawrence junior, and Michael, all works at germ and mineral shows in the area.
"We are considering our next improvement requests," they are still in the planning stage but will be submitted through the Board of Regents on April 1.
A committee was established to determine which of the departments that are related to biological sciences will get space in the proposed building.
Gym Addition, Science Facility Proposed
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said that the biology-life sciences building had existed as a concept for only six weeks, and that a committee met for the last two weeks to determine what departments should be located in the
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"We're trying to see where we stand on space needs." Brower R. Burchill, chairman of the biological sciences administration said.
proposed building and how much space should be allotted to them.
The report must be submitted by March 1 to Keith Lawton, director of facilities, planning and operations, Burchill said. The Regents will submit the proposal to the legislature on April 1, he said.
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Friday, Feb. 8
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Saturday, Feb. 9
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Kansas Union
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Monday, Feb. 11
Horror Films
Classical Films
THE BODY SNATCHER
Boris Karloff
Tuesday, Feb. 12
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Wednesday, Feb. 13
7:30 & 9:15
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MY LIFE TO LIVE
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Thursday, Feb. 14
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6
Friday, February 8, 1974
University Daily Kansan
MILLIE WESTMAN
Above: Beating a drum is easier with a little help from a music therapist. Below: Even clapping can be hard the first time around
AFFECTION
A child sits on the floor with their head bent and hands clasped in their mouth, while a woman reaches out to touch them.
Music Therapists Train By Helping Others Adjust
By DIANE YEAMANS Assistant Feature Editor
Bobby has trouble following directions and coordinating his movements. He is nine years old, mentally retarded and has the verbal capacity of about a nine-month-old child. With his music therapist, he works on increasing his ability to sing and by acting out songs with his hands.
the aged in the Lawrence area, to name ony a few.
Jerry is nine years old and deaf. His music therapist uses the same activities to help him learn to observe his surroundings and understand his understanding of sound vibration.
THE CHILDREN, whose names are ficticious, are patients at the United Affiliated Facilities (UAF) in Haworth Hall, and the music therapists are University of Kansas students gaining clinical experience in a little-known but expanding field.
Carey has behavioral and perceptual problems. He refuses to play with other children and resists directions. His music therapist uses colored bells and discs to help his color perception and to encourage responses to empathize, having him listen to the sounds of bells and musicals.
Steve, age three and a cerebral palsy victim, and Lisa, age four and mentally retarded, sing songs, an exercise in memory and listening, with their music therapists
All this is preparation for a career in music therapy, a profession with strong roots at KU and growing popularity throughout the nation.
These student music therapists aren't limited to the clinical experiences at the UAF. They work with prisoners at Larsing State Prison, patients at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri, and children, the Veterans Hospital in Topeka, Bosth Stone Halfway House, Pinkney and Cordley grade schools and some homes for
WILLIAM SEARS, professor of music education and music therapy, said, "The music therapist tries to use music—we hope and we claim, somewhat scientifically—to help people toward better coping behaviors."
Besides the techniques used in the child development clinics on campas, Sears said, the music therapist adapts musical instruments for use by physically handicapped persons and helps people learn about music and music skills.
Sears said he put the "somewhat scientifically" in his definition because music therapy capitalizes on the theories of many disciplines—most directly from psychology, occupational and physical therapy, sociology and speech pathology.
Much of the music therapist's work involves the theories of behavioral medicine, including psychologist, Sears said. But the theoretical background is expanding. But he said, because the many demands being made upon music therapy require a wider variety of skills.
ONE OF THE advantages of the UAF, Sears said, is that it allows music therapy students to work with other professional teachers can coordinate their therapy programs.
Bruce Preuder, assistant instructor in music education, said music was an important part of his job.
Staff photos by Dave Regier
therapeutic value to anyone was limitless
10
Below: Learning to play together at Haworth Hall is a big step forward
the role he plays was thrilling. Because of the cultures and ethnic implications of music, he said, it is important for the music therapist to understand the role music plays in ethnic cultures.
Balancing is hard work.
A woman raises her arm and smiles while sitting on a floor surrounded by six children.
Penny
Patricia Doyle, teaching assistant in music education and music therapy, said therapists at the UAF try to improve a child's coordination, speech and visual skills and increase attention span through music therapy sessions. They also try to help the children recognize colors and numbers, and to improve his relationship with other children.
THERAPIES MUST be inventive, Doyle said, to cope with different situations. At the music therapists sometimes make equipment that rattles, from aluminum cars and lids.
Doyle said one music therapy student developed a color-coded system to teach piano to patients at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The therapist coordinated notes on sheet music with the piano keys by using colors.
A small success in the key of C.
Sears said a music therapist might teach an older person to play an instrument such as piano or clarinet.
He described a KU graduate who learned to play the piano and a violin backwards and held in her right hand although she could not play the left. She was now a practicing rugby player.
GORGETTEY ROGERS, Freeport, N.Y., junior, said she thought music therapy was useful for children. If it mentally retarded or physically handicapped can learn even three chords on a guitar, she can play 15 or 20 songs and can understand the sense of pride and accomplishment.
I
The Advocacy is an
Two v
and
univer
Who peach the fir
In a therapeutic sense, Rogers said, the sessions were probably most valuable in improving the patients' relationships with other people.
Sears said that at the Lansing prison, music therapists gave prisoners music appreciation lessons, which they thought helped to curb hostile behavior.
Unless a music therapist has a permanent unless a clinic, Sears said, he usually doesn't know whether the patient has been helped by therapy. He said that at the UAF, the music therapists only worked with the children for a semester, and that at other times they might quit the therapy sessions or be released by the doctor or psychologist in charge.
F
BECAUSE OF THE SHORT time involved,
direct feedback on the effect of music
to performance.
However, Sears said he did know of a prisoner at Lansing who seemed to be helped by music therapy. He had participated in the program six months without any comments or responses, Sears said. When a prison psychiatrist was preparing him for parole three years later, Sears said, he asked the prisoner to remember the music therapy sessions.
Onl show Facu
Sears said the prisoner said yes, named some of the pieces that had been played and asked why anyone had been so nice to him. From the last comment, Sears said, it was assumed that the music appreciation had had a positive impact on the prisoner.
Sears also said the KU music therapy program was unique because it was the only program in the country requiring six semesters of clinical experience for graduation. He said some university programs had no clinics.
MUSIC THERAPY students take music classes, including theory and history, Sears said, and must be accomplished in a primary and a secondary instrument. He also must also be acquainted with portable instruments like the guitar and autohorn.
In addition, Sears said, the KU music therapy program includes courses in principles of music therapy and methods of applying music to practice courses taught in the School of Education.
Music therapists are required to complete a six-month internship before they can be certified by the National Association for Music Therapy, Sears said. The association originated in Lawrence, and the national offices are maintained here.
KU has, for a long time, been a center of music therapy. The University, in 1946, had the second music therapy program in the country offering a master's degree.
Edward Gaston, a KU professor of music education who died in 1971, is often called the father of music therapy. Gaston founded the national association.
SEARS SAID that Gaston set the pattern of music therapy education at KU, and he was able to standardize music therapy education across the country by recommending a program to universities which were starting their own departments.
Because of the force Gaston put behind KU's program and because of the strong clinical experience of the program's graduates, Sears said, KU's program has been in existence for the last three years, Sears said, the department has grown to 200 students from 72.
But the increase in students has created a need for more full-time faculty members in the department, Sears said. In addition to himself, he said, there are three teaching assistants for the 200 students in the program.
Although employment possibilities are good, Sears said the job supply is beginning to increase. Graduates are the increased number of graduates in three years. Graduates are helping to expand the scope of music therapy by applying to institutions and convincing them of its usefulness.
No one really knows all the possible applications of music therapy, said Sears, but the field is expanding almost too rapidly to keep tabs on it.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 8.1974
7
Nixon Impeachment Debated at SUA Advocate Series
teach such
student teach ofrapist with the
arison. amusic sought
By RANDY SCHUYLER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Whether President Nixon should be impeached and tried on the grounds of the SUA Advocate Series.
s areunning
ne ine last
to exe yap
them said.
de apes,
but able to
The series is conducted similarly to the Advocate's television series in which there is an affirmative and a negative advocate. Two witnesses for each side are questioned and cross-examined. Charles Oldfather, university attorney, moderated.
John Wright, professor of psychology and human development, the advocate for impeachment, called Mrs. Raymond Cerf, 100 Sunset Dr., as his first witness.
Curt said that the worst thing Nixon had done was to order the secret bombing of Cambodia—about 3,500 bombs. She said he had falsified records to cover the raids.
"The law means absolutely nothing to our President," Cert said.
SHE ALSO SAID that his support of the Huston bill, which allowed for increased surveillance of college campuses, the power to arrest students and the use of wristpits, moved his guilt.
naslash's name on Nixon's "enemy list" was the most revealing thing about the president.
"He can't tolerate anyone else's point of view. Anyone who disagrees with him is a dangerous enemy," she said. Cerf said that that was how dictators acted.
Cerf said that she was an enemy of Nixon's.
James M. Masuda, assist, professor of political science, the advocate for Nixon's defense, cross-examined Cerf. He said that impeachment was a political activity and that the grounds could be whatever the House of Representatives said they would
Cert replied that falsifying documents and deceiving the public were grounds.
ARTHUR KATZ, dean of the School of Social Welfare, was the second witness and a confessor.
He said impachment would be "a sound and healthy development for the nation at this time. Katz also said that problems in the country had grown in the past six years, but he lost his credibility and thus his ability to deal with industrial and labor leaders.
Faculty Senate Gets Small Crowd
Only five members and two reporters showed up for yesterday's meeting of the conference.
The Lawrence Daily Journal-World had incorrectly reported that the meeting had been canceled. The Journal-World said it received the wrong information from the office of Richard L. Von Ende, executive secretary of the University.
The five members of Faculty Senate who
showed up were gerhard H. W. Zuther,
presiding officer of Faculty Senate and
professor of English, James E. Seaver,
professor of English, James E. Seaver,
Committee (SenEx) and professor of
history; Jerry Lewis, associate dean of
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and
director of Centennial College, Arno F.
and应应 graduate diplocate professor of business;
and Von Ende.
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Masuda, cross-examining, said that neither problems in the country nor lack of confidence by the people were grounds for unreachment.
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Katz replied that there was nothing to fear and everything to gain by impeaching him.
When comparing the Bay of Pigs with the Cambodia bombings, Grant said that Kennedy hadn't been threatened with impeachment but merely had to bear the weight of failure. He also said Nixon was justified in having Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office burglarized because Ellsberg was a possible security risk.
Carroll D. Grant, assistant professor of law, was the first witness for Nicon. He said that the things Nixon had been accused of weren't new and that his predecessors had done so.
Oldfather had earlier said that some witnesses were called upon to express views which they didn't hold. This became apparent when Wright asked Grant if he thought Nixon would resign if the charges against him were proved.
LAUGHING, GRANT said, "I don't think, that man will ever resus."
The second witness for Nixon, Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, stressed Nixon's former and continuing foreign policy as a reason to not impeach him.
However, Grant said that no president since and including Roosevelt had avoided the chance to use the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to harass his opponents. This was similar to Nixon's alleged attempts to persuade the IRS to audit political enemies returns.
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---
It's Not Too Late! to take a Free U class
There is still space in the following classes:
Astrology
Bahai Faith
Biblical Prophecy
Breadmaking
Carlos Castenada
Chess for Fun
Concepts for Social Insurance
Juggling
Elementary Houseplant Care
Human Relations and Relie
Human Reproduction and Contrection
Men's Awareness
Human Relations and Religious Experience
Female Awareness Figure Drawing
Consumer's Workshop
Ice Skating/Ice Dance
Men's Self Help (Men & Health)
Pheasant Hunting and Gun Control
Political Science Workshop: Elections '74
Relaxation Training Workshop
Workshop in Engi-
gious Images: A Women's
Perspective
KU-Y Discussion Groups
Life Planning for Women
Self Defense for Women
Saving for Survival
Help (Women)
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You can enroll in these classes Friday, February 8th in the lobby of the Kansas Union. After that date you may still get into a class by calling the SUA office, 864-3477 and seeing if there is still room.
---
He said there was a special relationship between Nixon and Kissinger which had made the previous successes possible. He expressed fear that the European oil companies were preparing to arm imitation talks with the Soviet Union might be jeopardized by impeachment.
Wright, cross-examining Ketzel,
agrees that the diplomatic successes had
been misunderstood.
Ketzel insisted that Nixon and Kissinger had formed the ideal team, the president staying home and laying plans and Kissinger doing the footwork.
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8
Friday, February 8, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Bob Dylan Concert
Dylan Could Do No Wrong
By GARY BORG Kansas Reviewer
He was up there like a hammer, wide stance behind the microphone delivering a powerful voice and performance that shook the entire area.
Bob Dylan and the Band appeared in the Missouri Arena, St. Louis, Mo., for two shows on the night of Feb. 4. The celebrated poet performer, from his early "Ballad of Hollis Brown" to "Forever Young" and "Wedding Song" from his newest album. Dylan fans in St. Louis were mostly college-age people who enjoyed the older and younger varieties, including two nurses.
A thick cannabis foj filled the arena by 10 o'clock, blocking the massive ceiling from view. At 10.30 Dylan and the Band took the stage together and performed a few 1964-68 vintage songs in a sinuous rock. Dylan did no wrong, could do none. The crowd ex-
plied in applause after each number,
punctuated by ecstatic howls and cries of
Perhaps having read reports of earlier shows in the tour, the St. Louis crowd was more tolerant when the Band worked alone. "Hag Manna Rug," "Up on Cripple Creek," "Dance With the Night Thou Dove Old Diasse Down" were all effective, despite Dylan's absence.
The last part of the show, with Dylan and
Dylan with acoustic guitar and harmonica began his solo spot with "The Times They are a Changing" cren 1963. This was popular, too, at the time of our show. The audience was ready with a short but thunderous response when Dylan sang the line, "but even the President of the United States sometimes must have to Mr. It’s Alright Ma (14)今生 Bleeding!"
National Ballet Troupe Delight in Hoch Show
By LINDA HALES
Kansan Reviewer
The performance by National Ballet of Washington Wednesday night at Hoch Auditorium was a delight to both eye and ear.
Lee Delhiels set a light-hearted tone for the ballet, "Coppellia," a story of love and sacrifice.
Franz and Swaindon, lovers about to marry, be involved with a sinister toymaker. Dr. Coppelius, when Franz suddenly falls in love with a life-size dog, opposes
The ballet, called by Nicholas Sergveje and Arthur Saint-Léon and restaged by
Kirk Peterson as Franz was good. He danced competently and drew applause for his performance.
Deidre Grohgan (Dawn) and Charlene Gehm (Prayer) performed well. Gehm's particularly graceful arm movements set her apart from the other dancers.
The corps de ballet danced a lively Mazurkaz and a Cardas, peasant folk dances, with much typically-European boot stamping and clapping. Marrying the corps' performance, however, was the lack of space on the Hoch stage. The dancers at times looked cramped and their promenades blurred into confusion.
the Band, featured a high and mighty version of "Highway 61 Revisited." This was most typical of the concert, done in a way that would be appropriate to that of "Highway 61" album.
A spark also surged through the audience when Leon Russell, in blue denim and a cowboy hat, bounced gently on the stage to pay his respects. Toward the end of the show, Russell placed the hat on Dylan who was in the middle of "like a Rollin' Sorte," so it was too big for him, sliding almost over his eyes, and Dylann promptly returned the favor.
The show ended with the arena full lit, the crowd standing, clapping, screaming, sometimes singing to "Like a Rolling Stone," driven by the Band and the surly little surrealistic prophet from the iron ranges of Hibbing, Minn.
"was Dylan, full bore. The crowd, as a whole, was totally enslugged by the music. It was a tremendous performance. Dylan, however, hardly addressed the audience. His only words were "Thank you, you've been more than kind," "Thank you, you're more than kind," and they were missed by many people.
One man said, "I wish he'd say something to us," and this was a common sentiment. But Dylan once said of himself, "I stand confidently in his 'true', then nothing more can be asked."
"The Venetian Twins" will be shown at 8 p.m. feb. 15 and 2:30 p.m. feb. 19 to 10 noon on Friday, Feb. 27.
Do you know what a slapstick is? I don't mean as a classification of comedy, I mean a slapstick. It's a paddle with a board hinged to it that pops when you hit someone with the paddle, and that's funny. It is. There's no reason, it just is.
By DON CREACH
Kaman Reviewer
Actually careful examination shows that it takes a lot of thoughtful, hard work to make a slapstick funny. For example, the people who are hit have to know how to react without anticipating or overreacting. Such effort is exactly what has gone into making "Venetian Twining" Twing. And have people about it: the performance is funny.
It's important that I didn't say the play is tremendously funny. The script is mostly tresome and exposition explanation. I don't know how much of the actor's business was written into the script, how much was told to the actor and how much came from the players.
Farce Carries 'Twins'
But it is such business that provides most of the laughs. There is no witty repartee, little clever punning, generally little verbal humor.
The play is a combination of a comedy of manners and a farce, learing very heavily toward the farcical end. Rufus Cadigan is very successful in showing both of these elements as he portrays both Venetian Twins: a clever aristocrat and a loveick
simpleplen. As soon as he appears on stage, he conveys that twain he is portraying
But more important than the use of these two types of comedy is the success of the farce. The comedy of manners is adequate, but the farce carries the show.
And what a force it is! There are too many outrageous comic bits going on, rapid fire, to give the audience a chance to sit back and get bored, except when the situation of the situation have to be explained clearly, with no fan to distract the audience.
It is at such times that the play wears on the ears. It is a shame that the imagination of the company had to be stifled at such moments, and obviously put many ideas into the show.
As ever, the problem with the Experimental Theatre is that so few people get to see the plays. If the rest of the performances are already soldout, find someone who has a ticket. Swipe it from him and hit him with a slapstick. If you know how to do it, it will be funny.
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K. U. EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE 864-3982
Fredric Franklin, director of the National Ballet, is well-suited to an audience of both frequent and infrequent balletgears. It was a pleasure for him to applaise and laughter by the KU audience.
"Coppelia" demands as much pantomine as ballet from the dancers, and the National Ballet does.
The old Doctor Copellius, danced by Fredric Strobel, was the archtypal sir sister sorcerer, complete with cape and dusty magician's book.
His workshop, a dusty, cobwebbed stage,
was a good backdrop for his mechanical
design.
KIEF'S
Knoblauch's performance was excellent on all counts. She was light and graceful, her movements effortless. And she persevered with builda with just enough petulance and humor.
Dean Badolato, as the Chinese Doll, gave the most spectacular performance of the evening. He leaped as if from a springboard and demonstrated a superbly elastic takeoff. His brief performance as a mechanical doll was matched only by Christine Knoblauch (Swainla) as the come-to-life Copella.
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Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn-
- how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed
- how to read readily (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension
- how to make fast, clear, graphic notes
- how to compare and contrast the visual various writers
- how to organize your thoughts in an essay
Our Reading Dynamics teacher is a former Western Civil instructor, but this is not a discussion group. It is our goal that we will help you with Western Civ materials at the Third Reading Dynamics session. We have had some students who were struggling to read effectively scheduled for some future home practice in Reading Dynamics reading. Every week we will check your notes and give a few questions on the reading so you can learn you are understanding.
WEEKS BEGINNING FEBRY 12 and meets Thursday, 7.10 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
REGULAR READING SESSION BEGINS FEB. 12 AND MEETS TUESDAYS, 9:30 p.m. FOR EIGHT WEEKS.
CALL NOW TO ENROL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION: 843-6424
M
--for Student Body President
M
Send the FTD LoveBundle and the Extra Touch of Joie de Fleur perfume.
When she's there
and you're here
and it's Valentine's Day,
send her the FTD
LoveBundle Bouquet
—tender blossoms
and a satin
heart sachet with a
capsule of FTD's
exclusive new
perfume, Joie de
Fleur. Call or visit your
FTD Floriated Day. You can
send your flowers across the
street or across the country.
Usually available for less than 12
FTD
$12^{50}$ than
As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets his own prices. 1974 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association,
KCT
UNICAMPUS COALITION
C
John Beisner
The seeks tornodual will event
Todd Hunter
for Student Body Vice-President
We Stand for:
- Abolishing the foreign language requirement
- Revamping the academic advising program
- Reduction in parking permit prices
- Reduction of parking ticket fines
Vote Feb. 13 & 14 (paid for by Unicampus Coalition)
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 8,1974
9
KU, O-State Clash Spikes Tomorrow
The University of Kansas track team seeks to get back on the winning side tomorrow when it hosts Oklahoma State in a dual meet in Allen Field House. Field events will begin at 4:30 p.m. and the running events will begin at 6 p.m.
The Jayhawks will be minus two of their outstanding performers for the meet
Missing will be high jumper Barry Schur, senior, Tucson, and Mark Lutz, senior, Rochester, Minn. Schur holds the Big Eight record in the high jump at 73 and Lutz is the defending conference champion in the 100- and 220-dash dashes.
Latz recently won the 300 yard dash at the United States Track and Field Federation indoor meet in Oklahoma City and was named the meet's outstanding performer.
Both Schur and Lutz were arrested last weekend on charges of drug possession. They pleaded not guilty at their arraignment Monday in Douglas County Court.
Couch Bob Timmons said both Schur and Latz have been suspended pending the verdict.
"The suspension is just in keeping with our policy," said Timmons, "and doesn't in any way indicate that we feel they are cruel."
"Oklahoma State has been a big surprise this season," Timmons said. "They weren't figured to be as strong as they were last season but they have improved very fast driving the indoor season. They've come up with some great contests against the big Eight indoor meet in Kansas City and have shown much more balance than they would."
In an effort to better determine the makeup of the team that will compete in the conference indoor meet Timmons said he planned to use several people against OSU.
"We're going to do some maneuvering in order to feel our way as to exactly who we are going to enter in the conference meet," he said. "After our narrow loss to Nebraska last weekend I think some changes will help strengthen our overall team."
Timmons said that improvements in the dashes and in the shot put were most urgently needed. He said the 'Hawks were strongest in the high jump and broad jump but were almost as strong in some of the middle distant races.
High jumper Keith Guinn and pole vaulter Terry Porter will also represent KU at an Olympic development track meet tonight in New York's Madison Square Garden. Both will return in time for tomorrow's dual meet against Oklahoma State.
Probable Entries are:
(60) yard Dash-Paul Jefferson, Danny Seay, Emmett
Edwards
404 yard. Dash- Tom Scavuzzo, Eddie Lewts, Nolan
400 yard Run-Jay Wager, Ken Sutter, Gary Ballyon,
run-Run Dean-Frantz, Jim Ewell, Geary Dahlman
Cravitz, Cervante, Vazquez, Lewin, Lewis, Nunn,
Cromwell, Tumucker
1040 yard JR - Jay Wagner, Ken Solter, Gay Balloo,
180 yard run. Dean Frenat, Jim Ewell, Date Gehartt
140 yard run. Barrie Williams, Ray Hawk
Mike Run-Dave Anderson, Mike Flint, Mike Martinez,
Two-Mile Run-Kend McDaniel, Eric Blatton, George
Glover
60-yard High Hurdles - brack, long, 1000
Pole Vault - Terry Porter, Steve Riley
60yard Low Hurdles-Don Welter, Dennis Brack, Doug Tong, John Long
ENGINEERING SENIORS & GRADS
February 13 and 14
Palo Vault- Terry Porter, Steve Riley,
High Aim- Ketton Gatum, Randy Smith, Steve Butterfield
Mile Relay - Scavuzzo, Cromwell, Wagner, Lutz
SENIORS, SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW NOW.
High Jump - Kern Gulch. Randy Smith. Steve Battelwood.
Shot Put - Patrik Wikkemann. Larry Roth. Charles
Krauss.
Place Corps or VISTA need you for volunteer positions overseas and here at home. Recruitors will be interviewing in the ENGINEERING PLACE OFFICE, WED. & THUR.
MED SCHOOL ADMISSION PROBLEMS?
EuroMed may offer RX via overseas training
And that's just the beginning
Since the language barrier constitutes the predominate difficulty in succeeding at a tertiary school, the Eurournd 12-week medical and conversational language course, mandatory for all students, five days daily, 5 hours per week (10-16 weeks) the course is student will attend medical school.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
In addition, Earned provides additional training with a 9-12 years intensive clinical course and American students now study medicine in that particular course serving as mentors.
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $.03
Senior or graduate students currently enrolled in an American university are eligible to participate in the Eurodem program.
For application and further information, phone toll free. (800) 645-1234
KANSAN WANT ADS
170 Old Country Road
Mineola, N.Y. 11501
Euromed. Ltd.
or write
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, pool, service and expenses.
Accommodations, pool, service and expenses.
Accommodations, pool, service and expenses.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it;
1. If you use them, you're an advantage
2. If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage
Rither way it comes to the same thing—New York. It was a great visit, not available at Campus Madison, Town Crier
Ray Austin, 15 K. E., 9th. Phone: 842-304-1805. Hours available for any声病程 problem. Cost: $107.50
Tubulars - Hutchinson spint butyls $49.55 at
Ride On Bicycles.
**FOR SALE:** Apple- 7 varieties; $3.75/basket and $12 for a dozen. **GRAPEFRUIT** for $12; for $16, mix and match fruits. **GRAPEFRUIT** for $12; for $16, mix and match fruits. **GRAPEFRUIT** for $12; for $16, mix and match fruits. **GRAPEFRUIT** for $12; for $16, mix and match fruits.
1. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
2. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
3. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
4. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
5. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
6. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
7. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
8. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
9. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
10. 3-lbs. turnips; 3-lbs. for $20; 20-lbs. onions; 20-lbs. for $16;
price per item: NORTH SIDE COUNTY BOOKSTORE, also authorized by our local retailer; also available from our store (90 sq. ft.) cellar, picnic spot or other items. NORTH SIDE COUNTY BOOKSTORE, also authorized by our local retailer; also available from our store (90 sq. ft.). NORTH SIDE COUNTY BOOKSTORE, also authorized by our local retailer; also available from our store (90 sq. ft.).
CROWN IC-150. Guaranteed phone hum and noise levels are 85 dBm at rated output (typically 1,200 dBm)_. Each unit is hand tested. You receive results. Pull unit from Audio Systems, 9th & 8th Island. 2-8
Use租用-recorded, reel to reel lays $1.00 to
$2.50 per reel. Check albums at Renaissance
Relyed Solution 12 x 8-inch mattes for $3.00.
Sale - Manila/Sensor 1004 DLT-SLR camera.
55m Flm 18 and 135mm F2 L8 lenses. Good condition, recently issued and meter system reconditioned. F31-3465, but will bargain. Call Rob at 841-5125.
Must-Sell- Guilt-D-35 Bluejacket Special with
Fashion, Design and Play looks and plays.
2-11
809. Ask for Carey
Saint Bernard boarding-AML registered Chambers.
Some older dogs available at reasonable prices.
Some older dogs available at reasonable prices.
BBMW 2002...1972 ...19,900 kmiles. Metallic paint.
AM-FM Cam. FCB. Light Call. Light
Cam. FCB. Light Call. Light
2-12
FOR SALE. 1911-1-2 $80.00 Hacienda, Mobile
Mineral Springs. Drought resistant condition. Wood vidity test. Qw for im-
munity. Wood quality test. 500 sq. ft.
70 MG Midgear. Engine and body like new. $1600
842-1089
$1600
Camaro 1970 For Sale, 6,000 miles on the engine,
1975, recently lined, good condition, CB
843-3545
300 Sazuki, $250, works work but runs O.K. w/
tools and toolset. Call 841-4135
1973 Oasis Pioneer with low miles and many ex-
pansions. Phone 840-3533, B41. Both prized for ex-
pansion. Phone 840-3533.
1985 Portland -Saint Claire Hotel. Excellent environment. Call John and come by for a hotel treat. Call 412-705-6380.
must Self腻夺 Hall contract. Open to male or female. Call Bill what I have used in the Case Number. Call Bill as needed.
FOR SALE: 1962 Mercury Meteor, $150, 842-2473.
2-15
Mid-length, embruidered suede coat fully-lined,
with black fur Worn once. ONLY $80.95
$120.95
For Sale: 1836 4-door Chevy. Runs good. Reliable.
843-4634 2-13
READE DECK SPOILERS fit 67. 68, 69 Cam-
ware Foldback Bolt easily to trunk lid Rid
Locks
For Sale: Pioneer SX-628 receiver Dual 124I
Turntable: Sigma 91E plate, Creality 3D
Camera: Samsung SDI 1080
for sale: Malleny 12-string guitar, almost new,
call Nancy at 842-16033.
2-14
TEC 1500 load to reel taut tape deck. Auto-reviver,
Reverse taut tape deck. Reel taut tape deck.
Conform. Perfect condition, $400, new feed, $200.
115 Michigan St. B-B-Quene. We have open pit
and sawn wood for your dining needs.
Try our briquet platter, sandwiches and
or brushed by the pound. Half-briquets at
9:30 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. 842-8510-710.
NOTICE
Hey, they probably get it in town, you should
be surprised if it's not on the Board of
Fractionation our Specialty 311 West 6th St.
Fractionation our Specialty 311 West 6th St.
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
CRESCENT
Crescent Heights
Oaks Acorn
- Rental Office 1815 W.24TH
APARTMENTS
TYPEWITER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smith-Carneau Marquee, $1750. Closet cleaning and drying. Aware and cleaned and cleaned Electronic and light industrial clocks. River City Repair 615 Vermont. Burlington. River City Repair 615 Vermont. Burlington.
Guys - our students do personalized new half-time programs at our private dance school. *Lawrence Beauty School, 392 Mass.* 843-253-3301.
Learn to ride and jump at the University Horse
Riding School. Learn horse riding on a Tullow or
Tullow on a semester basis. Visitors
are welcome.
DYNAMIC_DUO IN RIVER CITY CITY *Ka-volunteers*
Danaville and Vista will be on campb
February 14th
SIX-HOUR MARATHON EXCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leader.
Information orientations hold daily this
Friday. Flint, 4pm, or call on Ms.
826-6055.
2-8
HORSE CARE- One space available for, manned riding horse. Box stall, justure, tack room. City limits, ten minutes from camp and a 10-minute wander, day-night-4345-6406, night-843-6280, 2-11
MUSICIANS—keep your hand in! Wollay, daytime engagement engagements with a talented, versatile, truly with you. Group the 42nd Army 9:30-10:30, at 843-888-2111 Call Paul 2:11
The Westport Trucker is returning, weekly & biweekly. The trucker calls, connects, calculates, all free all your time. Please pick one up.
Mont Blair Party Lounge now available for private phone. Phone 843-263-414 for p.m.
Dressmaking: recycle your clothes by having them beautifully enlarged. Stretch your clothing dollars. Lewis and Levis, Jeans paired—men or women. Ralph Lauren 305-412-8288 or 1348 or 842-609-3209 to 3:50 to 2:12
GOING TO EUROPE - Reserve your flight today!
Choose the dates for your next departure. When the 90 days is over,
prepare to book a new plane early. Last year many many to make your
plan
Too many student recruiters didn't attend meetings with students who will do the job, and it might happen someone who is not a graduate.
Lawrence Gas Liberation, Inc., Meetings 7.500
Square Mile, Lawrence, MA; 124-827-3778, evening after 6 p.m.
Socialization, 842-778-3974, evening after 6 p.m.
Extra clean-up time is coming. Take those extra spring up-time to STOR-ALL. Sizes from x10 to x18 must be your lock, lighted on the site manager. 1217 West Gen. (K-10) Kan. Ken. 269-968. 2-13
BIGLOWES BAR-B-Q- Specializing in Bar-B-
Q. Attention: 415-268-9000, TweeFee Junction,
Bar-B-Q 641-768-9000, Call 641-768-9000
Enjoy give your sweetheart a Valentine Candle
Exquisite floral bouquet of WAXMAN CANDLES W 4th
hour Floral bouquet of WAXMAN CANDLES W 10th
hour
I'm looking for, a mature female vocalist (also preferred, who can sing with creativity, with an understanding of music, with a basic repertoire of folk rock, but am willing to work like but on anything with the same voice). I have heard that he's secretly hiding their calls talent Randy at 1:50am anytime after 6:30 or on Tuesday at 5:45am.
This week at the Shire dance to D & D Special,
and Saturday, Membership availability
842-320-3930
Hina Yaga—Message workshop in Yuga and
Pee-Yoga—Message workshop in Yuga.
Free demonstration Friday night. Expert Mass-
ing Saturday morning. Admission required.
EXTREMELY IMPORTANT. Will owner of a
car which jumped a long fence near the New
Era window, joined a long fence near the
New Era window, jumped a long fence near the
FOR RENT
APARTMENT~sacuples, clean and quiet 2 bedroom. Walk-to-walet wrap with birring fireplace. Wash & dry clothes.
YARN+PATTERNS - NEEDLEPOI
WEEKLY JOURNAL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-6254
Casa de Taco
10-5 Monday-Saturday
1105 Massachusetts
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
JAYHAWKER APARTMENTS are our
location with TOWNSIDE Wi-Fi.
GSM + 855-212-6937
www.jayhawkerspirit.com
FOR BENT: A~new 2 bedroom apartment with
conversion of a furnished storage, storage NEAR
Hospital, furnished kitchen, laundry
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious entryway, laundry room, each of three bathrooms, laundry room, each of three bathrooms, and second floor in coornday, 1. Tiles and 2. Bedding and furniture. 3. Floor coverings. W. Stool - 443-7256-3913. Trilodge
Art. for: Renl. 1 BKB, kitchen, bath, BK Clos.
Art. for: Renl. 2 BKB, kitchen, bath, BK Clos.
Available Now 1000 1609 Kitchen
FOR RENT to make or female student. Nice
room with bathroom, desk, laundry, and
parking from Glenwood. Parking and utilities paid.
Call (855) 342-7610.
HILLIEW APARTMENTS, 1735-735 West 24th. Now leasing 1-lead and 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartments on a quiet, dithoning, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, off-the-street parking, KU has an office suite. (808) 647-5500.
Large furnished apartment near campus entrance.
Fully furnished. Bathroom, kitchen, laundry.
All air paid,贴金 贴金 for 2 of rent. 842-743-9761.
Studio Apartment quiet and clean. Bundled.
Kitchen breakfast or graduate student
bachelor's degree in business. Refer
to 287-904-6315 for more information.
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
RENT - DUPLEX, up floor, 2 bedrooms, kitchen
bathroom, patio. Rent $490/month.
Pat. Washroom, Pat. Washroom,
2-15
Formidable Apts for rent at 19 W. 14th, I and J streets, 280 E. 65th St., N.Y.C. 10023. Water pail Col. at 842-660-4924 from 4 p.m.-2 i.m.
For Rent - Furnished, 1 bedroom, apartment
between 6:00-10:00 p.m. Monday through
Saturday.
PERSONAL
Meadowbrook, Aponi apartments. Great Variety. Swimming pool. Community service kU. $1460 for a A-shaped communal kitchen KU. $1460 for a
FOR RENT: 116 Indiana Large, carpeted room
with kitchen, bathroom, driveway, living
room, bedroom, office, and parking.
95% full. $375 a month.
Interested in no-fails low-cost jet travel to
the United States? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS
practically answers! EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS
provides getting where you want to go. In话 to
free at 800-222-3509.
tf
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles. $ M $
Festival of the Arts—March 24-30, 150 tickets still available for all 7 nights' $coupons for entire week can now be purchased at the店 or individual night tickets sales start March 2-22
Why do we have to pay for the inefficiency of
the electricity bill? We can change
Vote for Kel Rells and Kelly T薛
Taleh.
Let your Valentine greet you be understood well, with a fragrant candle from Waxman
THE BODY SHOP
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
Vitamins & Supplements 843-9412
Area's Largest Selection
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Rose KEYBOARD
Guitar Strings $ _{1/2} $ Price Friday Nite
only $ ^{1} 14^{95}$
If You're Planning on FLYING.
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER PASSED)
for Airline tickets)
Send money order to American Corp. P.O. Box 8731 K.C. Moil, K.64114
HELP WANTED
Let Maupintour
PENLAND
**Expenditures by Traffic and Security have doubled in three years. Students control board access at the campus." I was later asked: **So are we. Vote Ed Ruffs and Kelly McKenzie on VD. Vote the Valinties '21** *citation*
Fine Custom Upholsterer work done to your
upholstery, removals, references
by appointment.
Life Size Photo
WANTED
Nostalgia!
Available.
Wanted: Alumni from major high schools in the state to apply for a position on commission bureaus in spare time. Contact: johndoe@uc.edu
Limited Number
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model at Kansas City, Kansas. No experience necessary. No expertise required. You need not be glamorous. Personality and ability are important. An individual, licensed firm providing personnel. An established, licensed firm providing personnel. A
Girl to clean apartment twice a week. $2.00 per
hour. Call 834-0415.
SERVICES OFFERED
Edward G. Robinson
Mast. St. Dell is looking for experienced girls to fill positions. Call for appt. interview.-843-9750.
travel service
SUA / Maupintour
Smoking Is Our Only Business
Experienced Architecture draftman. Full time or part-time. M-42-111 (m-8 a.m.-5 p.m.) No beginners required.
Xp-required hailstorm can work for heavier winds (3.89-12.99 p.m). Call Jay Johnson, 855-246-0111.
Mounted on Sturdy
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
Warded. A married couple as家庭 parents to ten children. Woman of legal age, 18; ten adulcled boys, ages 12-18. Good salary for training. Training required. Reply to Wichita Youth Ministry, 5470 S. Kissel Blvd., Wichita, KS 67202; or call 216-668-8841 or 216-668-8843.
Guitar lessons fingerstyle, open tunings, slide
sheets, mandolin scales, bass guitar lessons
week course. Call 842-8068. For Ask for Link 3.
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St
GATEHOUSE APARTMENTS. No house requires a reservation. Call 621-590-7843. Cast dates: Open 8am, 9am, or later. Parking available on-site.
Roommate wanted - Jayhawk Towers. Own bed,
bath, kitchen, laundry room. Hire $177 will pay you $48 &
$11 the payment. Call 503-263-2688.
Woman Romaine wanted to share large bureu
downown with two other, other two. 2-11
want one. 2-11 2-11
Cardboard with
Female roommate wanted to share nearly two mirrored one bedroom gt on 9th Street QB-28-404-172-3600.
RIVER CITY PIPE -815 Vermont. 414-4832 Stires - watchers - typetwiers. Independent repair specialists. No retail hub. We service what replaces. Unhurried repairs. See .ff.
Baby, after needed, 7:20-4:30, Monday thru Friday
Baby, 8:42-720 after 5 p.m.
PHONE 843-1211
Giraffe Twirl
BEEN MEANING TO COME
closest SALE out
DREAD CORNER
842-5581
Bike
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
Facial Rock
love is . . .
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
843-8499
Orange County Work
. . . wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
Open 7 Days a Week
LIMOUSINE & CHAFFAUER SERVICE. Ultimate
service for your limousine needs.
May plus gas call. Negotiation.
Call 621-753-9000.
LOST
TYPING
Lost: Brown leather purse Friday morning, in
Rockville. I should have known. I need it. I need 842-7633.
2-11
Whenever, "mot," the albums from 1963 Tenn. Music Company were played. I did not think you found them worth it. I did not think you found them worth it.
Lest brown female cat and blue and gray female cat were in the same room, 845-6089 or bring to 2007 Hedge Court. 845-6089 or bring to 2007 Hedge Court.
LOST--4 month old Talby Abbey Cat. 2-4-14 HeliCat 3-0-14 HeliCat 4-0-14 HeliCat
**His brother Moses** maniac.
Employment Opportunities
Typing in my home. IBM Electronic Pica type
terminal. Call Kit 412; Printer, Prompt,
accurate work. Call Kit 412; Printer,
accurate work.
Experienced thesis typist Close to campus. 841-
4909. Myra. 2-12
Experienced Typist—Will do thesis, dissertations,
tortoises and micticanes typing. Call Fax:
516-387-2409.
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other museums. Typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt service. Typing spelling corrected. Photo 183-9543. Mrs. Wright.
$85 to $95 PER WEBK PART TIME UNTIL MEMORIED
Company. Compares top money for that, personal
home. For further information see:
Phoenix Advertising, P.O. Box 11707, Atlanta
Lawrence Rental Exchange
a new beer place.
Alaska is booming this year! Approved hand-book, "JOBS IN ALASKA" covers all occupancy $2.00 from "JOBS IN ALASKA" Box 1565 Anchorage, a located employment agency. 2-11
Johnnie's
- Stained Glass
842-2500
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, Assistant Suggested Requirements: Master of Public Administration degree. Experiential experience in state budget process. Some knowledge of the job requirements. Oversee Oarkes Regional Commission activities would be helpful. Duration March 1-1974 through June 1975. Req. Bach's or Masters research grant. Salary $700 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas growth and development, including particular employment components of future growth policies in the 1974s. Please apply at the Institute for Social and Environmental
(corner of Bth & New Hampsthins)
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
Books, Gifts
745 new hampshire
Open 8-5
RIDES --- RIDERS
Jam Hall
The number to call for up-to-the minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Carnelow leaping KU Union 5:00 p.m. Friday for the game between Wake Forest and Cincinnati 6:25 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mon., Thursday.
Mon.-Sat.
Museum of Natural History
Rag
Tag
WE FEATURE:
1-5 Sun.
- Sweat Suits
- WE FEATURE:
842-105j
- T-Shirts
- Tennis Shoes
- Tube Socks
842-1059
- Gym
Golf & Tennis Shirts
4
- Party Favors
- Jewelry Greek & Independ-ent
- Coaching Jackets
- Handball Equipment
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
10
Friday, February 8, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KU Ready for Rematch with OSU
Check your basketball schedule. You may be a little surprised when you do.
Next week's first place showdown between the University of Kansas and Kansas State may be on your mind, but it isn't the 'Hawks' next game. KU first must travel to Oklahoma State to take on the Cowboys at 7:35 tomorrow night.
The Hawks will be trying to maintain their one-half game lead over second place Kansas State and also extend their Big Eight record to 7-6. The Cowboys are last in the conference at 1-6, but KU can't afford to look ahead to the K-State game.
Anyone who saw the first game between the two schools, which was played in Lawrence, knows that the Cowboys probably are a better team than their record indicates. In that contest, Tommie Smith's jump shot went 4-3 in an frantic rally the 'Hawks came from eight points during the last two minutes to win, 68-66.
"I think there is little doubt we have a great deal of respect for Oklahoma State." KU coach Ted Owens said yesterday. "That is not to say we didn't the first time. I think it is fair to say, however, we were not sharp and did not play particularly well in the first
game. Of course, Oklahoma State had a lot to do with that."
Cowboy guard K. C. Kincaide gave the Hawks problems in the first half, but the Hawks won by 29 points.
"We can choose from one of two alternatives," Owens said. "The people covering him either have to do a better job or we will have to put more height on him. This could mean playing forward Roger Morningstar at guard."
Against Oklahoma State, KU will field its normal starting line-up, which includes four players averaging in double figures.
Morningstar leads the 'Hawks with a 13.9
Morningstar leads the 'Hawks with a 13.9
Reserve center Rick Suttle also is scoring in double figures with an 11.1 average. Suttle has come off the bench to lead KU's scoring in the last four games, including 20 points in the 'Hawks' last game against Colorado.
KU's balanced attack has been one of the main reasons for the "Hawks quick start in the conference, but Owens warned that KU couldn't risk a let down at this time.
"We have a big game tomorrow," Owens said. "We haven't really given any thought to K-State. When you are eight down with the game, you're on the ball." State doesn't take them lightly.
*Every team we play, as long as we are leading the conference, is going to do its best.*
KU Gymnasts Face W. Illinois Tomorrow Night
Owens also discounted the possibility that the Hawks were looking ahead to the K-State.
Probable Starting Line-ups;
OKLAHOMA STATE
Lafayette Threat-7
Kevin F. Inger haul-6
Kevin Hopson 6
K. C. Kineade 4
Ronnie Dannelle 5-11
The University of Kansas gymnastics squad will host Western Illinois at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in a dual meet at Robinson Gymnasium.
RANNS
King & King
60-80 Motor
60-80 Motor
Danny Knight 60-80
C
Tork Kitten 60-80
Tork Kitten 60-80
The KU gymnasts scored their highest total in three years last week and defeated Northern Iowa and Kansas State. The 'Hawks scored 155.85 points.
★ ★ ★
Big Eight Standings
Conference Games All Games
Kansas 9 6 10 14 4
Nebraska State 6 6 12 14 4
Oklahoma State 5 2 3 14 4
Colorado 3 2 4 14 15
Colorado State 2 4 8 19
Nebraska State 2 4 8 19
Iowa State 2 5 11 18
Missouri 1 4 6 18
Oklahoma State 1 4 6 7 12
"We have had excellent practices in recent days and have really felt like we have turned the corner," KU coach Bob Lockwood said.
Probable entries are:
Floor Exercise, Hirsch Greenie, Jody Summers
Floor Exercise, Michael Whitehead, Mark
Summers, Ford Culbertson
Vaulting, Mick Backum, Greg Sharf
Vaulting, Mike Bracker, Greg Shurf
Vaulting, Mike Bracker, Mike Cook, Culbertson,
Whitehead
High Bar, Hirsch Greenie, Grelenie
Atwater
'Hawks to Host Nebraska In Swim Meet Tomorrow
Tumorow's Gamer
KU at Oklahoma State
Oklahoma at Colorado
Nevada at Kentucky
Kansas state and Iowa state (TV)
The University of Kansas swim team will continue its dual meet schedule as the Jayhawks host Nebraska at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Gymnasium. Students will be admitted free with their KU ID cards.
Coach Dick Reasonan said that Nebraska didn't represent that much of a threat, but his squad was looking not呆熟 the .kU team. Nebraska, 74-30, in a dual meet last year.
Probable Entries are:
Probable Entries are:
Brian Kaneli - Rachel Kayne, Brian Kaneli
Alan McDonald-Kane, Dale Career
200 yard backstroke - Gary Kemp, Mike Ullerstad, Fred
200 yard breaststroke - Pat Dilafille, Roger Newman
100 yard butterfly - Kirk Rubin, Don Menzel, Rick Hall
100 yard individual medley - Neguet, Neagut
100 yard individual medley - Neguet, Neagut
Curver Mcdonald Medley, Gary Ardill, Dibbone, Memle, Kodd, Rodd and Freeman-Ben Wagner, Mike Alley, Abby 1000 Freiee-Komp, Wagner, Alley 1000 Freiee-Komp, Wagner, Alley 1000 Freiee-Komp, South Devin
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The Evelyn Wood challenge:
Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster, with comprehension!
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If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
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We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy . . . we're using yours . . . the toughest you can find!
If you're open minded and want to improve your reading ability, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to begin tonight,
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Every night this week at the Reading Dynamics Institute, Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
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Experience Challenges 'Fresh Approach' in Election
Past Record, Ideas for Future Head Beisner-Hunter Campaign
By LINDA HALES
Kenneth Stoff Reports
John Beinser and Todd Hunter say their experience and ideas for the future are reasons why they should be elected student body president and vice president.
"I see myself as a strong facilitator." Beiser says. "Hopefully, one thing I'm putting upward is a record of sorts, and I have to act as a government) has changed some things."
Hunter says he is capable of handling the vice presidency because he knows parliamentary procedure and has been active in campus organizations.
"I have a lot of different ideas on how senate meetings should be run, which would attract interest and attention from senators and the student body," says Hunter.
Beiser, Salina junior, and Hunter,
Oklahoma City junior, are running on
the Uncampus Coalition. They both have
experience in the Student Senate.
BEINSIER WAS ELECTED to the senate in 1971 and 1972, and is an ex officio member of the senate as president of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH). He has served on the Communications Committee, the Student Executive Committee and the Committee on Committees. He is also a member of the University Council.
Before being elected president of AURH,
Beiser was its treasurer and served on a
residents' activity fund task force and
Coordination Committee.
Beisner, a political science major, is a Summerfield Scholar, a National Merit Presidential Scholar and a member of the National Reserve Hall Honorey.
Hunter was elected to the senate in 1973 and has served on the Academic Affairs Committee and Studios. He is also a chair of the University Judiciary, the Parking and University Judiciary, the Parking and
See BEISNER Page 2
I'll just provide the text as it appears. No images or additional context to describe.
Beisner
1976
Rolfs
The candidates for student body president. The election will be Wednesday and Thursday.
Rolfs Says Inexperience Means Campaign Not Tied to Status Ouo
By LINDA WEINSTEIN
Kansan Staff Reoerter
Ed Rolfs and Kelly Scott, candidates for student body president and vice president, say they will bring a "fresh approach" to student government.
ROLFS WAS ELECTED to the senate from Pearson College last year and has been a student representative on the College Assembly for the past two years.
"I think we can do a better job than our opposition," says Rolfs, Junction City junior and candidate for president. "We haven’t been involved and entrenched in the Student Senate. We’ve been on the outside unable to look back with a fresh approach."
Scott, Houston sophomore, hasn't had any previous student government experience except with residence hall government at Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls. She says her lack of experience will be a help rather than a hindrance.
"I honestly think I can (represent the
student body better. My vision is clearer," she says.
The philosophy of the Rolfs-Scott campaign is "a question of priorities."
ROLFIS SAYS that the senate isn't the most important voice of the students and that priority should be given to the College Assembly. He also says students should work with legislators and alumni groups. Academics is Rolfis and Scott's first
Rolfs says priorities currently lie within the senate but they should be changed to external affairs-academics, campus affairs and political affairs.
The candidates say they will work for the adoption of pre-enrollment at the University
Rolls says the administration is basically for pre-enrollment, but administrators are waiting for proof of student support before proceeding.
PLEASANT Forecast: Sunny and mild.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See ROLFS Page 3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Forecast: Sunny and mild. High in the mid 30s, low in the low 30s.
Monday, February 11. 1974
See Story Page 2
Man, The Coyote's Worst Enemy
news capsules / the associated press
Possible Suspects Sought in Kidnapping
The FBI announced yesterday it is seeking a young white couple as potential witnesses and possible suspects in the terrorist kidnapping of a Jewish man.
"Right now, we're only seeking them as potential witnesses," said Bennett, but he stated they could possibly be considered if and when they were found.
FBI Agent Thomas Draku said the man and woman were parked in a car near Miss Heart's apartment at the time of her abduction last Monday night and had been there "for a substantial period of time—well over an hour." No one goes here then, the kidnapping he posed.
Pay Raise for Congress Is Hot Potato
In an election year when constituents are testy with economic woes, Congress is jungling a hot potato: a hefty pay raise that will come its way.
Several resolutions to block the raise have been introduced in both the House and the Senate.
The House resolutions were referred to the Post Office and Civil Service Committee, which has shepherded us to consider them and report, in detail, the work of its members.
W. German Public Service Workers Strike
In the Senate, there appears to be more inclination to bring the matter to a vote in the full chamber. And there are predictions that if that happens, the
West German public service workers began strikes for higher wages yesterday after nearly one million union members voted for nationwide walkouts to snarl mass transit, garbage collection, post offices and airports. More than three-quarters of the lower-level employees of municipality authorities were uninsured Thursday. Frieds to strike for monthly wage hikes of 15 per cent. Government negotiations offered 9.5 per cent increases when wage talks collapsed last week.
Chancellor Willy Brandt and his cabinet met in emergency session and said they would urge urgent new negotiations "to avoid serious effects on the
Mob Politics Ousts Indian State Government
But this weekend Prime Minister India Gandhi's central government had to step in and take over Gujarat state in central Indian because of a public health crisis.
The month-long upsurge began as a protest against rising prices and shortages, particularly in the state capital of Ahmedabad 480 miles south-
Changes in Indian governments always had grown out of the ballot box or accepted parliamentary procedures since this nation of $70 million won the right to vote.
Mob politics has pushed one of India's state governments-Gujarat State—of power for the first time, raising anxious questions in a land of political ambition.
End in Sight to 11-Day Truck Strike
By the Associated Press
There were growing indications last night that the largest part of the strike by independent truckers is all but over. Pennsylvania officials said National Guardmen would stop patrolling at midnight as violence continued to be down sharply.
Votes from small groups of strikers, which were reported yesterday, were generally in favor of an end to the 11-day strike. A majority of the day and spot shortages of food and gasoline.
One sign of the developing trend was a report from strike leader Tommy Thompson, who told reporters he was urging his fellow drivers to climb back in their rigs. On Friday, Thompson had said he and his men were going to take over the mile more of their demands were satisfied.
Another was the decision by Pennsylvania officials to end National Guard patrols. Pennsylvania appeared to have been the worst violence during the shutdown.
IN DALLAS, Tex., an association which claims to represent all truck stop owners in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and New Mexico voted to keep its facilities open. Voluntary and forced closings of truck stops had been a major weapon used by strikers to protect themselves.
In Pittsburgh, Pa., the chairman of the Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers recommended last night that his group's members and all independent truckers resume working today. Bill Hill, whose company has been involved in the strike, said the vast majority of steel haulers' locals had given strong approval to the settlement.
There continued to be small pockets of
resistance to the settlement that promises trucks all the diesel fuel they need and an immediate 6 per cent surcharge in the future. The new rules goes to make up for recent fuel price hikes.
But most strike leaders, and government officials, were calling for a return to the city.
Rejection votes were reported yesterday by small groups of truckers in Nebraska, Arkansas and Oklahoma. The Independent Truckers Coalition, which claims to
represent 3,000 drivers, reported a strong rejection vote yesterday in Allon, Ill.
These developments made it likely there wouldn't be a full return to work by all the staff.
But truck traffic was reported up again yesterday as more and more of the leaders of the independent drivers recommended acceptance of the settlement.
Several Wisconsin truck stops that had been blocked during the shutdown, said business was returning to normal. An Atlanta, Ga., truck stop located on the main
north-south throughout along the Eastern Seaboard said its business was about 70 per cent of normal yesterday, compared to 10 per cent figures it issued at the height of the
Industries hard hit by layoffs—which totalled more than 100,000 during the height of the shutdown—prepared to call their employees back to work.
Meat and produce shippers sent convoys of trucks roll to areas where shortages had been building up since the strike began Jan. 31.
Coal Walkout Embitters Campaign
LONDON (AP) — Britain's coal miners formally walked off the job yesterday in a strike that added venom to a bitter election. The union crippled the nation's staggering economy.
Their walkout marked a direct challenge to Prime Minister Edward Heath's attempt to maintain his anti-inflation wage controls. Industrialists say it will reduce vital manufacturing industries to a two-day or even a one-day work week.
Most industries already have been reduced to three days of work a week because miners have refused to work overtime. Coal powers the manufacture of 70 per cent of Britain's electricity, and the coal-powered overtime has drastically reduced supplies.
Heath called for an election last Thursday, more than a year before his five-year term expires. He set the vote for Feb. 28, 2013 to postpone the strike during the campaign.
The basic issue plugged by Heath's Conservative party is: Who runs the country, the elected government or the 280,000 miners and their unions?
The debate has been widened—and embittered—by the Conservative claim that leftists in the miners' union, among them Labour, have been bent on destroying British democracy.
The opposition Labor party, led by former Prime Minister Harold Wilson and based on support from the rank and file, says it would settle the strike and get Britain back to work. It has disputed the Conservative charges of "红的 under the bed" and says the real issues is a decent living for the miners.
Heath has maintained he can't offer more than a $7.70 a week addition to the average miner's basic pay of $81 a week. More, he could shatter his anti-inflation program.
The miners are holding out for $101.50 a week average basic pay.
Public opinion poll shows the nation's 40 million voters are generally unaware whose presidential candidate is running.
Payment of social benefits, they said, would depend on the unions to pay strike pay. In the British welfare state, men have been able to strike without drastic reduction in family incomes and without depletion of union funds.
The welfare programs give striking minors no grants from the government. But they get $400 a week for $80 a week, plus free milk, free school meals and some assistance to keep up interest payments on mortgages, rentables on estate and basic pieces of furniture bought on time.
Dockers at the North Seaport of Immingham refused to unload an Italian freighter laden with Polish coal for British shipping. The seamen were supporting the coal miners' strike.
Profs, Rules Check Some Cheats
By BOB MARCOTTE
Cheating by KU students?
"Unheard of" of", John Landgrebe,
"a girl you will tell you with
laughter in his voice.
Then he will describe how, every once in a while, desperate students pirate lap boards out of Hick auditorium in advance of a test in which they will have related facts, hide them in corner corners
Russia to Assist in Mideast Talks
Syrian and Israeli artillery batteries blazed away at each other on the Golan Heights again yesterday, but an Israeli spokesman said that Russia would try to persuade Syria to meet Tel Aviv's main team for negotiating a troop separation agreement along the lense. These teams are a list of Israel's
The Israeli announcement marked the first time that Israel has attributed an active role to Russia in effort to free the Israeli soldiers captured in the October war.
By the Associated Press
Stealing lap boards probably ranks rather low on the scale of cheating sophistication, and it certainly can't match the organized effort that goes into a fraternity file of old theme papers and final exams or the college yearbook. The student writing and selling standardized theme papers.
The Tel Aviv command said four Israeli soldiers were wounded in the fresh fighting along the heights. But the U.N. Emergency Force said all was quiet on both sides of the Suez Canal, and that Israel and Egypt were pulling out as scheduled.
These conditions are a list of Israel's POWs held by Syria and permission for the Israeli government to take them.
At the same time, Libyan leader Moammar Khadifyla launched a savage verbal attack on other Arab leaders he said should have been involved. They should be swapped aside by revolution.
The communiqué was the first since Tuesday, when some of the heaviest fighting since the October war came to a ston.
Khalifa didn't name those he had in mind, but said that Libya was ready to arm and train revolutionary fighters needed to suppress Islam. In Egypt and Algeria opposed to Arab unity.
The communiqué said the artillery engagement broke out along the northern flank of the battlefield.
Khadadly attempts to merge his nation with Egypt and Tunisia have bogged down. A Syrian communique said the fighting on the Golan Heights lasted 75 minutes.
of the auditorium and later copy from them as they take the test.
"Our positions silenced enemy sources of
fire in many areas of the fighting and death strong blows to three enemy positions in the
In Tel Aviv, the military command said Arab guerrillas crossed into Israel from Lebanon Saturday and killed an Israeli girl in a bazooka attack on a small truck.
The communique made no mention of casualties.
The driver of the van, an Israeli soldier,
was wounded, the command said.
The girl was the first Israeli civilian killed in more than two years. Arab guerrillas killed an American nurse in an ambush in the occupied Gaza Strip in January, 1972.
In Jerusalem, Premier Gold Meir cancled her appointment because she was a longtime ally.
In Cairo, the press reported that Egyptian editors have been told that newspaper attacks on the United States and the Soviet Union permitted despite the lifting of censorship.
But university professors have had to develop a few tricks of their own to counter the wide range of stratagems used by cheating students.
LELAND PRITCHARD, professor of economics, says he began handing out different versions of tests after World War II when classrooms became overcrowded. When students ask questions, he says, but it meant that a student looking on his neighbor's test for an answer would probably end up with the answer for an altogether different question. When he sees students cheating, he says, "We should do them it." They're hanging themselves."
The word got around quickly, he says, when a couple of students ended up with negative point totals at the end of the class. He still uses the method in large classes.
photocopy exams before handing them back to students, landgrebe says.
So the department was forced to
THE CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT encountered a rushed of cheating about a year ago, Landgreve says, when students began to add their answers answer after the exams had been graded and handed back. They would demand more credit, Landgreve says, claiming that the added parts of their answers had been overlooked
MOST OF THE plagiarism involves material that must teachers are quick to recognize.
The main concern in the freshman-
sophomore English program is with
plagiarism and the use of previously written
themes, according to James Gowen,
professor of English and director of the
program.
Teachers in the program, he says are
instructed to make writing assignments specific enough so that material lifted from fraternity files and published book reviews won't be sufficient to cover the assignment.
It's rather peculiar that when students
's rather peculiar that when students See CHEATING Back Page
WE TATDO ANYTHING
EXAM
TAPE-DOWN
2
Monday, February 11, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Coyote Sport for Guns and Poison
By CRAIG STOCK
Kenan Staff Reporter
His appearance isn't very impressive—he usually weights less than 35 pounds, his cushion is frequently加大 and he has that sty look you usually associate with used car
But despite his unrepressiveness appearance, the coyote (Coyota latisrans), a cousin of the wolf, has stirred up an impressive amount of interest.
In 1972, the Environmental Protection Agency banned the use of the most popular
coyote poison, Compound 1080 (monofluoride acetate) and the M-44, spring-loaded tube containing sodium hydroxide, which was then banned for several years in Kansas.
"THEY'RE NOT NECESSARY." E. Raymond Hall, professor emeritus of zoology said yesterday. "I don't see any need for the use of that kind of thing at all."
Hall said the indiscriminate use of poisons was the result of poor management techniques used by sheep growers, who have found it easier to exterminate
predators than to tend their flocks carefully.
The Environmental Protection Agency, however, agreed last month to permit the use of the M-44 cyanide gun on private land. The department later released December that he opposed this relaxation of the ban on poisons because the sheep ranchers had a record of callous disregard for wildlife. The slaughter of scores of 772 sheep in 1972 is an example of this disregard, he said.
Beisner ...
From Page One
Traffic Board and the Chancellor's Institutional Self-Study Committee.
A POLITICAL SCIENCE and speech- human relations major, Hunter is a Carl Erickson scholar and member of the Owl Society. He is president of Sigma Chi fraternity and a member of the Interfraternity Council.
Beisner and Hunter acknowledge that they have been called the status quo element in the election, and that some people have expressed about the purity of their coalition.
"The purpose of the coalition," says Hunter, "is to make it so the Student Senate is not a joke, to make more people more involved."
"The intention," Beiser says, "of putting (the Unicamp coalition) together was to bring people from all over the campus, participateomen, into the decision process."
It isn't a political machine, Beasner says. Candidates running on the Unicamp coalition have their own platforms, which are geared to their own constituencies, he
BEISNER AND HUNTER'S platform centers on three main issues: academic policies, Security and Parking reform and Affirmative Action.
They advocate revamping the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences undergraduate advising system. They propose an investigation of the existing system by a senate committee, which would suggest alternatives such as paid upperclass advisers within the Colleges-within-the College.
THE FOREIGN-LANGUAGE requirement should be reduced, say Beisner and Hunter, and funds now given to the Department of Education needled to other, more popular departments.
Re-evaluation of the Intensive English Center and other foreign-student services is another part of the Beisser-Hunter platform. They propose establishing a committee to study international student problems.
The Security and Parking Department's system of ticketing, of appealing tickets and of budgeting should be studied by a task force. Beiser and Hunter say.
THE TASK FORCE would be given a time limit in which to study and recommend alternatives to the Security and Parking budget.
Beisner favors reinstating the initial
ruses kill any animal in contact with them, not just the coyote, Hall said. The continued use of poisons by ranchers prevents many valuable furbearing animals from re-establishing their populations, he said.
warning ticket and changing the fee for violations from $ to $5. He would also like to see a one-stop, pay-later appeals system established.
Beisner and Hunter also advocate appointing a senate coordinator for Affirmative Action to find and bring into the senate qualified women and minority students; assuring equality for women's intercollegiate athletics; and reestablishing Operation Escort to improve pittsfield campus security.
THE PLATFORM ALSO recommends that the senate work toward setting up a formal advisory board to assist in the KU budget-making process.
Beasner says he and Hunter have spent about $300 on their campaign so far.
COYOTES AREN'T a big problem in Kansas and Douglas County, according to Earl Van Meter, Douglas County agriculture extension agent.
According to Van Meter, there were 12 complaints about livestock losses to coyotes in Douglas County last year. He said that when a complaint was received, the state wildlife control agent was notified. If the agent is too busy to handle the complaint, local coyote hunters are then asked to kill the problem coyote.
Although bounties on coyotes were outlawed several years ago, the Wildlife Damage Control Handbook, prepared by the cooperative extension service at Kansas State University, has been hunted as a sport in Kansas. Methods used, according to the handbook, include trap-
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reviewed. Docking has recommended increases of 7.4 per cent for educational programs, 8 per cent for the physical plant, 6 per cent for the Kansas Geological Survey, 3.5 per cent for research and 6 per cent for extension.
Other requests that were cut by the governor and that will probably be discussed are funds for women's in-patient equipment and building and street repairs.
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ping, hunting with dogs (sometimes involving the use of airplanes or trucks as spotters) and hunting from blinds after calling the coyotes.
In previous years, the University's budget was presented to the Senate Ways and Means committee. The procedure was changed this year to improve the efficiency of the committee procedure and to allow subcommittees of three and four men to visit each of the regents' schools to see firsthand what the schools needed were.
thru February 28
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ALFRED VAN METER of 1119 Delaware, huns coyotes almost every week. He said there are many coyotes in the Douglas area, but there is also "an awful lot" of hunters.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Keith L Mitcher, vice chancellor for business afairs, and John Conard, assistant to the chancellor, will present justifications for reinstatting items that were deleted from the Rigent's requests by Gov. Robert Docking.
Kansas University administrators are appearing before the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee this afternoon in Topeka to review the University's 1975 budget before it is presented to the full legislature.
VOTE In The Student Body Elections February 13th and 14th Wednesday Polling Places (Feb.13)
Robert Hoffman, professor of systematics and ecology, said that although coyotes weren't in any danger of extinction, there shouldn't be attempts to exterminate them.
ON THE HILL
(8 a.m.-4 p.m.)
Strong
Union
Summerfield
Van Meter sells the pelts of the coyotes he shoots. Pelts in good condition usually sell for about $10, he said, although some turs have been sold for sale because of their mangy condition.
RESIDENCE HALLS
(5 p.m.-8 p.m.)
Oliver
GSP
McCollum
Lewis
FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES (6 p.m.-9 p.m.)
Delta Upsilon
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Alpha Gamma Delta
Gamma Phi Beta
The top priority item is a 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries requested by the Kansas Board of Regents for all six state universities. Docking proposed an 8.8 per cent increase.
Thurs. Polling Places (Feb. 14)
On The Hill
(8 a.m.-5 p.m.)
Strong Union Summerfield
Get Out And Vote!!!!
Coyotes occasionally attack livestock and a farmer has a right to defend his livestock, Hoffman said, but the indiscriminate use of poisons was wrong.
A requested 10 per cent increase in general operating expenditures will also be
Administrators to Justify Increases in KU Budget
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The Evelyn Wood challenge:
Bring the toughest textbook or reading material you own to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson and we'll show you how to read it faster with comprehension!
If you're like most people,you're probably skeptical about our ability to make Speed Reading work for you.
O. K. Tonight we'd like the opportunity to prove, as we have to millions, that you can read faster with comprehension.
In fact, we challenge you . . .
challenge you to come to tonight's Free Speed Reading Lesson armed with the toughest textbook or reading material you own.
We'll show you how to read faster, with comprehension. And, remember, we're not using our materials . . . books that you may feel are too easy . . . we're using yours . . . the toughest you can find!
If you're open minded and want to improve your reading ability, we challenge you . . . challenge you to begin tonight, to make reading work for you!
Tonight at the Reading Dynamics Institute Hillcrest Shopping Center, 7:30 p.m.
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
I
Call 843-6424
Make reading work for you!
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 11. 1974
3
Designer-Craftsman Show Opens
By NANCY SMITH Kanan Staff Reporter
About 350 people attended the opening of the 20th Annual Designer-Craftsman Exhibition yesterday afternoon in the Kansas Union exhibition gallery.
The event, sponsored by the University's department of design and the Kansas Union, is open for the designs of present and past Kansas residents, including KU students and alumni. Textile and ceramic woven blown glass vases, silver pendants and a chess set were among the exhibits. The exhibition will run through March 3.
Gary Nemchok, assistant professor of design in jewelry and silvermilking, is a member of the Jewelry Design Society.
Eleven of the 114 entries on display were
judged on Jan. 24, as "outstanding" by Hekki Sepi, professor of art and chairman of the metalmensing department at the University of Tokyo. The sepi is an internationally known金属学。
Cash prizes totaling $1,300 were presented to the 11 outstanding artists during yesterday's ceremony. William Alexander, chairman of Colorado State University's ceramics department made the presentations.
Alexander is craftsmans trustee to the American Crafts Council in New York City for the south central region of the Council, Oklahoma, Alabama, Colorado, Texas and Arkansas.
professionally in their own studios or as art teachers.
Entries were pretty well balanced between ceramics, glass, metal and fiber, Nemchock said. There were also enamels, plastics and leather.
Witney was recognized yesterday for her work with the Exhibition in a speech by the exhibition designer and present chairman of the department. Rowland helped set up the first exhibit.
Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, established the annual exhibition in 1953, when she was chairman of the design department.
Carlyle H. Smith, professor of design and head of jewelry and silversmithing, had charge of this year's award funds, which came from patron donations and entry fees.
University of Kansas students must make appointments to give blood this year, according to Kevin White, Shawne Mission chairman and chairman of the Red Cross blood drive.
Students who wish to donate blood can register for appointments from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today through Friday in Wescow and Summerfield halls and the Kansas Union information booth. Donations will be taken Feb. 19-20 in the Kansas Union and Feb. 21.
22 in Templin Hall.
The appointment system is being used this year to eliminate a problem that arose last year, White said. Last year, 200 persons who wanted to donate were turned away because they all came at once and the center couldn't accommodate them.
Residents of fraternities, sororites and residence halls will recruit donors. This year's goal is 1,200 pints, almost 300 pints above the previous record. White said.
Rolfs...
From Page One
Advising is an area that Rolfs says needs improvement.
"THEERE ARE TWO kinds of advising; one, advising of requirements and two, advising about what's expected of you in a situation in which what the instructors are like," he says.
Rolfs advocates the placement of five students at enrollment tables of each College-Within-the-College during enrolment to help advise other students. He says the practice of students advising a teacher is not unusual. However, he says some students don't know anyone to ask about what's expected of them in many courses offered.
The candidates say they want to revamp the curriculum requirements.
Rolfs says that curriculum requirements have been hard to change because faculty members have voted against the changes. He says that in order to change the curriculum, there will have to be a change in the structure of the College Assembly.
ROLFS AND SCOTT advocate cutting the size of the College Assembly from its present 800 members to just those under 40, and to increase the student body who are really integrated.
The second priority of the Rolfs-Scott campaign is campus affairs.
Scott says she and Rolfs want to change the emphasis of the Security and Parking Department from parking to security. She says they want to reduce parking fees and permit costs while increasing the security of students on campus.
SCOTT ALSO WANTS to revitalize Operation Escape and increase the funding for the project.
Their third priority is political affairs,
actively with Concerned Students for
activities with Concerned Students for
Students Must Set Time Ahead To Give Blood
Higher Education to present a positive view of the University.
Rolfs wants to recruit student representatives to speak to high school classes across the state to 'sell KU to the students in an effort to increase enrollment.
Although Rolfs and Scott say external
affairs are their basic priorities, they also want to make some internal changes in the Student Senate such as reducing the budget.
ROLF5 SAYS that $10,000 was unnecessarily allotted for supplies for the senate office and that he will cut back here to help reduce the budget.
on campus
SPECIAL
Monday - Wednesday
at Vista
BROWNIE ALAMODE WITH HOT FUDGE
THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Faculty Recital Series will feature pianist Carole Ross at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
45c
THE ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS will sponsor a dinner for members of the Kansas Legislature at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Lewis Hall cafeteria. See chapter 20 for details. The purpose of the dinner is to better acquaint the legislators with the University.
open until 2 a.m. Fri & Sat
1527 W. 6th 842-4311
Use Kansan Classifieds
ON CAMPUS NOW!
-green salad from the "make your own" salad bar choice of dressing
Union—Today thru Thursday
Liberal Arts Placement—
Tuesday
Seniors and Grads are needed by Vista for summer and fall volunteer positions here in the U.S.A. See recruiters at the following locations:
-mini loaf of Old Fashioned Sour Dough Bread from the recipe of The Market, San Francisco
-bowl of soup dipped from the kettle
THE RIVER CITY SOUP AND SALAD BAR
-beverage
luncheon special includes
Business Placement—
Wednesday and Thursday
Educational Placement—
Today Only
Introducing another new concept in Food Service
CELEBRATE
ALSO
$.96 + tax
THE RIVER CITY SOUP AND SALAD BAR EST.1974
St. Valentine's Day and the 1st Anniversary of the Deli
FREE CAKE and COFFEE FOR ALL Food Service as usual in the Deli and Cafeteria
Wednesday, Feb.13 and Thursday, Feb.14 11.00 a.m.--6.30 p.m.
another Kansas Union response to Student Demand
842-8664
812 Mass.
VALENTINE
GIFT
IDEAS
BELITS
SANDALS
HANDBAGS
WATCHBANDS
LEATHER GARMENT
LEATHER ACCESSORIES
ALSO:
MOCCASINS
FRYE BOOTS
HIKING BOOTS
PRIMARILY
LEATHER
craftsmen of fir
Festival of the Arts
March 24-30,1974
1500 TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR ALL SEVEN NIGHTS
$^7^{00}$ FOR Entire Package
Package Coupons Now Available at SUA Office Coupon Holders Will Have First Choice of Seats Individual Night Ticket Sales Start March 4
Individual Ticket Prices:
Kansas City Philharmonic . . . . . . 220
William Friedkin . . . . . . . . . 130
Les Blank . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
Ozark Mountain Medicine Show . . . 300
National Folk Ensemble of Nigeria . 200
A Funny Thing Happened on
The Way to the Forum . . . . . . 200
Pointer Sisters . . . . . . . . . . 200
TOTAL '1600
an SUA production
Hoch Auditorium
4
Monday, February 11, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Vern's New Target
Atty. Gen. Vern Miller is riding high again, brandishing the new inquisition powers that were granted to him in the 1972 Kansas
Miller issued 375 subpoenaes to Kansas newspapers and radio stations, demanding disclosure of records of advertising revenues submitted by nationalDOT campaigns of Gov. Robert Docking and Morris Kay.
The inquisition powers are an ominous addition to the weapons of the crusading attorney general. But the target of his investigation wasn't the state's press, bingo players, doe smokers, pornography exhibitors or other maligned minorities.
This time the target was Miller's fellow-Democrat, Gov. Docking. This politically volatile investigation tends to support the theory that Miller enforces the law rigidly, overzealous, but fairly.
The subpoenaes are part of an investigation into the alleged contribution of $30,000 to the Docking campaign in exchange for a $25 million architectural contract for the University of Kansas, Medical Center.
The advertising records of state newspapers and radio stations were subpoenaed to determine whether the content it existed and, if so, how it was spent.
This fishing expedition is typical of Miller's ruthless approach to law enforcement, but at least it is directed against corruption in government, a more legitimate, serious area of crime. This is a notable deviation from Miller's past capers.
The respectability of the state legal system could rise again to a dignified level if the attorney general would quit hiding in car or hide under a sign, or direct his attention toward crimes that genuinely victimize
individuals or the public
The attorney general's office requires a lawyer's, not a policeman's presence. Instead of enforcing every law with reckless obstinance, the attorney general must discriminate between petty and serious crimes and set priorities accordingly.
This involves imaginative recognition of the needs and differences of communities and of the laws which genuinely need to be enforced to prevent crimes that harm unwilling citizens.
Some of the public may be occasionally gluttonous, stoned, obscene or may dabble with any of the Seven Deadly Sins. But such things are moral concerns and are unenforceable. The acceptance of this fact will prevent much grief for all concerned and unclog the court system so that serious crimes can be more easily enforced.
Certainly petty morality laws should be abandoned or at least be given the lowest priority. The way not to solve the problem is to slap the state with such rigid law enforcement that the citizenry finally grows weary of it and insists on changing the laws. The legislative process is too slow and the public hysteria concerning drugs and morality too great for such a method to work.
The Miller investigation into alleged corruption in state government should be encouraged. His critics should make it clear that they are not opposed to law enforcement but recognize that just and necessary laws that prevent one citizen from abusing another should be thoroughly and forthrightly enforced.
The attorney general might then take the demanding responsibility to deal with the need he attentions as dictated by his common sense and imagination.
-Bill Gibson
Demon Ale Menace
The report by beer distributors (Kansan, Feb.5) that beer usage in our town is increasing is truly shocking. How can the people of lawrence passively watch thisImmigration and still call them citizens?
The hard-nosed individualist among us says, "Let them drink beer if they want to, it's their own lives they're ruining." But this
The vast body of common knowledge about the evils of beer drinking is daily being augmented by a growing number of dedicated research scientists.
In this era of beer drinking and building burning, it's a fortunate family that doesn't have a loved one in the house. You go away from the rayears of alcohol.
same person is the one who curses the loudest when some beer-crazed student rapes his daughter or someone else. You can be beer money or sets fire to his dog.
Even if one discounts the crimes of violence caused by habitual beer drinking, the incredible data being accumulated on its relationship to sexual impotency, insanity, birth defects and the like are enough to bring shudders at the sight of a beer truck.
The sad part is that no one ever intends to become a drunk—he only wants a big sip of beer "just to see what it's like."
The time for the authorities to act is 1037 h. For an entire generation is 1057 h. DePastor
—Alan Hurlbut
WASHINGTON—"There will be no recession in the United States of America," said President Nixon in his State of the Union address. An administration economist with whom I had been watching the speech, grimaced and covered his head: He had just been discoursing about the recession the nation faced.
Council of Economic Advisers chairman Herbert Stain not only joins in the disclaimer of a recession—but just to make sure, he wants to redefine it.
The notion that the President could declare a recession out of bounds with the flick of his speech-writer's wrist only added to the problem of unreality evoked by the whole address.
Arthur M. Okun, former economic council chairman, said, "I have a new perfect advance indicator of recession, and that's when Herb Stains starts splitting hairs about the definition. The last time he did this was in 1970."
BY HOBART ROWEN The Washington Post
HIS GLOWING ACCOUNT of a prospering nation, busily at work, leading the other free nations in a quest for peace with Nixon. How did that happen, what country Mr. Nixon was talkful about.
Nixon's Economic Forecast Unreal
It didn't sound much like the United States in 1974, beset with rampant inflation and growing unemployment (already up to $8 a week in October); with an energy crisis; with food
The economic report notes that "we enter 1974 in a condition of high inflation and in the early stages of a slowdown." It goes on to explain that, "the failure of a mild recession while avoiding the word."
ABOVE ALL, the report stresses the question marks that have been thrown into the economic outlook as a result of the energy crisis, uncertainties that could force the administration to be attempting to bail out some of something worse than a mild recession.
"In view of the uncertainties facing us," the economic report says, "It is extremely important to be prepared with fiscal measures to support or restrain the economy if it is clearly running outside the general track described here for 1974.
"The administration is now in the process of preparing for support action. A decision to take such measures would have to be made with great caution, however, in view of the additional supply bottlenecks that might be caused by the energy shortage."
fortunately, the very mild slowdown which we anticipated for 1974 now threatens to be somewhat more pronounced because of the oil embargo, the resulting shortages and the
"We expect, therefore, that during the early part of this year output will rise little if at all, unemployment will rise somewhat and inflation will be high."
SO THE SITUATION is much more touch-and-go than Mr. Nixon wanted us to believe—presumably because a candid evaluation on the TV tube would have helped erase the image he was trying to secure of a successful, productive five years in office.
Even the President's written State of the Union message was candid: "Un-
Mr. Nixon didn't dwell on the failures of his economic policies and forecasts of the past few years. His economic message claimed that last year "the real income of the U.S. households per capita, after taxes, rose by 8.3 per cent, also above our long-term rate."
rms is the kind of slippery statistic with which the President tries to cozy people into thinking that they are better off than they were in 1973. Non-farm workers had actually declined in 1973. The per capital figure cited by the President includes all income, farm and non-farm, dividends, tringe benefits as well as payroll taxes. They take home a pay of the average individual.
The most recent labor department report shows that in 1973, real average weekly
HWOT
Computer Files Limitation Sought
To be brought back to earth, one has to go no farther than the economic report by the U.S. National Bureau of Standards that document can fairly be said to be more optimistic than some private assessments
The article, actually a syndicated column on the editorial page, had criticized the FBI's new computerized background file on criminals and suspected criminals. Calling it "the most dangerous column" the column raised the spectre of the computer becoming "the dawn of big brother."
"WASHINGTON—Two weeks ago a suburban newspaper publisher in Southern California returned from lunch to find two FBI agents waiting in his office. The agents insisted they had come to discuss an article the newspaper had recently published.
By ROBERT A. JONES The Los Angeles Times
For over an hour the agents attempted to convince the editors of the paper, the
Little Orphan Annie Fading Fast; Columnist Pleads for Euthanasia
price escalation and food shortages again on the horizon; and with little recent prospect
By PAUL RICHARD The Washington Post
Her hairdo is a mess. Her politics, once rightist and righteous, have gone all liberal and squishy. Her head has grown, her hair has crumbled, and she changes size from frape to frange.
earnings were down 1.5 per cent—the effect of an 8.8 per cent increase in consumer prices against a 7.2 per cent increase in average hourly earnings.
Ottoman things have to Little Otman Arnie, Leapin' Lizards, she looks like
The tyke has lost her tart, tough talk and her instinct for adventure. For almost half a century Annie knew the difference between good plain folks and creeps. Now she's hanging out with lobster-eating hippies in a psycheduled bus.
IT WASN'T FDR who caused her troubles, nor kidnappers, commuters, reformers, trade unions nor the graduated income tax.
Sufferin' sunfish!
Annie, once upon a time, had powerful protectors, but she's never faced such peril. Sandy has rescued her. Not have Daddy been to the waterfront or the magic blanket nor the cunning of the asp.
There are plenty of things right about the state of the union, including the fact that it has stood up so well, relatively, despite the challenges posed by the coronavirus for which the President is responsible.
Gray, who created her, wrote her and drew her has been dead since 1968.
A crusty old conservative like Daddy Warbucks, Gray believed in self-reliance, but when he died he left annie in the lurch. The Chicago Tribune-New York News Syndicate sent an SOS to the people who do comic strips.
Nor has Harold Gray.
Citing money as the reason, Caplin left
Since then, a lot of story men and artists—Henri Arnold, Joe Orlando, Hank Raduta, Bill Williams, Win Mortimer, Phil "Text" Blaisdale, Elliott Caplin, Michael Fleischer and Vic Martin—had meddled in Annie's life. —None of them were given bvines.
Millions read her once. Some sent her flowers when she was sick. Some were outraged by her politics and sent letters to the governor. Another girl, the Washington Post tried to drop the strip in the 1960s, angry Annie fans picketed the paper. But in October, when she stopped appearing in the Sunday comics, few noticed it to notice and there were few complaints.
HAROLD WAGA was the best writer this business ever saw," says Blaisdale, "but he couldn't really draw. Though I had to sweat, he'd actually put it in his fuzzy style and his iicky-pink penwork."
the strip in August. Blaisdell quit in December.
"Have you seen what they have done to Little Orphan Annie?" a Washington cabbie asked a her other day. "She looks like she's been drawn by a vegetable."
The syndicate, still hanging in there, now has hired someone else to do little Orphan Man.
THE UNDERTAKER has been carting off her readers," says Carlin.
Fleisher writes it now and Martin has been doing the drawing. As Annie's fans noticed in December, when his first stirs up the hair, he cannot draw in the style of Harold Grav
'I've asked a lot of people what they think of Jettick's chances,' says Blaidell. "It's hard to tell."
Annie once seemed real to millions of her
Lettick says that his Annie will look more like Gray's "younger, cutter and perhaps a little plumper." His first strip—with his bvline—will appear Wednesday morning.
The syndicate and Lettick are hoping that the little Annie will survive. But it's probable
Anaheim Bulletin, that the column was mistaken.
readers and to Harold Gray. Harold Gray believed.
"Read him," says Lettick. "He'd say things like, 'The only thing wrong with Russian roulette is that not enough Russians play it.' I can't write things like
"They said no intimidation was involved, but the whole point was to convince us not to print stories like that anymore," said Kenneth Grubbs, the paper's editorial page editor. The editors were unconvinced, and the agents left.
SADLY, ONE doesn't get a real picture of the state of the union from the President's address. For the most part, we are served up what Nixon's men want us to believe, like the council's assertion that the "maximum rate" is 49 per cent, or the "approximately" met last year, although the unemployment rate was 4.9 per cent, rather than 4.0 per cent.
Gray made lots of enemies, one suspects on purpose. He said he hated all reformers, and reformers hated him. The Catholic press objected to his "brass-knuckled loyalty," and the New Republic accused him of inserting Paxism into the funnies.
FBI AGENTS have made at least one other visit to people who publicly criticized their computerized files. The other case involved a Massachusetts resident who wrote to Gov. Francis W. Sargent about what of he believed were several abuses.
Nother could Capilln who said, "I love the way he told his stories, but I hate what he told me."
Neither could Fleisher.
Annie and her loyal dog Sandy (art!) minger on forever on the comic page; but if the choice were mine, I'd kill her off—or, as some might have thought, 1924, and start reprinting from scratch.
Officials at the Bureau deny that the actions are intended to squelch such criticism, but the incidents do reveal the seriousness with which the FBI—and other federal agencies—regard the public attitude toward a growing demand that the government's store of background information on individual citizens.
His strips were rarely dull.
Such fears may be difficult to assuage. Relatively minor abuses of data systems can ruin lives, as when the computer wrongly claims that innocent people have committed crimes or, almost as bad, when the machines are fodged suggestion that certain people are less than worthy citizens.
Increasingly, computerized records are being criticized for more subtle reasons, perhaps best expressed by author Donald G. Macrae:
"in all societies . . . men have lived in the interstices of their institutions. They have counted on the mercy of error, ignorance and dishonesty of their fellows and their state. In a world of computers this mercy may not long exist. All our failings and achievements, our credit-worth and our petty delinquencies, are insignificant in the constant resentment of the machine."
Business Advisor . . Mel Adams
Business Manager
David Hornbeck
With the notable exception of Massachusetts, these systems have grown without regard to state or federal regulation. In large part agencies are free to place whatever information they please with whom they see a need for information with whoever they see fit.
IN WASHINGTON a recent count showed there were at least 750 computerized data
systems under government control collecting every kind of personal information from mental illness, drug use, and juvenile delinquency to credit status and criminal activity. The number of data received is too small that no one has yet tried to count them.
After five years in office, the twin economic problems of high inflation and unemployment are still dominant. Mr. Nixon hasn't found the answers, although he's tried gradualism, expansion, controls, and now, seemingly, gradualism all over time. The current worsened by shortages of energy is made on an ad bac basis, day by day. The only thing that is constant is the dose of reassuring rhetoric.
All of that may soon change. In his state of the Union message, President Nixon said "The problem is not simply one of setting up a network of computers in automated data systems) but . . . of limiting the uses to which essentially private information is put and of recognizing the basic proprietary right each company has in information concerning himself."
The administration is expected to follow up the President's message with an extensive bill aimed primarily at the network of state and federal criminal data banks called the National Crime Information Center, currently under control of the FBL.
the unit is the product of several disputes between the Justice Department and other federal agencies, and was eventually disbanded. The unit agencies, principally the Department of Defense, the Small Business Administration, and the Civil Service Commission, would have the right to oppose features of the legislation in Congress.
These agencies objected to their exclusion—along with all other non-criminal agencies—from access to the information stored in the data banks. The bill specifies that only law enforcement groups will be given access unless federal or state statute specifically grants such access to other agencies.
F
Th little Law said
F
F
W Mer the
Case Closed On Robbery In Maryland
The FBI got their men, but nobody will go to jail for bank robbery. The bank got back $400,000 of its money, and the robbers or the robbers had themselves a $147,000 spending, sorry.
An assistant U.S. attorney got a guilty plea from one suspect on a reduced charge, but five of six persons allegedly connected with the heist or will get their freedom, one in part because the prosecutor thought they "to charge him while his buddies got off."
By FRED BARBASH
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—A $47,000 bank holdup—the largest in Maryland and possibly U.S. history—has been solved and the bank robbers seems content.
A SIXTH SUSPECT pleaded guilty to a reduced charge and received a recommendation of lenency from the federal prosecutor.
The case, which federal investigators describe as "closed," involves the robbery of the Maryland National Bank's Friendship Branch and a $74,000 Airport branch of $47,000 on Sept. 28.
The robbers forced an employee arriving that morning to open the doors. They then deactivated bank alarmes and told tellers before leaving with bills in demonstrations of ten, twenties, fifties and hundreds. The airport is located about 10 miles south of Baltimore and 25 miles north of Washington, between the two cities.
AFTER A FOUR-MONTH FBI investigation, federal prosecutors in Baltimore believed they had found the man responsible, they say they were unsure of their case.
The whereabouts of the money, however, remained locked in the memories of the robbers and their accomplices. To Michael Marr, assistant attorney general for Maryland, the recovery of the cash was important as a "deterterent" to would-be robbers.
To Hilary Caplan, a lawyer for one of the men initially charged with the robbery, the prosecutor was under pressure from the police about its insurance, to find the money.
EARLY FEB. 1, FBI agents dug up about $200,000 on hill near jessup, Md. They located another cache of almost equal size in the Baltimore home of a relative of one of the holdup men. Most of the balance, according to the FBI, was spent.
At any rate, to locate the cash, Marr made a sweeping deal.
In return for an agreement that "individuals who handled the money wouldn't be prosecuted," Marr said, two of the holdup men gave FB1 agents the names of two persons who could lead them to the cash.
Believing the cases to be weak, "I went in with the idea of trying to get a loaf," Marr said in an interview last week. The partial recovery of the money would be a "deterrent" to future would-be robbers, he contended.
Special agent Farrow, of the Baltimore office, wouldn't say how agents knew it was. "He didn't have it," she said.
Marr vigorously denied, as did a spokesman for Maryland National, that the arrest of Mr. Browne was a lie.
A bank spokesman also refused to detail the extent to which it was covered by insurance.
Griff and the Unicorn
SIMON! AN APPLE FELL ON YOUR HEAD!
JUST LIKE SIR ISAAC NEWTON!
AND DO YOU KNOW WHAT HE DISCOVERED?
A SPLITTING HEADACHE?
🎧
wow!
BONK!
by Sokoloff
SIMON! AN APPLE
FELL ON YOUR HEAD!
JUST LIKE SIR
ISAAC NEWTON!
AND DO YOU KNOW
WHAT HE DISCOVERED?
BRIEF
A SPLITTING HEADACHE?
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 11, 1974
5
ING THE?
Food Supply Okay Despite Strike
The independent truckers' strike has had little effect on local food shipments, Lawrence grocery and restaurant employees said yesterday.
They said that they doubled if their operations would be affected, even if the
Curtis Watson, manager of the Howard Johnson's turnip restaurant said be didn't
think the strike would have much success in Kansas.
He estimated that 90 per cent of the normal number of trucks are on the road.
Watson said most of the freight in Kansas was handled by small independent operators that were well positioned to deliver it.
Bob Olberling, manager of the Kentucky
Fried Chicken restaurant at 658 W. 23rd St.
WAVNE, Mich. (AP) -- Big Lincolnns, Mercuries, and Art Forses have been rolling off the track for years.
Today, however, the Wayne plant will start turning out just one model—the Ford Econoline. It's now the first of its kind.
Ford's Wayne Plant Turns From Guzzlers to Compact
When production reaches its full pace in a few months, the Wayne plant will turn out 60 Mavricks an hour, compared to production of big Fords an hour earlier this model year.
Ford made the switch from drawing board to production restart in only six months. Normally, such a change would have been a two-year project.
Many of the plant's 3,500 workers returned to the job last week, but found little that was familiar. The plant underwent a $75 million conversion, and Ford said it stripped virtually every piece of equipment from its factory, switching the line to small-car production.
Amid widespread consumer concern over gasoline prices and availability, Ford has been selling Mavickers as fast as they can now. It is not as easy to find Fords still on hand at are record levels.
Ford's Chicago assembly plant has been shifted from the full-size car to an inline producing the new little Mustang II has been added to the San Jose, Calif. plant.
There are too many small independent truckers in Kansas who aren't participating
Oberbaying said it was the independent truck lines, with 30 to 35 rigs, which were used for the highway.
said he also doubted that the strike would affect Kansas shipping.
Ford also plans to introduce two new compacts in the coming model year. The firm said it then will be able to produce two 2009 Ford Taurus models at 30 per cent of its domestic auto output.
General Motors and Chrysler have converted another four plants to small cars, as the energy crisis forced the industry to move quickly. Sales were down 25 per cent in January compared with a year ago, but the company says cars were available to meet the demand.
In Kansas, most of the independent lines have 8 to 12 rams and they simply aren't affected as much by the fuel shortage, he said.
Warren Eisenstein, a cook at Treoled's Restaurant and Delicatessen at 944 Massachusetts St., said he had experienced shortage of ussheries on his staff, which was well stocked on food.
John D. Butler, owner of the Chuck Wagon restaurant at 2408 Iowa St., predicted a beef shortage may develop within the next week or two.
Buller said market conditions in the beef industry made him aware that strike could cause that potential shortage.
Richard Avery, an employee at the Dillon store at 1740 Massachusetts St., summed up most of the grocers' comments: "There's always a shortage of something in a grocery store," he said, but Dillon's" isn't having any unusual shortages."
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Election Rigged, Means Charges
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)—Russell Means, an American Indian Movement leader on trial in connection with the occupation of Wounded Knee, S.D., has asked for an investigation of the recent tribal election on the Oglala Soux reservation. Means was narrowly defeated in his bid for president of the tribe.
Mark Banks, the brother of Means'
cofidentain, Dennis Banks, also said
Means was beaten by incumbent President Richard Wilson, who pledged during the campaign to throw AIM leaders off the Pine Ridge Reservation. Unofficial vote totals showed Wilson taking a 179-vote edge.
Means had spoken with attorneys about contesting the legality of the election last week.
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UNICAMPUS COALITION -
JOHN BEISNER STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
TODD HUNTER STUDENT BODY VICE-PRESIDENT
They stand for:
·making the Student Senate a model of Affirmative Action, beginning with the Unicampus Coalition.
enforcement of the 20% representation rule to provide more student input in University policy making.
VOTE FEB. 13-14 paid for by UNICAMPUS
CAROUSEL
PRESENTS BUSINESS is BETTER THAN EVER
★
SALE
★
We're going strong & the Spring Stuff is rolling in. To make room for all these spring goodies, we're having our last markdown on all Fall & Winter items Good as they are . . OUT THEY MUST GO!
COORDINATES up to 1/2 off
SWEATERS PURSES LONG DRESSES
20-40% off $799reg.to $2000 up to 1/2 off
PANTS
$699 to $999
DAYTIME DRESSES $ \frac{1}{2} $ off
SHOES
$599 & up
Best bargain this year
PANTS—DRESS WOOLS 30% off
MISC. GOODIES
$1 00 & up
Stop by the store who CARES who you are & how you look Doors open Monday at 10:00 til 6:00 711 W.23rd MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
6
Monday, February 11, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Book Describes Baseball as It Was
By BILL CAMPBELL KENNEDY RENTURES
Kansan Reviewer
"THE GLORY OF THEIR TIMES" by
Larence S. Sitter (300 pages, Collier
Press)
Take a trp back in time. Back to 1908, to a baseball game between Detroit and Cleveland, and watch Germany Schaefer steal first base.
"The Glory of Their Times," through memories of 22 men who played baseball from the turn of the century through the present, are sure and a game far different from the one we know today. You'll view a game of large parks and small gloves, of 48-ounce bats and
Ritter and his tape recorder traveled
And because he lets the men tell their stories, the flavor of the times is returned. The game is baseball, but more importantly, it's a book about the meet who played baseball.
75,000 miles through the United States and
over 12,000 stories of the men who
planned ballgame then.
men like Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and Charlie Johnson, men like Rogers Hornsby, Christy Mathewson and Baba Ruth. It all there. But this book tells more than just their exploits on the field—a baseball encyclopedia can give you that. It tells what it was like to play and live alongside them, as remembered by the men who were there.
Giants win three pennants and yet pitched only two innings. It's about pitcher Rube Waddell, who would pour ice water on his arm because he didn't want to burn up his catcher's glove and call in his outfield and pitch without them.
The book is about an era of baseball when it was possible for little Tommy Leach to lead the National League in home runs with six, and for the New York Giants to steal 34 bases in one season. It was an era in which the Nats were brilliant and still lost the batting title by 24 points.
ITS’ALSO ABOUT men like Charles Victory Faust, who helped the New York
IN MANY PLACES the book is comic. The reader is treated to scenes such as three Dodgers on third base at the same time, a pitcher sliding into home run, then racing to first base and diving in.
head first, to jump up and shout, "Schaefer leading at the quarter!" repeat, the act at second and third and, after dying into home, get up, brush himself off and announce, "Schaefer wins by a mose" and people in the stands for the attention.
The book is serious where the men compare their game with today's. They are serious when they discuss the achievements, with remarkably accurate memories in most cases, of their fellow players.
"The Glory of Their Days" is easy to read. It's pages, with the dozen of pictures, flair almost too fast. When you've finished you'll be forced to smile, lean back and say, "Damn, I wish I could have seen that."
Holy Rollers Put Through Wringer
By STEVE LEWIS
"THE PREACHERS," by James Morris
THE PREACHERS," by James Morris (418 pages; St. Martin's Press, 1973; $35.99). From the holy world of fruits and nuts covers The Preachers' a book about successful martyrs, southers and con man who dispense joy to the world in the name of Jesus.
Author James Morris has studied nine contemporary religious sideshow rings, ranging from the 1960s through the 2000s and has written an amusing expose that the Gideons would do well to place in every book.
Mortis particularly roughs up Oral
Berkshire, the faith hearter turned college
Robert's spiritual career began when he was 17 years old. While playing basketball he collapsed from an illness that was diagnosed as tuberculosis.
By coincidence, a tent revivalist was in town. Robert's parents took him to see the church, where he was baptized. Unfortunately, there is no documented proof that Roberts ever had TB. Nevertheless, a few weeks after the miracle, he was married and remained in the Pentecostal Holiness Church
Roberts' faith-healing abilities first became apparent in 1946, when a friend's
Paperbacks
"HENRY IN A SILVER FRAME" by James Eastwood, Pocket, 95 cents)—An interesting mystery thriller about a writer who comes up with an idea involving two women who are sent together on a trip through Europe, one of them becoming a murderess. Then the whole thing assumes a realistic twist.
"IHHE HARVEST BURNS" by Helga Moray (Paycor, $1.25)--Another in this writer's series about the people who settled South Africa. Her heroin returns to the land of the Boers and becomes involved in a romance with a handsome duke.
"PAPILLON" by Henri Charrieire (Pocket, $1.95) — a reprint of a nonfiction book of escape that is assuming new populist identities and a motion picture version. "Papillon" is a about man who is convicted in Paris and sent to the infamous penal colony of French Guiana. He escapes, is captured and sent to prison, then escapes again. It reads more like a novel.
"LONE STAR RANGER" by Zane Gray (Pocket, 75 cents) "FUGIVEIT'S CANYON" by Hall G. Evarts (Pocket, 75 cents) - Western tales, the first by a man who died 35 years ago but whose books are still popular; this one about Buck Duane and the Texas Rangers. The second is by a more recent writer. Both are pretty routine.
"STORM IN THE VALLEY" by Carolyn MacDonald (Pocket, 50 cents) — A romantic tale in set in America at the time of the Revolution. The girl who fails in love with a Levaileal raider girl who falls in love with a Levaileal raider girl.
THE "CASE OF THE SLEEPWALKER'S NIECE" by Erle Stanley Gardner (Pocket, 95 cents)—One of the earliest Perry Mason tales, first published in 1936, this is about a boy who sleeps a sheepwalker, who may have committed a crime, but doesn't know. Good fun as always.
THE GODDESS ABIDES" by Pearl S. Buck (Pocket, $1.59) a soapy but well-written romantic drama, published in 1972. Her debut novel is taught her "the real meaning of love."
"THE NIGHT STALKER" by Jeff Rise (Pocket, $1.25) - Adapted from a television screenplay that attracted wide attention. Las Vegas is the setting of this story about murders that appear to have been committed by a vampire.
"GOOD NEWS FOR THE MODERN MAN" (Pocket, 95 cents) - The New Testament in a modern English version, the translation of the American Bible Society.
Convict Running
THOMASTON, Maine (AP)—If elected governor, Maine State Prison inmate Danny Trask could have the power to grant parole but he says he won't do it. He would be arrested. But he says he won't do it.
Trask, serving a 20 to 40 years sentence for robbery, was ruled eligible to become a gubernatorial candidate Friday. Atty. Gen. Jon A. Land said no state law bars him from office, and the Secretary of State has been preparing Trask's nomination papers.
Convicted in October, 1965, Trask, 35, will be considered for parole until December, 2018.
foot was apparently crushed by a heavy motor.
Samperming to the rescue, Roberts touched the toe of his friend's mangled foot.
His friend's foot was instantly restored.
ROBERTS WAS UNKSE, however,
their feet were still very sore.
reviews
hurself in his church study, laid on the floor and told God he wouldn't leave until God spoke to him. Unable to resist, God commanded Roberts to the sick.
Healing is exactly what Roberts did until God told him to build a college and to name it St. Michael's College.
Roberts, a secret intellectual all along, closed down his faith-healing tent for good in 1967 to become a new person, a college president.
Then there is A. A. Allen, whom Morris describes as a combination James Cagney and George Wallace. Allen was in "the Great War" with his brother the Lord and became a faith healer.
Allen was fairly effective, too. Bodies could be seen convalescing on his revival tent's floor as he heated them with the power of God.
ALLEN, OF COURSE, disliked reporters because they were a threat to expose him.
He once publicly sent demons to attack several newmen. President Nixon would
But Allen decided to move on to greater things. He announced in 1966 that he would begin raising the dead. The government, objected, and Allen had to change his nunit.
Finally, Allen's wife filed for divorce, charging that her husband was insane.
On June 11, 1970, at the peak of his success, Allen died. The coroner's verdict:
The most successful black preacher today is a relative newcomer. Rey, Ik. Wee.
A former unsuccessful hellfire and dammation preacher from South Carolina, Rev. Kev proposes a new philosophy: "I want my pie, with ice, with cream on ton."
TELLING HIS BLAST followers that "you can't lose with the stuff I use." Rev. Ike solicits money from them on faith that they will be rewarded by God with Cadillacs and new homes. Ike calls it the "Blessing Plan." It is been a blessing for him, anyway. He has a wardrobe that would put Liberace's to shame.
My favorites from Morris's list are the Armstrongs—father Herbert and son Garner Ted. Together they've scientifically proved that God's intervention and proved the inerrancy of the Bible.
The gloom and doom message drives their radio and television listeners to despair, only to be given one last hope in the coming "wonderful world tomorrow."
THE ARMSTRONGS' broadcasting style and their lack of appeals for money have
made their 42-year-old Church of God the largest independent evangelical church in America.
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Herbert, 81, flies around the world bobbing with world leaders while Garner Ted, 43, stays home prophesying the imminent end of the rule of map.
Their semi-secret church has an annual income of $55 million, which is largely financed by 75,000 tithing coworkers, in inclusion chess champion Bobby Fischer.
Topeka Municipal Auditorium
Monday, Feb.18, 8pm
These are but a few of Morris's fascinating preachers--persons who have become skilled in the art of exploiting human suffering and ignorance. As a light shineth in darkness, "The Preachers" is worth your time.
Republic Municipal Auditorium
Monday
Feb.18, 8pm
Bachman Turner
Overdrive
Freddy King
Advance Tickets on sale at Better Days and Kiel's in Lawrence
ON CAMPUS NOW!
Seniors and Grads are needed by Peace Corps for summer and fall volunteer positions overseas. Stop and talk to recruiters at the following locations:
Union—Today thru Thursday
Liberal Arts Placement—Tuesday
Business Placement—Tuesday
Engineering Placement—Wednesday and Thursday Educational Placement—Today Only
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 11, 1974
7
I am grateful to the people for their generosity. I will be remembered for my kindness and love.
Kansas Staff Photo bv DAVE CRENSHAW
William P. Albrecht and His Portrait
Albrecht Celebrated in Portrait
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, acting on behalf of the University of Kansas, formally accepted a portrait of William P. Aberchee, Graduate School 1963/72, Friday afternoon.
Albrecht is now a professor of English at KU. Administrative officers at KU must retire at age 65 but can teach in their academic discipline until age 70.
Part of the surplus funds was used to take
a photograph of the portrait. The framed color photograph was given to the KU English Department, of which Albrecht was a graduate and will hang in the Graduate School office.
Albrecht's portrait was painted by Frank Szasz, a Kansas City artist who has also painted John F. Kennedy, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman.
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StudEx Passes Petition To Elect Own Chairman
A petition to the University Senate to make the chairman of the Student Executive Committee (StudEx) elective by the senate was passed by StudEx last night which acted in place of the entire senate on not considered at the last senate meeting.
StudEx met last night because that legislation not considered would die with the election of a new senate and would have to be reintroduced, according to Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president.
Evan Ellen, Salina senior and StudEx chairman, who introduced the petition, said his position was salaried and therefore did not have a salary. He student body president as is currently done.
The petition will go into effect if it is proposed by the University Senate at its April meeting.
A bill, also introduced by Olson, to make the StudEx chairman presiding officer of the Student Senate in place of the student body vice president was defeated by 58-21.
Opposition to the bill centered on the idea
that the presiding officer of the senate should be elected by the student body and the student council.
the student body and should represent all students on campus. Olsen,说话在 favor of him, would say the person the senate elected would probably be more qualified for the parliamentary position (of presiding officer of the senate) than someone elected by the senate.
He said the StudEx chairman compiled all the materials to be discussed by the senate and was therefore more familiar with the matters to be acted upon.
StadEx also passed a resolution supporting the landlord-tenant bill currently before the Kansas Legislature and voted to amend the summer intramursal program for 1974.
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15 East 8th 844-230
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Seminar on
"A LEGAL CAREER FOR BLACKS"
FEBRUARY 20,1974
7:30 p.m./Pine Room of the Kansas Student Union
Topics: The Ins and Outs of Law School Career Opportunities in the Respective Legal Fields
Respective Legal Fields
DWIGHT HENDERSON, Director of the Legal Aid Society of Kansas City, Kansas
Speakers:
CHARLES SCOTT, SR., General Counsel for the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights and private practitioner BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Assistant Federal District Attorney of Kansas City, Kansas
Sponsored by the Dean of Men's Office
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Hunting for Trophies Banned by Tanzania
DAR ES SALAM, Tanzania (AP)—Big game hunting for trophies and skins will be permanently banned in Tanzania, and professional hunters will never be allowed to operate in the country again, the government said Sunday.
But a spokesman said peasants would be allowed to hunt certain animals for meat
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9th & Indiana
NO PANIC!
You can read the entire year's Western Clv assignments in the next few weeks and pass the Comprehensive in May.
Reading Dynamics shows you how to get right down to the meaning in all those words
You Learn—
how to preview each reading in a few seconds per page to find out what issues are discussed.
how to read rapidly (probably three times as fast as you do now) with good comprehension
prepension
—how to make fast, clear, graphic notes
- how to compare and contrast the view of the various writers
- reading Dynamic Learner in a Western Western Co. instructor; but this is not a discussion group. We will begin learning these readings. Therefore, the reading group is done but most of the readings are done in class but most are not. There are some of the readings are done in class but most are not.*
scheduled for our daily home practice in Bedfordshire BC.
We will show you how to read both text and much reading. Every week we will check your notes and print them so you can read the notes as you see you are understanding.
WESTERN CIVB BEIGES FEBRUARY 14 and meets thursday 7.10 am. FOR EIGHT WEEKS,
REGULAR DREAMING DYNAMICS SECTION FEBRUARY 15, 16 and MEETS TUESDAYS. 7.10 am.
CALL NOW TO ENROLL OR FOR MORE INFORMATION—843-6424
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---
8
Monday, February 11, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Cowboys Fall, K-State Coming Up
Now that the last of the preliminary games are out of the way, the University of Kansas and Kansas State University can get to the business at hand.
The two teams will meet Wednesday night in Manhattan in a televised showdown for the final prize.
Both teams won tough road games over the weekend to remain at the top of the conference standings. KU beat Oklahoma State, 80-71; at Stillwater and Kansas State beat Iowa State, 72-56; in Ames, KU leads Utah State, 74-63. Kansas State is one-half game back at 7-1.
KU and problems, similar to the ones in the Cowboy game played here, before it came to light.
"It was one of those games that instead of trying to win, you try to keep from losing," she said. "It's a tough game."
Starting center center Danny Knight led the Jayhawks with a career high of 43 points. KU's last four games, Knight had spent much of his time on the bench while his
backup-man, Rick Suttle, led the 'Hawks attack. Knight had scored only 17 points in the game.
I wasn't doing anything differently," she said. "I was just on my knees shooting it was just hard."
Knight certainly was hitting; he made 14 of 20 field goal attempts and six of eight free kick attempts.
It was a shot by Knight with 6:36 left that
Big Eight Standings
put KU into the for the first time, KU
managed to retain its slim lead for the rest
of the run.
Conference Games
| | W | L | All Games |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 1 | 8 |
| Kansas State | 7 | 1 | 15 |
| Oklahoma | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Colorado | 3 | 3 | 9 |
| Nevada | 3 | 4 | 12 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 6 | 11 |
| Missouri | 2 | 6 | 10 |
| Mississippi | 1 | 5 | 10 |
All Games
Knight scored eight of KU's first ten points in the second half. The last two of them were scored by Josh Rouse.
A final rally, led by Roger Morningstar,
KUI its biggest of the game, 80-69.
(AP)
A tenacious zone defense also helped to win the game. Intended to protect Knight and Suttee who were in foul trouble, the zone defense made five points in the last three minutes of the game.
Last Weekend's Resu
Kansas, 80. Oklahoma State, 71.
Oklahoma, 80. Iowa State, 56.
Oklahoma, 41. Colorado,
Nebraska, 53. Missouri,
Foul trouble, something that has plagued KU all year, was again a problem. Norm Cook and Dale Greenlee both fought out with more than five minutes left in the game. Knight and Suttle first played the game with Smith and Morningstar to star Tom Kingman. Smith and Morningstar to star three each.
Owens had to juggle his line-up and defenses constantly to keep all his players on the ball.
KU Trackmen Sweep Aside OSU
Despite the loss of three outstanding performers, the University of Kansas track team rolled to an overwhelming victory over Oklahoma State University, Saturday after the Jayhawks swept 10 of the 15 events and doubled the Cowboy's score, winning 84-6.
The KU squad was depleted last week when it lost high jumper Barry Schur and spinner Mark Lutz. Both were suspended from the team by Coach Boh Chimmons their arraignment last week on charges of illegal possession of amphetamines.
The team was further crippled Friday night when freshman high jumper Keith Guinn suffered a knee injury while competing in the Olympic Invitational Meet in New York City. Guinn suffered the injury while warming up prior to the competition. The extent of the injury is unknown at this time, pending examinations today.
Gymnasts Win,
Score over 150
The University of Kansas gymnastics team is beginning to believe in itself. The KU squad beat Western Illinois in a dual meet, 145.00, Friday night in Robinson Gymnastics.
The victory marked the second straight meet in which the 'Hawks have broken the magic 150 point level. KU scored 155.85 against Kansas State and Northern Iowa.
"We're beginning to develop a lot of pride in ourselves," said Coach Bob Lockwood. "We know we can score in the 150's and we're making progress with each meet."
KU outscored Western Illinois in every event and the vaulters, led by Mike Backus, posted the highest point total of the meet with 27.20. Backus, Shawnee Mission junior, won the game with a 9.4, his personal best and a school record.
To make things worse, Terry Porter competed without his favorite pole which was lost on the way to the meet in New York. He managed to managed to win with a vault of 15 feet.
The team's strongest showing came in the field events where it swept the first three places in all but the shot put competition.
Danny Scaey won the long jump with a leap of 24-10, Randy Smith won the high jump at 6-11 and Theo Hamilton leaped 46-3 to win the triple jump.
Other firsts were won by Jay Wagner in the 60-year run, Dennis Brack in the 60-year high hurdles, Tom Scavuzzo in the 40-year dash, Tom Kopmes in the two-mile run and Don Welter in the 60-year low hurdles. The Jahayh mile relay team of Scavuzzo, Nolan Cromwell, Wagner and Eddie Lewis won its event.
The squad will compete in the Central College Championships this Friday and Saturday. The meet will be held at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind.
IF YOUR FRIEND IS ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS OR TOO FAT FOR CANDY A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SURE IS DANDY!
This year the University Daily Kansan will have a special Valentine classified section on Thursday, February 14th. Send a message to your special friend.
Only $1.00 for 25 words.
Bring your special message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 12 and your message will appear on Valentine's Day.
LET SOMEONE KNOW HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT THEM.
VOTE
VOTE
SPRING
ELECTIONS
FEB. 13-14
"It causes problems," Owens said. "We try to get ready for that kind of situation by using all the possible combinations of players that we can in practice."
KU and Kansas State, the runaway leaders of the league along with Oklahoma, haven't met yet this year. Last year, Kansas State beat KU three times: 51-70 at the Big Eight Tournament, 77-68 in Lawrence and 67-68 in Manhattan
Kansas State played a poor first half before finally exploding in the second half against Iowa State. Kansas State was led by sophomore Jake Harden, who played in the conference, with 18 points.
RATIO OF REPS
Cook 0.52 FT PB RB F T
Murganting 0.13 F12 F14 F T
Greenbeer 14.70 F14 F14 F T
Grillee 0.2 F8 F8 F T
Squash 0.2 F8 F8 F T
Snuffle 0.2 F8 F8 F T
Snuttle 32.60 F12 F14 F 26
Snuttle 32.60 F12 F14 F 26
54.1 82.4
OKLAHOMA STATE (71)
FG PT RB F T
Pitzerabad 4.82 4.7 1.9 8
Threat 4.12 4.1 1.3 10
Henson 3.4 3.4 1.9 9
Dalebet 3.41 3.1 1.5 4
Daniel 4.12 0.0 1.9 4
Dahle 3.4 0.0 1.6 4
Dahle 3.4 0.0 1.2 4
Totals 26.68 19.30 2.0 19
KANSAS OKLAHOMA STATE
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Ryan O'Neal
IN "What's Up, Doc?"
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Friday, Feb. 15
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Saturday, Feb. 16
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Thursday, Feb. 14
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Monday, Feb. 11
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 11, 1974
9
KU Swimmers Still Unbeaten
The University of Kansas swim team continued its dominance over Big Eight competition as it defeated the University of Oklahoma to meet Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
The Jayhawks captured 12 of the 13 games to win their 28 consecutive dual meet with the Clippers.
Cock Dog Reamon said he was well aware that Nebraska didn't have the talent that KU had. He said he wanted to let lot of people swim so he could decide who would fill the last few places on the KU team that will go to the Big Eight Championships in Waco.
"By and large I was satisfied," Reamon said. "The improvement we have shown by virtue of our competition is on schedule or ahead of schedule."
Ground Master, Hockey Team (Gary Kempman, Tenn. State)
Ground Master, Ice Hockey Team (Rahmi Kampai, Kanada)
Ground Master, Away Hockey Team (Rahmi Kampai, Kanada)
Ground Master, Away Hockey Team (Rahmi Kampai, Kanada)
Kansas
**JONATHAN FLEMING**, 3, JACK ALDREY (N), 10, MILLY M. CUBER,
Terry L. CRUMBERT (N), 8, DAVID GORDON (N),
Terry RIVER (N), 10, NILSON GORDON, Garden Jacket (N)
*Bachar, Individual Mediacy - II*. Ben Wagner (KU).
*Bachar, Individual Mediacy - III*. Ben Wagner (KU).
*Bachar, Individual Blandau (KU)*. 2; Lerry, T. Rutherford (KU).
One-Meter Diving 1. Sweeping Kill (KU), 285.4, 2. Scoot-
dive Kill (KU), 265.7, 3. Tomb Floor (KU), 172.4,
4. Tomb Floor (KU), 172.4
200. freelancer - 1. Tom Heaton (KU), 18, 3.3.
210. freelancer - 2. Paul Bracken (KU), 18, 3.4.
4 Bill Davis (NU), 12, 3.4. 6 Scott Martin (NU), 10, 3.9.
7 free-lender - 8. Alan McDonald (KU), 21, 4. 10 free-lender - 9. John W. Cook (KU), 21, 4. 11 Paul Dahur (NU), 23, 10. 5 Water Staher (NU).
Broadway (NYC) - Brass Maternity (KC) - Q4.12 J. Johnston
(Broadway) - Broadway (NYC) - J. Johnston (KC) - Q4.12
Broadway (NYC) - Broadway (NYC) - J. Johnston (KC) - Q4.12
Broadway (NYC) - Broadway (NYC) - J. Johnston (KC) - Q4.12
Broadway (NYC) - Broadway (NYC) - J. Johnston (KC) - Q4.12
EN 2179 / 6.07 Grooming Disinfecting (KU) EN 2183 / 5.04 Cleaning (KU) EN 2190 / 6.06 Bath (KU) EN 2191 / 6.08 Bed (KU) EN 2192 / 6.10 Cloak (KU) EN 2193 / 6.12 Shoe (KU) EN 2194 / 6.16 Bed (KU) EN 2195 / 6.18 Cloak (KU) EN 2196 / 6.20 Bed (KU) EN 2197 / 6.22 Cloak (KU) EN 2198 / 6.24 Cloak (KU) EN 2199 / 6.26 Cloak (KU) EN 219A / 6.28 Cloak (KU) EN 219B / 6.30 Cloak (KU) EN 219C / 6.32 Cloak (KU) EN 219D / 6.34 Cloak (KU) EN 219E / 6.36 Cloak (KU) EN 219F / 6.38 Cloak (KU) EN 219G / 6.40 Cloak (KU) EN 219H / 6.42 Cloak (KU) EN 219I / 6.44 Cloak (KU) EN 219J / 6.46 Cloak (KU) EN 219K / 6.48 Cloak (KU) EN 219L / 6.50 Cloak (KU) EN 219M / 6.52 Cloak (KU) EN 219N / 6.54 Cloak (KU) EN 219O / 6.56 Cloak (KU) EN 219P / 6.58 Cloak (KU) EN 219Q / 6.60 Cloak (KU) EN 219R / 6.62 Cloak (KU) EN 219S / 6.64 Cloak (KU) EN 219T / 6.66 Cloak (KU) EN 219U / 6.68 Cloak (KU) EN 219V / 6.70 Cloak (KU) EN 219W / 6.72 Cloak (KU) EN 219X / 6.74 Cloak (KU) EN 219Y / 6.76 Cloak (KU) EN 219Z / 6.78 Cloak (KU) EN 219A / 6.80 Cloak (KU) EN 219B / 6.82 Cloak (KU) EN 219C / 6.84 Cloak (KU) EN 219D / 6.86 Cloak (KU) EN 219E / 6.88 Cloak (KU) EN 219F / 6.90 Cloak (KU) EN 219G / 6.92 Cloak (KU) EN 219H / 6.94 Cloak (KU) EN 219I / 6.96 Cloak (KU) EN 219J / 6.98 Cloak (KU) EN 219K / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219L / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219M / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219N / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219O / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219E / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219F / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219G / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219H / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219I / 6.99 Cloak (KU) EN 219J / 6.99
Gary Ackey (NCU) Kyle Geymert (KU) 1.184.24
Garry Ackey (NCU) Gareth Bentley (NJC) 1.184.24
Garry Ackey (NCU) Nick Jankowski (NJC) 1.184.24
John Williams (NCU) 1.213.35 N.J. Nassau Jackman (NJC)
100 W-Freeman Lake, Kellie Heidley (K1), $83.49,
250 W-Freeman Lake, Kellie Heidley (K1), $83.49,
250 W-Freeman Lake, Kellie Heidley (K1), $83.49,
Jack Ackman Jr (N) (k1), $72.19, Carry Gugl (N) ($19.88,
N)
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Watermeter (NU) 10:20. 3, Tom Foson (NU) 14:00.
- 900-yd.冻水表 (NU) 14:00.
- Rockwall Hall, Nick Hall, Tom Hedgeson,
Nebraksa (Scott Martin, Steve Raynor, Paul Daugherty,
Mike Effertz), Kansas (Hoggett Mosey, Mike Effertz).
Women's Team Gets 2nd Loss
The University of Kansas women's basketball team had it hopes for a berth in the state playoffs damaged Friday night as theku fell to Fort Hays State. 56-39.
KU, Kansas State and Fort Hays are all contending for two playoff berths in the state tournament, to be held March 1 and 2 at Bethany College in Lindsborg.
The Hawks were leading Fort Hays 23-19 at halftime, but a strong second half shooting performance moved Fort Hays to a 36-27 third quarter lead.
Both Fort Hays and KU have two losses in conference play, while Kansas State has only a single loss. To remain in contention for the Cotton Bowl against Kansas State, Feb. 22 in Manhattan.
42 95 78 65 43 21 10
Unicom
202/SR
Electronic
Slide Rule
It's a powerful scientific instrument.
□ Trig functions
□ Log functions
□ Roots and powers
□ Radian selector
□ Separate reusable
memory
□ Leatherette hole-holster
□ Nose case
It's a powerful mini calculator.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
- Adds, subtracts, multiply*
* Subtracts addressable*
* Memory*
* Automatic constants in*
* all four functions*
* Display enable*
* Big, bright display*
* Hardy kickstand for*
* desktop use*
* Optional battery (optional AC/DC charger)
* 6 x 3/4" x 11 inches;
6 x 3 1/4 x 1 1/2 inches, weighs 12 ounces
Three Days
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $0.03
Unicom Systems Rockwell International
KANSAN WANT ADS
195 $ ^{00} $ Inc. Charger
Lawrence Typewriter
700 Mass. 843-3644
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.20
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their race or national origin. ALL CLASSIFIED TO I11 FLINT HALL
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 use them, you're at a dis-
Either way it comes to the same thing—'New York City'. It was the city of campus Madison, Town Clerk.
Ray Audio, 15 E. W., Phone A42-342-8075
Available for any stereo problem. Cost 105.
Available for any stereo problem. Cost 105.
Tubularis - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
FOR SALE Apples : Apple $3.75 (basket and
price $4.50) grapefruit 12 for $1; mix and match oranges
grapefruit 12 for $1; mix and match oranges
12 for $1; ltb. turtles - 3 lbs for 25c, 200c - 20h;
12 for 25c, 200c - 20h; 12 for 25c, 200c - 20h;
20c prepares and cucumbers 2 each, 6 for
25c prepares and cucumbers 2 each, 6 for
25c prepares and cucumbers 2 each, 6 for
$1; peaches - 86c lbs, 12 for $1; peaches - 86c lbs,
12 for $1; strawberries also antiques, used durings, collage-
tainer stamps,
Must will-Will-Guild D-35 Bluegrass Special with
Jim McNeil and Play and looks like play.
195 Ask for Cook.
2-11 Ask for Cook.
Saint Bernard puppies -AXL registered. Chemi-
scaled. Pet sleds available. Rescue older dogs available at rescues. Needs 3,500 hours of time per dog.
BMW 2002 - 1973 - 19,500 km. Metallic paint.
BMW A-33, FM-36. Lights: Cabrio. Width-
evenings 8:42
evenings 12:12
FOR SALE! 1971-17 * x. 50" Hacienda, Mobile
property. Condition well. Wooded area. Died for a
complicated illness. Wooden box on the porch.
1973 Oasis Ploater with low miles and many extras. BSA with 424, both prized by many. Phone 885-1353. Phone 2-12
1965 Postmaster - Star Chief for sack. Excellent team work. Must be able to John and come by for a test flight.
(See below.)
Mid-length, embruised suede coat fully-lined,
black hickory fur Worn once! ONLY $6.00
4-212
will need Mellanby Hall contract. Open to male
senior students with no academic qualifications.
semester B4-839-9069 or ask for Frank 2-12
or female, please mention what I have used with
their instruments for sale. FOR SALE: 1926 Mercury Material; $150,842-2473.
For Sale. 1632 4-10 Door Chevy. Runs good. Reliable.
843-4634 2-13
REAR DECK SPOLIERS fits 78.68 69 Camaro
Bolt忠实压低 toktk 81 reall Real
chevy 442-8215
For Sale Seller SX-626 receiver, Dual 1214
phone (800) 353-7711, e-mail cardridge, Creative
1214, Excelsior. Email excelsior@cardridge.com
for sale: Yamaha 12-string guitar, almost new,
call Nancy at 842-1690. 2-14
TEACR 1500 reel to reel desk lamp - Auto-energysupply
TEACR 1500 reel to reel desk lamp - Perfect condition, $490 now, used $280
TEACR 1500 reel to reel desk lamp - Perfect condition, $490 now, used $280
STEREO DISCOUNT$ - Marantz, Pioneer, Sono,
- 320GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514, - 365GB $ 514,
nner 727-$ 727, Mirrorless 924 MK1-1900, Audio
924, Mirrorless 924, and peripheries Audio
924, Mirrorless 924
**1980 GTO - 320 cm in. four, speeded Factory mugs, condition 4 mug $65 or best offer. Building kits* mug $65 or best offer.
For Sale—Austin Healy Sprite MK 1K. 864-6273
3-15
For sale. 15kg bike, like condition. Wing: 6mm, tail: 7mm. 20mm front wheel. Proved long shag AIL, in perfect condition. Call 843-914-6157.
Naismith Contract-$50 off-MA1E-842-4208
John or Mary. J
Must sell 7 Glenplain X .8,000 mils. buckets,
the floor Call 812-6279 Must买 2-
immediately!
72 Gibon Les Paul Deluxe with car Starburst
finish. $153, phones 45-643-00 after 5 days. 2-15
with delivery.
151 Michigan State, B-St. Bar. We have open pit
baskets. Try our plate, basket plate, bread sandwich
or brisket by the pound. Half-hickory to
9:30 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday, 842-8510 if
familiar.
Hey, there's somebody new in town you should meet! HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Services and Parts on all the new and used Honda Student machines our Specialist 1811 at 2:43- 2:13 3333
NOTICE
MUSICIANS--keep your hand in! Well paying,
weekday daytime engagements with a talented,
versatile, truly with life. The 42nd Army
Guard, Guard of Honor, Guard Civil
3-9:30 to 3-10, at 834-858. Patch 2-11
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day service. Smith-Coveri Mannals, Inc., unique antique check & watches serviced and cleaned Electricite and light industrial equipment by River City Repair B158 Vernon, RI. River City Repair B158 Vernon, RI.
HORSE, CARE- One space available for well-manned riding horse. Box sit, pasture, tack rooms. City limits, ten minutes from camp site. Phone Dion Alexander, days=844-654-2100 2-11
Dressemaking: recycle your clothes by having them beautifully altered. Stretch your clothing dollars. Lewis and Jeanne problem call 842-761-3050 or 842-4029, 3:00 to 5:00. 2-12 1348 or 842-4029, 3:00 to 5:00.
Mont Bleu Party Lounge now available for
Mont Blau Party Phone 843-265-286 for 4 p.m.
2-25
Too many student senators don't attend meetings. Too many students who will do the job and do it right are not interested in them.
GOING TO EUROPE.-Reserve your flight today!
Be sure to book early. We will be following
before departure. We the 30 days is the last
flights. And we urge you to make your
booking in advance.
LAWKY, 841-670-9780, call 2-125
LAWKY, 841-670-9780
Spring clean-up time is coming. Take those extra things to STOR-ALL. Sizes from 5x10 to 7x12, your lock, lighted, lighted on the machine, 17x10 West Kit. (K-10) Kun. Kam. 268-9638 2-13
Lawrence Gray Liberation Inc., Meetings 7:30
and 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 12,
secondary. Meetings 8:45-9:17, evenings at
8:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 13.
BIGE-OWS BAR-B-Q-Speeiling in Bar-B-
Q. Wear
I'm looking for a mature female vocalist (also
an interpreter) to perform a blend of rock,
glamour and jazz. I play two electric pianos
and a saxophone. I have an advanced piano
performance skill, as well as music preparation. Please send me your resume at job.com/employment. 818-3459 anytime after 6:30 or on Tuesday or
Monday before 7:30.
EXTREMELY IMPORTANT! Will owner of a
camera be harmed if you trip while
joining a hammer on 90#. The enemy
will strike you in the face and tear
away your camera.
Enjoy giving your sweetheart a Valentine Candle
for her. Pick the **WAXMAN CANDLE** *$7* **for**
the floral bouquet (including $4 each).
JACCHIOLEERS My total expenditure for this is
$12,050.00. My actual expenditure is $11,934.00.
A LOCATI CAGOITO (represent you in Spanish) is
$12,050.00. A LOCATI CAGOITO (represent you in Spanish) is
Hanya Yugi—Masage workshop in Yuga and
Yuga Yugi—Dream workshop in Yuga
Free diaprintation on Friday night. Expert Msg
on Yuga Yugi.
www.hanya-yugi.com
Hair like you need a place like ourst Stop in and check out the Lawrence Beauty School, which is located in styling, shaping, perming quick-service and more-give us a call at 843-2353 today! *2*
J-SCHOOLESER! Help destroy the vetch myth!
J-CHOOLESER! Help destroy the vetch myth!
PUP THE WICKER'W INOP OF THE
PUTH THE WICKER'W INOP OF THE
FOR RENT
Wall to wall carpeting. front door parking, space for gates. wall mounted bathrooms, laundry rooms, each 48 inch clear tile swimming pool with gas BBQ grill. Bathroom with tile tile floors. townhouses. 2000 W. Sikthi-843-7232-8323. townhouses. 2000 W. Sikthi-843-7232-8323.
JAYHAWKER APARTMENTS are located in
JAYHAWKER, CA. Our room
automates with utilities call 843-4993
room assistants with utilities call 843-4993
FOR RENT...A new 2 bedroom apartment with
ten bathrooms, enclosed courtyard, parking. Storage. NEARE
courtyards. WIFI. NO COMMUTATION.
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice
room, furnished, WiFi. 10% credit.
*bracket from block* University. Parking and wifiited paid.
Apt. for Rent: 1 BR, w/kitchen, bath, LR. Choose
location. Amenities Available. 1500. Kettle
available. 1600. Shower.
DRIEF - DUPLX top floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bedroom, living room, balcony.
KITATSUER, Pal WALLE, 843-7810
2-15
K
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
THE HITE in the WALL
25 & 45 past the hour
DOWNTOWN
'KU ON WHEELS"
Open until 2 A.m. - Phone Order
843 7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
KILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1735-1743 West 24th West no. leading 1 and 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished rooms, kitchen, bathroom, dishwasher, all electric kitchen, dishwasher, carpet, display, all electronics, resident manager Apt. 3, Appt. 841-622 106. Resident manager Apt. 3, Appt. 841-622 106.
TWICE AN HOUR
Another
Large furnished apartment near campus office space
180 West 46th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11203. Baital,
all bills paid, ideal for 3 of 5. Call 647-947-8700.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT are conditioned,
with an en suite bath and separate
feminine coaches to the RU and CU. No pat-
tions.
FORE RESULT. 1116 Indiana, Large catered room,
large kitchen, bathroom, dryer, living space.
Kitchen, kitchen water dishwasher, laundry
room. Residential home.
Student Senate Service
Studio安排, quiet and clean. furnished.
Resume, headshot, background or graduate student WEB
site. Send resume to Studio 1073 West 5th Street,
New York, NY 10022.
Formulated Apls for treat at 19 W, 10 h, 4 and 1
middays. For treat at 20 W, 10 h, 4 and 1
middays. Water paid. Tcp at Bell 6826-4 after 4 p.m.
2-15 h.
PERSONAL
For灯篮-Furnished. 1 bedroom apartment quarter-
size, between 40-52 feet², between 6:00-10:00 p.m.
Monday-Sunday.
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to interested schools? Interested in practically any? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for getting where you want to. Phone us online or call us at (800) 216-9345.
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $tickets for entire week can be purchased at the office. Individual night tickets sales start March 2-22
Let your Valentine cake be understood sensually with a fragrant candle from Candles Tide, 79 West 21st Street, 2-34
**Expenditures by Traffic and Security have**
**been reduced.** We have boarded or so were told. This is best transpli-
mated? So we are. Vote Ed Rofls and Kelly
Vote VD. Note the Vote 2-12
Cohlation.
Fine Custom Upholstered work done to your satisfaction. Fast, reasonable, reliable fabric selection.
EVER WANT SOMETHING WARM AND BRIGHT
7, W 14th M. Hour. 8-10:30 B.M.
6, W 12th M. Hour. 9-10:30 B.M.
You, the student, have a choice. You can choose to be a member of the college, for mankind, for gettiness, and if you in choice, to be your own counselor. Then you can feel more effective in leadership. If you in choice, you will be
J-SCHOOLERS Cut off my enrollment promotion
J-MAPLE Application for MathA Campus for Students
J-198-205 Application for MathA
Textbook shortage: Need Haliun Retainance Art History book by hariyat. Any condition, can be addressed. Call 408-769-1143.
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Alumni from major high school in
commission. Contact him by phone or in
computation to space time. Contact
info: 800-762-3915.
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Phone 843-6424
The Ramayana is hiring waitstaff for part-time
and temporary positions. Call 435-6048 for appointment.
Ask about training.
Mass. St. Dell is looking for experienced girls.
Mass. St. Dell: Call for app.—intervite: 837-795-
1016. Email: dvp@dell.com
Experienced Architecture draftsman. Full time or part-time. N22-1118) 8 a.m.-5 p.m. No longer required.
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10
Monday, February 11, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Cheating...
From Page One
cheat, they are as naive as they are," Gowen says.
And it's usually pretty easy to pick out the work of "ghost writers," he says, particularly when it is compared with work that a student has done in class.
ABOUT 4,000 STUDENTS enrol in freshman-sophomore English classes each semester. Gowen says, but probably less than a per cent of their work involves cheating.
Marston McCluggage, professor of sociology and chairman of the department, says that he heard of two or three incidents of cheating by students in his department this year, but that the cases were handled by the department up before the department's review board.
However, all three say there is no way to estimate how much cheating actually goes on.
"We catch the dumb cheaters," Gowen says, conceding that there are successful women.
article II of the Rules and Regulations of the Article Senate, adopted March 19,
1970, has a section dealing with academic misconduct.
"ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT by students," it says, "shall include giving or receiving of unauthorized aid on examinations or in the preparation of tests." Another assignment is knowing ruisrepresenting the source of any academic work."
The rules say that an instructor may "treat as unsatisfactory" any student work which is the product of academic misconduct and that, where possible, there will be means provided at departmental levels to deal with misconduct.
The rules also state that if a student is unsatisfied with the decision of the instructor, department or school on a charge from the University, she must seek review by the University Judicialty.
THE RULES establish these penalties:
—Admition and warning that certain actions represent academic misconduct and, in some cases, cause more severe disciplinary action.
Censure, a written reprimand.
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The University of Kansas Theatre
The University of Kansas Theatre presents
THE PLAYBOY OF THE
WESTERN WORLD
by
J. M. Synge
the story of someone who becomes himself
Feb.13,14,15,16,at 8:00 p.m.
Feb.17, at 2:30 p.m.
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
University Theatre — Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
- Disciplinary probation, exclusion from specified privileges or extracurricular activities; may be imposed.
- Suspension, exclusion from classes and other specified activities for a definite purpose.
- Reduction of grade, which may include awarding a failing grade.
- Expulsion, which is the termination of student status for an indefinite period.
McCluggage says it is important in dealing with a student suspected of cheating that "you don't convict him without letting him defend himself."
A student of ten has plagiarized in a paper, McCluggage says, because the student
doesn't understand when to quote and when not to.
GOWEN SAYS that one such case went to court several years ago. Noting that a charge of plagiarism or cheating is actionable as slander or libel, he says he instructs teachers to come to him first when they suspect a student of cheating.
Usually an instructor will ask the student to do the assignment over again or reduce it.
The two then try to find the source that the student has misused if plagiarism is involved, and Gowen later confronts the student with the evidence.
If it is a first offense or if it arose out of a
basic misunderstanding of, plagiarism,
Gowen says, the penalty is usually mild,
as giving an F for the paper, which
then has to be made up later.
Gowen says he notifies the Dean of Women's or the Dean of Men's office of the incident and the proposed penalties.
IT IS PART of a due process, he says, which is both equitable and fair, in which the student is notified of his rights and confidentiality is honored.
The cheater by and large is a student who's not yet become integrated in the academic community," he says, "one who
tends to view college as a continuation of high school."
Often he is the student with a moderate or light class schedule, who senses that he is in a jeopardy or who is unable to live up to the expectations of his parents and others.
McCluggage says that the atmosphere a teacher creates in the classroom has a lot to do with whether his students will cheat.
STUDENTS ARF more likely to cheat on those exams where the questions are unfair or too technical and are more likely to cheat on them than they have little or no respect, he says.
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THEIR RESPECTIVE PERSONS ARE AUTHORIZED TO SERVE ON THE COMMITTEE
ON ELECTRICITY FOR THE PRODUCTION OF A NEW VOLUME OF THE GENERAL
REPRESENTATIVES.
D
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4
BEAUTIFUL!
Forecast: Continued warm and sunny today, high in the low 60s, low in the mid 30s.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
84th Year, No. 88
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Police Investigate Increased Rapes
Tuesday, February 12, 1974
See Story Page 2
news capsules the associated press
Libya Nationalizes 3 U.S. Oil Companies
In Tripoli, Col. Meemmar Khadufy nationalized the Libyan operations of three American oil companies yesterday in response to what he called 'terrorism' against the country's oil industry.
A government deed issued by Khadifa's Revolutionary Command Council ordered total nationalization of the operations of Texaco, California.
In Washington, government officials said if Libya had seized the oil companies' holdings for a political purpose, Washington would encourage them to do so.
Most Truckers Abandon Protest Shutdown
Despite pockets of resistance from militant drivers, the majority of independent truckers yesterday abandoned their protest against assaults.
After 11 violence-scared days that left two drivers dead, scores injured and 100,000 workers temporarily without a job, truck traffic was reported at near-normal levels in most states and vital production was rolling once more to market.
Officials at several Midwest livestock markets reported receipts close to or above prestrike levels. Truck stops in a number of states began pumping
Solzhenitsyn Rejects Prosecutor Summons
Alexander Solizenit, author of "Gaila Archipelago," a harsh criticism of Stalinist labor camps, rejected yesterday in Moscow a summation to the question of what happens to people who fall into the trap.
The prosecutor's office delivered a summons to the apartment of Solzhenitsyn's wife last Friday, but she refused to accept it. The second summons was delivered yesterday and Solzhenitsyn said he refused to acknowledge the legality of the summons.
After a furious campaign of official press denunciations of Solzhentyan and his book, the prosecutor's action could be the start of an attempt to overthrow him.
Four States. D.C. Adopt Gas Ration Plan
Service stations in Washington, D.C., New Jersey, Massachusetts, New York and Washington started rationing gasoline Oregon-style yesterday. Pennsylvania and Maryland will adopt a similar plan later this week, sources said.
The plan restricts gasoline sales on even-numbered days to motorists whose license plates end in even-numbered digits, and vice versa. Generally, motorists whose plate bears letters instead of digits can get gasoline on old days and out-of-state motorists are exempted.
30 Arrested in Drug Raid
Bv BOB MARCOTTE
and CHUCK POTTER Kansas Staff Reporters
Twenty-nine adults and one juvenile were arrested in Lawrence about 4 a.m. today as a result of a drug raid by Atty. General Vern Miller and about 125 law enforcement off-
Twenty-one of the adults were University of Kansas students, according to Rex J. Bentley, president.
The arrests were made at Oliver, McCollum and EWlsworth hills, Jayhawker Towers and "pretty much all over the county" Berkwitt, Douglass County attorney
Lathe Howey, 20, of 25 N. Michigan St., aiding sale of marijuana; Francis Biggers, 23, of 147 Kentucky St., sale of methamphetamines; Kent Scott, 23, of 180 Engle Road, delivery of marijuana; James Baker, 20, of 1603 W. 15th St., conspiracy to sell amphietamines and sale of THC; Kathryn Garrison, 20, of 1800 Engle Road, sale of marijuana; Steven Ludwig, 19, of room 518 Ellsworth Hall, sale of marijuana; James C. Lang, 19, of Florida St., sale of marijuana; Roger Bellows, 18, of room 450 Oliver Hall, sale of marijuana; Mitchell Long, 18, of room 813 Oliver Hall, sale of marijuana; Mark L. Rickman, 21, of 1800 Engel, sale of marijuana and aid and abet sale of marijuana.
Charges ranged from delivery of marijuana to sale of opioi. Berkwitz said that "quite a lot of marjuana" had been purchased at the pounds at one location. Amphetamines, LSD and a powder that could be either cocaine or heroin were also seized, he said.
Mark Avery, 18, of 219 Bristol Place, sale of marijana and opium; Steven Braun, 24, of 1140 E. 133d ST., sale of cocaine and opium; Richard Marshall, 18, of 1713 E. 133d ST., sale of marijana; Lawrence Mason, 21, of 901 E. 23rd ST., sale of marijana; Sam McClatche, 18, of Jayhawker Towers, sale of amphietamines; Garold Masoner, 19, of Jayhawker Towers, sale of cocaine and amphietamines; James Dougherty, 18, of Jayhawker Towers, sale of amphietamines, THC Marijana and adding sale of marijana.
Jane Worley, 21, of 1149 Oregon St., sale of ambiphenates, THC and marjuanja; Palma Hungerford, 20, of 1149 Oregon St., sale of ambiphenates; Malinowski, 19, of 1153 Naisim Drive, sale
property and delivery of marijuana; Davic Sidor, 18, of 251 W. 25th St., delivery of cocaine and possession of marijuana; Allen Waters, 21, of 1230 Tennessee St., No. 4, counts sale of marijuana and one count sales of marijuana; Martin Dixon, 22, of 1313 Valley Lane, two counts sale of marijuana.
Marty Dixon, 22, of 1313 Valley Lane, two counts sale of marjana; J. L Vickers, 21, of 610 Tennessee St., possession of marjana; J. P. Koch, possession of marjana; Charles Shriver, 18, of 1603 W. 15th St. No, 105B, aiding in the sale of marjana; Max Vickers, 19, of 1603 W. 15th St. No, 105B, aiding in the sale of marjana; and Judy Schletcher, 19, of 1815 Naismith, sale of marjana.
Charges against one person were dismissed this morning at the request of Berkwitz. Fourteen others had been released on bond by 9 a.m. this morning.
There are a few warrants yet to be served in connection with the raid.
"I'll imagine we'll go out and have another go at it today." Berkowitz said.
Arraignment of those already arrested was to continue today in the county court. Officers conducted the raid simultaneously in about 25 groups. Most of the officers were from the Lawrence Police Department, while the attorney's office and KU Security and Parking. Twelve KBI agents also participated in the raid.
See RAID Back Page
Funding Battle Continues
By BETH RETONDE Kansan Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-Competitive faculty salaries are essential if talented instructors and superior classroom teaching are to be maintained, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee yesterday.
The committee is reviewing budget requests for the six state supported universities and colleges. Several requests made by the Kansas Board of Regents were made by Mr. Docking's proposed budget, which he presented to the legislature in January.
per cent increase in faculty salaries for the University of Kansas and Wichita State University and an 11 per cent increase for Kansas State University, Emporia State College, Fort Hays State College and Kansas State College at Pittsburg.
Docking has recommended an 8.5 per cent increase in salaries.
IN THE OPENING STATEMENT to the 23-man committee, Carl L. Courtier, chairman of the Board of Regents, said the board fully supported the salary increase because the faculties at the state schools received no salary increase in 1972, even though other state employees were given a raise that year, and because some faculty
members were interested in organizing for the purpose of bargaining for better
Although faculty organization isn't necessarily wrong, he said, the board supports the alternative of giving adequate time to students who have to organize into barrining units.
The other item supported by the regents is a requested 10 per cent increase in other programs. The other request requests to 7.4 per cent for educational programs, 8 per cent for the physical plant, 6 per cent for the Kansas Geological Survey, 6 per cent for research and 6 per cent for education.
Oil Importers Begin Talks
WASHINGTON (AP)—A conference of 13 energy-consuming nations began cautiously yesterday, seeking a new way to agree on "rules of conduct" for buying foreign oil without appearing to threaten oil-exporting countries.
Opening the two-day conference, U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said bilateral oil agreements by individual countries are more problems and might make them far worse.
"We believe that it is essential that these
Six of Ling's Houses Condemned
SUBSTANTIARY BUILDING
DO NOT ACCEPT
It is a responsibility to secure your building and ensure its security.
Mary Lynn Lee 49
Kanaan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
This Property Condemned
Condemnation notices were posted on six houses yesterday by the city minimum house insurance company.
BY JILL WILLIIS AND SUZI SMITH
Karen Stiff, Narazova
Ed Covington, housing inspector, said that he has placed noticed on the condemned building.
Covington said he looked for "dangerous, unhealthy situations" when he inspected
Ling had been given until the end of last November to repair conditions that were in violation of the city's housing code. Ling would comment on the condemnations last night.
六 apartment houses near the University of Kansas campus were condemned yesterday by the city minimum housing inspector. All six houses are owned by Daniel Ling, professor of physics and astronomy.
The condemned houses are at 1128, 1131,
1228, and 1301 Ohio St., 1245 Louisiana St.
and 1321 Tennessee St. Many of the apart-
ments in these buildings are rented by
University students.
"It was kind of shocking to come home and find out I wasn't supposed to live here anymore," said Mark Creamer of 1321 Tennessee St.
controversy between the owner of the buildings and the city.
Tenants living in the six houses said they weren't warned that their houses were going to collapse.
Most of the problems stem from electrical violations, he said.
"We're certainly not prepared to move out," said Bow Dibson, Ferguson, Mo. "Just keep it on."
None of the tenants said they knew of anyone making complaints about their housing conditions and all called Ling a "good landlord."
Creamer said he would probably move out soon but she said the city wouldn't be able to do that.
Bowman said the apartment above hers had a problem with cockroaches in the kitchen. Sometimes, she said, they cover the floor at night.
There's no point in fixing the broken pipes now, he said, because the main furnace is broken and the basement can't be kept there to keep the pipes from freezing again.
Creamer said his apartment had had no water at all because the pipes had burst. He said he took showers at a friend's house and brought in drinking and plumbing water.
He said, however, that there were heaters in all the rooms so the temperature in the house was comfortable despite the broken furnace.
Creamer he thought the condemnations were "a political thing." He said he thought the city was after Ling Hsu and his reputation for owning "trashed-ut places."
Covington said that according to the city ordinance the tenants would have to vacate their properties.
"This is, of course, ridiculous," he said. He said, however, that it would defeat the purpose of the housing ordinances if tenants were allowed to occupy the houses for an infrequent period of time.
"Sure it's a hassle," he said, "an expensive hassle."
Covington said he was helping the tenants in a round-about way.
Linda Triplet, director of the Consumer Protection Association (CPA) said yesterday that the CPA had referred only five complaints from tenants about substandard housing to Covington's office last semester.
"When a cop gives you a ticket he's doing it because he wants to save your life, but when you get the ticket you think he's an s.o. b." he said.
arrangements follow agreed rules of conduct." Kissinger said.
The tenants are better off moving out of these houses, 'he said.
Many tenants don't complain, she said,
because they don't mind or because they
aren't.
THE EUROPEAN NATIONS at the conference have been pressing for an early meeting of both consuming nations and oil-roducing nations.
Those attending the sessions include foreign ministers, finance chiefs and energy experts from the United States, Japan, Canada and Norway and nine members of the European Common Market: France, West Germany, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Italy, Denmark, Ireland, Luxembourg and Belgium.
THE CONFERENCE participants have repeatedly emphasized that they had no intention of making this meeting into a diplomatic event. The United Nations producing nations that precipitated the world crisis by cutting off deliveries to some countries last October and by sharply influencing them.
Walter Schoel, West Germany's foreign minister and president of the Council of European Communities, urged a conference of all interested nations—including all developing countries—by April 1, one month earlier than proposed by Kissinger.
Arab oil shipments have since been resumed to most European countries but
Kissinger said the United States would seek no help at this conference in response.
DYKES TOLD THE COMMITTEE that increased funding of operating expenses was necessary to help the University keep inflated costs for materials and supplies.
EUROPE RELIES on imports for about 60 per cent of its energy.
Kissinger warned that failure to resolve the energy problem by international cooperation "would threaten the world with a vicious cycle of competition, autarchy, rivalry and depression such as led to the collapse of world order in the '30s."
"The most immediate and critical problem concerns price," Kissinger said.
"The 10 per cent increase the regents have requested will help us hold our own and perhaps make some small improvement," he said. "The inflationary spiral has been particularly acute in books and publications for our libraries, in support for many of our medical programs, and in a number of the scientific fields."
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus, also appeared before the committee to emphasize specific needs if were needed at the Lawrence campus.
THESE ITEMS INCLUDED women's intercollegiate athletics, Supportive Educational Services, laboratory equipment, North Hall and a new computation center.
The University had requested $88,575 to fund women's intercollegiate athletics. Docking had deleted from his budget the entire amount the regents had requested.
Shankel said the moral and ethical commitment to provide the same opportunities to women as to men, regulations requiring equitable support for both men's and women's programs and women's incomes justified the funding of the program.
Shankel said federal funds could be lost if equitable facilities weren't provided by the state. He also said the number of women's intercollegiate athletic events had increased from 185 in 2006 to 188, a number of men's events has increased to 185 from 160 during the same time period.
"I don't like the federal threat any better than any of you, but it is there and I believe that unless we make provisions for com-
municipalities to deal with this we could be heading for trouble," he said.
"The BOARD WAS CONVINCED," Courter said, "after listening to the administrators, that this is an area where we must make sure we respond for those who want to participate.
charon Drysdale, assistant professor of
See BUDGET Back Page
Rv RUNNY MILLER
Potato Provides Food for Thought
By BUNNY MILLER
Kansas Staff Reporter
If you've been wondering lately why you haven't been thinking too clearly and if you've noticed an increased sex urge, you may need too much meat and not enough potatoes.
If what some scientists are saying is true, meat lovers may be sexual athletes but they aren't as bright as potato, bread and dessert freaks.
Recent studies say that certain foods may cause insomnia and exaggerated sexual activity. A different food group, they say, may produce more desirable effects, such as increased brain alertness, increased attention, and reduced appetite and increased motivation.
Scientists base this theory on animal studies showing that different types of foodstuffs can alter the amount of a brain cell, which is involved in the activity of brain nerve cells.
Carbohydrates, found in sugars and
Every student in a residence hall knows that spaghetti shows up on the menu a lot more often than steak. For years the so-called starchiness of dorm food has been a point of complaint. But now these students can spoon in all the potatoes and bread they desire, and smile with the knowledge that they are feeding their brains.
If the studies are valid, University of Kansas residence hall residents can rest easy. Their daily fare contains plenty of "brain food."
starchy foods like spaghetti, increase the available serotonin, scientists say. But lots of protein foods, like steak or milk, can reduce it.
Lenore Ekdahl, food service director, said the residence hall menu "follow the four basic food groups all the way through." Each meal, she said, contains three ounces of protein, at least three vegetables and a fresh fruit.
She said the Academy of Science recently
A week's residence hall menu showed that students could choose from about 48 dishes containing mainly carbohydrates or sugars and about 36 dishes containing pure protein or partly protein foods. This doesn't include pasta in the food, which is available at every meal.
recommended a reduction from 70 grams of protein a day to 56 grams. This reduced protein requirement has no connection with the "brain food" reports, she said.
A typical lunch or dinner includes two meat dishes, a potato dish, bread or rolls, a yellow and a green vegetable, tossed salad and a pickle salad, two or three desserts and a soup.
Could residence hall cafeterias cut out protein foods entirely? Could droom residents subsist on a diet made entirely of brain food, breads, vegetables, fruits and desserts? Ekdahl answers with a resounding "no."
"We have to have a balanced diet," she said. "That's the only way."
2
Tuesday, February 12, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Rape Victims Urged to Call Police; KU Offers Medical Aide, Counseling
By NANCY SMITH
BY MARIE CARTMEN
Kansas Staff Reporter
Lawrence and campus police said yesterday that they had no strong leads in their attempts to solve 21 rapes reported during the past 18 months.
Eleven of the 21 rapes occurred on the University campus, and city and campus authorities are cooperating in an attempt to solve them.
But LT. Kenneth Harmon, Lawrence police detective, said the police had no idea how many rapes went unreported during the past year.
THE MOST RECENTLY REPORTED attack occurred at about 4:30 p.m., Feb. 3, near Stephenship Scholarship Hall, according to Detective Sgt. Cletus Watts of the campus police. The victim, a KU student, reported that she was grabbed by a white male and assaulted behind the KU News Bureau building at 1400 Louisiana St.
Her assaultman was described by police as 5 feet 4 inches to 6 feet 1 foot, between 170 and 220 yards. A woman with a prosthetic leg was
years-old with longish brown hair cut just below the ears.
He appeared friendly when he first approached the woman, police said.
KU rape victims can go to Walkins hospital for medical aid if they report the
DR. MARTIN WOLLMANM, director of health services, said rape victims' medical histories were taken and victims were given general examinations to determine injuries. The exams are done by a physician with patient records and are run for venereal disease, he said.
Rape sometimes triggers severe emotional problems. Psychological counseling is available from professionals at the mental health clinic, Wollmann said.
Wollmann said very few rape victims had been treated at Watkins since his arrival in London.
A rape counseling service is also available to KU coeds 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Casey Elke, assistant to the dean of women, said that by calling the KU
Information center rape victims could immediately get in touch with trained,
DESIGNED PRIMARILY to help women who have just been assaulted, the two-year counseling service provides comfort and is a liaison between the victim and the campus's policewoman, Shirley Pearson, is only available, Elke said.
Counselors try to get the victim to call the police if she hasn't already done so, Elke said. Getting the pertinent information quickly is a valuable aid to quick apprehension of rapists, police detectives said.
Counselors, who either take the victim to Watkins Hospital or meet her there, encouraged the woman to have a vaginal smear taken so a motile (living) sperm count can be done. Eike said. The sperm culture has been tested for penetration, and is documented proof of penetration. Such evidence can be used in court if the victim decides to prosecute.
★ ★ ★
Rape Defenses Taught to Women
Eyes, throat and groin are the most vulnerable parts of a would-be rapist's body, according to Terry Rees, Kansas City, Kan. third year law student and intern at Sparrow Law Group in Kansas City.
If a woman is in a position to safely use force, she said, gouging the eyes, punching or elbowing the throat or kicking the groin could temporarily incarcerate her.
About 30 women are enrolled in his class, where they are taught to base judgments on the size of the attacker, the location of the attack and self-defense.
Campus police suggest that women walk in couples or larger groups and stay away from dark areas when alone.
Bullion Markets See Jump; France Expects Revaluation
WE ARE ON CAMPUS TODAY!
LONDON (AP)—The price of free gold jumped $3 an ounce Monday and in Paris it soared above $150 an ounce for the second time in two years, amid reports that France may soon unseal its gold.
Seniors and grads in Business, Education, Liberal Arts and Engineering are needed now for summer and fall volunteer positions in Peace Corps.
See us at: Union, Engineering Placement, Business Placement, Liberal Placement.
The price jump in bullion markets means that gold has surged up $28.50 an ounce since Jan 1. It rose $2.50 an ounce in London from Friday's level to close at $146. In Zurich, the price was up $3, to the same closing level as London.
The dollar caused slight worries in Europe, the European exchanges except Paris, where it is so low.
We will be there thru Thursday.
The jump was generally attributed to unconfirmed reports from South Africa that France and perhaps Italy and West Germany may soon increase the value of the currencies there, so the their currencies from the present perpulsed up $42.22 an ounce to somewhere around $100
But in the smaller French market it rose from $19.22 an ounce to $11.11, crossing the once unthinkable $10 value. On Jan. 25 it reached $15.21 an ounce.
divided into a free market for the buying and selling of the metal for jewelry, industry and hoarders and an official sector reserved for state banks.
Since March, 1968, gold trading has been
- PARTS OF ACTION-
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
EVERY DAY!
Bowl
Bowl 3 games for $1.00 Monday-Thursday 12-6 Friday ... 12-12
VOTE
In The
Student Body Elections February 13th and 14th Wednesday Polling Places
ON THE HILL
RESIDENCE HALLS
(Feb.13)
(8 a.m.-4 p.m.)
Strong
Union
Summerfield
FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES
(6 p.m.-9 p.m.)
FRATERNITIES
RESIDENCE TIME
(5 p.m.-8 p.m.)
Oliver
GSP
McCollum
Lewis
Delta Upsilon
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Thurs. Polling Places (Feb.14)
Gamma Phi Beta
Alpha Gamma Delta
(8 a.m.-5 p.m.)
On The Hill
Strong Union Summerfield
Get Out And Vote!!!!
Nixon Subpoena Held Up in Mail
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A state judge said yesterday he was "speecheel" when he learned that a subpoena he issued Feb. 4 for President Nixon to appear in his court hadn't yet found its way through the mail to Washington.
Superior Court Judge Ginger Ringer, who issued the unprecedented subpoena of a president, had his clerk contact the local post office, and a tracer was placed on the envelope which was sent Feb. 4 by registered mail.
In Washington, the White House said it hadn't yet received the subpoena, which
Nixon's attorneys have said he wouldn't honor.
The subpoena was issued at the request of former presidential aide John Ehrlichman, and commands the President to appear at a Feb. 25 pretrial hearing for Ehrlichman, G. Gordon Liddy and David Young.
The three are charged with burglary and conspiracy in the 1971 break-in at the office of Daniel Elsberg's psychiatrist, want Nixon to testify to the formation of the secret White House investigations unit which became known as the plumbers.
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$2.00 per person Brought to you by The Music People, Ltd.
Cafe and Sea
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didn't
rest of
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for
David
and
office
They
on of
unit
Tuesday, February 12. 1974
University Daily Kansan
3
Cultures Dictate Funeral Customs; Burial Still Most Popular in U. S.
By LINDA A. HALES
Kansan Staff Reporters
We're all going to die some day; that's sure. Most of us will go underground, a few will go up in smoke, and an even smaller number will be left to the birds.
Anthropologists say culture ranges from the ancient Chinese to the Hottentots and Greeks traditionally bury their dead, but their funeral ceremonies vary greatly.
"We know that roughly 500,000 years ago they already sprinkled some red ocher on bodies so they would still have color," Felix Moos, professor of anthropology savs.
But, the Parsis continue the ancient Zorastian custom of throwing bodies in stone Towers of Silence where the flesh is buried in cultures. Bones are then placed in ashes.
In India, the Hindu's custom is to cremate the dead on funeral pyres, although the ancient custom of the widow throwing her husband's burning pyre has been outlawed.
By comparison, burial, or in some cases, cremation, in the United States is tame. Funeral services, usually arranged by a funeral director, are simple compared with the formal parades and mourning customs of other cultures.
But this is not to say they are all alike.
Nor is it likely that your funeral will be like
this.
"People are looking for what serves their individual needs," says Larry McElwain, funeral director and embalmer at Warren Mortuary.
But changes have occurred in the funeral business as they they in the second business, the McKenna wish.
"About 90 per cent of all funeral services used to take place in the church," he says.
Services themselves, are becoming more secularized, he says, although many people still prefer traditional verses like the 23rd Psalm to contemporary poetry.
Choice is not limited to verse, however. Oscar Rumsey of the Rumsey Funeral Home says people can choose from a variety of coffins including cloth-covered wood (the least expensive), stainless steel, mahogany, oak, copper and bronze.
by Mayo
Rumsey says there is a difference in the way each kind of coffin looks and in how long each will last. There is also a difference in cost.
"I don't think eople spend more than they want to," McElwain says.
He says relatives usually make decisions about the funeral because most people don't plan ahead. Relatives often try to gear the deceased up with the standard of living of the deceased, he says.
McEiwain complains that funeral homes are of ten portrayed in a bad light because of their "pathetic" treatment.
"We're trying desperately to find ways of holding the line," he says.
released in the last six months show the cost of living has risen faster and higher than the
The cost of a funeral, according to Rumsey, can range anywhere from about $500 to $3,000. Cremation, he says, isn't substantially cheaper.
EAGLE
SUA
Only about two per cent of Warren Mortuary's business is cremation, McClain says, but the figure would be higher on the east or west coast. Because of a land shortage on both coasts, cremation becomes more attractive, he says.
KU SKI CLUB MEETING
★Color Movie: Attack
★Ski Repair Clinic
Tonight, Tues., Feb. 12
7:30 p.m., Pine Room
Kansas Union
McElwain expects burials to retain their popularity in Lawrence.
Everyone Welcome!
C
for Student Body Vice-President
Todd Hunter
UNICAMPUS COALITION
We Stand for:
·Abolishing the foreign language requirement
·Revamping the academic advising program
·Reduction in parking permit prices
·Reduction of parking ticket fines
John Beisner
for Student Body President
Fools Afloat
Vote Feb. 13 & 14 (paid for by Unicampus Coalition)
C'MON, BLARNEY! SEE IF YOU CAN HIT ME!
C'MON! I DARE YA!
PFF!
THE CHOCOLATE SARDINES WITH GARLIC DOES IT EVERY TIME.
MAYO
C'MON, BLARNEY! SEE
IF YOU CAN HIT ME!
C'MON! I DARE YA!
PFF!
THE CHOCOLATE
SARDINES WITH
GARLIC DOES IT
EVERY
TIME.
MAYO
ATTENTION SENIORS Class of 1974
A factory representative will be in the Kansas Union Bookstore all day
Thurs. and Fri., Feb. 14 and 15
to assist you in placing your orders for Graduation Announcements.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
NATIONAL LAMPBOOT LEMMINGS
NATIONAL LAMPWORK
LEMMINGS
a concert . . .
to be presented in
HOCH AUD.
8:00 p.m.
FEBRUARY 23, 1974
TICKETS GO ON SALE
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13
Tickets Will Be
$250 & $350
1
Tuesday, February 12, 1974
University Dallv Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Long Way to Go, Baby
Helmer: "Before everything else you're a wife and a mother."
Nora: "I don't believe that any longer, I believe that before we become human being, just as you are—or human rate I shall try to become one."
nora's challenge, from Henrik Ibsen 'A Doll's House,' was made nearly a century ago. Since then, women have earned the right to vote and have gained greater access to higher education and the job market. The advent of women's liberation has brought about an increased consciousness among women of their abilities to extend themselves beyond the traditional role of homemaker-wife-mother.
But in many areas of society,
Not only the challenge has gone un-
pitted
The average American woman today is healthier than she has ever been, better educated, more affluent, better dressed and more comfortable than her sisters of the past. She makes up more than a third of the national work force, although according to a Department of Labor survey, generally fewer skilled job than a man does. In many jobs she still doesn't receive equal pay for equal work. In fact, her median earnings have actually declined relative to men.
Still, she has progressed. Government agencies are making research posts. So are colleges or universities, industrial firms and
even engineering societies, long considered to be male strongholds.
Ford Motor Company now combs computerized lists of women employees for candidates to fill every new job opening. Women law school students, who compose about 10 per cent of their classes at 400 and 900 per cent at Boston University, are being hired by establishment oriented law firms on Wall Street and in San Francisco.
The effectiveness of the women's liberation movement, however, can't be measured by statistics alone. American men and women are often teach other in new ways—and they don't always like what they see.
A decade ago women accounted for 6 per cent of the nation's 260,000 doctors; today they make up 7.6 per cent of 345,000. In the future women will rise as entering the number of women increasing.
The basic goals of women's libera-
ration are favored by nearly everyone—the goals of equal pay for equal work, equal job opportun-ity and equal treatment by the employer. This practice on a consistent basis has taken and will take much time and effort.
As it says in the ad picturing a woman holding a cigarette, "You've come a long way, baby." There is no way to go that there is still a long way to go.
—Linda Doherty
Reverse Liberation
One recent development in the women's liberation movement is the attack on elementary and high school textbooks. According to the liberationists many textbooks are subtly "sexist."
It seems to me that the only rational solution is to give them what they want. If women demand equal pay for equal work, then they should have it. In fact, they ought to be paid more than men.
Women are portrayed by these textbooks as weak and helpless, needing male protection. Men are supposedly portrayed as having a wider range of career possibilities. Various women's organizations have initiated court actions and lobbying programs to get these books changed or to remove them from classroom use.
Now, I am not in favor of brainwashing our children with any kind of propaganda, sexist or otherwise, but this attack on school textbooks shows how far the women's movement has diverged from its first concern—better jobs and better pay for women. The liberationists are now engaging in sexist witch-hunts and are looking for sexists under every bed. Apparently they will not be satisfied until they have turned society upside down.
Giving women more than equal pay would have two direct benefits. First, it would stop all the fuss. I assume women are as economically motivated as men. Their economic demands satisfied, women would be less willing to pursue their more exotic demands such as reforming the language and changing textbooks.
Furthermore, men would gain the tactical advantage. If women received better pay than men, men would become the oppressed minority. Being the oppressed minority, which we men always have been, all of the moral arguments would be on our side. Men could start agitating for reform. After all these years of
being called sexist, male chauvinist pigs, men would finally be able to strike back. We could show the women that men can demonstrate, lobby and sue just as well as anyone can.
It's time that men dispel the myth of female superiority in managing household affairs. Take cooking, for example. Women seem to think that men are incapable of functioning in a kitchen. But why are all of the world's truly great chefs men? The answer is that men are better cooks. Deep down, women have always known this to be true, but they could not bear to admit it.
Another advantage that would be reaped from having men stay home is the reformation of daytime television. Men will force the networks to get rid of those horrible movies that women watch those things in the first place is absolute proof of female inferiority.
In fact, I think this reformation of daytime television has some brilliant possibilities. Instead of playing pro football games on the field, we can play during the middle of the week in place of the soap operas.
This could solve a lot of family problems. Husbands would no longer be glued to the tube on weekends, and wives would no longer be football waist for half hour during the off season, the networks could show Razquel Welch or better yet, Linda Lovelace movies.
The more I think about it, the more I am convinced this is a reasonable solution to the women's liberation problem. The women get the satisfaction of having rewarding careers, and the men get to spend the rewards. The women get to seek their own identities, and the men get to sleep late. The women get the ulcers, and the men get the boredom. All in all, it seems like a fair exchange.
John Bender
The fourteenth amendment allows a woman the right to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy, according to the decision in Dee v. Baton and Roe v. Wade.
Should Abortion Remain Legal?
Since then the states have abandoned most restrictions on abortions. The decision, however, only intensified the controversy over legal abortion and inspired bitter opposition from many individuals and religious groups.
A survey of New Jersey hospitals by the Health Planning Council in October 1973 indicated that about 50 per cent of the 109 hospitals were uninsured, and Supreme Court rulings. Many of the hospitals, it was reported, have been subjected to pressure from both pro- and antiabortion groups including protest marches, threats of economic sanctions and court decisions.
Senator James Buckley, C-N.Y., proposed a 'right to life' amendment (S.J. Res. 119) that would define a fetus as a person from the moment of conception.
Several bills have been proposed to amend the constitution so that abortions would be illegal. The Senate has already passed a law that would deploy use of medicinal funds for abortions.
A similar bill (H.J. Res. 261) was presented in the House by Rep. Lawrence Hogan, R-Md. Both the Buckley and Hogan bills would amend the constitution so that abortions would be illegal. No stipulation is given on whether the preservation of the life of the mother
According to the Supreme Court's 7-2 arizonation ruling, which is the basis for a federal lawsuit against Texas.
During the first three months of pregnancy the state has no voice in an abortion decision. During the second three months of pregnancy, the state can regulate the abortion procedure so that maternal health may be ensured it may not limit the grounds for abortions.
defined as persons who have no constitutional rights. But the right of abortion is
During the last three months of pregnancy the state may regulate or forbid abortion except when necessary to preserve the health of the mother.
The anti-abortion movement is the latest crusade to try to subvert attempts to control the environment and maintain freedom of choice.
YES
The question remains: Should abortion be legal?
It is a prime example of how one group makes its own moral judgments and tries to impose them on the rest of society through the legal process.
The Supreme Court's decision protecting the right to abortion during the first six months of pregnancy is legally sound and morally wise. It gives individuals the freedom to make their own choices acca
The needs for maintaining legal abortion are widespread and urgent;
—Legal abortions have eliminated the
SPECIAL FOCUS:
WOMEN'S
RIGHTS
need for dangerous illegal abortions.
Disregipectible doctors or amateurs no longer have the opportunity to get rich by performing abortions under hazardous and sometimes deadly conditions. In such a case, the mother and the fetus are threatened.
- Legal abortions often protect are we or good health of the mother. If the Buckley and Hogan amendments were adopted, all abortions irrigardess of maternal health would be restricted. In this case the anti-abortion amendments should not be dubbed as "right to life" bills. They simply substitute the lives of the already living for the lives have the capacity to live. Under some circumstances a woman live without an abortion. The "right to life" amendments are revealed to be more properly titled the "doomed to die" bills
- Legal abortions diminish the flood of unwanted and, potentially, unwieldy children
- Racism is a barrier to childbirth
- —Legal abortions give unmarried women and couples the freedom to plan their life so that they may benefit fully from it and gain the right to have children. —The children who would eventually be born.
- Legal abortions provide an alternative to help diminish financial pressures on couples that cannot afford to raise children properly.
It should be noted that the need for abortions is not restricted to the freedom of the mother. Abortions are one tool which can be used in an emergency to provide a better environment for all people.
But some have argued that the fetus must be considered a person with its own set of rights. The Supreme Court decision rightfully permits the prohibition of abortions when pregnancy when the fetus is developed and is likely to be able to live outside the mother.
Before that time the fetus is only a mass of cells with the capacity for life but not a claim to it. It is absurd to try to defend the elimination of cells because the elimination of cells must be considered murder then restrictions should also be enforced on executioners of other living forms such as those who trump on grass or water in order to logic the Save the Raisin Foundation.
Further, abortion is no more an unnatural human control over environment than abstinence from sexual intercourse or the use of birth control devices. Abortion is simply the last control available after the other controls have failed.
Certainly those individuals who think that abortions are immoral or bad policy have the freedom to deny themselves the use of this alternative. And they have the right to try to discourage others from having abortions, for instance by limiting their groups. But they must not be given the power of the legal process to dictate their choices to the rest of the society.
Bill Gibson
It is difficult to define abortion as criminal because it seems necessary and convenient. It is more tempting to define it as non-criminal. There is the problem of over-population. And then, at times, there is the problem of the unwanted child who, if he lived, would be an economic and spiritual burden to his mother.
What is, unfortunately, the strongest argument is that no one knows very much about the little creature in the womb. From his point of view, it is obviously impossible to declare abortion criminal or non-criminal.
Probably it will be quite some time before medicine can demonstrate whether or not the unborn have human feelings or "soul." Meanwhile, it might be a good idea to give the unborn the benefit of the doubt. Where life is still a mystery, it is perhaps a crime against human nature to develop the habit of destroying it.
IF THERE ARE indications that abortion may, after all, be a crime, then it might be an excellent approach to perform fewer abortions and to use pills and condoms more often. At present, man is really forced to go against his sympathetic impulses. He is also asked what it is unjust, self-rightous, and cowardly to condemn what one does not know.
The pill should be overheated so that it does not make women obese, neurotic, or create dangerous clots in their blood vessels. There should be a much better pill for men. For the good of society, benign impulses should be allowed to flourish.
It is impossible to demonstrate that abortion is a crime. The operation has been widely legalized. It is the abortionist who causes it, not the woman relatively free of feelings of guilt. Abortion has been cast in the innocuous role of a mere service, which makes it seem no more dramatic than a wound on one's shoulder or otherwise—enlightened people are for it.
Under the present circumstances, the destruction of the unborn is quite easy for many people to carry out in terms of their own conscience or in conscience-easing reasons why this is so.
Women's Liberation:
Unfortunately, women who are carrying an unwanted child should ponder a number of things. Can it be demonstrated that the woman we see in this section what circumstances does one have the right to go ahead? Does the situation in which abortion finds itself in American culture help paint a guilt-free picture of what it may be? Is abortion good karma for man?
Jerome Lloyd
By CHRISTOPHER WEBER
Movement Reflects Social Change
One of the things I find exasperating about Women's Lib is that too many take it for The Movement, instead of just the tiltteal white foam of the wave that is coming from the ocean. Foaming crest can be exciting and useful, but the wave was there a long time before it.
Women's Lab is not the Movement. It is a movement, just another factor in the mounting social change that is already so much a part of our world that some of its startling offshoots get buried in the back pages of the newspapers.
What I call The Movement is that which for more than 50 years has been carrying women—though not without their own efforts into the brotherhood of men. What is now known as "Women's Lab" is just the most visible aspect of it.
The Movement is more my mother's than women's liberationists. She has worked almost as far back as I can remember, always as a telephone operator, not for fulfillment, nor for economic survival, but to advance.
How else would she make it in one generation from daughter of immigrant parents to mother of college graduates? And get a house and car besides?
THERE WERE A LOT of working mothers like her where I grew up on the southwest side of Chicago, sales clerks and secretaries and what not. How relatively remote was Betty Friedan's "The Feminine Mystique" came out while I was in college.
Back in 1960 only about one in three mothers worked and, apparently, they did
Griff and the Unicorn
SIMON! AN APPLE FELL ON YOUR HEAD! YOU'VE DISCOVERED GRAVITY!
GRAVITY IS ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL FORCES IN NATURE! DO YOU REALIZE WHAT THIS MEANS ?!
IT MEANS I'M GOING TO PUT THIS GRAVITY STUFF ON THE MARKET AND CLEAN UP!! CHING!
SIMON! AN APPLE FELL ON YOUR HEAD! YOU'VE DISCOVERED GRAVITY!
SKRUFF
by Sokoloff
GRAVITY IS ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL FORCES IN NATURE! DO YOU REALIZE WHAT THIS MEANS?!
IT MEANS I'M GOING TO PUT THIS GRAVITY STUFF ON THE MARKET AND CLEAN UP!!
CHING!
not live in suburbs that Friedan mined during the '80s for much of her material. Today, more than half of our nation's mothers work before their children are 18, and most of the mothers with children under six, and the suburbs are not of an exception.
The movement is just another trend in our nonstatic society, a society seeming to change so swiftly that professors such as Alvin Toffler write books with titles like **Future Shock**. The trend may not be as influential as Toffler thinks, but it probably has gone too far to be reversed or significantly shifted far beyond a horrid wrenching of our society.
The causes are a group of push-pull factors that interact with each other to produce, among other things, "Women's Lab." The major ones include:
"Sister work weeks: In the days when men worked 10-hour days, six days a week, they hardly had time or energy to do much more at home than eat, relax a bit and sleep away; they are much more available women whose household tasks.
"ALIENATION"? For a variety of reasons, but especially because brute strength is now a minor factor in survival for most people, a man's role is less sharply defined than ever; since he is less sure of his place, a man can be more open to mutually accommodating changes in his role and that of any woman he marries.
Linked to that is the rapidly weakening influence of society in determining the role of an individual man or holding him to it; the ability to take care of himself today may be 1,000 miles away, as mine are, and there is little they can say or do about how their offspring live. That is a long way from the close-knit, slow-changing villages of most of our not-so-distant ancestors.
A third relation factor peculiar to the U.S. is the cultural churning we are subject to; we are the only country where people of different cultures come together, usually in great numbers, and have to get along as best they can. That kind of constant shaking up of culture through accommodation and re-education has made loose traditional male and female roles.
MORE EDUCATION: Increasing numbers of men and women are going to college or through other post-high school education. Expose enough of any group to understand the differences in some changes in attitude. My mother was marched out of high school by her parents
because "it was a lot of foolishness." She never left the south side of Chicago and married in her late 20s. My sister spent her junior year of college in Spain, lives and works in Toledo, Ohio, and at the prime child-bearing age of 27 remains single.
Smaller families: Or, as it used to be called, the post-pillage a matter of freedom of choice now that a wide range of contraceptives are available and there is all too obviously no economic interest in having a child. We should not with no in-laws about to order your life.
ECONOMIC NECESSITY EXPECTATIONS: Once it was enough to have food, shelter, clothing and the seventh day off to thank God you had a job. Then you had to thank God you had a part of our economic heritage—radios, cars, television sets, washers, dryers, air conditioners. It is no surprise in hindsight that the number of working wives went up, the number of children went down and the number of adults edit more than doubled, from 1960 to 1970.
The net result of this is the freeing of women from their traditional role through factors that push them out, such as real or perceived economic need; factors that pull them out, such as more education, and the ability to participate in life to be pushed and pulled, such as the pill.
SOME OF THE TRENDS that contribute to or result from this wave of change can be read in Census Bureau reports and similar statistics. What is happening is not just a random occurrence, but the effects of which Friedan and others after her spotted. Statistically, we know this;
1. More women work each year.
2. More and more of the women going to work are married, and more and more often the married women are of prime child-bearing age (25-34).
3. There is an economic advantage to that.
letters policy
The Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but ask that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 800 words. All letters are submitted according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and homeowner; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
4. Women still get the short end of the employment stick. Nationally, the increasing numbers of women going to work seem to be entering the lowest-path fields.
The median income in 1960 for working couples was $6,900 nationally, or $1,380 more than that of couples in which only the husband worked. By 1970, working couples had a median income of $12,270, or $2,972 from couples in which only the husband worked.
In a sense, then, The Movement is inevitable because of the economic and social causes that it springs from, but for lack of adequate research about it no one knows just how it is going or whether the direction is a good one. More information and understanding is needed to ride the wave, rather than be swamped by it.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan
5
AND IT DOESN'T EVEN HURT
IF WE THOUGHT THE PROCESS OF GIVING BLOOD MIGHT MAIM YOU FOR LIFE, WE WOULDN'T SPONSOR THIS NOTICE.
WE KNOW BETTER. GIVING BLOOD DOESN'T HURT. AND THIS YEAR, YOU WON'T EVEN HAVE TO STAND IN A LINE!
NOW WE'VE SUPPLIED THE INFORMATION. WILL YOU SUPPLY THE BLOOD?
ISN'T A HUMAN LIFE WORTH 40 MINUTES OF YOUR TIME?
REGISTER AT. . .
WESCOE CAFETERIA SUMMERFIELD (HAWKS NEST) KANSAS UNION
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Mon. (10 a.m.)
Feb. 11 Feb. 12 Feb. 13 Feb. 14 Feb. 15 Feb. 18 (3 p.m.)
DONATIONS AT. . .
BMOC
UNION FEB.
19-20 (TUES.-WED.)
TEMPLIN
FEB. 21-22
11-4:30 p.m.
10-3:30 p.m.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HARTMANN & ASSOCIATES College Master
WEAVER'S DEPT. STORE 901 Mass.
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
WHITE ELEPHANT 737 New Hampshire
UNIVERSITY STATE BANK
1ST NATL. BANK 9th & Mass. 107 W. 23rd
TOWN SHOP-COUNTRY SHOP 839 Mass.
ALFIE'S FISH & CHIPS 6 & Maine
HENRY'S DRIVE IN 6 & Mo.
WAXMAN CANDLES 7 W. 14
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Townsquare Campus Bank 7th & Mass. 9th & Louisiana
WILSON'S SUPPLY & SERVICE 1016 Mass.
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
CLOSEOUT CARPET 546 Mass.
—A.U.R.H.—
6
Tuesday, February 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Local Sierra Club Ponders Action Against Clean Air Law Exemptions
By DON LEVY
Kansas Staff Reporter
Exemptions from air pollution standards for two local industries may be contested by the Kansas Sierra Club, an environmentalist organization.
Coggins wouldn't speculate yesterday on what decisions the organization might make.
The club is conferring with the national Sierra Club about possible action to contest the exemptions, according to George Coggins, professor of law and Kansas Sierra College.
Exemptions for Farmers Cooperative Chemicals and Kaw Dehydrating Company have been informally approved, Robert Chanslor, assistant chief of the air program branch of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), said yesterday in Kansas City.
COGGINS ACCUSED EPA and the Division of Environmental Health (DEH) of the Kansas Department of Health, which originally heard the exemption requests, of intentionally disobeying the law by granting the exemptions.
"It is obvious that they propose to circumvent the meaning of the law, to permit pollution to continue and to deny to ordinary citizens a chance to participate in the hearings," he said.
The Sierra Club attempted unsuccessfully last year to protest the exemptions at a DEH bearing. The group also submitted a petition and filed an action against state agencies may be approved by EPA.
Chanson slur Farmers Cooperative Chemicals had been given until July 1, 1975 to make necessary modifications. Kaw Dehydrating Company has until Oct. 1, 1974.
COGGNIS DISAGREED with statements made by state and city-county health officials last week that Douglas County air pollution wasn't critical.
"As to air pollution," he said, "Douglas County exceeds all federal standards."
secondary and primary, It's classified Priority 1 in particul-"
Particulates are solid, dust-like particles, such as grain elevator dust, Terry Watkins, area engineer for DEH, said. Most of Kansas is classified Priority 1 because of dust from natural sources and man-made particulates, he said.
WATKINS SAID THE particulate level in Douglas County had exceeded federal standards only once, in 1971. The federal standard is 75 micrograms per cubic meter.
Douglas County's particulate level reached an annual mean average of 77 micrograms per cubic meter, Watkins said. However, the particulate level descended to an average of 62 micrograms in 1972, he said.
Jan Sides, DEH air quality control engineer, said that pollutants in Douglas County were measured at a DEH mobile in the Lawrence public library parking lot.
SIDES SAID SOME OF THE equipment had been malfunctioning. When it is operating properly, the van measures carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide and ozone and provides a soiling index, a type of particulate measurement
No long-range data exists on the full range of pollutants because of the equip-
The van has been in operaton about six months. Before the acquisition of the van, DEH relied on measurements provided by city-county health officials.
Complaints about industrial air pollution are funneled through the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department to DEH, which examines under guidelines approved by EPA.
RICHARD HACK, Lawrence-Douglas County environmental sanitary director, said complaints about industrial air pollution in the county since they reached a peak in 1970 or 1971.
Hack said his office received only four or
complaints about industrial air pollution last year.
Local health officials said that air pollution wasn't a problem but that water pollution in the Kansas River, Lawrence's water supply, was increasing.
FARMERS COOPERATIVE CHEMICALS, FMC Farm Chemicals and the City of Lawrence must meet new federal water pollution guidelines for their use of the river by July 1977, said Richard Duty, a Water Pollution Control Division of DEH.
Lawrence has received a federal grant to assist in construction of an additional stage of the project.
The city facility removes only 40 to 50 per cent of the organic wastes in the sewage before returning the water to the river, he said. The new facility should increase the removal of organic material to 80-95 per cent.
INDUSTRIAL PLANTS release chemical, as well as organic wastes. Three of the chemicals released are ammonia, nitrate and phosphate.
"Ammonia is toxic, and nitrates and phosphates are nutrients. They provide nutrition for algae and aquatic weeds," Duty said.
"The individual instances of pollution aren't severely bad, considering the uses of the Kansas River. It is a large river with a mouth that allows the water to all three, the sum total does do harm."
Jim Williams, Lawrence water department engineer, said water department chemists had noticed a recent increase in the level of pollution in the river.
"WE'VE BEEN USING about 90 per cent river water and about 10 per cent well water," Williams said. "But we're thinking of increasing the percentage of well water."
The city treatment plant is able to adequately remove the increased potassium
FINE ARTS presents . . .
POETRY HOUR
featuring...
SUA
HALE CHATFIELD WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13 JAYHAWK ROOM—UNION—8:00
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Nelson Hockeyteller, former governor of New York, will address about 1,000 people at a Republican fund-raising lanceon at the downtown at the Municipal Auditorium in Topeka.
Rockefeller Is Lunch Speaker
years as governor, to spend more time as chairman of the Commission on Critical Choices for Americans and the National Commission on Water Quality.
Many political analysts saw this as a first step toward a campaign for the Republican presidential nomination in 1976.
Rockefeller's visit is in support of the re-election campaign of Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and the Kansas Republican Legislative Committee.
Rockefeller told reporters when he resigned that he hadn't decided on his 1978 political plans.
Rockefeller resigned Dec. 11, after 15
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76
Tuesday, February 12, 1974
7
By STEVEN W. LEWIS
Kansan Staff Reporter
Metrics Treading on a King's Foot
A thousand years have elapsed since King Edgar of England measured from the tip of his nose to the end of his outstretched hand to standardize the length of a yard.
He used his foot to standardize-you guessed it-a foot. The distance between the two feet is about 6 inches.
When one of Edgar's subjects needed the exact measure of a foot, but the king wasn't
on campus
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE College
organization will meet at 7:30 tonight
in organization
THE KU CLUB CLUB will show a ski movie, *Attack*, at 7:30 tonight in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. A ski repair clinic, *Skis* and Sports Shop, will follow the film.
KU RUGY CLUB practice will begin at 4 p.m. today on the field behind Oliver Hall,
A HILLEL DISCUSSION with Rabbi
Hillegroth
the Regional Room at the Kansai Union.
THE FILM FESTIVAL, the super eight film class, and the Festival of the Arts film workshop will be discussed at SUA's super eight program in the Oread Room of the Kansas University.
THE KU COMMISSION on the Status of Women Career Seminar will sponsor a discussion on two career marriages at 7:30 tonight in the Jaywalker room of the Kansas University and our couples will discuss combining marriage and separate careers successfully.
AS IMPRECISE AS KING Edgar's
were they, buy and demand for the
everyone in the world.
around, he would place 36 barleycorns end to end.
Among industrial nations today, the United States alone clings to the system of weights and measures that King Edgar helped establish.
All other industrial nations have adopted what is commonly called the metric system, which is more accurately called the International System of Units, or simply SI, based on the French "Systeme Internationale."
Government authorities have estimated the United States loses $10-25 billion annually in international trade because our system of exchange doesn't work as well. In the case of war,
SEVERAL BLLS before Congress would take the United States off the customary system and put us on the International System of Standards has endorsed such legislation.
If such a bill is passed, the United States would undergo a conversion period of about 10 years, during which time calories, quarts, pounds and acres would disappear into history books and joules, liters, gallons, square feet etc. structures would advance into common usage.
After the conversion, 10 gallons of gas will sell as 38 liters; 5 pounds of sugar will weigh 22 newtons and a 70 degree Fahrenheit day will be 21 degrees Celsius.
THE U.S. SCIENTIFIC community has already adopted SI units. The next step is to convince the American public to do likewise. According to Lelon R. Capps, professor of education, the public won't be convinced easily.
"This is one issue the young and old alike are in common agreement upon," Capps said.
Although conversion to the International System is a relatively simple process, he said, people will fight it. Future elementary teachers are required to take a course dealing with the new system, Capps said, and many students don't like it.
BEGINNING NEXT YEAR, Capps said, some publishers will pulish two editions of textbooks—one based on SI units and the other based on customary units.
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He said he thought total conversion would take 8-10 years.
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turns-an-inch to so-many-turns-a-cimeter. Pipe sizes, however, can remain the same, he said, but be referred to in SI terms.
John S. McNown, professor of civil engineering, said he wasn't optimistic about the public's acceptance of the changeover either. He said, however, the changeover was necessary to maintain our international markets.
University Daily Kansar
McNawn said he expected Congress to act on the International System within a year. Within two years, he said, changes will begin.
THE COST OF CONVERSION has been estimated at as much as $50 billion.
McNown said some of the cost would inevitably be passed to the consumer. The benefits of SI, he said, will be delayed by the necessity to use both systems during conversion.
McNown said conversion wouldn't necessarily require changes in all machines and products. He said milling machines would have to be changed from so-many-
"IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING, we're already using international units," McNown said. "We believe any engineering student now will need to understand SI units. I insist my students work one out of four four problems in international units."
McNown said the International System, which is based on the decimal system, could be manipulated more efficiently than the inch-pound system as soon as Americans became familiar with it. He said it meant that it had a vocabulary of 20 to 50 words.
Inconvenience and inflation aren't the only drawbacks to conversion, according to some experts.
Tuesday night is Talcat Night all this month
Critics say the cost of conversion will force many small companies to close. They also argue that once the United States has converted, imports will more readily flow into the country, which will result in fewer jobs.
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Some have said the adoption of SI would mean another triumph of the multinational corporations over the welfare of the public. They argue that the United States got to be the No.1 economic power in the world on the inch-pound system and that no other system, including SI, is as exhaustively developed.
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JOURNALISM MAJORS
Make Your Vote Count
Student Senate Elections Feb. 13 & 14
WILL DICKINSON (Ind.)
F. A.C.E.S.
Senior Class Officers
Thane HODSON president
Mark McCAUGHEY vice-president
Kim
Pat
SOPTIC treasurer
HOTCHKISS
secretary
paid for by F.A.C.E.S.
"We're not sure that it is a serious problem," Ed Church, president of Lawrence Property Management, andajawhakers Towers, said yesterday.
Part of the middle section of the parking lot of Jayhawker Towers Apartments has shifted three to four inches creating a gap between the stairs and the leading to Jim Waldorf, resident manager.
Structural engineers and management will meet today to determine the extent of damage.
Shifting Closes Parking Area
---
The area has been evacuated as a safety precaution to prevent possible danger to people.
864-3477
The problem was discovered Friday by two University of Karasas engineering students who measured the shift before being to the management of the Iowers, Waldorf said.
IF YOUR FRIEND IS ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS OR TOO FAT FOR CANDY A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SURE IS DANDY!
Church said that until the full extent of the damage could be determined, corrective action couldn't be taken. The cause of the shift hasn't yet been found, he said.
This year the University Only $1.00 for 25 words.
Daily Kansan will have a Bring your special message to 111 Flint by
special Valentine classified section on 5:00 p.m. Tuesday, Feb.
Thursday, February 12 and your message will appear on
14th. Send a message to your special friend.
Valentine's Day.
SUA
If you want to volunteer to help others travel, please stop by. All our programs are planned by students.
Our students and staff are here to help you with your travel ideas—hopes—plans. Please check with us.
LET SOMEONE KNOW HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT THEM.
(guides to inexpensive, U.S. accommodations—to foreign students/youth hostels—students charter flights within Europe/Ala/Asia/student travel).
(is it legal? a gimmick? how much really? who? where? doesn't one know your history? will I fly? ifly how many hours do I work in Paris? where will I live and whom is the real organizer? who's maken you work with the best idea? do pictures lie? what's CAB: T CGC-TR-ABC ATC?)
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(passport—international student id—visas—hostel pass—international drivers license)
The University of Kansas Theatre
presents
THE PLAYBOY OF THE
WESTERN WORLD
by
J. M. Synge
the story of someone who becomes himself
presents
Feb. 13, 14, 15, 16, at 8:00 p.m.
Feb. 17, at 2:30 p.m.
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
University Theatre - Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
8
Tuesdav. February 12, 1974
University Daily Kansan
K-State Coach, Cagers Praise KU
Bv MARK ZELIGMAN
Kannan Sports Writer
Kansas State basketball coach Jack Hartman must have been looking at the wrong schedule. To listen to Hartman talk, you'd think that KState was playing UCLA tomorrow instead of the University of Kansas.
"Kansas presents one of the biggest challenges to K-State's basketball tradition since I've been here," Hartman said yesterday in a telephone interview. "KU is one of the top teams in the game, and it will be very difficult for us to match up with them personnel wise."
"Kansas has great size and shoots the ball extremely well," he said. "They're complete in every phase of the game. They have to be very aggressive." If a combat team is execute as well as we can."
HARTMAN, HOWEVER, HAS no reason to be envious of KU. His Wildcats have defeated the Jayhawks the last four times they have met, and could move into first place in the Big Eight with a victory tomorrow.
Kansas State has also won the Big Eight
tune and finished second in the NCAA
Masters tournament.
In an analysis of our own team, Hartman said that K-State's strengths were quickness and shooting ability. He said they lacked size which had hurt their rebounding, a:"hough the rebounding had improved in recent games.
Hartman will likely start a short aggressive line consisting of Lon Kruger
Williams and Dean Harris at forwards and Gene McVey at center.
THIS YEAR' s KANSASTA team was considered, prior to the season, to be rebuilding from the loss of Steve Mitchell and retaining his position, and rebounders from last year's team.
"You might say we don't have any superstars," Kruger said. "We've played together a long time and our experience really helps."
Kruger, a 54-foot-11 senior, is the acknowledged leader of the Wildcats. Last year's conference player of the year as voted by one poll, he's averaging more than 16 points a game in conference action this year.
"Lomie does have a great feel for the game," Hartman said of Kruger. "He has such tremendous perception of what we are going to do. He is a step ahead of everybody else."
K-STATE IS IN MUCH the same position as KU in regard to substitutions and team depth. Hartman's top substitute is center Carli Hardin. Doug Snider and Chuck Dickie Williams.
Gerlach, a 64-foot-9 sophomore, is a good percentage shooter and ranks third on the team.
Snider, a 6-four-4 junior, is also a good shooter and a tough defensive player.
Williams, a 6-foot-3 sophomore, is a good ball handler and has won several games for the Wildcats with his clutch freetrow shooting.
The only non-senior starter for K-State
Iowa State Edges MU
AMES, Iowa (API)—Iowa State, led by Hercle Iy's 24 point performance, edged Missouri, 79-5, in a Big Eight Conference loss for Missouri and with consecutive conference loss for Missouri.
Ivy, a sophomore from St. Louis, scored 10 of his points in the first half to give the Cavaliers an advantage.
El Eberhard led Missouri with 28 points. Garv Link had 16 and Steve Dawnings had 14.
Iowa State's biggest margin was eight points, 79-21, on a pair of free throws by Jeff Duff. (AP)
A total of 50 fouls were called; 28 belonged to Missouri.
In the second half, the lead changed hands six times before Iowa State gained the lead for good at 66-65, on Robert Wilson's short jump shot with 4:12 left.
Missouri, which had defeated the Cyclones in the Big Eight tournament title game in December and also at Columbia Jan. 12, dropped to 1-6 in the league and 10-9 overall. The Tigers haven't won since the last victory over Iowa State.
The win improved Iowa State's league mark to 3-6 and 12-9 overall.
"I'M LOOKING FORWARD to playin in the KU game," Harris said. "I've heard people talk about how the crowd reacts and people begin to stand in line to get in at noun."
will be Harris, a 6-foot-8 freshman who is
not forced for his rebounding.
Catherine
Harris said that he had played against Kaitlyn. Kaitlyn was irritated that Harrison wailed no words in describe Sutcliffe.
MeVey, the Wildcat's center, will have the unenviable job of guarding Suttle and the other half of KU's center combination, Danny Knight.
"If somebody's a good shooter, you can't stop him from shooting," Beard said. "You can just try to be there every time and give him the best chance. If he does, then you've done your job."
"Suttle and Knight are both fine basketball players." McVey said. "One won't be able to hold them down. It'll take a team effort."
BEARD AND HIS TEAMMATES have been doing the job all season if statistics are any indication. K State ranks first in the Big Eight in fewest points allowed—an average of 61.5 points a game in eight conference games. The highest point total they've allowed thus far has been 69 points to Oklahoma in their only conference loss.
HARTMAN SAY THAT HE hadn't made up his mind: he would play a zone or man-to-man defense. K-State has used a zone defense extensively in recent games.
Although the KU game is important to the K-State players in terms of state rivalry, most of the Wildcats have tried to keep the game in perspective.
Owens' Flower Shop
If the Wildcats do employ a zone, look for KU to counter with long distance shooting, an art at which KU's Dale Greenlee, Roger Browne and Norm Cook are quite proficient.
Touch Her Heart with Flowers
9th. & Indiana
K-State's Beard, a 6-foot-3 senior, is regarded as one of the premier defensive players in the Big Eight. That said a good start for the Greenlee, was going to get his points anyway.
"is s just another game," McVey said. "I really haven't looked forward to KU all that much because of the other teams we've had to play, such as Colorado, Oklahoma State, and Iowa State. I just take them one at a time."
WILLIAMS, A 6-FOOT-9 SENIOR,
another of the Wildcat matts. A good
outside shooter, Williams is K-Sate-
sis leading in conference games with an
award on 87 JULY 1974.
SUA Popular Films
Barbra Streisand
Ryan O'Neal
"What's Up Doc?"
A Peter Bogdanovich Production
TECHNICOLOR © - From Warner Bros.
A Warner Communications Company
Friday, Feb. 15
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 16
2:00-4:30; 7:00-7:30
75c Kansas Union
Horror Films
THE BODY SNATCHER
Boris Karloff
Tuesday, Feb. 12
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Film Society
MY LIFE TO LIVE
d. Godard
Thursday, Feb. 14
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Classical Films
MAN
WITH A CAMERA
and ENTR'ACTE
Wednesday, Feb. 13
7:30 & 9:15
75c Kansas Union
Special Films
THE PASSION OF ANNA
d. Drever
Monday, Feb. 18
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Children's Films
CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS
Sunday, Feb. 17
50c 1:30
Kansas Union
SUA
Popular
Films
Barbra
Streisand
Ryan
O'Neal
IN
"What's Up,
Doc?"
A PETER
BOGDANOVICH
PRODUCTION
TECHNICOLOR Inc. From Warner Univ.
A Warner Communications Company
Friday, Feb. 15
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 16
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
75c
Kansas Union
Children's Films
CAPTAINS
COURAGEOUS
Sunday, Feb. 17
50c
1:30
Kansas Union
"Naturally we'll be more fired up emotionally for KU." Williams said. "But mentally we'll approach the game about the same as always."
Horror Films
THE BODY SNATCHER
Boris Karloff
Tuesday, Feb. 12
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Film Society
MY LIFE TO LIVE
d. Godard
Thursday, Feb. 14
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Classical Films
MAN
WITH A CAMERA
and ENTR'ACTE
Wednesday, Feb. 13
7:30 & 9:15
75c Kansas Union
Special Films
THE PASSION
OF ANNA
d. Drever
Monday, Feb. 18
7:30
75c Kansas Union
Election Day Feb.13th & 14th
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Olympic Board Disputes NCAA's Amateur Ruling
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP)—LORD Killianan, president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), said yesterday that American college athletes might be given opportunities if they compete as professionals in one sport and as amateurs in another.
He was referring to the new rule passed last month by the National College Athletic Association, allowing pros to retain amateur status in a particular sport.
The IOC executive board has yet to finish
The IOC executive board, which wound up a three-day meeting at Olympic headquarters, expects to have its new eligibility rule ready in about two months. A draft will be sent to all IOC members, who will vote on it at Vienna next October.
drafting its revised eligibility rule. But Killiann told a wows conference: "Certainly academic rules on professionalism of this kind are now to be changed in the foreseeable future."
K.U. NIGHT TONIGHT!
Kaleidoscope (Tonight-Saturday)
MRS. DAVID ROBINSON
WELCOMING THE NEW
MEMBERS OF THE
NEW GENERATION
Free LIVE MUSIC WITH K.U. I.D.
Yuk It Up At The Yuk Down
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C
UNICAMPUS
DEANNA BURKHEAD
CHRISS DAVIS
DAVID CHUBB
DIERCK CASSELMAN
LEWIS D. GREGORY JOYCE HUDSON STEVEN METTERNICH BETH RAXTON
DAVID FRANCISCO
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BRUCE POWELL
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KENT VOTH
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Senators from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 12. 1974
9
Commuters Organize New KU-KC Bus Run
Plans for a commuter bus service from Lawrence to the University of Kansas Medical Center and other places in Kansas City, Kan. and Kansas City, Mo., are being transported by the University Transportation Committee, Gene Young, committee chairman, said yesterday.
Younger said that a 32 passenger bus could save about 30 gallons of gasoline a day, would cost the same or possibly less money if they used a pool and would also be more dependable.
The committee is composed of Lawrence residents and KU students who commute to New York City. Younger said the committee was satisfied non-profit organization. He said that while the committee was a registered student organization, it didn't plan to seek university funds for his research.
Younger said that a permit from the Kansas Commerce Commission would be necessary for the committee to run a bus from Lawrence to Kansas City, Kan. and then travel from the Interstate Commerce Commission to Kansas City, Mo. The cost of such permits, he said, would be prohibitive.
Soccer Players Begin Practice
Weather permitting, the KU Soccer Club will hold its first practice at 4 p.m. today. Also scheduled is an intrasquad scrimmapage to be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
The practice and scrimmage will be held at the club's field on the northwest corner of 23rd and Iowa streets. All interested students are encouraged to attend.
Anyone who can't attend the scrimage or the practice but would be interested in playing should contact Jim Sheldon at 843-6866.
"We are writing a report and hope to distribute it to state legislators who are interested in mass transportation and energy." Younger said. "We hope the legislators will make an exception in regard to the rules governing the permits."
Younger said that immediate plans include operating a bus from Lawrence to the Medical Center and that he hopes the services will be available at points in the metropolitan Kansas City area.
Plans for the commuter bus route to the Medical Center won't be implemented for at least 60 to 90 days and the remainder of the period may be longer according to the legislators, according to Younger.
Younger estimated that 30 to 40 persons would ride the bus daily when service was started but he said that he had no idea what the ultimate number of passengers would be.
The KU Student Senate is sponsoring a commuter bus that leaves Kansas City, Kan., in the morning en route to the Lawrence campus and retu's is from O-zone and is discontinued according to Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president.
"My guess is that if the bus is not self-supporting by the time the next senate passes, then we'll need to move."
--who were welcome to watch at the course and
were able to have a seat. There were also
other students, after some time, watching
after a week, after two weeks, after three
weeks, after four weeks, after five weeks,
Afraid of Spiders?
A very effective, painless, scareless, and easily acquired method for reducing your fear of spiders is available.
For information, contact
Rusty Sullivan Dept. of Psychology 864-388 or 841-291-70
--who were welcome to watch at the course and
were able to have a seat. There were also
other students, after some time, watching
after a week, after two weeks, after three
weeks, after four weeks, after five weeks,
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1811 W. 6th Lawrence, Kansas
843-3333
Parts & Accessories
WE'VE LOWERED PRICES
Ford RENT-A-CAR
Ford RENT-A-CAR Compare Our Prices It's far out!!!
Rent a Pinto for $8^{00}$ per day and 8 $^{\circ}$ per mile.
Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates Overtime
PINTO $8.00 plus 4C per mile $45.00 plus 4C per mile $5.00 plus 4C per mile $1.50 per hour
WAGON $9.00 plus 9C per mile $55.00 plus 9C per mile $6.00 plus 9C per mile $1.50 per hour
MAVERICK $9.00 plus 9C per mile $55.00 plus 9C per mile $6.00 plus 9C per mile $1.50 per hour
MUSTANG TORINO $9.00 plus 9C per mile $55.00 plus 9C per mile $6.00 plus 10C per mile $1.50 per hour
GALAXIE $10.00 plus 10C per mile $55.00 plus 10C per mile $8.00 plus 10C per mile $1.50 per hour
Station Wagon LTD PICK UP $11.00 plus 11C per mile $65.00 plus 11C per mile $8.00 plus 11C per mile $1.50 per hour
Above rates include insurance ($100 Deductible)
843-3500
JOHN HADDOCK FORD INC.
Ride on!
With a
Ford Renta-
car.
(LAWRENCE PHONE I 3 5500 * C PHONE I V 2 8343
23rd & ALABAMA * P O X M E I
23rd & ALABAMA * P O X M E I
P. O. Box 667 Lawrence, KS. 66044
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
One Day
Accommodation, good, services and expo-
sitions. Contact HR@bison.com for in-
formation. CLAIRE: bison@bison.com
CLARIE: bison@bison.com
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
2) If you use them, they at an advantage
don't use them, you them, at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—New York City college students are not available at campus Madison, Town Crier.
Ray Audio, 12 E. W., Phone: (866) 555-2020
available for any stair space. Call: (866)
107-295-6030
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
FOR SALE. Apple--12 baskets, $7.35 bushel and sale. Apple--12 baskets and my potted cedar dried fruit bushel and apple--20 for $18, the $14 for $11, the $8 for $6, the $4 for $2, the $2 for $1, the $1
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles
Saint Bernard cared for-AML registered Champions in their care. The other dogs available at reasonable prices are under our care.
BMW 2002 - 1972 - 13,900 kmiles. Metallic paint.
AM-FM. F镜子. Lights. Cable Light. 4-12
2-12
1965 Pontiac-Star Chief for sale. Excellent repair and maintenance. Call John and come by for a treat deal.
FOR SALE 1971-19 - x 50" Hacienda Mobile
36" x 24" Walk-in Deck on a Solid
wood condition. Wood gutter Owens Doye for
2000. Fully insured. Call (800) 555-2010.
Mid-length, embruired nuded coat, fully-lined
black fur lard. Worn once. ONLY $199.
8-212
Three Davs
1972 Oss Ponkner with low miles and many ex-
penses. Battery with 40Ah. Both prized by
phone 843-1053. Phone 843-1054.
Must sell Naimih Hall contract. Open to male applicants only. Call 813-9696 or ask for Kinker
FOR SALE. 1962 Mercury Meteor. $150. 842-2472
2-13
For Sale: 1983 4-door Chevy. Runs good. Reliable.
843-643-044
*
READE DECK SPOLERS fit 67.68 cm Cameroon
areal deck easy to轻刷 to lightweight
chear 842-2123 l-15
842-2123
For Sale: Skipper BX-624 receiver, Dual 12A14
For Sale: Skipper BX-624 receiver, Dual 12A14
Speaker. Excellent condition. N43-8800. S-12
TEAC 1500 reed to reel deck. Author-versified.
TEAC 2400 reed to reel deck. Author-versified.
Perfect condition. $400, need $200.
Perfect condition. $400, need $200.
STEREO DISCOUNT* - Marantz, Pinnser, Sunny
- Dell 4300MHZ - HP 5810MHZ - 8260MHZ - 8290MHZ - 8291MHZ -
8292MHZ - $130 - I14I- 124I- 144I - Krof Pro
- 797 - 720 - 725 - 726 - 727 - 728 - 729 - 7290 - 7291
- 7292 - 7293 - 7294 - 7295 - 7296 - 7297 - 7298 - 7299 -
7300 - 7301 - 7302 - 7303 - 7304 - 7305 - 7306 - 7307 - 7308
- 7309 - 7310 - 7311 - 7312 - 7313 - 7314 - 7315 - 7316 - 7317 - 7318 - 7319 - 7320 - 7321 - 7322 - 7323 - 7324 - 7325 - 7326 - 7327 - 7328 - 7329 - 7330 - 7331 - 7332 - 7333 - 7334 - 7335 - 7336 - 7337 - 7338 - 7339 - 7340 - 7341 - 7342 - 7343 - 7344 - 7345 - 7346 - 7347 - 7348 - 7349 - 7350 - 7351 - 7352 - 7353 - 7354 - 7355 - 7356 - 7357 - 7358 - 7359 - 7360 - 7361 - 7362 - 7363 - 7364 - 7365 - 7366 - 7367 - 7368 - 7369 - 7370 - 7371 - 7372 - 7373 - 7374 - 7375 - 7376 - 7377 - 7378 - 7379 - 7380 - 7381 - 7382 - 7383 - 7384 - 7385 - 7386 - 7387 - 7388 - 7389 - 7390 - 7391 - 7392 - 7393 - 7394 - 7395 - 7396 - 7397 - 7398 - 7399 - 7400 - 7401 - 7402 - 7403 - 7404 - 7405 - 7406 - 7407 - 7408 - 7409 - 7410 - 7411 - 7412 - 7413 - 7414 - 7415 - 7416 - 7417 - 7418 - 7419 - 7420 - 7421 - 7422 - 7423 - 7424 - 7425 - 7426 - 7427 - 7428 - 7429 - 7430 - 7431 - 7432 - 7433 - 7434 - 7435 - 7436 - 7437 - 7438 - 7439 - 7440 - 7441 - 7442 - 7443 - 7444 - 7445 - 7446 - 7447 - 7448 - 7449 - 7450 - 7451 - 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8311 - 8312 - 8313 - 8314
G700 CTO-520 cm in. 4 speed, Factory mgm,
condition 16 mgm $39 or best offer. Building
condition 16 mgm $25 or best offer. Building
For Sale—Austin Healy Sprite MK IV 864-6273
100%
For sake of 10-second lift, you prefer concrete. Wright
for sake of 10-second lift, you prefer concrete. Wright
for sake of 10-second lift, you prefer concrete. Wright
Naimish Contract-$30 oft-MA1E-842-4208
John or Mary J.
(M)
Must seil 7) Greenlin X. X 850 miles, buques,
buckets, baskets, the floor Call: 624-6729. Must
immediately
For Sale. French Horn, Farken Model 1978 IIH.
30-54-2644. $9,995. For sale. Box 101, 514-54-2644; 4 p.m., in Waxman's box. Tree Box 101, 514-54-2644.
Skirt (Hex GS 200), Boots (size 9'), Lange
baskets (markers), Pencil (Pole) $180
Bags #85-105-60
CONVIFEHTE 1962 pop-top coupe, 4 speed air,
low power, low weight; metal blue 842-527, 18-8
85 Plymouth Satellite p.s. a. p. a. a. c. 128, 2 bar-
meter, A-1 condition, low mileage 1577,
1577
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOIN'
NATIONAL GOLF LEAGUE
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10.5 Monday Saturday
Lawrence Rental Exchange
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $ .02
842-2500
--who were welcome to watch at the course and
were able to have a seat. There were also
other students, after some time, watching
after a week, after two weeks, after three
weeks, after four weeks, after five weeks,
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
843 7685 - We Deliver 9th & 11th
THE HIDE in the WALL
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
Some new records added to our used list. Beat
Supreme, 2015. The original band records at Rays Recorded Sound.
Friday's new release on iTunes:
Garrard Turretable for sale, Model 80L in good condition. Cheap. Call 843-5546
2-19
Dekon-Desen AM FM / FM Stereo 3 maks. oplej.
Holdtakt 400 mm. Filtre
wcamera Alc. exel scroll 843-6213 2-18
wcamera Alc. exel scroll 843-6213 2-18
M4 MG8 new batteries, rebuilt engine, five lanes.
M20 MG8 new batteries, $1500 cafe. catch 90%
or $694 or 864 mlc.
45 Michigan St. B-Bar-Quelle. We have open pit
basketball court. We also offer the
our bridge plate basket, bridge sandwich
or brick by the pound. Miltchicken by the
pound. Miltchicken by the pound.
9:30 p.m. closed Sunday and Tuesday. 8:20-10 p.
FOR SALIUM CHIP 1962 Mercury Meteor. A Medium-size economy car in good running condition. $5,000.
NOTICE
Hey, there's somebody new in town you should meet! HORIZONS HONDA. Sales, Services and Parts on all new and used Honda. Student services our specialty, 1817 West Eighth Street, 3323 3323 2-12
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. South-
west Maintenance. Clock clocks & worksite
clocks and cleaned Electronics and light industrial
areas. River City Repair 815 Vermont, Burlington,
River City Repair 815 Vermont, Burlington.
Dressmaking, recycle your clothes by having them beautifully adorned. Stretch your clothing dollar, Levi's and Jeans paired—mess or the old ones? 30.50 - 18.50 43.75 - 24.90 62.90 - 41.90 92.90 - 30.50 2-18
Mont Blu Party Lounge now available for private phone. Phone 843-258-4 a.m., for phone.
Two many student senators don't attend meetings.
They aren't available on the job, and it do it again.
They are unavailable.
GOING TO EUROPE--Reserve your flight today!
Must be flown to Europe by WAYFARER
during your stay in New York. Fill up all fees and we urge you to make your
arrival at the airport low-cost. Call AIR
JAWKYH..1-800-555-2222
Lawrence Gas Liberation Inc., Meetings 7:30
and 8:00 p.m. Friday, June 21 at 10am.
Southington - 819-727-5976, evening after 7:30 p.m.
Stamford School vol. 14, posita. The York Journal vol. 9, posita.
The New York Times vol. 10, Wash., The Boston Globe vol. 12,
Washington Post vol. 1716 World Word (kid), Shearwater
Vol. 30, Washington Post (kid)
HIGHEWON BAR-B-Q—Specializing in Bar-B-Q,
BAR-Q Salad, Soy Sauce, Teffee Junction,
Murray Salad, Tofu Salad, Toffee Junction,
Tofu Salad, Tofu Junction, Tofu
Enjoy giving your sweetheart a Valentine Candle
from Ralph Lauren's "Candles for the Heart"
Plouquet bouquet WAXMAN CANDLES, "Worth $40,
for the girl in your life." (Sold out)
I'm booking for a mature female student (almost 40) to join me as a private art instructor. I am also an artist, and give it practice and plane time. I have experience teaching art in both right person, i need inspiration. Please someone send me a profile, payline after 6:30 or on Tuesday at the studio.
J-SCHOLLEH. My total expenditure for this in
the past year was $12,397.00 for a DAGI ¢
DAGI ¢ CAGIOPPO expenditure in $12,397.00
Hatha Yuga—Manasara workshop in Yuga and
Yoga for students in India. Free demonstration Friday night. Expert Manasara workshops to be held throughout the month of June.
Hair like yours needs a place like our Stop in and check out the Lawrence Beauty School, 919s Mass. Our students will show you the latest hair trends and products we can help more-give us a call at 843-2533 today. 2-15
J-SCHOOLLERS: Help deny the voting noth-
ing to a school board.
PUSH THE WHOP IN OFFICE!
FUCK ME!
Montezort pre-school (ages 21 to 5) has open
montezort or BPF session. Information: 843-577
or 843-594 of BPF session.
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
Free to students led by experienced Group Leaders Information orientations held daily this spring. Flint, 4 fpm, or call Tom Hairy 842-605-7488 842-605-7488
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious walk-in closets, complete electric closet, each with 4 units, clear blue swimming pool, gas BBQ grills, 3 bedroom suite with townhouses 2000 W. Seth 3 bedrooms with townhouses 2500 W. Seth 4 bedrooms with townhouses 3000 W. Seth 6 bedrooms with townhouses 3500 W. Seth 8 bedrooms with townhouses 4000 W. Seth 10 bedrooms with townhouses 4500 W. Seth 12 bedrooms with townhouses 5000 W. Seth 14 bedrooms with townhouses 5500 W. Seth 16 bedrooms with townhouses 6000 W. Seth 18 bedrooms with townhouses 6500 W. Seth 20 bedrooms with townhouses 7000 W. Seth 22 bedrooms with townhouses 7500 W. Seth 24 bedrooms with townhouses 8000 W. Seth 26 bedrooms with townhouses 8500 W. Seth 28 bedrooms with townhouses 9000 W. Seth 30 bedrooms with townhouses 9500 W. Seth 32 bedrooms with townhouses 10000 W. Seth 34 bedrooms with townhouses 10500 W. Seth 36 bedrooms with townhouses 11000 W. Seth 38 bedrooms with townhouses 11500 W. 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FOR RENT
APARTMENT -apucces, clean and quiet ? 3 bedrooms. Wall-to-wall expandable. Garage. 841-767-5797. 841-767-5797.
Biraffe Twirl
BEEN MEANING TO COME
clear SALE and
OREAD CORNIR
A42 581
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
- Crescent Heights
ADVENTURE a bookstore
●Oaks ●Acorn
Gaslight
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
FINE BOOKS
FINE SERVICE
JAYHAWKER TOWER APARTMENTS are
used for guests with twill payment.
Gifts with twill payment. Call 843-8901.
Furnished Kitchen. For rent at 12 W. 18th, 4 and 1 lane.
Kitchen, Bathroom, Laundry room.
Water paid. Coffee Cup Tonn at 862-6700 after 4 p.m.
Coffee cup Tonn at 902-6700 after 4 p.m.
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon-Sat.
FOR RENT - A new 3 bedroom apartment with
a large kitchen, laundry room,
conditioned, equipped, parking space. NX4E
- 1 Bathroom.
Phone 843-6424
Large furnished apartment near campus, private suite, large kitchen, 30'x24' with private bath. All three tiled, all air conditioned. Ideal for 2 or 4 (Call 847-643-2972).
FOR RENT to make or take female students. New York City, 123 West 56th Street. Parking and allied fees: $40 a day from June 1 through November 30.
POR HENTT 1146 Indiana Lamp, carpeted room
with fire alarm system. Kitchen wires deliver, plumbing
kitchen fittings, water heater. Poorly maintained.
80% water leakage.
RINT-HEP DUPLEX, top floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom. DUPLEX, 3 bedrooms. Kitchen,
kitchenette. Foyer, walls 843; balcony 2-
12.
PERSONAL
HILLIEVIEW APARTMENTS, 1733-1745 West 24th
New leasing at 1 and 2 bedroom furnished or
unfurnished apartments in the downtown,
carpet dwellers, all electronic kitchen,
warehouse, garment disposal, all kitchen
equipment, stop. Resident manager in Appl. 3. Call 842-1622 fst.
stop. Resident manager in Appl. 3. Call 842-1622 fst.
Studio Apartment? mute and, kindly, hurry.
Marketing in-house or graduate student. Reqs:
Bachelor's degree in marketing, human resource, or rel. field.
For Rent: Furnished, 1. bedroom updates apartments,
between 6:00-10:00 p.m., Monday through
Saturday. $399.
ONE BEDDING APARTMENT - non-condominium.
All bedding in unit includes washable
residences made of KCU and carpet. No
paint, glue or paint roller needed.
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to the United States or Europe? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way to practically answer:
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30. 180 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $7 coupons for every week can be purchased at the SUA.
Individual night ticket sales start March 2-22
Let your Valentine greeting be understood seriously, with a frangible candle from Waxman (30 cents).
EVER WANT SOMEWITH SATURDAY AND BRIGHT NIGHTS?
7 W 140, St. Hours 10:00-5:20 Saturdays
8 W 130, St. Hours 10:00-5:20 Saturdays
Fine Custom Upholstered work done to your satisfaction. Fast, reasonable, reference. Trucks & Trailers.
You, the student, have a choice. You can choose to give your whole life to your community, just politics. And if you choose, you can compel his or her to give up his or her compulsion. Yes, if you want effective change, you must give up compulsion. Kelly Scott, Eld Roll and Kelly Scott, the Vatican's spokeswoman, told Rolle that
J-SCHOOLRELEASE to get my program premise
published in the journal "Journal of the
Mafia Application." C:GXCHEP for Student Sch
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Textbook shorter! Need Italian Renaisse Art
textbook by book HAR! Any condition call 212-567-9444
HELP WANTED
FEMALE STUDENTS—Work as a figure model in Kansas City several days a week and earn an hour of experience. You need not be glamorous. Personality and style are important, you should person. An establishment, licensed firm providing studio training. Studio: 3109 Main, Kansas City, Mo. Phone: (805) 267-4310. Minutes from the turffield. Eight jours. 2-15
Experienced Architecture Architect Full time or part time M-1111; 8 a.m.-5 p.m. No beginnings.
The Sanctuary is hiring waitress for part-time
work. To apply, visit www.sanctuary.org or call 843-2658 for appointment. Ask for
Rebecca Heller, Sanctuary Director.
Wanted: Salad girl. Kitchen help. Part-time evening phone: 841-1312 at 6 p.m.
2-15
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
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1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
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Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
314 N. 3rd
Employment Opportunities
LOST
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL POSITION
Research, Audit, Assistant, Suggested Request
Master of Public Administration degree. Exp
ress Master of Public Administration degree to
state budget process. Some knowledge of the
orate process with regard to Orare's
duration March 1947 through June 1952,
helpful Duration March 1947 through June
research grant. Salary $600 per month. Per-
form research on a project concerning Kansas
research assistant on a project concerning Kansas
assis on the administrative, financial and busi-
ner components of future growth policies in the
state. Apply to Institute for Social and
ENVIRONMENTAL INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRON-
MENTAL INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRON-
EMployment QUALIFIED WORKER AND MEN
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HALL RACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
LOST 4-month old Tabby Alley Cat 2-47H Mice
his mother's mice. 61H His mother misses his
mother's mice.
Least-3 years, old 61. Borned puppy, names
Ashley. Leased from Lennon. Leased from
Lennon from Lennon W 210. W 210. Reward
$500. Leased
Lest brown female cat with black and gray coat,
6 yrs old. 800-712-5644 or by phone by 257 Hillside Cove
1431 W. 85th St.
Lost one silver carved ring in bathhouses of
Lost island, they turn to the Wexon Lake,
2-4m tall. It turns on its wine louge 2-4h
Lost a brown crochet hat between stadium and
157 Strong. 842-9135. 2-18
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CITY. REPAIR - 815 Vermont, 414-6038.
Sterios ~ watchers ~ typewriters. Independent repair specialists. No retail店. We服务 what repairs replaces. Unemployed workers. See if repairs.
Guitar loose tension fusable, open tuning, slide-
board, tremolo, neck drive. Key course: B954 - 800-6880, For Land: 815-3766.
Experienced baby shower can work afternoons and
weekends. 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. Call Jack Johnson.
800-156-2342 2-12
LIMOUSINE & CHAFFERFEUER SERVICE. Ultimate
night care. Special rates. Plus night
prior gas plus Neoplasia. Call 853-677-
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TYPING
Experienced Typist Will do thesis, dissertations,
and miscellaneous typing. Call 612-349-
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Experienced in typing thesis, dissectional, term papers, other mute typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and prompt service. Proof reading, judging corrected. Phd: 843-954. Mrs. Wright
Typing in my home IBM Electric, Pica type experienced in using, typing, Prompting, Calling.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-4909. Myra. 2-12
WANTED
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. No lease required.
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. Call 815-374-2000. Open 8 a.m., 8 p.m. or l.m. for pickup.
Residential wanted - Jayhawk Towns Own bed,
bath, kitchen, bath & walk-in closet. Bid $107.
Need $107, bid per bth & $175 per the unit.
Emergency room 911.
RIDES — — RIDERS
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RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
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3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
843-8499
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KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
10
Tuesday, February 12, 1974
University Daily Kansar
JOHN L. SCHNEIDER
Kannan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
Victor Contoski, Associate Professor of English
Budget...
From Page One
physical education, told the committee that the state supported men's intercollegiate athletics by providing $62,000 for salary payments to some athletic officials, including that of Clyde Walker, athletic director.
She said women were encouraged to excel in sports but if they excelled too far, they had to "prey upon people" in the state for funds.
SHANKEL SAID THE $59,145 requested by the University to fund supportive Educational Services was necessary to ensure an adequate job of helping disadvantaged minorities compete successfully and has recommended $90,435 for the program.
The governor deleted the reegents' request for $40,000 to furnish laboratories in the building, and then furnished when the building was constructed because costs were higher than originally planned. A compromise between making the building smaller and not furrowing it made the city more expensive.
The labs are currently unoccupied. Continuing inflation of laboratory materials will raise the cost of furnishing the labs, so that the sooner funds are provided for furnishings, Shankel said, the less costly it will be for the state.
STATE SEN. ROSS O. DOYEN, Concordia, who was present at the committee meeting, asked what kind of computation center was needed at KU.
Shanker said the present computation center in Summerfield Hall was overcrowded because of the rapid expansion of business and the economics department.
He said that computer instruction was becoming more important and that administrative demands for computer time had increased.
Dykes said the computation center couldn't handle a pre-employment process.
which the administration has indicated it wants to implement.
State Rep. Roger Turner, R-Wichita,
asked what the University was doing to
protect its students.
DYKES SAID KU WAS cooperating with the other state schools to avoid duplication of programs and to eliminate high cost programs with low enrollments.
The University's tenure policy was questioned by State Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan and Dykes said the administration was concerned that the present percentage of tenured faculty not increase significantly so that the University wouldn't lose its flexibility in responding to new programs and student needs.
State Rep. Ansel W. Tobias, R-Lyons, asked Dykes whether he thought tuition costs should be increased to help meet the costs of funding the University.
Dykes replied that students are currently paying 31 per cent of the cost of their education here, the highest percentage paid by students in the history of Kansas.
He said the average fee paid by each student had decreased in the past few years because the proportion of out-of-state students was much higher than many students were only part-time students.
ATTENTION FRESHMAN WOMEN
CWENS (honorary Sophomore women's organization) is now accepting applications for 1974-75 membership.
Selection based on activities, scholarship and leadership qualities.
Contact Linda Jones at the Dean of
Women office. Deadline—Thurs.
Feb. 14 at 5 p.m.
THE BODEGA A Private Club
MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE
Like You Have Always Wanted in Lawrence
6& $ \frac{1}{2} $ E.7 St.
842-9549
Tuesday, Feb. 12 . . . 7:30 p.m.
AMATEUR 8 FILM WORKSHOP
— KANSAS UNION —
Open to All Interested Students
MEETING
Contski said he thought that imitating other potets was "a very healthy thing" for him, but he had to keep through several styles before he had arrived at his own. Now, however, he said he thought he was pretty well set in his own style, as he had established his own life style.
"Td die of embrassment if anyone was to them," he said. "They all so dope."
★ Free University class now available
★ Film Festival & Contest Committee
★ New Sound equipment demo.
★ "SUA Film" Committee
★ Seminars & Lectures
Contorto said he had written some pretty bad poetry in his life, but he hoped it had improved somewhat. He said he had just read it, but then he had done when he first began writing.
"In fact, they're probably less sensitive than most people," Contesk said yesterday, "because they go on putting into words what happens it is too holy or too sacred to be put down."
Pois aren't necessarily extra-sensitive people, according to Victor Coskoski, associate professor of English and author of *The Astronomer* (1963), "Astronomers, Madonnas and Prophectes."
"I don't think I'm changing," he said.
But I may go through one or two more changes.
You just have to believe in yourself, he said. For example, some of the poems that are in "31 New American Poets" were rejected more than 20 times.
Sensitive Poet a Myth, KU Assoc. Prof Savs
Contesi said that most of his poems were published in small magazines for poets and that there was a kind of underground for the lesser known poets.
Contski said that it was “discouraging” to be a poet because “you keep sending you stuff to your teacher.”
"After you've written an awful lot, you might like other ideas, ideas, but you aren't sure."
BRING YOUR IDEAS, COMMENTS, AND CINEMATIC PROBLEMS
"Nobody I know is in the business to make money," he said.
Contoski, whose latest book, "Broken Treaties," contains poems about Kansas,
Contakti and his wife, who is Polish, lived in Poland for three years, and Contakti was a prominent leader.
'My topics sort of determine themse-
ses,' he said. 'I'll think, "give me the
key."'
said he didn't think of himself as a local color writer.
He said finding people to translate poetry from Polish and Slavic languages to English was a problem because few people understand it, but through to convey the poet's original meaning.
"You either have poets doing their own fantasy in the translation, or you have professors writing straight grammatical translations," Contoski said.
Seniors and Grads in Business, Education, Engineering and Liberal Arts are needed now for summer and fall volunteer positions in VISTA.
We Are on Campus Today thru Thursday
VISTA—A Part of Action
See us at: The Union Lobby
G
UNICAMPUS JUNIOR CLASS
Lee Lydick president Sherri Endicott secretary
RUTH RUSHMAN
REBECCA RUSHMAN
JOHN RUSHMAN
MICHAEL RUSHMAN
Vote February 13-14
Jamie Mangan treasurer
Don Lamb vice-president
Paid for by T.C.
MOTHER'S patented Valentine's Day
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Start the evening right
Start the evening right with the casual dining atmosphere of the CHUCK WAGON, specializing in Bar-B-Que (ribs, ham, beef, pork). Steaks (cooked just right) and Sandwiches.
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A great way to show her you care, and the perfect finish for a wonderful evening!
MOTHER'S
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2406 IOWA
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Raid...
The raid, which was initiated by the attorney general's office, had been planned for about six weeks, he said. He refused to disclose details of the burglery this morning before making the raid.
From Page One
significant about the timing of the rad. Berkowitz said he didn't think so.
Asked whether there was anything
Legislative hearings on KU's budget requests began yesterday in Topeka.
Berkowitz said there had been more warrants issued than arrests made, but he refused to say how many warrants had been issued.
Your Campus Travel Agent
SUA/Maupintour travel service
Telephone 843-1211—Kansas Union Plus 3 Other Locations:
900 Massachusetts / The Mails / Hillcrest
- Airline reservations/tickets
(No extra charge)
* Amtrak train reservations/tickets
- Hotel reservations
- Cruise/ship reservations
- Incentive travel
- Weekend holidays
*rions*
- Car rentals
- Sports holidays
- Escorted tours
- Private group programs
- Independent travel
- Motorcoach charter tours
- Worlds of Fun tickets
The Castle Tea Room
Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence 1907 Mass
Call now for information 843-1151
The Castle
A perfect place for your Wedding Reception. Why not plan your Castle Tea Room Reception today?
WE
Use Students with Faculty Advisers and Tutors who Are Capable of Assisting and Guiding.
"A QUESTION OF PRIORITIES"
Increase Mt. Oread Lighting, Foot Patrols and Build on Our Own Transportation Network
Coordinate a Campus-wide Program to Locate Jobs Before Graduating
ON ACADEMICS:
THEY
REVAMP ACADEMIC ADVISING
ON TRAFFIC AND SECURITY:
ROLFS
SCOTT
REDUCE PARKING PRICES AND TICKETS
ON JOB PLACEMENT:
UH...
"A QUESTION OF PRIORITIES"
Vote Ed Rolfs
Student Body President
Kelly Scott
Student Body Vice-President
Pd. Valentine's Day Ticket
Use Kansan Classifieds
Docking Protests Kansas Gas Cuts; Dealers Worry
By BYRON MYERS
Kansas Staff Reporter
Gov. Robert Docking has complained to national energy chief William Simon about the threat of a shift in midwestern states to alleviate gasoline shortages in the East, James C. Shaffer, governor of North Carolina.
Shaffer said Docking had written to Simon, praising Kansans for their public response to a statewide energy alert and complaining that Kansas was being punished for excellence in fuel conservation.
Kansas will be among 10 states that will suffer cuts in gasoline allocations to redirect gasoline supplies to states in the Midwest, according to a announcement made Saturday by Simon.
The governor's message expressed extreme disappointment in what Docking
called "discrimination against the agricultural states, which are the bread-
IN LAWRENCE, gasoline dealers and distributors are apprehensive of the possibility of reduced gasoline allocations for March because of the diversion.
Gleim Diekner, Mobil Oil Co. distributor for the Lawrence area, said Monday that he hadn't heard from the Mobil district office in Kansas City, Mo., about the company's
"The first I knew about it (Simon's announcement) was when I heard it on the radio and I thought that allocation to be about 80 per cent of the contract we had in March of 1972. In January we were allotted 95 per cent of the 1972 sales and this month we were cut to 87 per cent."
Dieker said that unless the cut in
allocations exceeded 7 per cent the Mobil stations in this area would be hurt very much.
Reduced supplies of gasoline have caused Mobil stations to close earlier and move from a seven-day week to a six-day week, Diekher said, but none of the Mobil stations in Lawrence appears to be in danger of closing.
TEXACO OFFICIALS were reluctant to speculate about the effects of Simon's sales supervisor from Topela, said that any information about impending cuts in gasoline supplies should be referred to the district manager's office in Kansas City,
A call to the Kansas city office entitled little information. Donald Lindsay, who works in the district manager's office, said that Corky Larsen, Texaco district sales
manager, was out of town for conferences
but that no information has come down to
him.
"it's a little early," Lindsey said.
A. D. Dick, bulk plant manager for M. & M. Oil Co., Lawrence jobbers for Phillips 69 products, said he was afraid jobbers would have another cut in allotment.
"OUR GASOLINE allotment for February was 75 per cent of the 1972 contract," Schick said, "and our distillate and diesel fuel allotment is 95 per cent."
Schack said that Phillips 66 also had put his jobbers on allocation for motor oil and grease and that the price of motor oil had increased this month. The price of Trop-Arctic, the company's premium motor oil, is $20 per gallon for each case of 24 quart cars, he said. This will probably mean a five-cent-a-quarter increase to the consumer, he said.
M & M Oil Co. operates in both Douglas and Johnson counties, Schick said. In Douglas County, none of the dealers the company services has been forced to close, but one station in Olathe and another in Mission have closed, be said.
RVOL PACK, bulk fuel agent for Standard Oil Co., said he had not received an invitation to the meeting.
Polk said that as a distributor he received 100 per cent of his allotment but that he received only 50 per cent.
He said his business was directed toward farmers and companies who purchase their products.
Dale Soltwedel, who operates Dale's Standard Service at 1300 Massachusetts St., said that for February he had received 90 per cent of his 1972 sales but that he hadn't heard from the district office about any reduction for next month.
One dealer said that allotments for her location were going up. Mrs. Jerry Clayton, co-manager of the Kerr-McGee station at 920 N. Second St., had allotment for ten tentatively set at 20,000 gallons of gas when but was then raised to 22,500 gallons.
"MY HUSBAND and I talked to our area sales manager today," she said, "and we save no reason to believe things won't be the same next month."
Jack Panchol, operator of Jack's Super 100 Clark Station at 9th and Louisiana streets, said that his gasoline allotment has been cut from 51,000 gallons for January to 29,000 gallons for February but that he expected an increase next month.
My gasoline supply should go up by about 2,000 gallon for March," Panchot said.
Forecast: Sunny and unseasonably
High in the 60° land in the 90°
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
V
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
Canine Captives
stray dogs, including those captured on campus, is filling the Lawrence animal shelter.
Lawrence Canine Control Officer Ray Albaugh coaxes two dogs into his truck after finding them wandering on the KU campus yesterday. The large number of
Raid a Record, Miller Says
Raid No Threat To New Budget, Legislators Say
19 BOB MARCOTTE and ERIC MEYER
Westerday's drug raids at Lawrence and Louisburg were the largest in the history of the Kansas attorney general's office, Atty. Gen. Vern Miller said yesterday.
See Story Page 2
But David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said the raid was disappointing. "It is just a sad story," he said.
"I wasn't entirely satisfied with the raid," Iwerkwitz said. "I would've liked to have been there."
Miller estimated that $10,000 worth of drugs were seized at Lawrence and $328,000 worth of drugs were seized near Louisburg. The second major effort filled "two good-sized bushel baskets."
real soon, maybe quicker than you think," Miller said. "And it would be reasonable to assume that we still have undercover agents doing drugs and gathering information."
Amphetamines, pure cocaine, hashish, marijuana and a white powder thought to be benron were seized, Miller said. However, be said laboratory tests and measurements of quality and quantity of the drugs hadn't been made.
Suspects Startled by Raid
By JILL WILLIS
More than 100 state and local policemen participated in the raids yesterday, which began at Loussau 45 miles southeast of Lawrence in Miami County. Nine persons, including 30 men and 30 women in Loussau, and 30 persons, including one juvenile, were arrested in Lawrence.
THERE'LL BE more raids in Kansas
Kansan Staff Reporter
Most of the people arrested in the drug raid early yesterday morning were either too tired or too astonished to understand what was happening.
"The police were in my room before even got out of bed," Roger Bellows, Omaha
Ken Scott, Yuma, Colo, senior, said, "To the best I remember they knocked twice and then walked in. I can't remember what went on. I was so tired."
"I was just flabbergasted," said Jenee Vickers, Kansas City, Kan. semi, "I don't mind."
The raid by Atty. Gen. Vern Miller and about 125 law enforcement officers ooc
mortality.
Some people complained that the police officers didn't allow them time to open their doors.
Dave Malinowski, Overland Park freshman, said the police broke the door down to get into his room. "They knocked a couple of times, he said.
Chuck Shriver, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, said he was asleep when his roommate, Lisa McCormack, came in.
France Stalls Energy Conference
WASHINGTON (AP)—The 13-nation Washington energy conference was forced into an unscheduled third day after France refused yesterday to agree on a communique based on U.S. proposals for meeting the oil crisis.
After a day of private meetings between Secretary of State Kissinger and French
Dissident Solzhenitsyn Arrested, Wife Says
Foreign Minister Michael Jobert as well as cauuses by the European Common Market nations, the conference reached its original termination date with little accomplished.
MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet police muscled into a Moscow apartment yesterday and arrested Nobel Prize author Alexander Grishny, the dissident writer's wife reported.
She said that Solventynsy was confronted by seven rough men just inside the door of her apartment. A counselor from the state prosecutor's office named Swerve showed a document authorizing use of force arrest she said.
Instead, a drafting committee was appointed to work last night on a draft communique that might be acceptable to the French.
According to his wife, Solzhenityn told him, "I won't go. I have explained why. I want to leave."
The mother of Natalya Sveltova, the novelist's wife, said the police then dragged him off. Mrs. Solzenhitz said the woman, advised her four hours later, that Sveltava was dead.
"I refuse to acknowledge the legality of your summons and will not come for an interrogation to any state organ," he said in a statement Monday.
Since the publication in the West of his new book on the Soviet labor camp system, Gugal Archipelaago," Solzhenitsyn has been pressured in the press, criticized on radio and in caricatured in posters as an enemy of "everything the Soviet Union holds dear."
The maximum sentence for anti-Soviet slander is seven years in a labor camp and five additional years in Siberian exile. If he commits a crime, he may be for investigation up to nine months.
SOLZHENITSYN has twice refused to honor summonens to appear for demand.
Yesterday's action could be the first step toward a trial for "anti-Soviet slander." Or he could be released soon in hopes that his new postings would help mukinine statements to Western newsmen.
There was no official confirmation of the arrest.
The American position as agreed to by all the Common Market countries except France calls for setting up a committee to prepare for further meetings with less developed nations and ultimately with the major oil producing countries.
"WE ARE COMING BACK tomorrow and we will be meeting during the night to work on the communique," Kissinger told newsmen yesterday.
However, other statements by Jobert and U.S. officials indicated little hope for accommodation. American sources clearly thought that any compromise would have to come from French because the United States or other participants were already in basic accord.
A labor camp victim under Stalin, later rehabilitated, Solzhenitsyn based his latest book on his own experience and con-
trol of the fellow inmates in the Stainst camp.
Jobert, for instance, volunteered that "regretfully we can't say that we have done everything to assure that this conference should be a success."
Jobert told a news conference that "we will do our best to resolve the problem."
THE FRENCH HAVE OBJECTED to any plan based on strong international cooperation that downgrades unilateral agreements with the oil producers.
Regardless of the French attitude, U.S. and other officials said a communique would be issued, even if Jobert refuses to sum.
The opening of the conference yesterday immediately ran into trouble, and the scheduled morning meeting of the foreign ministers was delayed 30 minutes.
WHEN THE SESSION did begin, first of the major foreign ministers were missing. After a round of speeches by finance officers, the meeting recessed.
"Next thing I knew there were about five policemen around me," he said.
Two students in Oliver Hall and one student in McColum Hall said the police were investigating the attack.
Kissinger ate lunch with the other 12 foreign ministers and then spent an hour alone with Jobert in a fruitless attempt to reach the Frenchman to drop his opposition.
Elaune Green, resident director of Oliver Hall, said that room keys weren't given to the police but that they might have had skeleton keys with them.
"In two instances the police kicked the door in," she said.
Green said a police officer stayed with the night guards and the student on desk duty
"They wouldn't allow the student at the desk to tell me about the raid until it was over."
A POLICEMAN does not have to wait to be invited into a residence, according to Paul Willey.
Ordinarily a policeman will knock and announce his presence before entering, he said. However, an officer can use reasonable force to enter a residence if someone is in danger or if some evidence is in danger of being lost.
Scott and his roommate, Wolfgang Elimes, Kammerich, Germany, graduate student, said police officers knocked at their door but didn't identify themselves.
"I FIGURED they would search the room anyway. That's the impression I got. They were very quiet."
Mark Rickman, Overland Park junior,
said he signed the waver because he didn't
understand that he could prevent the search
if he refused to sum it.
Eilmes said Scott went to the door, but he wont sure whether Scott opened the door of the house.
Three pipes and a set of scales were confiscated from his room, Rickman said.
Some of the people were asked to sign a waiver allowing the police officers to search
Scott said he thought the police opened the door.
Bellows said he refused to sign the search waiver because he didn't know his rights.
David Berkowitz, Douglas County attorney, said an officer couldn't search a room without a warrant unless he had the evidence of residence or the evidence was in plaint sight.
Although police searched Scott's room, Scott said he didn't see a search warrant for his room until he was at the police station. Scott was then confiscated from Scott's room, too.
"then there be a search," Berkowitz
said, "but the officers must have a wiz-
ness."
There are occasions when an arrest is made and the evidence from the arrest is presented.
SEVERAL STUDENTS said they were set
See WARRANTIES Page 2
OFFICERS REPORTED that one resident of Oliver Hall apparently tossed a packet of drugs out a window as officers. The packet landed on a ninth-floor ledge.
Miller briefed the Lawrence raiders at 3 a.m. at the Douglas County fairgrounds. They started warrants at 4 a.m. The agents worked in teams of five, raiding McCollum, Oliver and Ellsworth residence in addition to several private residences.
Members of the Lawrence Police Department, the KU Security and Parking Department, the Douglas County sheriff's office, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation
The raids were the result of six weeks of investigation by agents of the attorney general's office, Berkowitz said, and many of them were still being made well in advance of the raid.
When there are only a limited number of agents to work with, he said, they are allowed to make contacts and drug transactions as long as possible and to save up their evidence against individuals. If they do not make any contact, an agent makes a contact, his activity will be uncovered and he will be burned out for that area.
Berkowitz said the investigation had "run out of steam" recently, indicating it was too slow.
"OUR INVESTIGATION in Lawrence led us to Loussau. Miller said," Louisburg
See RECORD Back Page
Among the 30 persons arrested was reserve offensive guard James Baker, Pittsburgh sophomore. Baker was charged with conspiracy to sell amphetamines and sale of THC (tetrahydrocannabinol—the抑制 glucinatory ingredient in marijuana).
Yesterday was the first day that Kansas had school football players could sign letterheads for their coaches. Officials in the athletic department said the drug raid might have an effect on the team.
JIM SHELDON
Kansan Staff Reporter
Gale Sayers, assistant to the athletic director and a leading football recruiter,
The effects of atty. Gen. Verm Neller's drug raid yesterday in Lawrence may reach even to the University of Kansas' football recruiting.
Deadline for Free Drops, Credit-No Credit Is Friday
Football Scouts Say Raid Could Harm KU
Friday is the last day to file for the credit-no credit grade option and to drop courses without penalty.
To file a creditio credit option a student must obtain the card option from his dean's office and turn it in to the department that offers the course. No option cards will be accepted without a student's KU identification card.
To drop a course a student must pick up a drop slip and get approval from the department that offers the course. Then he must get the appropriate mark concerning grading instructions from his dean's offices
During the "free" drop period, canceled enrollment in a course will not appear on a student's permanent records.
Under this system a student will receive credit for a grade of A, B or C. No other grades are accepted.
The credit-no credit option can't be used for courses in a student's declared major. One course may be taken under the onion each semester.
said it was still too early to measure the total impact the incident would have on people.
Once a student files the option card, he is bound to remain under the contract, said Gil Dyck, director of the Office of Admission and Records.
Dyck said yesterday that taking courses under the option might have some bad effects. He said that often other schools didn't honor the option and converted credit grades to C and no credit grades to P. For those reasons, he has had his KJUD before signing the binding credit so-credit sign card.
"I don't think there is any question that it will hurt," Sayers said. "We don't have any real returns yet, though. Most of the coaches are still out recruiting and we won't really know until March 6, when national teams are out for out-of-state players) can be signed."
Sayers said that KU had signed seven to nine players to letters of intent as of last night but that there might be further ramifications.
"Anytime something like this happens it can hurt your recruiting," said Sayers. "Other schools can use it as ammunition in recruiting against you."
Athletic director Clyde Walker said he had met with head football coach Don Fambrigho and asked him to make an official statement wouldn't be made until the athletic department had gathered all the facts of the incident. Fambrigho refused to make any comment.
"We are greatly concerned, naturally," Walker said. "Certainly we feel that a situation such as this can do no one any good.
"I plan to have a meeting with all the head coaches as soon as I can get them all together to discuss the methods and means of how to deal with this problem."
Walker said the athletic department had brought in authorities on drug abuse to talk about the situation.
"We feel we have been doing whatever we can in this area," he said. "However, I want to meet with the coaches to see what we can do above and beyond what we have done."
Two other KU athletes, trackman Barry Schur and Mark Lutz, were arrested earlier this month for the illegal possession of a firearm. Two other incidents could have an extensive effect.
"This problem goes deeper than the athletic program," Walker said. "I am concerned on how it affects the entire University of Kansas."
2
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news capsules / the associated press
Arabs to Discuss Disengagement Today
Arab nations will hold a summit in Algeria to discuss disengagement of the Syrian and Israeli armies, the Algerian Embassy in Paris and official meetings with representatives from other countries.
The meeting comes in a week of important oil developments—more nationalization of American companies in Libya, and an Arab oil meeting Thursday to discuss the petroleum embargo imposed on the United States.
The official Algerian news agency said the participants in the Algiers disengagement talks would be Syria, Egypt, Algeria and Saudi Arabia.
The kidnapers of heiress Patricia Hearst demanded millions of dollars worth of free food yesterday for California's needy as the first step in negotiating the girl's freedom. They threatened to kill the coed if her family didn't comply.
Hearst Kidnapers Demand Food for Needy
The demand was accompanied by an 11-minute tape recorded message from Miss Hearst, who urged her parents to meet the kidnappers' conditions quickly. Her father, newspaper magnate Randolph A. Hearst, said he would do his best.
The Symbionese Liberation Army, which claims responsibility for the kidnapping on Feb. 4, said it "arrested" Hearst for "crimes her mother and father have committed against the American people and the people of the world."
$24 Million Already in Campaign Coffers
About a year before the next general election, candidates for federal offices and supporting committees had more than $84 million in hand to pay for them.
Some of the money reported on hand at the close of 1972 represents leftover business from 1972 elections, but most of it is in pools looking forward to potential election.
The figures released yesterday by the Center for Public Financing of Elections were compiled from a study of official candidate reports required by federal law. This is the first year the new reporting requirements have been in force well in advance of a major election year.
Warrants...
up for the arrest by a narcotics agent.
From Page One
up for the arrest by a narcotics agent.
"He (the agent) sold some hash to my friend and my friend sold him some THC back," Rickman said.
Bellows said, "The guy looked like a junkie."
The agent had smoked with them before, Mitch Long, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, said.
"He did lots of things policemen don't do," he said.
Some of the police officers were making pokes about the drug arrests, Kathy said.
"I got very special treatment," she said,
"I was the only one I saw that wasn't hurt."
Rickman complained that one of the *narcotics agents*' had 'the gall to call me if I
"I hadn't even been booked yet," he said. The agent said he had turned the students in for their own good and in the end they would thank him for it, Rickman said.
By BETH RETONDE
And LINDA WEINSTEIN
Legislators Minimize Impact of Raid
It's too early to tell what effect yesterday's drug raid will have on Kansas legislators' attitudes toward the proposed Chancellor Bill Rochester and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday.
However, the general attitude of the estimated 80 legislators who attended last night's Association of University Residence Hall (AUR) legislators' dinner was that Atty. Gen, Vern Miller's raid wouldn't have any effect on the proposed budget.
Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, said some legislators might use the drug raid as an excuse to cut the University's proposed budget. He said, however, that the university's objective enough to realize that theraid involved only a small number of students.
Lady is a member of the Ways and Means Committee, which is now hearing KU's request.
Lady said he hadn't heard any comments from other legislators about the drug raid. He reiterated his support for the Board of Education in the 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries.
Rep. Paul Feleciano, D-Wichita, said legislative attitude had changed since the early 78 when a "wait and see" attitude made legislators hesitant to appropriate measures. When he said, the attitude is one of support and response to the students and the administrators here.
Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought legislators were more intelligent than to cut the budget request because of a drug raid that involved KU students.
Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, said theraid wouldn't affect legislative attitudeas much as Miller's 171rd on Lawrence.He said the legislators realized they couldn'tpenalize a whole institution for the actionsof a few.
Some administrative officials have said
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Glover, however, said the 1971 legislature cut the university's budget because the state wanted to ensure it not because of bad publicity about KU. The state's economy is healthier now, he said, and as a result the 10 per cent increases for expenses have a good chance for approval.
Last night's dinner was the third annual dinner for legislators sponsored by AURH. Besides the 80 legislators who attended, the administrators and 170 students were present.
Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel also and concern should be for the students
research rather than teaching students. He said the KU faculty didn't have him.
Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president, addressed those present at the event.
"They're not getting enough money for teaching students. They have to do research in the field."
Vogel said the 1971 raid had a deterrent effect on legislators because it was one of the few cases in which he
Buckley said he knew legislators questioned whether KU professors and instructors spent too much time doing
Buckley told the legislators that the 1.5 per cent difference between the regents' council and the governor's proposed increase would not result in an amount to that much of a difference among them.
"It's a morale booster to get the faculty this 10 per cent, not so much dollars and cents." Buckley said.
HALE CHATFIELD
Buckley urged the students and legislators to discuss general budget issues and affect library and to also discuss the requested funds for women intercollegiate athletics.
POETRY HOUR featuring...
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13
congious to talk about any detrimental effect the raid might have on the budget when one considered the tragedy of the students involved in the raid
Jim is attending K.U. as a part-time undergraduate student, and will be at your service for the next three years.
the 1871 legislature didn't appropriate a faculty salary increase largely because of student demonstrations, drug raids and the burning of the Union.
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Jim has had previous experience in the small car field. He was formerly with Merriam Motors and Johnson County Mazda in Kansas City.
Jim has new and used Volkswagens for sale to students, faculty, administration, alumni and friends of the university. Your sales representatives work at your convenience—his hours are your hours.
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Time Is Crucial in Battle for Oil Sufficiency
'PLAYBAY OF THE WESTERN WORLD', a 1907 essay by Irish playwright John Millington Syngge, opens at 8 ontrugh in the University of Kansas Theatre. The play, set in a dreary coastal village in western Ireland, is a satire of the Irish countrytown's inclinations toward escapist fantasy and emotionalism.
THE SUA DUPLICATE BRIDGE meets at 7 tonight in the Curry Room in the Kansas Union.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Reporter
U. S. proposals for consumer-national cooperation, exploration for new energy sources, new technologies, prospective American self-sufficiency by 1980 and so on, over time, but there is reason to worry about what they will do in interim in the highly volatile Middle East.
Much of what is proposed to meet the worldwide oil crisis will take a lot of time, and time is a scarer commodity than oil. And there are other risks for a new round of desperate instability.
Generalized statements of common purpose in today's situation can sound like tribal rites and incantation, because even as the consumer nations participate cautiously sponsored conferences, the oil produces area is developing a new set of tensions.
WASHINGTON (AP)--The Federal Energy Office is considering beating Congress to the punch by rolling back the price of domestic crude oil, which is now exempt from price controls, sources said this week.
It would be achieved by setting an administrative price ceiling on control-free domestic crude, probably at 50 per cent and then the controlled price of $2.25 a barrel.
The rollback proposal is a real possibility although no final decision has been made,
Simon Ponders Move To Roll Back Oil Prices
EVEN IF THE ROLLBACK is ordered, it would have a minimal impact on the price of gasoline—one or two cents at the most, the sources said.
But the move would cut into oil company profits as well as quiet some of the criticism
that domestic oil prices have moved too high and too quickly, according to the
Congress is considering legislation that would roll back the price of uncontrolled crude oil.
THE ADMINISTRATION'S PROPOSAL,
which is now under high-level discussion,
would set the new control price at $7.87,
if the 50 per cent rule is adopted.
Energy chief William E. Simon told Congress recently that the administration agreed that crude oil prices should be partially rolled back. But Simon said he want to go as far as the congressional proposal, which is part of the emergency energy bill.
Arab Iran hasqed territorial claims against Arab Kuwait and only a couple of years ago attempted an invasion, which was met with brutal repression. The British presence is gone from the Persian Gulf, there is a jawning and potentially perilous vacuum there. Hereditary anti-Communist rulers of the Saudia region are the targets of the attacks of an Iraqi heavily armed by the Soviet Union.
—TWO PRODUCER nations now fattening on high prices, Arab Iraq and non-Arab Iran, have been trading military blows in a revived border dispute.
Uncontrolled domestic crude oil prices range from $5.60 to $10 a barrel, although
- Libya's strong man president, Moammar Khadifa, is infuriated by Sadat. Khadifa has been clamoring for revolutionary risings of the "musses" against rulers of Egypt, Tunisia and anywhere else where they may be deemed impeding Arab unity. He tamed a oil tariff against the United States to coincide with the meeting and to preclude a planned meeting of Arab producer nations this week.
nation's economy, has been collaborating with both Washington and Moscow in seeking some sort of area stability. He has also called for rulers to relax their anti-U.S. embargo.
Syria's leaders drag their feet, resting Egyptian pressure for military disengagement with Israel. The Syrian regime has reason to worry about adverse political impact at home. Neighbor Iran is likely to be the target because the Iranian accepted the cease-fire.
—The hereditary rulers of Saudi Arabia and the sheikdoms in the east have no insurance they will be spared Khadidy's pAN Arab wrab should they show any signs of listening to proposals to ease the oil embargo.
All this boiling ferment takes place in an area where countries not much remove liquids from food.
MARVEL STUDIOS
MEDITATION
Instead of disengagement, there has been new fighting on the Syrian front.
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Maybe some of the proposed measures will work. Maybe short-range as well as long-term cooperation is possible. In any event, viewing Middle East developments, the industrial nation's leaders will have their fingers crossed.
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MEANWHILE, ADVANCED NATIONS run up enormous trade deficits. Industrialized economies haven't had time to adjust to the sudden jolt of the oil price rise. The international monetary system may be subjected to severe strains.
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Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the vetters.
This year's race for the top jobs in the Student Senate has slightly more appeal than last year's one man sprint for the tape, but only slightly more. It should offer all the excitement of a tortoise race.
Election Lacks Oomph
The real question, however, is whether anybody really cares.
Some speculate that John Beinser and Todd Hunter, who got a head start by announcing their candidacies early in December, will easily outdistance later-starting Edd Rolafs and Kelly Scott. He says that Rolls and Scott will win a one lose one. But nobody really knows.
After all, both tickets have based their campaigns on platforms of essentially the same planks. Vote for either ticket, and you'll be voting for people who have deplored the current enrollment procedure, urged elimination of the foreign language requirement, mandated training in medical advising, criticized the Security and Parking Department and supported more money for women's athletics.
And of course there are the standard promises of returning more power to the students, making the Student Senate less a joke and fighting that bane of campus politics, apathy.
And apathy once more will be confirmed as the response of most University of Kansas students to the election today and tomorrow. The election gives every indication it will be the flasco that last year's was.
Consider the parallels. As election day drew near last March, the Student Senate struggled through its last meeting with barely half the elected representatives in attendance.
Last week, the current Student Senate recessed twice to raise a quorum of half its membership so it could conclude the year's business. It also elected to the battle cry of defeating apathy in student government.
As election day drew near last March, a Kansan reporter surveyed the electorate and found that only 35 per cent of those polled professed concern about the outcome. Then a mere 14.4 per cent of the student body, 2,536 students, bothered to vote.
(That total was down 35 per cent from the vote in 1871.) 85 per cent from the vote in 1871.
Last week, Kansan reporters surveyed the electorate and found that only 37 per cent of those polled knew Rolfs was a candidate for student body president and that 26 per cent knew Beisner was his
There's no reason why it should be any higher. The issues last year, as voters interviewed at the polls defined them, were apathy in the Student Senate and the allocation of the student activity fee. Candidates can promise some influence on those topics, but those topics don't especially grab the imagination.
opponent. That seems to indicate that he is least as low as it was a year ago.
This year's candidates have at least come up with some more interesting issues. But the trouble with inveighing against things like the enrollment process, the foreign student population and Security and Parking is that the Student Senate can't do anything about those things.
And the reason for that rests in the senate's essential silliness. The senate can't act for lack of a quorum, and it can't get a quorum because new senators quickly find out about the purposelessness of senate meetings and their interminable delays.
Then there is the petty bickering that erupts periodically. In this campaign, there first were accusations by one candidate that supporters of the other candidate had pulled a petty maneuver in the senate to block legislation essential to his campaign.
Then came some bickering about whether Brother Richard Paxson was in love and charity with his neighbor, Brother Richard Lauter, when Lauter accused Paxson of positional threats and Paxson accused Lauter of treacherously switching political loyalties.
What it all boils down to is that there isn't much in this election for most student voters, unless they want to indicate in a poll what priorities the Student Senate should give to academics, campus affairs, political affairs and internal senate matters, whatever those are.
For the winning candidates, however, there is much more. At the recommendation of the current president, the senate has recommended that the new senate give its officers hefty salary increases.
On top of that, there's the possibility that senate officers and a few other senators will have a chance to get academic credit for the proposed proposal. The proposal was made by a committee of which Hunter was chairman.)
So the spoils are worth the race, however purposeless the race might be for everyone else.
Bob Simison
By STEPHEN S. ROSENFELD
Ta Tau Feng
WASHINGTON-The word from Henry Kissinger, passed by a journalist friend, is that the secretary of state faces an interior challenge of "crisis" dimensions from Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger in making foreign policy. This is juicy Washington stuff. It's indicative of where we are in the world, too.
The interesting question it raises—and this is already a matter of lively concern in the whole foreign affairs community—is whether President Nixon is hinting that the United States, while hoping to cooperate and improve relations with the Russians, has the resources to make its way in the world without cooperating with them. There are those general lines, which are front and back of the same policy, but there is a vital nuance all the same. Europeans are especially sensitive to it.
The intriguing thing is that, by a friend's account, Kissinger, an international celebrity coming off a Nobel Prize in Vietnam and a huge personal triumph in the face of accusations of authority is threatened by a truly obscure bureaucrat who is a homebody to boot.
The Washington Post
r Russians, one notes, have been quick to pick this up. They have begun zeroning in on Schlesinger by name, most recently for his suggestion that, if NATO is weak, the Soviets could "bring political pressure to bear against Western Europe," Kissinger, who has said the same more delicately, still gets the kid-glove treatment in Moscow.
Partly it may be that Schlesinger is a more substantial figure than any that Kissinger has previously dealt with in the national security apparatus. Mervin Laird, the only other man worth counting, concentrated on withdrawing from Vietnam and paid relatively little heed to the first attack by North Korea and retaliation and renown; the Peking and Moscow breakthroughs, and the Vietnam negotiations.
Schlesinger, though he has been barely half a year in the Pentagon, arrived with a formidable substantive knowledge of what is emerging as the "big" national security
Intellectuals Subtly Tug for Power
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Kissinger vs. Schlesinger
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The Washington Post
There are some decisions I'd just as soon make for myself. Among them is the one that occasions this commentary: the use of auto safety belts.
WASHINGTON- If I had to choose between Big Brother watching me and Big Mother watching over me, I guess I'd go for Mom. But not by a landslide.
The D.C. city council held hearings to help it decide whether to enact a regulation making seatbelt use mandatory, with nonuse punishable by law.
THE VERY IDEA struck me as silly when I first heard about it. Now, after I have seen some of the testimony favoring mandatory buckling, it still strikes me that way—no less so because it is born of genuine concern for public health and safety.
Without bothering with my mental reservations on the statistics they throw about, let me conceive the major claims the proponents make: that seatbelt saves lives, that car accidents have been fatal in any event, they believe a number and serious of bodily injuries.
Most American motorists, I suspect, believe the statistics. And because they believe them, most would probably support legislation that makes it mandatory for manufacturers to provide safety belts in new cars.
NOR AM I I TAKEN In by her disanalogous analogies, her illogical logic and her tortured conclusions. One Big Mother's helper—John W. Garratt of the Cornell Aeronautical Lab in Buffalo-has sloughed off arguments based on personal freedom with the rejigger that speed limits, traffic signals and highway dividers
BUT MOST AMERICAN motorists don't want to use the belts, or at any rate, don't use the brakes.
That doesn't prove that most American motorists are either suicidal or stupid. It may mean only that they take their statistics with a grain of salt.
It isn't Big Mother's statistics that bother me so much; it's her oppressive concern, not for the public welfare, which is her duty, but for me personally.
also constitute infringements on personal freedom.
Well, whether Garrett can or not, you and I can see the difference between laws that protect us from the actions or inactions of others and laws that protect us from our own actions. The latter is mandatory for you to keep your brakes in good working order, not because you might hurt yourself but because you might hurt me. The same with traffic laws and antipollution laws and mandatory inoculations. I don't know if you could choke on your filch or catch your typhoon.
"PERSONS INJURED or killed needlessly through failure to wear belts impose a burden on society in many ways. At the accident scene, police, fire department and ambulance personnel are needed, making them unavailable for other duties. In addition, additional accidents, endangering them and others as they travel to the scene."
What is the danger to the public if you decide to take a chance on killing (instead of merely maiming) yourself in the event involved in an accident? Again, Garrett:
Right. And I suppose Garrett would
OKAY, I MUST not totally unreasonable. I will NOTMARTY belt in airplanes, both because they make me feel safer and more secure than being through the cabin in the event of some sudden maneuver. I won't protest if you make me strap my children in before I take them driving. (incidentally, how come I have been much bell about bettles school buses?)
support mandatory wearing of galanes on the logic that failure to wear them could lead to cold, wet feet, to pneumonia, to tie-up hospital rooms and the pre-emption of patients in emergencies, not available for other duties. Not to mention that your sudden sneeze might start an orderly, leading him to drop a food tray, thus creating a slippery mess in which an emergency診察 practitioner could take a fatal skid. And you know how badly we need general practitioners.
"I'll bless the bureaucrats for giving me the information that helps me to know that safety belts increase my safety. After that, please leave it to me whether I leave my vehicle or not," the motorcycle helmet in the chest or my head in the oven. It simply isn't their business.
issue of the second Nixon term—strategic arms. Previously Kissinger monopolized this issue with his intellectual, bureaucratic and publications rattle dazze. As a former defense intellectual at Rand O'Connor with experience in the CIA, TSA. Schlesinger break the monopoly.
N . rever, he arrived at the Pentagon just as doubts were escalating across the p.ical spectrum about the enduring value and visibility of some of the first-trimester refugees in the war with Kissinger: the Vietnam agreement, SALT I and Soviet-American detente. These doubts may yet be eased but, until they are, it is only to be expected that a certain amount of the loose deference available in this town will be shared with Kissinger to the more somber Schlesinger.
Kissinger represents the idea that the nations that count can be brought into a certain stable relationship, a "structure of peace." This is the sense in which Schlesinger calls Kissinger a "diplomatist," defined by Webster as "one
who is dexterous, tactful, or artful in meeting situations without arousing antagonism. The Midest affords plenty of scope still for a "diplomatist." But the sag of deterence and the messiness of the energy crisis, which lends itself poorly to flashy tactics, requires a secret diplomacy, make the going somewhat rough for Kissinger these days.
work of both men is struck much more by their likenesses than their differences. Both are tough-minded intellectuals long fascinated with the uses of power. In manner, Kissinger is smooth, Schesinger a bit rougher. Whether this will make a difference in respect to Congress, where Schesinger has a responsibility (until he receives Schesinger of gaining approval for a large budget), will be especially important to see as a need to me misleading to imagine that Kissinger is the sophisticated and Sschlering the boor, or to suspect that either is more than momentarily the captive of pique.
By contrast, Schlesinger has spent much of his career, in and out of government, thinking about the size and shape of the country. He also has possessed in the world; how to project that politically to foreigners and how to win support for it—in terms of budget and in terms of a will to use it—from the American people. In his first year, the first time the United States has lost its clear strategic and political predominance and there is wide read nervousness and confusion about where the country goes from here, Schlesinger's hour may have
In fact, anyone who looks at the public
There is a natural high-low approach in foreign affairs. One man holds the carrot, the other the stick. In this case, it's not easy to believe that men can say whether there is personal tension them. I would say just that there is a professional tension which is not only unavoidable but essential. Mr Nixon and his colleague at the Clinton administration talented men in the government's service.
"NO GENERAL, YOU CAN'T FIRE YOUR NEW MISSILES. THAT'S NOT AN ATTACK, THAT'S PLAIN,OLD-FASHIONED DECY."
Griff and the Unicorn
Kansas Ponders Campaign Reform
This is the fourth of a seven-part series on the 1974 session of the Kansas Legislature by State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita. Hess is a law student at the University of Kansas.
by Sokoloff
A Governmental Ethics Commission will also be established if Senate Bill 689 is passed. The commission would receive complaints and conduct confidential investigations. If investigation warranted, a hearing would be required within 30 days of the commencement of the commission to subpoena witnesses and to administer oaths, and any refusal would be
Campaign reform legislation is being considered by the 1974 session. Two bills would provide for stricter reporting of contributions and better-defined conflict-of-interest rules.
Recent events have forced attention on reform reforms and I am glad to see the progress.
Senate Bill 689 was reported out of the Judiciary Committee, and will be debated on the Senate floor soon. The major provisions are conflict of interest and the establishment of a Government Ethics Commission.
Senate Bill 689 states that no legislator can be monetarily interested in any contract with the state while a legislator or within one year after expiration of his term. The governor must have a state agency, other than the legislature, must file disclosure within 10 days of the contract. Disclosures will be filed with the legislative body of which he is a member of the Senate. Failure of disclosure, misrepresentation or falsification is a misdemeanor.
ALSO, LEGISLATORS are barred from participating by voting or other action in committee or on the floor of either house when he has a personal interest.
As a student, my resources are extremely limited, so I have been fortunate not to have any conflict of interest. However, most people have a special interest because of their profession. I think it is almost unavoidable. The real problem is when a public position is abused for personal or professional gain.
YOU CAN'T SELL GRAVITY, SIMON!
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declared in contempt of District Court in Shawnee County.
The bill would provide each political party with rights to legal counsel; calling and examining witnesses; introduction of evidence; hearing opposing witnesses and public hearings.
The Senate last week passed an extensive campaign financing bill, Senate Bill 656. The bill states that not later than ten days after becoming a candidate, every candidate shall appoint a treasurer or establish a committee with a treasurer.
ANY FINDINGS by the commission would be reported to the respective body (legislative, executive etc.) and the attorney general, or county or district attorney, who will then enforce or disqualify any member depending upon the findings of the commission.
Lobbyists, according to the bill, would be required to register every year with the Secretary of State and pay a $10 registration fee. Lobbyists would also list computations of all expenditures and list individually all those who compensate each lobbyist.
ALL ACCOUNTS must be detailed. All expenditures made and contributions received must be recorded not more than $1,000 in building a contribution or making an expenditure.
No contribution received by a candidate or political committee shall be used for personal tunds of the candidate, his political party, or members of the political committee.
Four reports must be filed: (1) annually on January 31 for the preceding calendar year, (2) on the fifteenth day preceding an election, (3) on the fifth day preceding an election, and (4) on the thirtieth day following an election. These reports require documentation of all claims and amounts, proceeds from sale of items, all expenditures and debts owed.
Residual funds must be turned into the Governmental Ethics Commission and divided equally among state political party committees. An independent candidate may remain amounts to the State Treasurer to be depicted in the general fund.
Reduced Marijuana Penalty Elicits Little Change in Use
BY FIRST IAGE The Los Angeles Times
By PHILIP HAGER
The Los Angeles Times
PORTLAND, Ore.—Last October, the most lenient prison possession in the state's Salem jail was handed over to Stetson.
Under a law enacted with little controversy by the legislature, persons found with up to one ounce of marijuana—enough for 20 cigarettes—couldn't be found guilty of a crime but only a "violation,"—something like a traffic offense.
They could be punished with nothing more than a 100 fine. They couldn't be jailored, nor would they be sent to prison.
Stiff criminal penalties remained in effect in possession of large amounts or possesses (pursuant to)
By most authoritative accounts, the new law has produced little change in the pattern of illegal drug use in the state. Law enforcement officials said that in some respects it had made their task simpler and more efficient.
"We've got a lot of calls from parents whose sons and daughters are telling them there's practically no law against smoking there," said Sgt. Robert Skippe of the
Critics of the law believe it was enacted in haste and without sufficient consideration of either the potential dangers of marijuana or the impact of removing the criminal penalties.
NONTHELLESS, some narcotics officers expressed uneasiness about the long-range effects of the law. And a citizens' group organized an initiative campaign to repeal the measure.
Multnomah County sheriff's vice section. "It's tough for the parents to argue with their kids when wise people—the legislators—acted as they did."
A group called the Committee Against Liberal Drug Laws will begin circulating initiative petitions next month, seeking to restore criminal penalties for marijuana
LAW ENFORCEMENT authorities say they have detected no significant increase in the supply of marijuana, or other illegal drugs, that can be attributed to the new law.
"We have no evidence more marijuana is being used, said Michael T. Bailey, a spokesman for the state's lawsuit attorney." But realistically we can't help but believe that, with all the publicity of the new law, people who were afraid to use it before are less afraid now. I suppose people who are less afraid now.
Bailey said he had "no great philosophical agreement" with the law but conceded it had "administrative and fiscal benefits."
Under the law, offenders are cited rather than arrested and booked. The streamlined procedure saves time and expense. Offenders, facing only a minor penalty, are more inclined to plead guilty rather than demand a trial.
"So far it's been quite successful," Bailey said. "The police by and large are happy with it—they don't have to spend half a shift booking a suspect and writing a report. The judges are pleased with it because it saves court time. And our office is pleased with it because we can concentrate more on serious crimes."
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
5
Don't Bring Dogs on Campus, Shelter Operators Say
If you own a dog and plan to bring it on campus, Vic and Helen Melton have some
The Meltons operate the Charles Isle Memorial Animal Shelter, which serves as the Lawrence Humane Society. An, dogs caught by the Lawrence canine control officer are brought to the shelter to await their owners, adoption or death.
The Meltons are required to hold stray dogs for 72 hours. After that, the dogs may be adopted or destroyed. The Meltons urge anyone who misses his dog to call the shelter before the dog is adopted or destroyed.
Melton is critical of students who take their dogs to classes.
"All those kids have dogs and they all think they have to take them to class," he said.
"Really, to let a dog run no way is to care for your dog," said Mrs. Melton. "A lot of young people come in and say, 'Oh, I love dogs—I've had at least 25 of them.'"
"Well, what's happened to 'em?" she replies.
About 25 dogs were brought to the shelter from campus last week, according to the
Polls opened this morning beginning the two-day election for student body officers,
John Ziegelmeyer, Shawnee Mission senior and Student Senate elections subcommittee chairman, said yesterday that students must present their KU ID cards and their current registration cards to polls workers before they could receive ballots. Polls will be open at Strong Hall, the Kansas Association and Summerfield Hall until 4 p.m.
Pallis will be open from 5 to 8 tonight at Gerlude, Sellers Company, McCormick.
Tumorrow, polls will be open only at strong Hall, the Kansas University and Sumitomo
"We've got one dog that was in here about (our days ago) and now he's back again," she said.
Student Elections Begin Today; Opinion Poll Included in Balloting
Besides voting for officers and senators,
students will be asked to complete a Student
Certificate.
The poll also asks whether the senate should fund the LA&S courses, Feedback, student organizations or University programs. The poll also asks whether the University refuse to fund them.
Retrieving a dog from the shelter can be an expensive pastime. The fine for violating the city leash law is $10 for the first day a dog is unclaimed, and $2 for each day thereafter. The fines must be paid to the city clerk before a dog may be picked up.
Melton, but most of the dogs caught at KU are claimed by their owners.
The poll asks students to rank senate priorities—academics, campus affairs and
Election returns will be announced either late Thursday night or early Friday morning. The Kansan will report the election results in its Friday issue.
About 300 stray dogs are brought to the shelter each month, according to the Meltons. The dog catcher brings in dogs and the rest are brought in by citizens.
More than 100 dogs are destroyed at the shelter each month, Melton said, and many of them are puppies. He said puppies faced a big health problem in the crowded environment of the shelter and he and his wife tried to save as many puppies as possible
They say they reume 50 to 65 pets with their owners each month through the use of the use
The Meltons operate a find file, a file of reports of lost and found dogs and cats.
"In big cities, the humane societies don't even have puppies," he said.
A wide variety of dogs is available for adoption at the shelter. German shepherds, a dachshund, a collie shepherd, a black labrador retriever, and several puppies are available to adopt in the shelter; awaiting adoption or a painless death in the shelter's high-altitude chamber.
The Meltons say the population explosion of pets in the United States is a tragedy.
Recently eight puppies were brought in. They were about six weeks old, according to Melton, and were a fuzzy mixture of brown and white fur. The puppies weren't well fitted for the puppies' adoption.
"When we get eight pups in a litter like this, we're lucky to get rid of half of them," she said.
Only two cats are available for adoption at the shelter. The Melons said winter was a slow period for cats, with very few new cats born in this season and only for years at the shelter they said.
"During cat season starting in May, we put em' in the machine as fast as they come in," Melton said. "We've got no place to keep 'em."
"People let their pets run loose, but they don't want to keep the litters," said Melton. "It's a shame."
CALL US — KUOK FORUM
Sunday, Feb. 17----8:00 p.m.
Guest: MIKE THOMAS
The Meltons have several pets of their own. They own several dogs, two cats and a seven-month-old skunk, which was brought to the shelter. Melton's wife said the skunk followed them around like a dog and nuzzled against their legs like a cat.
AIM Lawyers Ejected from Court
KU Traffic and Security Director
call:
4-4746 4-4747
Three defense attorneys in the trial of American Indian Movement (AIM) leaders were hurt out of the courtroom under the orders of an angered federal judge yesterday.
U. S. District Court Judge Fid. J. Nicholls marshals to remove two York lakes in the vicinity of his property.
and St. Paul lawyer Kenneth Tilsen, after a heckle exchange in the trial of AIM leaders
Count On Experience
What triggered the removal was Banks' reference to an incident in Nebraska and the ensuing discussion of an objection raised by U.S. Atty. William Clayton.
Todd Hunter
— Student Body Vice-President —
Vote Today and Thursday
(Pd. Unicampus)
John Beisner — Student Body President —
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Place a Kansan want ad.Call 864-4358.
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Drafting Feb. 14, 21, 28, March 7
Weaving for Young People Feb. 16, 23, March 2, 9
Creative Crocheting Feb. 18, 25
Off-Loom Weaving Feb. 18, 25, March 4
Spinning Feb. 23, 24
Tapestry Weaving Feb. 26, 27, 28
Pick-Up Weaving March 5, 6, 7
Supplemental Warp Weaving March 20, 21, 22
Card Weaving March 25, 28, April 1
Finger Weaving April 1, 4, 6
Basketry April 8, 11
Inkle Loom Weaving April 9, 12
Summer & Winter Weaving April 17, 18, 19
Spinning April 20, 21
Dimensional Weaving April 23, 24, 25
Natural Dye Workshop April 27, 28
Crackle Weaving April 30, May 1, 2
Natural Dye Workshop May 4, 5
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Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Fools Afloat
by Mayo
WHAT'S THAT YER BUILDIN' BLARNEY?
I'M INVENTIN' A CALENDER-HOUR GLASS.
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Woodwind Concert for Everyone, University Quintet Members Sav
How about 'Quartet III in F Major' by Gioacchino Rossi?
Ever heard "Trio Sonata in C Minor" by Johann Quartz?
Probably not, unless you are a student of a woodwind instrument. But at 8 tonight the University Woodwind Quintet will perform these two selections and works by three 20th Century composers in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The quintet, composed of four members of the music faculty and a musician from the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, realizes how select its audience is, but doesn't see that as an excuse for not playing.
"Music is an alive library and people select their music with a specific interest in
mind. But, like reading a book, one often explores new subject matter," said the group's oboist, Robert Stanton, associate professor of wind and percussion.
Dave DeBolt, bassist and a member of the Kansas City Philharmonic, said he no need for a new listener to acquaint himself with the woodwind instruments.
through your ears to appreciate it," be said,
"good."
"A deeper understanding will add to your enjoyment, but you can take enough in
Other members of the quintet are Lawrence Maxey, clarinet; David Bushouse, French horn; and John Boulton, flute. All are assistant professors of woodwind and percussion. Mary Ellen Sutton, assistant instructor in organ, will play the harpsichord for the Quantz composition.
People to People Program Lacks Manpower
By BUD HUFFMAN Kansan Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas People to People program needs more people.
The coordinator of the program, Nancy Kaul, Shawnee Mission sophomore, said more students were needed to find homes for 60 foreign students during spring break.
Most of these students attend classes at the intensive English Center, she said, and advised them to use a computer.
Although some halls will be open to students during vacation, they cost an extra $3 each day and no food service is provided, she said.
Kaui said that there were five or six U.S. students working to find vacation homes for the foreign students but that more U.S. students need to be prepared the job by spring break.
"it's a lot easier for 35 people to find one or two families each than it is for one or two
people to find 35 families each," she said.
KAUIL SAID she had been active in People to People while she was in high school and taught at the University of KU in fall 1971. At that time two KU seniors were doing most of the work she needed to complete.
Kuai said that at that time she didn't realize how large the program had once been.
She said that in the 2½ years she'd been running the program she often had to skip classes and other activities to organize the "home stay" program.
Home stay allows interested foreign students to spend school vacation with American families. Its purpose, she said, is to contribute to international understanding and to allow students to get away from the college atmosphere during vacations.
FOREIGN STUDENTS get a distorted view of the United States if all they ever learn in school.
a group of KU students led by William F. Dawson. The group wanted to set up a program that would allow foreign students to participate in American families during school vacations.
The idea caught on both locally and nationally. President Kennedy appointed former President Eisenhower to direct the national program. Dawson and others involved with the KU program joined the national group as advisers.
At one time, more than 100 U.S. students were involved in the KU People to People organization. They helped foreign students learn English and adjust to life in the United States.
CLARK COAN, dean of foreign students,
and daystar that there were about 150,000
students.
The program was once formally organized with elected officers and membership requirements. The organization now has five or six active students and is much more informal, Kaul said.
People to People was organized in 1961 by
G
UNICAMPUS JUNIOR CLASS
Several faculty members will aid the workshop, which is funded by the Division of Continuing Education and registration fees paid by participants.
The City Clerks and Municipal Finance Officers Association of Kansas will have its annual meeting in conjunction with the school.
"The school is part of our effort to make our expertise available to help city officials and keep the community safe."
Lee Lydick president Sherri Endicott secretary
The school, sponsored by the Institute of Public Affairs and Community Development of the University of Kansas, will meet at the Ramada Inn. It is designed to bring city officials together, teach them technical skills and provide an overview of current issues in urban planning. The assistant director for grants and programs of the institute, said yesterday.
100 City Officials Attend School
SILVERMAN
STANLEY
MARCUS
REID
BETTY
LUCIANA
JOHNSON
More than 100 city clerks and finance officers from across Kansas will meet here today through Friday at the 24th annual Clerks and Municipal Finance Officers School.
were 811 foreign students at KU during the fall semester, he said.
Vote February 13-14
Coan said 91 students were from the
capable of China, 91 from Iran, and 64 from
East Asia.
Coan said foreign students here come from all continents. Most of them come from the Far East, the Near East and Latin Europe, and few come from Europe and Africa.
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Wednesday, February 13, 197
University Daily Kansan
7
Beef Prices Higher, Food Survey Indicates
Several beef price increases were noted in the Consumer Protection Association food supply report.
Regular ground beef prices increased in
Pennsylvania, Rusty's and Safety four to
ten cents.
Round steak with bone went up 20 to 40 pounds a pound at six stores, and the round steak was up 19 to 40 pounds a pound at five stores. Stores showing increases in the prices of the cuts included A&P, Fallley, which both kroger stores, Rusty's 21st Street and Safeway.
Other price changes noted this week included;
Sugar, five-pound package, up four to 14 cents for C&K brand at five stores; up three to nine cents for store brands at five stores. Sweeteners up to 63 cents at A&P and 20 cents at Safeway.
Park rostr, up at Dillon's Massachusetts Street store, Falley, the Krogers 23rd Street, Rusty's 23rd Street and Safeway; down at Krogers downtown store.
Store bills of 2 per cent milk were down
Dilora's 6th street, Falkley, and both KK
Street.
Item
Griest, Heartland, plain, 10 oz.
Grease, Total, Gen. Milk, 12 oz.
Bread, white, 15 oz., store brand
Bread, white, 18 oz., store brand
Floor whte, 50 oz., Gold Medal
Floor whte, 50 oz., Gold Medal
Leanthil, 1 lb
Golden beef regular, in-lb.
Round steak, bone in, lb.
Round steak, bone in, lb.
Tobuwee steak, in-lb.
Tobuwee steak, in-lb.
Center cut
End oil
Dry beef, red, Caration
Dry milk, 30 oz., Caration
Yogurt, 8 oz., store brand
Potatoes, red, 10 oz., back
Potatoes, whole kernel, 90 can, Delmonte
Canned corn, whole kernel, 90 can, Delmonte
Frozen orange juice, 6 oz., Minute Malt
Eggs, 1 doz., grade A large
Begins, 1 doz., grade A large
Toilet tissue, pack Northern
AIP
Dilution %, 4th St.
Dilution %, Max. St.
Palm's
Ruger's, Downtown
Margarita, 8th St.
Ruby's, 22nd St.
Ruby's, Hilbert
Safeway
Average Price
73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 69 | 69 | 69 | 69 | 35 |
73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 69 | 69 | 69 | 69 | 35 |
30 | 30 | 33 | 33 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 25 |
30 | 33 | 33 | 33 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 25 |
37 | 32 | 35 | 35 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 20 |
37 | 32 | 35 | 35 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 20 |
51 | 51 | 51 | 51 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 49 | 37 |
2.99 | X | 1.15 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.73 |
2.99 | X | 1.15 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.19 | 1.73 |
2.49 | 1.50 | 1.59 | 1.79 | 1.79 | 2.19 | 2.09 | 1.94 |
1.19 | X | 1.19 | 1.58 | 1.59 | 1.95 | 1.95 | 1.95 |
1.19 | X | 1.19 | 1.58 | 1.59 | 1.95 | 1.95 | 1.95 |
37 | 47 | 47 | 54 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 47 |
57 | 47 | 47 | 54 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 55 | 47 |
1.49 | 1.29 | 1.29 | 1.29 | 1.29 | 1.29 | 1.29 | 1.29 |
82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 1.77 |
82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 82 | 1.77 |
73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 73 | 4.09 |
X | X | X |
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Harry - contest ends March 8, 1974
...
F. A.C.E.S.
Senior Class Officers
Thane Mark
HODSON McCAUGHEY
president vice-president
Pat Kim
SOPTIC HOTCHKISS
treasurer secretary
paid for by F.A.C.E.S.
CollegeMaster
The Insurance Estate Program Started by More College Men and Women Every Year Than Any Other Plan. Shouldn't You Find Out Why?
Hartmann
By JEANHAYS Kansas Staff Reporter
107
They designed a car restraint system, a high chair that can be manufactured by the mentally retarded at Cottonwood Industries and a chair for cerebral paler victims.
Hartmann
&
Associates
842-4650
Last semester the six students in the industrial design class of William Bullock, instructor in design, put their imaginations to work to create articles for children.
"I wanted them to design for children because then you're designing for someone outside your own experience," Bullock said recently. "They can't tell you what they want."
Lance Rake, Waukesha, Wis., senior, designed a car restraint system. An in-chuck notebook contains his research on the design of seatbelt regulations on car seats, the physical structure of children to find out their most desirable parts and the shortcomings of preschoolers.
Industrial designers are responsible for pop-tops on our beer can, personal spray bottles and paint cans.
ONE ADVANTAGE of Rake's car seat is that it can be used by an infant and adapted as the child grows. It consists of two molded fiberglass parts on a frame. The child sits
Students Design Articles for Kids
1915 W. 24th
ONE SUCH DETAIL stumped Don Nelson, Lawrence senior, in his design of a chair for people with cerebral palsy. Nelson used the same method to screw the chair to the frame.
in one part and the other goes in front as a shield.
The seatbelt of the car goes over the entire seat. Rake said this was an improvement because in some seats, the seatbelt attached only to the frame and on impact the frame collapsed and left the child unprotected.
"I was originally working on a high chair bat vent and talked to Dr. Miller in the occupational therapy department and I met people with tension-athetosis." Nelson said.
Hake's car seat can be adjusted when the seat is uncrewed from the frame and the rear window is closed.
The force of impact is evenly distributed through Rake's seat. He explained that in some car seats, the seatbelt went directly across his body and on impact actually cut him in two.
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"Their arm and leg muscles lock straight out and they can't control themselves," he said.
"The concept is one thing. It's the details that become hard." Rake said.
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sad. "What they have now are just chairs with straps to hold them in."
Nelson created a chair that can be adjusted to different angles. Both the back rest and the seat can be tilted to achieve the correct posture.
"I wanted to make them as esthetically pleasing as possible so that if some of them were in a room they wouldn't be obvious," Nelson said.
Dan Brucker, Schuyler, Neb., junior,
designed a high chair that can be made at
Cottonwood industries, a workshop for
the mentally retarded in Lawrence.
"COTTONWOOD HAS a lot of woodworking equipment, so it designed it out of three wood particle boards." Bruckner says it's cheap and should sell for under $10.
No part of the wood is wasted, he said.
The high chair is designed to be pushed up
to the table so the child can feed himself, but it also has a tray on the side.
"The back is only about six inches tall because I discovered that kids' back muscles aren't very developed and if they aren't supported, the kids will have to use them to support themselves and will develop them."
"It's easier for the mother to feed the child from the side rather than the front," he said. "That's the way they do it in Europe.
He said he was going to take the model out to Cottonwood and see what they thought of it.
Weeks of research went into each model. Rake said it was a constant process of research, preliminary drawings and more preliminary drawings.
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UNICAMPUS
DEANNA BURKHEAD
DIERCK CASSELMAN
DAVID CHUBB
CHRISS DAVIS
DAVID FRANCISCO
LEWIS D. GREGORY
JOYCE HUDSON
STEVEN METTERNICH
BETH PAXTON
BECKY PODREBARAC
BRUCE POWELL
GARY PRATT
CHARLIE RHOADES
MARK SCHWARTZ
JEFF SOUTHARD
HAL URBANEK
KENT VOTH
BILL WEBSTER
Senators from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Vote Unicampus February 13 & 14 Paid by Unicampus
Paid by Unicampus
ATTENTION SENIORS Class of 1974
A factory representative will be in the Kansas Union Bookstore all day
Thurs. and Fri., Feb. 14 and 15
to assist you in placing your orders for Graduation Announcements.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
8
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KU Offense, K-State Defense Clash Tonight
OKLAHOMA
32
SYNC
KANSAS
45
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
By GERALD EWING Kansan Sports Editor
Playmaker Kivisto Will Be Key Figure Tonight
An explosive offense will test an aggressive defense when the University of Kansas and Kansas State University meet at the Ahearn Field House in Manhattan.
The game, to be televised starting at 7:30,
will decide the Big Eight conference
leadership, KU, which has a 7-4 conference
winning record. The teams, and K-State
is one-half game back at 7:1.
KU ranks first in the conference in points scored, averaging nearly 78 points a game.
K-State is the top defensive team, allowing opponents only 63 points a game.
sports
Although the importance of the game has been played down by some of the players, it is of utmost importance to both teams. A win for KU would give the Jahyahws a two-game lead, and a K-State win would tie up the conference leadership.
"EVERY GAME IS important in the conference, but it is particularly important when two contenders are involved," KU coach Ted Owens said. "You have a chance to put a win on your own record and, at the same time, a loss for the other team. All other games are half games, but when two contenders play, a full game is at stake."
As Owens admits, KU must play its best at Manhattan. The Jayhawks haven't
In addition to Jones, the Atlantic Conference has three players in the top six: North Carolina State's Tom Burleson and Alabama's Tom McMillen and Len Elmore.
WICHTIA-University of Kansas playmaking game Tom Kivisto remains in second place in the balloting for positions on the West team at the third annual Pizza Hut Basketball Classic enters its final month. The charity event, sanctioned by the NCAA and NAIA, will be April 1 at the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Special to the Kanman
Kivisto No.2 In Balloting
Kristivo has 29,781 votes and trails UCLA's Bill Walton by 3,000 votes.
North Carolina's Bobby Jones moved into first place in the East balloting. He leads Terry Compton of Vanderbilt by 400 votes.
The top eight vote-guests on each side are
to play in the nationally televised
conflict.
Balloons are available in the nation's 1,400
Balloons Huts and through the participation
of other organizations.
The top eight men on each squad are:
Eberhard had a very poor shooting percentage."
"It will be important for us to play aggressive defense against Kansas State, move the ball well on offense and control the backboards," Owens said. "We'll just have to do two things: execute well and play extremely hard."
OWENS the team was well prepared for the game and would give a
won at Manhattan since 1971, and K-State
three all games last year.
THE top eight men on each squad
**EAST**
1. Bill Wailer, UCLA, 27,29
2. Sam Hain, Tulsa, 20,22
3. Sam High, Tulsa, 20,22
4. Kelvin Wilks, UC Davis, 23,073
5. Keith Wilks, UC Davis, 23,073
6. Tommy Carter, UCLA, 22,131
7. Tommy Carter, UCLA, 22,131
8. Billy Tulsa, Tulsa, 22,131
**RACE**
1. Bob Jones, North Carolina, 20,320
2. Terry Mackenzie, Indiana, 20,300
3. Robert Murray, Maryland, 19,140
4. Gary Novak, Notre Dame, 19,072
5. Marvie Harper, Providence, 17,994
6. Marty Harper, Providence, 17,994
"We've had good concentration in the recent practices," Owens said. "We're ready and we know what we have to do to succeed."
The home court appears to be in *N*-State's advantage, but Owens said that wasn't the case.
"Obviously, our game with K-State will take on great importance, but in some cases, the out-of-town games are easier." Owens said. "We've been playing greater emotional stress all year. We've had to learn how to play that really means that the players are ready."
KU will have a slight height advantage which should help in rebounding, an area in which K-State hasn't been overly impressive.
IF YOU DON'T LIKE REPUBLICAN POLITICS—
JOIN KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS
There's an opportunity for YOU to participate in the National Young Democrats Convention in Chicago February 15, 16, 17 and State Convention in Lawrence March 15, 16, 17. Call 841-0816.
K-State is expected to open in a zone defense but Owens said it wouldn't create any defenses because the team has been preparing for both zone and man-to-man defenses.
THE MOST IMPORTANT individual matchup appears to be Norm Cook against Larry Williams, Williams, a senior, is K-State's leading scorer and rebounder, and Cook, only a freshman, leads KU in rebounding and is second in scoring.
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The probable starting lineups:
"Norm has done an excellent job for us all year," Owens said. "I think, though, that lately he has begun to assert himself on the boards and is becoming a more complete force in our league." He outstanding job against AI Eberhard. Not only did he hold him to 13 points but
Cook has played exceptionally well in recent games and has held two of the conference's top forwards, Scott Wedman of Notre Dame and John Marshall of Missouri, well below their averages.
THE sirloin
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Danny Knight 5-10 C
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Tickets For
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Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
9
LET'S BAY!
BATTLE FOR NO I SPOT IN BIG D PONTE
PULL CORD
K.SU.
"HERE KITTY,KITTY...HERE KITTY,KITTY..."
Finley, Players Begin Arbitration
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Charles O.
Finley stared across a green tablecloth
yesterday at 20-game winner Ken Holtz-
man, the first in a long line of Oakland A's
players to take his salary dispute to
arbitration.
"It's no secret that the A's lead both leagues in the number of cases," said Marvin Miller, leader of the Major League Baseball Players Association. Nine players from Finley's World Championship club have hearings scheduled here.
"We're World Champions again," joked Reggie Jackson, who is reportedly asking for $135,000 and will go before an arbitrator to decide if the men's heartbeat as a player responds to pressure.
"I don't know whether I'll bring a lawyer or just go in myself and say. 'Here's what I
Colorado Edges Nebraska, 65-64
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Scott Wedman scored 21 points to lead Colorado as the Bufs edged Nebraska 65-64 Tuesday night in a Bie Eight Conference basketball game.
Colorado took the lead late in the first half, led 33-28 at intermission and barely managed to hold on in the final minute of a game, while rallied behind the shooting of Jerry Fort.
Colorado, now 4-8 in the Big Eight, is 9-12 overall. Nebraska is 4-8 in the conference.
did last season. Where's the dough?"""
Jackson said.
Finley arrive five minutes late for the first hearing wearing a black business suit rather than the bright, green blazer he wears to most baseball gear.
The Sheraton-Palace Hotel meeting room. by coincidence, was decorated in
"All he brought was himself, his wife and a briefcase," said reliever Rollie Fingers, whose hearing also was scheduled yesterday. "If I were him, I'd bring a whole bunch of lawyers. If he loses these cases, it could cost him about $150,000."
Oakland team colors, with yellow walls and the green tablecloth.
---
THE BODY SHOP FIGURE SALON
Announces starting Thursday, Feb. 14, 1974 HATHA YOGA
A
Thursday Evenings 7:00-8:30 Members Free Others $1.00 per Session Instructor—GYANAM
VOTE In The
Student Body Elections February 13th and 14th Wednesday Polling Places
(Feb. 13)
ON THE HILL
(8 a.m.-4 p.m.)
Strong
Union
Summerfield
RESIDENCE HALLS
FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES
(5 p.m.-8 p.m.)
Oliver
GSP
McCollum
Lewis
& SORORTIES
(6 p.m.-9 p.m.)
Delta Upsilon
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Alpha Gamma Delta
Gamma Phi Beta
Thurs. Polling Places (Feb.14)
On The Hill (8 a.m.-5 p.m.)
Strong Union Summerfield
Get Out And Vote!!!!
No.7 Pitt on Prowl, Jayhawks 16th
By the Associated Press
The Pitt Panthers are on the prowl—and moving up.
The University of Pittsburgh basketball team, which had an undistinguished 12-14 record a year ago, is the surprise of the 1974 college basketball season. After the Panda team's season opener to West Virginia, they started winning . . . and they haven't stopped.
Pitt has played 19 games since then and has won them all. It's the longest winning streak in the nation among major college teams, and it has propelled the Panthers into the 7. spot in this week's Associated Press poll, released today.
Pitt moved from 10th place a week ago after an 85-70 triumph over Kent State and a loss to Alabama.
Oklahoma State, 85-71, and Colorado, 81-66,
moved up from 17th to 18th.
The top five teams in the poll remained unchanged from last week. The UCLA Bruins, 18-1, were on top, receiving 49 of 50 firstplace votes and 98 of a possible 1,000. The Bruins whipped Oregon 86-44 and squashed past Oregon State 80-73 last and squashed past Ohio State 80-73
Second was North Carolina State, with 89 points. Notre Dame, which ended UCLA's record winning streak at 88 games with a 71-70 upset earlier in the year before losing a rematch with Bruins, was third with 797 points, including the one first-place vote UCLA missed. Both N.C. State and Notre Dame are 18-1.
Creighton, which upset ninth-ranked Marquette 75-69 Saturday night, is a newcomer to the top 20, as are Utah and Arizona.
642
576
431
386
331
302
299
256
215
146
134
76
57
41
40
25
13
North Carolina, 17-2, was fourth in the poll with 642 points. Vanderbilt, 18-1, took fifth place at 576 and Maryland, 15-4, was sixth with 431.
The University of Kansas, which defeated
No. Carolina 17-3
No. Georgia 18-2
Maryland 14-9
Alabama 16-5
Arkansas 16-4
Long Beach 16-5
Houston 16-3
50. Cal. 14-9
51. Cal. 14-9
Wisconsin 15-8
North Carolina 14-8
Cruziana 14-8
Ukiah 16-5
Let Your Love Shine with
a Shining Heart Candle
from:
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Prescription Drug Coverage?
Maternity Benefits?
Major Medical?
Emergency Treatment Benefits?
Student Health Insurance Forum OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS Monday, February 18th, at 7:30 p.m. Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Topeka Municipal Auditorium
Monday, Feb.18, 8pm
Bachman Turner Overdrive
1. 如图所示,图中线段 $AB$ 和 $CD$ 是平行线,点 $E$ 为 $A$ 和 $B$ 的中点,点 $F$ 为 $C$ 和 $D$ 的中点。延长 $EF$ 到点 $G$,连接 $FG$。已知 $\triangle EFG$ 与 $\triangle ABD$相似,且 $EG = AF = \frac{1}{2} AB$。求证 $\triangle EFG \cong \triangle ABD$。
Freddy King
Advance Tickets on Sale at Better Days and Kief's in Lawrence
10
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Public Transit Possibilities Outlined
By BOB MARCOTTE Kansas Staff Reporter
A broad outline of public transportation possibilities for the city of Lawrence was presented last night to the Lawrence Area PTCA Council by Ernest Coleman, director of federal programs for Unified School District No. 497.
A first step in the planning of a public transportation system for Lawrence would be the appointment by the city commission, to head the transportation possibilities, Coleman said. Such a committee should include representatives of KU, Haskell, senior citizens, the public at large, and others.
Coleman said the creation of such a committee probably would involve less time and expense than would be incurred if the agency directly grant through the federal government.
Coleman said his proposals represented only his own personal interest and he emphasized that it would be up to groups with a diversity of expertise to committee proposal to the city commission.
THE TRANSPORTATION NEEDS in Lawrence make it unique among most cities of comparable size. Coleman said, because of its location in a university, a junior college and local industry.
The need for public transportation can be seen, he said, among workers, many of whom live on the opposite side of the city and work in different occupations. The Indian Junior college, where there is virtually no transportation available to students; and among the city's 3,000-4,000 elderly and the 6,000 poor who attend school, there is now a strong interest in using public transport.
There is also the possibility that transportation services could be expanded on the KU campus, he said, and that a transition program should be for shopping, meetings and night classes.
Coleman said there were several innovations that could be used in a comprehensive transportation service, including computer scheduling, master routing the routes of transportation vehicles and routing on the basis of telephone calls.
FUNDING FOR A transportation service could be obtained through a one mill city levy, which this year would have provided $18,700; from revenue sharing funds; through federal grants and through contracts with the Kansas Department of Education for transportation aid to carry some secondary-school students.
Because of the deadlines involved in approving levy funds and contracting for state education funds, a comprehensive transportation system would probably have to be ready for operation by late August of a given year, Coleman said.
Topeka has served as a trailblazer among Kansas towns, Coleman said, in developing its transit system. In the process, he said, a lot of the legal and legislative groundwork needed to make Topeka a funding public transportation. Topeka is supporting legislation in the State Senate that would give the city authority to issue bonds, against a one mill levy, that could be paid off over a 5- to 10-year period. The legislation may give bonding authority only for a certain period. If not, would leave out town like Lawrence, unless the legislation could be amended.
Peron Murder Attempt Thwarted, Police Say
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)—Federal police said yesterday that they folled扑 to assassinate President Juan D. Echevarria and the wife of the president of Uruguay.
Authorities arrested at least 30 persons identified as members of urban guerrilla groups in Argentina and Uruguay, Police Chief Miguel Iniguez said.
One person, Carlos Alberto Caride of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, was arrested while possessing a satchel of explosives near where Peron and President Juan M. Bordaberry of Uruguay were to pass, Inguez said.
Detectives were said to have discovered a plot to assassinate the two presidents during an investigation of a separate plot to kill Isabel Peron, who is Argentina's vice
president, and Jose Lopez Rega, Peron's closest aide.
The first plot, planned in the resort city of Mar Del Plata, 250 miles south of here, included plans to blow up a state oil deposit on the coast by dipping a of a ton naval officer, police said.
POLice seized arms, including explosives "which could have blown up four city blocks of buildings," Luis Margaride, the public safety commissioner, said.
Police said Caride was arrested with the explosives as he hurried toward a major thoroughfare along which Peron and others had arrived in a motorcade to the presidential mansion.
Informed sources said Caride was amon-
about 350 terrorists released in a general
war.
Volunteer Tutors Needed
All Areas
Faculty and students interested in donating tutoring time without pay should contact the Minority Affairs office, 864-4351, or the SES office, 864-3971, for specific information.
BROOKLYN
20% to 50% off selected styles including boots pictured above
willing to devote time & energy to the Senate.
FRYE BOOT SALE
-a candidate for Student Senate from Liberal Arts & Sciences.
craftsmen of fine leather goods
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—interested in helping the Student Senate realize its potential for the students.
RICHARD MEISEL is:
L. A.&S. Students Vote for Richard Meisel on Feb. 13 & 14.
812 Mass. Downtown
Pd. for by Richard Meisel campaign committee
What Did You Have to Eat Last Night?
If you can't remember, then try the Flagship.
FLAGSHIP INTERNATIONAL
12th & Oread Ample Parking
A 21-year-old University of Kansas woman was the victim of an attempted assaultually yesterday morning, according to a Lawrence Police Department report.
KU Woman Breaks Away From Would-Be Assailant
The woman broke away again, ran onto 9th street and flagged down a police car. Police searched the area but were unable to find the suspect.
The suspect was described as 54foot-10, slenderly built with shoulder-length hair tapered at the ears. His age was estimated to be about 21. He wore a blue work shirt and blue jeans and was clean shaven.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR GRADUATE TRAINING IN BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH AND EDUCATION
The Department of Anatomy of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University provides training skills for Ph.D. and to career opportunities in teaching and research at the School of Medicine.
Non-Federal monies for stipend and research support of qualified applicants available. Applications requesting financial aid have been received by March 15, 2014.
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the balcony NEW PRIVATE CLASS 'B' CLUB
DANCE
LIVE BANDS NIGHTLY
Coming Thursday, Feb. 14
SUGARLOAF
Tuesday, Feb. 26
DOUG CLARK and THE HOT NUTS
grandmothers
a fine drinking emporium
417 W. 37th, Topeka, Kansas
The University Shop Announces Its Annual
Super Valentine's Day Sale
Three Days Only Feb.14,15,16
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
This Sale Offers You Unbelievable Savings DON'T MISS IT!
SWEATERS
$11.99
Suits . . . . . . . . . . from 59 $ ^{9 5} $
Sport Coats . . . . . . . from 39 $ ^{95} $
Winter Coats (includes all leathers) . . . $ _{1/2} $ Price
Shoes ... 1/3 Off Belts ... 1/2 Price Gloves, Mufflers, Caps ... 1/2 Price
DRESS SLACKS
'14"
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SPORT SHIRTS
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Remember — Three Days Only
CUFFED PANTS
$5
or
2 for $9
TIES
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University Shop Across from Lindley Hall
ALL SALES FINAL
FREE CUSTOMER PARKING
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
11
Conard Named Dykes' Assistant
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes yesterday announced the appointment of John Conard as an assistant to the chancellor, Conard's appointment is part of a reorganization of University Relations and Development, which Conard has directed since 1970.
Dykes said Conard would provide general assistance to the chancellor as a liaison with federal and state governmental officials. He will also represent the chancellor's office in Lawrence community activities and at other functions throughout the state.
Conard received B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of Kansas. He was a Summerfield Scholar, member of Phi Beta Kappa and editor of the Jawhacker. Conard (1952-60) in political science at the University of Paris on a Rotary Foundation fellowship.
David Dary, assistant professor of journalism, has been appointed acting director of University Relations. He has served as assistant director of the University Relations office for the last three years.
in brief
Publishers Elected
Officers of the William Allen White Foundation at the University of Kansas were elected Monday at the foundation's annual business meeting.
Drew McLaughlin of Paola, publisher of the Western Spirit and Miami Republican newspapers, was elected president. Stuart Aubrey, publisher of the Hutchinson News, was president, and Emerson Lynn, publisher of the Ida Register, second vice president.
The foundation's director, Edward bassett, dean of the School of Journalism,
Kenneth E. Anderson, professor of education, has received a Fulbright-Hays lectureship to Colombia, South America. Anderson is the executive director of the Kansas Master Planning Commission on Higher Education.
Anderson Gets Award
He will conduct seminars in July and August at Colombian universities. The seminars will cover planning in higher education and planning in planning and development of a system of learning.
Anderson, de of the School of Education for 16 years, has developed a doctoral program for administration in higher education. Since he returned to full-time teaching in 1969, 13 persons have earned doctorate degrees.
Ex-President Of Peru to Talk
The Rt. Hon. Fernando Belaunde-Terry,
president of Peru from 1963 to 1988,
will speak on U.S.-Latin American relations in
light of the night in the ballroom of the
Kansas Union
Belaunde was active in Peruvian politics from 1945, when he won a seat in the Chamber of Deputies, to 1988, when a coup ousted him from the presidency.
Balinde's regime also built a highway cutting across the Andean forest. Its purpose was to open up some of the 5 million acres of the country's richest land for colonization and to gain access to the rich resources of the eastern Andean foothills.
During his term as president, Belaudon passed for internal improvements. Many schools, irrigation canals, rural airports, and roads built under his constitutional regime.
ENGINEERS:
Vote
ZUMWALT
MURFIN
SCHUMACHER
Q+
♂ ♂
For Senate
Afraid of Spiders?
A very effective, painless, scarceless, & easily acquired method for reducing your fear of spiders is available.
For information, contact Rusty Sullivan Dept. of Psychology 864-3888 or 841-2910
--for sale: Yamaha 12-string guitar, almost new.
Call Nancy at 842-1603. 2-14
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
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Fully accredited University of Arizona GADALAFAIR AUMER SCHOOL offers July 1-August 10. courses in ESL, bilingual education, ethnobiology, art, folk dance and folk dance government and history. Library 5170 room and board in Mexican 5215. For brochure write: internship. Programs: 413 New Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisements in the University Daily Kaman are offered to students who wish to learn the LEXAR LARRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLANT HALL
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. Read the notes.
2. Ask questions.
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage.
Ray Audio, 15 E. R. Ave., 442-307-1898
Ryan Audio for any mk. stereo problem
available for my stereo problem Cust.
717-676-7500
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butlys $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
Either, way it comes to the same thing—New
Analysis of West Coast towns is available now
through Town Crier, Township 13.
FOR SALE: Apples - 7 varieties, $375 (bushel) and
10 apples - 6 varieties, $249 (bushel)
granate-12 for $1; mix and match oranges
fruit-12 for $1; mix and match oranges
12 lb. turkeys - 3 lbs. for $2c, 208 cans -
12 lb. potatoes - 3 lbs. for $2c, 208 cans -
12 lb. turkeys - 3 lbs. for $2c, 208 cans -
for $5c; peppers and cucumbers each, 6 for
$5c; peppers and cucumbers each, 6 for
$5c; peppers and cucumbers each, 6 for
$1; peppers - 86 cans - 12 lbs. roasted
peppers - 12 lbs. roasted peppers -
stamps, also antiques, used durables, cell
camlings, etc. Also antiques, used durables,
cellcamlings, etc.
SHOP, 70 No. 2b, 10 lbs. box of Kayser
SHEEP, 5 seven days a week, $12 - $150
Herbal Herb
Saint Bernard boarding-XML registered. Cham-
ney. Ski lift. Boat dock. All older dogs available at reasonable prices. No pets allowed.
FOR SALE: 1962 Moreury Meter. $150. 842-2473
3-13
For Sale: 1982 4-door Chevy Runs good.
Reliable.
843-6434
2:13
REAR DECEX SPOLLER fit 67- 68- 69 Cameron
Holt easily casts fire. 13- 15-
For Sale: Premier SX-628 receive Dial 1241
For Sale: Premier SX-628 receive Creativity
Creative Speaking Excellent condition, 628-459-3090
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
TECAB 1500 reel to reel debt账单 Auto-reverse-
ruptcy Control Perfect condition $400 nosed. need $200
controls. Perfect condition $400 nosed. need $200
STEREO DISCOUNT$ - Manantry, San Antonio,
Katy, TX - $149-$310, Dial 121-244, Kona Pro
$-361, KIA $110 - Dial 121-244, Kona Pro
727 - $275, Miracast $120, Midland $120, Audio
$120, Mirrorade $120, MR1-K110 - $180, Audio
$120, Mirrorade $120, Wide Indpired Audio $120,
$120-670, Wide Indpired Audio $120,
$120-670, Wide Indpired Audio $120,
1998 CTO-320 cm in 4. speed, Factory mold,
condition 16 mpi GB or best offer. Building
condition 16 mpi GB or best offer. Building
For Sale—Austin Healy Sprite MK IV. 864-6273.
Carson City, CA.
For rate 10 speed bike, perfect condition. Winged for rate 15 speed bike, perfect condition. Frog-shaped long tail. ALL in perfect condition. Cable lock.
Naimith, Contract-$50 off-MAIE=$812-498
John or Mary. C
Must sell 75" Greenlin X. 8,500 miles, bukesck.
For the call Floor 912-6275. MUST
immediately!
Sk虹 (HSX GS 200) Boots (size 9') Lage
(width, binding) (marker), Points
434-105-308 2-18
68 Plymouth Satellite p.s. a.t. a.e. 318, 2 bars
1577 A-1 condition, low mileage 1577
For $349, French Shell Forker Model 1918; Gilbert
Sale 659, $379; Ford 2000, $319; Vulcan 2000,
$349; Ford 4000, 4 pice; Veo Box 2000, $299;
Lincoln 2000, $299.
CORVETTE. 1989 pop-top coupe. 4 speed, armor.
Rockford. $842-723-5128
*Some new records are available.*
The vinyl reissue-Recycle the Sound! Buy or Sell
the records at Rays Recorded Sales. 12 E
6th. 1989.
Garrard Turntable for sale. Model 40B in good condition. Cheap. Call 813-5546 2-18
89 MGB new batteries, rebuilt engine, free
296 or 364 MGB $1250 call 6-700-296
296 or 364 MGB
Fox Sale--Denon AM FM/FM Sterere, 5 mold, old.
For Nikon Camcorders All excellent 843-814-
842-814-843-814-843
FOR SALR CHEAP! 1962 Mercury Meter. A
driver can car in good running
condition. $150. 842-2473-210
Must sell! A 1972 Toyota Colte ST in fantastic
condition. Call 865-432-9421 or mail
call. Enquire 865-432-9421
Midland AM-FM Receiver and pair of Jensen
Receiver with 2-microwave radios.
rich sound at a great price 842-832-215
2-14
1973 OSSA. Planker. Low miles and many extra.
Call 843-1005. 2-19
Bert and Ernie are having the planet. From art
and architecture books, including "The Planet of
Book Roots" books, troop clothing, etc. 83-292.
1969 Prebird 19 mg. Original owner, new poly-
methylene film, perfect condition. Re-
movable transmission tape, perfect condition. Re-
movable rubber glove.
For Sale: 23 Channel CB radio with antenna
Call: 842-9033
2-15
30 Car & Trucker; 71 Cornet 2 dr. 71 Chevy
Honda; 84 Dodge 2 dr. 70 Chevy
Marcus 6; 84 Chevy 2 dr. 70 Chevy
McCarran 6; 84 Chevy 2 dr. 70 Chevy
American; 66 Chevy 1 ton; 66 International
Chrysler; 66 Chevy 1 ton; A-10 Auto
North Hiwat 40 and Turnip 1A
FOR SALE 1973 14 x 6 8 Mini Base. Set up ad-
justment of wrinkles, wrinkles and creases,
with tie-downs and retractors.
For Sale. New-New to twin Cine Light with lights
$79.50 value will take hotel offer over $70.00
$99.50 value will take hotel offer over $80.00
NOTICE
Male Jeans, for guys, now at the Attic for girls.
Come in and see 927 Mass. 2:19
115 Michigan St. Bar-II-Bar. We have open git barsbark=wood only. we have the barstbls or barbs, the wood barstbls or brisket by the pound. Half-btchies by the pound. Half-btchies by the pound. 9:30 p.m. Crown Sunday and Tuesday. 842-910-110
TYPEWITTER CLEANING - 3 day service. South Carolina, Tennessee, Florida, Georgia, watchable heat and clenched Electronics and light industrial equipment. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 815 Williamsburg.
Show Sportspier 1971, Sportspier, Grafen
Show Sportspier 1971, Sportspier, Grafen
winner in three shows. Musa Kudrani
winner in three shows.
Hey, there's somebody new in town you should
hurry! HORIZONS HONDA, Sales, Service and
parts on all used and used Honda Shuttle
cars providing our Specialty 1811 West Bath
3333
2-15
2-12
Clean spring up-time is coming. Take their extra things to STOR-ALL Sites from X15 to 24. Private your look, your feel, light on them and the West Garden, K-(K-10) Kan. K-268-9638
Mont Blae Party Lounge, now available for pr-
ticipation. Phone 943-258-4384, a. p. to m.
0800-667-1967.
BIGLOWES BAR-B-Q- Supervising in Bar-B-
Q, 50 West 43rd Street, Suite 216,
Mon-Sat, 5:30 to 8:30 a.m. or Teebeer Junction on
5th St., near Chelsea Market.
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBERATION, Inc. MARRIAGE
FOR RIGHTS IN THE 2014-2015 CIVIL WAR
FOR BOLTAGE 1423-8129, EVENING
AT 7 P.M.
I'm looking for a mature female vocalist任 prefecto, who loves to leap with creativity, and has a keen eye for the arts, with a basic repertoire of folk rock, but an aptting to work like hell on anything with her sense of humor. She's secretly hiding their talents call Randy at 8:30 or on Tuesday Friday afternoons.
Enhance giveaway your giftcard to a Valentine Candle
box with the following information:
Floral bouquet for WAXMAN CANISTER $7.95 each
Mini bouquet for WAXMAN CANISTER $4.95 each
2-SCHOLERLOS My total expenditure for this job is:
$17,598.00 for the job offered in DACU (DACU OPPORTUNITY) you pay in $16,294.00.
The next highest cost for this job is:
3-BACHELOR LOS ANGELES My total expenditure for this job is:
$17,598.00 for the job offered in DACU (DACU OPPORTUNITY) you pay in $16,294.00.
Hair like you need a place like ours! Stop in and check out the Lawrence Beauty School. Our students will show you the latest in styling. We will teach you how to give great-give us a call at 843-2533. 2-15
J-SCHOOLESH
Help do survey the voting math.
Build a program that can calculate
women with candidates. Time to be repurposed for a
community project.
Build a program that can
calculate women with candidates. Time to be repurposed for a
community project.
SIX-HOUR MARATHON EXCENTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders. Information orientation held daily the
Friday 4, 1pm, or call: Tom Lay 842-6055
842-6055
Montessori pre-school (ages 2 to 5) has access
to Montessori preschool information: 842-577 or
843-544.
Must find home for 9 mo. old black female, 18-
42 years. Must be in contact with spi if stay is
82-429-6056.
Don't come to The White Elephant to see how you learned for Inkstead, come to THE WHITE ELEPHANT to learn for you. THE WHITE ELEPHANT will teach you how to be a man-kitten for you. THE WHITE ELEPHANT MARKS SAT, *Sat* & *Sun*. See ya after all, allegory?
If you took my brown leather purse from Robert, I would return it. If you please return other contents to Robbins, I will.
If, too, don't like Republican politics—join KU.
But don't want to be part of a group to participate in the national and state convention.
FOR RENT
FOR LEST to male or female student. Nest in
basket. 1 block from entrance. 1 block from
parking. Parking and utilities paid
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
18th Bath 841-2656
10.5 KING STREET
--atmosphere"
K
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
UNABLE TO PARK?
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
NIGHT CLASSES?
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
Area's Largest Selection
PERSONAL
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
5:45 - 10:15
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT AND CONTAINMENT
FOR TWO BEDROOMS IN A GENERIC FAMILY
REQTURE. NORMAL KIT and LAUNDRY. No pr
prices.
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
Rose KEYBOARD
Smoking Is Our Only Business
HILLWELL APARTMENTS, 1723-1750 West 24th.
New listing is a 2 bedroom furniture for up-
mium-$999. Two additional rooms, dimming,
carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen,
gym and laundry room. KBU stop.
Resident manager in parking. KBU
stop. Resident manager in parking.
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, space for dogs and horses, private kitchen interior, private kitchen interior, private bathroom
George's Shop
FOR RENT. The Indian Large commercial room
for rent is located in the heart of West Bengal.
Kitchen卫厨 driver drive to room #130. Bedroom #5
and bathroom #2. Free Wi-Fi. 24/7 cleaning.
Please call 911 for emergency help.
843-3007
APPEARANCE-suspicious elephant and quiet 12 birds
Near Wet and Near no. town, No. post: BK-707-100,
ff
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS are on campus and save you time and money. bedroom apts with utilities paid. Call 412-893-1111 at www.jayhawkertowers.com If
For Rent: Furnished, 1 bedroom apts. (2)
3 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms. Between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Mon-Fri.
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles
RENT-DURLEPLEX bip floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen, laundry, parking (incesses. Call MMEK. Kitten Pet Washroom.
Finished Apts. for rent at 18 W, 14th, 1 and 2 floors.
Room Apt. for rent at 16 W, 15th, 1 and 2 floors.
water paid. Card Torn at 82m2x2.0 for 4 aries.
Water paid. Card Torn at 82m2x2.0 for 4 aries.
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights $7 coupons for every work can be purchased at the SNA
Individual night ticket sales start 2-22
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings ½ Price
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
private balcony, enclosed patio, entered storage room, NEAR
Riverfront. Call (804) 576-5193.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to
a destination you really don't know? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive wa for
practically anywhere
Let your Valentine greeting be understood sensibly, with a fragrant candle from Waxman (30 cents) or a lit candle.
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
EXEVER WANT: SOMETHING WARM AND BRIGHT
EXEVER WANT:
WANDLE T 7 W 14 H 8nces Warm-0.30 -3.50
J-SCHOLLERS J-ROY and you promote students in the Mafa Application. Check FORCE for Student Services on the Mafa Application. CHECK
You, the student, have a choice. You can choose to vote for ineffective leadership. You can vote for competent leadership. You can vote for who promises an atmosphere of compasience. Yet, if you want effective politics and compassion, you can vote for Kol Rdells and Kohl, and Kelly Seedt and Kelly Seedt. 2-13 times Day College.
*Textbook treatment* Need Italian Romanian; *Textbook* by book HARVY. Any condition. *Catalogue* 841-1825
***
Friday Nite
842-2500
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
MOTHER'S
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
2406 Iowa
843-9764
2408 Iowa
843-9844
Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties"
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
If You're planning on FLYING, Go to Maupinup. Do That! No Wagging Your!! (NEVER Ran a cost extra for airline tickets)
SACMH CIRCLE, K.U. Senior mum's honorary is now accepting information sheets on presupose documents for her 50th birthday, 5:15 p.m., Feb. 28. Shirts may be picked up in the mum's office. For men: Call 219-6083 6083.
FUNNY VALENTINE TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER
VALENTINE WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF AND
MAINING OF A VALENTINE TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER
Hospice-Valentine Days Day with All My Heart.
From the One Who Loves You Sun. For Thanksgiving.
Detect the Words in the Text.
HELP WANTED
Experienced Architecture staff. Full time.
842-1171 8 a.m.-5 p.m. No beginner's please.
Wanted: Salad girl. Kitchen help. Part-time work.
Phone: 843-1831 after 6 p.m.
2-15
FEMALE STUDENTS. Work as a figure model in Kansas City. Several days a week and earn cash. You will work with people you need not be glamorous. Personally and socially, you are an expert in providing person. An established, licensed firm providing studio modeling, film production, Studio 3109 Man, Kansas City, Mo. Phone 212-567-2480 or Located minutes from the taurus exit.
Two sharp waltzes to work at the college oriented Mr. Vuik, Friday and Saturday nights, beginning this weekend. Be by for personal instruction in the art of duckwalking, Iowa, and Iowa, due to Duckwalk's. 2-15
The Sanctuary is hiring waitresses for part-time
job duties. Please call 812-424-6535 or contact us at 812-
424-6534 for appointment. Asking for a
full time job position, please refer to our
website.
WANTED
CATHODEHUSE APARTMENTS. No lease required.
Can be used with a vacation rental.
Can still stay 8 w.m. or later, if you
need it.
Roommate wanted - Jayhawk Towers. Own bed-
room-fullly - furnished -utilized付费. Back去房
宅. Rent $107, you will pay $65 & I will pay
the rest. Contact Rooftop. Place 814-4284 &
12-32
Formula Biomaterials needed includes -nifene-
diamine; adipose tissue; poly(ester)
fibre. If these expire may 31st DW-www.care-
ing.com. (800) 555-2678.
travel service
SUA / Maupintour
Wanted: Baseball cards pre-1962. Please call 843-
2701.
LOST
Leah-3 men, old St. Bernard puppy named
Leah-4 men, old St. Bernard puppy named
Leah-5 men, old W 10th, W 21th. Howard-8
men, old W 10th, W 21th. Howard-9 men,
PHONE 843-1211
THE HI E in the WALL
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
443 7685 We Deliver 9th & 11th
- T-Shirts
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
List a brown crochet hat between stadium and
117 Strong. 842-9135. 3:42
WE FEATURE:
Corner of on:
842-1059
Employment Opportunities
X
Another Student Senate Service
- Sweat Suits
- Jersey's (cotton, double knit nylon mesh)
Thursday, Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m.
Third Visitor & Identity
Nancy Hofman
United Ministries Bldg.
1984-1994
borrowed by Growth Center
TYPING
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, Arkansas. Appointed Requirements: Research Analyst; Administrative Degree; Experience in research administration. Some knowledge of the Kansas state budget. Some knowledge of the Kansas state government. Possible activities would be helped; Master's degree or equivalent upon funding of research grant Shares. Will work at a research assistant on a project as part of a research team on the administrative, financial, and legal state of Kansas. Application Deadline: March 1. Environmental Studies, Room 627. BLUE THE STUDIES IS IN AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OF ALL RACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO AP-
RIDES ———— RIDERS
- Tennis Shoes
SERVICES OFFERED
Typing in my home IBM Selectric Pica type. Typing on the computer Promethean. Accurate work. Call Katie. 841-253-6900.
LIMOUSINE & CHAUFFER SERVICE. Ultimate
service for all your limo needs plus gas.
Negotiable. Call 641-752-9300.
- Tube Socks
Experienced in typing thesis, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter with plexa type. Accurate and prompt proofreading and typesetting corrected. PhD at Mesa Mes. Whitn
RIVER CITY CTYT REPAIR-815 Vermont. 841-463-8032 Stories - watchers - typewriters. Independent repair specialties. No retail hustle. We service what replaces. Unimpaired repairs. See Notices.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841- 2-19
4080. Myra
Guilfaita lessons fingerclips, open tunings, slide
chords. Call 823-9069. Call for more
course. Call 823-9069. Ask for link 214-525-7667.
Encounter Micro Lab
THE BODY SHOP
Vitamins & Supplements
843-9412
THE BODY SHOP
TWICE AN HOUR 25 & 45 past the hour
DOWNTOWN
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks
Wanted: Hide and back to Chicago or preferably
the city's office. Applicants must:
864-705-4098, John B. or 843-805-4098,
Robin L. or 843-805-4098.
Gym Shorts
"KU ON WHEELS"
- Party Favors
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
- Coaching Jackets
- Golf & Tennis Shirts
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
- Handball Equipment
K
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Heights
Crescent Heights Oaks Acorn Gaslight Rental Office 1815 W.24TH 1 and 2 BEDROOMS
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
- Books, Gifts
- Books, Gifts
- Open 8-5
Mon.-Sat.
- Stained Glass
1-5
Sun.
Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall
---
12
Wednesday, February 13, 1974
University Daily Kansan
28 Released After Drug Raid; Bonds Total $143,750
By CRAIG STOCK
Kansan Staff Reporter
All but two of the 30 persons arrested in yesterday's drug raid had been released from custody by last night. The two remaining in jail were James Dougherty, Vandalia, Mo., freshman, and James Christangler, of 429 Florida.
Bonds totaling $143,750 were posted in Douglas County Court by 26 of the persons arrested. A hearing has been set in Douglas County for the juvenile cases during the raid.
Charges against one of the persons arrested were dropped yesterday morning.
At least six warrants for drug offenses were still outstanding last night.
A total of 38 counts of violations of marijuana laws were listed in the charges
against the 28 adult suspects. There were 20 counts of sale of marijuana and eight counts of aiding and abetting the sale of marijuana. These are Class D felonies, punishable by a minimum sentence of 1-3 years and a maximum sentence of 10 years.
Six counts of possession of marijuana and four counts of delivery of marijuana were among the charges against the suspects. These offenses are Class A misdemeanors, punishable by not more than one year in a county jail. Delivery of drugs means serving as a go-between for the buyer and seller in a drug deal.
Nine counts of amphetamine law violations were among the charges. There were six counts of sale of amphietamines, one count of possession of amphietamines, one conspiracy to sell amphietamines. Sale and possession of amphietamines and sale of
methamphetamines are Class D felonies.
Conspiracy to sell amphetamines is a Class D felonies.
There were three counts of sale of cocaine and one count of delivery of cocaine among the charges. Sale and delivery of cocaine are felonies punishable by a minimum of 1-5 years in jail or a maximum of 20 years in jail.
There were two counts of sale of opium.
$^7$ le of opium is a felony punishable by a minimum of 1-5 years in jail or a maximum of 20 years in jail.
Two counts of sale of THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the active hallucinatory chemical of marijuana, were among the charges. Sale of THC is a class D
University of Kansas students arrested were:
Mark Avery, Mellville, N.Y., freeman, charged with sale of opium and markhamhill. He was released on February 21, 2019 after a trial warrant was arrested last November in a drug sale operation. Mark Avery was arrested last November in a drug sale operation. LDS County Attorney Dave Berkwitz said the opium and markhamhill case is being investigated by LSD. County Attorney Dave Berkwitz said the opium and markhamhill case is being investigated by LSD.
because a witness in the case failed to textify.
Roger Lee Bellows, Omaha freshman, charged with alighting and abating the sale of marijuana and released on bail. He is charged with selling $250,000 in James Baker Pigmentium sophomore, charged with sale of TKC and compspiracy to sell a petroleum product and released on bail.
Stephen Braun, Galen senior, had two counts of sale ofication, adding and abetting the sale of opium and methamphetamine, according to his and his preliminary hearing was set for 10:30 am. Feb. 21. Braun served a prison sentence he had可戒ed of an opium addiction.
integration and possession of migratory and reproductive
Sam McCallie, Toperia freshman, charged with sale of
their equipment.
Lawrence Mason, Midshipman, charged with sale of
marijuana and possession of marijuana and released on
appeal.
preliminary testing was not met for J.P. Marrow. A further evaluation was needed, and charged with use of sake or distilled sake and sale of simplestones and chocolates to customers, would be required.
Richard Marshall, Tupaia Prabham, charged with the murders and assaults of marital and rape offenders at $30,000. His preliminary hearing was adjourned.
Mitchell Long, Kansas City, Kan. keenly favors a firm of mortgages and引资的但在1200 bonds. Fits well in the mortgage industry.
Stephen Lulichel, Oyster photographer, charged with sale of his 15-year-old daughter's jewelry. He was released on $50,000 and will be arranged at $30,000.
Ken Scrunt, N.Y.C. Colo., senior, charged with delivery of vitals and released on 5000 bond. His arrangement was approved.
Katherine Gerrish, Athleo sophomore, charged with sale of marijuana and hairdresser on $1,200 bill with
and held in marriages and followed on $1.50.
Mark Hickman, Overland Park junior, charmed with sale to
Mark Hickman, Overland Park junior, charmed with sale
was a distribution point for this area. We moved in after our intelligence said those people in Louissurg were about to move out. We had to finish the raid that night by going to Lawrence so we wouldn't lose any of the men, and then we figured if they thought we were on their hill."
All of the arrest warrants were issued for illegal sales, not mere possession, Miller said, but several of the people arrested were "dirty," with illegal drugs in their possession.
Miller said that the raids had been planned for about a week and that Richard Stanxw, Lawrence chief of police, had been notified once the plans were definite.
From Page One
"Of course," Miller said, "the chief knew all along that we were in the area."
News of the impending raid apparently reached many students Monday. Headquarters, Inc., a drug counseling center, acknowledged hearing several rumors, as did the University Information Center.
Miller said representatives of United Press International, radio station KLWN and the Lawrence Daily Journal-World went with his agents on the raids.
pant, especially when somebody gets paranoid about things." Miller said. "But I told no one except the officers involved. Some attorney in my office may have informed some members of the press, or some members of the Topeka press corps might have watched the gathering of cars around this office."
Miller said he hoped the raids wouldn't jeopardize the University's budget, currently being studied by the House Ways and Means Committee.
RUMORS LIKE this are always ram-
Record Raid . . .
"I'm sure the legislators realize this sort of thing happens to all universities," he said. "But that's not why people to stop selling drugs. Drug raids are never a success; they're always a tragedy."
K. U. vs. K-State on our tube
WE'VE GOT THE GAME ON TAP.
80c PITCHERS
from tip-off 'till midnight The Ball Park
of marijuana and adding and abetting the sale of
marijuana. He posted $3,000 bound and will be arranged at a
TOMMY HAWKINS
synch shop.窦志卿 St. Louis freshman, charged with position and sale of merchandise and released on $1,200 paycheck for two weeks.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Jane Worley, Nedessa sedar - charged with three counts of assault and release of a woman married and released on bail. Her assignment was to investigate the case.
Palma Hungerford, sophomore, charged with possession of amphibians and released on $750 bond. Her
David Malikowski), Overland Park freshmen, charged with killing four people and injuring two others in a fatal shooting at 2000 feet and his preliminary hearing was set for November.
David Maler, Overland Park freshman, charged with stealing 15 pounds of methamphetamine from an 10.200 lb bag. His arrival was set for a court hearing on Wednesday.
Conard Elected By United Fund
Anan Wardra, Kansas City, KS., senior, charged with the
release of information and released on $3.00 bond. BD arrangement
with Merrill Lynch.
William Max Lucas, de the School of Architecture and Urban Design was elected second vice president and Martin Jones, KU budget officer was elected treasurer.
John J. Conard, director of University Relations and Development, has been elected president of Lawrence United Fund by the organization's board of directors.
marriages and released on $2,000 bond. Her arraignment was set for 4 p.m., Feb. 21.
ease Vickers, Kansas City, KS, seni. charged,充电
and abating the saliva of marbula and possession of
James Duncan-Brewer, Vanceville, Miss. Mrs. Brewer, daughter of James and Ann, received the honorary degree of Doctor of Philosophy in August 1987 from St. Louis University. His pre-doctoral research was on the effects of temperature on immune responses.
1427. Kentucky, charged with side of
metamorphosis for fire on $2,500.
His preliminary bearing was set
up.
Old silver elevens premise arrested and charged we
have been sentenced to death for the mutilation of marriages and released us $10,000. His arrest was met with outrage.
Charter Shriver J. 1603 W. 15th St., charged with three
bearings and a hearing on 30-900 b.p.O.
His preliminary hearing is due
8/20/2017.
Milton Dick, 1135 Valine Lane, Sharped with two counts of murphys. In the backyard there are two counts of sale of marthens and was visited on two occasions.
If your primary hearing is not for you or on 24-hour basis, you will be required to pay a $300 fee. If your primary hearing wa
James Christophson, L.M., charged with sale, with
he himself. He is in Douglas County jail for $10,000 a
day.
SACHEM CIRCLE
Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa wishes to announce that information sheets for new candidates for membership are now being received.
Sachem Circle, a member of the national organization Omicron Delta Kappa, has been a K.U. institution since 1910. It is a distinctive honorary group for senior men, who, by their selection, are recognized for their character, academic achievement, and service to the students of the University of Kansas.
All junior men are eligible and information sheets on them may be submitted by faculty and staff members, fellow students, or by the candidates themselves. These sheets may be picked up in the Dean of Men's office. Deadline for consideration is 5:00 p.m., February 28, 1974.
SACHEM CIRCLE
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
84th Year, No. 90
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Voter Response Light First Day Of KU Election
Thursday, February 14, 1974
See Story Page 12
JOHNSON
Karsan Staff Photo by CARL DAYAZ
The Spoils of Victory
Jubilant Kansas State University basketball fans removed the basketball nets last night in Ahearn Fieldhouse after the Wildcats beat KU, 74-71. The victory put the
Wildcats into first place ahead of the Jayhawks in the Big Eight basketball race.
Simon, Budget Chief Clash in Energy Arena
WASHINGTON (AP)—Federal energy chief William E. Simon made clear yesterday that he would like budget director Roy L. Ash to keep out of the energy area. Ash had predicted that the energy crisis would end this year.
"Perhaps I should call a press briefing on the budget or maybe I should ask Mr. Ash to keep his cotton pickin' hands off energy policy,"Simon said.
His comment, on NBC-TV's "Today" program, came after Ash said on three different occasions Tuesday that the energy problems this year, although problems would remain.
A source close to Ash said Ash had every right to speak out on energy. Besides serving as director of the Office of Management and Budget, Ash is a member of the Cabinet-level energy committee on which Simon also serves.
The White House refused to be drawn into the apparent controversy.
"Both gentlemen are working toward the
In saying Ash should perhaps keep his "cotton pickin' hands" out of the energy area, Simon was using the same words his boss, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, said he would suggest that the then White House should be kept out of economic policy areas.
goal set by the President" to relieve the energy crisis, spokesman Gerald L. Andersen
"Nobody's statements can make my job more difficult," he replied.
Simon was asked if Ash's statements about the ending of the crusis would make him a slave?
Simon said in a recent article written for the Associated Press that one of his biggest problems had been to make people believe there was an energy crisis.
Ash had told newsman Tuesday, "The immediate short-term crisis is manageable, onetime and will be over with before the end of this year."
See SIMON Page 2
LANGENBROICH, West Germany (AP)-Banished from his own country, a tired and stunned Alexander Solzhenitsyn begins to begin a new life in exile in the West.
Solzhenitsyn Exiled to West
"Now I simply have to collect myself and to understand my situation," he told newsmen before telephoning his wife in Moscow.
"You understand, I am very tired. I am worried. I am worried about my family . . ." said the 55-year-old author. He brushed aside any questions.
He made his brief remarks in the courtward of the country retreat of German author Herman Boll in the rolling Eifel hills where St. Michael's first basin入门 through the school Life.
BOLL, ALSO a Nobel laureate, said the Russian would refrain from further visits to Ukraine, but she remained in Moscow. Mrs. Solzhenytan said the family would follow him into exile.
Soilenzityn said he learned to be expelled only two hours before the scheduled departure of the flight to Frankfurt.
In Moscow, Solenthizm's wife Natalya
Sveltova said she spoke with her husband
for about 15 minutes. She said he told her he was all right after his 26-hour ordure which began when secret police musceled into their home until Tuesday night and dragged him away
Sie said Solzhenitsyn told her he was escorted by eight men on the Soviet jeller that brought him involuntarily to Germany.
and handed him a single rose as he got off the plane.
"I DON'T KNOW whether I said
"I don't feel so facinated," Kutschera
told newsmen.
The last Soviet citizen of equal prominence to be forcibly deported was Leon Trotsky, who was thrust across the frontier by the Russian losing a power struggle with Josif Stalin.
Regarded in the West as the greatest living Russian author, Salentzhyn arrived in England in 1739 and spent most of his life there.
from approaching the plane which tasted to a fat station on the tarmac runway.
The Soviet news agency, Tass, announced in Moscow that the Presidium of the Supreme Court had stripped the author of his citizenship "for performing systematically actions that are incompatible with being a citizen of the USSR" from its role in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
It added that he was exiled yesterday morning, that his family would be allowed to join him.
By ROY CLEVENGER Kaman Staff Reporter
Rocky Uncertain on Plans
TOPEKA-Nelson A. Rockefeller, former governor of New York, yesterday urged Americans to "get back to the plain old virtues that made America great."
Rockefeller spoke to about 1,000 persons at a Republican fund-raising dinner.
"You can't legislate morality. You can't legislate honesty," he said. "The answers to
★ ★ ★
Dole Says He Wants Kissinger to Visit KU
By ROY CLEVENGER
Kansan Staff Reporter
DOLE PREDICTED that Kansas wouldn't suffer because of a Federal Energy Office plan to distribute more gasoline to states hit hard by shortages.
TOPEKA-Sen. Bob Dole, RKan., said yesterday that he hoped he and a top-level government figure, possibly Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, would help the University of Kansas, this semester.
The becklers—about half of the 1,300 persons in the audience—repeatedly interrupted Dole, who tried to defend Nixon's Vietnam policies and explain the President's attitudes toward Russia and the Peoples Republic of China.
He said plans for the visit this spring weren't complete.
Dole's last scheduled visit to KU was April 27, 1972, when he was beckoned by a large crowd opposing President Richard Nixon's bombing of North Vietnam.
Kansas is among 10 midwestern states that will supply gasoline to 12 eastern and 4 others.
"I thatdn't bother me any," Dole said yesterday before a lunchroom with former New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. "It didn't disspaint me."
"I don't like it, but with a fair allocation plan it has to be that way," he said.
The cut in the Kansas allocation will be less than 2 per cent, or no more than a quarter.
Also, because February is three days shorter than January, Kansas will have more gasoline than was available last month, he said.
"I'd rather run against George Hart," he said, referring to the former state treasurer
"We have to have a flexible program," he said, and "I hope that in July and August, when we really need gas, we'll shift in that direction."
Dole expressed the hope that the distribution program might help Kansas
Dole said that the energy crisis was the top concern of Kansans and that only a handful had access.
HE DECLINED TO say whether he would prefer running against Gov. Robert Docking or Atty. Gen. Vern Miller in the senate race this November.
and perennial candidate. "I'd rather nobody ran against me."
Dole urged the luncheon audience to become more active in state politics.
"This is the year of the volunteer," he said. "This is the year we determine what to do."
He said the Republican party needn't suffer because of Waterate.
Dole also announced that the General Services Administration had selected a site for a new courthouse, federal office building and parking lot in Topeka.
our problems must come from the hearts and minds of 200 million Americans. We care deeply about our health, our economy and
Rockefeller said Americans should be more compassionate and self-reliant. He faulted government for promising more than it could deliver.
'WEVE GOT TO STOP looking to big bureaucracy and to Washington for it.'
In an interview, Rockefeller said great public uncertainty would be generated if President Richard Nixon resigned before voting on the Watergate investigation.
"I think the country will be better served if this is handled by the House Judiciary Committee under the proper constitutional procedures," he said.
Nixon shouldn’t resign simply because his popularity ratings have plummeted,
"THAT MUST BE AN entirely new
poll," he said, pretty low in his
polls, like pops himself sometimes.
Rockefeller expressed serious doubts about the feasibility of public financing of federal elections, which he called "the most complex political issue of our time."
in a morning press conference,
kookteller said Watergate and related
attempts.
play a greater role in politics and reembause the importance of a two-party system.
He said Americans were lapping out at Nixon and Congress because they were "the most visible force," not necessarily because they might have contributed to the scandal.
ROKEFELLER REITERATED THAT he wasn't a candidate for the 1976 election because he was dependent and said he would depend on his political future late in 1975 or when he completed his role as chairman of the Commission on Critical Mass. He was a National Commission on Water Quality.
He said he would support his party's nominee in 1976.
Rockefeller called the Arab oil embargo against the United States "a form of blackmail" and urged Congress to pass an export ban. But his decisions not renvested to increase production.
In the interview, he said he thought gasoline rationing wasn't necessary now but might be later. He said a successful energy policy must consider both energy needs and ecology and include greater federal funding for research in both areas.
Rockefeller's speech was largely geared toward the re-election campaign of Sen. Bob Dole, I-Ran. Rockefeller's visit and a speech at the California Gov. Ronald Reagan marked the
See ROCKY Page 12
BOB DOLE
BOB DOLE
BOB DOLE
Nelson Rockefeller Faces Newsmen at a Topeka Press Conference
Marijuana Possession Cases Rare, Prosecutor Says
By BUD HUFFMAN and DON LEVY
One fifth of a sample of 350 drug cases in Lawrence from 1969 to 1978 were dismissed during arrangement or soon after, acco- nside the Douglas County and District courts.
Seven of the 19 cases filed in a Sept. 24, 1971, drug raid by Atty. Gen. Vern Hill was dismissed, four with the notation "illegal search and seizure" entered on the records.
The number of drug charges in Douglas County has decreased from a peak in 1971 because of a change in attitude among law officials, David Berkowitz, Douglas County.
Most arrests today are for hard drug
addiction, including heroin or
delivered in custody by a law enforcement
Arrests for
Marijuana possession is no longer a priority target for local law enforcement
possession usually come only as a by-product of another investigation, be said.
Juvenile cases, charges against defendants under 18, are arranged in county court and sent to juvenile court. A small number of County drug cases involved juveniles.
Drug cases in Douglas County totalized 191 in 1971, according to Berkowitz. In 1972 they declined to 106 and dropped to 61 in 1973, he said.
Of a sample of 359 drug cases from 1969 to 1973, almost 60 per cent of the cases were banded at the county level. The county personnel monitor charges and arrangement in all cases.
Marijuana is no longer regarded as such an unkown and possibly harmful drug as such, but it is still illegal.
Juvenile court records aren't open to the public.
Arrangement includes a formal decoration of charges, a decision whether the charges are redeemable or not.
a trial and a determination of the court in which the case will be tried.
A case may be dismissed during arrangement for a variety of reasons, including insufficient evidence, illegally obtained evidence or extradition of the defendant to another state on another charge.
During the 1971 peak in drug arrests, fimes for drug possession stiffened, evidently a judicial reaction aimed at halting the increase in drug use.
Few arrests for drugs were made in Douglas county until mid-1969. Until Miller's recent arrests the arrest rate seemed to have hit a pre-69 level.
Fines reached $1,000 for misdemeanor possession charges, but sentences never exceeded one year and were almost always suspended or probationary.
The only unsuspended sentences from 1969 to 1973 were given to hikikiners on the turnip charge with drug possession or defendants who had already served the
Virtually all misdemeanor cases last year received suspended or probationary sentences for one year. Fines averaged $250. Any violation of drug laws will send the parole back to jail for the duration of his sentence.
majority of their sentence while awaiting trial. Sentences for these groups seldom have the same length.
A small number of county court maidencorner cases are appended to the
At the district court level, the nature of drug offenses, amount of fines and type of charges is determined.
A new charge, attempted possession of marijuana or other drugs, emerged in county court in the early '70s. It isn't treated as severely as possession charges. In May, 1970, for example, a conviction resulted in only a $75 fine.
Besides handling appeals from the county court, the district court is the court of appeal.
Generally, a conviction in these cases resulted in suspended sentences. Often, the court ordered that the individual be released.
Changes of the charge from possession of a narcotic drug to possession of a dangerous chemical substance
These convictions were rare.Most persons pleaded guilty to either possession or attempt to sell.
Beginning in the '70s, one-year suspended sentences or a fine or both were the most frequent penalties for possession of marijuana.
Possession of drugs other than marijuana or any attempt to sell drugs brought stiffer sentences. In early cases, conviction of sale brought sentences of one to 10 years.
Most of the early cases involved charges of possession of a narcotic drug, including
After July 1, 1970 the state's drug law was changed. Possession of marijuana became a misdemeanor and the only possession allowed to be sold in states where were appeals and plea bargaining cases.
Only three drug-related cases in this period were tried before a jury. In two cases the defendants were found guilty and in the other case the defendant was found not
Of 61 drug-related cases docked at the
district court level between Feb. 1, 1989 and
March 30, 2015,
Two persons were tried and found not guilty and one person was found not guilty of the drug charge but guilty of criminal trespassing.
Of the remaining 47 cases, involving 54 defendants, 31 persons received suspended sentences. Nineteen persons were placed on probation and three persons were sentenced to prison.
In addition, 20 of those found guilty also received fines. Fines ranged from $100 to $250 for possession of marijuana and up to $1,000 for more serious offenses.
2
Thursday, February 14, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news capsules the associated press.
More States Go to Odd-Even Rationing
To ration or not to ration? That was the question facing more and more state officials Wednesday as the federal government continued its walt-land-
South Carolina, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island joined the list of states announcing gas rationing plans based on the odd-even Oregon rule.
Eight other states already have put similar programs into effect—all but three on a voluntary basis.
The White House said Tuesday that President Nixon would assess the results of statewide platoe before making any decision about nationwide war.
A federal price freeze on gasoline, plus a newly enacted ban on sales to regular customers only, had service station operators in several states threatening a strike yesterday. Some had already closed their pumps, and others said they were prepared to do so.
Gas Strike Threatened by Station Operators
Gerald Vilela, president of a Waterbury, Conn., service station, said 65 stations there had closed for 48 hours to protest the favored customer ban.
Nixon Wants $19.3 Billion for Mass Transit
President Nixon has proposed a $19.2 billion revenue-sharing program designed to improve the nation's public transportation system.
designed to improve the nation's public revenue-sharing program designed to improve the nation's public transportation system. He also asked Congress yesterday to apportion the responsibility to revitalize the nation's rail system through a massive program of government loan guarantees and through relaxed regulatory procedures.
3 Grain Exporters Lost on '72 Russian Deat
U. S. grain exporters apparently didn't make a financial killing as a result of inside information by selling wheat to Russia at subsidized prices in 1972, when the United States lost $46 billion.
The report, however, recommended that Agriculture Department subsidy regulations be tightened "to preclude the possibility of large profits or losses."
Of the five exporting firms that provided it with data, the GAO said, one of the reported profits of two cents and one of 1.1 cents a bushel. Trade sources told us that 28% of the total profit came from the bushels.
of a cent.
The other three firms had losses of nine-tenths of a cent, 1.5 cents and 1.9 cents a bushel.
Astronomy Meeting
ASTRONOMY ASSOCIATION will meet at 8 tonight at 134 Mallet Hall, Wyman Storer, professor emeritus of astronomy, will speak.
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From Page One
I: will be over, he said, because Americans will have learned to live with seven per cent less energy than they had before the Arab oil embargo. He said long
lines around gasoline stations also would have disappeared by the end of the year. Simon yesterday agreed the gasoline lines would end. "It's obvious shortages are going to continue, but not with people waiting in line," he said.
The University of Kansas Theatre
presents
THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD
by J. M. Synge the story of someone who becomes himself!
Feb.13,14,15,16,at 8:00 p.m.
Feb.17,at 2:30 p.m.
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
University Theatre — Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
ROCK CHALK REVUE
RHYTHM AND RHYTHM
A SOJOURN EN TIME
ROCKCHALK
REVUE 74
S
Ticket Sales begin Thursday Feb.14, SUA Office & Town Criers
Tickets are $2.50 for Friday night $3.00 for Saturday night
Hoch Auditorium - March 1 and 2, 8 P.M. ALL SEATS RESERVED
0
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 14. 1974
3
Six Ling Houses Declared Unfit City Says Tenants Must Leave
The city isn't "playing games" anymore with landlord Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy, Ed Doyle, city housing inspector, said yesterday.
six houses owned by Lang were "rendered uninhabitable" by the city and were placarded Monday with signs saying it was a misdemeanor to live there.
According to Covington, the houses, which are in a four-block area near the University of Kansas campus, must be vacated.
Long will then have the option to repair the houses. If the houses are still vacant and unrepaired after six months, the city will be asked to act, possibly to condemn them.
The inspection of the houses was part of a house-to-house survey begun in January 1972. Of the 182 houses canvassed in that year, 56 were approved with the city's renovation housing code.
Most of the tenants in Ling's apartment houses said he was a good landlord.
He doesn't make the tenants pay rent if there is something substantially wrong with their apartments, said Deb Bowman, Ferguson, M., adj. of 1131 Ohio St.
A former Lang tenant, who asked not to be identified, said the plumbing in his apartment broke frequently and the wiring was damaged. The company until these problems had been corrected.
"Repairs were made but we had the same problems over and over," he said.
The former tenant said he didn't move out of the apartment because it would have been too much of a problem in the middle of the school year.
"We learned to live with it since it was free," he said.
Sharon Mayer, a KU buildings and groundlights护士 of 1245 Louisiana, said she would have problems finding a new apartment at this time of year.
By CAROL GWINN
Kansas Staff Reporter
Love, Valentines Remain Popular
More people have filed for divorce than for marriage licenses in Douglas County during February, which may indicate that adults aren't all that different from children, at least during the Valentine season.
Mothers and teachers are still coercing children into giving Valentines to all the (ugh!) boys or (ugh!) girls in the class—even to the gushy members of the opposite sex, properly scorned by any self-respecting grade schooler.
But while adults are still marrying and getting divorced, they aren't doing it on account.
"We have issued 12 marriage licenses this month," Pat Gattenhine, deputy clerk of the Douglas County Probate Court, said yesterday. "That ought to give you some money." But there are already getting married on Valentine's Day, June and December are the big months."
Hill said he thought younger people were beginning to send more cards, especially birthday cards.
"It's. I love you, you're sweet" only in Jonathon Livingston Seagulls' term." Hill said. "It's more straightforward. Youth aren't buying fancy lacy cards.
"Older style cards still have a place," Hill said. "The majority of Hallmark cards are bought by middle-aged America, mostly women."
such as key chains and plaques also seemed to appeal to younger people.
amount of cards produced and the profits grossed, according to Roque Hill plant division.
He said that most of his customers were of high school and college age.
He said that about half the time . . .
Valentine cards couldn't be distinguished from regular cards until the cards were read.
"There's a lot of photography these days," Hill said.
diamond ring sales. Valentine's day doesn't have that much of an influence. It isn't that important to me.
HILL SAID new Valentine gift products
Kay Owens, who works at Owens Flower Shop at 84 Indiana St., said Valentine's Day and Mother's Day were the biggest Owens' Flower Shop, except for Christmas.
Dick McQueen, owner of McQueen's Jewelers at 89 Massachusetts St., said that although his store had an increase in sales, he thought most of it was in the nature of small jewelry a boy and girl might exchange.
"I really don't think there's an increase in
SHE SAID THE MOST popular flowers for Valentine's Day were red roses, thenoses of other colors, and finally red carnations.
JUNIOR WOMEN
Mortar Board information sheets are available in the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong.
Deadline—5:00 p.m., Friday, Feb. 15, at 220 Strong
ROLFS SCOTT
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!
SPONSORED BY FRIENDS OF THE VALENTINE'S DAY COALITION
VOTE
SPRING ELECTIONS
FEB. 14
ROLFS
SCOTT
ROLFS SCOTT
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!
SPONSORED BY FRIENDS OF THE VALENTINE'S DAY COALITION
One from Raid Detained in Jail
One of the 30 persons arrested in Tuesday's drug raid was still in Douglas County jail yesterday. James C. Lang of 429 Florida St., was held in lieu of $10,000 bond on a charge of sale of marijuana, a felony. James Dougherty, Vandalia, Mo., freshman, was released yesterday on $15,000 bond. He was held on charges of sale of amphetamines; sale of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the hallucinatory chemical in marijuana; sale of marijuana and abetting the sale of marijuana.
JUNIOR WOMEN
Mortar Board information sheets are available in the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong.
Deadline—5:00 p.m., Friday, Feb. 15, at 220 Strong
VOTE
SPRING ELECTIONS
FEB. 14
SIRLOIN
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Finest Eating Place
we have a special treat in store for you on VALENTINE'S DAY!
so . . .
Make reservations now to bring your special valentine out to dinner that evening!
Our motto is and has always been ...
"There is no substitute for quality in good food."
1½ Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843-1431
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE
One Group—Reg. 14.00
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• Famous Brand
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Short Sleeve
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One Group—Reg. 11.00
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$4'99
One Group—Bell
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Reg. to $6'99
12'50
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FEB. 14
THE
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we have a special treat in store for you
on VALENTINE'S DAY!
so . .
Make reservations now to bring your
special valentine out to dinner that evening!
Our motto is and has always been . . .
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in good food.”
1½ Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843-1431
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
THE Sirloin
Pasadena
DINING
4
Thursday, February 14, 1974
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Bra-Burners Updated
It used to be that whenever a woman declared a preference for women's liberation, she was met with stares, glares and lots of laughter. She might as well have slicked her hair back into a butch and worn a sign saying, "Down with men!"
It wasn't that long ago that the typical women's liberationist was characterized as a bra-burning, sign-carrying, man-hating harridan. But the day of the radical women's liberationist, like the day of the political militant, is generally over.
There may still be a few picket lines here and there, but the real action is elsewhere. And fortunately the focus of publicity has switched from the extremists to their quieter sisters.
I am still little more than a fellow-traveler in the women's liberation movement, yet I think I can speak for today's typical young feminist. She is a woman unintimidated by society's outdated definition of woman solely as mother and sex mate. She admits to her ambitions and if they call for a college degree, she gets one. She is as willing to confront the challenges of the business and professional world as those of the kitchen.
Although she doesn't claim it as her own ideal, she doesn't disparage the still prevalent desire to remain exclusively at home.
She recognizes that ours is a two-sex society and it's going to stay that way, and that it's impossible desirable to eliminate sexuality.
She doesn't feel that competing in what is still very much a man's world will jeopardize her ability to enjoy herself, feel, enjoys considerably—being regarded and treated as a sex object, but not only as a sex object.
Most important, she is highly motivated toward accomplishment, meaningful activity and growing growth as a human being.
Although this "typical feminist" bears only faint resemblance to the sign-carriers and bra-burners who may call her Aunt Tom, she recognizes the importance of these women to the beginnings of the women's movement. Had it not been for the Susan B. Anthonys and the Gloria Steinems, there would perhaps be no spotlight at all to shine on the women's movement—a movement which involves more than half of the nation's human beings.
Bunny Miller
Burial Costs Resolved
The problem of high funeral expenses can be quickly and easily resolved. The problem, of course, is that in his hour of grief the mourner is obliged to tidy up his budget. The solution is that the financial yoke can be completely lifted—forever.
Burial around Lawrence is expensive but not out of hand. The county will pay the relatives of a once indigent, dead welfare recipient $500 toward funeral expenses. But from then on the money problem rares its grisly head.
The average person who dies in Kansas is just as lucky as the person who lives in Kansas. Life is not exorbitant here and death need no explanation. The average weeping and shivering relatives are charged only $732.
Someone in Baldwin recently died for $2,000, likely a rouged smash in a Johnny Carson outfit. A gathering of pink-cheeked local sophisticates must have relished the challenge. But as scarily camaraderie in his eye as musical fountains played the swan song of the local water company.
And Kansans are lucky because there is plenty of room for cemeteries throughout the state. If they are thin men, they are doubly
lucky, because fat women putrefy first. And consider this: in New York your relatives could pay as much as $5,000 for your funeral.
There, as on the West Coast—where cemetery space is also melting away—a little plot of at the end can cost a great deal.
Thus, cremation is the rage on both coasts. In new Orleans, there is also a vogue for the torch. Hardly has your grave-digger flung the first shoveful before gradual seepage becomes a problem. After two or three feet, the dead are absolutely at sea.
The local rates for cremation:
$550, give or take a few bucks.
Towing charge to the crematarium
1 Topeka $125; mandatory
minimum cash asset for the trip
$250; cremation itself=$100; urn
(bronze)=-$135.
The solution is obviously to bury the beloved on your own, and in Kansas this rash act is absolutely legal. You get a death certificate from a doctor. Then you get a burial permit from the city clerk. The bloody burrow out into the backyard, put him in a hole, and fill it in.
the paperwork and the labor is
very kickin' afterwards
you can
—Jerome Llovd
Biologist Foresees Age of Scarcity
World Must Balance Population and Resources
Irene L. Brown is a research fellow in population biology at Stanford University,
By IRENE L. BROWN
Special to the Los Angeles Times
Beverly Smith sits in a long line of cars at a gasoline station in California waiting to get her allotted five gallons. Half a way away in sub-Saharan Africa, Mr. and Mrs. Smith are about to leave waiting for their food allotment. The American woman and the African couple are equally frustrated, tired and afraid that they will not be before they get to the head of the line.
They and others in similar predicaments are getting a foretaste of what may be mankind's lot over the next 100 years—the death of the 900s. Elrich has called "the age of scarcity."
Of course, there have been localized shortages and famines throughout history. The present crisis, though, is worldwide. How it affects you personally depends on
what part of the world you live in. Mrs. Smith will survive if she doesn't get her five gallons of gas, but the Sulmins may not live if they don't get their food allotment.
The causes of both problems—the "energy crisis" in America and the failure of the monson rains in Africa for the fifth year—may seem transitory and in the case of the U.S. "Energy Crisis" even pheny. Not so. Both events were predictable. Finite sources of energy are needed, grown demand, and monosons, which shifted north in the 1920s, are quite likely to shift south in the 1970s. Examining events leading to the problems of Mrs. Smith and the Salman family discloses a mass of complications—rapidly expanding population with too many people using too much of the world's resources, and having an unfriendly environment. Attempts at solution usually are too little, too late, and often harmful.
The Smiths and the Sulmins are part of a
world population of approximately 3.9 billion. If you counted one person per second around the clock for the rest of your life, you could not count them all—and by that time their numbers would have tripled, on the basis of current projections. World population will double in 35 years at the 1973 growth rate. It took longer —45 years—for the world to double between 1927 and 1973, and in ancient times it took about 1,000 years.
Man long ago acquired the ability to increase (at least temporarily) the carrying capacity of his environment. Each new advance—stone tools, plows, railroads, medicine, public health—allowed an increase in population.
Increases in population were followed by new technologies, which allowed further increases, seemingly forgetting that there must come a time when carrying capacity cannot be increased anymore. The result: too many people.
PRICES W.B. T
^ OF COURSE, ON APRIL 30TH WELL HAVE TO TURN HIM LOOSE"
The Sulimans unfortunately live in an African area that is marginal for farming in its best years. In bad years they will always have to depend on food from elsewhere. Where? At present, according to the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization, worldwide wheat stocks are below 30 tons at the best level since 1952. In 1973 the United States sold much of its wheat crop to Russia, now it is considering buying some of it back. The Sulimans can no longer look to America for food in time of crisis.
For the year 2,000, the U.N. median estimate for world population is 6.5 billion. Since the earth cannot feed its present population, it seems unlikely that this population will ever be reached. The population growth will spread—perhaps even to the United States where food production will be greatly affected by the energy shortage.
If the Smith and the Sulimin children see the year 2,000, they probably will find themselves in a world of far fewer people. they will have witnessed nature's death and the population explosion—fammes probably accompany by plagues, ruts and wars.
Our problem today is not how to plan to feed twice the present population; it can't be done. The green revolution, now widely adopted in China, has taken time for 10 or 15 years while birth control programs were initiated. But of all the major countries that have attempted population control programs, only the United States and Canada are to be substantially reducing its birth rate.
Unprecedented problems require unprecedented solutions. Before, there always was a place to move on to, a confidence that the environment could withstand new technologies. Now there is no place to go and a fair certainty that conventional technologies are reaching their limits both in energy use and environmental disruption.
The alternative to vigorous worldwide action to balance population and resources may well be increasing hardships and suffering that will pave the way for authoritarian measures to allocate materials and energy, or make more attention to schemes for genetic engineering and education in the context of a less fitted. In such a climate, dictatorships—whether governmental or technological—could thrust. The years ahead are perilous for individuals, for human freedom, and for mankind itself.
Terminology Crisis Confronts U.S.
By LARRY PRIOR
The Los Angeles Times
In the 1850s, when the British began to worry about running out of coal, they talked about "the coal question."
In recent months, they have talked about the energy: challenge, condition, crisis, crunch, dilemma, emergency, foul-up, pinch, problem and shortage.
As Americans begin to worry about running out of energy, they find it difficult to be so reserved.
The common term is energy crisis, but it is often found with quotation marks around it, so that it can be avoided and disclaimed simultaneously.
The term crisis is usually preferred by those who see the necessity of some form of immediate action, such as striking environmental laws from the books or nationalizing the oil industry.
In this sense, they use the words as it comes from the ancient Greek crisis, meaning a sifting or judgment. The medical profession, starting with Hippocrates, borrowed the word and it was used to designate the change in a disease that spelled either recovery or death.
In layman's terms, crisis became the time when a decision had to be made whether to continue a course of action, modify it or stop it altogether.
The problem with attaching crisis to energy is that reputable analysts are unwilling to say that the country has reached the point where they can tell if it will recover or die.
To further confuse the picture, crisis is
often used in the context of short-term and long-term crisis, or even a succession of crises, such as in this appraisal by President Nixon last Nov. 7;
"While a resolution of the immediate crisis is our highest priority, we must also act now to prevent a recurrence of such a crisis in the future."
Some economists reserve the term crisis only for the type of economic chaos that brings a nation to its knees, which they see as a possibility in the United States by the 1980s unless things are done differently.
But some fundamental changes will have to be made now, according to these analysts, if we are to avoid the crisis of the 1980s, which means the long-term crisis is also an immediate crisis, although not to be confused with the "immediate" crisis of the Arab oil boycott.
The waters become further muddied by those who see the energy crisis as a fiction, because various elements of society have written their own scenarios.
Environmentalists see the crisis as an oil company fabrication, and conservatives see it as a result of incept government intervention into the market place.
People in the energy business see the crisis as a failure of nerve. A Continental Oil Co. executive recently gave a speech about how the country's coal reserves—of which his company holds a large hunk—are "readily mineable."
President Nixon used the same theme recently, still leaving doubt whether we are in a crisis: "We have an energy crisis," he said, "but there is no crisis of the American spirit."
Readers Respond
Mysterious Markings, Solicitation Discussed
To the Editor:
In the passage outside Wesco Room 3140 is a door behind which lie roofs about which I, being of the wrong gender, must profess to know nothing. This door has a considerable history. At the beginning of this semester it was marked "Women." Some of the women who deemed themselves such were, notably, many must have complained at his discrimination, for in the second week of the semester, this door bore the legend
"Women" and below this "Ladies."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
At the other end of the passage is a door that appears to be undergoing a similar label-mutation. This second door was labeled "Men" at the beginning of the semester. It has now arrived at the "Men" and "Gentlemen" stage.
I assume that the ladies must have subsequently objected to whatever the women were doing in that room, for in the third week of the semester, the door now bears the sign "Ladies." Where now, I ask, are they? They were used them to be expelled from this room?
Published at the University of Kansas daily examination periods. Mail subscription rate: 95 a semester $15 a year. Second class付费册 price: $25 a semester. Third class付费册 price: $1.25 a semester an student in student activity fee. Advertiser offered to all students without request. Advertiser offered to all students without request. Advertiser not given; necessary those of the Universities.
4. C. Mo. Freshman
bursting from such action are too odious to contemplate. Friedrich Limbhoff
In order to maintain the status quo I strongly suggest that the “Men” among us, myself included, take great care to be on our best behavior whenever we do whatever we do in the room beyond this door, lest we have to make a fuss about prefer to be called “gentlemen,” and who probably possess the necessary influence to have our label removed. The consequences
Exaggerated Caper To the Editor
Apparently the law officials have become as bored as the freshmen in Oliver Hall. I'm referencing the incidents of alleged extortion at Olver in which a fat lady-finger and a face of an extortion note were found, and the police have had to have made it to the front desk in Olver alone the Kansas City Times, Wichita Eagle, and Douglas County Court.
Don't we all miss the days when student apathy was overwhelmed by demonstrations and marches? Excitement was everywhere, boredom was at its lowest and K.U. was on national television. So followed the calm attitude on campuses that still exists.
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What's happened to the American language since the great simple prose of Jefferson or Lincoln? And how can it be restored? The National Conference of English Teachers has now appointed a "committee on double-spoken" to alert teachers and combat semantic distortions and corrupt language, and to combat "semantic distortions." One of its members is bringing out a book called "Llars in Public Places."
The Watergate hearings helped to draw attention to how mechanical and mendacious government language had become: Zigler with his "inspiratory" statements; Hill with his "humble" zero defect system; and the whole range of euphimms, from surreptitious entry (for burglary) to "currency increments" (for money). They all showed how words were used to evade moral responsibility, and they told everyone a dog in a machine.
It can't all be blamed on Nixon and the "Germans" in the White House. The worst culprit, from years back, has been the Pentagon, with its love of dehumanized
Officially Double-Speaking
At a recent lunch, I recorded not only such familiar Pentagonean as "targeting doctrine," "single-shot kill-probabilities" and the ubiquitous "capability," but also two other qualifications, "hypothetical" and "sizing"—which even the Pentagonean people complained of.
multiple nouns and indigestible prose. The present Secretary for Defense, James Schlesinger, although he is a sophisticated diplomat, amature theologian, one of the worst.
stifies campaigning, which in turn, stifles controversy, which often allows candidates to ride into office on waves of personal rather than on waves of issue consensus.
WASHINGTON—On top of the State of the Union message there ought really to be a report on the state of the language for, at a time when no one's sure what's really happening to America, the use of words gives some kind of clue.
Also, the rule is inconsistent and vague. You can solicit votes in the student's rooms if you either call and get permission, or if you are introduced by a common friend. The law may make a hair-splitter of a distinction, but it seems to me that these indirect means are no less solicitus than the direct means.
To the Editor:
Because the solicitation prohibition on student candidates has a detrimental effect on the vitality of the University and is outrageously vague, future residence hall contracts should allow direct solicitation for student elections.
University residence hall contracts prohibit soliciting of any kind in the upstairs halls. I believe that the solicitation prohibition is well warranted in many instances. Otherwise, we would all be overrun by Fuller Brush men.
Solicitation Needed
The Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no superscript. The letters are subject to editing and commentary 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 member's name and position; others must provide their names and address.
Steven Polard
I don't feel, however, that the solicitation rule should be applied to student election candidates.
First, we must realize that the Student Senate contributes a great deal to K.U. Then too, the better the senators the better the Senate.
Curtailment of senatorial solicitation
Prairie Village, sophomore
letters policy
Bv ANTHONY SAMPSON
The London Observer
Griff and the Unicorn
WHAT'S IN THE BOX, SIMON?
GRAVITY!
I DUG IT UP OUT OF THE GROUND.
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EVERYBODY NEEDS IT... WITHOUT GRAVITY, YOU'D BE JUST FLOATING AROUND IN THE AIR...
I'M GOING TO SELL IT AND MAKE A MILLION!!
I DISCOVERED IT WHEN AN APPLE FELL ON MY HEAD!
NEXT TIME I HOPE IT'S A WATERMELON.
!
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I'M GOING TO SELL
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MILLION!!
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FELL ON MY HEAD!
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Thursday, February 14, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Entertainment
Classics Face 'Serpico' Opening
MOVIES
"MY LIFE TO LIVE"—Anna Karenina
plays a woman who goes from being a wife
and mother to casual promiscuity and then
pronunciation. 7:30 p.m., tonight in the Kansas
"WHAT'S UP DOC?"—Burra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal in this starry directed by Peter Bdgovanich. 7 and 9:30 p.m. or 4:30 p.m. Feb. 16 in Woodruff Aglirium.
*CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS"--Spencer Tracy, Freddie Bartolomel and Melvin Douglas star in this story about the relationship between a Portuguese fachman and a millionaire's spoiled son. 1:30 p.m. Feb. 17 in Wooldruff Auditorium.
"MAN-THE MEASURE OF ALL THINGS"-Fourth film in the Kenneth Clark "Civilisation" series, it discusses the early 150th century and artists such as Botticelli, Masaccio, Bellini and Van Eyck, 7 n. f. m. 17 in Woodward Auditorium.
'THE PASSION OF ANNA' - Max von Sydow, Lvl Ullman and Bibi Anderson star in this 1970 ingrain Bergerman film about the life of a German artist from 9:30 to Feb. 18 in Woodruff Auditorium.
"LA DOLCE VITA"—Fellini film that exposes the gaudiness and corruption in parts of Italian life. Marcelo Mastriani, Anita Ekberg and Ankog Aunie star: 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. Feb. 20 in Woodruff Auditorium.
Mitchell's 'Court and Fire' Brilliant, Sensuous Music
By TIM BRADLEY
Kansan Reviewer
Each new vinyl visitation from Joni Mitchell is a natural, almost organic excerpt. She's known for her work forms a cohesive catalogue of her development as a musician and a person. In the span of her six albums, we see her grow from a fingerpicking folkie to a mature
I was thunderstruck by the absolutely unbridled brilliance of her latest work, Court and Spark. The album runs a couple of weeks before the trumpeters to a rock'n'roll kicker to quiet intropective forays. Because of the subtle production on many levels, each song oozes swirls and swirls of such sensuous music that I worry about the mere holding up my water.
Mitchell magically breathes new life into such time and tongue-worn themes as love gone sour, the shallowness of social conventions and the painful intersection of two unchanged eggs. Lyrically, she's abandoned the catchy poetics of her earlier
Paperbacks
Violence marks two new titles. In John Buell's "THE SHREWSADE EXIT" (Pocket, $1.50) we are treated to a story of a happy family vacationing together who are suddenly confronted by three motorcycle toughs.
A Funny Thing About JOHN DENVER
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work in favor of a succinct, free verse, conversational style and she's overcome her annoying habit of cramming as many books as can possibly fit into her prasas.
HER SONGs are full to bursting of the secret revelations usually reserved for the closest of friends as she takes on characters in a battle that is ablite splice to a pampered party girl.
The album boasts such rock'n roll royalty, as Robbie Robertson, Dennis Budmid, David Crosby, Graham Nash, Milt Holland, Joe Sample, even Cheech and Chong. Singing out songs would be picking nits; the album forms a conceptual whole, and each song seems to grow out of or melt into the songs around it.
I will mention that that 'Raised on Robbery' is her first try at straight rock'n'roll, and Mitchell proves that she can fox a pretty man trot.
"Twisted" is a real nine-wrinkler at first but a few more spins class Mitchell's rendition far above Bette Milder's slicker reading of the same time. The other cubs are often called the "Midnight Alabama" album is one of the worstest wedges of wix to come down on the pike in a long time.
LEMMINGS
TICKETRON
*SUPER DAD" and "SON OF FLUBBER":
*Two more Walt Disney movies, 7:30
and 9:30 p.m. Feb. 15-19 at the Granada
Theatre.
"ROBIN HOOD"—A Walt Disney cartoon with animal characters playing the legendary outlaws. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. tonight at the Granada Theatre.
'THE WAY WE WERE'*Barbara Streisand is a Jewish lawful girl whose relationship with all-an-American WASP, TOM KENNEDY, and PETER SCHNEIDER is 4:54 p.m. Feb. 14-19 at the Varsity Theatre.
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"SERPICO" Al Pacino stars as a cop who cleans up the corrupt New York City police department, 7:40 and 9:40 p.m. Feb. 14-19 at the Hirschert. I
-EXTREME CLOSE-UP>Another Michael Crichton ("The Andromeda Strain. The Terminal Man") movie, but how did the 3:09 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 14:19 at the Hilderstein II
"SLEEPER!"—The latest Woody Allen sature, which is about an owner of a health
foods store who goes to a hospital for a simple operation and emerges 200 years old. The police are against a police state ruled by a nose. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Feb. 14-19 at the Hillcrest III.
--featuring TIDE ALSO STARRING FREE BEER
"101 IN THE SHADE" -American College Theatre Festival presentation by Meranee Community College, Kirkwood, Mo., the play is a musical comedy. Words and music by Harvey Schmidt and Tom A. p.m. Feb. 20 in the University Theatre.
THEATRE
"PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD"—Experimental Theatre presentation by J. M. Syngge and directed by William Keeler, assistant professor of theater. 8 p.m. Feb. 13-15. 2:30 p.m. Feb. 17 in the Experimental Theatre.
"LANGUAGE OF LIGHT"—The Museum of Art's high photography collection is being hung together for the first time. The collection is a survey of the history of the photograph as an art form. Feb. 3-24 in Spooner Art Museum.
JOURNALISM MAJORS
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 14, 1974
7
KU Falls 74-71;Wildcats Grab Big 8 Lead
By GERALD EWING
Kanaan Sports Writer
MANHATTAN A stingy zone defense and a lack of fools helped Kansas State University defeat the University of Kansas, 74-71, last in anight at Abner Field House.
The win gave K-State the conference lead with a record of 8.1. KU dropped one-half game to No. 3.
KU was stymied throughout the game by an inability to penetrate the saging K-State zone. Most of KU's points came on long jump shots from the outside. KU's two longest jumps and Rick Suttle were ineffective met with the game and combined for only 14 points.
A second major factor in the game was K-State's avoidance of fists. The Wildcats had to finish the game with only 15. KU'd get to shoot a free throw until 8:28 was left in the second half. The Hawks finished the game with only one free throw made in four rounds.
KU opened up an 8-lead early in the first half, on long jump shots by Norm Cook, Dale Greenlee, Roger Morningstar and Knight.
K-State surged on back three field goals by Kary Williams to take the lead, 16-12 with 10 seconds left.
The two teams traded baskets several times before K-State finally broke away to its biggest lead of the half, 27-20, with 6:24 left.
KU fought back to tie it at 30-on goals by Tom Kivisto, Morningstar, Tommy Smith and two follow shots by Suttle. The half ended with KU ahead 34-13. KU's final points came on two long jump shots, one on either by Smith with only two seconds left.
The second half was similar to the first with KU getting most of its points from outside and the lead being traded back and forth in the early going.
K-STATE TOOK the lead for good, 41-40, on a short jump shot by Dean Harris with 17:44 left. The lead was lengthened to 51-42, K-State's biggest of the game, on shots by Larry Williams, McVey and Harris. That came with 14:27 left.
35-foot jump shots, one by Smith and two by Greenlee pulled KU within three again, 62-89 with 5-44 left. But the Wildcats had another seven lead, 68-10 with 3-10 left.
KU cut the lead to five points several times in the final minutes, but couldn't keep it going.
K-STATE SCORED its final points on two clutch free throws by Harris and two long jump shots by Larry Williams and Kruger. The three long jump shots that shot atia (7, 7-8)
It wasn't that KU played poorly, but that K-State played that much better—especially Larry Williams and McVey. Williams was the leading scorer in the game with 20 points on ten of 14 from the field. McVey added 15 points in one of his best performances, while Mississippi high was 15 against Northeast Missouri State, hardly in the same class as KU.
If statistics are any consolation, KU outschool and outboundbounded the Wildcats, but it is still an unfortunate
The next game for KU will be against Iowa State Saturday in Allen Field House.
Pinehill
| | FG | FC | RT | RB | F | TK |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cook | 0.16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 16 |
| Murgantierar | 0.16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 16 |
| Mugentierar | 0.16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 16 |
| Kikko | 0.13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 14 |
| Kikko | 0.13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 14 |
| Sutti | 0.12 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 12 | 12 |
| Sutti | 0.12 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 12 | 12 |
KANSAS STATE (24)
Cook, Knight, Miranda, Owens, Reid, Shelton, Emery—With 2:06 Left, No One Looked Happy
| | PG | FT | RB | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| L. Williams | 15 | 8 | 24 | 4 | 30 |
| Hurry | 2.5 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 16 |
| McVoy | 6.0 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 13 |
| Boer | 5.1 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 14 |
| Boer | 5.7 | 2 | 6 | 1 | 4 |
| Boer | 6.2 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 4 |
| C. Williams | 3.7 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| C. Williams | 3.7 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Total | 28.57 | 18.24 | 32 | 15 | 87 |
KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
SUNY
N.Y.
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Greenlee Dribbles Past K-State's Lon Kruger
the balcony
NEW PRIVATE CLASS 'B' CLUB
LIVE BANDS NIGHTLY
Coming Thursday, Feb. 14
SUGARLOAF
Tuesday, Feb. 26
DOUG CLARK and THE HOT NUTS
grandmother's
a fine drinking emporium
417 W. 37th, Topeka, Kansas
"We got it!" yelled a jubilant Gene McVey as the K-State center raced from the floor, arms raised, following last night's victory over the University of Kansas.
The Wildcats had indeed "got em," 74-11 before a frozenized soldout crowd in Ahearn.
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
Kansan Sports Writer
Wildcat coach Jack Hartman was more composed than his players after the game, but not by much. He was exceptionally skilled and strong, that KSU had triumphed on its hope court.
"I WAS PLEASED with our work on the boards," Hartman said. "We also definitely knew of the players who told out players before the game that if we were going to give them anything, it was the outside shots. Thankfully, they didn't have to come from the outside and hurt us very bad."
Hartman Credits 'Cats' Zone in Win
"I saw some tremendous individual effort out there tonight," Hartmann said. "It was incredible."
K-State held the Jayhawks' double post tandem of Rick Suttle and Danny Knight to 14 points. Larry Williams, Beard and McVey took control of the boards in the second half by grabbing many "must" rebounds.
Hartman said he thought a major contributor to KU's downfall was the Wildcats' ability to stay out of foul trouble while forcing the 'Hawks to foul.
Two free throws by K-State's Jim Molinari with just 11 seconds left in the game sealed the victors for the Wildcats, giving them a 78-47 lead. Molinari was intentional fouled seconds after a Bill Klein kick to KB to within 76-75, with 15 remaining.
Kansas State used 80 per cent free throw shooting and the 27 points of Darryl Winston to edge KU, 78-77, in the junior vgame game against Oklahoma State. In Kansas State basketball game
K-State JV's Edge KU, 78-77
K-State had a 34-29 halftime lead, KU closed the gap time and time again early in the second half, but the Wildcats opened the game on defense with tippins or long bombers by Molina
Klein's tipin gave RU its first lead of the game, 66-65, with 5-25 remaining in the game. But the Wildcats backed and took a 72-71 lead with 1:53 left.
Other lineman signed were James Emerson, Harry Murphy and Frank Osborn. Emerson, a 6-3, 35-round tackle from Emmerson, was the highest-ranked Magazine's prep All-American team. He averaged more than 14 tackles a game and ran the 40-yard dash in 4.8 seconds. Emerson also kicked a 50-yard goal field this season to be the longest in Kansas prehistory.
Osborn, 6-5, 245 pounds, from West Elk,
averaged more than 20 tuckles a game.
Murphy, who is from Shawnee Mission east,
6-4, 210 pounds.
Caleb Row, Percy Battles and Tom Dinkel are backs. Rowe, from Leavenworth, is 5-11, 175 pounds. Battles, 5-11, 100 pounds, is from Wichita Southeast and Dinkel, 6-3, 230 pounds, is from Shawnee Heights in Tonka.
"WE NOTICED THAT KU has been making a lot of fools in their games this season," Hartman said. "We thought that we could get them in foul trouble with our
Rebanding against the tough KU front line was a tremendous chore, KSU forward and rearline were on high alert.
"I didn't really notice whenever they (KU) made any personnel changes," he said with a grin. "It seemed like it was tough underneath the board all night long." McVey was a more settled player in the bullpen, not wasn't
Jim Lob and Skip Johnson, two of the players signed, were members of Shawnee Mission South's state championship team. Johnson, 6-1, 200 pounds, rushed for 955 yards on 189 carries last season. Lob is a 6.3, 210 pound lineman.
"Aas a team, I thought we pretty much did what we wanted to against Kansas," he said. "We wanted to go out and play like we were going to win and we just did that—we won, again."
KU COACH TED OWENS, meanwhile,
was more than upset over the inability of
8 KU Prospects Sign Conference Letters of Intent
University of Kansas football coach Don Fambrough yesterday announced the names of the first eight high school seniors in the state's most prestigious letters of intent with the Jachwicks.
SUA Popular Films
Barbra Streisand
Ryan O'Neal
IN "What's Up Doc?"
A Peter Bogdanovich Production
TECHNICOLOR* From Warner Upson
A Warner Communications Company
Friday, Feb. 15
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 16
2:00-3:30-7:00-9:30
Kansas Union
75c
Children's Films
CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS
Sunday, Feb. 17
50c
1:30
Kansas Union
Miscellaneous Films
THE RITUAL
d. Ingmar Bergman
Tuesday, Feb. 19
7:30
Kansas Union
75c
Film Society
MY LIFE TO LIVE
d. Godard
Thursday, Feb. 14
7:30
Kansas Union
75c
Classical Films
LA DOLCE VITA
d. Fellini
Wednesday, Feb. 20
7:30-9:15
Kansas Union
75c
Special Films
THE PASSION OF ANNA
d. Drever
Monday, Feb. 18
7:30
Kansas Union
75c
SUA
Popular
Films
Barbra
Streisand
Ryan
O'Neal
IN
"What's up
Doc?"
A Peter
Bogdanovich
Production
TE CINEMAKER - From Warner Bros.
A Warner Communications Company
Friday, Feb. 15
7:00-9:30
Saturday, Feb. 16
2:00-4:30 7:00-10:30
75c Kansas Union
Children's Films
CAPTAINS
COURAGEOUS
Sunday, Feb. 17
SUA
Popular
Films
Barbra
Streisand
Ryan
O'Neal
"What's up
Doc?"
KU's offense to muster any sustained threat against the Cats.
Kansas' position in the Big 12 race was weakened by the loss to the Wildcats, Owens admitted, but he emphasized that the team will contenders for the conference crown.
They played the zone about the way they always do. We were just too impatient on them.
"We were super cautious in attacking their zone," Owens said. "We just couldn't get through."
"We're a good team," he said. "We just have to get going again. We did a lot right."
tonight. We didn't play bad but we weren't great either."
But, as K-State floor leader Lon Kreuger pointed out, the invincibility of KU was that it had been built to fail.
"We KWEEN THAT 14 games was a long stretch," Kruger said of the Big 8 conference schedule. "And if KU could win all four, it would obviously deserved to win the league crown.
But, thanks to K-State, KU won't win all 14 games this year. And, for KU, the revenge countdown for their March 6 home game rematch with the Wildcats has been.
TACO
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FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
Maupintour travel service
Make your airline reservations NOW for Spring Break with
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Kansas Union
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8
Thursday, February 14, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Premed Advising Being Organized
By LINDA WEINSTEIN Kansan Staff Reporter
An advisory organization for premedical students has been started by a University of Kansas student and is being funded by the Student Senate.
Ray Lewis Jr., Edison, N.J., senior, is organizer and president of the new Student Association of Combined Health Services.
Lewis said yesterday that he had seen the need for premedical advising three years upon and that he had waited to see the need acted upon. He said, however, nothing was done and he decided to form an organization himself.
Terry Law, Ellinwood senior and vice president of the organization, said, the organization would provide a chance for
premedical students to work together instead of competing.
BESIDES ADVISING STUDENTS about the required premedical curriculum core, Lewis and the organization would offer courses of studies from midwest medical schools.
He said the organization would act as an information service for premedical
Peruvian Ex-President Advocates Self-Sufficiency for Hemisphere
By DAGMAR R. PADEN Kansan Staff Reporter
The United States won't be able to attain national self-sufficiency according to the Rt. Hon. Fernando Balaude-Terry, president of Peru from 1963 to 1968. In a speech last night in the Kansas Union Building, he denounced bermispherical self-sufficiency instead.
He said that by 1894 the United States would import many raw materials including all of its tin and 30 per cent of its copper.
"If the national self-sufficiency goal for the United States is too ambitious, as it seems it is, why not aim for hemispheric self-sufficiency?" Belaunde asked.
Latin America needs equipment and know-how when the United States needs raw materials, Belarus said. In the Soviet era, the U.S. had little interest they aren't affected as much as the Free
World by the energy crisis.
The Andes mountains, Belaune said,
could be a source of much hydroelectric
Balaieu said it was possible that new technology could allow energy-producing countries to transport electrical power to industrial counties without heavy costs.
The resources of the sea are of great concern to Latin American countries, Belaude said.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Officer Interviews February 26
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
Board Member Interviews March 2
Director, Festival of the Arts
Films
Fine Arts
Forums
Free University
Ubal Relations
Indoor Recreation
Outdoor Recreation
Special Events
Travel
Other (Define Position)
Information and Applications Available in the SUA Office
Deadline for Officer Applications: 5 p.m. Friday, February 22
Deadline for Board Member Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27
Lewis said he would also organize review sessions for the Medical College Admission Test and the Dental College Admission Test. The organization, which is still in the planning stages, has 10 members. Lewis said he planned to set up a central advisory committee to oversee each. Each separate branch of health care would form its own subcommittee, he said.
THE PURPOSE OF the central advisory committee will be to provide one localized
The Student Senate allocated $125 to the organization to pay for its expenses. Lewis said, however, the allocation wouldn't be enough to pay for mailing costs, numedographical review booklets, medical entrance exams and general expenses.
There will be an organization meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. March 3 in Wescrose Hall to recruit members. Robert Adams, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and vice chancellor for student affairs, will be at the meeting to answer questions.
Election Day Feb.14
Use Kansan Classified
Jayhawk
VOLKSWAGEN
Introduces
JIM NUGENT
Your University Sales Representative
Jim is attending K.U. and will be at your service for the next three years. Jim has had previous experience in Volkswagen sales.
Jim has new and used Volkswagens for sale to students, faculty', administration, alumni and friends of the university. Your sales representative works at your convenience—his hours are your hours.
Realizing the student's time and money situation, Jim will be glad to meet with you at your convenience in your home or elsewhere. There is no need to come to the showroom—let the showroom come to you.
Call Jim at 864-2653 or 843-2200 anytime for a personal appointment. Look into the economy minded Volkswagen and let Jim explain the "Owners Security Blanket." Bank financing available with approved credit.
C
surprise!! TOGETHER WITH surprise!!
Flash
Flash Codiac and the continental kids
free state opera house 642 Mass.Ave. Lawrence
free state opera house
free state opera house 642 Mass.Ave. Lawrence
free state opera house
5
Don't miss Flash Cadillac's only appearance in the area!! We're selling limited tickets so there's room to rock 'n' roll!!! Hang up your dice and shine your wheels!
$3 in advance
$3 ^{50} at the door
This Weekend!!!
fri.15 & sat.16
9- midnight
Advance Tickets at KIEF'S and BETTER DAYS in Lawrence BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD.
C
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 14. 1974
9
End of Skylab to Have Little Effect at KU, Dean Says
By S. J. WOHLRABE
and ANN GARDNER Kansan Staff Reporters
The phasing out of the Skylab program won't drastically affect the University of Kansas, William P. Smith, in the School of Engineering, said yesterday.
"That particular aspect may be plaused out but we have many other NASA research programs still going," said Smith, who is also director of the Engineering Science Division of the Center for Research, Inc. (CRINC).
B, G. Barr, assistant dean of research administrator and executive director of CRINC, said yesterday that the Skyla space program at KU wouldn't entirely end. He said KU would continue to analyze the data from the Skyla project.
Barr said he thought Skylab comprised
only about 20 per cent of the total research grant funding from the Nation Aeronautics
Smith and Barr said the Skylab program constituted such a small part of the KU—NASA cooperative budget that the cut in funds didn't hurt KU.
"THIS PHASING OUT of research programs is nothing new," said Smith. "The pattern of funding is constantly changing. For example, the energy crisis will be the new thing these days in funding and we are developing those interests."
"The individual projects go up and down. We have to have new money coming into different projects at different times. It's part of the game."
would bring in an estimated $600,000 during the next three years.
CHINC is in the process of negotiating an advanced airspace program involving KU and three Wichita-based aircraft companies, said Barr. He said the contract
KU receives an average of about $500,000,
yearly in NASA contracts, said Barr.
BARR SAID KU ALSO had a new KU NASA research grant for Earth Resource Technology Satellites (ERTS). He said KU was the first to have an ERTS univariate satellite next year.
KU receives substantial aerospace contracts from NASA, said Smith. Prospects of more funds from NASA are in place for this research. NASA contracts is on this year, he said.
Although the Skylab space program involved five departments at KU, Barr and Smith said the plasing out of the program wouldn't seriously affect faculty working on it.
Smith said that the faculty affected by the end of Skylab would have to look for new research funds but that their jobs weren't in jeopardy.
THOSE MOST SERIOUSLY affected by the end of Skylab are graduate students,
"We will have to start developing new contract proposals and resaign displaced customers."
Barr said it was much easier to phase out students in research grant programs because they were usually at KU for only two or three years.
dean of Research Administration, said professors were very concerned with the effect on students of the end of federal programs.
Barbara Etzel, professor of human development and family life and associate
"Professor are very loyal to students and concerned about the poor monetary悬崖," she said. "The university grants," she said. "Some professors go out and literally farm students out of their own money."
Whether the fund would be a loan or money that need not be repaid was also questioned.
JIM YOUNG, LAWRENCE GRADUATE STUDENT in oceanography, said, "two or three professors work together to try to find a way for other projects when one contract runs out."
The future of research grants from NASA is relatively secure, said Smith.
ATTENTION FRESHMAN
WOMEN
*Attempts to work out proposals and to work out the money situation have been made.*
Legal Fund for Profs Discussed by AAUP
"I just can't see that all money for KU projects would be cut by NASA," he said.
CWENS (honorary Sophomore women's organization) is now accepting applications for 1974-75 membership.
Selection based on activities, scholarship and leadership qualities.
confident we will be successful on NASA project funding in the future."
Contact Linda Jones at the Dean of Women office. Deadline—Thurs., Feb. 14 at 5 p.m.
The establishment of a legal defense fund for University of Kansas faculty members whose tenure rights or academic freedom are threatened was discussed yesterday by executive committee of the KU chapter of Association of University Professors (AUA)
*Research grant proposals are con-
tinuously being developed so when we get
a grant, they will be updated.*
Smith said KU probably did more work for NASA than most of the other schools.
CHEESE
Good selection of fine imported cheeses available at reasonable prices. No extra charge for slicing. Most cheese sold bulk—taste before buying.
THE MERCANTILE GROcery COMPANY
Natural and Specialty Foods
730B Massachusetts St.
Lawrence, Kansas 68044
Phone: 913-843-9746
Marilyn Stokstad, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and a member of the committee, said such a fund could be used by a faculty member who needed a lawyer at a grievance hearing on tenure rights or academic freedom.
correction
To file for the credit-no credit option a student must obtain an card issued from his dean's office and return the completed card back to the dean's office, rather than to the department office, as incorrectly reported in yesterday's Kansas.
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1811 W. 6th Lawrence, Kansas
843-3333
Parts & Accessories
Free
•BASEBALL
1 game per player
7-8 p.m. only
--game purchased 8-midnight Tuesdays & Thursdays The Ball Park Hillcrest Shopping Cent
BEER
1 draught with each
MATTHEW
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Write-In Candidates for Junior Class Officers
VOTE
DAVE FLOOD
president
RHODES STEVENS
vice-president
pd. for by Parks
POLLING PLACES ON THE HILL (8 a.m.-5 p.m.)
February 14th
Strong The Union Summerfield
Vote Today In The Student Body Elections
Get Out And Vote!!!!
XXXXXXXXXX
The Flamingo Club
now presents daily Candy Topless Disc Jockey from K.C.
Open Everyday 9:00 in the Morning-3:00 a.m. TOPLESS DANCERS EVERYDAY This week Cindi and Debi are here! 2:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
Dance to the Sounds of Captain Crunch Fri., Feb. 15 and Sat., Feb. 16
Bands every Friday & Saturday Night 10:30 p.m.-3:00 a.m.
TOPLESS DANCERS ALSO APPEAR WITH THE BAND
501 N. 9th 843-9800
501 N. 9th 843-9800 Memberships Available Private Party Facilities Available
XXXXXXXXXX
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
is having a
Washington's Birthday Sale!
This is a genuine across the board sale. Every piece of Winter Merchandise will be marked down a minimum of 25%
This sale includes:
TRAILWISE down products
Logan 47.50 Now 32.95
Sweater 41.50 Now 29.95
SNOWLION down products
Thualome 31.00 Now 19.95
Thualome 31.00 Now 19.95 Ultimate 42.00 Now 29.95
HEATHKNIT shirts and thermal underwear SEAFARER cords
Genuine issue Air Force Arctic Parkas Flight Jackets and Split Hood Parkas Cold Weather Boots and Work Boots
This sale is not designed to close out our slow-moving items. We are fully stocked and are selling First Class winter merchandise at a great savings.
It's a Winter's End Sale so Come to Sunflower and Save!
10
Thursday, February 14. 1974
University Daily Kansan
Local School District Is Desperate for Money; Superintendent Wants Budget Limit Increase
By BOB MARCOTTE
Several bills now before the Kansas Legislature would directly affect the operations and funding of the Lawrence school district to Carl Knox, president of schools.
Knox discussed the bills Monday night at a meeting of the Lawrence Area PTA (LA) on Tuesday.
He attached the greatest importance to a House bill that would raise a 5 per cent limit on budget increases to 1 per cent. The limit is set at the point where the school districts. The Lawrence school district is included in the 5 per cent limit, which was passed during last year's session as part of the legislation.
The 5 per cent limit means the school district can't increase its budget more than 5 per cent over the previous year's budget. Knox said. The 5 per cent limit applies to those districts whose costs per student email or exceed the statewide average cost.
The new legislation, Knox said, would raise that limit to a 7 per cent increase above the previous year's budget. It was introduced, Knox said, because of economic conditions that have developed in the state during the past year. Knox said inflation was hurting the schools as much as it was hurting the average consumer.
He gave the following examples of rising costs:
Paper selling for 76 cents a ream this year will cost the school district $1.05 a
—Bulk gas that the school district bought for 23 cents a gallon last year is being bought on a month-to-month basis for 38 cents a gallon.
—the costs of basic instruction supplies such as thumb tacks, rubber bands and art markers.
"What they will be in the future we don't know," Knox said.
—The school district pays $100 a month
for trash collecting services from the city,
but cost will increase to $100 a month.
Passage of the 71 per cent limit is needed desperately. Knox said.
Without it, he said, "I think the hand-writing is pretty clear on the wall that it's going to be a tight squeeze to maintain even our present person."
Given the 5 per cent limitation, he said, school personnel are having to settle for pay increases that can't match the 8.8 per cent rise in the cost of living. The sacrifice is even greater, he said, because professors are larger holders of unions are drawing larger increases.
Knox said he thought there was a very good chance that the budget increase bill would be acted upon favorably. Representatives of the state's public schools, including the School Association, PTA chairmen, the United School Administration and the state Department of Education met in Topeka Monday, Knox said, and agreed that passage of the bill was urgent and necessary. Legislators will probably treat the bill as a measure for the House Ways and Means Committee can find funds to help finance the increase.
Another critical item before the legislature is a senate bill that would establish a state public school and vocational educational programs in the local school districts. Those programs were excluded from the basic finance formula and are now funded through local mill funds.
The new legislation is aimed at "power equalization," Knox said, which would provide for a more balanced contribution of revenue for the programs by the state and the local district, depending upon the wealth of the local district.
It would result in lower property taxes in the local districts and allow greater tax incentives.
The bill would also remove a current requirement that local school districts must pay the tuition costs of high school graduates from the district who go on to vocational-technical schools, even in other parts of the state.
district has levied but is not able to use for its own benefit.
The Lawrence school district, he said, pays about $22,000 a year for students attending vocational-technical schools throughout the state.
Passage of the power equalization bill and the budget limitation bill depends upon the amount of state funds the House Ways and Means committee will have to apply to the bills. The committee must establish priorities in the allocation of state funds. Those priorities will affect both pieces of legislation, he said.
willing to devote time & energy to the Senate.
RICHARD MEISEL is:
—a candidate for Student Senate from Liberal Arts & Sciences.
—interested in helping the Student Senate realize its potential for the students.
This is money, Knox said, that the school.
L. A.&S. Students Vote for Richard Meisel on Feb. 13 & 14.
Pd. for by Richard Meisel campaign committee
WE'VE
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THE BODEGA A Private Club
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it's a tie, it's a sandal, and it's crepe soled. Only Famoliare can combine these great features into a super comfortable shoe. In navy, white, or brown, the only way to go for spring—
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Use Kansan Classifieds
Dear Steven,
As you know, your mother and I have made great sacrifices to send you through college. The very idea of you asking us of we can send you to Europe this summer is outrageous the nerve! Your mother and I haven't had a vacation in the last 5 years.
But knowing you, you'll get yourself to Europe someway or other. Well to show you we do want you to enjoy yourself like the other kids. I've sent this STUDENT-RAILPASS coupon your mother clipped out. Because you're a student underde, you can get unlimited second-class rail travel in 13 countries for up to 2 months for only $165. The trains are clean, modern, punctual fast, and comfortable. So once you get over there you can see Europe as cheaply as possible.
By the way get your STUDENT-RAILPASS here; you can't buy it in Europe. Also a great deal Steve -- tax free and one beautiful way to beat currency fluctuations.
Now there are two things I suggest you do. First, send in the coupon so you can buy the ticket. Second, start saving your money. Love, Dad
Mr.
2
Jason
192 STUDENT-RAILPASS
It allows you Europe at the Europeans see it.
Eurailpass, is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark,
France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway, Portugal, Poland, Sweden, weitere
Eurailpass, Box 90, Johannesburg, New York 117116
Send me your free Student-RailPass folder. □
On my tree Eurailpass folder with reinforced map. □
Name...
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Fares subject to change
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 14, 1974
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Deadline: 5:00 p.m.2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
I LOVE YOU
❤
I LOVE YOU
Happy Valentines Day Douthart Hall!!
Nancy Nulder Roses are blue, Red Violets are blue,
Nancy Nulder I ed my copy to my protector that I love you.
♠
Man of the world—you'll always be a winner
His kind of happy Valentines Day Good Luck and
I Love You
Mrs. Ross, you the light of our life, the coal of fire, we cannot live without You—be our companion.
TO BIG BOY DEBT, ITAURUS's favorite flutie. Be calmer. Or I'll be唱 (released with a deal)
W LOVE the Pi Phi, Stuart, Cham, Michael
W LOVE the Pi Phi, Stuart, Cham, Michael
W LOVE the Pi Phi, Stuart, Cham, Michael
DELTA SWEET-
HEARTS HI PIPA SPAWS
Coach you've made me so very happy. Thanks.
We've been better than I expected. Love. Always,
Sunny.
Hanna, who has long since the last time you've
about me, seems more comfortable with some friend's heart love. Ron McDonnell
Five-chewed I'd like to have three fires. One in the fireplace, one in me and one in your J. A.M.
I LOVE YOU
I LOVE YOU
February 16th is special; it only once comes on a holiday. David A. Hewlett's day is a special day for our love. David A. Hewlett
Lubbbe, Zubu-Have a Zing out Day! Hugs and
Kisses—Zebu
This is to express my total love and commitment to the one I care about, be my Valentine for tomorrow, be my Cindy Lay, be my friend.
Strange Feltows 2016. We'll produce the goods and materials at info time. The lesson we promised for Friday is on food packaging.
Valentine Poem to Diana Roes are red. Valentine Poem to Diana Roes are red. Now, i will dream of you. Love, Rancher.
Gack-Ook 21 is the magic number. I can hardw-
ind. Wait, India needs you. Love, LH.LM
Luke… Preshas don't always come in canals' it
for you. CLING TO ME. MECISHAR
it for you. CLING TO ME. MECISHAR
Aa== "Wiveld" Lorrie, "lornie" Vicky Jeannette,
Aa== "Wiveld" Lori, "lornie" Vicky Jeannette,
Aa== a turkey cute. bye, hire now. LED
a turkey cute. bye, hire now. LED
R. J. D—We all love you (especially L.J.H).
R. J. D—We all love you (especially L.J.H).
R. J. D—We all love you (especially L.J.H).
Rob-Yes dear you, forever and ever.
Even if you are too tall for no happy Valentine,
you are too short for no happy Valentine.
Seout. You're so warm and so fine. When I am
bereaved, you will be relieved to be benebled
by your valentine. I love you.
To my "Special Brothers" I love you all—C.O.
I LOVE YOU
EIC! To my heart, you're the best. You're as
awful as you are. I want to be your valentine girl,
an awful girl.
RN-IH Ine can I always find the long and winding road that leads to your door-RII
To Heart Roses are red, violets are blue, please
to Heart Roses I have a heart for you
I love you to the Moon!
Tu SUZY P —Even though you date another, if I could have my daughter I'd come to you if only you would bekown your little pinkie, for you, your still, your cream of the twinkle. Anson.
Sometimes the deepest feelings are the hardest to express. An adequate to ask for. How thankful I am, Sweetheart.
I LOVE YOU
RB-CB ever a SLOB could look good in that
RGB-capped VGA, but GBA's & GLAS are my
love. Love you, C.S.J.
JKP—he never lonely to me, I feel like I can't on. Comma to talk to me, baby! It all over, now.
...
LADY LEO- Thank you for putting up with my
relationship and for strengthening our
relationship. Love. Thanx.
RICK—'It've been a great year! Me and Libre love you. SLJ
I LOVE YOU
Dana Staats, All bubbles aside, will you be my valentine? M. Bubbles.
❤
1. Please spend less time with your
studies and more time with me. Love, Bill
Snowy. Roses are red, Violets are blue. We go to bed, but you can see me.
Rick-Clarke, Can't wait till. Saw something that made me laugh. I moved to my naive to my miss! I miss your eyes. Your blind.
10 Karen Nevis, my love, even though I
can't see him, he'd move in still can't
see each other. He's known—Bruce
MUNCHIN, may you always be on my yellow brick road. DIWWW
Happy Valentines Day! Cottey College, CSC
Have a spare minute! Call Charlie, 864-6138, to wish him a Happy Valentine Day.
Jeff R.F. Have a happy day, that all. A Valentine's not appropriate though, thought TD love to have a laugh with.
Happy V.D. to the boys at the Academy house and be aware of Maryland, Love, Wanda.
Happy Valentines day, J. K. Keep a aight of that
Happy Valentines day, for no $50 these
much. Remember, Rama.
KIMO HAPPY V.D. I DIGS YOUR BUNS!
TED. BER
I LOVE YOU
J. Do Bane. Your music, stir it into movement
of your body. Enjoy the music for my Valentine
forever. Your gugela. The music to my Valentine
forever.
To Hunke, Cakes, Bobbin, Litter Bear, Tuna, Exe-
brius, Cake, Kend, Kent, Grent, Kend, Valen-
vita Day to the Day, Cake, Kend, Valenvita Day to the Day
The AOD's are lucky. They have the best home
tours in Southern California - Happy Valentines Day,
Mother's Day and Za-Za Day.
To Kelley, I've tried to think of words to say but writing will not do, as when I tell you your big mistake.
"Admiral": A special way of remembering you for the many ways you have remembered me.
Saintoria Bell, Rome son ruin, Vieles non anand, I
would love to study here. We study some
study anyway? Maybe I can. Are you
Hankie "You're loved by me, but only a few of you. But many of them are. Are you frightened, or frighted? Should I stay?"
"My true love hath my heart and I have his never war, a better baggage; drunk in the wine, a wicked woman."
Hoy Bone. My eyes are still curly and my hair is
long. I have never ever young and remember
I love you. Mike
To B. Cox. Finding you was everything that mattered.
Happy Valentine Day, C.R.
I LOVE YOU
I LOVE YOU
Kathy. Happy Valentine Day. I love you. Alvin
JJ Happy 3rd Valentine's Day! Who would've known that the cardboard cracker little day in Italian restaurant, PL would have been so important.
Dear Babyfriend, I love you so much. I can't. I'm sorry. New Year's. 1978. All My Love, Body Lotion. It hurts. 1979. All My Love, Body Lotion. It hurts.
Dido's and cards, so here's a Valentines bullfoil for
the kids. From Monica Stall, Cannell, and Mackers.
The Fourth one.
An old Jewish Proverbs says: "God could not be created without The Father, who may Mom Yoda."
Bill Cox. To the sexiest and most prestigious
around. Happy Valentine Day, Pam, Teri,
Jenna
❤
From
❤️ ❤️
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to students at our campus. WE ARE READY ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLIAT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it;
influences. We come to the same thing—New
Analysis of Western California is available now
through the American College of Physicians.
1) If you use them, you an advantage.
2) If you don't use them, you at a dis-
Roy Audio, 15 E. 9th Place, 842-843-2074 Human
Technology for the Health Care
available for any声噪 problem. Cost:
$107.99
Tubulares - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles.
for sale; Nancy 12-string guitar; almost new;
call Nancy at 842-6693
2-14
FOR SALE: Apple-7 turtles $73 baited and
12 baited for $98, apple-green fruit-12 for $12, mux and match fruits
12-16 baited, 12-16 turtles $25 for 25c, quailgee
12-16 baited, 12-16 turtles $25 for 25c, quailgee
12-16 baited, 12-16 turtles $25 for 25c, quailgee
$25 for 25c, poppers and escapes 6 turtles, 6 furs
for 25c, poppers and escapes 6 turtles, 6 furs
for 25c, poppers and escapes 6 turtles, 6 furs
for 25c, poppers and escapes 6 turtles, 6 furs
for $1, quailgee-12 baited, 12-16 turtles
for $1, quailgee-12 baited, 12-16 turtles
dampers, also mites, used turtles, eel crab
dampers, also mites, used turtles, eel crab
SHOP, 77 No. 210, 3 blinks of Kawaii
bridge upon 6- seven days a wk, $81-3150
Bullet Bearer approved -AXL registered. Chum
Chum bearer available. Handheld older dogs available at reasonable prices.
For Sale—Austin Heavy Sprite MK IV. 864-6723
http://www.austinhardware.com
1988 GTO - 320 cm. in. 4 speed. Factory mats.
1988 GTO - 320 cm. in. 4 speed. Factory mats.
1988 GTO - 320 cm. in. 4 speed. Factory mats.
16 mg ZAMS or best offer. Building
materials.
TEAC 1208 red to reed jaws deck Auto-ventrue-
ing. Perfect condition. $400 need, need $200
Perfect condition. $400 need, need $200
NTERBO DISCOUNT$ - Marantz, Pioneer, Sunsong, 161C, HLC $130, K140 - Dual I144, K490, Kose Frozen $727 - Miracer $125, T27 - Miracer $125, Mircarod $10H MKR11 - $150 Audio MKR21 - $250 Audio MKR23-1024-952 or write indendence Audience $64
For Sale. French Horn, Farkas Model 1781 BM
For Sale. French Horn, Farkas Model 1781 BM.
-934-756-5000 for 4 pm in a window, Box 227,
-934-756-5000
Skid (Hawk GS 20) Boots (size 9") Lange
factory load binders (marker), Polez $15.99
68 Pelmuth子孙 y.s. at a.l. a. 318 2 b. 245
leader A1 condition, low mileage 819
leader A1 condition, high mileage
CORVETTE 1969 pop-top coupe 4 speed air, electric or hybrid. Recorded by new record added to our used ones. Beat the vinyl record-Hycarde The Sound! Buy it or sell it at RAYs Recycled Sounds, 2nd, 19th.
Garrard Tentable for sale, Model 4018 in good condition. Cheap. Call 843-5566
2-18
86 MGB new batteries, rebuilt engine, tire less
86 MGB 364 - $250 per call. Follow 6-100.
86-364-9044
Fiat-Solden - Dauro AM FM, FSTernes 3 mins old.
Also 200 mm F4.5 and 35 mm F1.8 for Nikon
F3x. 200 mm F4.5 and 35 mm F1.8 for Nikon
F3x.
Midland AM-JFM Receiver and palen of Jemison
Midland AM-JFM Receiver and palen of Jemison
fourth sound at a great price 842-8323
2-15
FOR SALE CHIEP 1982 Mercury Meteor. A Medium-size economy car in good running condition. $750.00.
Bert and Ernie are leaving the planet. From art
and architecture, they bring to life gothic books, toys clothing, etc. 843-2210.
For Sale: 23 Channel CB radio with antenna.
Call 821-9033. 7:15
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Must sell: A 1972 Villa Calilca ST in fantastic condition. Call: 842-9742 for large, insured trades. Call: 842-9742 use
1973 OSSA Planker. Low miles and many extra.
Call 843-1035. 2-19
Casa de Taco
1950 Kirbird 19 mpg. Original owner, new polyester fabric, red/orange, angular perfect transmission, radial perfect condition. Reconditioned.
FOR SALE 1927 14 x 60 Mobile Set. Set up,
receive phone calls, and access the
wireless, with love and retiring. Call
(312) 548-2345.
For Sale - New 6 vell Twin Cine Lights with
DVD player. The lights will value $149,
will take best offer over $75,000.
Additional charges apply.
Male Jeans, for guys, now at the Atic for girls.
Come in and see. 292 Mass. 1-29
1-29
For Sale: Honda-1971 "Trail 70" cycle. Also
available 12:30 after 5:30 every Wednesday at 7:30.
$1,999.
Sporter Sporster, 1971 Sporter, Fiver, Five Sporter, Five
chowned, top winner in three shows. Must sit on
chosen chair, top winner in three shows. Must sit
NOTICE
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Qu. We have open plaques 315 Michigan St. have glass slabs or ribs that we can bake in the oven or brush by the pound. Half-thickness by the pound. 9:30 p.m. closed on Sunday and Tuesday. 842-210-6199.
TYPEWITHER CLEANING - 3 day service. Smith-Traditional w/ 20 with ribbon. Tumblers, tape transports, tape rolls and ceased. Electricite and light industrial appliances. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 811-664-7920. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 811-664-7920.
Mont Blau Party Lounge now available for privation. Phone 843-2523 after 4 p.m. for reservations.
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBRATION, Inc., Message
for referral to SOCIALIZING-B427, ewntnch
for referral to SOCIALIZING-B427, ewntnch
Enjoy giving your sweetheart a Valentine Candle
in the dark, a large bouquet of WAXMAN CANDLES *W* 4mm
bouquet. PACKAGED IN STOCK. MINT.
I'm looking for a mature female vocalist (also preferred) who loves to sing with creativity, and I don't care if you are a girl or a woman with a basic repertoire of folk rock, but am willing to work like hell on anything with the group. You have to be a bit secretly hiding their talents call Randy at 6:30 or 4:30 on Tuesday for Friday afternoons.
J-SCHIOELRS. My total response for this use case is 472 responses. The most popular use is a DAGO to CACIOPIO represent you in SEM. I will receive 350 responses.
Hair like yours needs a place like ours! Stop in and check out the Lawnace Beauty School, 830! Ms. Kournus Our students will show you the latest trends we know are going to more-give us a call at 843-2635 today. 2-15
SIX-HOUR MARATHON EXCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders. Information orientations held daily this month. 4, Fint, 4pm, or call Tom Haigh 2-856-8456.
J-SCHOOLZIEI Help destroy the voting mud in our polls. Send a letter to PUTHERLAND for a gift for FUCKING WILLIAMS' WOF! on Tuesday, March 21st.
(surge of 80th & New Manshira)
745 new hampshire
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Johnnie's
842-2500
a new beer place.
Montessori pre-school (ages 21 to 5) has open
Montessori pre-school. Session information: 842-323
842-364.
Must find home for 9 mo. old black female, %
Great Dane breed -42-68058
w will stay in 19-29
42-68058
Hall.
If you took my brown leather jacket from Robbie,
but please return other contents to Robbie.
Don't come to the White Elephant to see how you do the WHITE ELEPHANT to see how you come to the WHITE ELEPHANT to see how you must have going for you. THE WHITE ELEPHANT is here to show you what you're doing. 10-Fat, 10-Sun & Sun "See ya later, alligator."
PERSONAL
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Ireland or New Zealand? Learn practically, practically? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for your trip. Get a phone to go free at 800-223-5699.
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
Festival of the Arts- March 24-30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights $7 coupons for entire week can be purchased at the museum. Individual night ticket sales start March 2- 24
Let your Valentine greet you be indented ♥
and encircle the wrapped candle from Waxman's
Candles. 7 W. 343
Fine Custom Upholsterer work done to your customer's specifications, references shown by appraisal, 843-828-7900.
EVER WANT SOMETHING WARM AND BRIGHT
EVER WANT CHEAP AND COMFORTABLE
Wear a T-shirt. " W 14H. St. Hours 10:90-5:56 MHS
Wear a hat. " W 14H. St. Hours 10:90-5:56 MHS
J-SCHOURLRE, Cheese got my campus promiserate
I-MATTA, Cheese got my student promiserate
I-MATTA, CACHOPE for Student Discount
I-MATTA, CACHOPE for Student Discount
HELP WANTED
SACHERM CIRCLE, K.U. Senior men's honorary accepting information sheets on proselytism in the United States 5:00 p.m. Feb 28. Sheets may be picked up in men's or women's Office. For call: into 219 5083.
PUNNY, VALENTINE TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER
TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER TEMPER
BLAST AND BATH. THE DEFINITION OF BOUNDARY
SAULT AND BATH.
Lawrence Rental Exchange
Beth-Happy Valentines Day With All My Heart,
From the One Who Loves You FOREVER, Done
Today!
The Sanctuary is waitress wanna for part-time
requests. Call 923-0540 for appointment. Ask for
phone or c
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model in Kansas City, Missouri. Daily. No experience necessary, and you need not be glamorous. Personality and tenacity are essential for this position. An established, licensed firm providing professional services to students at 3109 Main, Kansas City, Mo. Phone (864) 726-1848, room up to 15. Located near KC Central Station.
Experienced Architectural draftman. Full time
842-111-8 #. 8 am.-pm. No phone.
Please please.
Wanted: Salad girl. Kitchen help. Part-time
phone: Phone 843-1431 after 6 p.m.
2-15
Crescent Heights
- Oaks •Acorn
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Gaslight
CRESCENT
1815 W.24TH
Rental Office
Please post your problems at work at the college mattel on my web site www.mattel.com or call me 877-253-6940 to review any evening after pm. My visit will be free. I am not responsible for any damages.
Part-time help, for dairy farm, general farming.
Participate in the summer. Must have transportation
money. Must have transportation money.
Tenn Lean School Supervisor to work w/junior and senior high youth after school and Saturday morning activities and events of interest to youth. Must have experience supervising youth group; $200. Register at United Methodist Church, 496 Vermont Bay, United Methodist Church, 1-Feb. 16-For additional information: 943-7234, 2-18
I need a secretary—general office skills necessary.
I need an administrator, IT support,
The Music People, Ltd. at Free State Office.
(202) 814-3579.
FOR RENT
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
FOR RENT to make or female student. Nice
furnished room with two bedrooms.
Black jacket from Union. Parking and utilities paid.
Semi-private.
Wall to wall carpeting, front door pool, spa,
bathroom, bathroom, complete electronic lin-
er, private toilet, shower, privacy ceiling,
clear floor the swimming pool, plus PBJ grids
and matting. Bedside cabinets and bedroom,
bedroom, bath-townhouse 2000 W. Sichtho
1800 E. Sherman Avenue
APARTMENT-INTERNAL, clean and quiet 2 bedrooms. Walk to St. James's Park. Call 643-537-9011. Call 643-537-9011.
JAYHAWKER HAWKER APARTMENTS are
a family run, 500 sq ft. apartment
gets, with offered utilities Call 822-6017
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
balcony, laundry, barbecue, carport,
invested property, banking, school,
NAMU, and more.
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1723-1735 West 44th Way.
Now leasing at 2 and 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartments. Bathroom, ditioning, carpet, disposal, electric kitchen, refrigerator, laundry room, step stair stop. Resident app in App. 3. Call 843-1622 fax 843-1622.
BRNT - DUPLXEP top floor. 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
breakfast. Good quality. Free parking. Call:
315-796-4100.
For Fort-Formed, 1 bedroom quarantine apartments
at $199,000; between $60-$100,000. Monday.
Phone: (855) 372-4122.
One and two efficiency, furnished. For males.
Near downtown. No pets. Nails: 853-507. ff
WANTED
CATHEIQUE APARTMENTS. No home required.
CATHEIQUE APARTMENTS. Call 855-726-9311, or visit
catheiquest.com. Open 8 am to 6 pm, or visit
catheiquest.com.
Formate Romainea needed additional -sulphite
compounds and added Selenium to the DW-WW娇
EBw 1906. (See page 1405.)
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOIN'
RIMSHORE
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 4th. 841-2656
TWO ROWS WIDE
90 SQ FT
--a bookstore
10-5 Monday-Saturday
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts Now Open
Foreign Cars
314 M. 3rd 843-8080
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
Hardworking male lead vocalist in rock band
Hold up a good range. Ham player also plays.
846-2858 2-18
***
***
***
Wanted: Basketball cards pre-1962. Please call 845-
2701.
Serve charge caffer capsule of giving inductance
of $10.50 for each charge caper of 843 or 842.
Call Disk Hardware 843-6500 or 842-7500.
Rosemont Warren T. preferred large, 2 bedrooms
room with a master suite and an office.
Prefer student grade. B41-842-3841
or telephone.
Case is booking for MCI Company in Colorado.
Skewed Share Deviation Fees: Up to $9 per
share.
Employment Opportunities
SERVICES OFFERED
BRIER CITY HIPAH-835. Briar Vermont, 411-893-6000.
Emergency services. No refunds. Welcome to the service
phone number. No rebate. We serve many areas in
Vermont.
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES* JOB OPENINGS** Position: Master of Public Administration degree. Expereince in Research Experience with the Kansas state budget process with regard to Kansas state budget processes through June 19, 2014. Please contact enquiries@instituteforsocialandenvironmentalstudies.com research grant. Salary: $760 per month. Perform research on a project connecting Kansas growth and development with parallels important components of future growth policies in the Kansas state budget process. Please apply at the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES EMPLOYER QUALIFIED WORKERS AND MEN ALL RACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
love is . . .
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
843-899
Open 7 days a Week
. . . wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
I Love You
LIMOUSINE & CHAUFFEUR SERVICE. Ultimate
phone: 854-276-9100. Negotiable. Call 854-
276-9101.
ADVENTURE
Tired of Housework? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and washing. Do work done pro-actively by machine at a reasonable price. For more information, call 843-8394 or Wandy or Riff. 843-8394 an evening and weekends.
NIGHT CLASSES?
K
TYPING
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
Experienced in typing thesis, dissertations, term papers, other mini typing. Have electric typewriter with ink tip. Accurate and prompt typing. Has been polished corrected. Phd 814-3544, Mrs. Wright
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric, Pica type.
Typing in the office. IBM Selectric, typing. Prompt.
accurate work. Call: Kitty K.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-2
4980 Myra
LOST
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
5:45 - 10:15
Phone 843-6424
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
TWICE AN HOUR
25 & 45 past the hour
FINE SERVICE
FINE BOOKS
DOWNTOWN
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
Lost one after earved ring in bathroom of Man-
hattan. I answer, "I know whoever
found it, please turn it in." I am not
sure.
UNABLE TO PARK?
Latex 3.099 old slid 81. Bernard puppy, name
Bernard on tilt from 1011 from 81.400. Reward on
top from 1011 from 81.400.
Open until 2 a.m. Phone Order
813-7681 We Delivery 9th & 11th
Another Student Senate Service
Lost a brown. bruce hat between stadium and
317. Strong: 842-9135.
2-18
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
四
THE HLE in the WALL
"KU ON WHEELS"
WHY NOT
sell your unwanted items with a classified in
the UDK
m
12
Thursday, February 14, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Voter Turnout Light on First Day
By LINDA WEINSTEIN
Kansan Staff Reporter
Once again, a light voter turnout characterization of day voting in the Kawasaki district of Kawasaki
Approximately 1,700 students, or 9.1 per cent of the student population, cast votes yesterday in elections for student body officers, senators and class officers. Last year, 7.4 per cent of the student body voted on the first day.
John Beatner, Salma junior and candidate for student body president, said the slight increase in voter turnout yesterday was a sign of a race for student body officers this year.
Last year, Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president, and Nancy Archer, Anamasa, Iowa, senior and student body vice president, ran unopposed.
Todd Hunter, Okahama City junior and Beiser's running mate, said, "The first thing I think helped voting (turnout) was that it was a good day.
"I also think maybe this time a lot of people were urged on by the issues. The one thing I felt was that it wasn't going to
Ed Rolls, Junction City junior, the other candidate for student body president, said, "I think there's a lot of apathy, but I think there are a lot more people aware of the issues this year. However, I don't think that primarily means a lot more people will vote."
Kelly Scott, Houston sophomore and Rolls' running mate, said she thought the race for student body officers would be a lot closer than anyone had imagined.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
Wait, let me re-read line 1.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 2.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 3.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 4.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 5.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 6.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 7.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 8.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 9.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 10.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 11.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 12.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 13.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 14.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 15.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 16.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 17.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 18.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 19.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 20.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 21.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 22.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 23.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 24.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 25.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 26.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 27.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 28.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 29.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 30.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 31.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 32.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 33.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 34.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 35.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 36.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 37.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 38.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 39.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 40.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 41.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 42.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 43.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 44.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 45.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 46.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 47.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 48.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 49.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 50.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 51.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 52.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 53.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 54.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 55.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 56.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 57.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 58.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 59.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 60.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 61.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 62.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 63.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 64.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 65.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 66.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 67.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 68.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 69.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 70.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 71.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 72.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 73.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 74.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 75.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 76.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 77.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 78.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 79.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 80.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 81.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 82.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 83.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 84.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 85.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 86.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 87.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 88.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 89.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 90.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 91.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 92.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 93.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 94.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 95.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 96.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 97.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 98.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 99.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 100.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 101.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 102.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 103.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 104.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 105.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 106.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 107.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 108.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 109.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 110.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 111.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 112.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 113.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 114.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 115.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 116.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 117.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 118.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 119.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 120.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 121.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 122.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 123.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 124.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 125.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 126.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 127.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 128.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 129.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 130.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 131.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 132.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 133.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 134.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 135.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 136.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 137.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 138.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 139.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 140.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 141.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 142.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 143.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 144.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 145.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 146.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 147.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 148.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 149.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 150.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 151.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 152.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 153.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 154.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 155.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 156.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 157.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 158.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 159.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 160.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 161.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
The word 'underdog' is actually 'underdog'. The first one is a typo.
Let's re-examine line 162.
'Since we are considered the underdog and we've gained some ground, I think it would be a good idea.'
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Let's re-examine
John Ziegelmeyer, Shawne Mission senior and Student Senate elections subcommittee chairman, said there had been no problems reported yesterday at the polls.
ballot for senior class officers. The ballot listed Mark McGaughy as a candidate for senior class vice president. The name should have been Mark McCauhay.
Ziegelmeier said it wasn't the senate's fault that McCaughley's name was misspelled. He said the candidate didn't know who he was and the proofs before the ballots were wrenched.
He said one name was misspelled on the
Barr Barber, El Dardo freshman and
bill worker at strong Hall yesterday, said
that the college would help him.
"Quite a few students walk on by," he said.
He said the majority of the students who had voted in Strong Hall had been freshmen.
Kenyon Blunt, Topkea sophorme, said he had trouble at the polls. Blunt is classified
a freshman on his registration care but he has 48 hours of credit which should be required.
The poll worker handed Blunt a ballot for sophomore class officers. Blunt told the poll worker he was really a sophomore and wanted a junior class officer ballot.
Blunt said the poll worker wouldn't give him a junior class ballot because he said he wasn't authorized to.
Zieglehner said several students had been confronted with the same problem. He suggested that students contact the office to change their classification.
Students must get verification from their college-with-the-college or from their
school before the registrar's office can change a student's classification, a
Rodney Pringle, Topeka sophomore,
explained why he was apathetic about the
war.
"The only reason I voted for them (junior class officers) is because they're friends of mine," he said.
Pringle said he didn't vote for any senators or student body officers because, "it not just going to affect my education and one dim bit if I vote for the other things."
Pools will be open until 5 p.m. today at Strong Hill, Summerfield Hall and the
University of Colorado.
Chairman Picked for Dean Search
David Hardcaste, assistant professor of social welfare, has been named chairman of the committee to find a new dean for the School of Social Welfare, Ambrose Saricks, vice chancellor for academic affairs, announced last night.
The present dean of the school, Arthur Katz, has announced he will resign July 1.
Nominations for the post will be accepted by the committee and will be kept secret, Sarriks the normal procedure for nominations. The post has been to keep all nomination requests.
The committee will meet later this week to set deadline dates for the nominations and the final selection of the dean, Saricks said.
Shirley Gilham, director of affirmative action, will assist the committee to ensure
Schultz, associate professor of social welfare; Harold Washington, assistant professor of social welfare; Patricia Tilley, Overland Park junior; and Dorothy Johnson, a social worker from the Kansas City area.
James Rosser, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, and William Argeringster, vice chancellor for research and the dean of the officio members of the search committee.
Rocky Uncertain . . .
start an intensive campaign that will include a visit to western Kansas this spring
From Page One
About a dozen persons picked outside the press conference in opposition to Kashmir.
He said the Republican party throughout the nation must broaden its base of support by increasing its visibility.
"We've got to be the party of the people—the party of Lincoln—and not be afraid of them."
that the selection procedure is in accordance with the affirmative action plan.
Besides Hardcastle, the members of the committee are Donald E. Chambers,
Rockefeller told reporters be thought women should be able to choose whether to
Piacards carried by representatives of the Right to Life Affairs of Kansas and others called Rockefeller "the father of abortion" and "bloody Rockefeller."
Saricks said the committee would reduce the number of nominees to those who were interested in and qualified for the job. He had two candidates for the job visit the campus.
The speech was originally scheduled for last night, but was moved to mid-day because party leaders feared legislators and state republicans might instead attend attention in the gama between the University of Kansas and Kansas State University at Manhattan.
Rockefeller said he wanted to visit KU some day.
"I would welcome a rough and tumble discussion," he said.
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KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
84th Year, No. 91
Student Senators Elected
Friday, February 15. 1974
See Results Back Page
Kansas Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
?
Dos-A-Dos
Penny Porter and other members of the Lawrence Twirling Teens Square Dance Club taught several students to "line dance" last night.
Jaworski to Get No More Tapes
WASHINGTON (AP)—Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski told the Senate yesterday that the White House had refused to turn over more material for his case, the White House confirmed the statement and said the order came from President Nixon.
"It is now clear that evidence I deem it to our investigations will not be forthcoming," Jaworski wrote Sen. James Koch, the former chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committees.
A committee member, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., immediately urged Eastland to call a meeting "to consider the omnimous implications of Mr. Jaworski's letter." He said the prosecutor should be given the opportunity to testify.
Jaworski said he had been informed by letter that the President had refused to reconsider his earlier decision to quit cooperating with the investigation, at least with regard to producing any tape recordings of presidential conversations.
AT THE FLORIDA White House, deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said Nixon had decided that material already supplied Jaworski was sufficient to allow the grand juries to proceed with their work without further delay.
Beisner and Hunter in Campus Election
He said that Rolfs and Scott were told of the discrepancy before the results were added to the data. This allowed the extra votes amounted to only a 2 per cent difference, not enough to change the result.
month, President Nixon signed a hardening in the amount of cooperation he had with Iran.
"I believe that I have provided all the material that he needs to conclude his in-depth study."
IT WAS BELIEVED unlikely that Jaworski would seek that route in the break-in and cover-up case because new litigation would delay indictments that are expected
He said that a deputy also wasn't given materials that related to the investigation of dairy industry contributions, and that the White House refused to permit prosecution staff members to review files that related to violations in investigations unit known as the plumbers.
"There was never any problem with the vate totals," said Ziegopever.
In his State of the Union message last
BY LINDA HALES
Kansan Staff Reporter
Jaworski said the Watergate break-in and cover-up grand jury would be able to return indictments without the benefit of additional evidence but that the material was important to a complete investigation and might provide evidence necessary for any future trials.
John Ziegelmeyer, chairman of the senate election subcommittee, said 47 more ballots were cast than names registered. The difference wouldn't have swung the election.
Beiser and Hunter's margin was 5 per cent.
Asked if this meant Nixon would furnish Jaworski and his staff with no further tapes or White House documents, Warren said. "If he did want to, he would continue to discuss matters with Jaworski on a confidential basis and would cooperate with the special prosecutor's efforts."
The requests for some of the materials date back to August 1973,awski told Erik Svedberg.
Beiser and Hunter ran on the Unicamp Coalition. They campaigned for reform of the Security and Parking Department's ticketing and appeals procedures, improvement of the undergraduate advising system in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and reduction of the foreign-language requirement in the College.
JAWKORSKI SAID that in the investigation of the Watergate break-in and coverup he had asked, and been refused, tape recordings, and made meetings and telephone conversations.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF the results was held up nearly an hour after a discrepancy between the number of ballots received and registered at polling booths was discovered.
In confirming that St. Clair had refused Jaworski's latest request for material, White House aides made clear that the decision had been made by Nixon himself. Eastland, reached by telephone in Mississippi, said he hadn't seen the Senate committee report. The Judiciary Committee declined to comment on what the committee might do. It has a meeting scheduled Tuesday to consider a nomination for deputy attorney general.
Asked whether Nixon was contemplating firing jaworski. Warren refused a direct response, saying the question "is not before us, the situation hasn't been raised."
There was no mention in the lengthy letter of whether Jaworski might go to court to seek the material, as did his predecessor Aribaldchock Cox. Cox was fired last October for refusing to agree not to press his case further through the courts.
John Beisner and Todd Hunter are the new student body president and vice president. They defeated Ed Rolfs and Kelly Scott.
Of 2,258 votes counted for president and vice president, Beiser and Hunter received 1,267 and the Rolfs-Scott ticket received 44 students, 44 students voted, 92 fewer than last year.
Official results of the election, which included Student Senate representatives and a majority early this morning at Summerfest, However, results of the student referendum and of the election of Graduate School area representatives weren't immediately available.
Beiser, reacting to the announcement,
said, "I'm glad it's over."
Energy Office Moves to Decrease Gouging, Increase Truckers' Fuel
THEY ALSO favor increased support of women's intercollegiate athletics, even in the presence of improvement of campus security. Affirmative Action and student participation are core values.
A central issue in the Beiser-Hunter campaign was increasing student involvement in University government. The university an outgrowth of that idea, Beiser was
The FEO urged more states and local governments to take steps to solve long gasoline station waiting lines and other supply problems. It suggested minimum-purchase requirements and staggered delivery of gasoline was available throughout the day.
Beiserin also said he thought the campus-wide coalition victory would help to create a "strong sentence." But, he said, all the people who would be free to "vote their own minds."
Unicampus candidates took 49 of 52 positions for which they ran in the senate
"I'm very excited by the fact that the coalition was very successful," Beisner said. "This kind of success will bring unity to student government."
It will depend, he said, on how rapidly gasoline production is increased, how well
BUT SAWHILL the news conference a gasoline rationing decision needn't be made now, and that the question would remain under study.
-Sawhill said the FEO also would propose legislation requiring mandatory reporting of information from all energy industries.
FEO administrator William E. Simon had a gasoline rationing decision could be made in his absence.
BEISNER AND Hunter had maintained throughout the election that their experience in student government was a point in their favor.
Nine incumbents were re-elected. Ten sought re-election
the public continues to conserve fuel and other unpredictable factors.
On two of the hottest issues, gasoline rationing and gasoline allocation, however, are among the most difficult.
Beisner has been in the senate for three years and has been a member of the University Council and three senate committees, including the Student Senate (Studebix). He is also president of the Association of University Residence Halls.
"I THINK WE will see a reduction in prices—that's what we want," he added. "The FEO told refiners to increase jet fuel production six per cent and draw from stocks to supply airlines with their February fuel allocations."
Hunter was elected to the senate in 1973 and is a member of the Parking and Traffic Board, the University Council and several senate committees. He is president of Sigma Chi Fraternity and a member of the Interfraternity Council.
Last week, based on incomplete statistics, the FEO said that some states appeared in line for much smaller proportions of the nation's gasoline supply than others, despite the allocation program's aim of nationwide equality.
Since then, "have-not" states have been pressuring FEO to redistribute the supplies
SAWHILL SAID yesterday that the FEC had conflicting data and wanted to make sure it had the right figures before it made a decision on whether state to state, to alleviate the inequalities.
themselves against the chance of excessive raiding of their own allocations.
Meanwhile, the distribution of present gasoline supplies for February remained in doubt as the FEO tried to get its figures or the first month of mandatory allocation.
United Air Lines announced that it would reinstate 36 flights on March 2 which it discontinued early last month because of the fuel shortage.
"A summit meeting of Arab leaders ended in Algiers less than 24 hours after it opened, Algerian President Houri Barniedemeen apparently had been urging King Faisal of Saudi Arabia to maintain the oil embargo against the United States.
Sawhill felt FEO investigations found "some illegal marketing and pricing practices" and some "atrocious situations" where they were selling prices for promocase around the nation.
He named no specific cases but said that violators of federal regulations would be charged.
Results of the class officer elections are shown below:
Thane Hodge, Lawrence junior (F)
292
Thomas J. Hicks, Lawrence junior (F)
293
Senior Class Vice President
Mark Mc Kee, Center Junior (F)
190
J.D. Lat牢, Center Senior center (F)
153
Pat Sigle, Overland Park senior (F)
280
Mark Hockenberry, Center Junior (F)
195
Kip Hockenberry, Center Junior (F)
249
Susan D. Brenn, Hucklembury senior (F)
208
Les Lydik, Overland Park senior (U)
311
Jason Lydik, Overland Park senior (U)
311
Junior Class Vice President
G D. Laughlin, Leewardwood sophomore (A)
136
David Christ, Leewardwood sophomore (A)
136
Sherrill Earl, Wichita sophomore (U)
460
Jun is Manage, Wichita sophomore (U)
460
Jan is Mangage, Wichita sophomore (U)
455
David Wooding, Wichita sophomore Class President
455
Senior Class Vice President
N Stephen L. Moore, Wichita sophomore Class Secretary
458
Sally Ranger, Wichita sophomore Class Secretary
460
Senior Class Vice President
Lynn Buck, Wichita sophomore Class Secretary
464
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Energy Office (FEO) announced moves yesterday to direct more fuel immediately from the refinery to crack down on propane price-poaching.
All major oil companies were directed to adjust diesel fuel and gasoline allocations to give the trucking industry all the fuel it needs.
There were still no decisions on gasoline rationing or redistributions. FEO Deputy Administrator John C. Sawhill said the agency was sending teams into 20 states and the District of Columbia in an effort to verify gasoline supply data.
Only after that is done, said Sawhill, can the FEO decide how to shift supplies around to alleviate apparent imbalances among the states.
Sawhill told a news conference here;
—THE FEO FOUND that petroleum imports averaged 4.9 million barrels a day last week, just about the level expected under the Arab oil embargo, but some 500,000 barrels a day higher than reported Petroleum Institute, an industry group.
Police Think One Man Responsible for Rapes
Although the cases vary slightly, Alexander said, the descriptions given by him are accurate.
One man is probably responsible for 15-20 cases of rape or attempted rape reported in Lawrence since May, Lawrence Police Sgt. Francis Alexander said yesterday.
According to the descriptions given by the victims, the assailant is a white male, 6 feet to 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 150-175 pounds. He is probably in his early 20s, clean shaven and has brownish wavy hair covers his ears but does not reach his collar.
The reported attacks have been concentrated in an area northeast of the city.
Alexander said that in most of the cases the victims reported that the suspect either walked or treated by them. He then turned, and grabbed the victim, Alexander said.
Over the last nine months, Lawrence police and KU Security and Parking officers have checked out approximately 50 leads in connection with the attacks, according to Alexander, but have been unable to track down the suspect.
"We're just going up against a wallk wall right now." Alexander said, "and we sure
The police have been hindered in their search by slow reporting of attacks. Alexander urged anyone who is a victim of an attack to contact the police as soon as possible so that they can begin their investigation immediately.
Composite drawing of rapist
news the associated capsules press
Hearst Denounces Saxbe's Suggestions
Randolph A. Hearst, father of kidnip victim Patricia Hearst, denounced as "dann near irresponsible" a comment by U.S. Atty. Gen. William Saxbe yesterday that if FBI agents discovered where Miss Hearst was, they would attempt to rescue her.
Saxe later issued a statement backing the FBR's handling of the case and declared he wouldn't want agents to take any action that would endanger Milti.
Heast also rejected Sabez's suggestion that the family shouldn't agree to a multimillion-dollar food giveaway demanded by the Symbionee Liberation Army, the underground terrorist group that abducted Miss Heast 11 days ago from her apartment in Berkelley, Calif.
"Mr. Saxbe isn't the father of Patricia," Hearst said. "I'm going to do what I can to get her out."
Sales of U.S. Grain to Mideast Double
Sales of high-priced U.S. grain to the Mideast are doubling this year, and government officials said there was little chance that the Nixon administration would prohibit shipments in retaliation for the Arab oil embargo.
The Agriculture Department said shipments of wheat and other grain might total $900 million in the year ending June 30, about double the sales of
Service O. Shanklin, acting sales manager for the Foreign Agriculture of USDA, said that even if the United States applied an embargo, the Service O. Shanklin would not accept the deal.
"We criticize the Arabs for the oil embargo and it would ill behoove us to adopt their tactics." Shanklin said.
Lawyer Says Solzhenitsyn to Fly to Zurich
Exiled Soviet writer Alexander Solzheniin will fly to Zurich, Swit-
chen lawyer, Fritz Hebe, said. He didn't give the purpose of Solzheniin's lawy-
er.
Sözlenizten is now staying at the country retreat of German writer Heinrich holl, in Langenbruck, Germany. Langenbruck is a town of 239 houses.
Invitations to live in various countries have been pouring in to Solzhenytin's temporary refuge. Hebe has said Solzhenytin may settle in
Food Prices Rising Faster than Expected
Grocery store food prices are rising much faster than government experts had expected and in 1974, could match last year's 16 per cent jump, the
Consumers are now seeing the biggest increases expected this year,
Agriculture Department of ficials said. If farmers produce record crops and turn out more livestock next summer, prices may level off and possibly decline by the year's end, however.
Meanwhile, officials said supermarket food prices in the first quarter were up 5 per cent from the last three months of 1973. Compared to the period of January through March last year, the prices are expected to be up 20.7 per cent.
Kissinger, Arab Officials to Confer on Syria
Foreign Ministers Israeli Fahmy of Egypt and Ormar Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia will meet in Washington this week with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to discuss disengagement between Israel and Syrian forces in the Golan Heights, according to State Department officials.
Later Kissinger will fly to Key Biscayne, Fla., to consult with President Richard M. Nixon.
The officials said threw now appeared to be hope that Syria was ready to begin disengagement talks.
Molecules Involved in Addiction Isolated
The first isolation of the brain molecules involved in drug addiction was conducted at the University Medical Center research team which works with mice.
The discovery could eventually have great importance in dealing with narcotics addiction, said Dr. Avram Goldstein, the chief of the research
He said it also could allow for the development of a nonaddictive pain reliever.
2
Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Commission to Act on Hospital Improvement Financing
The Lawrence City Commission will act Tuesday on an official statement of the city's intent regarding possible financing for improvements to Lawrence Memorial
The decision to consider a statement of intent was made yesterday at a meeting between members of the commission and members of the hospital's board of trustees.
"We need to be told whether to stop now or to continue planning and come back to work. We have a good plan for the best facility at the best money Warren Rhodes, chairman of the board, held."
Buford Watson, city manager, said the statement of intent could in effect, that the city would be willing to look at final cost figures and consider financing hospital improvements, enabling the board to move ahead with planning.
WATSON SAID he hoped the commissioners could give the board an indication of whether they would be willing to authorize agreements with banks for new revenue bonds.
But Rhodes said members of the board hadn't gotten to the point of financing at this stage and that the trustees weren't seeking permission for revenue bonds at this time.
Rhodes said the board would first have to study a report by an accounting firm on how much room costs would rise under different tax plans. He also said he would be sent to the board at its next meeting, Feb. 20.
Mayor Nancy Hambleton and Commissioner Jack Rose both said that improved hospital facilities should be common to all of the communities overall health needs.
Funeral Rites Are Tomorrow For Librarian
Memorial services for Florence Lesueur Johnson, assistant head of the catalogue department of Watson Library, will be at 12 noon on Friday, the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd St.
Mrs. Johnson, 60, died Tuesday in her home at 1634 Illinois St. She worked in the office of the National Park Service.
Surviving Mrs. Johnson are two daughters, Meredith Johnson of Lawrence and Leslie Plank, Dallas, Tex.; her mother, Martha Fraizer Fratcher of the home, and one grandson.
The family requests donations be made to the scholarship fund of the Business Institute.
A preliminary study on community health needs has been prepared by Good Health, Inc., a hospital consulting firm from Rochester, Mum. Good Health was recently retained by the board to be project director for hospital improvements.
Three alternatives are being considered: creation of a new facility to the west of the present hospital, addition of new facilities to the east of the present hospital and renovation of the present facility.
RHODES READ a statement" to the commissioners saying that recent cost estimates lead them to believe that the people of Lawrence could have a new 186 best hospital with built in flexibility and at a cost of between $21 and $15 million.
The statement noted that removing the present facilities to conform to State Health Department requirements and expanding the facility to meet 1980 health care needs would cost over $13 million, an estimate made by Good Health.
Hampton said she thought there was general agreement among members of the commission that something needed to be provided better health services for Lawerence.
However, said Rose, "I don't think the information we have at this time is sufficient for us to choose plan one, two or three."
Mrs. Don Robertson had her late husband, a partner in the architecture firm of Robertson, Peters and Williams, had received a commitment last year from the board that his firm would do what Good Health had now been retained to do.
She later said it was her understanding that the commitment was a verbal one in which Robertson's firm would have hired a new executive, and that she had improved improvements the board decided on.
THE BOARD apparently changed its mind, she said, and went out of the state to live.
Rhodes said that Robertson, apparently because of illness last summer, never got around to recommending a consultant to the board. Other members of the firm, he said, hadn't come forward with a recommendation until the past week.
Rhodes wouldn't comment on a letter by Mrs. Raymond Cerli, 1000 Sunset Drive, which had been sent to him, other members of the board and the local news media.
taken at "special meetings" on those dates, she stated.
According to the letter, one of those minutes referred to action by the board at a
special meeting on June 28,1973, where it was decided to invite representatives of Good Health, Inc., to a survey of hospital resources and the condition of the physical plant.
Regents to Discuss Using Fees for Field House Floor
TOPEKA (AP)—Lawrence landlords protested yesterday a landlord-tent bill being studied by the House Judiciary and was “heavily weighted toward tenants.”
Cerf's letter stated that Rhodes had told the board he hadn't had meetings on June 28 and on July 23. But minutes of later meetings referred to actions that had been
The bill passed the senate with major amendments. If approved by the house committee it will be sent to the floor of the chamber, consideration by its full membership.
Local Landlords Protest Landlord-Tenant Measure
A request for authorization to use student
tools to install a synthetic floor in Allen Field
House will be discussed by the Kansas
University and its monthly meeting in
Tepeeka tomorrow.
The bill is aimed at establishing rights, duties, obligations and remedies for both minor and major victims.
The senate took out a section of the bill that would have given tenants recourse if the landlord failed to respond to a notice certain repairs needed in the dwellings unit.
Mrs. Marie Lynch of Lawrence said insurance rates for buildings in an area near the University of Kansas campus had been lower because they were considered high risk.
"The landlords didn't create this situation, the tenants did," Lynch told the committee. She said that tenants, who are renters, make laws and regulations pertaining to housing.
The University of Kansas is requesting authorization to use $180,000 of student fees collected before July 1966 to replace the women's basketball court, construct new tennis field events areas and provide additional facilities for the entire University.
Since the fees were collected before the Student Seat Code was adopted in 1969, the money balances to the University rather than to the student are not guaranteed by get authorization from the regents to use it.
JUNIOR WOMEN
students to disappear at the end of the month without notice. She said that if the property owner was forced to comply with international laws, low cost housing would be lost.
Another witness said it wasn't unusual for
The bill has been assigned to a sub- committee for further study.
Athletic director Clyde Walker, who supported the use of the money for renovating the field house, has said he would raise the remaining $120,000 to improve the improvements by asking for private donations from friends of the University.
Legislature to pay for increased fuel oil costs for this year will also be discussed. An appropriation of $168,145 will also be granted increased fuel oil costs for next year.
Another request for a $103,263 supplemental appropriation from the Kansas
Mortar Board information sheets are available in the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong.
LAWRENCE KS.
Deadline—5:00 p.m. Friday, Feb. 15, at 220 Strong
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ACME Salutes Player of the Week ROGER MORNINGSTAR for Outstanding Play in the K-State Game
Mingnasiong led the Jayhawks with 14 points in the Kansas State game. He is the team's leading scorer and his outside shooting has helped in many KU victories.
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THE BODEGA A Private Club
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Washington's Birthday Super Sale—9:30 to 5:30 Saturday, February 16th
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BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! I'D GIVE AN OSCAR TO AL PACINO FOR 'SERPICO'!"
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Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansan
2
More Loans to Students Aim of Bill
By JIM KENDELL
Kansas Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON-Help for beleaguered middle-income students and their parents may be on the way.
The House Special Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings this week on a measure that would eliminate on July 1 the needs test, an analysis of family history, for guaranteed loans to students whose parents make less than $20,000 a year.
Congress instituted the needs test last March 1 in an effort to choke off the rising default rate on student loans. In 1973 the government covered $46.6 million in defaulted loans, $86.6 million this year and $115 million for next year.
But the needs test had the unexpected side effect of making it impossible for many families in the $10,000 to $15,000 income bracket to send their children through
school because they couldn't get guaranteed student loans.
If the needs test shows that they need help, the government will insure a loan to help them.
"The most critical single problem is the default rate," said Ed McAbe, a director of the Student Loans Marketing Association, during the hearings yesterday. The association will hold student loans from 1972 to purchase and temporarily hold student loans made by private lenders.
The U.S. Office of Education estimates that from 1988 to 1975 the gross default rate on guaranteed student loans will be about 4.3 per cent. Opponents of elimination of the needs test content that this would only lead to more defaults.
"No program can survive if the default rate is over one per cent," McAbe said. Before 1985 the default rate on student loans was set at 20%. Purdue, Purdy, director of financial aid at the
University of Missouri, told the subcommittee.
Purdy said that under the same rules and administration the rate was now 3.5 to 4.5 per cent. What has changed, he said, is the national atmosphere.
The war on poverty got many low-income students into college and proportionally more of these students defaulted on their loans, Purdy said. The antistabulation atmosphere of the late 1980s also contributed to the default rate, he said.
Purly said that since 1971, students have been more "down to earth" and open to counseling about financial problems and that he expected a lower default rate.
Even if Congress passes this measure, which Republican committee members have described as a band-aid measure, there is bound to be more talk about student loans. The same subcommittee has scheduled hearings Feb. 28 to let students testify about the problems of student financial aid.
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4
Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansar
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Vern in Wonderland
It was wall-to-wall cops, man.
Vern and Dave and the KBI anc. the
Lawrence Department and police,
the officers who were simply, all over the place.
The street people had been itchy all night. Their favorite bars were the ones in New York.
They came belreling into Lawrence about a 4 a.m. Tuesday, all 12illion or so of them, with arrest warrants and runs.
The whole thing was downright weird. Cops were nowhere to be seen. Two were drinking coffee at 2 a.m. at the Holiday Inn, both of whom were wearing rims parked outside. The truckers were, presumably, asleep.
Then, zap! Vern and the gang made 30 arrests in 25 locations and herded them all downtown. ("Book im, Dan.")
by 7:30 a.m. the county sheriff's office was still mass confusion. Some of the people arrested were still around, waiting to be arraigned or booked or whatever they do to you. Some of them looked nervous, some of them just grinned sourly.
One young man was semi-amused. "It's 4 a.m., man, and I can't believe you guys bust in, with guns and all. I had a closed full of guns, they must
have thought I was gonna shoot it out with them, ha, ha."
County Attorney David Berkowitz looked haggard.
"Why do you keep calling them agents?" Berkowitz said, beginning with the effects of a police officer night. "They're law enforcement officers."
"How many agents were in the raid, Mr. Berkowitz?"
But there is something significant about the timing of the raid. Legislative hearings on KU's budget requests began Monday in Topeka. It would be fatuous to suggest that the raid was deliberately timed so as to harm KU's chances with the legislature, but the timing is at best unfortunate.
It would be equally fatuous to imagine the legislators giving much weight to the results of the raid, but it is also difficult to imagine that the raid will be completely out of their minds.
Later: "Is there anything significant about the timing of the raid?" Berkowitz and Rex Johnson tried to be frightful, smiled. Both of them said no.
Whatever the result of their
action, you should note that the
raid did not help help KU
Chuck Potter
And her well-meaning freels tell her to run no risks, to insist on her freedom to restrict her freedom of movement, that they themselves would despise.
Rape News Needed
Every woman is the victim of the rapist. She may have never even looked at a stranger on the street, she may have never been approached, much less attacked, yet she is still the victim of the rapist.
Every time she refuses to walk alone to her car at night, every time she decides that it really isn't worth going to an evening class since she can't find someone to take her or walk with her to campus, she is the victim of the rapist.
The woman lives the life of the citizen of a police state. Often she faces a self-imposed curfew of darkness, and to break that curfew means fear and running the risk of attack.
The ill-conceived idea that one woman who is raped wants to be raped, either consciously or subconsciously, still lingers, and the physical rape a woman endures is often less tragic than the mental rape she faces at the police station or from society.
So the woman is caught in a daze. She leaves her house, she is traveling unprotected, she is
considered partially to blame; if she stays very carefully at home, she restricts her freedom. Neither option is satisfactory to an adult.
Newspapers and radio stations are able to provide a partial solution to this double bind. By communicating the area in which a rape occurs on campus or in town, the news media can give women a defense against rape—knowledge of which areas to avoid—while at the same time not restricting their movement.
That the local news media doesn't provide such information is an indication of the stigma attached to rape—such a stigma, in fact, should not be used to rape over the radio or to print it in the newspaper is almost taboo.
The media should freely print or broadcast news about the predictable areas of mugging or robberies; printing such news would be regarded as a public service.
To hesitate to print news of the area in which a rape has been reported is a great disservice to the public because such news gives people an illusion of being without fear and allows them to be a little less the victim of the rapist.
—Carol Gwinn
Readers Respond
Human Liberation Sought
To the Editor:
I surely hope Mr. Bender's editorial on the women's liberation movement was intended to be humorous. Even if it was, lost a good deal of its intent humor in the writing. Mr. Bender demonstrates his great insight on the matter of social change.
It is quite obvious that he believes economic concerns to be the final goal of liberation. Apparently women may attain economic benefits on the job market, irrespective of the fact that employers are still discouraged from thinking of careers as doctors, lawyers, or pilots. So such 'exciting' demands as changing our workplaces and possibly do good, according to him.
In fact, may I suggest that Mr. Bender look at a few children's textbooks and talk to some liberated men and women before he attempts to write any subsequent humorous editorials on this subject. I'd like to laugh next time.
He also inadvertently demonstrates the fear some men harbor, that liberating women means that men will become more oppressed. If he knew anything about the women's movement, he would know that a good substitute for "women's liberation" is "human liberation." Certainly casting suspensions on the skills of women who work with and care for children does not further Mr. Bender's cause, whatever it might be.
Mary Kesler
Mary Resier Lawrence graduate student
Outspoken Machismo
Why is it that quiet men always shoot their mouths in print? Could it be that their parents, textbooks, teachers, presidents, principals, television stars, comic strip
To the Editor:
Why else would intelligent and apparently reasonable men preach to women all over Tuesday's Kanan editorial page? Maybe they would remind them to remind themselves of their superiority.
characters, employers, encyclopedias,
band leaders and coaches have drummed
Frankly, men, as sole dominators, have a rather poor track record. male preachers teach male buffalo-hunters and male factory-builders to dominate the earth. male legislators give subsidies to male land-developers and male automakers to make it easier for buffaloes to appease male munitions-makers, male economists, and male saviors-of-thepeople
I do not imply that women would have some things differently. But it might be healthy for our country to find out. Unfortunately, we will never convince women to run for high office until we stop telling little girls that they can aspire to be doctors, but not doctors; or until we stop telling students to school board, but not for the Senate; or until we stop allowing men to dominate our jobs, our country and our bodies.
Unfortunately, women generally lack the confidence necessary to undertake a public campaign, unless they use the masculine language and imagery that women's movement, in part, seeks to build confidence in ourselves as persons. It is not easy, and is not aided by thoughtless, grounded editorials which tell us we're not good at soap opera addicts who can't even cook.
it is not better to join ranks, as humans,
than to continue to seek domination over
one another. We have wasted too many
time and money that we don't waste
the minds of our women as well.
Nancy Harper
Lawrence graduate student
104 of Faculty Fired at Southern Ill.
By BART BARNES The Washington Post
CARBONDALE. III.—In a confrontation that reflects many of the deep political, economic and philosophical divisions in post-secondary education today, Southern University here has fired 104 faculty and professional staff members, effective June 15.
University officials say an extreme budget crisis is to blame. But ramifications of the dispute extend to such gut issues as the absence of a college system of tenure, an almost sacrosanct institution in which college faculty get paid, and the lifetime employment after passing a probation period.
Since 1970, many colleges and universities, faced with declining enrollments and financial squeezes, have laid off faculty as an economy move.
seeking a court judgment that no one's civil rights had been violated.
But the intensity and complexity of the fringes at Southern Illinois make the situation here unique in many respects. The students are so focused that a classed file a classed action suit against six of them
The dispute includesensure by the Faculty Senate and a call for the removal of the University president, a figure in midwest Republican politics for a number of years and an aide in the 1968 presidential campaign of President Nixon.
Dismissed faculty and staff members, many of whom have been at SIU for more than a decade, see in the fringes suggestions of a campus political purge and a milialateral restructuring of the University away from the campus into technology and industrial training.
At the heart of the controversy is SIU's president, 45-year-old David R. Derge, a former vice president at Indiana University and a political polster and consultant who directed the president's polling operation in 1968.
Derge, who in two years at SIU has gained a reputation as a hard-nosed administrator, was paid $83,000 for polling done in the 1968 campaign and afterwards by President Gerald Ford. The Republican Kalmbach, Part of the money came from the so-called "dirty tricks" fund, money left over from the 1968 campaign, although no official source can be account for every cent received.
Firing of the 104 faculty and professional staff, he said, was a matter of simple economics. Enrollment at SIU has dropped 20 per cent since 1970, from 22,625 to 18,043. There are now about a million number of campuses across the nation in recent years—the Illinois board of higher
education made deep seashes in SIU's budget request for the next academic year. This left the University administration with no choice, Dereg said, but to lay off faculty and staff. There was no purge, he insisted. When the axe did fall, however, it fell suddenly and without warning. It also fell without regard to tenure.
Of the 104 fired staffers, 28 were faculty members with tenure status, a fact which has brought vigorous protests from the American Association of University Professors. The AAUP also charged that the decisions on who would be fired were clear, and that there was no chance for any meaningful participation by the faculty in those decisions.
It was Dec. 13, less than 10 days after the SIU administration was informed of the pending budget cuts, that letters went out to the department payment would be terminated as of June 15.
Many, like William H. Evans, a full professor in the English department, had no more warning than a telephone call from his department chairman the morning the letter arrived. "He just told me my name might be on the list," recalled Evans, who left a tenured position at the University of Illinois in 1968 to accept the job at SIU.
COAL MINES
That night, when he picked up the evening newspaper, Evans saw his name on another
"--- DEN OF RUFFIANS!"
list—a list of the six defendants in a lawsuit filed by the University.
What the University was looking for in
what the University was looking for in
a declaration that a bonafide
financial emblem.
The point of the suit, be said, "was to get a resolution of whatever legal problems are involved as quickly as possible. The only way we could our legal opinion was to cast it in terms of an adversary lawsuit."
Under attack and criticism at universities and colleges across the nation, the defenders of tenure argue that it is the main safeguard of academic freedom, a protection for faculty against being fired for political beliefs.
Outcome of the Carbondale suit is still pending but it could have major implications for other institutions faced with similar situations.
With the ending of the draft and the Vietnam war, stabilization of the college-age population and a general calling into gear for a higher degree, enrollment at a number of campuses dropped since 1970. This has been accompanied by reduced budgets and mass loss of faculty in both public and private colleges in states ranging from Wisconsin to Texas.
As Robert Harrell, the fired English teacher and president of the Cardabone company, it is the issue is simply "If they can get an assistant, I can do anything that damn well please."
There is a pattern in the firings, Harrell contends, of getting rid of those who have used to "make trouble on campus," like the women whose students were being discriminated against.
Foreign language teacher Vern Anderson, he said, was fired after serving on a number of faculty committees that issued recommendations critical of the University. One such case involved an antwar teacher and the committee Anderson served on recommended he be granted tenure, a recommendation rejected by SIU.
There was no attempt to abridge academic freedom or tenure. Durg insisted of us who are academics are valued even more than those who do not. No one wants to see anyone lose a job.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Publicized at the University of Kansas daily publication, the Kansas Journal, for examination periods. Mail subscription费为 $ a summer fee, $1 a year. Second class postpaid package includes a $10 summer fee. $1.25 a semester fee in student activity fee. $1.25 a semester fee in student activity fee. Advertised offered to all students without regard to gender. An advertised fee is not necessary those of the University are not necessary those of the University.
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News Adviser Suzanne Shaw
News Advisor .. Susanne Shaw
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Alternative Wedding Appeal Grows
Newsday
Nontraditional weddings are not newing, of course. In the '60s, people were being married under water, while she skydived, and in the '70s, couples had a guest was likely to be a cow as a person.
By FRED BRUNING
NEW YORK-Having dipped their own candles, fermented their own wines, and custom-bladed their own yogurts, they've created a more profound brand of do-it-yourself cooking.
At first, the alternative wedding may have seemed just a passing fancy of an unorthodox generation. But, it seems, the students are more inclined to campus turmul and political pyrtechnicals.
And so, it is not surprising that, in recent months, three books have been published on the subject of how to work out your own kind of wedding.
"To those young people who, in their search for honesty and integrity, are thinking through the meaning of their wedding ceremony," so reads the book by Jane R. Lovett, "Write Your Own Wedding." The book is coedited by Mordecal L. Brill, a rabbi and psychotherapist; William H. Genne, coordinator of family ministries at The University College; and Sister Marlene Halpin, academic dean of Molloy College in Rockville Centre.
"Kids come casually—sometimes with hesitation or embarrassment"—to the idea of creating their own wedding, Sister Christine. "We give them ideas to prime the pump."
Underlining the interest in individualized weddings is a deep concern for candle and meaning, she said. "The whole tenor is of honesty. Many young people put that idea into their different prayers. Some even write the marriage creed and thereby say:
'In these terms we make the marriage
women.' They include the idea of honesty
and trust.
Basically, a nontraditional wedding can be nontraditional in two areas. On the wife's side, the bride's side may be more traditional.
Arthur Dobrin, who wrote "Getting Married the Way You Want!" with Ken Briggs, Newsday religion writer, said that people would realize the options available.
Indeed, do Dobrin, leader of the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island, the options are varied. "Legal requirements are minimal—simply that you obtain a license. What's required in the ceremony is that you be given a set of change vows and that the person officiating say the couple is, in fact, married. Beyond that, there are taste and religious
requirements, no legal ones."
Like the other books, "Getting Married the Way You Want," suggests how a couple can write their vows and stage their own ceremonies.
Recently, Dobrin officiated at the wedding of a university art teacher who was married in his classroom. "It wasn't a gimmick," Dobrin said. "Art and the art couple. It would be gimmicky only if it was not an expression of their personality."
He mentioned another unusual wedding, one that took place on a fishing boat in the Great South Bay. The bride and groom—his nephew and brother—cascade from dissimilar backgrounds.
"They wanted a setting where everyone would feel on the same level with everyone"
*I thought they were going to be in an empty room.*
fishing boat because no one (among the guests) had experienced a wedding there
"And it worked. Everybody related with everyone else. There wasn't much room to get away from each other so no cliques were formed. The couple created a celebration and broke down boundaries between people."
Dobrin said he believes that the people who design their own weddings are not doing so in an attempt to overthrow them. He instructed him to print on a paper moment in their lives.
"The wedding should reflect the people who are getting married," he said. "If it doesn't, the people are like mannequins being pushed through a process," with no feeling of their uniqueness as human beings.
Wrong Number Exposes Energy Woes
Newsday
Rv ED LOWE
NEW YORK-Joy Sachs finally broke down, crying. It all got to her. The truckers, the gasoline shortage, the fuel oil shortage, the temper shortage, the federal government, people who vibrate and the New York Telephone Co.
Joy Sachs is the secretary who answers the phone at Charles Yulish Associates Inc., which is a Manhattan energy consultant firm for utilities, big corporations and federal and state agencies throughout the country.
It has a subsidiary that produces and sells energy-related educational material to anybody who wants to buy such things. The thing is that energy is energy information service (E.I.S.)
For the last two months some of the telephone company's information assistance operators have been giving the firm's phone number to callers who want to talk to the Federal Energy Office in New York, or to sell at the federal energy office in New York. The result Charles Yulish savs:
"I have heard the most untimely stories I've ever heard in my life. I had a 4-year-old kid call and ask, 'Don't you have a daddy?' Then why aren't you letting my maddy have gas to come home from work?' I had people calling saying that they could solve the entire energy crisis, because these energies are much less expensive than this energy. I had people calling and speaking with muffled voices, like through a handkerchief, asking if I would care to buy a
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"sixty per cent of the calls are on price
giving. The psychology of these is really
interesting. There's a rythm to these calls,
and they go from 25 to 100, obviously called five other numbers and
gotten nowhere—and you have to let them
get their two and a half minutes out before
you tell them they're got the wrong number.
So what happens here come I am not the
right number."
"Then, there's the usual spectrum of people who threaten you. They say, 'Listen you — if you put me on hold I'll come here and break all your — windows.'
"The most frustrating part," Yulish continued, "is dealing with the telephone company. It's like Franz Kafka is running the phone company. My secretary, Joy, broke down crying this morning trying to figure out how to deal with your operators that we're a private business, and you get, 'I'm sorry, we're not authorized to do that.'"
Yulish and his secretary, feeling sorry for the callers, tried to direct them to the energy office, but the number changed three times.
Telephone company spokesman Philip Spain said that federal officials had asked him to be involved in Energy Office number, which was set up to field complaints and solve problems. Barbara Howar, an energy office spokesman, said that she never had heard of the complaint.
Meanwhile, Yulish's marketing vice president, Ron Gossing, came up with a solution to the problem.
"He said," Yulish related, "Why don't we just become the Federal Energy Office and let them do what they want."
Friday, February 15. 1974
5
Conoco Hit Hard by New FEO Plan
By BYRON MYERS
Kansan Staff Reporter
Lawrence Conco dealer are beginning to feel the crunch caused by a re-allocation of crude oil supplies ordered by the Federal Energy Office, (FEO), Dick Allen, district marketing manager for Conco, said yesterday.
A survey of Conoco stations in Lawrence yesterday found two closed completely and a third open for service work only. None were selling gasoline.
Alen said all Conoco agents, jobbers and dealers had been informed that the federal government's new crude oil allocations significantly reduce their petroleum supplies.
Conoco's crude oil supplies have been sufficient to run its refineries at maximum capacity; but under the federal program, Conoco must sell an equivalent of 2.8 million gallons of gasoline daily to other refiners during February and March. Allen said
ALLEN SAID the result would be a 20 percent decrease in supply to Conoco's own refiners. He said Atlantic Richfield Co., Standard Oil of Ohio, Oil Mill Co. and Texaco could purchase crude oil from Concoo and other small refiners.
"We're being penalized for our foreword in all exploration and development," Allen
Allen also said a Conoco newsgram pointed out that it "didn't make sense for Conoco to import crude oil at $18 a barrel to sell to our competitors at $7 to $8 a barrel."
Conoco was also concerned about diversion of domestic crude oil from inland refineries that "serve our agricultural heartland" to eastern refineries that traditionally have used crude oil from offshore drilling.
The newsman said that Conoco generally supported FEO's actions, but that Conoco didn't think crude oil allocation was in the best interests of its own people. Allen said.
"CONOCO'S VOLUNTARY allocation program was much more workable than the complex situation we find ourselves faced with under federal regulations." Allen said.
University Daily Kansan
Allen said he had spent all day Saturday with representatives of FEO. The company made an appeal and filled out all the information he provided. He said with Conoco's suggested program he said
Conoco dealers from across the state met yesterday with company officials in Kansas
Dealers and jobbers were told they couldn't sell any more gasoline this month, and any gasoline now in their tanks would be shipped part of March's allotment, Allen said.
City, Allen said. All the dealers were presented, he said, to hear marketing officials explain the situation and make recom- ments before the dealer until more gasoline becomes available.
state energy office in Topeca for exemption from the set-aside rule, which requires gasoline be put in reserve in case of a state emergency. The successful, he can appeal similarly to FEO.
Alen said some dealers had called FEO but received nothing except more condiments.
"We'll only have 75 per cent of our 1972 volume for jobbers and dealers after we take care of top priority customers and the two per cent set-aside figure." Allen said.
There are two appeals a jober or dealer can make, Allen said. He can appeal to the
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Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansan
100
Testing 1, 2, 3 . . .
Lake Forest, Ill., junior, uses the new
equipment to aid in his practice of a foreign
Jeff Creel, memo tape Tenn. sophomore, from Memphis in the new language lab.
Art Museum to Be Studied As a Showcase for Others
By CAROL GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas Museum of Art has been chosen by the newly-formed Council on Museums and Education in the state. It is because of its public education programs.
The museum's education programs include tours of Spooner Art Museum for grade school children as well as special exhibits, such as "The Extended Hand" exhibit.
Dolo Brooking, curator of museum education, said yesterday that the selection of 10 or 12 museums from all over the United States was made in mid-December and that the number of museums later had been narrowed to eight.
The programs used by the selected museums will be models for other museums. The council, which has 18 months' experience in museum information, for use by other museums.
Brooking said the council was formed because of the increased need for information about public education programs in the museums.
When the museum program program was beginn at KU in 1986, Brookling said, it was one of the few programs he had.
"You very seldom find university museums involved in public education," Brooking said. "Most university museums are for the use of the art history students.
"Not a whole lot is being done now in museums public education, but some notable work has been done. More will have to be done if the museums are public institutions.
"We are a small museum with limited resources," Brocked said, explaining why it is difficult to find.
"We have innovative programming and we interact with other departments on the job."
Brooking and she thought geographical disturbation was also some basis for the model.
"They're studying everything," Brooking said, "relationships with other departments, the traveling art van, what they work, how do they work, who is doing what."
A console with switches and tape decks lifts and folds up from a desk. Headsets lower from the ceiling and begin to emit foreign sounds.
No, it's not the Star Ship Enterprise. It's an electronic classroom in Wescoe Hall and those are students, not aliens, wearing the headsets.
Electronic Language Lab Flexible
The electronic classroom is a feature that makes the language laboratory at the University of Kansas unusual, according to Ermal E. Garinger, director of the laboratory and a teaching associate in Spanish and Portuguese.
The most important feature of electronic classrooms, Garrett said, is their ability to learn from the teacher.
THE CHANGE from regular classroom to language lab is made with the turn of keapered switches on a desk at the front of the room. One switch lifts the top of the desk exposing controls for the lab. Another switch lowers headsets from the ceiling.
Garinger said the versatility of the electronic classroom was valuable to teachers and allowed the fullest use of classroom space because the headsets and lab controls didn't clutter up the room when not in use.
Another important feature of the electronic classroom is its protection from theft. The classroom has several security features, including
language laboratory in about two minutes.
Dockings' Capital Gains Criticized by Candidate
TOPEKA (AP)—The Rev. Forrest Robinson said yesterday that the family of Gov. Robert Docking had made more than $500,000 from its ownership in a company with no state agency and although not illegal, it was "a violation of moral principle."
Robinson, candidate for governor, speaking from a prepared statement at a news conference, was referring to a Docking family stock interest in the Kansas Public Service Company in Lawrence, a natural gas utility.
"Since the Docking family owns one-fourth of both the common and preferred stock in Kansas Public Service Co. the company has had five years, more than a man working a lifetime could earn at $ an hour," Robinson said. "In addition, the family's share of annual earnings has increased 226 per cent since 1990." Kansas Corporation Commission ruling.
Robinson was referring to a 1968 ruling by the commission that gave rights to Kansas Public Service to serve areas adjacent to the city of Lawrence. Kansas Public Service was authorized to serve the city of Lawrence, and the territorial dispute was over areas then just outside the Lawrence city limits.
A spokesman for Docking said Robinson had been a pig "in a poke" by reviving his son from a brain injury and electing. But Robinson said he was speaking out now because a conflict of interest bill now in a House committee does not prevent a repetition of such a situation.
Robinson said this represented a moral conflict of interest on Docking's part because a company in which he owned stock was doing business with the University of Oklahoma. In addition, a body whose members were appointed by the governor, the Board of Regents.
"Under federal law governing the conduct of federal officials, such a situation as is prohibited," Robinson said. "Surely the governor no less a guardian of public interest."
"I believe it should be illegal for any public official to profit directly or indirectly from his official position, and the law should clear and simple on this point," Robinson said.
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The language laboratory also has two rooms for individual language study. Each room contains 50 cubicles, or carrels, equipped with heaters.
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Robinson charged the Corporation Commission ruling in favor of Kansas Public Service came after Docking appointed two members to the body.
But the Docking spokesman, news secretary James C. Shaffer, said the decision came prior to Docking's election. Shaffer said a court decision affecting the corporation had been approved by Corporation Commission then simply carried out the court's mandate.
A language student can come in, push a button to select his lesson for the week and study the recorded lesson without having to ask for the particular lesson, as was necessary in the old language laboratory at Blake Annex.
MOST OF THE carrals are equipped with cassette tape recorders, Garringer said, and some students will record the lesson as he listens to it. Then, the student can take the tape home to study.
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Services were opened for use as soon as they were installed so not all the problems with the equipment were solved, Garinger said.
Use of the language lab has been increasing by about 10 per cent each week for several weeks, according to Garinger. He said the popularity of the lab was growing as more people became aware of its opportunities and ease of operation.
"A final check out this week by a technician from Wichita should have reduced problems with the equipment to almost nothing," he said.
"I did an awful lot of brainstimp," he said about the lab wich scotter slightly lessens.
Garinger designed the laboratory after consulting with language teachers and laboratory directors from other universities.
Oral Roberts University spent about $1 million for their language lab, he said, even though their lab doesn't offer the variety of services the KU lab offers.
THE FLEXIBILITY of the KU lab will prevent it from becoming obsolete in the near future, he said.
Plans for the laboratory include recording Voice of America broadcasts from a short-wave radio in the lab for use by language classes, Gartering said.
Some complaints about the lab have been because not all of the bugs were detected.
THE LANGUAGE laboratory is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The library is a shortage of funds for personnel limits the lab's open. The personnel and supplies budget increased by 20 per cent from the amount provided for the old lab at Blake Annex, he said.
In the same time the number of classes using the lab has increased 600 per cent, the available programs have increased 400 per cent and the use of tape recorders for students has doubled.
The shortage of personnel funds could force a reduction of the number of hours student assistants work at the lab, Garinger said.
“There’s only so much a budget can budge,” he said.
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CHARLES SCOTT, SR., General Counsel for the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights and private practitioner BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Assistant Federal District Attorney of Kansas City, Kansas
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 15, 1974
7
KU to Host Iowa State Tomorrow
Thanks to Kansas State, the University of Kansas will be faced with a new situation when it takes on Iowa State at 2:10 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House.
KU's loss to K-State Wednesday night knocked the "Hawks out of the Big Eight lead for the first time this season. KU is now in the position of trying to keep pace with the first place Wildcats who have a one half game lead.
K-State plays at Colorado tomorrow.
While the loss to K-State was costly, KU is still very much in the race, but can't afford a win.
"If anything, we will concentrate more now," KU guard Dale Greenlee said yesterday. "Not too many teams go to K-State and win."
head coach Ted Owens said that the Iowa state game represented a must win for KU, and the team's performance was good.
"We realize that we are still in good shape in the race," Owens said. "All we have to do is rest of our games. If we do win all six, we are out the eight champions. It's up to us now."
KU won the first game between the two schools 73-49 in Ames. That game marked a victory for KU, and it continued.
Iowa State had gotten off to a fast start and looked impressive with a second place finish in the pre-season Big Eight Tournament. However the Cyclones have dropped to fifth place in the conference at 3-6. Iowa State is 12-9 overall.
"They won last Monday, though (against Missouri)," Owens said, "and they remember that we beat them last year in Ames, but they took us down here."
KU won in Ames this year when the 'Hawks broke open a close game with a rally at the start of the second half and then offa late a Cycle comeback. The game was the first beginning of what has become a trend in KU's conference games, namely foul trouble.
Against K-State, the 'Hawks had the same problem and it might have cost KU the game. KU scored only a point from the free throw line, while the Wildcats had 18.
The game will be televised regionally as the Big Eight game of the week.
Greenees said that the 'Hawks might go to their zone defense a little more to avoid getting too much time on their feet.'
possession of amphetamines were dismissed yesterday.
In a prepared statement, Coach Bob Timmons said: "Because of failure to comply with team policies, Barry Schur's meet suspension will continue until the first meeting on April 6 at the Wichita State Relays in Wichita. Earlier charges of drug
"We are a physical team and physical
team out in foul trouble." Greumbeau said.
Only eight game of the week.
Probable starting line-ups;
KU goes into the game with a 7-1 record in the conference and an overall record of 15-8.
Schur Suspended till April; His Drug Charges Dropped
RANNAWS
Norton Cook 6 F
Danny Cook 4 F
Danny Knight 10 C
Digi Cranele 12 C
Iowa state
Larry Loots 6-9
Robert Wilson 5-6
Craig DeLaney 6-10
Hercle Ivy 6-3
Eric Heffel 6-3
End from Ward Signs KU Letter
Barry Schur, University of Kansas high jumper, hasn't been reinstated to play since 1983. He could be a first-time
Cornhuskers Next Test For Jayhawk Gymnasts
"Nebraska is a young team which uses a lot of high caliber stunts," said coach Robert Lockwood. "They're going to be great and the routines well, it could be a very close meet."
Powerful Nebraska will meet the University of Kansas gymnasies team in an important duel meet for both squads at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium.
Nebraska is currently ranked in the top ten in the nation and has been recognized as the third best team in the Big Eight, behind Iowa State and Oklahoma.
The Cornhuskers will be particularly vulnerable tonight with the loss of Gene Mackee, who is sidelined with an injury, Mackie is Nebraska's all-around man.
The "Hawks have established themselves as a conference contender with impressive victories in recent weeks in Kansas State and Oklahoma." The Hawks over Western Illinois in a dual meet.
"Our major question mark lies with the inconsistency of our performers on the parallels bars and the pommel horse," said Lockwood. "The outcome of the meet could
Andalikiewicz, a 64oot-3, 215-pound end, played both offense and defense for Ward's class 4-A state championship team.
Tom Andalikiewicz, a prep *American* from Bishop Ward, has signed a Big Eight letter of intent with the Notre Dame football team. Don Fambrighau announced yesterday.
depend on how strong we are in those events."
Lockwood said his squad had a good week of practice and would be striving to retain its point range of recent meets.
KU Track Team In South Bend
The KU lineup tonight is:
**Floor Exercise:** Blind Green Herring, Jody Summern,
Mike Cook, Mark Whitehead, Mark
Smith, Ford Cullerton,
Marc Murphy,
Rick Backup, Rick Short,
Parallel, Mike Cook,
High Bar, Blind Green, Cullenhead,
High Bar, Blind Green, Cullenhead.
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1811 W. 6th Lawrence, Kansas
843-333
Parts & Accessories
Grege Vandeveer and Jim Euell are still on the injured list and will not compete.
The University of Kansas track team will compete against Big Ten Conference teams for the first time this season tomorrow in a game between Indiana meet at Notre Dame University.
Vale Vale - Terry Power.
Mile Scavuzzo, Cromwell, Wagner, Lewis.
400 Tom Navarro, Eddie Levits
401 John Gomez, Jeffrey Lance
Mile: Dave Anderson, Barrie Williams
402 Gregory Dillen, Jeremy Smith
60 vd hind bump-Demic Breack
50 vd front bump-Demic Breack
80 vd bufferfield.
Perry Tortey, Peter Ward
90 vd bufferfield.
The meet will be the fifth of the indoor season for KU. It will also be the last meet prior to the Big Eight Indoor Championships, March 1-2 in Kansas City.
Fifteen teams are entered.
"This should be an excellent meet for us for two reasons," KU coach Bob Timmons said. "First, it will give us a chance to see how we fare against Big Ten teams. Also we can use it to prepare for the conference meet."
Don Weller, a freshman from Ward High recruited as a hurdler, last week participated in the long jump and finished second in the Bunny Seay with a jump of 24 feet 4 inches.
Several surprising performances have been turned in by the 'Hawks in the last two
"We were tremendously surprised and pleased with Don's performance," Timmons said. "I never dreamed a guy could be this good when he never had long jumped before."
Seay also gave an outstanding performance outside of his usual event, He and John Butterflier high jumped 6 feet 9 inches—career highs for both.
"I would also like to state that at no time I was contacted by any member of the University of Kansas or its Athletic Department concerning this case." Berkowitz said.
Berkowitz said the most important charges were the ones for alleged sale of dendritic cells against former KU hit potter Rudy Guenaver, another roommate of Schur's.
Schur was arrested on Feb. 1, and arraigned on the charges Feb. 4. His roommate KU aggrite Mark Lutz, was also charged with fraudulent illegal possession of amuletries and theft.
sports
Timmons wouldn't elaborate on what team教练 Söhner had built.
possession have been dropped and this continued suspension is in no way related to
team policies Schur hadn't complied with. Douglas County Attorney David Berkowitz said the charges were dismissed because the evidence was circumstantial, in which the drugs weren't upon his person, in plan view when he was arrested.
"On the fifth day of February, 1974, Mr. Schur took a lie detector test, the results of which indicate that he had no knowledge of the drug, but he was careful and the drugs were not his," Berkow said. "There was no evidence that Mr. Schur was involved in the sales and dealing that took place in his apartment and indeed there was no evidence that Mr. Schur would remove himself from that particular scene."
Swim Team To Face OU
In a dual meet against Oklahoma last year the University of Kansas swimming team scored a lopsided 101-10 win, but coach Dick Reasonn warned his squad that tomorrow's meet with Oklahoma might not have the same outcome.
The meet a year ago is one of the most lopsided wins in the history of KU swimming. According to Reamon, who is hoping to guide the 'Hawks to their seventh straight Big Eight championship, Oklahoma is a completely different team.
"Oklahoma is one of the most improved teams around," he said. "They are a team with aces and faces. Several of their people registered possible championship times."
The Hawks have record two impressive victories the past two weekends, trouncing Nebraska last week, 93-20, and edging Iowa State two weeks ago, 65-50.
Tomorrow's meet, the final home appearance this year for KL, will start at 4
Tomorrow's entries are:
Seyard freestyle-Phil Kidd, Randy Kanel, Briar Cagney.
100 yard freevely - Kidd, Alain McDonald, Dale Carver.
100 yard freeway - Berry, Jason Blake.
100 yard freely-grey - Gregory Kemp, Mike Alave, Dave
Kemp.
*Kay* - Kentuck. Ben Watson, Kegley.
400-yard backcourt - Mike Litteri, Armand Reynolds.
Kay
300-air breast stroke - Pat Dillis, Roger Neugent,
300-air balloonetry - Dem. Minne, Rock Hall Rick
200-300 individual medley - Carver, Hodgson,
Richie
200-300 medley relay - Uffield, Dilate, Mente.
200-300 medley relay - Dilate, Mente.
- free press relief -McDonald, Carver, Kanel,
Divine, Steve and Scott Tavares
Lodgson.
Diving--Steve and Scott Davie
—OPEN— 9 p.m.-3 a.m. Mon.-Sat. Complete Canopy of Sound with Unique NEW Sound System
MapHatter
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Thurs.—Ladies' Night "as usual"
Disc Jockey
Fri.—DJ/Playing Your Requests
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Mad Hatter is NOW Lawrence's newest private club for members and guests 21 or older
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Jayhawk
VOLKSWAGEN
Introduces
JIM NUGENT Your University Sales Representative
Jim is attending K.U. and will be at your service for the next three years. Jim has had previous experience in Volkswagen sales.
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Present this coupon when purchasing any large pizza at regular price during Grand Opening and exchange it for THREE DINNER Coupons.
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8
Friday, February 15. 1974
University Daily Kansan
Irish Brogue, Whisky Flavor 'Playboy' Play
By JAY GLICK
Kanan Reviewer
Irish broughe and Irish whisky flavor "The Playboy of the Western World," which opened at the University Theatre Wednesday evening.
The play, by John Millington Syngge, a playwright of the Irish renaissance, is set near a village on the wild coast of Mayo, a county in northwest Ireland.
The story is about a youth who has run away from what he believes to have been his murder of his father. The boy fearfully recounts the incident and is held in heroic esteem by the villagers. For two and a half acts, the boy enjoys the adoration of every female in the village and elicits fear in every male.
Just as the boy and his love, Pegan, are to consummate their wedding vows, the boy's father makes an untimely entry. The boy is reduced to a laughing-stock.
A fight between the boy and his father ensues. The boy again thinks he has killed his father, as do the villagers who wish to kill him. But again the boy's father returns to life.
The boy leaves the village with new self-
esteem. Pogen, after he leaves, realizes
that he is no longer a villager.
Syngne said in 1907 of "Playboy" that it "is not a play with a 'purpose' in the modern sense of the word, but although parts of it are, or are meant to be, extravagant comedy, still a great deal more that is typical of a serious venus when looked at in a certain light."
Both the comic and the dramatic sides of "Playboy" are explored in the production. Early in the play, the humor is inviting. In the latter sections, the seriousness of the drama is somewhat moving. But the play has some problems.
the irish brogue, while it adds to the atmosphere of the play, tends to muddle and obscure the dialogue. The father, played by David Cook, best handles the dialect. In fact, it is the inevitable comparison between Cook's delivery and that of the other actors that causes the audience to realize that the play is too muddled and intelligible and still be brugu
*"Playboy of the Western World" will be
born at 5 p.m. Feb. 13-15 and 2:30 p.m.
March 9.*
National Lampoon Adapted to Radio
Radio humor lives!
By MIKE RIEKE Kanaan Reviewer
Actually, despite popular belief, radio humor never died. After its big days in the Thirties, radio humor was sent into a comosate state by World War II. Except for occasional signs of life from such people as Bob and Ray (Ellott and Goulding) and Stan Freberg, radio humor has been dead for a long time.
But recently radio humor has been revived on the weekly "National Lampoon
with the words, "Mission Impeachable."
with the words, "Mission Incompete.",
"Good morning, Mr. Hunt." a voice said.
Democratic party are attempting to seize control of the government of the United States by legitimate means. They plan to use a free press, open discussion of the government's actions, and offer effort to win the presidency. Should they succeed, all our efforts toreal the Bill of Rights, compel the Supreme Court with right-wing motions, intimidate the media, suppress dissent, halt social progress, promote democracy and crush the Congress will be destroyed.
reviews
Radio Hour", broadcast at 6 p.m. Sundays by KUDL-FM. The show is produced by the National Lampoon magazine and is written by many of the same people who contribute to the magazine. If you are familiar with the magazine, you know what to expect
As in the magazine, some of the best central on the "Radio Hour" is the one for the "New York Times."
"Your mission, E., should you choose to accept it," the voice continued, "is to stop these men once and for all by insuring that the weakest of them, Sen. George McGovern, wins the nomination, and then sabotaging his campaign by any possible means. You will have at your disposal electronic bugging equipment, burglary surveillance, video recording device, camera disguised as a tobacco pouch, forged documents, a safewife, 500 loyal but clumsy Cubans and $2 million in $100 bills.
"As always, if any member of your CIA
force is caught or killed, the President will disavow any knowledge of your activities. This Administration will self-destruct in 16 months."
"Good luck, Howie," the voice concluded. A take-off on Bell Telephone commercials was set against a superb sound effect background of machine guns, rocqueing bullets and screams. The narrator, speaking in English with a Spanish accent, spoke of a festival in his country sponsored by an American company.
"El Almene is dead so that your phone won't be," the narrator concluded.
Not all the humor is political. A segment of the program two weeks ago was entitled "Philosophical Inquiry," and was hosted by the University of Spokane. The object of the program, the professor said, was to answer age-old philosophical questions through empirical research. The question for that program was, "Where is there no air to hear it, in that forest and there is no air to hear it, in that forest."
The professor explained that he had placed a microphone next to a tree in a room, and that he would click the button in the radio studio, the professor caused the tree to fall by remote control.
When the microphone failed to detect any sound from the falling tree, the question was finally answered.
"Tune in next week," the professor urged us audience, "when we will answer the inquiry, 'If God is all-powerful, can he make a rock so big he can't lift it!'"
The "Radio Hour" is interpersed with advertisements for self-improvement correspondence schools such as Academie D'Irianapolis de L'Accent Academie D'Irianapolis Academy of the French Accent) and who train training courses for Laamp-Lapa training.
The quality of "Radio Hour" varies from week to week. Last Sunday's show was a demonstration by the Lampoon Radio Hour"; a collection of the first few months of its existence. The show had some good material but didn't include any original, regular show had been the previous week.
A word of warning is probably necessary for some listeners who are offended easily. Some bits on "Radio Hour" are in bad taste. But often that material deserves the biggest laughs. Enjoy what you like and forget the rest.
Rapid Art Changes Now Traditional
Lecturer Says Extremes No Longer Avant Garde
By CAROL GWINN
Kannan Reviewer
The avant garde in American art has ceased to exist, according to Irving Sander, last night's speaker in the Humanities Lecture series.
Sandler, the author of "The Triumph of American Painting: Abstract Expressionism" and a contributing editor to Art in Magazine magazine, said that so many styles existed during the sixties that novelty, or the avant garde, became a tradition, and, as a tradition, could no longer be considered avant garde.
Sandler alternately read his lecture from a text, smoked, cleared his throat and siped water. His lecture, entitled "The Art of the Singer," was written as Art," was too technical for anyone not knowledgeable about art. Terms weren't defined for the layman in the audience, and the lecture often seemed a confusing series of rules, who weren't adequately identified
Sandler began his lecture with slides of the impressionist Edouard Manet's "Olympia" and the postimpressionist Paul Gauguin's "Self Portrait."
Beginning with Manet and Gauguin emphasis was placed on truth and honesty, Sander said. Gauguin, he said, was the first French artist to recognize in his postimpressionist paintings.
Gamun, he said, was the first to consciously identity himself with the avant
Sander said that during the 1920s and 1930s, art took two different routes: "the use of paint was taken over and as seen in works by Salvador Dali, and geometric abstraction, seeking to find forms in the universal tradition, the "universal" sense," he noted, "seen in Peter Mundani's work."
During the 1960's, Sandler said, one style followed by another made novelty the main value in art. Today more emphasis is placed on the playful nature of the scene. Much of the avant garde can't be distinguished from everyday life, Sandler said, sitting Andy Warhol's paintings of rows of Campbell's soup and "Three-Cents-For Pads," a painting of boxes of Brillo pads.
of art, often considered avant garde, was now a tradition.
"The limit is reached," Sandler said, when art comes as close as possible to being considered.
Sandler said that advancing to the limits
Sandler said that even an anti-art phase ended up being shown in museums.
"There's just no way to arrive at art, and no way not to," he said.
Now innovations are met with nods of approval, Sandler said. The public no longer responds with anger at the new because they have been exposed to modern art in the museums and they are also, for the most part, college educated, he said.
Sandler said that Jackson Pollock, whose abstract expressionist paintings are often streams of paint that Pollock has run down, is one of the most iconic blacks the Hueper" in a particular magazine.
Now that magazine claims to be the first to have recruited him, Sandler said.
Sandier said that the change to college-educated masses was one reason that novelty and rapidly-changing styles were permitted by the public.
S.U.A. Fine Arts & University Friends of Art Present Kenneth Clark's CIVILISATION FILM SERIES
MAN—THE MEASURE OF ALL THINGS FEBRUARY 17
In this film the great names are Botticelli, Masaccio, Bellini, and Giorgione, with one Northernner of like ideas, Van Eyck. The place is Italy and the time, the early Fifteenth Century. The discovery is man, not as God's servant but in and of himself.
Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m.
NATIONAL LAMPON LEMMINGS
Critics have acclaimed LEMMINGS as hilariously funny, a theatrical triumph, wonderfully talented, remarkable, as having absolutely no respect, and the list continues. It is truly unsettlingly hilarious.
Student Union Activities presents a satirical, joke-rock, mock-concert, musical comedy, semi-revue, theatrical production. Sounds confusing? National Lampoon LEMMINGS will be presented in Hoch Auditorium on Saturday, February 23, 1974, at 8:00 p.m. LEMMINGS, an off-Broadway production now touring the college circuit, contains the wit, humor, parody, and satire that is associated with the National Lampoon Magazine. Much of the original cast has been retained for this road engagement and their "... wicked parody of the world of rock, spoofing the talented along with the pretenders, their absurdities, conceits, and affectations ... goes straight for the satirical jugular vein on many fronts, much in the reckless manner of the late Lenny Bruce."
All seats are reserved and priced at $2.50 and $3.50.
COME FLY WITH US
sophomores, juniors, aviation training with summer openings, no obligation until completion of officer candidate training.
check it out with jim robson in the kansas union february 18-20 from 9 to 3 or call collect anytime 816 374 2376.
We're Using George's
Hatchet on our Prices—
George Washington Sale - Feb. 16
THUR. Till 8:30
÷10 Items
2.50
÷15 Items
3.75
÷20 Items
+5
÷25 Items
+6.25
÷30 Items
+7.50
÷40 Items
+10
Good Selection!
Come in Saturday and see.
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Big, Small Cars Sell Well; Mid-Sized Sales In Doubt
By DAGMAR R. PADEN
Luxury and small cars sold well in Lawrence during the past year, according to several dealers, but there are mixed views. The average volume of intermediate-sized cars
Kansas Staff Reports
L. G. Brubecek, sales manager of Jim Clark Motors, 2121 w. St. Str. tern, said Monday that the market was down but small cars and luxury cars were selling. He bought earlyly bought intermediate and full-sized cars had switched to buying economy cars.
Luxury cars such as the Lincoln Continental are selling well, according to R. W. Sanders of Sanders Motor Co., 9th and Mississippi streets.
Louie Constantine, sales manager at Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac, Inc., 1040 Vermont St., said, "Cadillacs are breaking all sales records."
"We ran out of Hondas in early December and could have had 40 or 50." Plass said.
COMPACT CARS are selling well, according to Jack Ellen of Jack Ellenna Buck-Oldmobile GMC, Inc., 2112 W. 29th St. Terr. His firm had a 400 per cent increase in sales of small cars over last year's sales between November and January.
Toyota also are selling well. Dean Brunnaugh, salesman at Competition Sports Cars, Inc., 2300 W. 29th St. Terr, said his firm had a 70 percent increase in sales of Toyota since last spring. He said the company sells times as many Toyotas as it now does.
"Every Datsun dealer in the U.S. is selling cars at almost twice the anticipated rate," said Paul Hunter, sales manager to Tony's Imports-Datsun, 500 E. 32rd St.
Datsuns, another small car, are selling well.
He said his company had been short on cars for the past two years.
Sanders said that cars in the Lincoln-
mercury economy line (Comet and Capri)
Sanders, Ellena and Constantino said that medium-sized cars were not selling well.
But salesmen of medium-sized cars disagree.
AL KELLS, sales manager at John Haddock Ford, Inc., 23rd and Alabama businesses, said the sales this January were between those on the gas shortage that suffer from the gas shortage, he said.
Chevroleters are also selling well, according to Mel Racy, new car sales manager at Turner Chevrolet, Inc., 738 New York Avenue. They no longer need a selling dip over this past year, he said.
Constantino gave some tips on car buying. He said that customers could get a better deal if they paid the car rather than on a $5,000 small car because they were on large cars than on small cars. He also said that a floor model car could be purchased for less than a car that had been bought.
Anytime you buy an import you pay the
on campus
KANU-FM AND KFKU will conduct a discussion, The Pro and Con of Marijuana legalization, on the "Call-In Thing." Legalization may participate by calling 964-8530.
THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in room 172 Robinson Hall.
Basic steps will be taught from 7 to 7:30 in Room 172 Robinson Hall.
KU-ID CARDS prepared during spring enrollment can be picked up Monday at the admission and records office, 122 Strong Hall. William L. Kelly, associate dean, said students must present their spring registration certificates to claim their IDs.
THE LAWRENCE LIFE PLANNING Center of the United Ministries in Higher Education have scheduled two workshops. The first will be at 7 p.m. Friday and continue on Saturday at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. The second workshop will be at 1 p.m. Sunday at Cantonbury House, 1116 Louisiana St.
THE M.T. OREAD BICYCLE CLUB will sponsor two races at 1 p.m. Sunday at Broken Arrow Park. There will be a 12-mile race. The races are open to the public.
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
WATERCOLOR WALL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2656
10-5 Monday-Saturday
This $107 is computed on the basis that gas is pried at 50 cents a gallon and that a small car can get 30 miles a gallon while a large car may get only 15 miles a gallon.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
list price whereas you can get a discount on domestic cars, Constantino said.
Books, Gifts
- Stained Glass
In order to save this $167, a car owner must take a big loss on a heavy car if he has to trade it in now. Constantine said.
Many people are putting off car buying according to Paul Sayer, manager of car leasing in New York.
Open 8-5
Mon.-Sat.
He said that many people that own fully-
sized cars lease compact cars as second
vehicles.
the effects of the gasoline shortage. He also said that many full-sized car lessors are using this fuel.
MANY DEALERSHIPS are now buying big cars and putting them in storage. Constantine said. Big cars will be in and once the gasoline score is be, he said.
Museum of Natural History
Constantine said that if a car was driven 10,000 miles a year, the driver might save only $167 on gasoline for the year if he switched from a large car to a small car.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Several dealers said that many people made a mistake when they turned in large cars in order to buy small cars for reasons of economy.
Brumbaugh said that gasoline prices on the East coast had been higher than gas prices here for the last two years. He has also paid 66 cents a gallon for gas in New York.
KANSAN WANT ADS
--a new beer place.
"We're still 10 cents lower a gallon than the air. I do not look forward to a great drop."
Three Days
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $0.3
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered by the University or national origin, PLEASE ARRANGING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes-Now on Sale!
1. ) If you use them, they at an advantage
2. ) If you don't use them, you at a dis-
tinction
Either way it comes to the same thing—New
Mountain. It is just a matter of not validating
it at Campus Maidstone, Town Crier.
Rail Audio, 15 K, W-98 Phone #942-3257 Hours
Rocky Audio, 10 K, W-98 Phone #942-3257 Hours
available for any stereo position. Cost $100.
Tubulars - Hutchison sprint butyls $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles.
FOR SALE: Apples. 12pk, $2.75/bushel and
90 lb. apples. 12-pack, $3.49/bushel and
grapefruit. 12 for $1; mix and match orange
apples. 12 for $1; mix and match oranges.
12 for $1/12 btw. tbls. 3 lbs for 25c, onions,
tomatoes, potatoes. 12 for 25c, peppers and
encoccer balls. 6 for 25c, peppers and encocer
balls. 6 for 25c, peppers and encocer balls.
$1 for $1; peaches-8e $1. reasted peaches-12
orange skins, also antiques, used furniture, collectible
items, also antiques, used furniture, collectible
items. SHOP, 70 No. 21, 3 bike per Kow Water
SHOP, seven days a wk, $8.12-$13.99
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Saint Bernard Bernard – AXL registered, Cham-
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does available at reasonable price.
STEREO DISCOUNTS - Marantz, Pioneer, Samson,
Kleinfeld, Kelan, Kishikawa, Kishiro, $110 - $130, I24A 124A, KM Pro Receiver
-$168 - KM II, KM III, KM IV, KM V, KM VI, KM VII,
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wheelschall, TMRTE, TMRTE, TMRTE, TMRTE, TMRTE, TMRTE, TMRTE, independent, Audio, LNW Landwood, independent, Audio, LNW Landwood
**1988 GTD-250** cu. in. 4 speed. Factory mongu-
condition 16 mug $25 or best offer. Building
condition 16 mug $25 or best offer.
For Sale—Austin Healy Sprite MK 19, 864-6223
7-1055 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE CO., LTD.
Plymouth Satellite, p.s. a.t. a.i. c. 138, 2 bar-
ration A-1 condition, low inilease 158
1377
Skis (Head GS 200), Boots (size 9/12), Large
bindings (markers), Money (Polaris)
For Sale. French Horn. Farken Model 1948. Tailpiece:
95-3476. $495. Boxed. For sale at: 4 p.m. on or after 10 a.m., Box 201,
514-7476.
Garrard Turntable for sale, Model 400 in good condition. Cheap. Call 863-5540. 2-18
CORVETTE 1969 pop-top coupe, 4 speed air,
power low-mileage car, high-performance car,
low-powered car that used ours. Beat
the vinyl riase--Rcycle the Sound! Buy *Sell
at Racks at Rays* Recycled Sounds.
9th**, 2-18
Ford Saleen -Dunedon AM FM,FM Stereo 5 mw
Gulfstream D-500 AWD 3.6L 4x4 1989 Nikon Camera All EXIT, 843-624-3830 2-18
FOR SALE CHEAP! 1962 Mercury Meter. mat-
er in good condition in car for good run.
diameter $150. 842-2473-2518
discount $150. 842-2473-2518
Midland AM-FM Receiver and pair of Jensen
Model 2 specs (price $599.00, price $829.00)
2-15 CD-ROM with price $829.00
Bert and Ernie are leaving the planet. From art
and design books, to music, to books, to book
Gooks, toys, to clothing. © 1982 by James R.
Burt and Ernie.
For Sale: 23 Channel CB radio with antenna
Bail: 842-983-0251
2-15
Must sell! A 1972 Toyota Colice SL in fantastic condition. Call 845-742-9424, online call 845-742-9424, or text Call 845-742-9424.
1973 OSSA Planker. Low miles and many extra.
Call 843-1055. 2:19
For Sale-New 6 vell twin Coin Lights with
Retro Trigger. Retro Trigger. Retro Trigger.
$50.50 value will take best offer over $70.00
$80.50 value will take best offer over $70.00
FOR SALE! 1973 x 14 x 60 Mobile Home. Set up in
FOR SALE! 1973 x 14 x 60 Mobile Home. Set up in
1973 x 14 x 60 Mobile Home. Call us at
(212) 538-1300 or visit www.mobilehome.com
169 Firebird 15 mpg. Original source, new poly-
imide transducer, perfect condition. Remote
transmission radio, perfect condition. Re-
sistant to light and water.
Show Sporterate, 1971 Sportster, Gurden, Five
Show Sporterate, 1971 Sportster, Gurden, Five
topped champion, top winner of three shows. Music
by the Sporterate Music Company.
For Sale House, 10914 "Trail 26," cycle also.
For Sale House, 10914 "Trail 26," cycle also.
1439 after 5-30 weekdays, anytime半夜 2-50
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
THE BODY SHOP
French Vole-Soix-Me-Ped. 1 Plead. 2HP 160 MPG; w/
France vole, child seat, m-goal. 2 MASS-843-
843-857
Vitamins & Supplements 843-9412
1965 Olds Culsafe-$600 or best call-Call 843-
604 after 5 and weekends.
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
Male Jeans, for guys, now at the Attic for girls.
Come in and see. 297 Mass. 3-19
NOTICE
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Quae. We have open pit
baskets in the room. Try our dry place, plate
sauce submerged or brisket by the pound. Half-chickens by the
pike. Here we can or take it on. Open 12 am to
6 pm. Tables are available. Call (317) 840-9411.
TYPEWITHER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smithsonian Museum. 3-hour appointment. Antique clockes & watches served and coated. Electrical and light industrial buildings. River City Repair. 815 Vermont. 815 Washington.
Mont Blair Party Lounge now available for
Monte Carlo Phone 843-283-0414 at 4 p.m.
for 2-455-867-9999.
Hair like yours needs a place like ours! Stop in and check out the Lawrence Education School. $99! Mass. Our students will show you the latest trends, get inspired, and more—give us a call at 842-353-1000. 2-15
LAWRENCE, GAY LIZERATION, Inc. Merges
law firms in New York City to offer
referral services to 845-957-8175, evening
weekdays.
J-CAGIOLELS My total expenditure for Bim is $349,080.00 which includes $217,680.00 of CACIOPO represent you in Bim and $121,390.00 of CACIOPO represent you in Travel.
J-SCHOOLERS help dislodge the voting myth
with a new approach. They can win
betting with the WOOP in opposition for
a second time with the WOOP IN OPERATION.
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students led by experienced Group
Leaders. Information orientations held daily
from 4:30 Pm, 4 fltn, or cell Toni Hain-
842-6506.
Montforton pre-school (ages 21 to 5) has open
montforton.montforton.school information. @433-854-
838-5644
Most find home for 9 mo. old female, 18-
26 yrs old. Bernard will ward off what is
spawned. 842-905-3800
nazareth.com
FOR RENT
If you look my brown leather衬衣 from Robinsons, please return other contents to Robinsons.
Don't come to the White Elephant to see how much you love the White Elephant, for instead, come to the WHITE ELEPHANT at the WHITE ELEPHANT MARKET. 272 N. Bremen St., Fri. 10, Sat & Sun. "See ya later, alligator!"
If you don't like Republican politics—John KU-
taw to matriculate in the national state and
state congress, you should go to Washington.
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice room, private kitchen, close proximity to block from Union. Pushing and utilities paid.
APARTMENT-Session, clean and quiet 2 Bed.
Room, $450 per night. Toilet, laundry,
Oklahoma City, Ohio. 10:30-10:59 am/7:00-8:09 pm.
Room is located at 1615 W. 10th St.
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious walk-in closets, complete electric kitchen appliances, blue waterproof units, clear blue swimming pool, gas BBQ grills, 3 bedrooms, large bath townhouses. 2500 W. Sixth 3 bedrooms, blue townhouses. 2500 W. Sixth
JAHYAWKER TOWER APARTMENTS are located on two rooms with付费设施 Call 843-893
FOR BENT - A new 3 bedroom apartment with
an updated kitchen, laundry room, NEAR
conditioned, carpeted, storage, SKYLARK
unit.
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
RENT-DUPLEX. top floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen.
RENT-DUPLEX. top floor 2 bedrooms, kitchen.
*rental#: bedroom. bedrooms. 84-781.*
*rental#: bedroom. bedrooms. 84-781.*
Town Tavern (formerly Johnnie's)
401 N. 2nd
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Bud & Evelyn
One and two efficiency, furnished. For males.
Near downtown. No pets. 835-767. tf
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1723-1750 West 24th. New leasing i.e. 2 bedroom furnished or unimproved, enclosed, ditching, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry, off-the-street, KU bus stop. Step/leather closet.
Meadowbrook Apartments. Great Variety. Brownsville, TX 76520. Rent $395/month. Provides communal area KU. From $1490. Mileage: 8 miles. Address: 2810 N. Windsor St. Brownsville, TX 76520.
Home for Rent - Very cheap rent if occupied by you. Fully furnished 4 bedrooms. Call 855-123-4567. Hotel Room Only
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Salad girl. Kitchen help. Part-time employment. Phone 8431-1431 after 6 p.m.
2-15
FEMALE STUDENTS - Work as a figure model, 40 hours daily. 45% to $80 per hour. No experience necessary, and full-time position is glamorous. Personality and confidence are essential for person. An established, licensed firm providing tutoring services in Stuios, 3109 Male City, Mo. Phone: (212) 667-2211. Located 10 minutes from the temple.
If You're planning on FLYING La Moutapout
Do The MOWING On Your! (NEVER an extra cost
for airline tickets)
Two sharp waitresses to work at the college oriented Mr. Ukry, Friday and Saturday nights, beginning this weekend. Come by for personal introspection or to talk about Iowa and Iowa, next to Duckwalt's. 2-18
Part-time help, for dairy farm, general farming throughout the state. Must have transportability.
PERSONAL
Teen Lunge Supervisor to work w/junior and senior high youth after school and Saturday school. Manage activities and events of interest to youth. Must have a bachelor's degree or summer job possibilities. Submit resume to 1st United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont Ave.,肥东, Ft. for 4-month availability. 843-7134. 2-18
I need a secretary—general office status requires
a Bach Degree or equiv in Music, or
The Music People, Lafayette at Free State Press
Office.
If you are on an aerate hybrid, desipidate, quaternary
acid, or hydrocarbon base, please call Implem@643.8275
per hour, please call Implem@643.8275 per hour.
(corner of 8th E New Hampshire)
Johnnie's
SUA / Maupintour
Jam
Festival of the Arts - March 24, 30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $7 coupons for entire week can now be purchased at the theater. Individual night ticket sales start March 2-22
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to New York? Interested in education? Educated flights can help you find the least expensive way for your trip. Go to phone in at 800-223-5698 if ft
PHONE 843-1211
travel service
745 new hampshire
SACHEM CIRCLE, KU Senior men's honorary in non accepting information sheets on prowessey of the university. Fax 914-783-6800, 5:00 p.m.-Feb. 28. Sheets may be picked up in office of Men's office. For indr call 219-5083.
EVER WANT SOMETHING WARM AND BRUNCH?
CANDIER 18W, 48H. Bears 10:00 - 19:50 MW.
WATERPROOF.
BIRAFFE TWIRD
BEEN MEANING TO COME
close SALE out!
OREAD CORNER
842-5591
Hall.
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDEF
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
Area's Largest Selection
Rose KEYBOARD
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Enquiries
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings ½ Price
Friday Nite
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass
MOTORCYCLE
J-SCHOOLDIRC Chess and two逗逗 game promoter
J-ARTS MAPPING Artist for J-Math Application J-CGHEPO for Student #281
Hertz-Hump Valentines Day. With All My Heart,
the One Who Lever You Lever You. Forever.
2015
To the lady indicating, you only ask -Do pim-
sions, preparing her hairs made of waxy
if so. If fawfaw makes it, ask for help.
*
WANTED
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. No lease required.
CALL 212-509-3678, Open 8 a.m.-4 p.m., or午晚
call 212-509-3670, Open 8 a.m.-4 p.m., or午晚
Resume Required To: share large, 3 bedrooms
room with private bath. Apply online or
write a resume. Prefer grade student. Call
812-547-8900.
Formulario nemedia needed immediately—nombre
formulario nemedia necesita immediatamente.
If age, these waited May 31st DW-WWW request.
If age, these waited May 31st DW-WWW request.
Wanted: Baseball cards pre-1962. Please call 843-
7701.
Square舞 dance either enables of giving instruction
in some form, or calls for training. Call Dice
Call Dice 84-509-6300 or 842-7500
Hardworking male lead vocalist into rock band
641-8258
good range music. Man player also uses
842-8258
Case is booking for KM Company in Colorado.
Assist with customer follow-up to 5 pass-
engers. Respond quickly.
Want to Rent Working hand needs rehearsal
Want to Call 814-4604
Want to call 814-4604
2-21
Employment Opportunities
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES *JOB INSTALLATION* - Position Master of Public Administration degree. Experienced in the development of a state budget process. Some knowledge of the application of research skills required to Oarls Regional Commission activities during Duration: March 1, 1974 through June 1, 1984. Req. Ph.D. or equivalent in research salary: $700 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas search assistant on a project concerning Kansas search assistant on a project concerning Kansas re
TACOS
TACOS $3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
MOTHER'S
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
2406 Iowa
843-9764
WAGON
'Bar-B-Q. Steaks
and Sandwiches'
2408 Iowa
843-9844
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
Smoking Is Our Only Business
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CITY. PACK-airer - 815 Vermont, 841-6883.
Stores : watchers . Independent repair specialists. No retail店. We service what replaces. Unimpaired resources. See Notios.
O
LIMOUSINE & CHAUPFEUR SERVICE. Ultimate
business travel package. Plus
plus plus. Negotiable. Call &
800-754-3231.
Tired of Housework? Let us do it. We speculate on floor cleaning and waxing. Work done proverbially at a reasonable price. For more information, visit www.norah.com or Randy or Ruff. Ruff #383-2084 evenings and evenings.
Rag Tag
TYPING
Typing in my home. IBM SECMic. Pica type.
Typing in my home. IBM SECMic. Pica type.
Accurate work. Call Katie. 841-253-7960.
Accurate work. Call Katie. 841-253-7960.
LOST
Experienced in typing theses, dissertation,
papers, other masters. Typing. Have electric typeeer
device, plus pica typeeer. Accurate and prompt
service. Proofread and polish corrected. Ph.
845-9344. Mrs. Wright
Lost: one silver carved sword in bathroom of Mara's room. it please turn it in at Weson University. it please turn it in at Weson University. 218
WE FEATURE:
cotton double knit
Lost a brown crochet hat between stadium and
137 Strong. 842-9135. 2-18
Experienced thesis typat. Close to campus 841-
8490. Myra. 2-18
- T-Shirts
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
WE FEATURE:
. . wanting to take care of each other . . in your own home purchased from
IDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
303 Woolsey St.
Lauren, Kansas
843-8499
Open 7 Days a Week
-
Lost 5 month old female mothe beagled manne
Lost 5 month old female mothe lost Newrong
Call 842-3565 2419
Rag
Tag
LOSST-Gold Watch: Plain Brown Leather Bangle.
GOLD-WATER SUMMER freshwater balloon. Reward Return.
SUMMER freshwater balloon. Reward Return.
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
*Jerseys (cotton, double kni nylon mesh)
842-2500
Found—Pair of contact lenses Wednesday in N
Zone—Call 683-7603 and ask for Marry.
2-19
Lawrence Rental Exchange
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Heights
Oaks Acorn
Gaslight
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
love is . . .
- Sweat Suits
Corner of 12th and Indians
- Tennis Shoes
- Tube Socks
-Golf & Tennis Shirts
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
- Party Favors
- Coaching Jackets
- Handball Equipment
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
10
Friday, February 15, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Senate Results
School of Business (4)
School of Business (4)
Ann Dillard, Haskell, Huntley, Hunger junior (U)
Mary Burcher, Northampton, Hunger junior (U)
Diane Linn, S. Liang, M., sophomore (U)
Rick Vuccilli, Liberal, Junior (U)
Diana Lynn, S. Liang, M., sophomore (U)
Bill Owens, Liberal, Junior (U)
School of Education (8)
Terry Cahill, I., Sophomore (U)
John Browne, Whistlebirds junior (Ind.)
Joshua Lehmann, Whistlebirds junior (Ind.)
Clinton Buryen, Alton, Ill., Junior (U)
Sarah T. Lightner, Satilla sophomore (U)
Ashley T. Lightner, Satilla sophomore (U)
Sahra Dine, Luxembourg, Sophomore (U)
Glene Glower, Emperor lemmon (U)
School of Engineering (4)
David Martin, Whitliebirds junior (U)
George Fitzgerald, Whitliebirds junior (U)
Lee Schumacher, Norwalk, Junior (U)
Lesen Schumacher, Norwalk, Junior (U)
Bill Douglas, Lawrence sophomore (U)
Bruce Douglas, Lawrence sophomore (U)
.68
111
119
89
61
55
130
128
124
124
121
117
115
64
63
66
43
37
35
Saira Shawres, Hibernian Fremantle (Australia) 17
**Denise Durham,** Ocean View Fremantle (Australia) 18
**Emily Duckworth,** Ocean View Fremantle (Australia) 18
Marissa Gahm, Ocean View Fremantle (Australia) 18
**Gregory McDowell,** Ocean View Fremantle (Australia) 18
**Miriam A. Chelsea,** Rockville Center, N.Y., seagullermaine
Roverde School (18)
Howard S. Grady, B.S.
24 Howard Street, Valewood, Md. (ind.)
25 Ernest Thomas, Valewood, Md. (ind.)
26 Shaikh Nair Al-Abduhain, Ind. (ind.)
27 Mark Blunberg, Lawrence, Ind. (ind.)
28 Joseph W. Lawrence, Ind. (ind.)
29 Joseph M. Mikhel, Kuala City, Kan. (ind.)
30 James P. Nichols, Kuala City, Kan. (ind.)
31 Soldar Tiran, Iranian, Iran (ind.)
32 Sidair Dipa, Tiranian, West Germany
33 Lurida Humes, Das Motem, Nowa,
34 Merlu Taoluien, Kota, Oltawa
35 Abuel Fahal Kahal, Afghanistan
36 Abbel Fahal Kahal, Afghanistan
37 Yayaka Wade
38 Yayaka Wade
HATCHET DAYS!!
Washington's Birthday Super Sale—9:30 to 5:30 Saturday, February 16th
SPEAKING UP
Dress Shirts
&
Sport Shirts
values $11 to $15
NOW
$4.98
Warm Outerwear Jackets & Coats values $40 to $70 NOW
Sport Coats
&
Suits
values $45 to $100
NOW
$24.95 & $34.95
$ 24.95 & $ 34.95
Slacks &
Sweaters
values $19 to $32
NOW
$9.90 & $16.00
No Exchanges No Refunds Cash and Carry
THE
Town Shop
839 Mass.
Uptown
VI 3-5755
THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Uptown
Randy Freeman...52
**School of Journalism (3)** ... 52
Aaron Garcher, McKinney...53
Bob Marshall, Lawrence Park (Junior.)... 59
Bob Marshall, Lawrence Park (Junior.)... 60
Cindy Schleyberg, Colby Junior (Junior.)... 71
Todd Thompson, Pfisteron, II. (Junior.)... 27
Todd Thompson, Pfisteron, II. (Junior.)... 28
Liberal Arm and Shrimp (18)
Becky Podrebenko, Kaucity City, Jr. (Junior.) ... 318
Dana Burkeenk, Lawrence Park (Junior.) ... 184
Chrysus Davis, Lawnwood (Junior.) ... 181
Chrysus Davis, Lawnwood (Junior.) ... 181
Hal Urbakson, Salina Juvenile (Junior.) ... 174
Hal Urbakson, Salina Juvenile (Junior.) ... 174
Beth Patterson, Brewwood, Mo. (Junior.) ... 173
Beth Patterson, Brewwood, Mo. (Junior.) ... 173
Bill Webster, Carriage, Mm. (Junior.) ... 166
Shipman Metzleron, Princeton, II. (Junior.) ... 156
Gary Fork, Topple junior (Junior.) ... 156
Gary Fork, Topple junior (Junior.) ... 156
David Chadw, Trophy jumper (U) ... 138
David Chadw, Trophy jumper (U) ... 138
David Cisserman, Wildlife jumper (U) ... 152
David Cisserman, Wildlife jumper (U) ... 152
Bill Hill, Shawnee Michigan jumper (Ind.) ... 177
Bill Hill, Shawnee Michigan jumper (Ind.) ... 177
Sam Kunke, Würdlebach jumper (Ind.) ... 186
Richard Mabelle, Lakeland jumper (U) ... 114
Richard Mabelle, Lakeland jumper (U) ... 114
Cai Law, Webbian jumper (U) ... 31
Cai Law, Webbian jumper (U) ... 31
Jon M. Talley, Bierloch, Mo. first year ... 9
Jay W. Milton, Lawrence first year (U) ... 7
Jay W. Milton, Lawrence first year (U) ... 7
Timothy R. Rodden, Lawrence ind. ... 6
Timothy R. Rodden, Lawrence ind. ... 6
Coadyman, Lawrence jumper (U) ... 138
Coadyman, Lawrence jumper (U) ... 138
School of Social Welfare (X)
Fairmont University
Party Districts
Cincinnati, OH 45230 18
Indianapolis, IN 66217 0
Chicago, IL 60613 0
Detroit, MI 48280 0
Washington, DC 20005 0
National Election Committee
National Election Committee
SWING DOWN TO SANDY'S Thurs. Fri. & Sat. Tenderloin, French Fries Med. Soft Drink 95c
SWING DOWN TO SANDY'S
Thurs.,
Fri. & Sat.
Tenderloin, French Fries,
Med. Soft Drink 95¢
Sandy's
Come as you are
...Hungry"
Sandy's
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
Across from Hillcrest
THE FUN INTO EATING OUT
School of Architecture (2)
North College (4)
FING OUT
Sunday's
Sandy's
School of Architecture (1)
Clark David, Clark Grove, Ms. Jubair (lind.)
Jae F. Willmer, F. Willmer (lind.)
Gary Neely, Paloma叙尔德 (lind.)
Jane M. Riesel, Jane M. Riesel (lind.)
Frank T. Bram, Frank Clyde Freshman (lind.)
*Sherwin College (4)*
Wilkie, Brook (A), Fred (A)
Brad Wiley, Overland Park freshman (U) 119
Lane Baskett, Overland Park freshman (U) 118
Stephen L. Segreger, Parish Village freshman (U) 89
Stephen L. Segreger, Parish Village freshman (U) 89
Stephen L. Segreger, Parish Village freshman (U) 89
Jeff Rydel, Glencore, III freshman (U) 50
Severe Foldt, Parish Village sophomore (U) 50
Severe Foldt, Parish Village sophomore (U) 50
David Hacken, West Coast Mo., sophomore (U) 50
David Hacken, West Coast Mo., sophomore (U) 50
Centennial College (4)
Cincinnati College (4)
Bolie Daniels, U of M
Ken Nillard, Leward sophomore (U)
Ken Nillard, Leward sophomore (U)
Greg Brangdon, Sallina sophomore (U)
Mark Dellon, Freshman law freshman (U)
Mark Dellon, Freshman law freshman (U)
Scott Fleeman, Sallina sophomore (Poop)
McAfee American (Poop)
Park Franklin (Park freshman)
North College (4)
Mary Harrah, Marshall, Scandinavian freshman (I). U.
Debbie Reid, Marshall, Canadian freshman (I). U.
Derek Shallif, Marshall, Canadian freshman (I). U.
Judy Appleton, Akron, Mo., freshman (C) U.
Julie Anderson, Akron, Mo., freshman (C) U.
Bill Blessing, Cleveland, Freshman (C) U.
Bill Blessing, Cleveland, Freshman (C) U.
Rodney Fraser, Billy City, freshman (C) U.
Rodney Fraser, Billy City, freshman (C) U.
Neumann, Cleveland, freshman (I). U.
Utah College (5)
Judit Cataiian, Colorado freshman (U). U.
Jip Pearson, Colorado freshman (U). U.
Jip Pearson, Colorado freshman (U). U.
Clancy Langel, Lawrence region freshman (U).
**Pearson College (4)**
Barbara A. Horsley, PhD (U.S.)
Bruce Warner, Bingham sophomore (PHIP)
Bruce Miller, Bingham sophomore (PHIP)
Charlie Brush, Shawne M. Freshman (PHIP)
Kirk Hoffman, Lawrence sophomore (Ind.)
Rick Hoffman, Lawrence sophomore (Ind.)
Jill Hewitt, Wikichsen sophomore (Ind.)
John Lyman, Wikichsen sophomore (Ind.)
Ivac Jarmon, MacArthur Ciphonomer (Ind.)
The University of Kansas Theatre
presents
THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD
by J. M. Synge
—the story of someone who becomes himself!
Feb.13,14,15,16,at 8:00 p.m.
Feb.17,at 2:30 p.m.
KU Students admitted free with Certificate of Eligibility
University Theatre - Murphy Hall Ticket Reservations: Tele: 864-3982
This program partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
a
Flash
surprise!!
CadiWac and the continental kids
free state opera house 642 Mass.Ave. Lawrence
free state opera house 642 Mass. Ave. Lawrence
free state opera house
free state opera house
Don't miss Flash Cadillac's only appearance in the area! We're selling limited tickets so there's room to rock'n' roll!!! Hang up your dice and shine your wheels!
6
$3 in advance
$350 at the door
This Weekend!!!
fri.
fri.15 & sat.16
9- midnight
Advance Tickets at KIEF'S and BETTER DAYS in Lawrence BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD.
C
100
101
102
98
98
95
94
67
67
67
38
38
38
142
142
142
109
109
109
71
71
32
32
Forecast: Increasing cloudiness with a chance of showers. High low 50s, lower upper 10s.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
84th Year, No.92
Counselors Lend Help To Rape Victims
Monday, February 18, 1974
See Story Page 2
news capsules the associated press
Hearst Plans Food Distribution Program
Randolph A. Hearat today will announce a food giveaway program involving "a substantial amount of money" in an effort to win his kidnapped girlfriend.
Jay Bosworth, the family spokesman, said announcement of the program could be expected before 3 p.m. today. Bosworth, who appeared briefly before reporters at the family's home at Hillsborough, said Hearst was "encountering some delay because of the three-day holiday."
A tape recording with a message from the kidnappers and from 19-year-old Patricia Hearset was delivered to the newspaper executive late Saturday.
"You may rest assured that we are quite able to assess the extent of your sincerity in this matter and we will accept a sincere effort on your part," said the male speaker on tape, identifying himself as General Field Marshal David Liberation Army. The SLA has said it kidnapped Milda Hearst on Feb. 4.
Kissinger Continues Middle East Talks
The foreign ministers of Egypt and Saudi Arabia are reported to have urged Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger yesterday to start shuttling between Damascus and Jerusalem and arrange for a disengagement of Israeli and Syrian forces.
The message Ismail Fahmy of Egypt and Omar Sakarf of Saudi Arabia brought with them, according to diplomatic sources, is also believed to contain the familiar warning: The lifting of the oil embargo is linked to the re-establishment of the Syrian territory Israel occupied in 1967 and in the October war of 1973.
Kissinger met separately with both ministers yesterday. Today the talks will continue with Kissinger meeting with both ministers together.
Secret Service to End Protection of Agnew
The Treasury Department said yesterday it was lifting Secret Service protection for former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
protection for former Vice President Sphir I. Agnew.
A spokesman for the department said the decision to end federal protection for the resigned vice president was made by Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, with the knowledge of the White House.
The spokesman, Charles Arnold, said Agnew's Secret Service guard will "end before midnight."
Union Poll Favors Nixon's Departure
The union said 49 per cent of the respondents said Nixon should resign while 23.2 per cent said Congress should move for impeachment.
The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said workers with the company must complete membership poll favor President Nixon's resignation or impeachment.
The poll was based on a survey of 9,000 questionnaires returned from among more than 15,000 mailers to every 50th member of the union's mailing list.
It was the first survey of rank-and-file sentiment by a major labor union since last fall when the AFL-CIO criticized Nikon's handling of the issue.
Death Toll Uncertain in Philippine Rebellion
At least 558 persons have been killed in recent fighting with Moslem rebels in Jolo, Philippines, the director of the Jolo Social Welfare Department said yesterday. The figure is double the casualty toll given by the Defense Minister in Manila.
Their official, Mrs. Liddy Rasul Tanedo, said a body count showed that 250 rebels and 300 civilians were killed, and "a lot of others reportedly perished in the fire while others are missing. We cannot really exactly determine the number of dead."
Nixon's Experts Explain Gap
By GAYLORD SHAW
Associated Press Reporter
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -Moving to contest the findings of court-appointed experts, the White House said yesterday its own investigation points to a defective recording machine as the cause of erasure marks in the famed 1834-minute gap.
President Nixon's chief Watergate lawyer, James D. St. Clair, launched what could be a major new White House counteroffensive when he said in a statement that the erasure marks "could have been," and he did not, "caused by the defective machine."
The White House would not identify the experts who conducted the technical investigation cited by St. Clair, but said their names and credentials would be presented to the special prosecutor's office and to the court-appointed panel.
The court-appointed panel of experts indicated last month that the erasures were deliberate and were caused by someone using a machine's record button five to ninety six t.
St. Clair's statement also did not specify that St. Clair's "admittedly defective memory" was by presidential secretary Rose Mary Woods in transcribing the tapes, one of which was later discovered to have the gap. But a machine to which St. Clair referred, a machine to which St. Clair was refering,
Testimony by Miss Woods and another presidential aide, Stephen Bull, failed to answer questions.
the tap, and St. Clair's statement yesterday was the first time the White House had pointed to the machine itself as the cause. St. Clair disputed news stories suggesting two other tapes turned over to the court, with rumors rather than the originals, and said that the tape was a Justice Department investigation of possible violation of grand jury secretey.
At the same time, St. Clair acknowledged that one member of the court appointed panel "did express the opinion that two of the President's tapes could be reeer-
dings''—thus partially confirming weekend news accounts.
"Based on the views of one member of the panel of experts," St. Clair said, "a technical investigation has been made, with the result that the conditions found by this study are actually characteristic of the Sony recorder and do not indicate a rerecording was made."
"I am absolutely confident that when all the facts are known the authenticity and integrity of the tapes turned over to the court will be clearly established."
★ ★ ★
Watergate Papers Missing Time Magazine Reports
NEW YORK (AP) - Some White House documents described by several Watergate witnesses have disappeared from the room where they were stored. Time magazine said yesterday.
Time indicated these were the documents referred to by special prosecutor Leo Jaworski last week in a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Jaworsky said in the letter, "We have reason to believe that there are additional documents somewhere in the White House files."
Time said it had learned the documents believed to be missing were memos written
by former White House aides John D. Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman and Charles W. Colson. It said the memos referred to activities of the "plumbers," the secret White House investigative unit set up by President Nixon.
The documents originally were stored in a vault in the Executive Office Building. Time
"The vault in which the files were kept is guarded by Secret Service agents." Time said. "But they do not search the White House." The author adds that the vault after inspecting documents."
Stolen Helicopter Makes Landing At White House Amid Shotgun Fire
WASHINGTON (AP) - A harrowing flying escapade in a stolen Army helicopter culminated in a storm of shotgun fire and a bombing of the law of the White House early yesterday.
By LEE BYRD Associated Press Reporter
Secret Service officers wounded and arrested the sole occupant of the chopper as it bounced to a standstill just 100 yards from the executive mansion and well inside the White House grounds. He was identified as a fireman who washed out of flight school last September.
President Nixon, however, was in Key Biscayne, Fla., and Mrs. Nixon was visiting the couple's hospitalized daughter, Julie, in Indianapolis.
In the last minute of a bizarre, two-hour
Pfc. Robert K. Preston, 20, a helicopter mechanic at nearby FT. Meade, Md., was being held at Walter Reed Army Medical Center for psychiatric evaluation and treatment of superficial buckshot wounds, officials said.
chase which began with a midnight theft of the aircraft at Ft. Meade and the buzzing of houses and cars in the suburbs, the pilot first hovered at the Washington Monument in full view of dozens of officers and a parading police helicopter, then borne down to estimate 60-km speed toward the president residence less than one-half mile away.
When he crossed onto the grounds, police turned a number of spotlights onto the helicopter, a UH-1B "Huey," and opened fire with shotguns. The craft slowed abruptly, veered leftward at some 50 feet before slamming into a building, bounding on one runner, and then the other.
The pursuit helicopter, flown by Maryland State Trooper Don D. Sewell, lewished onto the bridge of White House and Sewell's partner, Cpl. Louis F. Saffran, jumped out to tackle the suspect just as he aliquoted from the cockpit. The officers of the military officers also joined in subduing him.
Preston was charged with unlawful entry
Hag had reacted shortly Saturday when the Washington Post reported that two of the subpoenaed Watergate tapes "are suspected of being recorded versions of the crimes rather than the original recording they have represented to be in court ..."
St. Clair and another presidential lawyer, J. Fred Buzhardt were flown here by government jet yesterday to confer with a use chief of staff Alexander M. Hojr II.
of the White House grounds, said Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner, and could not comment.
HAIG SAID "there is no evidence that any of the tapes are duplicates or rerecordings." St. Clair said in his Sunday statement that "this insinuation is utterly false."
One source described them as "not findings at all, but initial and very tentative".
WHITE HOUSE and other sources have said that the experts' tentative observations were made known to lawyers for both the prosecutor and the prosecutor sometime in early January.
But the source said the White House feared the experts charged with analyzing the tapes might mention the issue when they made their report to Chief U.S. District Judge J. Sirica on the 18.5-minute gap in one of the Watergate tapes.
Later in his statement, St. Clair turned to the question of the 18-tm-minute gap in a June 20, 1972, tape and a conversation between the tape and former staff chief H. R. Haldenman.
White House officials have been concerned for more than a month that the technical experts examining the Watgate tapes would reveal suspicions that some of the recordings are not originals, presidential aides report.
Despite gunfire which riddled the left side of the helicopter, the abrupt landing apparently did not result from mechanical failure. The plane back to Ft. Meade without difficulty.
Regents Defer Utilities Budgeting
That report, which the six-member panel gave to Siraca on Jan. 15, discussed only the June 20, 1972, tape which contained the gap. The experts agreed that the tape, "in so far
"Our technical investigation has determined that the erasure marks identified by the panel of experts in the gap could well have been, and probably were, caused by the admittedly defective recording machine," St. Clair said.
ny BETH RETONDE
TOPEKA—A request by the University of Kansas and Kansas State University for more money to cover increased utilities costs was deferred Friday by the Board of Regents until further studies on the needs of utilities could be made.
See TAPES Page 3
KU officials had asked the repts to approve a supplemental appropriation request of $103,263 for fiscal year 1974 and higher. They estimated the cost of increased utilities expenses.
However, a recommendation by the regents' building committee stipulated no supplemental appropriation for fiscal year 1974 and only $24.331 for fiscal year 1975.
A similar request by K-State for $112,928 for fiscal year 1974 and $175,258 for fiscal year 1975 was also amended by the regents' building committee to $42,273 for 1975 only.
Students to Partially Fund Field House Floor Project
KETTH NITCHER, KU vice chancellor for business affairs, and Dan Beatty, business manager at K-State, protested the release of a memoir by a mattee. Both said the fuel crisis, the rise in
The renovation of Allen Field House, to be funded partially by $180,000 of student activity fees, was approved by the Kansas Department of Hogents at their monthly meeting Friday.
The renovation of the field house includes replacing the wooden basketball court with a synthetic surface and constructing a new running track and field events areas.
BECAUSE THE MONEY was collected before the Student Senate was formed and then the power to specify the use of student money was transferred to the attorney, said the money belonged to the University, and its use would have to be furnished by Campus Architect Archie R. Dykes and approved by the Board.
The $180,000 of student activity fees which will be used to help finance the project was collected.
Clyde Walker, athletic director, said yesterday his office was working with the architects to develop a floor plan and to design the building so it will be sent to contractors for bids.
He said he hoped the plans and specifications would be finished and the
KU is on an intermittent contract basis with the Gas Service Company for its gas supply. When the weather becomes cold for a long period of time, gas service to the university may be interrupted and the University must then switch to fuel oil for heating.
contractors' bids in within a month. The bids must be in before any concrete plans are made to raise the rest of an estimated $300,000 to complete the renovation. Walker may ask the contractor to raise the money by asking for contributions from alumni and friends of the University.
fuel oil prices and increased costs for other utilities had created a concern that fuel oil tanks be reflashed as soon as possible after fuel oil had been used.
Walker said several companies had been surveying the bleacher situation and would make recommendations and cost estimates for replacing the present bleachers. The new bleachers will make it easier for the players to attend student recreation because they can be put in place for basketball games and removed easily to provide more room.
Walker has estimated that once the project was started, it would take four years.
Besides the installation of a synthetic floor and the track and field areas, the renovation plan includes installation of operated bleachers on the floor of the arena.
HE HAS ALSO said that he thinks the present basketball court was in danger of
NITCHER SAID that so f.r. this year' KU had to use oil for 10 days, and it was estimated that oil would have to be used for more days before the end of the winter season.
HE SAID *16,000 gallons of fuel oil were used a day when gas service was interrupted this year. Because of an increase in fuel oil costs, about $5,000 more than was appropriated is needed for this year. Nitrogen costs are $14,000 these and these other increases in utilities costs.
He said the cost of the fuel oil was also expected to increase by about eight cents per gallon next year. Nitcher said an additional $118,750 would be needed to cover estimated fuel oil costs alone for fiscal year 1975.
HE ESTIMATED that KU would use 17,000 pounds of fuel oil for every day gas service was interrupted next year. The company's assumption is from campus building expansion.
Utilities prices and the needs of the University are expected to go up even more.
After discussion by KU and K-State officials, the matter of supplemental appropriations for increased fuel oil costs was discussed in a meeting of more study. Further recommendations will be made after each of the six state supported schools have submitted more information.
THE REGENTS' Health Education Committee also a approved motion to issue $280,000 worth of stipends for the support of 14 third-year resident doctors at the medical branch in Wichita. The stipends would be those doctors serving in family practice.
William O. Rieke, executive vice chancellor for the Medical Center, said the reorganization had been under consideration for some time and would permit better administrative support for the three schools at the Medical Center.
make the University of Kansas Medical Center a College of Health Sciences. The schools within the college are the School of Nursing and the School of Allied Health.
IN OTHER ACTIONS, the regents' Health Education Committee approved a motion to
The regents also authorized KU to spend $6,000 to remodel Blake Annex A for re-use as an anthropology museum and work study area.
Regents Define Exigency Term
In declining to hear the case of three faculty members at Emporia State College who had been released from their jobs, the board said its policy had been to recommend changes in the number of faculty at Emporia State College or either increases or decreases in enrollment.
Financial exigency was defined Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents as a condition that occurs when the legislature has deleted salary money for teaching positions from the appropriations for a state-supported school.
"If as enrollments decline the number of faculty are reduced by the Legislature, and, if the appropriations for faculty salaries are similarly reduced, this would, in the opinion
See EXIGENCY Page 2
A. A. KOHAN
Kansas Photo
Marcel Marceau in the Guise of 'Bip'
Words Without Meaning Spell Marceau's Success
Kansan Reporter
By MICHELE M. LONSDORFER
KANAS SCI CITY-Ways have lost their meanings, said the little man with an allure. "It's like a secret language," he says.
The little man's name is Bip, the alter ego of French mimic Marcel Marceau, considered by many to be the master of pantomime.
The absence of meaning in words has accounted for increased public interest in the study of criminal behavior.
Friday, Marceau was in Kansas City to do a show, "The Times, They Are Changing."
"Mines can express what men can't express adequately with words," she said. "The mine is the conveyor of emotions, the Don Quixote that sleeps in one of us, Pentomimes, like other forms of art, to try to convey the poetry of the soul."
Another reason for the increased interest in pantomine is the public's identification with them. They are also known as "wombats."
See BIP Page 2
2
Mondav. February 18, 1974
University Daily Kansan
University Offers Rape Counseling
University rape counselors characterized the attitude toward rape among KU women as "low-level hysteria" during a rap session last week.
Of the twenty-one unsolved cases of rape or attempted rape that have been reported in Lawrence during the past 18 months, 11 have occurred on the campus, police said.
The most recent reported attack at KU was Feb. 3, near Stephenship Scholarship
Pollice say he had no strong leads, but thought one man was responsible for 15-20 of the reported attacks. Lawrence and campus police are cooperating in the investigation.
KU's rape counseling service, staffed by women, exists to help women cope with the fear of rape and the aftermath of a rpist's attack.
The rape counselors said their main purpose was to provide emotional support to women who had been raped. Victims' they said, are of primary importance.
A rape counselor may be contacted through Headquarters or the KU Information Center at any time of the day or night.
If police have not been contacted, the
counselor's first duty to a victim is to explain the importance of police involvement. Counselors said they could report a rape to police without using the victim's name, but they tried to get the victim to report the crime.
Victims are advised not to bathe or change their clothing because personal condition is evidence of the crime. Counselors offer to drive the person to the hospital or meet them there because rape should be examined for internal injuries.
Rape victims do not have to report the crime in order to receive medical aid at Watkins Hospital, the counselors said, and an investigation by law to report a rape patient to police.
COUNSELORS ENCOURAGE the victim to have a vaginal smear taken at the hospital so a living sperm count can be done. The sperm count indicates ap- pearment of penetration and is documented evidence in case the victim prosecutes.
Victims are also given a general examination, tested for venereal disease and offered a morning after contraceptive pill.
Slides Show Rape Defense
A slide show titled "Women Take Warning" has been produced by the Dean of Women's Office and campus police to protect themselves from attackers.
★ ★
The show will be presented for the first time Tuesday evening before an audience of 1,500.
"Women Take Warning" attempts to teach women to be aware of the danger of attack and to keep a clear head. It also advises women to wear clothing such as carrying a lighted cigarette
Tuesday's showing will be the first of
numerous presentations across the campus.
Interested women should contact Casey
A booklet called "What Every Woman Should Know About Self-Protection" will be distributed at the shows. It offers suggestions on how to avoid being the victim of an attack and what to do if attacked.
The back cover of the booklet tells what to do if you are raped or attacked on the KU campus. "What Every Woman Should Know" is available free at the Dean of Women's office.
Peer support is an especially important function of the counselors during the victim's contact with the police. The counselors said they were ready to help with getting pertinent information to police investigators.
After the initial investigation period, counselors offer to take victims home, or perhaps invite them to spend the night with
a counselor. The counselors said they did
what seemed best for the victim.
Counselors remain available to help the woman through succeeding periods of depression or difficult times such as line-ups and hearings.
They have contact with many professionals on campus and in the community.
on campus
FRIENDS OF THE UNITED FARM WORKERS and others interested in the lettuce bounty will meet at 7:30 p.m. The Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union.
HILLEL will sponsor a speech and slide presentation by John Gurkoff, a representative of the United Jewish Appeal, about Israel after the recent Yom Kippur war at 7:30 tonight in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
A CAREER PLANNING WORKSHOP series for women will begin at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. There will be eight workshops in the series, which lasts until April 16.
LAWRENCE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE will sponsor an address by Bob Ellsworth, former ambassador to NATO
Food Costs to Increase Hall Fees
and top-ranking campaign assistant to President Richard Nixon, at norton Tuesday in the Kansas Union. Reservations can be made at the chamber office.
By RANDY SCHUYLER
Most residents interviewed grudgingly approved the increase. They all said
Food costs will increase the basic price of residence hall contracts next year, J. J. Wilson, director of residence halls, said. Costs of contracts will increase $80, of which $60 will go for food and $20 for maintenance.
residence hall food needed improvement.
The food makes Katelyn Corley, St. Joseph,
Stephman, "sick once in a while," she said.
"It's tough." She's not sure.
Wilson said the move to increase the prices and to make improvements at some
Karen Domyon, Clifton, New Jersey freshman, also of GSP, said "they should increase the amount and quality of the food."
Exigency . . .
of the hallis was discussed by members of the Association of University Residence Halls (AUHR) last fall and approved by the Hallis Board in 1973. It is the first increase in two years.
From Page One
THE REGENTS also approved a measure to credit returning hall residents $5 against the fee.
From Page One
Grand Goodman, professor of East Asian studies and history, and president of the KU
The Senate Executive Committee senators appointed a committee to try to fix the problem.
Residence halls differ in price according to the amount of services they offer, Wilson said. Templin Hall is the cheapest. For living there will go from $500 to $1030.
Bip ...
inasmuch as the salary money for a certain number of positions would have been deleted from the appropriations," the board's statement said.
Robert D. Adams, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said last night that the committee would probably make recommendations concerning financial exigency to Dykes about the beginning of March.
The matter of financial exigency has been under debate lately at the University of Kansas Campus. In a tenure statement last semester Chancellor Arch R. Dykes said that financial exigency was difficult to address because it didn't mean "budgetary convenience."
"Men will cry and laugh for the same reasons," he said.
chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said he would have to read the full statement that agents before commenting on the matter.
The regents also said that they viewed tenure as "guarantee of academic freedom and a commitment to due process in any termination of faculty" but that tenure didn't guarantee permanent employment in case the actual need for faculty was reduced in order to carry out specific programs.
"This is as important as any statement the reents have issued in recent years," Goodman said. "It's an extremely im- portant statement that I careves careful and thorough examination."
Marcauel said he is exploring new paths to meet the public's demand for his art. He is opening a studio of mime in France. He and Marcauel Company will direct the school.
J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of history of music, and president of the Kansas conference of AAPU said the question of financial exigency had not yet been closely butted that a more exact analysis might be drawn up by AAUP by late April.
Lewis and Joseph R. Pearson Halls will increase from 850 to $1045.
"The school will be open six months a year," he said, "so I will be able to teach, as well as the members of my company. It is our responsibility to introduce new generation and new talents in the field.
Oliver and Ellsworth Halls will increase from $65 to $104. Residents there are charged $15 extra for a security fee that costs $20 at the halls at night with two-way radios.
Hashing Hail rates will increase from $1015 to $1995. Already included in the rate is the security fee and a fee for the use of a studio.
CORRIN AND Gertrude Sellars Pearson residents will pay $1945. In addition to the $80 increase, they pay $15 for exercise and music practice rooms.
McCollum Hall will become a communications center, which means that library facilities and electronic equipment will be located at the largest increase, from $965 to $1095.
NATIONAL CAMPOON LEMMINGS
uproariously funny spot of the rock scene and its counter-culture folk
tapes, topical skins done in style of avant-garde superior college
hockey. A funny, colorful jacket worn by a student "Jumper Bruce"
COME FLY WITH US
sophomores, juniors, aviation training with summer openings, no obligation until completion of officer candidate training.
check it out with jim robson in the kansas union february 18-20 from 9 to 3 or call collect anytime 816 374 2376.
"My aim is to play in regular theaters during six months but also to bring another dimension in my career with films and TV shows. I want to expend the most you can," he said.
He recently completed a film, "Malcoun Shankle," that will be released soon. It was made in the United States and was directed by Robertsen, the producer of "Rosemary's Baby."
NAVY
In the film, Marceau plays two parts. He is a talkative scientist and a silent narrator.
"It involved a deep preparation, almost as intense as the creation of a new panther."
Philip Berrigan to Conduct United Ministries Forum
Phil P. Berrigan, pacifist and former priest, will conduct an open forum discussion at 3:30 p.m. today in the United States in Higher Education Center, 1284 Oread.
In 1988 Berrigan and his brother Daniel Berrigan broke into Selective Service Local 33 in Cattonsville, Maryland, and burned selective service records. Philip Berrigan spent three and one-half years in prison as a result of that incident.
Berrigan's visit to Lawrence is sponsored by the Lawrence Life-Planning Center, the
Vietnam Veterans Against the War and Winter Soldier Organization and the War Resistors League. Dresner
SUA Popular Films
Prison reform is expected to be a primary topic in today's discussion. Berrigan is the author of a book, "Widening the Prison Gates."
Berrigan will spend the early part of the day in Leavenworth where he will participate in a demonstration and vigil in connection with Leavenworth Brothers, a group of federal inmates who instigated the riot at the Leavenworth federal Prison last summer.
FILMS $UA FILMS $UA FILMS $UA FILMS $UA FILMS
Friday, Feb. 22
7:00-8:30
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
A NARANCO PICTURE R
DIANA ROSS
IS BILLIE HOLIDAY
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
A RIANCO PICTURE
Fined in PANAFOX* in COLOR
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
Kansas Union
Special Films
THE PASSION
OF ANNA
d. Ingmar Bergman
Monday, Feb. 18
7:30
Saturday, Feb. 23
Miscellaneous Films
THE RITUAL
d. Inmar Bergman
Tuesday, Fob. 19
7:30-9:30
Kansas Univ
Classical Films
LA DOLCE VITA
d. Fellini
Wednesday, Feb. 20
7:30-9:30
Kansas Union
Film Society
BEHIND THE VEIL
THE QUEEN Thursday, Feb. 21
7:30
Kansas Union Children's Films
Walt Disney
THE AFRICAN LION
Sunday, Feb. 24
SWIF SWIF
Kansas Union
ROCK CHALK REVUE
RHYTHM AND RHYME
A SOJOURN EN TIME
ROCKCHAIK REVUE 74
Tickets Available at the SUA Office & Town Criers.
Tickets are $2.50 for Friday night
$3.00 for Saturday night
Hoch Auditorium - March 1 and 2,8 P.M.
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Monday, February 18, 1974
University Daily Kansan
3
(1)
Kansan Photo by BOB GILLUM
Chris Marcotte, Topека, and Susan Alexander, Lawyer Carruth-Cahill, the appellant.
Horsin' Around
last week. Alexander, who often rides on campus, said that she was once told by a girl in high school to always wear pants.
keep her vehicle on the roadway. He apparently overlooked their lack of
MOSCOW (AP) - Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in perhaps the last lines written on his native soil, has urged his fellow Russians to reject official lies.
Solzhenitsyn Essay Rejects 'Lies'
Doing so, he said in an essay, is "the simplest and most accessible key to our understanding."
The essay by the 1970 Nobel laureate was called "Live Not by Lies." It is circulating among people.
The essay is dated Feb. 12, the day a squad of secret police muscled its way into the apartment.
The next day he was forcibly exiled to West Germany.
Solzhentzny asserts that lies have become a pillar of the Soviet regime and that every day virtually every Russian is subjected to varying degrees of pressure to accept the official falsehoods as truth, or at least not question them openly.
In apparent reference to the terror of the Stalin era, the banished author asserts that "we have been so hopelessly dehumanized for that today's modest ration of food we are to abandon all our principles, our social契约 'fragile existence' will not be disturbed.
Solizhenytse asserts that most Russians have not matured enough politically “to
march into the squares and shout the truth out loud or to express aloud what we think" because it is still too dangerous. His response is a refusal to retreat to say that what we do not think.
Russian poet Yevyev Yevtushenko was quoted in a Milan newspaper yesterday as saying in a letter to the Russian people that the authorities should not publish a public declaration against Solzhentsyn.
Veytushenko said he refused, just as he had when authorities tried to get him to "unnask" the late Russian writer Boris Pasternak.
Vytushenko said he thought Soviet authorities were starting a campaign to force the change.
From Page One
Tapes ...
as we have determined, is an original and not a copy."
St. Clair said that U.S. District Judge John J. Sirah had recited the tapes questions to the Watergate grand jury, where the evidence was inconclusive. "He added:
"Stories such as appeared in today's press based on unnamed sources can only impair the proper function of the grand jury process.
"I intend to discuss this matter promptly with the Department of Justice and request that an investigation be instituted as to the person or persons who may have violated legal constraints in referring to matters within the purview of the grand jury."
The new White House assertion that a defective recording machine probably was responsible for the erasure marks came two days after Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said there are no other gaps in the tapes similar to the 18%-inmate one but “there are sounds . . . throughout it, overrides and so forth. . .”
A White House spokesman said Ziegler, Haig and presidential counselor Bryce Harrow joined in yesterday's meeting with the U.S. ambassador to the statement issued in St. Clair's name.
Nixon himself did not join in the meeting, the spokesman said, but was aware that the attack was coming from Russia.
80c Pitchers
8-Midnight
Tonight
& Wednesday
The Ball Park
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Prescription Drug Coverage?
Maternity Benefits?
Major Medical?
Emergency Treatment Benefits?
Student Health Insurance Forum
OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS
Pine Room of the Kansas Union
Monday, February 18th, at 7:30 p.m.
REPLACING "THE DEVIL IN MISS JONES"
SUA Films
Ingmar Bergman's Statement on Censorship and Morality in Art "THE RITUAL"
Tuesday, Feb. 19
---
7:30 Woodruff 75°
Beisner to Present Bills
John Beisner, Salina junior and newly elected student body president, has begun to implement his campaign platform objectives.
"I've been working on writing bills,
'beesner said last night. 'However, I don't
know what they're talking about."
Beisner said he'd like to use the first.30 days of his presidency to make some organizational changes within the Student Senate. He said the organizational reforms were necessary to make the senate maximally effective.
newly elected senators—that many were women and that the majority of elected senators had run with the Unicampus Coalition.
"I think we have a very good group of people to work with," he said.
Beiser and Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior and body student vice-president, is the second to be elected margin of 5 per cent in the recent student body officer elections. Beiser and Hunter were elected.
The Beiner-Hunter platform centered on three main objectives: academic policies, security and parking reform and Al-firmative Action.
Students to Plan Security Work In Beisner Bill
Beiser announced last night that he had written a bill to be acted upon by the new Student Senate at its first meeting Wednesday that would establish a task force of educators, would work on an alternative plan for security and Parking operations for next year.
The majority of KU students are fed up with the current Security and Parking operation, according to John Beisner, a graduate and newly elected student body president.
Beisner said he 'hoped the task force would work from the Security and Parking budget, seeing what cuts could be made to improve his student's philosophy of Parking and Traffic.
"If they're recommending status quo," he said, "the students aren't going to buy it so we're going to have to come up with something."
Beisner said the Parking and Traffic Board was going to submit its recommendations this week for next year's Security and Parking operations
A petition to the Chancellor, also to be acted on Wednesday, asks that he take no action on recommendations by the Parking board until the task force's plan is submitted.
The bill also requires the task force to admit a plan within 60 days for increased funding.
bills which he planned to introduce at the senate meeting Wednesday night.
The task force would be appointed by Beisner within a week after the bil is passed by the senate, he said, and would be given 30 days to devise an alternative plan for next year's Security and Parking operations which would reduce fees and fines.
"If the Parking and Traffic Board isn't to make the needed changes," he added.
Beisner said he had already written two
The second bill would amend the senate code to provide for membership on the standing committees of the University Senate by students who aren't senators, he said.
The first bill would authorize the appointment of a three-member security and placement force to present recommendations on Security and Parking to reduce fines and fees, Beiser said. Within 60 days the task would be completed with a revamp the traffic board appeals system.
"This is a chance for more students to participate," Beinner said.
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GUY
The Clothing Consultant
4
Monday, February 18, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Consumerism Extolled
The February 1974 issue of Esquire magazine carries an interesting article by Elin Schoen about the Consumers Union, a nonprofit organization established in 1936. Consumers Union publishes a monthly magazine, Consumer Reports, which reports the results of tests it has conducted on various products and gives product ratings.
During the 38 years of its existence, Consumers Union has acquired a reputation for accuracy and reliability for its analyses. Consumer Reports doesn't accept advertising and doesn't permit manufacturers to advertise the ratings published in the magazine.
Consumers Union has built its reputation on its testing and reporting. Over the years the Union has tested everything from automobiles to frozen pizzas and tennis balls. In addition to Consumer Reports, the Union has published special reports from time to time, such as its 1972 report titled "Licit and Illicit Drugs" and a 1968 report on birth control and family planning.
Recently, however, Consumers Union has started to take a more activist stance. In the February 1974 issue, Consumer Reports tells its readers that the Union has established an office in Washington, D.C., staffed by five young lawyers. Consumer Reports reports that the office is "to take facts uncovered by CU's technical and editorial staffs and pursue the legal implications of those facts in the consumer interest." The activities in which the lawyers will engage
include testifying before Congress and various regulatory agencies as well as entering into litigation.
Business isn't at all favorable toward the idea of having the government legislate or regulate in the consumer interest. This antipathy is understandable without hypothetising evil motives on the behalf of the features. Because driving up production costs, consumer protection legislation could result in a myriad of legal problems.
In spite of this, businessmen need to recognize that they have a responsibility for the quality and safety of the goods and services they sell to the public. No excuse can be given for selling automobiles with engine mounts that may cause serious accidents, hot dogs that contain fecal matter from insects, or microwave ovens that emit harmful levels of radiation.
Products today are more complex, as are decisions about what to buy. It is impossible for the average person to research every product thoroughly; therefore, the consumer has to buy largely on faith. Consumer protection legislation would protect the consumer against gross negligence by the manufacturer and would benefit both the consumer and the manufacturer. Perhaps the Consumers Union team of lawyers will be able to assist the federal government in formulating reasonable legislation and regulation on behalf of the consumer.
John Bender
Guest Editorial
Religion School in Limbo
The School of Religion has been in limbo too long. It has been plagued by anomalies that have alienated it from the University without justification. The time has come for the school to attain the complete inclusion with the University that it is now seeking.
The school's alienation is caused by its undefined position in the University structure. The school provides the necessary training for students who receives no financial assistance from the
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University budget. Some courses in other departments are cross-linked or jointly listed for religion credit. The school has the unique status of being academically controlled by the University while remaining a financially self-supported entity.
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Misconceptions about the school have enhanced its alienation. Some have mistakenly assumed that it is illegal to support a religion program in a state-supported university. The school is non-dominational and is therefore legally required to support through the University budget. There are at least 82 other tax-supported universities in the United States with religion programs, including Wichita State University.
There are approximately 1,000 students enrolled in religion courses each semester. The school offers these accredited courses free of charge to the state. Its students aren't accounted for in the University budget.
Consequently, the University would receive additional financial support from the state if these students were added to the full-time equivalency (FTE) formula used to determine the University budget. The school wouldn't drain the financial resources of other components that constitute the University budget.
The school's faculty consists of 13 instructors, including 10 Ph.D.s. Some of these instructors teach in other disciplines. Their salaries are paid both by the school and the state depending on what courses they teach outside of the Religion School.
Chancellor Dykes should forward the school's request to become completely united with the University to the Committee on Religion in Higher Education. I urge the Committee to propose that the school become a department within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences where it can best function within the University structure.
The Religion School has a graduate program that has awarded eight master's degrees since 1969. Yet it hasn't received any financial support from the University.
The approval of this request by the College Assembly would eliminate unjustified procrastination concerning the school's full acceptance in the University.
Stephen Buser Belleville, Ill., junior
Stephen Buser
President Vanishes as Nation Drifts
BY CHALMERS M. ROBERTS Special to the Washington Post
WASHINGTON—Who's in charge here?
More to the point, is anybody in charge? or Are we, as a nation, drifting leaderless toward some precipice?
CHRISTMAS M. ROBERT
Special to the Washington Post
Such questions are induced by the seeming abdication of President Nixon from the management of the federal government. Sure, Secretary of State Kissinger continues in diplomatic orbit. The silent silo sitters are at their desks in the missile complexes and social security checks get into the mails once a month.
But this capital has a feeling, if I catch the mood, of drift. Mr. Nixon simply is not governing in the accepted sense. True, he appears in television film clips from this movie, where he is said to forth in his name. But one has only to look at the struggle of the energy crisis, the long lines at the gas pump, the embattled truckers at their parked rigs, to see that the executive branch of the U.S. government has, for all practical purposes, come too a
The other precedent is the latter half of Herbert Hoover's administration, when the nation slid into the great depression with Hoover insisting that relief for millions of unemployed was the task—yes—of the red cross, not the federal government.
I've been searching for precedents and, in this century, only two come to mind. The first was the final years of Woodrow Wilson when he lay abay in the White House after a war, and he ran, while the administration in those final magic years "when the cheering stopped."
GOVERNMENT IS by omission as well as by commission. Wilson, waiting out the end of his term, all but disappeared. "None of the cabinet men but the President, none saw a word in writing save for the handful of frighteningly unfamiliar-looking signature of him, nothing beyond hisclipse of him on the cover, actually prove that the President even lived," wrote Gene Smith in his book on the last years of Woodrow Wilson.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee finally came to call, to see if he were still alive. Sen. Albert Fall, who would later go to jail for his role in the Teapot Dome scandal, bent over the president's bed and said, "Mr. President, I am praying for you." Wilson responded, "Which way, senator?"
Hover's dilemma was different, not physical but mental. He had begun with: "Given a chance to go forward with the policies of the last eight years we shall soon, with the help of God, be within sight of the poverty will be banished from the nation."
He ended with shantytowns for the unemployed, all across the nation, dubbed "Boy Scouts."
The nation's answer to Wilson was Warren G. Harding. To Hoover it was Franklin D. Roosevelt. It made no difference that Harding talked of normalcy or FDR of balanced budgets. The country wanted change, not drift.
There are perhaps as many differences as similarities between those two eras and today. There is one great, perhaps the greatest, country has lost confidence in its president.
asserted, was part of an international debacle. America, he said should free itself "of world influences and make a large measure of independent recover."
Mr. Nixon stands at 26 per cent in the gallup poll. If Dr. George Gallup had been polling in the final Wilson and Hoover years, Mr. Gallup would have been something like that, too.
OF COURSE, the parallels with our current condition are not exact. We do have dissipation from a long and costly war, as in the wars in Afghanistan over the economic condition, as in 1832.
The battle that Wilson fought and lost had to do with principles of America's international conduct. The one Hoover fought and lost had to do with principles of the
The battle today, in Nixon's case, is not over principle but over his person, and over the president and so ourouraged but ourougrada conscience in the exercise of his powers that he should either resign or be removed from office because the constitutional route of impeachment?
government's role in assuring the public welfare
Watching the television news night after night and reading the detailed stories morning after morning, one gets the feeling of Nixon being backed further and further into a corner, one of his own making. His supporters see it as a lynch mob after him. I month Sooner or later, after month after month, the President has been holding dogging, the President will have to face the bar of justice in the House of Representatives and, perhaps, the Senate.
immaterial. The crux, the breaking point, way or the other, is coming, slowly, but sure.
He will either have to spill it all, to produce the tapes and the documents, not just for secret peruse but for public inspection, or he will have to accept the popular verdict that he is hiding evidence of guilt.
Whether one sees it as inexorable greek drama or a high noon at the OK corral is
IN THE MEANTIME, the government
ITS. Subordinates do what they can,
of substance, with Dr. Kissinger,
with make-believe. No one is being fooled,
knows knows Nixon is not governing
is close to being as paralyzed as Wilson
Hoover.
It is still two years and nine months to the next presidential election, nearly three years to the next inauguration, Congress cannot govern. A cabinet can function—but the president can set the course and summon the new party to support, with the concurrence of Congress.
Whether Nixon can ever again govern, as in his first term, is questionable, to put it mildly. Certainly he cannot until the issue of impeachment is resolved one way or the other. And that very likely will consume much of 1974.
An awkward and embarrassing pause often follows while the instructor waits for some reaction from the students. What are the reasons for such pauses? The students may think, "This is not a learning experience, this is merely a test." Or, "The
This nation survived the last years of Wilson and the final years of Hoover. It will survive the last years of Richard Nixon. Drift is not the natural state of American life. In this case, as in those, it adds to the pressure for change.
W. R. H.
Discussions Better Than Lectures
"AND SO THE 13-NATION ENERGY CONFERENCE CONCLUDES ITS SESSIONS..."
Unfortunately, the gidelines for establishing the appropriate discussion setting are not as easily applied. Although college teachers are exhorted to be sensitive facilitators and mediators, most teachers have not had enough training, or are ill-prepared to implement this method, first himself before a group of students who expect the normal 50 minutes of lecture information? Some instructors begin with ten minutes of well chosen remarks, then abruptly use a play to encourage class participation—asking a "provocative" question. Too often instructors extend extremely narrow or completely open-end questions or correct solution to this problem?" or "What are your ideas on the subject?"
By JERRY HUTCHISON
and PHIL MCKNIGHT
Classes that encourage discussion are often preferred to traditional lectures. Although lectures impart information more efficiently, research shows that discussions may be better for transferring more complex cognitive and attitudinal objectives. Teachers are exhorted to plan their classes accordingly.
This poses a problem to many college teachers. Because teachers learned under the lecture system and are at ease in such a structured setting, they are apt to use the guidelines for effective lecture training straightforward and most teachers can acquire them with practice. The lecturer who is articulate, enthusiastic and well organized, who uses attention-getting devices, illustrative examples and periodic summaries and who is free from distracting will probably succeed in the lecture hall.
by Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
The lack of time for students to think through a response and to respond at length is perhaps the most unfortunate aspect of cursory question and answer sessions. Premature responses tacitly encouraged or rewarded preclude more thoughtful answers that are essential to thorough understanding. When teachers cut off feedback to share their thoughts out rationale, they are depriving these students of the opportunity to reinforce their understanding by actively using their ideas.
inferior, predicting quite accurately that they are likely to be outsiders in future discussions.
manner. If he does not, such questioning can only (1) discover the brightest or best prepared students (2) gratify the instructor's ego with an agreeable response, and (3) give the instructor a moment of respite.
Unfortunately, such answers (often rhetorical) may have another不便 effect. They may come while many students are still thinking about the question. They may still be reflecting upon the question when the instructor moves to a new topic. Thus, rather than being a learning experience—where "thinking fast under pressure" is rewarded. Consequently, class members may begin to feel alienated or
I WONDER IF STICKS GET COLD IN WINTER...
MAYBE WE COULD BUILD IT SOMETHING TO KEEP IT WARM...
GOOD IDEA!
I'VE HEARD OF DOGHOUSES BUT WHOEVER HEARD OF A STICK HOUSE?
College students have 12 to 18 years of experience in this setting. Teachers' cynicism, ridicule, sarcasm and belittlement of wrong answers may have taught them that they should not teach teacher should announce his willingness to accept student contributions in a positive
teacher already has a preplanned answer. Why gamble on an isolated solution when it is much safer to remain quiet?" Some students ask, "What if the question that question, my peers will think I am polishing me. If I am incorrect, they will silently ridicule me." Or perhaps the class has seen what may happen to those who support some teacher's answers or beliefs.
Oil Policy Hurts Public, Dealers
I'VE HEARD OF DOGHOUSES,
BUT WHOEVER HEARD OF
A STICK HOUSE?
By SOLY STENNEN
Special to the Los Angeles Times
By JOE STEINER
Special to the Los Angeles Times
While everyone's been talking about the energy crisis, a big riff against the public
What I mean by rip-off is this: The government is letting the major oil companies back on their financial obligations to the companies that own the under brand names. The result is another windfall for the oil companies—coming at a time when they are enjoyng unprecedented prosperity—and another increase in the price, amounting to millions of dollars a year.
I should know. As an independent service station owner, I'm caught in the middle of it. I'm the one who has to adjust the pumps when I need them. Is not the one the customer should blame.
The term "independent dealer" is thrown around a lot these days, and the problems of those independents who don't sell major-brand gasoline have been well publicized. The industry has long worked with station owners in Los Angeles myself included—sell major-brand gasoline.
YOU SEE, I own my station. I don't leave it from one of the major oil companies. Over the years the big oil companies have always given discounts to independent owners like myself because it was cheaper for them not to buy with buying land, buildings and equipment.
Nationwide, this practice has accounted for tremendous sales in the retail market. Because of the discount from the oil companies, we independent owners have been able to reduce our prices to attract more customers. It has been a happy way of doing business—for the oil companies, for us and the public.
Unlike many company-owned stations, which have an alarming turnover rate, the independent station is often owned by a guy who has been in the neighborhood a long time and has built a solid reputation. I've been on the same block for 38 years. Not
Since the energy crisis, however, this has all changed.
The major oil companies, with one exception—Shell-started canceling discounts for independent station owners last August. They haven't stopped selling us gas; we just don't know how to keep up with it. As a result, I have no discount money to make mortgage payments, pay property taxes and keep my equipment repaired. Since a station like mine normally sells about 50,000 gallons a month, a 2 cent-per-gallon loss of interest, in my case, a $1,000 monthly loss.
Caught in a crunch, we independent dealers turned to the internal revenue service for permission to raise prices—to make up for discounts we were no longer able to sell. We also learned nature of contracts with the oil companies, price increases were allowed. I was among the lucky ones who got such permission. That's great for me but not so good for the spirit of competition. It means you, the dealers, have to pay more—you pick up the tab.
ACCORDING TO PAST custom, no oil company would even try to sell gas through an independent station owner without giving a discount, for other oil companies would rush in to pick up the available account. But since the energy crisis, this kind of competition no longer exists between the oil companies. Because of tight supply, the companies have become more nowhere to turn, and the independent dealer's discount—which for years has been the keystone to competition at the retail level—is now gone.
The position of the independent station owner is now completely reversed. We used to sell gas cheaper, but today, in many cases, we are the ones charging more.
only has the independent owner been more stable, but because of his discount he has been the main source of competition at the retail level.
Losing my discount has created a burden
for me, although I'm able to make up for it in part by increasing my prices. But I'm hurt when the public blames dealers for being the cause of the shortage of gasoline because of oil company financial shenanigans. It's particularly frustrating for me, after all these years of giving good gasoline and fuel, because I can no longer get out there and compete.
THE END result of all this is that the consumer takes a beating at the pump, the oil companies get a free ride out of the independent dealers (they no longer have to pay for fuel and other discounts) and I'm being squeezed out of business because I can't afford to compete.
One traditional way of selling gas—a way that has often meant lower prices, better service, more competition—is being destroyed. And when products become more plentiful again—as surely they will—have only monopoly and no competition.
But then, quite sure there will be no independent dealers at all. These days in America, it looks like the big guys always win.
letters policy
The Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than a inch wide, edited and condensed 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 name and position; their names and address;
Monday, February 18. 1974
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Butchers Report Reduced Prices
Settlement of the truckers' strike and consumer resistance to higher beef prices have brought the cost of red meats down, Ed Kinseth, beef production manager of Thesis Packing Co. in Great Bend, said last week.
The strike forced packers to kill fewer cattle because the carcasses couldn't be trucked out, Kinseth said. The depressed market forced beef prices up during the
past two weeks, a condition reminiscent of the shortage experienced last spring and summer. Now the trucks are moving again, and crowded feed lots are being emptied,
"The cattle had to be moved," Kinseth said. "The market should reflect a downward trend because of the adequate supply."
Local butchers said beef prices are returning to normal after last week's boost
The butchers said they had tried to absorb cost increases themselves, rather than pass them on to the protesting consumers. One butcher said he had enough beef on hand to avoid purchasing much of the higher-priced meat for sale during the strike.
in supplies.
Prices are nearly normal at Harwood's
Wholemeal Meats, 3105 Iowa St., a
neighborhood of the city.
KU, Jucos Plan Advisory Board
This decision was made at a conference of kansas community college officials and KU
An advisory board of representatives from Kansas community colleges and the University of Kansas will be established to oversee faculty from community colleges adjust to KU.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said KU was interested in working as closely as possible with the students.
Dykes said KU's failure to understand the role of community colleges was the basis of much misunderstanding between KU and the community colleges. He asked the conference what KU could do to improve transfer students' interaction with KU.
Several community college spokesmen said their former students who transferred to KU had trouble getting into some upper level courses. Jim Rosser, associate vice president of the university affairs at KU, said the concern with enrollment was an issue that must be dealt with.
One complaint of transfer students, said Don Meyer, representative of Johnson County Community College, is that KU professors are more interested in their own interests.
*Academic admiration as it has been needs change to meet the needs of people and to ensure that they are satisfied.
"Not all the problems are at the University," said Wallace E. Galluzzi.
superintendent of Haskell Indian Junior College.
Dykes said that he didn't know where the funds for the advisory board would come from but that a center at KU to help the students college transfer student was a good idea.
Del Shankel, KU executive vice-chancellor, said that the University had an increasing concern about its relations with community colleges.
Under Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmer, Dykes' predecessor, there had been a plan to establish an office at KU to deal with relations with community colleges in Kansas, Shankel said, but funding difficulties killed that idea.
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Minorities to Provide Job Training
Kansan Staff Reporter
By DON LEVY
A coalition of blacks, chicanos and American Indians was organized recently to provide vocational training for racial minorities and women.
Samuel said local union representatives and contractors had pledged cooperation.
Ray Samuel, coordinator of the meeting and director of the Lawrence Office of Human Resources, said the group's primary purpose would be to enable the group members to join construction unions and receive adequate training.
The group, Lawrence Area Coalition, is organized under guidelines of the Home Town Plan, a model federal program applauded for special federal revenue-sharing funds.
The next move, Samuel said, will be the formation of an administrative committee composed of three building contractors, three union of flicials and six minor group members.
According to the plan, unions and contractors would agree to train a percentage of minorities equal to the percentage of the minority population in the community.
Samuel said the plan would subsidize trade union training programs already in existence and seek assistance from the University of Kansas to set up vocational training programs for such occupations as nurse's aides and beauticians.
Samuel said that until recently unions had
Harold Shepard, an independent black contractor, was elected chairman of the group and presided over elections of administrative committee members.
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Buchholz said that the movement of classroom and office materials into Wescoe had been hampered by bad weather, but that much of the movement had been accomplished during the past few days because of more favorable weather.
Wescoe Moves To Be Finished
All the offices in Wesco Hall will be occupied next week after the English department moves in, Harry Buchbeli, director of the physical plant, said Friday.
LANDMARK
"The unions have been a closed door to us," he said.
refused to admit minorities and that the lack of adequate local craft training still barred many minority group members from union ranks.
Cynthia Turner, co-director of Ballard City, a self-heal center for disadvantaged children, said Topea and Kansas City already had Home Town Plans and were
drawing young people away from Lawrence.
Samuel said the plan would require one or two full-time administrators to do the actual work in the community. The ad- ministrators would be employed by the city, he said.
Vocational counseling for high school students would be included in the program.
enough beef to sustain wholesale customers until orients began to fall, be said.
Kansan
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Howard Keolliker, meat manager at Dillon's, 1740 Massachusetts St., said the store had absorbed higher beef prices for about two weeks, but last week retail prices had to be raised about 15 cents a pound on all red meats.
Most beef at the &P store, 1040 Massachusetts St. dropped about 20 cents a pound last week, meat manager Les DeWeese said.
"The way they're talking, we'll get a break next week," Koehler said. "Very possibly it will be next Saturday before we can lower the prices."
LeRoy Crumet, meat manager at Rusty's, 909 Iowa St., said the price of beef had come down quite a bit since early last week when he received his last supply.
Price increased causes the truckers' strike haven't been passed on to the consumer. Crumet said. He said he didn't know enough to be shown up in retail prices would be enough to show up in retail prices.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
Officer Interviews
February 26
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
Board Member Interviews March2
Director, Festival of the Ar
Films
Fine Arts
Forums
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Special Events
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(Define Position)
Information and Applications Available in the SUA Office
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Deadline for Officer Applications: 5 p.m. Friday, February 22
Deadline for Board Member Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27
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6
Monday. February 18, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Art Book Expands Mind
Realistic Absurdities Presented
By ALISON GWINN Kansen Reviewer
THE WORLD OF M. C. ESCIER by J.
L. Bocher (Harry N. Arries, Inc.; 1971)
Man, according to M. C. Escher, is incapable of imagining that time could ever stop or that there is an end to space. The other side of his mind is that he main on visualize a space that is empty, but "nothing" in the sense of spaceless beyond his imagination. Thus he develops and adheres to illustrations such as the hereafter that eternally and endlessly unfolds.
As a modern graphic artist, Escher works on the premiere that empirical reality is only possible by realism.
Paperbacks
south Africa is the setting for Helga Moray's "THE SAVAGE EARTH" (Pocket, $1.25). It is part of a trilogy concerning a beautiful Irish woman, Katie Kildare, who has struggled through the wilderness and found love with a dashing Boer leader.
Also not likely to strain your mind too much is Charles Williams' new one, "STAIN OF SUPCIPION" (Pocket, 50 cents). This deals with obscene phone calls, vandalism, the murder of a husband and wife, and seems to seem to want to do anything about it.
And there's Mildred Nelson's "THE ISLAND" (Pocket, 95 cents). This is about a young bride and her botanist husband and all the troubles they have on a tropical island—until she meets a handsome young boatman and finds real love.
Bill Pronini's "PANIC!" (Pocket, 90 cents) is about a man who has run away from wife, home and job, who witnesses a woman being murdered and who has to flee to the desert.
In Rosemary Harris’ “ALL MY ENEMIES” (Pocket, $1.25) we two sisters, long separated, overjoyed at being saved from a plague plagued into a life of terror and violence.
Kathyn Morgan Ryan's "THE BETTY FIRST" (Pocket, $1.50) is a family story, set in a prairie town, dealing with a vicious teenager who holds the secrets of three generations of the family.
We also have a somewhat soapy theme in Miriam Lynch's "HATE THIE NEIGHBOR" (Pocket, 95 cents). This is about a woman named Rita Prince, living in the Bronx. She is known for her marriage, working out a scheme to make her happy neighbors as miserable as she is.
same basis, a different realization might be developed. His prints are always a search for a logical connection between various manifestations of reality.
In Danielle Steel's "GOING HOME" (Pocket, $1.25) we concern ourselves with Gillian Forrester and her big problem: should it be Chris in San Francisco, a somewhat undependable sort, or Gordon in New York, a steadier soul?
"The World of M. C. Escher" provides an extensive collection of Escher's works, primarily in black and white, which are characterized by geological and, essentially, stylistic order.
PREFACING THE PRINTS are five essays, including one by Eicher, which explores the meaning of the English word
review
historical, artistic and scientific points of view. Indicatively, the essays are written not only by art critics, but also by a scientist and a mathematician.
technique and in content. Before 1937, Escher's works are more exercises, dealing with observations of the real world, with observations of the angle of view and various fantasies.
Unlike most artistic collections, Escher's works may be appreciated for much more than their aesthetic properties. Art has traditionally been evaluated by the layman on purely gut reactions — in the feeling that the observer receives from a work.
Escher's prints, however, must necessarily be judged on their technical precision and their ability to represent logical mathematical and scientific principles. Escher obviously uses his intellect in his works, which some critics consider "too much". The many creative innovations created are based on logic and orderly principles that they are so fascinating.
ONE CANNOT MERELY glance through the pages of drawings in this book. They must be studied to be understood and appreciated. What seems in a drawing to be an abstract figure is presented as a logical possibility of Escher's deliberate visual system.
Upon viewing an Escher print, one might be reminded of the grade school project of making moebius strips, in which the final product of intertwined, once-connected circles of paper seems totally illogical at the same time that it is physically feasible.
This illusory effect of the strips is, to Escher, one of the ever-present characteristics of reality. He believes that man, in his empirical existence, is made a fool of by thinking that he can truly represent reality in his artistic creations.
Like most modern artists, Escher sees visual reality as being plural, without unity. Unlike most modern artists, however, Escher depicts this multiplicity of visual phenomena as being rational and orderly rather than chaotic and aband. Heavily influenced by the works of Renaissance mosaics, Escher often works with the constancy of basic geometric figures.
AS ONE PROCEEDS by the section of drawings within the book, he is bound to the author.
Escher always exhibits a strong skill in the use of various media and technique, which is useful for lithographic drawing. However, as progresses, the technique becomes very subordinate to the content of his drawings. This is a means for Escher to present his ideas.
Escher attempts to link different aspects of reality through basically two ideas. He forms a coinciding of spacial perspective through mirror effects and the double use of reflection in his drawings, recognizable figures coincide in patterns, typically of fish swimming one way in a drawing and geese flying the other. With the subtle suggestion of endlessness, the contours of the鱼 and the geese gradually spread about a metamorphosis in their forms.
REALITY AND UNITY are always imprinted in Escher's prints, but one is always aware of their latent impossibility. His assumptions that positive and negative are interchangeable and that infinity is average are interchanged in playful, yet bizarre pictorial forms.
In one print, "Belvedere," a ladder begins inside a building and ends outside the building, but can still be climbed normally. A man and a woman look out of two windows from the other, or the other, but the man is looking away from us and the woman is looking toward us.
In another drawing, "Relativity," a man is descending the same stairway that another man is climbing, yet they are going in the same direction. Both prints are utterly incompressible and extremely fascinating.
NONE NEED not knowledgeable about art to appreciate this book and, ultimately, Escher's works. As complex as they are, their stories become massive and their concepts familiar.
The casual reader can slowly peruse the pictures, discover their eccentricities and chore to himself. The reader who demands that all of the details he can find them in the opening essays.
BROOKSTER
LAWRENCE KS
SUN
TAOS NEW MEXICO The Land of Deep Powder and Sun "TRIP CONFIRMED"
Spring Break
on Skis!
MARCH 10-15 *111
Trip Includes:
—Round trip chartered bus
—5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol condominiums, kitchen, fire-
place, balcony, sauna
—4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs
—2900 vertical feet
Only 12 spaces left . . .
*25 holds a reservation.
Balance due February 21st
For information, call SUA
964-3477
21st.
UA
864-3477
Jayhawk
VOLKSWAGEN
Introduces
23
JIM NUGENT Your University Sales Representative
Jim is attending K.U. and will be at your service for the next three years. Jim has had previous experience in Volkswagen sales.
Jim has new and used Volkswagens for sale to students, faculty, administration, alumni and friends of the university. Your sales representative works at your convenience—his hours are your hours.
Realizing the student's time and money situation, Jim will be glad to meet with you at your convenience in your home or elsewhere. There is need to see the showroom—let the showroom come to you.
Call Jim at 844-2653 or 843-2200 anytime for a personal appointment. Look into the economy minded lorkswage holder, let Jim explain the jobs he's banked. Bank financing available with approved credit.
SINGLE ALBUMS
198
AND UP
SINGLE ALBUMS
198
AND UP
SINGLE ALBUMS
198
AND UP
Spring over to our Record Sale!
Mammoth Values!
Over 40 major labels including, Columbia. RCA; Sine Qua Non
Nonesus; Vanguard; Atlantic; Turnabout, ABC, Command
Rock, Classical, Blues, Folk, Jazz
The James Gang, Fifth Dimension, B. B. King, Mountain, David Nairn, Jason Almond, Dave Mason, Mark Almond, Joan Baez, Dave Brueckel, Andres Segovia, Carlos Montoya, Julian Bream, Pablo Casals, Pittsburgh Symphony, London Symphony, William Steinberg,
Boxed Set Values!
Beethoven
The Knie Complete Symphonies, William Steinberg and the Brittenham Symphony Orchestra
6 record set
Value to $45.00
**World's Greatest Cellists" Limited Edition**
Pablo Casals, Pierre Fournier, Janos Starker
3 record set
Value to $15.00
**The Classical Guitar**
Segovia, Ammeda, Williams, Montyora and many others
5 record set
Value to $25.00
**Debussy and Ravel**
The best of these two great composers including
Glar Lune, La Mer and Bolero
5 record set
Value to $20.00
**Americana**
Includes Grand Canyon Suite, An American in Paris,
American Suite and many others
3 record set
Value to $15.00
**Guzart Mahler**
Symphony No. 8 and Symphony No. 2,
Conductors Mitropoulos and Klempeter
3 record set
Value to $15.00
$12.98
$5.98
$7.98
$7.98
$5.98
$5.98
Plus hundreds more!
BOXED SET VALUES
398 to
1298
SCHWANN LIST
9.98 TO 44.50
One Week Only Sale Begins Monday, Feb.18 at 8:30 a.m. and Ends Friday, Feb.22 at 5:00 p.m.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Store Hours Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 18, 1974
Educational Grants Still Available
Basic Educational Opportunity Grants are still available to freshmen who did not earn college credit before July, 1973. The government's application deadline is April 1.
A total of 174 freshman have received grants averaging $250, according to Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid. The maximum grant is $452.
7
Any freshman who is currently enrolled
When the program reaches full funding, Rogers sid, the maximum grant will be $1,400. The amount of money for which a student is eligible is determined by subtracting the amount his parents can pay from $1,400. The grant can't exceed half the cost of college expenses for one year, however.
and can prove financial need is eligible for the grants, Rogers said.
Under the HEW program, receipt of a grant can't limit the student's chances of obtaining other financial assistance as long as he or she possesses an assistance to pursue a college education.
Rogers said any freshman who thought he might be eligible for a grant could receive information and an application in the Office of Student Financial Aid, 28 Strong Hall.
650 Volunteers To Give Blood
About 650 people have registered to blood, Kevin White, Shawne-Mission junior and blood drive chairman, said yesterday. It is a little over half the aid of 1,200 pairs.
has been tried, according to White. It was begun to avoid the inconsistencies of last year when the center was swamped at one period and empty at another. White said.
Originally, he said, the plan was to send recruiters from fraternities, sororities and universities. But now, he says, the focus is on recruiting.
several places for recruiting blood donors. White said students could still sign up today from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Kansas Union, Wescoe and Summerfield halls and the information booth located at Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Drive. Also, he if students can't register, they can still give blood. The school's skidwalkers have been allowed to
KANSAN WANT ADS
blood. This part has been abandoned because of the amount of work that is involved. Instead, tables have been set up in several places for recruiting blood donors.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before pul
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to students of national origin, regardless to their national origin. REQUEST BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
1) If you use them, they are advantage
2) If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage
Rey Audio, 12 E. 9th, phone 842-307-2685.
Ray Audio, 12 E. 9th, phone 842-307-2685.
Available for any noise problem. Cost is $10.
Either way it comes to the same thing—New
York. Available now at Campus Martius, Town Square
at Campus Martius, Town Square
Salarii Borrowsed ARL registered Chamber-
ly member, with ARL registration. Some
other dogs available at reasonable price.
Contact us for details.
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles.
Skis (Heid GS 200), Boots (rule %2): Lange
factors, foot injuries (marker), Poles: $2.50
For Sale. French Horn. Farkan Model 1791 Horn.
Sale price: $4,000. Boxed. Send for sale
after 5:30 p.m. or a phone. Taxes. Box. E-
ctober 28.
Plymouth Satellite, p.s. a.t., a.c. 318, 2 b.mr.
Bently A1-condition, low mileage, 1577
1577
CORVETTE 1969 pop-top coupe. 4 speed, air-power low mileage, metallic blue 842-572-18
two-speed electric bass guitar with the vinyl crisis -Reissue The Sound! Buy or Sell your records at Rays Records Sound, 12 U.S. Avenues, New York, NY 10036.
Garrard Turnable. Sale for model 40B in good condition. Check. Call 813-5546. 2-18
1969 Firebird 39 iop Originator new, pop-fold glass. Air conditioned, power-sweeping, automatic transmission, radio, perfect condition. Reasonable price: 843-1075.
FOR SALE CHEAP $192. 1968 Mercury Meter. A
car in good or near condition.
difference $150. 824-2473. 2-18
Ford Sale~Denon AM FM/FM Sterlen, 3 mus. old.
Nikon DSLR~All except Nikon DX.
All except Canon EOS-1000.
1973 OSSA Planker. Low miles and many extra-
Call 841-1035 2:19
FOR SALE 1973 14 x 60 Mobile House Set. Up to 250 sq ft. for sale. Fully finished with stove and refrigerator. Call 800-754-2321.
Male Jeans, for guys, now at the Attic for girls.
Come in and see. 227 Mass. 8:19
2-19
1955 Olds Cullasin-$400 or best call-843-2
9644 after 5 and weekends. 843-2
2-21
For Salat, Hodge-1971 "Trail 70" cycle. Also
available for Sale on 5:30, 10:25, 15:00, 20:00,
25:00, 30:00, 35:00, 40:00, 45:00, 50:00, 55:00,
60:00, 65:00, 70:00, 75:00, 80:00. Saturday, July 20.
AM-PH bolton radio for 75 Pink-$29, FM-
AM-PH columbia radio for 80 Pink-$39,
FM-AM-PH columbia radio for 80 Pink-$49,
FM-Cell AM-PH radio for 160 Pink-$39,
FM-Cell AM-PH radio for 160 Pink-$49
French Volle-Solex Mo-Ped 1HP 290 MWC; w/
French Volle-Solex mo-chair child, and 1 mo. gas.
843-837-538
For sale: Stereo-Harmon Kardon SC20 compact
and standers and stand Better offer 2-20
Ru, 842-1351.
Tire-Mercedes: GY-14 with white bells cut to $20 per
pound. Tire-Willys: 35R/60R/12 on sale for $29.
$20 per pound. Tire-John Deere: $75 on sale for
$18 per pound.
The once a year Magnavox annual sale is now **$199**. "Sterios, Components, Digital clock radio, iTunes dios. Ray Stonebanks." 329 Mass. Your Magnavox database. Where you can always do best.
THE BODY SHOP
Vitamins & Supplements
843-9412
940 Mass. Lawrence Ks
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
Area's Largest Selection
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
Rose KEYBOARD
GIBSON KASINO
KUSTON OVATION
FENDER EPIPHONE
1903 Mass.
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings 1/2 Price
Friday Nite
Cassettes (pre-recorded) in A-1 condition 158
tapes, 24 hours old. LT-1 condition 158
tapes, 12 H. new LP, up as well as 220
tapes.
Honda 250-17921, 4800 miles, gold color, no one scratch, treated with TPC. Prices will go up on request.
Good used KLFJ compair exhert with remote
locker. Good used KLFJ for $200, just $10 at RP
Stonehawk k $230 for $330.
Best used KLFJ for $390.
1970 USA 600 - extended forks-runs great
-5,000 miles Call 843-3099
2-22
For female (2). Niklormat Fin Modes. New, never.
Call Steve. B103-1638. 6 p.m. 2-22
Email steve@steve.com
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at real
price. Also authorized to accept stamps.
Already authenticated other items HERE
COUNTRY SHOP - open 9-14 days a week.
COUNTRY SHOP - open 9-14 days a week.
832 Herb - 125 Herb
FOR RENT
For Sale Two magnificent male Persian Kittens
Stored in a cool, dry place. Aired.
stored from show stock. 843-217-5000
2-22
FOR RENT to make or female student. Nike
Wear. 1 block from Parking. Park and utilities paid.
1 block from Parking. Park and utilities paid.
APARTMENT-specials, clean and quiet (3 bed-
room), 100' x 75' (27.5' x 23.8')
Oakton, 10:30-14:15 (9:00-11:00) and 7:00-9:00
(6:00-8:00).
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious living room, comfortable office space, private patio gazebo, sunken pool, unite, clear blue swimming pool. gas BBQ grill, indoor kitchen, outdoor kitchen, townhouses. W. Sikh 348-752-3193. E-mail info@sikh.com.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS we are on
sale at 435-672-2211 with utilities paid 843-954-2211
at the same rate. Call 843-954-2211 for details.
FOR RENT - A new 3 bedroom apartment with
furnished, carpeted basement, storage, NEAR
Mall.
One and two efficiency, for males. For
Near downtown. No pets. 843-5767. tf
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1723-1735 West 42th Street. Now building a new apartment on or upstairs from the old apartment, from $195,000 in dimentioning, dimepail, all electric kitchen, all refrigerator, all dishwasher, stop, bus stop, resident manager in Apt. 3, Cali. B4 842-7600.
House for Rent-Very cheap rent if occupied by you. Enquiries via phone. Fully furnished. Call 852-341-6097. Call 852-341-6097.
NOTICE
15 Michigan State B-Sat-B. We have open pit barbriche—wood we only. We have ribs or slab barbriche—wood we only. We have ribs or slab or brick by the pound. Half-chicken to the plate. Kit at least or it take up Quesen 13 am to 6 pm. Barbecue platter.
TYPEWINTER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smith Brothers, Inc., Fort Wayne, Indiana. tape transport, antique clocks and light industrial repair and fabrication. Carriage and light industrial repair and fabrication. City River City Repair Bldg. Vernon, IA 41083.
Free: One JCJ $25 bicycle hire if you purchase a Ride-On Hike on song. The month of February from Ride-On Hike on song will have nice Italy, Cannamia, Raleigh, Pouget, Massachusetts, Bicycles - Ride On Hike $2-28
Massachusetts
MOTHER'S
Don't come to the White Elephant to see how much you can learn. Don't come to the WHITE ELEPHANT to see how much you have points for you THE WHITE ELEPHANT
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBERATION, Inc. Meetings for SENIOR EDUCATIONAL FORWARD, 642-378-5277, events for SECONDARY EDUCATIONAL FORWARD, 642-378-5277
2406 Iowa
843-9764
SIX-HOUK MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS.
Free to students led by experienced Group Leaders. Information orientations held daily with Time 4, Infirm 4, or call Tom May 2-18
842-6055
Montessori pre-school (ages 15 to 5) has open-
ment or PSI session. Information: 843-787 or
website: montessori.com
PERSONAL
MOTORCYCLE - repair and tune. All makes-
satisfaction guaranteed. Pick-up and delivery
service. Minor训甩伞 $12. Spring service spec-
ment. Ten for appointment. K4-835-7351
ninja. 2-22
Mont Bleu Party Lounge now available for pri-
vie parties. Phone 843-263-2684 a. p. for in-
quiries.
Ever want something warm and bright to come
into your life? Try our 14 St. Hours. 5:00-9:00, Sat-
2:22
Must find home for 9 mo for female black, must
Great Dane; Bernard, will驻 if so on Deer.
Is not in the house.
SACIEM CIRCLE, K.U. Senior men's honorary is now accepting information sheets on prope-
sure to be mailed to the Dean for consideration in 5:00 p.m. Feb. 28. Reach the Dean at the Dean of Men's Office. For info contact 842-
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Europe, the Middle East, the Far East, Africa or Canada? You can help you find the least expensive way for getting where you want to go. Phone us up at [phone] [phone].
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30, 150 tickets still available for all 7 nights $7 coupons for entire week can be purchased at the SUA office. Individual night ticket sales start March 1.
Meditation Research. Seeking meditators at lean
mindfulness centers, yoga centers, and awareness
awareness. For more information contact:
www.meditationresearch.org
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
1408 Iowa
843-9844
"Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties"
HELP WANTED
B-B-O, 5, Steaks and sandwiches our specials!
What do you get when you fall in love? You
get what you want, from the public as
a public service from Ken. 2-4th
Lake Mipoutau
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
Part-time help for the farm, general farming throughout the summer. Must have transportation skills.
PHONE 843-1211
Student to work as mast aid begin. Beginimmediately Weekend Basis Course. Phase 8a-413j 2-18
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOIN
IN THE HALL
THE CREWEL
CUP BOARD
10.5 Monday, Saturday
If You're Planning on FLYING.
---
Foods for Health
now at
615 MASS
842-2771
A
GUA / Maupintour travel service
KU Union -The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass
Wanted: Navy seafarer (r. 8 years or less) for
Wanted: Navy seafarer (r. 8 years or less)
Facilities: Pay and benefits are excellent. For details
contact us at info@nautica.com.
WANTED
I need a secretary—general office with executive
support. Send resume to Music The People, Ltd at Free State Office
86530, Johannesburg, South Africa.
If you are an accurate typist, dependable applica-
tion员 and a reliable communicator, you may be
perfunctive per week. Please call inquiries at
864-3238 or visit www.ibm.com for more info.
Business majors needed for research project. Part-
s of the budget given by Volunteers paid. Compa-
nies awarded $350,000 each.
GATIHOUSE APAPTMENTS. No lease required.
Room: 610 sq ft. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m., or later.
Gate: 614 yd. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m., or later.
Teen Laugh Supervisor to work w.juniior and senior high year after school and Saturday evening. Coordinates activities and events of interest to youth must have experience superviving youth groups; $200.00 for teen laugh. 141 United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont; by mail: 843-7134. Feb. 16. For additional information:
Formal Female remote needed immediately—sublease if age is 52 or older (May 31st) WD-WC warrant if ageless expires May 31st
Resume Wanted To share large 5 bedrooms
with family and friends. Apply
plus utilities. Prefer graduate student. B41-84711
12345 Street, Los Angeles, CA 90010
FINE BOOKS
Square dance canal能引导 giving inductive
squares. Call Diah Randall, 843-960 or 842-703.
2nd. Call Diah Randall, 843-960 or 842-703.
Wanted: Baseball cards pre-1962. Please call 843-
2701. 7-19
Phone 843-6424
Hardworking male loud vocalist into rock band.
Hardworking male good load. Mam player also.
2:19 2:19
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
Case is looking for SKI Company in Colorado.
Share expenses Destination Flexible Up to 10 g
in Shipping. Must be a U.S. citizen.
Want to Rent Working hand needs rehearsal
Wanted to Rent Working hand needs rehearsal
call Rent Call: 841-864-6846
2-21
LOST
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Last: one silver carved ring in bathroom of Mwanza
one silver carved ring in mwanza
please place it on the wall 2.18
place it on the wall 2.18
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
James Gang Foreign Auto Parts Now Open Parts for ALL Foreign Cars
K
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
Town Tavern
(formerly Johnnie's)
401 M. 2nd
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
FINE SERVICE
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Bud & Evelyn
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
---
%
NIGHT CLASSES?
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
UNABLE TO PARK?
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS 5:45 - 10:15
5:45 - 10:15
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
Lost a brown crochet hat between stadium and
317 Strong. 842-9125. 2-18
LOSST - Gold Watch. Plain. Brown Leather Band.
Brown Felt. Room temperature. Roof Storm Vent. Bottom. Rearward. Return.
Room Temperature.
Last 5 month old female mostly beagled
last 4 months lost near strong Hall.
Ford 642-5618
2-19
SERVICES OFFERED
Lost gold ring-tapon on top, Friday the 7th
phone please 843-9029 REWARD.
Loet in Union, in flowerbed bag...Whitlow hall bag
Planting at Whitlow Hall. Blooms seasonally. Plant
lemon planters. Trusses in Classroom. Garden
plants. Gardening supplies.
I've lost a hardback blue lowland notebook.
If you've found one, please叫 me 842.8282, 2-20
Organic Chemistry lab book, and notebooks from tennis courts behind Robinson. PLEASE RETURN tennis court materials to the semester, and can't be replaced. No questions added and generous reward offered. Call Pat. 212-456-7890.
LMUSINEE & CHAITPFUER SERVICE. Ultimate
service for your mobile phone calls.
Negotiable. Call 865-234-0721.
RUVER CITY *PIPE*-815 Vermont. 841-4032
Sterios - watches - typewriter. Independent repair specialists. No retail house. We service what replaces. Unused resources. See #172.
TYPING
Tired of Housework? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and washing. Work done professionally by laundries at a reasonable price. For more information, visit www.housework.com/Rond or Riff, 843-384-afternoons and evenings.
Get ready for spring. Garden Bids filled Organic
for 5 p.m. Call 841-4751 - 841-3295 -
26-29
Expertised thesis typet. Close to campus 841-
4908. Myra.
Fitting in my home IMD Schematic. Piga type electronic circuit board assembly. accurate work, Call Kaito, 814-206-3900.
Open until 3 a.m. - Phone Order
843.7685 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
DELICATESSEN G & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 1 a.m. - Phone Order
811 769 2500, 811 769 2501
THE HLE in the WALL
-
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Krug
Oaks Acorn
Gaslight
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
*Crescent Heights*
*Oaks* *Acorn*
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise
Indian Jewelry
•Bridal Silver
- Books, Gifts
*Stained Glass
Open 8-5 Mon.-Sat.
Museum of Natural History
Bycle Rail
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and prompt service. Proofread spelled correct. Phone 843-3544. Mrs. Wright
WE FEATURE:
RaQ
Taq
Employment Opportunities
FOUND
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, Assistant. Suggested Requirements: Master of Public Administration degree. Expertions on the budget process. Some knowledge of the state budget process. Please work with regard to Oransz Regional Council for research grant. Salary $200 per month. Perform help duration婚礼 for up to June through October. Provide research grant. Salary $500 per month. Perform search assistance on a project concerning Kansas research assistant on a project concerning Kansas research assistant on a project concerning Kansas research assistant on the administrative finance and financial components of future growth policies in 1974. Please apply at the Institute for Social and Environmental INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL EMPLOYER QUALIFIED WORK FOR A MEN WITH ALL RACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
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Monday, February 18, 1974
University Daily Kansan
OU Stands Between KU, Top Spot
By JIM SHELDON
Kennan Sanrio Writer
As tight as the Big Eight race is, any game between two leading teams is a key one. The game at 17:38 tonight, in Allen Field House between the University of Kansas and the University of Oklahoma is no exception.
A win for KU would mean a temporary tie with the Kansas State Wildcats for first place. K-State is idle until Saturday when it plays the Sooners at home.
A win for Oklahoma would move the Sooners into a die for second place with KU, and a loss would mean a third place.
According to KU coach Ted Owens, the game is an important one for both teams. However, Owens said he didn't think a loss would knock Oklahoma out of the race.
"Not with this many games left," Owens
said. "But it would put them two games behind with four games left to go."
AN OKLAHOMA WIN would also give the Sooners revenge for two earlier losses to KU. KU won in Norman B2-79 and also in the Bieu Eight Tournament, B2-72.
In the game at Norman, Rick Suttle came off the bench to score a career high of 31 points and lead a five-point KU comeback in the final 90 seconds.
The Sooners have made some changes since that game. Owens said that Oklahoma had centered its play on his big man, Alvan Anderson, that the Sooners had now added zine press.
KANAS
Ranger
Ringer
Morgan Starling
6-6
Isley Knight 10-10
Dale Greenie 12-12
Cheetah
OKLAHOMA
Tom Hollom 8-9
Bob Pritchard 6-7
Alvan Adams 6-9
Mike McGurb 2-9
Lie Gilbert 6-1
KANSAS
52
52
IOWA
33
Kansas Photo
Knight(52) Led KU with 17 Points
Track Team Is Third; Timmons Disappointed
Despite the absence of several top performers, the University of Kansas track team salvaged third place at the Central Conference Championship Friday and Saturday in South Bend, Ind.
Coach Bob Timmons said the overall performance of the team was disappointing.
Eastern Michigan University won the meet, followed by Southern Illinois in the third.
Absent from the team were high jumper Schur, Scholar, marker Latz and hurdler Pawel.
Schul and Lutz are both suspended from the team, and Vandavee is still alluring from the team.
"I was disappointed with our performance," Timmons said. "We hoped we'd do much better. We're a better team than we showed up there."
There were several impressive performances turned in by members of the KU team. Pole vaulter Terry Porter seemed to have regained his form. He won the pole vault championship and the U.S. Eight and NCAA indoor champion, has it done well throughout the indoor season.
"I was really pleased with Porter, Smith and Seay, and Nolan Cromwell also did well." Timmons said. "Right now, we've got a lot of time and get ready for the Big Eighth Indoor."
Also impressive in winning their specialties were Danny Seay and Randy Smith. Seay won the long jump with a leap of 11.24, and Smith won the high jump at 6-11⁵.
Both teams come into the game with only one day's rest after home games Saturday. Oklahoma beat Oklahoma State 91-78 and KU defeated Iowa State 72-57.
"They run a zone press now that is a little different than any we've played against this one."
The next meet is the Big Eight Indoor, to be held March 1-2 in Kansas City, Mo.
THE OUTCOME of KU's game against Iowa State was never in much doubt. The 'Hawks jumped out to an early lead and kept it.
At times KU played a lackadaisical game, but the Cyclones never could get themselves going. Both teams committed numerous overs and neither shot particularly well.
"We executed really well on offense at first and we had good shots," Owens said. "However, we did not execute well in the second half."
Save the Prairie support the
KU's offense was erratic, but its defense was solid.
Tallgrass Prairie National Park
"We played very well on defense, but not on offense," Owens said. "There were only three or four minutes when we were not sharp on defense."
protect your unique heritage sign the petition this week at various locations on campus
A key factor in KU's defense was the play of senior guard K司马ivo. Kivisto held Iowa State's leading scorer, Hercie Ivly, well below his 14.8 average. Ivy managed to score on two occasions only 1:35 was left in the first half. In contrast, Ivy had burned KU's zone defense for
supported by
Color Trainers All Gearmats
Kenya State 8 9 10
Kenya State 8 9 10
Kenya State 8 9 10
Nebraska 4 8 10
Oklahoma 4 8 10
Oklahoma 4 8 10
Missouri 7 10 10
Minnesota 7 10 10
Minnesota 7 10 10
Lawrence Sierra Club
Big Eight Standings
| | FG | FT | RB | B | TF |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cook | 9 | 9 | 10 | 5 | 18 |
| Moringstar | 4-12 | 1-12 | 3 | 4 | 10 |
| Meringstar | 4-12 | 1-12 | 3 | 4 | 10 |
| Kirkus | 3-13 | 1-12 | 3 | 4 | 15 |
| Kirkus | 3-13 | 1-12 | 3 | 4 | 15 |
| Smith | 6-10 | 1-2 | 4 | 4 | 10 |
| Smith | 6-10 | 1-2 | 4 | 4 | 10 |
| Moorehouse | 0-10 | 1-2 | 4 | 4 | 10 |
| Emery | 0-1 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Emery | 0-1 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Horacehouse | 0-1 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Horacehouse | 0-1 | 0-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Marsh | 31-10 | 10-18 | 4 | 12 | 5 |
KANSAS (72)
| | PG | FT | RB | B | F |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Wilbon | 2 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 9 |
| Loeks | 4 | 8 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Delancey | 3 | 10 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Ivie | 6 | 10 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Harry | 5 | 10 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Bransteiner | 5 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
| Benenson | 7 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
| Benson | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Kimika | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| John | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Dominic | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 26.71 | 7 | 33 | 13 | 57 |
**pa** *times earlier in the year at Ames.*
"I JUST TREED to stay in front of him*
Kansas 72, Iowa State 77
Nebraska 68, Missouri 87
Oklahoma 91, Oklahoma State 78
Kansas State 76, Colorado 74
KANSAS 20 33-73
Iowa STATE 20 33-67
Iowa State's acting coach, Gus Gudson, said lay's play was also affected by his experience with the team.
"I JUST TRIED to stay in front of him and break his head," Kivisto said.
"Today was the worst game we've had," Guydon said. "This is not an indication of what happened."
iowa State also had trouble defending KU and only some poor shooting by the 'Hawks kept the scoring down. KU was able, however, to penetrate the Cyclone's defense for some easy shots, including several fast break lavages.
"They committed a lot of people to the offensive boards and so we were able to run
KU ALSO RAN its now familiar backdoor special to Tommy Smith. Twice Kivisto hit Smith with perfect passes behind the Iowa State defense for easy baskets.
Swimmers Beat OU, Get Ready for Big 8 Meet
KU's depth proved to be the deciding factor as the Jayhawks won eight of the 13 events. Oklahoma's Dick Pattengale and John McLintock each won two events, but the rest of the Sooners did not perform as well.
The University of Kansas swim team completed an unbeaten season in dual meet competition against Big Eight opponents by 78-74. Saturday in Robbins Gymnasium.
KU coach Dick Reamon said the meet went as he had expected.
Reason praised the performances of Gary Kemp, Keith Rüche and Pat DiBiase. He also said the medley relay team looked good.
Saturday's meet was the last home appearance for KU. Their next meet is the Big Eight Championships beginning March 7 in Boulder.
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Oread Corner
DECK
Gymnasts Lose to NU
An almost record score by the University of Kansas gymnastic team was not enough to defeat the University of Nebraska Friday night in Robinson Gymnastics. The Cornhuskers beat KU by a three point margin, 161.60-158.35.
The 188.35 score is the gymnasts' best since 1962, and their third straight score
The meet went down to the very last event. Nebraska womre five out of the six events, but the largest point difference was only 1.6, in the rings and floor exercise.
parrallel bars and the horizontal bar.
The Jayhaws managed to beat Nebraska in the vaulting, 27-38-27-15. Mike Backus finished first with a 9.4, tying the school record he set on Feb. 8.
Lockwood song out loud on Whitehead for a "super performance." White head scored 45.4 and his team tied for third.
"I thought our men did an excellent job," Coach Robert Luckwood said. "We hit on 18 of 24 routines, which is exactly the kind of performance we've been working for."
Nebraska has an excellent squad," Lockwood said. "They are well coached and do difficult routines. They definitely top ten ranking in the nation." The results:
Al Overton won the all-around competition with a score of 49.80, edging out a teammate from the United States.
The Cornhuskers were victorious without the services of their top all-around man, and they were a force to be reckoned with.
Floor rowereach (1), Jim Linger (NU), 2), Allen
Floor rowereach (2), Jim Linger (NU), 2), Allen
Gary Burke (NU), 3), Gary Burke (NU), 4), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 5), Gary Burke (NU), 6), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 7), Gary Burke (NU), 8), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 9), Gary Burke (NU), 10), Aby
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Gary Burke (NU), 541), Gary Burke (NU), 542), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 543), Gary Burke (NU), 544), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 545), Gary Burke (NU), 546), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 547), Gary Burke (NU), 548), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 549), Gary Burke (NU), 550), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 551), Gary Burke (NU), 552), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 553), Gary Burke (NU), 554), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 555), Gary Burke (NU), 556), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 557), Gary Burke (NU), 558), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 559), Gary Burke (NU), 560), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 561), Gary Burke (NU), 562), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 563), Gary Burke (NU), 564), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 565), Gary Burke (NU), 566), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 567), Gary Burke (NU), 568), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 569), Gary Burke (NU), 570), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 571), Gary Burke (NU), 572), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 573), Gary Burke (NU), 574), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 575), Gary Burke (NU), 576), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 577), Gary Burke (NU), 578), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 579), Gary Burke (NU), 580), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 581), Gary Burke (NU), 582), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 583), Gary Burke (NU), 584), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 585), Gary Burke (NU), 586), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 587), Gary Burke (NU), 588), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 589), Gary Burke (NU), 590), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 591), Gary Burke (NU), 592), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 593), Gary Burke (NU), 594), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 595), Gary Burke (NU), 596), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 597), Gary Burke (NU), 598), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 599), Gary Burke (NU), 600), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 601), Gary Burke (NU), 602), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 603), Gary Burke (NU), 604), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 605), Gary Burke (NU), 606), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 607), Gary Burke (NU), 608), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 609), Gary Burke (NU), 610), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 611), Gary Burke (NU), 612), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 613), Gary Burke (NU), 614), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 615), Gary Burke (NU), 616), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 617), Gary Burke (NU), 618), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 619), Gary Burke (NU), 620), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 621), Gary Burke (NU), 622), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 623), Gary Burke (NU), 624), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 625), Gary Burke (NU), 626), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 627), Gary Burke (NU), 628), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 629), Gary Burke (NU), 630), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 631), Gary Burke (NU), 632), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 633), Gary Burke (NU), 634), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 635), Gary Burke (NU), 636), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 637), Gary Burke (NU), 638), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 639), Gary Burke (NU), 640), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 641), Gary Burke (NU), 642), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 643), Gary Burke (NU), 644), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 645), Gary Burke (NU), 646), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 647), Gary Burke (NU), 648), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 649), Gary Burke (NU), 650), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 651), Gary Burke (NU), 652), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 653), Gary Burke (NU), 654), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 655), Gary Burke (NU), 656), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 657), Gary Burke (NU), 658), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 659), Gary Burke (NU), 660), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 661), Gary Burke (NU), 662), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 663), Gary Burke (NU), 664), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 665), Gary Burke (NU), 666), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 667), Gary Burke (NU), 668), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 669), Gary Burke (NU), 670), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 671), Gary Burke (NU), 672), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 673), Gary Burke (NU), 674), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 675), Gary Burke (NU), 676), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 677), Gary Burke (NU), 678), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 679), Gary Burke (NU), 680), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 681), Gary Burke (NU), 682), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 683), Gary Burke (NU), 684), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 685), Gary Burke (NU), 686), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 687), Gary Burke (NU), 688), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 689), Gary Burke (NU), 690), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 691), Gary Burke (NU), 692), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 693), Gary Burke (NU), 694), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 695), Gary Burke (NU), 696), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 697), Gary Burke (NU), 698), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 699), Gary Burke (NU), 700), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 701), Gary Burke (NU), 702), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 703), Gary Burke (NU), 704), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 705), Gary Burke (NU), 706), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 707), Gary Burke (NU), 708), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 709), Gary Burke (NU), 710), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 711), Gary Burke (NU), 712), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 713), Gary Burke (NU), 714), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 715), Gary Burke (NU), 716), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 717), Gary Burke (NU), 718), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 719), Gary Burke (NU), 720), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 721), Gary Burke (NU), 722), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 723), Gary Burke (NU), 724), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 725), Gary Burke (NU), 726), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 727), Gary Burke (NU), 728), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 729), Gary Burke (NU), 730), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 731), Gary Burke (NU), 732), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 733), Gary Burke (NU), 734), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 735), Gary Burke (NU), 736), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 737), Gary Burke (NU), 738), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 739), Gary Burke (NU), 740), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 741), Gary Burke (NU), 742), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 743), Gary Burke (NU), 744), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 745), Gary Burke (NU), 746), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 747), Gary Burke (NU), 748), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 749), Gary Burke (NU), 750), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 751), Gary Burke (NU), 752), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 753), Gary Burke (NU), 754), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 755), Gary Burke (NU), 756), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 757), Gary Burke (NU), 758), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 759), Gary Burke (NU), 760), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 761), Gary Burke (NU), 762), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 763), Gary Burke (NU), 764), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 765), Gary Burke (NU), 766), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 767), Gary Burke (NU), 768), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 769), Gary Burke (NU), 770), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 771), Gary Burke (NU), 772), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 773), Gary Burke (NU), 774), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 775), Gary Burke (NU), 776), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 777), Gary Burke (NU), 778), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 779), Gary Burke (NU), 780), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 781), Gary Burke (NU), 782), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 783), Gary Burke (NU), 784), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 785), Gary Burke (NU), 786), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 787), Gary Burke (NU), 788), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 789), Gary Burke (NU), 790), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 791), Gary Burke (NU), 792), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 793), Gary Burke (NU), 794), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 795), Gary Burke (NU), 796), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 797), Gary Burke (NU), 798), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 799), Gary Burke (NU), 800), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 801), Gary Burke (NU), 802), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 803), Gary Burke (NU), 804), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 805), Gary Burke (NU), 806), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 807), Gary Burke (NU), 808), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 809), Gary Burke (NU), 810), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 811), Gary Burke (NU), 812), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 813), Gary Burke (NU), 814), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 815), Gary Burke (NU), 816), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 817), Gary Burke (NU), 818), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 819), Gary Burke (NU), 820), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 821), Gary Burke (NU), 822), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 823), Gary Burke (NU), 824), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 825), Gary Burke (NU), 826), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 827), Gary Burke (NU), 828), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 829), Gary Burke (NU), 830), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 831), Gary Burke (NU), 832), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 833), Gary Burke (NU), 834), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 835), Gary Burke (NU), 836), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 837), Gary Burke (NU), 838), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 839), Gary Burke (NU), 840), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 841), Gary Burke (NU), 842), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 843), Gary Burke (NU), 844), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 845), Gary Burke (NU), 846), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 847), Gary Burke (NU), 848), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 849), Gary Burke (NU), 850), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 851), Gary Burke (NU), 852), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 853), Gary Burke (NU), 854), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 855), Gary Burke (NU), 856), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 857), Gary Burke (NU), 858), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 859), Gary Burke (NU), 860), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 861), Gary Burke (NU), 862), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 863), Gary Burke (NU), 864), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 865), Gary Burke (NU), 866), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 867), Gary Burke (NU), 868), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 869), Gary Burke (NU), 870), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 871), Gary Burke (NU), 872), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 873), Gary Burke (NU), 874), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 875), Gary Burke (NU), 876), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 877), Gary Burke (NU), 878), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 879), Gary Burke (NU), 880), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 881), Gary Burke (NU), 882), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 883), Gary Burke (NU), 884), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 885), Gary Burke (NU), 886), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 887), Gary Burke (NU), 888), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 889), Gary Burke (NU), 890), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 891), Gary Burke (NU), 892), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 893), Gary Burke (NU), 894), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 895), Gary Burke (NU), 896), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 897), Gary Burke (NU), 898), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 899), Gary Burke (NU), 900), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 901), Gary Burke (NU), 902), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 903), Gary Burke (NU), 904), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 905), Gary Burke (NU), 906), Aaby
Gary Burke (NU), 907), Gary Burke (NU), 908), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 909), Gary Burke (NU), 910), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 911), Gary Burke (NU), 912), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 913), Gary Burke (NU), 914), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 915), Gary Burke (NU), 916), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 917), Gary Burke (NU), 918), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 919), Gary Burke (NU), 920), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 921), Gary Burke (NU), 922), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 923), Gary Burke (NU), 924), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 925), Gary Burke (NU), 926), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 927), Gary Burke (NU), 928), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 929), Gary Burke (NU), 930), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 931), Gary Burke (NU), 932), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 933), Gary Burke (NU), 934), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 935), Gary Burke (NU), 936), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 937), Gary Burke (NU), 938), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 939), Gary Burke (NU), 940), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 941), Gary Burke (NU), 942), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 943), Gary Burke (NU), 944), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 945), Gary Burke (NU), 946), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 947), Gary Burke (NU), 948), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 949), Gary Burke (NU), 950), Aby
Gary Burke (NU), 951), Gary Burke (NU), 952), Aby
Gary Burke
*Formal Harper, J.* *Strew Dinkey (NY), 0.40; 2 Mail*
*Davis, L.* *Paul Culliver (NY), 0.40; 2 Mail*
*Collaboration with P.M., 0.50; Post-Western (NY)* *1.60;*
*P.O. Box 937, New York, NY 10010.*
Slid Runner - 2, Foe Bindslam (NIU), 9.40; 2, Ruck Martell (NIU), 9.40; 3, Foe Bindslam (NIU), 9.40; 4, Foe Bindslam (NIU), 9.15; 5, Ninny John (NLU), 7.86; 6, Tom Hammel (NLU), 7.86
[3] Franklin, J. (1980). *Educational Factors in Early Adolescence*. M-1 Mike Reagan (KU), 8:00. 2. Gary Severson (KU), 8:00. 3. Gary Sternberg (KU), 8:00. 4. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 5. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 6. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 7. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 8. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 9. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 10. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 11. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 12. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 13. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 14. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 15. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 16. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 17. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 18. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 19. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 20. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 21. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 22. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 23. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 24. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 25. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 26. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 27. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 28. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 29. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 30. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 31. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 32. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 33. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 34. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 35. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 36. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 37. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 38. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 39. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 40. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 41. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 42. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 43. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 44. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 45. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 46. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 47. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 48. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 49. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 50. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 51. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 52. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 53. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 54. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 55. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 56. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 57. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 58. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 59. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 60. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 61. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 62. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 63. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 64. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 65. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 66. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 67. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 68. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 69. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 70. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 71. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 72. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 73. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 74. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 75. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 76. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 77. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 78. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 79. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 80. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 81. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 82. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 83. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 84. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 85. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 86. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 87. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 88. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 89. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 90. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 91. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 92. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 93. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 94. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 95. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 96. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 97. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 98. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 99. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 100. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 101. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 102. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 103. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 104. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 105. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 106. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 107. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 108. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 109. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 110. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 111. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 112. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 113. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 114. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 115. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 116. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 117. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 118. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 119. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 120. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 121. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 122. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 123. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 124. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 125. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 126. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 127. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 128. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 129. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 130. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 131. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 132. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 133. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 134. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 135. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 136. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 137. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 138. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 139. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 140. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 141. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 142. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 143. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 144. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 145. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 146. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 147. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 148. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 149. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 150. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 151. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 152. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 153. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 154. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 155. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 156. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 157. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 158. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 159. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 160. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 161. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 162. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 163. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 164. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 165. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 166. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 167. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 168. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 169. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 170. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 171. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 172. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 173. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 174. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 175. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 176. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 177. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 178. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 179. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 180. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 181. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 182. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 183. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 184. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 185. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 186. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 187. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 188. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 189. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 190. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 191. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 192. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 193. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 194. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 195. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 196. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 197. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 198. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 199. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 200. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 201. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 202. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 203. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 204. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 205. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 206. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 207. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 208. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 209. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 210. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 211. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 212. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 213. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 214. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 215. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 216. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 217. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 218. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 219. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 220. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 221. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 222. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 223. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 224. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 225. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 226. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 227. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 228. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 229. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 230. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 231. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 232. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 233. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 234. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 235. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 236. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 237. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 238. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 239. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 240. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 241. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 242. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 243. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 244. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 245. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 246. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 247. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 248. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 249. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 250. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 251. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 252. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 253. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 254. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 255. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 256. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 257. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 258. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 259. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 260. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 261. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 262. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 263. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 264. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 265. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 266. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 267. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 268. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 269. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 270. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 271. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 272. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 273. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 274. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 275. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 276. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 277. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 278. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 279. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 280. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 281. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 282. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 283. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 284. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 285. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 286. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 287. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 288. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 289. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 290. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 291. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 292. 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TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 380. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 381. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 382. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 383. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 384. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 385. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 386. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 387. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 388. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 389. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 390. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 391. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 392. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 393. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 394. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 395. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 396. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 397. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 398. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 399. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 400. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 401. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 402. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 403. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 404. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 405. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 406. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 407. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 408. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 409. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 410. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 411. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 412. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 413. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 414. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 415. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 416. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 417. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 418. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 419. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 420. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 421. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 422. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 423. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 424. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 425. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 426. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 427. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 428. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 429. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 430. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 431. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 432. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 433. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 434. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 435. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 436. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 437. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 438. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 439. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 440. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 441. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 442. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 443. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 444. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 445. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 446. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 447. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 448. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 449. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 450. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 451. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 452. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 453. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 454. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 455. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 456. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 457. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 458. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 459. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 460. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 461. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 462. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 463. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 464. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 465. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 466. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 467. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 468. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 469. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 470. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 471. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 472. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 473. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 474. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 475. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 476. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 477. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 478. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 479. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 480. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 481. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 482. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 483. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 484. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 485. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 486. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 487. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 488. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 489. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 490. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 491. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 492. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 493. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 494. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 495. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 496. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 497. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 498. TIE-John Johnson (KU), 8:00. 499
Forster Barr, T. H., Head Ranker RU, and Barry JR.
(University of Wisconsin) - Forster Barr, T. H., Head Ranker RU, and Barry JR.
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Birchers Say Conspiracy Afoot to Form World State
By STEVE LEWIS
Kansas Stiff Reporter
Kansan Staff Reporter
There is a conspiracy in the United States to create world government and destroy individual freedom according to the John Birtch Society. The society says participants in the conspiracy include President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The society claims that the conspiracy is being led by what they call insiders—a group of national financiers and the 1,300 members of Foreign Relations, a group that Kissinger was previously a member of. Their goal is to create world government, the Birchers
There are two active chapters of the John
Birch School in Lawrence. They meet separately once a month to discuss issues and organize letter-writing campaigns to government officials. Each meeting begins
The John Birch Society is named after an obscure fundamentalist missionary who was a captain in the U.S. Intelligence Service and died before World War II, but never eroded by the Chinese Communist
The society was founded in 1958 by candy manufacturer Robert Welch to expose the trend he $ ^{w}$ w toward more government and less freedom in the United States.
"LESS GOVERNMENT, more responsibility and with God's help, a better way to work."
Two local members of the society. Robert
Elder, a chapter leader, and Ed Jacobs
snake of their crusade in a recent interview
"I think the government should get out of everything." Elder said, "as far as controls are concerned."
Calling President Nikon a "big lurian" and a "big crook," Elder said he like to see him impeached. He said the presidency had been criticized by the organized Congress for allowing that to happen.
Eilder called Nixon's revenue sharing "deficit sharing" and a box. He also said that Nixon was a big fan of the economy.
"There's only one thing that has caused inflation and if President Nixon will look in the mirror he will see it." Elder said. "The facts are alike, we allies—you can't believe either of them."
JACOBS CALLED the Vietnam War "a war on the American people by the American government." He said it served only to make millionaire richers. Only with congressional approval, he said, should America enter a war.
Elder said the major news media were dominated by the insiders. As a result, he said, people weren't being warned about the conspiracy to arrest freedom.
He said that the American people had their heads "barred in the sand" and that that influence of Sir Richard Schieffler was to make people aware that this government was being eroded as government shifted toward both Washington and the United Nations. Jacobs said, "What the government pays for is not what it was."
you have in Communist Russia is controls and more control."
Jacobs said there was a conspiracy in this country to gain more control over the American people. He said, for example, that the Rockefeller, Ford and Carnegie militant groups so as to induce the government to put more restrictions on freedom.
"There's pressure from above and below," Jacobs said. "The pressure from above is financing the pressure from below. The pressure from below is gaining more control over the people."
"WHEN YOU HAVE all the money you need, you then try to control people."
Elder said Ralph Nader was actually making money for the auto industry as well
as helping the insiders gain more control over the people.
"All these safety control devices put more controls on the American people," said Elder. "We cannot afford what it's going to cost for the government to protect us."
"They make it sound as though we have accidents deliberately."
Jacobs said the insiders were pushing for gun control and consumer protection legislation. He said one consumer protec-
tion Congress required that a homeowner allow a compliance officer to inspect his home for violations of a minimum code.
Elder said the energy crisis was promoted and restricted by BIRCHERS袋.
A bird wearing a scarf is walking in the sunny sky with fluffy clouds.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Forecast: Partly cloudy. High in the upper 40% low in the lower 20%. 84th Year, No. 93
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 19. 1974
See Story Page 6
KANSAS
52
KANSAS
50
Living 'Sanely' Chief Concern, Says Berrigan
Knight Starts KU Fastbreak
Danny Knight knelt downscour for the most pass after grabbing a rebound in the Jayhawks' 89-90 win over the Oklahoma Sooners last night. Knight outscored Alvan
Adams, the Sooners' all star center, 24-23 and outbounded him 14-9. The win lifted KU into a first place tie with Kansas State in the Big Eight.
Hearst Pledges $2 Million
He said arrangements had been made for the money to be delivered to a tax-exempt, charitable organization approved by the attorney general of California, capable of making a distribution for the benefit of the poor and needy."
SAN FRANCISCO (CA) — Newspaper magnate Randolph A. Hearst pledged $2 million yesterday to feed the needy as a first effort to help his kidnapped daughter Patricia.
"This is a gesture of good will," Hearst told a news conference at a downtown hotel. "There is no guarantee Patricia is going to get home on this."
HEARST SAID HE was still looking for a suitable organization to administer the food giveaway demanded by the terrorist group. "The terrorists say it kidnapped Miss Heart on Feb. 4," he said.
Hearst said the $500,000 he was giving was a substantial part of his personal assets. He said the remaining $1.5 million from the William Randall Hepdell Hound Foundation had been donated to the charitable organization after the family members disguised themselves.
Heartst said he was donating $50,000 himself and that the Heartst Foundation was the first to do so.
"The money will be available tomorrow, but we have to find the proper conduit," the gray-haired editor and editor of the San Francisco Examiner said.
The SLA had given Hearst until today to devise a sweeping food giveaway estimated to cost as much as $400 million. Heearst said that it would be a modified plan for the poorest of the poor.
"THIS IS A HONEST effort on my part to do what I can, and that all's可我可 I can do. I do."
Hearst also said he asked noted San Francisco lawyer William Coblentz to see that two SLA members charged with the killing of four men, Marcus Foster last Nov. got a fair trial.
Solzhenitsyn Will Continue Work
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko said in Paris, where he was visiting French leaders yesterday, that Solzhenitza's files weren't known to many people and hinted it might be some time before they were allowed out of Russia.
Solzhenitsyn said he didn't have the strength to reassemble the collection of documents. If they are seized, he said, "then my remaining years and strength, being directed to Russian history, will be distanced from the present for which I need no architects."
ZURICH (AP) - Alexander Solzhenitsyn vowed yesterday to continue his work in exile and said he had as much right to live there as any other person. The audacity to physically throw me out."
In his first interview since he was expelled from the Soviet Union, Solzhenitsyn said he didn't know when his family would join him or where he would settle.
"If one is to believe the statements of numbers of the Soviet government, my task was to tell them that I said, 'But, without my presence, for two women with four children, it isn't easy to an existence of many years, to pack up in a moment when none of the children are ill.'"
Soltzhentyn, 55, seemed much the same as in Moscow—defiant of Soviet authorities who stripped him of his citizenship and held him and eager to get on with his writing.
Solzenhytan's wife, Natalya, their three children, a stepson and Solzenhytan's mother-in-law plan to join him as soon as he finds a place to live.
"If the Sveto authorities confiscate them, even partially, it will be spiritual murder";
The Nobel laureate voiced special concern for his family and for his literary artistry.
He accepted questions at the Zurich apartment of his Swiss lawyer, Fritz Heeb, and he gave him a speech.
Ignite, their 17-month-old son, has been sick with a cold for about a week.
As to his future home, Solzenhntyn said Switzerland had received him warmly and added he had invitations from other countries.
"I am most sincerely grateful to all those who invited me, he said." The decision will depend on the quality of the short time, rather spacious, calm quarters with some land, convenient for work and for living.
He said all his life, he had "lived without a house, cramped. I couldn't reconcile working conditions with family life. In the house, at least I would like to achieve that."
He said "the direction" his work takes now would depend on whether Soviet authorities released his archives. He said "October 1916," the second volume of the book, is the primary years, which begin with 'August 1914' and study and the third volume was under way.
The German news magazine Die Spiegel said Solzbiemsnt had already rented a country home 12 miles south of Zurich. It is unclear certainly in the vicinity of his lawyer.
As to the future, Solizenthym, who spent 11 years in Stalinist camps and exile in Soviet central Asia, declared, "I am an emperor of birth and don't consider my exile final."
HEARST MAIT ICE he didn't think the food giveway would be the last demand attached to his daughter's eventual release, but they said as much in one recent communication.
They said then that if Hearst met the food demand they would be able to negotiate the lease of his daughter, presumably meaning the first time he was implict in the first tape Hearst received from his daughter was that the release of SLA members would be tied to her release.
Hearst said the mechanics of how the money would be spent and the food distributed remained to be worked out. He met with reporters after a five-hour conference with leaders of activist groups designated by the SLA to monitor the food plan.
IN A TAPED MESSAGE received Saturday, Miss Hearst urged her father to develop a program "as fast as you can," even if it fell short of her capitals' initial goals.
The SLA warned that a failure to make an acceptable good faith gesture would be contrary to its objectives.
"prisoner of war." He heartst his plan known less than 24 hours before the deadline.
THE OPTIMISM of the Rev. Williams was also evidenced by the Hearst family after a communication from Patricia and the kidnappers was received last Saturday. In response, they spend the estimated $400 million to feed all the state's poor, aged and paroled, and a man identifying himself as an SAL agent would assess Hearst's good faith gestures.
The Rev. Cecil Williams, who organized a coalition of groups to oversee the food distribution, said earlier: "I am convinced that Patty Hearst is going to be released. I am also convinced that the peoples of this state that have gone hungry are going to be fed."
Announcement of the plan came after Hearst had met with several leaders of the activist groups. He came away from the meeting voicing respect for those persons.
HEARST SAID he hoped American Indian Movement leader Dennis Banks and other members of the coalition of community groups asked by the kidnappers to
monitor the food distribution would be consulted in any final arrangement.
ASKED WHETHER he had set aside any additional funds to meet possible future requirements.
"I would like to say I may not be their friend, but they've turned out to be mine," he said of the groups. "If there's anything that I can do to help them in the future, whether Patty's in or out, I'm going to try and do it and understand their problems."
"I don't think at the moment there is any more in the kitty. I think people are making a mistake in thinking this is a ransom demand."
Hearst returned to his home in Hillsborough, 15 miles south of San Francisco, and told reporters he would have no further comment yesterday.
Heard say he had consulted with the California attorney general's office because its approval was necessary before a charitable foundation could be established to the state. He said the attorney general's office has been the mechanics of the food distribution plan.
"I need time to think some more," he said.
Job Market Influences Enrollment
Editor's Note: This is the first of two articles about shifting enrollment patterns
By SARAH WOHLRABE
Kansas Staff Remorter
As job markets fluctuate and student interests change, enrollment in the professional schools at the University of Kansas also shifts.
In three of the eight professional schools enrollment has increased over the last five years.
The number of people entering the School of Journalism declined in 1970-71 because of declines in the number of students.
Good job markets, successful placement bureau and success in employment are some of the reasons enrollment has increased in the School of Business, John Tollefson, acting associate dean said yesterday.
"A large fraction of our teachers have received University recognition," Tolleson said. "If a student needs good things about him then he will be more apt to enter the Field."
Tollison said there had been a 44 per cent increase in the number of students in the School of Business since 1986. The rate of graduation from undergraduate and graduate levels, he said.
TOLLEFSON SAID STUDENTS were becoming increasingly interested in programs leading to jobs with futures. But, he said, "I like to think that the increase in enrollment is due to the good reputation of the business school on campus."
dean of the school, said, but enrollment has been growing since then.
Bassett said that faculty had been instrumental in drawing new students into the program.
"THE FACULTY in the School of Journalism has a fine reputation," Bassett said. "The quality of students has increased also, and it is due to bring more students into the school."
A national interest in interest in the fine arts is one reason for the increase in enrolment in the School of Fine Arts, Thomas Gorton, dean of the school, said.
Gorton said the interest in visual arts had
grown so much that the School of Fine Arts placed a limit on enrollment in that
"Professional school degrees look so attractive because the schools are preparing students for careers," Gordon said. "Careers are increases for careers in the arts."
THREE PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS at KU limit the number allowed to enter those schools. The School of Pharmacy has a limited enrollment of 245 students, said Howard Mossberg, dean. The school allows 85 new students in enter each year.
See Job Market Page 2
Quakes Nothing New For Sunflower State
The earthquake that shook a wide area of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas last week is a reminder that earthquakes are no strangers to the plains.
Since Kansas became a state in 1861 at least 46 quakes have been felt in the state. At least 15 earthquakes have been centered in Kansas, particularly under part of eastern Kansas.
Compared with other areas, "that number would be on the low side," according to Mr. Spencer, who was a former executive of the company.
news capsules the associated press
Charges Against Helicopter Thief Dropped
Pfc. Kenneth Preston, the soldier who flew a heliopter onto the White House lawn Sunday, was returned to the Walter Reed Army Hospital's psychiatric center yesterday after federal charges against him were dropped.
However, authorities said, Preston still faces possible prosecution for violating military regulations, including the charge of theft of government funds.
Preston remained silent yesterday during his appearance in D. C. superior Court. A U.S. attorney explained that the government did "wish to obtain facts about him."
Democrat Richard F. VanderVeen, a lawyer who had lost every previous race for office, scored a major upset yesterday by winning the Georgia Senate runoff with 61 percent of the vote.
Democrat Wins Ford's Place in Congress
Vardenveer had called the election a referendum on Watagete and President Nixon. He took an early lead in the vote counting in Michigan's 8th Congressional District and went on to defeat favored Republican Robert Laan, the former state senate mayor, who ran with Ford's support.
Meany Says U.S. Going into Recession
AFI-CIO President George Meany said yesterday at Miami Beach that the economy was going into a recession despite administration claims to the effect that Americans are no longer willing to pay.
Meany said the AFL-CIO would continue to push for President Nikon's impeachment despite an administration charge that the AFL-CIO was involved in the 2016 election.
Nixon Joins Wallace at America Rally
Stumping for the support of Southerners, President Nixon joined Alabama Gov. George Wallace yesterday in Huntsville before a crowd of 40,000 people.
Nixon made no direct reference to the Watergate scandal but accused the Washington news media of painting a distorted picture that there was no evidence of any wrongdoing.
LAWRENCE RESTS on the eastern boundary of the oval-shaped area which extends about 100 miles in a southwest to northeast direction.
A U.S. Department of Commerce earthquake risk map rates a portion of eastern Kansas as a two on a scale of zero to three. This means that moderate damage may result if a major earthquake occurs in the area.
However, the chances of a major quake are slim and it has been "thousands and thousands of years since what is today experienced a major earthquake." Peoples said.
People said it is obvious to anyone with a trained eye that it has been a long time since there has been a major earthquake in Kansas.
"JUST LOOK at the rock formations." People said, "You don't find lots of faults or distortion in Kansas rocks. If a major earthquake had hit Kansas you would find the evidence in the rocks. There just isn't much evidence."
Most Kansas earthquakes have occurred along what scientists call the Nemaha Anticline or Nemaha Uplift, under a portion of eastern Kansas. It is an updip or arch of layered rock in which beds or layers dip in opposite directions from the crest.
ONE OF THE EARLIEST quakes to have occurred along the Namah线 was on April 24, 1887. The epicenter, or point on the surface of the Earth, center of the quake, was near Manhattan
When the quake began early in the afternoon it caused the Kansas River to roll in a heavy wave two feet high. People rushed to safety. The bridge stopped. Farm animals near Manhattan
See QUAKES Page 7
2
Tuesday, February 19, 1974
University Daily Kansan
101
Job Market Influences
From Page One
Mossberg said there had been a larger number of students applying for available positions.
The School of Social Welfare also has a limited enrollment. Edith Black, administrative assistant, said more students had been an upgrading of the curriculum.
Black said about four students were applying for every available position in the graduate program. Two students are applied to a teaching position in the undergraduate program, she said.
"THEIER HAS BEEN A great increase in the popularity of service-related careers," Black said. "The School of Social Welfare is one of the professional institution just for a degree."
--of Education, said the decrease was a reflection of the job market. He said, however, that there had been a substantial shift in the School of Education at the graduate level.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design has a limited enrollment of 400, Kahn said. About 110 freshmen enter the school each year.
While six of the professional schools have shown increases in enrollment in the last five years, enrollments in the School of Engineering and the School of Engineering have dropped.
An increased awareness of environmental and urban concerns has brought an increase in the enrollment in the School of Art. He is a graduate of Charles Kaln, the dean of school, said he.
"There are people currently teaching who need to upgrade their skills," said Scannell. "Most of these students are part-time students who continue to teach."
"DEFENSE AND AEROSPACE layoffs have caused many high school seniors to turn away from technology," Smith said.
Adverse publicity is one reason for the decline in enrollment in the School of Engineering, William P. Smith, dean of the school, said.
Smith said he had seen indications that the enrollment in the engineering school was up.
DALE P. SCANNELL, dean of the School
Although enrollment has generally increased in the professional schools, the enrolment in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has remained about the same, Robert P. Cobb, associate dean of the college, said.
"MORE STUDENTS are concerned with immediate employment," Cobb said. "But more industries are looking for graduates with an education, not just training."
Cobb said the college offered several professional deprees.
"I am still firmly convinced that a graduate with a solid educational background can do about anything. The advantage of a liberal education is that it provides adaptability and flexibility when the job he has been trained for no longer exists."
Union Asks Docking Aid in Dispute
By LINDA HAWLEY
Kansan Staff Reporter
By LINDA HALES
Gov. Robert B. Docking has been asked to intervene in a dispute between the state personnel director and Public Service Employees Local 1132 over salary recommendations affecting University of Kansas Medical Center employs.
A letter was sent to Docking Feb. 13 by Lloyd Rose, president of Local 1323, the bargaining agent for Medical Center emeritus requesting a meeting with the governor.
The dispute that arose between Rose and Lowell long, personnel director, involved Long's refusal to submit salary increase requests to the Kansas Medical Center, the Kansas Board of
Regents and the union, to the state Finance Council for consideration.
Rose told the governor in his letter that the salary recommendations were the result of negotiations beginning in March 1973. The decision by Medical Center employees to strike last December also involved the salary recommendations.
Rose said yesterday that he had written to Docking because the governor was chairman of the Finance Council to whom Long would be to submit the recommendations.
Docking hasn't yet responded to Rose's letter.
Rose referred to Long's refusal to pass the recommendations on to the Finance Council as a veto. He said he hadn't expected such action from Long.
Rose said Long's objections centered on recommendations stating that all starting
salaries in 32 emplease classifications in the bargaining unit would be increased from 5 to 10 per cent. He said Long objected to the classification for nine of the 32 classifications.
Rose said he was 'very new' at collective bargaining with public employees and that Long's veto power raised some questions about future bargaining with the state.
In his letter to Docking, Rose said, "Can Mr. Long veto what has been agreed upon by the Medical Center, the Board of regents and Local 1132, after many hours of meet and greet with faculty and staff, a spirit and intent of collective bargaining for state employees is completely destroyed.
He also told the governor that it "will be more difficult to see that the employees remain on the job" at the Medical Center if he is not there, a recommendation is not for foretending.
Local 1132 Named Official Agent For KU Employes in Labor Talks
Public Service Employees Local 1128 has been certified as the official bargaining agent for University of Kansas management service employees and the University.
The union local was officially certified Friday by the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board (PERB), Carol Wampler, executive secretary, and yester- dayer, who asserted that the certification wasn't expected to teach University and union officials until today.
Certification is the latest step in a four month effort to resolve the contested election last Oct. 17 between the Kansas and Public Employees (KAPE) and Local 1123.
Lloyd Rose, president of Local 1323, said yesterday, "I can say I'm pleased to be the one who is going to represent the employees and help us and hope that new we can get to work."
Local 1132 was the apparent winner in the election, but KAPE representatives charged that the local had used unfair campaign tactics before and during the election. KAPE took its charges to a PERB bearing last month, but was overruled on the basis of evidence presented at the hearing.
The next step for Rose will be to meet with KU employees to determine their needs and clarify their demands before beginning negotiations with the University.
However, James Feldstein, KU labor relations director, has indicated that he expected KAPE to appeal PERB's decision in court and possibly to ask the court to grant a temporary restraining order. Such an order would potentially prohibit interaction between the University and Local 132 unit after the court appeal had taken place.
KAPE attorney William Haynes couldn't be reached for comment.
Rose said that barring any further delays, he should be prepared to begin negotiations with the buyer.
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Use Kansan Classified
Tuesday, February 19.1974
University Daily Kansan
x
3 Emporia Teachers Protest Firing
Exegesis is defined by Webster as "a state of affairs that makes urgent demands."
The definition of financial exigency reached Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents is unjust, according to an Emperor of Mexico on grounds of financial exigency last spring.
The faculty member, R. Dale Hogan, associate professor of industrial education, and two other Emporia State faculty members have protested that financial exigency didn't exist when they were dismissed.
All three had tenure. The other two were John F. Crouch, assistant professor of mathematics, and Terry L. Purcell, assistant professor of physical science.
THE REGENTS' STATEMENT Friday was in response to the faculty members' grievances filed against John E. Visser, president of Emproria State.
The regents told the Emporia State administration last spring that they would have to delete 50 teaching positions from their salary requests for next year because of a decreased rate of 100 in enrolment there. They held 50 positions were held by tenured faculty.
HOGAN SAID he thought tenure wasn't a guarantee of employment if the tenured person wasn't doing satisfactory work, but that he had been informed by the Emporia administration that his dismissal had to do with anything he had or hadn't done.
In the statement they issued Friday, the regents declared that financial exigency occurred when, because of declining enrolments, the legislature deleted salary money for faculty positions from the appropriations for a school.
SPECIAL CONSIDERATION is given to tenure faculty in deciding whom to terminate. Visser said, unless there is someone who has special expertise in his field, but not with special expertise in his field.
He said one of the tenured professors who was protesting his dismissal taught the same subject as two others in his department, but that a non-tenured faculty member was still given further area. He said this was why the tenured position, which could be taught by
others, was relinquished. This allowed the non-tenured position to be retained, he said.
Hogan said that last Wednesday the Emperor State Faculty Senate recommended the removal of two members who had been dismissed by renounce if the legislature approved a recommendation by Gov. Robert Docking to estimate some of the positions deleted last fall.
Office of Relations to Reorganize
Three new departments of the Office of University Relations and Development will be formed when the office is reorganized in the Managing director David Dary, said yesterday.
The new departments are the Division of Publications, the Division of Special Events, and the Division of Information, which will replace the News Bureau.
"Under the reorganization the Office of University Relations will be better able to serve the needs of the University," Dary said. "There has long been the need for a central publications office as well as an event to coordinate the numerous special events to occur on the Lawrence campus. The reorganization is a move in that direction."
The graphics portion of the present Photo and Graphic Arts Bureau will become a part of the Division of Publications. The graphics portion of the division is a part of the Division of Information Services.
The reorganization will enable the Office of University Relations and Development to improve the dissemination of information from all areas on radio and television stations, Dary said.
Dary said the reorganization wouldn't affect the services that have been provided in the past by the Photo and Graphics Arts Bureau.
The photographic services will continue to be available to the University community
from the photo labs in the basement of Watson Library," Dary said. "Graphic services will move to Carruth-O'Leary in March."
The Division of Publications will be directed by Tom Yoe, who is now editor of the Faculty Newsletter. This division will publish all University catalogues, the Faculty Newsletter and other campus publications.
Edward Julian, present director of the
Photo and Graphic Arts bureau, will direct the Division of Special Events, which will coordinate dedications, commencements, and other special activities on campus.
Larry Kunphy, present director of the National Research Council, the director of the Department of Information
All offices of University Relations and Development will be moved to new quarters in Carruth-O'Leary in early March, Dary said.
Two New Courses Offer Western Civ Comp Choice
An alternative to the standard Western Civilization comprehensive final examination has been devised, Mike Ducey, a director in Western Civilization, said yesterday.
20-31 hour lecture and discussion courses may be taken instead of the usual 2-hour courses and comprehensive exam to fill the required curriculum for most KU schools, Deenay said.
Any student who takes Western Civilization 134 and 135, the 3-hour courses and receives a passing grade on the final exam, can then take to take the comprehensive exam, be said.
Ducey said that all liberal arts and sciences students who were enrolled in Western Civilization 105, the second 2-hour course, must take the comprehensive examination the same semester they were enrolled in the course. Any student who fails the examination will be enrolled in the same semester will be enrolled in it automatically, he said.
Ducey said that students who fail the comprehensive exam would be given an incomplete for the course and must reenroll to take the exam the next semester or a grade of "F" will be recorded in his permanent file.
SUN
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After the statement was issued by the regents the three professors who complained turned to the American Association of University Professors (AUP) for help. AUP has consistently supported the rights of tenured faculty.
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NATIONAL LAMPOO LEMMINGS
Student Union Activities presents a satirical, joke-rock, mock-concert, musical comedy, semi-revue, theatrical production. Sounds confusing? National Lampoon LEMMINGS will be presented in Hoch Auditorium on Saturday, February 23, 1974, at 8:00 p.m. LEMMINGS, an off-Broadway production now touring the college circuit, contains the wit, humor, parody, and satire that is associated with the National Lampoo Magazine. Much of the original cast has been retained for this road engagement and their "... wicked parody of the world of rock, spoofing the talented along with the pretenders, their absurdities, conceits, and affectations ... goes straight for the satirical jugular vein on many fronts, much in the reckless manner of the late Lenny Bruce."
All seats are reserved and priced at $2.50 and $3.50.
Earl Robrigh, president of the AUP
Earl carpent at Emporia, said it was unfortunate
but expected that the regents wouldn't want
involved in a campus matter like this one.
Ribbaugh said he didn't think the term "financial exigency" was applicable to Emperor State because the amount of budget had been going up in recent years.
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Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Landlords vs. Tenants
Conflicts between landlords and tenants are ancient urban feudes and they will continue as long as interest are part of human nature.
But the sorrier extremes of the conflicts and their impact on Lawrence housing could be eliminated or diminished by housing laws and cooperation between landlords and tenants.
The most notorious landlord-tenant battleground in Lawrence is on the east and north rim of the campus. Properly dubbed the student ghetto, this area is jammed with people who have stood long past their prime and haven't adjusted to old age very gracefully.
Some of the houses in the student ghetto have been carefully preserved and these charming old gargantuans reflect a colorful city heritage. But too many of the houses reflect fallen grandeur and have been left to rot by careless landlords or tenants.
Every year some of the more hazardous of the houses are condemned. But until now little attempt has been made to resolve conflicts and their eventual contributions to low-quality housing.
A landlord-tenant bill has been passed by the Kansas Senate. The bill would establish regulations for security deposits and for various self-heLP methods by which tenants can insure adequate, functional housing. Landlords have protested that the bill favored tenants, but the bill stipulates obligations for both parties.
The bill could provide a rallying point for reversing the trend of
unconcern for the quality of housing. But it will never succeed without voluntary cooperation from all concerned.
In Lawrence, landlords and tenants of low-cost housing have essentially signed a mutual irresponsibility pact. The landlord won't fix the faucet or mend the toilet; they'll about the tenants' tidiness, personal lives, pets or tardiness in paying the rent.
In this impersonal arrangement, a landlord simply won't appear on the property either to keep it safe or to bother the tenant about loud noises or "hippie" friends. To a beagledenant who is accustomed to meddling landlords, this is a relief.
Although the system has some advantages for those who know what to expect, well-meaning landlords and tenants who want to improve the property are often stymied.
And the quality of housing suffers. Why should the landlord improve a building that will soon be abused by careless, migrant tenants? Why should a tenant improve a building that doesn't belong to him and is already in gross disrepair?
The cycle can be broken by one party's acceptance of responsibility and insistence that the other party meet obligations.
The landlord-tenant bill before the legislature will provide the legal framework needed to break the cycle. It should be a signal to businesses and residents together to improve the city's housing for everyone's benefit.
-Bill Gibson
Impeachment Opinions Concealed
Cautious Congressmen Ponder Letters from Home
By JACK NELSON
The Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON—Rep. Jerome K. Walde, D-CaliF, begins his letters to constituents by thanking them "for supporting my efforts to impeach President Nixon."
On the other hand, Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, D-Md., and author of an impeachment resolution, wrote, "Our democratic system is threatened, not by the Russians or by the Chinese, but by the President of our nation."
Members of Congress have described the volume of mail on impeachment as the
Walde's views on impachment are well known. But the views of many congressmen aren't. And, judging from their maltreatment of the congressmen hope to keep it that way.
Three constituent wrote Rep. Donald G. Brotman, R-Colo., that they had concluded that the House should be impeached. Brotman relied that "because the House sits as a grand jury in impeachment proceedings, it would be inappropriate for me to prejudge the evidence."
Some Congressmen write that it would be inappropriate for them to take positions before the House Judiciary Committee completes its impeachment inquest.
largest they have received on any one issue. It grew to tremendous dimensions after Nixon fired special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox on Oct. 20.
A White House announcement Oct. 31 that two subpoenaed recordings didn't exist and the disclosure Nov. 21 that one recording contained a message of further increases in the volume of mail.
The replies by Congressmen usually have begun with an apology for the use of form letters and an explanation of the volume of mail.
"Thousands of people have written to my office expressing similar concerns," wrote Sen. Harrison A. Williams, Jr., D.N.J. "Because of the enormous volume of mail, must reply in this form, much as I would like to address a more personal answer."
Williams wrote that while he might be called to sit in judgment on the President, he would not take a duty to judge the merits of any particular impachment charges to say that I strongly support the . . . action taken by the House of Representatives beginning a formal inquiry into this matter.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which is campaigning for impeachment, has analyzed letters on impeachment from 50 senators and 211 House
members. The analysis indicates that a large majority haven't formed opinions or made decisions.
The analysis, according to Charles Morgan Jr., director of the ACLU's staff, showed that the
Among House members, 28 favored impeachment, 74 were learning toward impeachment, 90 were against impeachment, 32 were not impeached and 68 were noncommittal.
Among Senate members, 7 favored impeachment, 19 were leaning toward impeachment, 5 were against impeachment, 2 were noncommitted in impeachment and 17 were noncommitted.
Even letters from Congressmen opposed to or leaning against impeachment may include some criticism of the President. Congressmen are members of Congress defend the President.
Rep. Robert H. Miellet, R-II., wrote that there had been "far too much tamper, inmuendo and loose rhetoric about the President's possible deeds and presumed motives. He has yet to be found guilty of anything other than having some appointees and associates accused and others already found guilty of misdeeds."
Michel said that "if any investigation clearly proves the President has violated the law or obstructed justice," he would have thought" to support impachment.
Passman of Lousiana, who wrote that Nixon's integrity "is unimpeachable."
The strongest defense of the President came from a Democrat—Rep. Otte, E.
"I don't condone the Watergate break-in by some of Mr. Nixon's nikon." Passman wrote in remember that they did not break into the Department of waterquarters looking for silver or gold. It was Doubless, they were looking for political information, periapsis trying to find out how much money appeared in Miami to support McGovern had gotten control of the Democratic party.
"What crime has our great President committed to warrant the abuse heaped upon him by lattices, liberals and blood-weapons? Why are many instances, misguided good Americans?"
Events caused sharp changes in the tomes of some letters. Before the Cox firing and tape disclosures, Rep. Robert L, Leggett, Calif., wrote constituent that impeachment was "a very complicated matter which will depend on evidence."
Afterwards he wrote of "one of the most ominous episodes in our political history" and that evidence available at this time strongly proves Mr. Nixon in at least a dozen foilments.
V.
Oddly, Rep. Charles Gubser, R-Calf, wrote that he realized there was "overwhelming national sentiment favoring impeachment," a comment that is contrary to the findings of national polls. But Gubser wrote that there was no evidence for impeachment and that he would not be swept along by public opinion.
Proxmire Bill Needs Lots of Luck
" AUTHOR! AUTHOR!"
The Los Angeles Times
By ERNEST CONINE
Lots of luck, fellow. The average congressman and senator must think him a trumpet.
Sen. William Proxime, D-Wis, has come up with the shocking proposal that all spending bills carry footnotes on their front ends. How much would they cost the taxpayers.
Politicians love to tell the voters what a particular piece of legislation will do for them.
much money must be picked from the packets of the people to pay for it. Which is one reason taxes are higher than the quality of government that we get for our money.
AS PROXMIE SEES it, every bill requiring the spending of federal money should be referred upon introduction to the General Accounting Office, which would estimate the cost of the proposal over the first five fiscal years. Direct and indirect costs to state and local governments would be projected, too.
"This stark, sharp, direct reminder of
Thai Student Activists Successful in Politics
By H. D. S.GREENWAY
The Washington Post
Bangkok- The students of Thailand succeeded where others failed. The students of Greece and South Korea got thrown in jail after their countries were imprisoned. But the bloody, mid-19th-century demonstrations in Bangkok led to the overthrow of the military regime, a new civilian interim government with a promise to constitutional and democratic elections in 1974.
No sooner was the victory won, however,
no longer the Thai student movement started to
lose its cohesion. It is now badly split between those who would cooperate and assist
the students in their movement and those who
would take a more radical and activist approach to reform.
Saakens's group is called the Federation of Independent Students, Thailand (FIST). Members of the new organization are to black pajamas and to give the clenched fists a power movement and of revolutionary groups in the United States and Europe.
The main split is between the conservative leadership of the National Student Center of Thailand and the fiery activist, Saekan Prasertkul, who quit the Student Center in November to form his own organization.
The Thai student movement would be considered conservative by American and European standards. The fists might be compared to the New Left--perhaps even to the Students for Democratic Society. But even the fists are far to the right of the French students of 1968 or the American yippies and weathermen.
Published at the University of Kansas daily publication of the University's examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $8 for examination periods, $12 for attendance at lawrence. K. 60045. Student subscription rate: $5 for examination periods, $7 for attendance at lawrence. K. 60045. Student subscription rate: $5 for examination periods, $7 for attendance at lawrence. Accommodations, goods, services and employee advertisement offered to all students without regard to race or gender. The university is not necessarily those of the University of Kansas.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
NEWS STAFF
Recently, for example, the dean of architecture of Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok resigned under student pressure. The students had criticized the curriculum and insisted on capitalist-oriented, 'huge-hound and traditional' and did not allow for "creative thinking."
NEWS START
News Adviser ... Susanine Shaw
Editor
The Student Center, which claims over 100,000 members, still speaks for the majority of students here. The FISTS number only a couple of hundred so far.
News Advisor . . . Susanne Shaw
Editor
Hal Ritter
In Thai terms, activism of any stripe is new and unsettling. Although the bulk of the population was glad to see the corrupt military government go and although the students are being acclaimed as national heroes, there is nonetheless a feeling of nervousness among government officials as to what the students will do next.
As is traditional in developing countries, the students who have studied in Europe and America are usually more radical than the students who have not. The former come from a world where they were less and they are impatient to change their own old fashioned and hierarchical societies.
Hal Ritter BUSINESS STAFF
The presence of U.S. troops and bases on Thai Soil was not an issue in the October demonstrations but it is becoming one. The new Student Center deputy secretary for the university is necessary to campaign on a pledge to oppose CIA interference in Thai affairs.
Business Manager David Hunke
Anybody who watches government at close hand is inclined to agree. Yet his proposal's chances for survival are approximately the same as those of a fried snowball, now that the heat is off on congressional reform.
cost, printed right up there on page one of
your bill, could itself save billions," said
Proxmire, who is chairman of the Joint
Economic Committee.
IN MANY CASES, the shoe fits. But practical liberais know that they have a stake in government economy, too. In government spending programs are legalized, government spending special interest groups, however much they are wrapped in humanitarian rhetoric. And every dollar wasted on an unnecessary or costly program can't start that can't be spent to meet a genuine need.
People who worry about economy in government run the obvious risk of becoming social outcasts, of being labeled knee-jerk conservatives whose passion for balanced budgets far exceeds their enthusiasm for cleaning up pollution, building mass transit systems or housing for the poor, and promoting improvements in the patient's health.
Spending bills are handled by one set of committees, tax bills by another. Congressmen can and do vote for spending money without a mandate to the comfortable knowledge that the president, not they, must take the political onus for refusing to spend the money, thus saving money. Congressmen, asking for a tax increase or spending, government doesn't have, thereby adding to
If the broader public interest is consumed at all, it is almost as an afterthought.
Compounding the problem is the activist American mentality. Newspaper editorial writers and politicians commonly judge the performance of Congress by how much legislation it enacts. To quote one cynic, "Political parties don't win elections by bragging about all the bills they didn't pass."
"FINALLY, THERE IS the fact that the congressional system of handling budgets does not require the lawmakers, individually or collectively, to share the burden of choice with whoever happens to be president.
inflationary pressures on living costs.
UNDER GREAT PRESSURE from the Administration and citizens' groups, there was movement in 1973 toward a reform of the tax system. The legislature appreciated revenues, set its own overall ceiling on spending and split up the money according to its own set of priorities. Legislation toward this end passed the Senate in 1974 but seemed to clear the Senate in 1974.
Obviously, the Proxime proposal would add greatly to the effectiveness of such reform. Attractive sounding programs would bear a price tag, certified by the General Accounting Office from the time authorizing legislation was introduced. The cost of cost-versus-benefit would be far easier for the public, the press and Congress.
But this is not an idea whose time has come. In fact, the whole congressional reform movement is in danger of bogging down.
Members of Congress weren't enthusiastic about reform to begin with; they were forced toward action by public opinion. Now, thanks to Watergate, many off the hook as long as President Nixon is on it. And they are probably right.
U.S. Oil Deals Include Monumental Mistakes
Kansan Staff Reporters
By BOB SIMISON
As a conference of oil-consuming nations opened last week in Washington, for example, Libya completed the takeover of three U.S. oil companies. It had nationalized 51 per cent of its operations last September. Poland announced the takeover of the company an agreement with Libya in which U.S. guaranteed oil supplies to Poland until 1980.
Both developments were interpreted as direct retaliations to last week's conference call.
The State Department's dealings with Arab oil producers have included some petroleum companies.
The developments also indicate the utter failure of State Department moves since the September nationalization. Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, plans to testify about the department actions before a subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee this week, according to the Wall Street Journal.
CHURCH'S STORY, the Journal said, will tell how State Department efforts have backfired as often as many American cars do these days. The results include higher electricity bills in New York City and a decrease from New England to Eastern Europe.
In September, it seems, the State Department and two of the three nationalized oil companies, Texaco Inc. and Standard Oil Co. of California, set out to convince other U.S. oil companies not to import Libyan oil.
Officers of the State Department and of the two companies each telephoned an officer of New England Petroleum Corp. that was working on a project to generate electricity for New York. All
The idea was to force Libya to compensate the nationalized companies and to discourage other oil-producing countries from taking similar actions.
BUT NEW ENGLAND Petroleum has already signed an agreement with the government-owned Libyan National Oil Co in response, Standard of California can contract a contract for tankers to transport the oil for New England Petroleum.
three told New England Petroleum not to buy oil from Libya.
New England Petroleum had to contract for tankers elsewhere at a rate 275 per cent higher than the rate in the canceled contract.
The increase in costs has been passed on to the power company, which is seeking to reduce its costs.
approval for a rate increase for electricity. Meanwhile, Libya was continuing to supply New England Petroleum despite the Arab oil embargo.
ANOTHER INSTANCE of backfiring by the State Department's pressure tacts occurred as a result of a warning to Coastal States Gas Corp, in Corpus Christi, Tex. Under pressure from the State Department and the oil companies, Coastal States used recoil oil from lilyba to Eastern Europe instead of bringing it to New England.
It is evident by now that Libya can sell all the oil it can produce despite an American boycott. And the response to the partial sanctions against Libya has complete nationalization of the companies.
This isn't the first time the State Department has gotten such results, Church found. In the 1960s, the State Department urged U.S. oil companies to refrain from signing agreements with Iraq because of a concessions dispute.
With a record like that, the State Department deserves little confidence in its handling of the embargo. Instead of hoping for great things out of moves for unity among ob-consuming nations, we can hope that we won't be left worse off than before.
So Iraq got help from the Soviet Union to develop concession area for sale of oil to Ecuador.
Readers Respond
To the Editor:
Students Criticize Vern's Tactics
I am a newcomer to Lawrence and the University of Kansas but I'm not wholly unfamiliar with the exploits of Atty. Gen. Rush, a professor of law who raids on our campus. The latest raid indeed follows what is by now a depressingly familiar pattern: early-morning roundup, mostly young people involved, only small children, a papuaiana and scarcely any hard drugs found.
The pattern of events is puzzling, to say the least. Is the attorney general deliberately trying to destroy the quality of evidence presented in court? Yes, witness an exodus of distinguished faculty,
We can see that, in addition to the personal hardship which those arrested must suffer, this institution will no doubt suffer for many years hence; indeed, long after Vern has passed on. I can only hope that we, as victims of this barbarism, can find the spiritual strength to bear our suffering with nobility.
a squeeze on office space and a reduction of library hours, it has become clear that the students here are paying a dear price for the Kaffarequ bureaucrat who has it in for
Paul Ceruzzi
Paul Ceruzzi
New Haven, Conn. graduate student
Griff and the Unicorn
MARKDOWN
by Sokoloff
WHAT A DRAG!
I HATE GOING
TO WORK...
I HATE GOING
TO WORK!!
YOUR PROBLEM IS THAT YOU DON'T HAVE THE RIGHT ATTITUDE!
OH, GEE...
SORRY
I LOVE GOING TO WORK
I LOVE GOING TO WORK
Weed-Killing Panned
To the Editor:
Thank you for preserving the ky. Thank you for saving precious souces of food from your kitchen.
Congratulations to Valiant Vern and his Merry Midnight Marauders on their weed-killing, door-stomping extravaganza! You have saved thousands of precious little blooming buds from the cancerous, fire-eyed flames that stalk the friendly cortises of the Hill.
Congratulations for even finding weeds amongst the sacred airturf of the stadium. No longer will I have frightening nightmares about the Great Colombian stalks invading my cozy little two-bedroom garden and dragging me away from my home. The wild Widow has to experience Carlos Castaneda's separate realigning reality.
But remember this. Old wedges never live and every weed has a root. Just call this a weed expert.
Thank you for clipping the hedges of law and order so that Jpbe look like crew cuts.
And thank you, UDK, for showing me which ivy is poison. No more rashes for me. Not every Tom, Dick or Harry is a weed, you know. But Mark, Ken, Judy, Charles and the rest of the crop are. I even know the unique characteristics and particular milieu.
Gene Pinder
Gene Pinder Elk Grove. Ill. senior
Liberation 'Problem'
To the Editor:
Only for the people to whom the women's movement presents a problem could reverse liberation propagate a solution. John D. Kennedy's 1963 speech in Kansas (Kansas, Feb. 12) are full of the typical "humor" which is so frustrating to women. While pretending to understand and support women, he demeans their important work in economic innovation in economic opportunities and education.
If Bender doesn't see the need for objecting to sexist roles represented in children's books, then he couldn't understand how pervasive sexist treatment of women is in our society. Women don't have to look for sexists and girls. Bender's womanizing work provides an example patronizing way women and the women's payment "problem" is dealt with.
Michele Zimmerman
Michelle Zimmerman
Wilmington, Del. junior
Tuesday, February 19, 1974
5
University Daily Kansan
Conoco Stations Open; Stocks Low
Conco gasoline stations in Lawrence are open for business again, but their gasoline supplies may not last until the end of the week. Conco station operators said they would remain open for service work even after their gasoline supplies ran out.
Richard L. Riggs, operator of Riggs Cooney Service in 1901 Massachusetts St., said that he had 5,000 gallons of gasoline when he was told last Wednesday by the Cooney district office in Kansas City that all Cooney stations should shut down until a meeting at a meet-in last Thursday with district marketing officials he reopened his station.
"We have enough gas to run through Wednesday and maybe Thursday, but after that we'll have to wait until March 1 to begin selling fuel again," Riggs said.
Riggs said that he had been pumping for two days from his $1,500 gallon reserve, but that he might be out of gasoline by Thursday. He said that he had to turn in an inventory of gasoline supply on hand to the office next Wednesday night, and that he expected to be told of his March gasoline quota by Friday or early next week.
RIGGS, WHO OBTAINS HIS gas directly from the Conoco Oil Co. and not through a distributor, said he had been alotted about 30,000 gallons of gasoline for the last four days of December and all of January and February. He said he didn't know what would happen to his allotment for March.
J. E. Young, operator of Red's Conoco
Service at 900 New Hampshire St., said that
Bar's History Horsey
You're sitting in a bar, sipping a beer and you see a bootprint on the wall. Time to stop drinking, right? Not necessarily. If you're wearing a 140 W, 70 St., it really is a bootprint.
The Stable looks like a stable because it was a stable, built about 1929, according to Don Murphy, an advertising consultant for KLW radio.
Murphy said yesterday that the stable was built by his grandfather William B. Campion.
Dalton leased horses from the stable for awhile, Murphy said, but stopped after customers became too rough with the horses.
Murphy said that as a boy he rode ponies at the stable and played in the hayloft, now a stablesman.
Murphy said his grandfather never completed his plans to remodel the stable in front of a stroke of a stroke and the stable was sold to a couple named Mull, according to Murphy.
Early Enrolling Is Recommended
An early enrollment system to be instituted in part by this summer was recennnished yesterday by the Council of Student Affairs, announced last night.
Balfour said the council recommended to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes that special arrangements to enroll early in fall semester classes be made for incoming freshmen who participate in summer previews.
He said that the recommendation was made with the understanding that an early enrollment system would be implemented so that the entire University could enroll early for the spring semester at some time during the fall semester.
In the early 1950s the building was remodeled as a steak house and bar and was
During the remodeling of the Stable in 1966 a reminder of the building's history was uncovered when a wall was torn down and hay and straw was found behind the wall.
An oats chute, that was used to send oats from the hayloft to the stable, is still in the bar—a reminder of days when water, not beer, ran through the troughs at the Stable.
Don Robertson, assistant state conservationist, said that careful farming and unusually heavy precipitation since autumn caused the threat of soil erosion in Kansas.
Erosion Threat Eased in State
A recent government report that part of the Midwest may again become a dustbowl needn't worry Kansans, an official of the conservation office said in Salma neatly.
The U.S. Soil Conservation Service predicted Feb. 12 that 10 states, including Kansas, could suffer serious wind erosion damage.
The conservation service said there had been more soil damage, and potential erosion from the irrigation.
Robertson said the period of greatest potential wind damage in Kansas was from now until May and that bad weather last fall might still prove costly.
"I started out with a 16,000 gallon allotment for January and February," Young said. "Then last Tuesday morning I got 2,000 gallons more to keep me going until the end of the month, but Wednesday I was gone to Newcastle City and told not to pump any of it."
"Last fall, because of all the rain and cold weather, farmers were unable to get all their wheat planted, and there was some concern as to whether there would be enough soil cover during the winter," he said. "We still don't know whether we'll have problems, but the continuing moisture is definitely a positive factor."
gasoline had been delivered to him last Tuesday, but that he was told Wednesday morning that he couldn't sell it. Young also said his gasoline directly from the Coino Corp Co.
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"I GOT AN OKAY from the company on Fruday to start pumping gas again, but I cannot exceed my February alotment," Young said.
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"THE JOBBERS DIDN'T get back cut back as much as the company installed stations because their allotment had been figured on a different base." Allen said. "They haven't been able to but they probably will be because of the two gasoline to some of the cities in the east."
Allen said gasoline allotments of 79 to 77 per cent of 1922 figures would probably be a minimum of 80.
He also said Conoco would probably be forced to close some of its smaller company-operated stations during the next year.
P. 0. Box 667 Lawrence, KS. 66044
"This gasoline will have to be paid back over a ten month period." Allen said. "If we don't, you pay it."
"THESE SMALLER STATIONS don't pump enough gallonage in relation to the cost of maintaining and repairing them," Allen said. "The return on them is pretty low at a time when Concoq, like the other oil companies, needs to generate capital to for exploration and development of oil resources."
He said that company-operated stations, in Lawrence had been hit harder than the Concoce station at 1241 E. 23rd St., which is serviced by the James Oil Co. a Concoce jobber in Eudora. James Oil Co. is owned by John W. Jameson of Lawrence.
Dick Allen, Concox's Kansas City district marketing manager, said Concox's Houston division headquarters had loaned the Kansas City district enough gasoline to get through the February allotment period, which ends Feb. 22.
"We could probably go in and close several of these small stations today and nobody would notice. But we have a moral obligation to the operators of these stations to not or unable so that the operators can start locating us from service station or some other line of work that will probably be more profitable than what they're doing now," he said.
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Tuesday, February 19, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Berrigan Says Society Ill
People are entrenched in "sickening normality," Philip Berrigan, pacifist and former priest, said yesterday at an open lecture during Ministries in Higher Education Center.
'My main concern today is how you live
sanity in today's society, where today's
people are more connected to each other.'
Wait, the word after 'main' in line 2 is 'concern'. The word after 'society' in line 3 is 'where's'.
The word after 'people' in line 4 is 'are'. The word after 'connect' in line 5 is 'to each other'.
Berrigan advocated finding a solution to "insane normacy" by forming an alternative life style of non-violence, resistance and community.
He said people should confront violence because, "the primary human right is the right to freedom."
The formation of community spirit is important, according to Berrigan, because people are primarily individuals and individuals must resist apathy.
"Doing nothing is one of the most common forms of violence. We know so little about violence," he said. "The reason for that is because we are violent."
People must resist evil and violence, according to Berrigan.
However, he said, "Don't resist evil or violence violently."
In 1968 Berrigan and his brother, Daniel, broke into Selective Service Local 33 in Catonsville, Md. and burned Selective Service records as a resistance to the Selma war. Philip spent three and one-half years in prison as a result of that incident.
Berrigan said when that he first began serving his prison sentence in 1968 he had the idea that what a person did in prison was the same as what he did on the street—communicate with people.
"I learned an awful lot about the building of communication with the prisoners," he said.
Berrigan spoke yesterday morning before a demonstration in support of the Leavenworth Brothers, a group of federal inmates who instigated a riot at the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary last summer.
Although he spoke in support of the
Head Librarian To California
David Heron, director of libraries at the University of Kansas, will resign his post here to take a job in California, Chancellor Roberts told a group of legislators here yesterday.
However, Heron said last night that he wouldn't confirm or deny that he had recited.
Heron will go to the University of California at Santa Cruz to become director of libraries there, Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols said.
the anti-abortion supporters. He said these supporters were "ignorant and negligent."
Leavenworth Brothers, Berrigan said. I'm not gun-ho for prison reform, I think the law is clear.
Berrigan cited anxiety as another act of violence. He said that in most airports, he had seen people with a knife.
However, Berrigan said he didn't condene
'I can't tell definitely when life exists, whether it be embryonic or at the fetal stage, and I don't think anyone else can,' he said.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 19, 1974
7
Birchers...
From Page One
IN ACCORDANCE with the society's distaste for centralized authority, the long-range project of the Birchers has been to get the United States out of the United Nations and the United Nations out of the United States.
freedom of movement. Government restrictions, he said, should be taken off the ground.
"I people knew the truib about the U.N. they would want us out tomorrow," Eardle said. "It is set up as headquarters of a one-man agency that happens, that leaves your lost freedom."
Jacobs said, "The goal is to abolish all countries and have one world government with one figurehead at the top. That, if you boil it all down, is what we against."
Jacobs said the relief programs of the United Nations seldom reached poor people. He said U.N. handouts usually ended up in the hands of dictators.
JACOBS SAID HE wasn't advocating isolationism. He said such things as international trade agreements were essential.
Eider said the society didn't exclude any racial or religious group from membership. The only requirement, he said, is belief in Christianity. He said the society forbade violence.
Elder said many persons didn't want to be associated with the society because it had
Jacobs criticized the University of Kansas for shutting out the views of the Birchers. He said there were some people who considered the society anoment who considered the society anoment
Elder said the society was fighting against both the insiders, who have been the establishment ant since President "Fraudulent Deficit Difficult, savelth," and public anarchy.
After mentioning George Orwell's "1844",
Jacobs asked Elder for a dollar bill. On the back of the dollar bill he pointed to a pyramid with an ablue seeing eye over it.
The word "Novus" is used in words "Novus Ordo Secorum", which he warned meant "A new world order."
Quakes...
The quake was felt over 300,000 square miles in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Arkansas and Texas.
began running wildly through the fields
The quake was accompanied by a low rumbling sound and two ground waves. The
ANOTHER OF THE more important Kansas quakes occurred on Jan. 7, 1906. Its center-like in the 1887—was near Mesa. It was a major quake, was felt over a 10,000 source rule area.
A newspaper reporter at Manhattan wrote: "The tremor was preceded by a wave of electricity that struck the wagon, or a hollow, booming sound. The shock seemed to be of two distinct waves—a lateral, followed instantly by a vertical one," and described a home in the city that escaped the shook.
"The people ran from their houses terrified, thinking that some awful extinction would have caused the trans of the wave was from southwest to northeast. Some people felt a second shock, twenty minutes following the two greater shocks, and also accompanied by a roaring wave."
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
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Recent years haven't been without moderately strong quakes. On April 13, 1961, a quake occurred in northwest Kansas. It was centered just northwest of Norton. Others were recorded in March 1873, October and November 1880, and November 1968.
on campus
FRANCIS HELLER, professor of political science and law, will lecture on 'Jayhawk Justice: The Origins of the Constitution' at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in 4058 Wesley Hall.
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE College
Organization will hold its weekly meeting at
10:30 a.m. on Saturday, November 27.
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25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas are offered to all students without regard to race or color. PLEASE BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLANT HILL
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
1. ) If you use them, they're at an advantage.
2. ) If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage.
Elsewhere, it comes to the same thing—New Analysis of Western Cyprus is available now on line 12.
iay Auval 12, E 59. Hprn. Phane 843-2047. Nurez
Rafael Bousquet. Phaneris et Couturier,
available for any stereo system. Gust I. Tou
drouët. Fondation de la Métaphonie.
Tubulars - Hutchemison sprint bikyle $45 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
1973 OSSA Planner. Low miles add many extras.
Call 841-3053.
2-19
1960 Preferred 10 mpi Origin new poly-
merization controller, original buffer, new
transmission rate, perfect condition. Re-
quire SCSI interface.
FOR SALE! 1973. 14 x 6 M Middle Set. Home set.
For sale in the original Middletown set with vardo and stifferer Caps.
Must be cleaned and vacuumed before use.
or sales-New 6 v2t Twincite Lights with
15% discount. Avail with bulk offer over $70.00
and with like bulk offer over $40.00.
For Sale: Honda-1951 "Trail 76" cycle. Also
available in: Honda-2000, Honda-3000,
after 5 years, anytime, any Saturday, 2
days a week, on Sundays.
French Motorized Bicycle I 1HP, 20MPG; MWC car, child seat, and 1 mo. gas; 843-847-859
843-847-859
1965 Old Cultures-$80 or best offer-Call 843-
604 after 5 and weekends.
Male Jeans, for guys, now at the Attic for girls.
Come in and see. 927 Mass. 2-19
AM-Push button radio for 73 Pins-$40, FM
amplifier, pocket-automatic radio, FM
amplifier, pocket-automatic radio
For sale. Stereo-Harmon Kardon SC20 compact
stand and speakers and stand offer 2-20
Ru, 842, 1438.
The once a year Magnavox annual sale is now
beginning. Save up to 30% on Digital
Digital clock radios, tape recorders & frans.
Ray Stonebucke's 929 Mass. Your Magnavox
Magnavox can help you can always be
open! Open Thurs. nights. 3-25
**Cassettes (pre-recorded)** in A-1 condition 158
**Cassette (pre-recorded)** in A-2 condition 159
Sounds of 12 E. newLP. New ELP as well as used 22
Type: clearance? G7-11 white heels out to €98
Size: up to 25" $30 - up to 40" $50 - up to 60" $70 - up to 80" $90 - up to 110" $120 - up to 140" $150 - up to 180" $200 - up to 250" $300 - up to 400" $500 - up to 600" $700 - up to 800" $900 - up to 1100" $1200 - up to 1400" $1500 - up to 2500" $3000 - up to 4000" $5000 - up to 6000" $7000 - up to 8000" $9000 - up to 11000" $12000 - up to 14000" $15000 - up to 25000" $30000 - up to 40000" $50000 - up to 60000" $70000 - up to 80000" $90000 - up to 110000" $120000 - up to 140000" $150000 - up to 250000" $300000 - up to 400000" $500000 - up to 600000" $700000 - up to 800000" $900000 - up to 1100000" $1200000 - up to 1400000" $1500000 - up to 2500000" $3000000 - up to 4000000" $5000000 - up to 6000000" $7000000 - up to 8000000" $9000000 - up to 11000000" $12000000 - up to 14000000" $15000000 - up to 25000000" $30000000 - up to 40000000" $50000000 - up to 60000000" $70000000 - up to 80000000" $90
For sale-2) Nikkormat Fm Modies, New. never.
Call; Sieve 833-1638, 6:48 p.m. 2-22
Honda 750 -1971- 4800 miles. gold color, not
to be sold at LC. LC Prices will go up.
thru to: $1,380. 6MILS
1970 BSA 600~extended front forks~runs great
-5,000 miles Call: 843-3899
2-22
Good used KLJH compact stove with remote control. $200 for $300, just $10 at JC Stonebank's $292 Mass.
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables as ...
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables as ...
Stamp. Also used, furniture collection,
collection stamps, decorative
COUNTRY SCHOP 710 N. 2nd 3 bites, a
week of stamps, every seven days a week
839-H358. Herb Alendron.
THE HID in the WALL
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
813-745-7 We Deliver 9th & 11th
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
Crescent Heights
- Oaks •Acorn
•Fuellight
Rental Office 1815 W. 24TH
Gaslight
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
James Gang
James O'Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
Now Open
Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
Town Tavern
(formerly Johnnie's)
401 N. 2nd
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
--atmosphere'
For Sale-Men's a speed bike. Count King: Alcove
For Sale-Men's a speed bike. $258.00; accessories
for sale: $15.00.
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smithsonian Museum, Baltimore. Antique clockes & watches served and cleaned. Electronic and light industrial equipment. River City River City Bldg. Vermont, 841-279-0500.
Free: One JC$ 213 bicycle bike if you pick up a used one. Free: One Bike Shift from Bide-On Bike Shop. It is a nice rack and we have nice Tailgate, Cannabia, Raleigh, Peachtree, & Moss Bicycles. Bike-On Bike Shift. 2:28
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
315 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. We have open pit sandwich plate, but we don't offer the plate, sandwich plate, sandwich sandwich or brick by the pound. Half-chikens by the plate. Eat it here or take it out. Open 18 am, 1 pm and 6 pm on Monday through Friday.
For Sale Two magnificent male Persian Kittens
One blue Snoop, one black smoker. Champion,
their names have been written on their
fur.
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
Don't come to The White Elephant to see how much you have got. Take the WHITE ELEPHANT to see how much amenities have going for you! THE WHITE ELEPHANT is the most advanced hotel in Tahiti, 10-Fat-Salt & Sun "See ya later alligator."
NOTICE
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBERATION, INC. Meetings
and events for socializing at 815-537-2977; events
for socializing at 815-537-2977; events
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Montessori pre-school (ages 2½ to 5) has open or PM session information: Information 842-757-782
or PM Session Information 842-757-782
Must find床 for 9 mo and black female, % Great Dane Bernard, will sardon; if saffron 2 - 49
842-696-09
MOTORCYCLE - repair and tune. All make-
satisfaction guaranteed. Pick-up and delivery
service. Minor tune up $21. Spring service spec-
ment. Tuition for appointment. N4-8578-34.
2-22
Mont Blau Party Lounge now available for private phone. Phone 843-258-43 for p.m. on Tuesdays through Saturday.
Bud & Evelyn
WANTED: Square dances caller caner of giving or receiving dance calls on Tuesday, March 21st and March 20th Card Deck叫牌 845-900 or 845-760.
Ever want something warm and bright to come
14 St. Hours 10:30 AM - Mon-Sat
2-322
FOR RENT
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice
bedroom, kitchen, laundry, garage.
F-3 block from U parking. Parking and utilities paid
with credit card.
APARTMENT-suspicious, clean and quiet 3-bed
apartment in a desirable area with 2-car.
Call 945-787-3000 or 945-787-6000.
Call 945-787-3000 or 945-787-6000.
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, space for games, computers, electric lights, private gate patio, waterfront units, clean blue swimming pool, BBQ grill BGZ, room with spa, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2000 W. Sikhth 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms.
842-2500
JAWHAYER TOWSHER APARTMENTS are on
room age with allotted paid. 843-962-0911
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
2406 Iowa
843-9764
MOTHER'S
YARN-SATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
ROUGH-SEVEN
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 18th 841-2656
10-5 Monday-Saturday
"a fun, friendly
2408 Iowa
843.9844
Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties"
FOR RENT - A new 3 bed room apartment with
bathroom, carpeted tile floors, enclosed
garaged, equipped kitchen, dormitory
NEXT WEEK.
FUCK WATCH
Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialies"
K
One and two efficiency, furnished. For males.
Near downtown. No pets. M3-7567. If
HULLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1723-1745 West 24th.
New leasing - 1, and 2 bedroom furnished.
Office - 1, and 2 bedrooms.
dining room, carpet, dispail, all electric kitchen,
bathroom, laundry. Residential Apt. 61, Boulder.
Resident step. Apt. 3, Boulder. 814-2622, 814-2630.
house for Bent-Virz cheap rent if occupied by students.
Fully furnished 4 bedroom. Call 853-728-0196.
WANTED
Room $47.50 per month in cooperative living
in a home setting. Great academic location near
Kennedy Center.
CANHUSEHU APARTMENTS. No lease required.
Call 516-230-4700 or visit www.canhousehu.com.
Call desk call: Open a 8 am, 8 pm or late
night call.
Phosphate Illuminate needed immediately—suspend
the Phosphate Illuminate before attempting to
if apple. Unveil essence May 31st DW-WWW unveil
if unveil essence May 31st DW-WWW unveil
Wanted: Baseball cards pre-1962. Please call 843-
2701.
Community Wanted: To share large, 5 bedroom
apartment in the Bronx. Send resume to:
Pierce Weiner graduate student 811-234-6780
Square舞 舞能 carrier capable of giving inju-
rient. Square舞 Call Dock耳机 845-900-945 or 845-
700-945
Cina is booking for SKI Company in Colorado.
She will be up to 15 hours longer.
Scores quickly. BG-6098
LOST
Want to Rest. Working hand needs rehearsal
Wait for Rest. Working hand needs rehearsal
You want to rest. You need to rest.
Call Rachi Rich 811-459-2014
Lost 5 month old female must be bramed
near birth. Lost new strong heali. FEP-
421 - 946 756
LOFT-Gold Wash, Plain Brown Leather Band
Luxury bathmat with built-in mattress. Bottom Reward
for using the bathmat. Return $100.
Mismatch is not covered.
Organic Chemistry lab book, and notebooks from tenns court records. Returning Refreshers to the lab work done this semester, and can't be replaced. No questions added and generous reward offered. Call Pat.
Lost gold ring-top on top. Friday the 7th.
Please phone 843-9020. REWARD. 2-10
Last in Union, in flowered hour. 'Whiskey-tone'
Lost in Union, in flowered hour. 'Whiskey-tone'
Blooming blossom. 'Chests in Cinnamon'
Blossom blossom. 'Chests in Cinnamon'
Vitamins & Supplements 843-9412
THE BODY SHOP
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
Mon.-Sat.
NIGHT CLASSES?
Open 8-5
If You're Planning on FLYING.
- Stained Glass
PHONE 843-1211
Museum of Natural History
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Let Maupin屁
Do The WORDS You'll!
(NEVER an extra cost
(or airline tickets)
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
SUA / Maupintour travel service
1-5 Sun.
---
5:45 - 10:15
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS? UNABLE TO PARK?
KU Union—The Mallis-Hillcrest-900 Mass
MOTORCYCLE
I've lost a hardback blue booknetbook. If you have one, please call 442-8328. If you don't,
Load Palp 14 from 1127 Chish. long-hair-tipped, men's palp. Finger tapered. If if condition is IF condition, if condition is IF condition. I
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 9e at Ride On Bicycles.
Festival of the Arts-March 24-30, 150 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $7 coupons for entire week can be purchased at the SUA office. Individual night tickets sales start March
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to Europe, or Rewind the Rise of Africa, or Asia, you can help you find a job that can help you find the least expensive way for travel. You can contact us by phone in fall at 800-223-5699.
MINI-HOUSE MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
We are responsible for organizing information orientation briefs this week to inform participants about the marathon and related events.
Meditation Research. Rocking meditation at least 20 minutes a day and awareness and warmness. More information can be found on Meditation Research's website.
SACHER CIRCLE, K.U. Senior mason's honorary in now accepting information sheets on prospe-
sory to visit the office at 520-436-1192 or 520-436-1193 at 3:00 p.m. Feb. 28. Shots may be picked up in Dean of Men's Office. For info call 842-436-1192.
HELP WANTED
Part-time help for dairy farm, general farming throughout the country. Must have transport skills. Must be self-motivated.
Wanted. Navy veterans cost $1,895 or less for five years of service. Travel benefits and benefits are excellent. Fee based on salary and benefits are specified.
1. Need a secretary—general office skills necessary.
2. Need a sound recordist—required by the Music People Ltd. of Free State Office.
3. Need a music manager.
Business majors needed for research project Parcel
management firm (Firm) Volunteer $1,900
simulated business firm (Firm) Volunteer $1,900
Midstreaming software (Firm) Volunteer $1,900
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CTY REPAIR-815 Vermont. 841-4083.
Stereos - watchers & typewriters. Independent repair specialists. No retail hustle. We service what repairs. Repairs unimpaired resources. See if repairs.
Tired of Housework? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and washing. Work done professionally by machine at a reasonable price. For more details, please visit www.housework.com/Randy or Biff, 843-384-3034 and evening.
GIBSON KASINO
KUSTON OVATION
FENDER EPIPHONE
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
Area's Largest Selection
Rose KEYBOARD
Hassass 843-300
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings % Price
Friday Nite
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
Smoking Is Our Only Business
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
Gel ready for spring **Gardenades坛** organic
for 3 plant. Call 842-9351 Organic
Tissue Bank
LIMOURNE & CHATIFFRU RSVICE. Ultimate
call center for your urgent Negotiable.
Call us at 1-800-745-6234.
Employment Opportunities
Special three year enlistment program for women with disabilities. The program includes ten hand positions. Excellent equipment furnished and you will earn at least $600 per year. We also offer the McCillan, by Birmingham and Atlanta) works plus two weeks in August through May; at the Army Reserve Center in Lawrence, Kansas. All enlistees must complete five weeks of work.
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIUES* JOB OPENINGS* Position: Master of Public Administration degree. Expert in research, Experience with the Kansas Kanata state budget process with regard to duration. Duration March 17 through June 11. Prior experience during this time will benefit research grant. Salary: $200 per month. Perform research assistant on a project concerning Kansas growth and development with particular emphasis on future growth policies in the Kansas State Budget. Please apply to the Institute for Social and ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIUES* JOB OPENING* Position: Master of Public Administration degree. Expert in research, Experience with the Kansas Kanata state budget process with regard to duration. Duration March 17 through June 11. Prior experience during this time will benefit research grant. Salary: $200 per month. Perform research assistant on a project concerning Kansas growth and development with particular emphasis on future growth policies in the Kansas State Budget. Please apply to the Institute for Social and ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIUES* JOB OPENING* Position: Master of Public Administration degree. Expert in research, Experience with the Kansas Kanata state budget process with regard to duration. Duration March 17 through June 11. Prior experience during this time will benefit research grant. Salary: $200 per month. Perform research assistant on a project concerning Kansas growth and development with particular emphasis on future growth policies in the Kansas State Budget. Please apply to the Institute for Social and ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIUES* JOB OPENING* Position: Master of Public Administration degree. Expert in research, Experience with the Kansas Kanata state budget process with regard to duration. Duration March 17 through June 11. Prior experience during this time will benefit research grant. Salary: $200 per month. Perform research assistant on a project concerning Kansas growth and development with particular emphasis on future growth policies in the Kansas State Budget. Please apply to the Institute for SOCIAL AND
TYPING
Typing in my home. IBM Selectric Pica type
Experienced think, instant typing, Prompt,
Auto-insert.
"KU ON WHEELS"
K
DOWNTOWN
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4980. Myrn. 2-10
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
ADVENTURE a bookstore
FOUND
TWICE AN HOUR
25 & 45 past the hour
FINE SERVICE
Another Student Senate Service
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other male type. Male. Have electric typewriter with nifty typemark. Accurate and prompt typing. Has a well-spotted corrector. Ph.D. 863-354, Ma. Wright
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
WE FEATURE:
Found—Pair of contact lenses Wednesday in N
Zone. Call 842-6703 and ask for Marty.
2-19
FINE BOOKS Phone 843-6424
Rag Tag
- Jerseys (cotton, double knit)
nylon mesh)
- T-Shirts
- Sweat Suits
Corner of 12th and Indiana
842.1059
- Tennis Shoes
- Tube Socks
- Golf & Tennis Shirts
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
- Party Favors
- Coaching Jackets
- Handball Equipment
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
1
8
Tuesday, February 19, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Offense, Rebounding Power KU Past OU
By JIM SHELDON
Kansas Sports Writer
Powered by an explosive offense and awesome rebounding the University of Kansas defeated Oklahoma last night in Allen Field House. 98-80.
The win moved KU into a first place tie with Kansas State at 9-1, while Oklahoma remained in third place but dropped two games. The team was the best when they played the Sooners in Manhattan.
"We are now even with Kansas State and our schedules are comparable." Coach Ted Owens said after the game. "They have two road games, and we have two road
Even though the Sooners outshot KU from both the field and the free throw line, the Hawks 25 of defensive rebounds often gave them a lead. They out-rebounded Oklahoma, 46-35.
KU guard Dale Greenlee said he was
KLAHOMA
40
There were no changes in the next three places. Pittsburgh, 21-1, retained the seventh spot. Alabama, 18-3, was next, and Marquette, 19-3, remained ninth. Last week Pittsburgh beat Cleveland State, 106-58, and Marquette, 91-71; Alabama topped Mississippi State, 67-1, and Mississippi, 77-57; and Marquette beat Loyola of Chicago, 69-43.
surprised by the high scoring, "At the half we had 40 points and then we scored 58 in the second half. There were also a lot of free throws, which stops the clock."
UCLA Falls to 3rd; KU Stays 16th in AP Poll
KU, 10, 16, lost to K-State, 74-71, last Wednesday, won over oklahoma State, 72-67, on Saturday and won over Oklahoma, 98-80 last night.
...completing the Top 20 in order are Kansas, Utah, Kansas State, Michigan and Iowa.
North Carolina State raised its record to 21 by beating Davidson, 105-78, and Wake Forest, 111-96. Notre Dame also improved to 24 by beating Forlham, 79-49, and South Carolina 72-69.
Vanderhall, which raised its record to 20-11 by beating Louisiana State, 91-48, and Georgia, 83-78, collected the only other firstplace vote and 698 points, good for fourth place. Maryland, 17-4, helped by a 91-86 victory on No. 6 North Carolina, climbed into fifth place while North Carolina slipped from north last week to sixth, getting 602 points.
Indiana beat Wisconsin, 81-63, and Michigan, 93-81, for a 16-record and 296 points, good for 10th place, up from 12th in the previous poll.
K-State, No. 18, won over KU and beat Colorado, 76-74, on Saturday.
Providence, 21-3, remained No. 11,
followed by Southern Cal, 18-3, Long Beach
State, 20-2, South Carolina, 16-4, and
Creighton, 19-4.
IT WAS THE OUTSECT shooting of Greenlee and forward Roger Morningstar that tore open Oklahoma's 2-1-2 zone defense in the second half.
Greenlee Beats Holland to Loose Ball
KU broke from a seven point halftime
lead and opened up a 15 point lead on a 20-
footer by Morningstar with 7:58 left in the
game.
The Top Twenty, with first place votes in parentheses, season records through
By the Associated Press
KL kept the lead the rest of the game, as Points never came closer than five points.
UCLA, which limped home from a visit to Oregon last weekend with two staggering defeats, fell from first to third place in this week's Associated Press college basketball poll. North Carolina State edged Notre Dame for the No. 1 spot.
The outlurth forced the Sooners into a full court zone press, but KU continually beat the press with solid ball handling and quick passes underneath to center Danny Knight. Knight scored nine of his game high 24 points after the Sooners went to their press.
UCLA, 18-3, received only three of the top votes and 842 points after losing 81-57 to Oklahoma State.
"When people hit you with a quick zone trap," Owens said, "they either beat you with it or you beat them. They have to turn it up, and they're very good at it. We scored wee稀 well against it at the end."
BOTH KNIGHT and Adams finished the fight, faults, but Knight won the rebel battalion.
did hit a cold spell that contributed to it," Owens said.
Knight's performance equalized the play of Sooner center Alvan Adams. Adams scored 23 points and at one point in the half, half blocked two consecutive Knight shots.
the second one was clean. I tried not to let it
bother me and come back and retaliate."
North Carolina state, runner-up to UCLA in last week's balloting, received 30 first-place votes and 1,034 points in Monday's voting by a nationwide panel of sports officials. Dame, No. 3 last week, received 22 first-place votes and 1,018 points for second place.
Adams "was tougher than in the games in the Big Eight Tournament and in Norman," Knight said. "He seemed more physical this time."
KU's next game will be next Tuesday at Nebraska. Owens said that the team would take two days off before the team prepare for the Cornhuskers.
"I thought I was fouled the first time. but
"WE HAD NORMAN (Cook) at the poet and they were sagging auf him and that left me open," Kivisto said. "They also had to watch our wings."
In the first half, Oklahoma started out in a man-to-man defense, but switched to the zone when Adams picked up his second foul only two minutes into the game.
The strategy worked as KU erased a six-point Sooner lead and raced into an eight point lead with 4:13 left in the half. Oklahoma hit a cold spell at the same time.
Saturday and total point. Points tabulated on a basis of 20.10-16.14-11.09-8.7-5.4-3.2-
With Greenlee and Morningstar cold from the outside, KU went to co-captain Tom Kivisto. Kivisto hit six of 13 shots in the game total of 17 was his high for the year.
take advantage of gaps in the Oklahoma defense. It also freed Kivisto.
"Tremendous game," Owens said of Kivito's play. "I don't know how a guard can get there."
KU attacked the Sooner zone by moving forward Norm Cook into the high post position at the free throw line, and used either Knight or Rick Suttle underneath. Owens said the offense was designed to give KU more height under the basket and to
"We have some guys with colds (Mor-
lone and Cook), and the coach has one too."
the game, I have six down and come back in
"the game, I have to honestly say that they
1. Cox Coral (SK) 20-81
2. Cox Coral (SK) 20-81
3. CUA 1.81.9
4. CUA 1.81.9
5. Maryland 17.4
6. Maryland 17.4
7. Pittsburgh 21.1
8. Pittsburgh 18.3
9. Pittsburgh 18.3
10. Pennsylvania 21.2
11. Pennsylvania 21.2
12. Long Beach SCC 19.4
13. Long Beach SCC 19.4
14. Credington 19.4
15. Litchi 19.5
16. Michigan 17.4
17. Michigan 17.4
Golf Team Meeting;
Tryouts Scheduled
1,034
.0108
.018
.698
.635
.620
.600
.383
.277
.266
.265
.260
.254
.240
.200
.164
.128
.62
61
40
35
31
19
| | FG | PT | RT | RB | T | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cook | 8.53 | 1.4 | 7 | 2 | 17 | 19 |
| Morgantown | 8.53 | 1.4 | 7 | 2 | 17 | 19 |
| Norfolk | 8.53 | 1.4 | 7 | 2 | 17 | 19 |
| Riverton | 7.14 | 3.4 | 9 | 6 | 77 | 10 |
| Riverside | 7.14 | 3.4 | 9 | 6 | 77 | 10 |
| Northeast | 7.14 | 3.4 | 9 | 6 | 77 | 10 |
| Nantucket | 6.52 | 1.4 | 8 | 6 | 12 | 11 |
| Northland | 6.52 | 1.4 | 8 | 6 | 12 | 11 |
| | FG | FT | RB | F | TB | F |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Holland | 8-13 | 4-12 | 8-13 | 5 | 19 | 10 |
| Pritchard | 4-15 | 4-17 | 4-15 | 6 | 12 | 9 |
| McCurry | 6-16 | 2-0 | 0 | 5 | 14 | 9 |
| McCurry | 6-16 | 2-0 | 0 | 5 | 14 | 9 |
| H. Williams | 1-3 | 3-5 | 3-5 | 0 | 12 | 9 |
| Farns | 1-3 | 3-5 | 3-5 | 0 | 12 | 9 |
| Farns | 3-5 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 2 | 7 | 7 |
| Farns | 3-5 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 2 | 7 | 7 |
| Total | 31-62 | 19-42 | 35-24 | 35 | 24 | 35 |
| Totals | FG | FT | RB | F | TB | F |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Total | 31-62 | 19-42 | 35-24 | 35 | 24 | 35 |
O'Neal said golfers with a five-handicap or better are encouraged to attend
Chuck O'Neal, University of Kansas golf coach, announced yesterday that there will be a meeting for students interested in trying out for the golf team at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Trophy Room of the Allen Field House Annex.
40 58-08
33 47-40
Qualifying rounds for the eight-norm squad will be the first week in March. There will be three rounds of qualifying, and a cut after two rounds.
OU Coach Impressed By KU Defense, Talent
By DON PFANNENSTIEL
Assistant Sports Editor
"A fine performance. Kansas is a beckuva club," were coach Joe Ramsey's first words after exiting the Oklahoma dressing room following the University of Kansas' decisive 98-80 win last night over Oklahoma.
Last night's KU victory was its third consecutive win over the Sooners this season. The Hawks beat Oklahoma in the Big Eight Tournament, 82-72, and in Norman, 82-79. Ramsey said there was no doubt KU had improved.
"The longer a team plays together, as the season progresses, the better they become," he said. "We had to get em. We played a fairly good game when we were only down by eight points, but late in the game the tempo stepped up and we cracked."
Ranssey said that in the first half the KU man-to-man defense pressured the Oklahoma offense to the outside. He said his passing lanes were closed by the KU defense, resulting in too much dribbling and not enough moving the ball.
"In the second half when they (KU) switched from a man-to-man to a zone the pace picked up," Ramsey said. Then their three outside shooters, Morningstar, Greenlee and Kivisto hit the bucket well which was the key to their attack."
Throughout the game KU playmaker Tom Kivisto was never at a standstill. He was stealing passes, intimidating the opponent and scoring clutch baskets.
"Kivito is a big key to KU," Ramsey said. "There is no other guard like him. He's a man who doesn't care."
KU's counterpart to Kansas State's Lon Kruger."
Kivisto was paired with Oklahoma's freshman guard Eddie Fields, who was playing in the place of regular guard Lee Gilbert. Gilbert is out with a slight shoulder separation. Hanssey said he wasn't sure whether his presence would have made a difference.
"He might have steadied us more," Ramsey said. "It might have cut down on some turnovers, but Fields did have some excellent passes and he is going to be good."
"KU are jumps him who have players like Alvan (Adams) who play with finesse instead of explosiveness. With Suttle and Spencer, there is a great opportunity to keep their players fresh."
Ramsay said that his team played well, talent in the league.
"Overall, KU has the talent," he said.
JV's Win,102-86
The Rockhill College junior varisty was unable to overcome a 10-point halftime deficit and lost to the University of Kansas varisty 102-48 last night in Allen Field House.
KU scored 50 points in the first half and added 52 in the second to break the century mark for the first time this year. KU has a 6-4 record for the season.
The Hawks were led by forwards Donne Von Moore and Jack Hollis, Hollis had a game high 33 points and Von Moore hit for 27.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
84th Year, No.94
Some Food Prices Decrease Slightly
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See Story Page 3
news associated press capsules
Israel, Syria Still Fighting; Talks Planned
Gunfire exploded along the Golan Heights cause-fire line yesterday as President Nixon announced he was sending Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to the Mideast again to begin disengagement talks with Syria and Israel.
The military command in Tel Aviv said Israeli and Syrian forces traded light weapons" and recollectile fire rifle fire near Bet Jon in the northern Golan state. The Syrian command said its forces clashed twice with the Israelis "and that was when evacuating casualties." The Tel Aviv command reported no casualties.
Hearst Asks Daughter's Return on Birthday
Patricia Heath's asked her kidnapers yesterday to make the ultimate "guest of interest" for up to $2 million pounds to feed them. The group, based out of her bedroom, had 200 beds.
Newspaper executive Randolph A. Hearst appeared in front of his Hillsborough mansion to say again that the $2 million "is not ransom" but an indication of his good faith to the Symbionese Liberation Army, which claims to have kidnapped his daughter.
California Atty, Gen. Evelle J. Younger said yesterday that he wouldn't prosecute anyone who accepted the food. He also suggested the Red Cross and Salvation Army as possible charitable organizations that might handle the distribution.
Solzhenitsyn Denies He Received Letter
Alexander Solzhenitsyn denied published reports yesterday that a letter from his wife in Moscow had been handcarrried to him in Garchi.
The exiled author, who has won a Nobel Prize, typed out a statement in Russian and handed individually signed copies to newsmen outside the city.
Solzhenitsyn assailed reports that a correspondent had brought a letter to him from Mrs. Solzhenitsyn.
"Nothing like that happened," Solzhenitsyn said. "I did not receive a letter from Mr. Crepeau (an AP correspondent in Moscow) or anyone else. I single-handedly received it."
Give Fiscal Authority to States. Nixon Says
President Nixon proposed to Congress yesterday that states decide where to spend federal money designed to assist economically depressed areas.
His plan would phase out the present Economic Development Administration and regional planning commissions, which Nixon has said have been ineffective.
Nixon offered a similar plan last year but ultimately agreed with Congress to continue existing programs while new ones were studied. Nixon's plan would channel money in block grants to states who in turn would decide, if the state did not want to be spent. The federal government would regulate broad use of the money.
Lollobrigida in Russia on Photo Assignment
Gina Lollobrigida is in the Soviet Union this week to photograph one of the world's most interesting men. But the Italian movie actress-turned-photojournalist isn't saying who.
"We're keeping that a secret," she said in an interview yesterday in Moscow.
Lolaorigira is traveling around the world on assignment from the Ladies'
bone journal to take pictures of men she and the magazine consider the
matter.
The actress has taken a sabbatical of more than two years from films to devote time to photojournalism, her long-time hobby, which she says is "the way I see the world."
18 States to Get More Gas
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Energy Office (FEO) yesterday ordered an emergency injection of about 1.6 million barrels of gasoline into 18 shortage-streifen
Energy office spokesman said the action was designed to share U.S. gasoline more equitably and he promised to re-evaluate gasoline allocations next month to make sure that all areas received about the same amount of gasoline, based on 1972 consumption.
There is no exact measure of the shortage for each state, but the national average is thought to be about 65 per cent of 1972 levels. The gap between states would have exact figures later in the week.
The extra 1.5 million barrels -67.2万 gallons- will come from oil company inventories and is to be a one-time action to ease critical shortages until a more equitable allocation plan can be put into effect. the energy office said.
Gasoline consumption figures for the 18 states were not available but, as of January, 5.9 million barrels of gasoline were being consumed in the United States each day—almost four times the amount of gasoline involved in yesterday's action.
But later the energy office said two of those states, Illinois and Maryland, had received 2 per cent increases in their electricity and would not receive another increase.
The additional gasoline was added to the general 3 per cent set-asides under the scheme, with the majority exactly where it is to go, to relieve long gasoline station lines and other impacts of
Under yesterday's action, eight states received an addition 5 per cent of their original allocations of gasoline for the one remaining week in February; two states got an additional 3 per cent and eight states received an additional 2 per cent.
Federal energy chief William E. Simon originally said 2 million more barrels of oil would be saved.
Under previous allocation rules, 3 per cent of the gasoline sent to each state was placed under the control of state governors to be distributed wherever they wanted in states. The remainder of each state's allocations was distributed through regular commercial channels.
On Feb. 9 the energy office ordered 2 per cent of the gas supplies for February
The FEO made no announcement on the allocations to other states, which had been made earlier. It also admitted a subject to possible error because they didn't include data from six companies, including the following:
That shift remains unchanged, but it had been done through normal oil company distribution, and two of the states that received 2 per cent increases Feb. 9 have already taken control of the governors instead of the companies, the FEO announced yesterday.
Here is a summary of all of the increases now announced in the February gasoline
moved from 10 states with relatively good supplies into 12 short-supply states and the other to 8.
- Five per cent of base allocations was added to the 3 per cent governors' set-aside for the last week of February in Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Oregon, Vermont and West Virginia.
Ervin Hearings Ending
—New Jersey and Virginia, whose supplies previously were increased 2 per cent in 1974 and 3 per cent in yesterday, increasing their governors set-asides by a total of 5 per cent.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate Watergate committee voted yesterday to finish its investigation without further public hearings.
In announcing the 6-1 vote, chairman Sam J. Ervyn Jr., D-N.C., said members of the House Judiciary committee interfere unduly with the ongoing impaction process of the House Judiciary committee or the criminal cases which will soon be prosecuted by the special court.
In a related development yesterday, a federal judge also moved to spruce public speculation about the work of the technical Watergate examining the subpoenaed Watergate tapes.
A month ago Sirica had referred questions about the gap in one tape and the claim that two other conversations were never recorded to special protecron Leon Jawkowski with a recommendation he turn it over to a grand jury.
The judge, John J. SirCia of U.S.District Court, imposed the rule after a closed-door meeting with attorneys from the White House, the special prosecutor's office and counsel for Rose Mary Woods, President Nixon's personal secretary.
After yesterday's meeting Siraisa issued a brief statement saying, "All participants in the meeting have agreed that continued public comment on the grand jury's work by those who have any association with the investigation is inappropriate."
Ellsworth Endorses Development Of Alternative Sources of Energy
"The passage of time and the development of new events have persuaded the committee that further hearings at this time are not necessary for the committee to successfully complete its work," Ervin said.
The end of the petroleum era will force a major restructuring of the American lifestyle, Bob Eldsworth, former special assistant to Richard Nixon, said here yesterday.
given to presidential Friend C. G. Rebozo by
n employee of billionaire Howard R.
Ellis
By ROY CLEVENGER
Kenyan Staff Reporter
In an interview after his speech, Ellsworth said university contributions in planning for the elimination of fossil fuels might prove crucial at a time of a projected climate change.
"We have been trying to develop nuclear energy for 25 years and last year, for the first time, we produced more by nuclear energy than by firewood," he said.
Ellsworth, a University of Kansas graduate, spoke to about 150 persons at a luncheon sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
nuclear power as an example of the failure to prepare for the end of the octetroleum era.
"The remainder of the century will provide a test different in kind but just as severe as any we have ever had in this country." But "I am confident that our people" would succeed.
Ellsworth said he thought the energy crisis was caused by excessive demand, ecological worries and government policies on energy development and exploration.
the oil embargo ends, ELLsworth said. At current crude oil prices, he said, U.S. requirements may total $350 billion a year for 2018 and without substantial consumption cutbacks.
"if the universities are alert and get in gear to help people, they can do a great deal
"We simply won't have enough money to buy that much oil," he said.
Ellsworth cited the slow development of
"in terms of energy, we have been living beyond our means," he said.
He said the committee would pursue in executive sessions evidence relating to CIA involvement in Watergate, dairy industry and pharmaceuticals, a campaign and a secret cash contribution
Ellsworth said long-range planning must now be begin because petroleum supplies are critical.
Ervin said the Watergate committee voted to ask the Senate to extend its life to May 28, three months beyond the Feb. 28 deadline for completion of its report.
Mitchell, Stans Trial Begins; Pleas for Delay Rejected
The governors' set-aides were increased 2 per cent yesterday for Connecticut, Florida, Indiana, Massachusetts, Kentucky, York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.
THE FEO said Illinois and Maryland, which received 2 per cent increases Feb. 9, got no additional gasoline yesterday, but the increased allocations were placed under the control of their governors rather than the oil companies.
— The increases announced yesterday added up to about 1.6 million barrels of gasoline which would come from company factories, not from other states, the FEO said.
See ELLSWORTH Page 2
Vesco, 37 years old, is a defendant in the case, but he fled the country and never answered the indictment. Attempts to extradite him have been fruitless.
NEW YORK (AP)—Despite their renewed protest, former Attert, Gen. John N. Mitchell and former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans went on trial yesterday, accused of exerting corrupt influence in the department and President Nicol's re-election campaign.
—The gasoline shift Feb. 9, subtracted 2 per cent from the supplies of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Wyoming; and Wyoming; the FEO said Tuesday's action, drawing on company inventories, would not alter those decreases from the supply.
Mitchell, 60 years old, and Stans, 65 are charged with accepting the under-the-table cash donation from fugitive financier Robert Vesco with the understanding that they would try to sidestep an inquiry into their involvement in the Securities and Exchange Commission.
This change will generate greater government influence on business, permanent inflation, strict controls on production and consumption of "goods and services that just can't be spread fully around," he said. Ellsworth said the switch to other energy sources might require reductions in industries where substitute products would be available.
Two per cent increases were assigned Feb. 9 to Arkansas, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi, North Carolina, Texas, and Tennessee; and also to New Jersey and Virginia whose states were further increased yesterday.
The trial recessed for the night before any actual jury selection got under way. Instead, about three hours were devoted to eliminating prospects who said it would be an under hardship to be sequestered for five weeks the trial was expected to last.
"The most important question," he added, "is whether our democracy can cope with the changes; can cope with the challenges of nationalization of business functions."
Frequently in pretrial motions, the defense had argued before Judge Lee P. Gagliard that a fair trial was impossible in a court where the publicity which was engendered not only by the Vesco case but also by the Watergate scandal in Washington, where both Mitchell and John F. Kennedy were involved.
"The prejudicial and massive publicity in this case has continued right up to the present time," a Stans attorney, John Dugard, argued while renewing a motion to have the court decide whether York or delay the proceedings indefinitely. Gagliardi told Duigard that he would handle this motion as he had its predecessors--testing whether a fair jury could be selected by examining prospective members of the panel. The first 80 jurors later were brought into Gagliardi's federal court for questioning.
Thus the first case of its kind in half a century of American history came to trial. Not since the Teapot Dome scandal of 1923 that led to federal officers faced a criminal indictment.
Meanwhile yesterday, the Teamsters Union called on Congress to boost the speed limit on federal highways to 65 miles an hour during the late night hours, and a consumers' coalition urged the Senate to initiate a freeze on natural gas prices.
The FEO had no final listing of the exact allocations going to each state for February but said it would provide additional information later.
The action Feb. 9 and yesterday's action were aimed at easing the most serious gasoline distribution problems during the winter of the mandatory fuel allocation program.
In another energy development, John C. Sawhill, deputy director of the FEO, told the Joint Economic Committee that no decision was rationing was expected before April 15.
According to Sawih, the administration wants first to see whether recently enacted redistribution plans will ease the shortages and end the long lines at service stations.
Ellsworth said that only sharp reductions in use of fossil fuels and greater research into alternative energy sources could solve the crisis.
Teamsters President Fritz Simmons said the higher speed limit would help truckers to both save fuel and keep from overloading because of the 85 m.p.h. limit now in effect.
"America's problems will make it resemble an underdeveloped nation with direct economic controls on imports, exports and use of monetary resources," he said.
Sharp increases in the price of Arab crude will make American dependence on forest products more important.
Fitzsimmons first advanced the proposal in a meeting with Labor Secretary Peter J. Brennan and Transportation Secretary Claude Brinegar. Although it would apply to all vehicles between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., it would be aimed primarily at trucks.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ignoring the threat of a presidential vet, the Senate yesterday passed and sent to the House dissent legislation providing for an oil price rollback.
The bill, which also would give President Nixon power to order gasoline rationing, passed by a two-to-one ratio after the Senate rejected an administration-backed attempt to send the bill back to conference with the House.
shortly before the vote, federal energy chief William E. Simon sent a letter to Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott, R-Pa., asking him to veto the bill in its present form.
Senate Passes Energy Bill Despite Nixon Veto Threat
Vice President Gerald R. Ford presided for the crucial vote on the motion to recount the bill to committee, which was offered by Sen. Paul J. Fannin, R-Ariz.
Opponents say the rollback would destroy business companies' incentives to expand product availability.
The emergency bill, which was first introduced by Jackson in October, has failed in two previous attempts to gain Senate passage.
However, Ford never got a chance to cast his tie-breaking vote because the motion was defeated by a surprisingly comfortable margin of 60 to 38.
In addition to the rollback, the bill would suspend temporarily clean air guidelines to permit power plants to burn coal in place of scarce low-sulfur oil and natural gas.
The confections substituted the equally controversial price rollback for the excess
The legislation also would grant car makers a one-year delay in meeting requirements.
DONALD J. KENNEDY
Kansas Staff Photo by BILL KERR
Bob Ellsworth Speaks to Students in the Jayhawk Room
City Backs Hospital Improvements, Defers Commitment on Finances
The Lawrence City Commission yesterday gave the Lawrence Memorial Hospital board of trustees its go-ahead with plans for improving hospital facilities.
The commission approved a statement agreeing with the hospital board that the hospital was in need of improvements. The statement said the commission would support the board's continued investigation of ways to make improvements.
The statement asked the board to develop specific recommendations that the city could implement.
However, the commission shied away from including any references to whether it might be willing to finance the impairments by issuing revenue bonds or by other means.
Mayor Nancy Hambieton said she wasn't
HER COMMENTS CAME in response to an initial draft of the statement by Commissioner Barkley Clark. Clark's version included the possibility that the city would have received that the improvements wouldn't entail an excessive increase in room rates.
"They need to know whether financing is down the line if they're going to put the package on hold."
City Manager Buford Watson said the hospital board probably would want to know whether the city would be willing to issue revenue bonds or provide other financing before the board concluded a contract with a hospital consultant for further planning.
yet prepared to commit the city to promises
possible financial financing of the project.
Commissioner Jack Rose urged the commission to adopt a statement that
HE SAID IT WOULD be the responsibility
the board to make specific re-
commendations.
Hank Booth of 1731 W. 27th St. Ter. also urged the commission not to commit itself to the hospital project which he said had many unresolved questions connected with it.
“It’s difficult to make much of a statement of intent,” he said, “because we don't have a firm recommendation yet from the board.”
Booth said there were questions among the public concerning the hiring of Good Health Inc. of Rochester, Minn., as consultant to the hospital board.
See CITY Back Page
9
Wednesdav. February 20, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Commissioners List Goals for Citv Ellsworth.
Bv BOB MARCOTTE
Kansas Staff Reporter
Members of the Lawrence City Commission last night shared their views on city goals with members of the Citizen's Advisory Council.
Mayor Nancy Hambleton said the commission was constantly faced with having to request for improvements and to create sites into the over-all scheme of the city.
In the new parts of the city, she said, the main concern should be determining how much the area will grow and brow the city at the same time as services to keep up with that growth.
In older parts of the city, she said, the concern should* be to try to preserve what is good in those areas and not allow change to destroy established neighborhoods.
Hambleton said she favored the neighborhood concept in planning, in which an effort was made not to bisect a neighborhood with major streets.
There will be a need for an adequate Clinton Parkway, she said, to handle the increased traffic that will develop when Clinton Reservoir is opened for public use.
She said there was "quite a shopping list of projects that the city needs to get under way."
Improvements are needed on 6th street west of Iowa Street for Clinton traffic, on Haskell Avenue near 31st Street and on Iowa Street north of 6th Street. Construction of the Haskell Loop, a traffic which is approximately 40 miles to proximately by Massachusetts Street and railroad tracks to the east and 6th and 9th streets, is also needed, she said.
Conversion of the present police and fire department facility at 745 Vermont St. will be needed, she said, for occupation by city offices when the police and fire departments are active, and facility, which hasn't been built yet. Other construction that the city must consider, she said, includes a secondary sewer treatment plant, a maintenance building, an indoor swimming pool for the school district, and a fire station for the southwest part of town.
Commissioner Barkley Clark said he was encouraged by growth of the North Lawrence and East Lawrence improvement associations and by their involvement in building up their neighborhoods and seeking ways to use federal revenue sharing funds.
Another area that needs attention, Clark said, is the neighborhood north of 51th Street that is bounded by the river on the south and the west and the railroad tracks to the east.
There are several measures that could be taken by the city to improve the neighborhood, he said, including a change in the housing prices and offering more residential development;
construction of the Haskell Loop, which would provide both direct access to the Kaw river bridge for truck traffic and serve as a buffer between industrial and residential areas already established in the neighborhood; rehabilitation of New York elementary school and funding for renovation of housing in the neighborhood.
The city is also going to have to decide what kind of development it wants at 6th and Massachusetts streets, Clark said. He will use an act as a focal point for the downtown area.
Clark said the south end of the downtown area would be in good shape after the development of the new county judicial building to the museum building at 11th and Marysville.
The city could improve the north end of the downtown area, he said, with construction of a new bridge and development of a river front park on land adjacent to the control project being worked on by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Flu Bugging Students; Cure is Rest , Liquids
Clark emphasized, "We've got to keep Lawrence as our regional shopping center."
BY LINDA WEINSTEIN
Kansan Staff Reporter
If you've been plagued recently by a runny nose, a hacking cough, sore throat, fever, diarrhea and aching, you've probably got the flu bug.
And you're just one of hundreds on campus, according to Dr. Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital.
Many students have come to the hospital in the last two weeks for treatment of viral infection.
"I wouldn't say it's an epidemic, although it seems to be prevalent," he said.
Wollmann said he was suspicious that many of the students viral infections were the result of a vaccine break.
"There are two different kinds of influenza viruses," Robert Bussell, professor of microbiology, said yesterday. We just call them Type A and Type B to defy the rules between them. Both are unrelated, but both cause the disease we know as influenza."
Bussell said the Type B infection was less severe than the Type A.
"There is a vaccine available (to prevent the flu)," Bassell said, "but it's recommended only for people who have chronic diabetes and disease which generally includes the age."
“It's not widely used because of its marginal effectiveness. One has to keep getting the shots each year and it's not feasible for our population.”
Other than the influenza vaccine, there is no medication to kill the influenza virus.
He said the body just had to "fight it out." Dr. Wollmann agreed.
"There aren't any medicines that will specifically eradicate a virus." Dr. Duncan says.
the very important thing here. Also take fluids."
Dr. Wollmann said many people recovered from the flu even if they didn't take care of themselves. However, he said, "I don't believe in amnioticum, tonsillitis and ear infections because I have a baby."
Both Dr. Wollmann and Bussell said the flu bug was highly infectious,
To help avoid catching the flu, Dr. Wollmann said, students should cover their mouths when they cough and reduce hand-shaking.
Studies have proved that handshaking contributes to the passing of germs, he said. A person covers his mouth when he coughs and then shakes hands with a friend. The friend then touches his mouth and transfers the germs into his body.
The flu bug usually lasts three to four days, he said.
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He said he hoped that a large shopping center wouldn't be developed in connection with the Highway 99 bypass which would finally be constructed in East Lawrence.
Development of a large mall of 100 acres or so, he said, would be a road "crusader" for the city.
Other considerations that should receive priority, Clark said, include studying public transportation alternatives for the city, continuing the city's sidewalk program, improving the ordinance up to date, improving of the hospital and weeding out antiquated ordinances.
Commissioners Fred Pence and Jack Rose both stressed the need for better communication between townpeople and the city commission and staff.
Pence said that he had found it "hard to communicate with 45,000 people" and that the high level of hostility he had often noticed among people toward city government was created mostly out of misunderstandings.
Pence said he would like to see the creation of a neighborhood organization similar to the North Lawrence and East Lawrence Improvement associations created in the Pinckney elementary school area.
O
Rose said an important consideration in setting city goals would be to determine what kind of growth the city should plan for in the next 15 to 30 years.
Whether the city triples its size again, as has done since 1944, or remains stagnant with an increase in population, is a question.
Commissioner John Emick wasn't able to attend the meeting.
toward solving problems and help themselves, too," he said.
From Page One
Ellsworth said he thought it was too soon to guess the final outcome of congressional and judicial investigations of Watergate and related scandals.
"I believe the matter is in the appropriate place," he said, and "I am well satisfied that the House Judiciary Committee can reach a reasonable decision."
Ellsworth, a Lawrence native, was the U.S. ambassador to NATO from 1969 to 1970 and was special assistant to President Nixon in 1969.
He was graduated from KU in 1945 and returned to teach in the School of Business in 1954-55. He entered the bar in 1954 and practiced law here and in Springfield, Mass.
In 1960, he was elected to the House of Representatives. He was re-elected in 1962 and served another year; he was defeated by Sen. James B. Pritchard, for the Senate Republic nomination.
Ellsworth made several world tours with Nixon in 1967 and was a top official on Nixon's 1968 campaign staff.
He is now a partner in the international banking house of Lazard Freses and Co.
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ALL SEATS RESERVED
Wednesday, February 20, 1974
University Daily Kansan
2
Fees, Profits Fund SUA
University of Kansas students pay for Student Union Activities (SUA) programs like another, Steve Warren, Hastings, Norah and SUA board president, said yesterday.
"SUA is not a clubtype, selective organization," Warren said. "Any student is a member because SUA gets part of its money from the student activity fee."
SUA operates on what Warren called a deficit budget. Each spring the 12-member board draws up an arbitrary listing of expected income and expenses for eight basic program areas, including expected profits from certain programs.
This year the board estimated that expenses would be $233.01 and income would be $186.99.
The money to make up the deficit comes from the Kansas Union funds, Warren said. Part of these Union funds comes from the student Union-usage fee.
"Each student pays an activity fee of $17 per semester," said Warner L. Ferguson, the union's associate director for financial affairs. "This fee is broken down in several parts. This fee of $7.50 per student goes directly to that $12.50 in bring about at $121.00 per semester."
Ferguson said that $12,500 was usually required to balance the SUA budget. The
rest, be said, goes primarily to maintenance of the building.
Warren said that two programs, films and special events, such as concerts, usually run at the Cineplex.
Milk prices decreased at several stores last week in the Consumer Protection Association food price survey. On Monday the price of a half gallon of All Star 2 per liter was $14, falling to 81 cents at the Dillon stores. Falls to 83 cents away, and to 76 cents at Rusty's on 22nd Street.
Milk Prices Decrease At Some Local Stores
"But we generally expect to make less than we spend," he said. "A lot of our programs are free, and if we charge more, there are much lower than commercial prices."
Rusty's brand 2 per cent milk also decreased in price from 75 cents to 21.5 cents at 21.5 cents.
Other changes in dairy product prices included a reduction in the price of store brands of cottage cheese at Dillon's on 6th Street, both Kroger and Rusty's on 2nd
Street, and an increase in the price of store brands of vowet at both Kroger's.
Large eggs were down two to five cents a
piece, and the eggs on its 6th Street,
and Rusty's on 23rd Street.
Last week's average prices are shown with the current average prices for each published item to provide an over-all index of price changes in Lawrence.
Meat price fluctuations at several stores resulted in average price increases for pork roast, decreases for ground beef, round turkey, over, whole frying chickens and fried thighs.
During the year, Warren said, the board doesn't "follow the budget by a hard and fast rule." This year, for example, SUA absorbed the Free University program at an unbudgeted cost of $15,000. SUA also increased spending for, respectively, Warren said.
Item AMP Dillen's, 48th St. Dillen's, 48th St. Paley's Ringer's downtown Ringer's, 22nd St. Ringer's, 22nd St. Salary Hunty's North Lawrence Hunty's North Lawrence Average Price Last Wear
Cereal, Total, Gen Milk, 13 oz. .79 .75 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .73 .74 .74 .74 .74
Oatmeal, Quaker Old Fashioned, 18 oz. .49 .49 .45 .45 .45 .47 .45 .45 .47 .47 .47 .47 .46
Bread, white, 16 oz., store brand .30 .34 .33 .35 .30 .30 .30 .30 .32 .30 .31 .31 .31
Bread, milk, 16 oz., store brand .30 .34 .33 .35 .30 .30 .30 .30 .32 .30 .31 .31
Bread, white, 18 oz., pkg. Cold Medal .30 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35 .35
Flower, white, 30 pk. Gold Medal .79 .75 .75 .75 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79
Flower, white, 30 pk. store brand .79 .75 .75 .75 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79
Ground beef, regular, lb. .99 .99 .99 .99 .105 .105 .105 .105 .105 .105 .104
Round steak, bone in, lb. 1.89 .1.83 .1.83 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.73
Round steak, bone in, lb. 1.89 .1.83 .1.83 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.89 .1.73
Bread, beef, 10 oz. .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00
Bread, beef, 10 oz. .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00 .1.00
Pork loin roast, end cut .49 .47 .47 .47 .49 .49 .49 .49 .47 .47 .49 .47 .115
Fry chicken, red thighs .1.09 .1.09 .1.18 .1.18 .1.19 .1.19 .1.19 .1.19 .1.15
Fry chicken, red thighs .1.09 .1.09 .1.18 .1.18 .1.19 .1.19 .1.19 .1.15
Cod, french, 10 box .1.49 .1.49 .1.09 .1.09 .1.41 .1.41 .1.39 .1.39 .1.35 .1.37
Parmesan, french, 10 box .89 .89 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .81 .80 .80 .80 .80 .80
Milk, 2 per cent, half gallon store brand .79 .79 .79 .77 .77 .77 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79
Sugar, cinnamon, 10 box .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43 .43
Dry milk, 20 dry cannation .X 3.58 .3.58 .4.19 .4.19 .3.49 .3.49 .3.49 .3.74 .3.81
Dry milk, 20 gt. store brand .3.39 X X X X X
The SUA board is made up of a four-member executive board and eight other members who each direct a program area. The executive board members are chosen by the executive committee of the Memorial Corporation Board of Directors. The eight members are selected each spring by the outgoing board and the newly selected executive board.
Interviews for next year's officers and board members begin Tuesday and March 2. Warren said next year's board would be expanded to include a program director for the Free University program and another director for the recreation program, which was split recently into outdoor and indoor areas.
CPA Offers Workshops
The Consumer Protection Association is
working with the workshop program for
Lawrence residents.
The workshop will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday night in the International Room of
the Library.
Each meeting of the workshop will be devoted to a different area of consumer spending, such as automobiles, life insurance, consumer credit and health services. Fund, deceptive sales practices and legal remedies for the consumer also will be discussed.
Topics will be:
- Life Insurance: How to Get your Money's Worth, Feb. 21.
—Tenant's Rights, Feb. 28.
—Tenant's Rights, Feb. 28.
—Buying a Used Car, March 7.
Buying a Used Car, March 7.
-Buy Beware: Fraud and Deceptive Practices and Legal Remedies, March 21
- Establishing a Credit Rating and Credit Unions, April 4.
- Government Regulatory Agencies and the Consumer Movement, April 11.
—Food Shopping: Economy and Nutrition, April 28.
The workshop is free.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Influential circles in Jordan are asking whether the United States is preparing to abandon its old border with Turkey and create of an overall solution in the Midwest.
Hussein-U.S. Relations Questioned
There is speculation in Amman that reports of demonstrations by units of the Jordanian army were influenced by the United States to weaken Hussein's hand in his forthcoming talks with President Nixon in Washington.
Hussein's most conciliatory position has been to call for a referendum among Palestinians to decide the future of the west bank at an unspecified date after the Israelis give way to a return of Jordanian civilian administration.
The United States has never taken a public stand on the future political rule of the west bank. The nearest it has gone is to state that the "legitimate rights of the Palestinian people" must be respected in an over all settlement.
There is also open suspicion in the Jordanian capital that Washington will come down against Hussein and for the creation of a Palestinian state in the occupied west bank of Jordan on the heels of an eventual Israeli withdrawal.
The immediate strain between Amman and Washington arose from the army demonstrations at the garrison town of Zerga north of Amman two weeks ago.
Informed sources said Hussein might have misunderstood early U.S. Embassy reports of the demonstrations, sent to him during the formal course while he was in London.
Reports from his own officials in Amman are understood to have given a much less dramatic view of the affair and have advised that there was no need for his return
to Jordan. But he disregarded the advice.
Influential Jordanians maintain their belief that Hussein and Premier Zedid Rafal were at the speed U.S. reports reached them in London and at the detailed information they contained about the army troubles.
The U.S. charge d'affaires in Amman, Pierre Graham, has been in constant personal contact with Hussein and Rifai in efforts to resolve any problems.
U. S. of affairs in turn were astonished that such reports, relayed as a gesture to their captain, had not been given.
Amman has been without a U.S. ambassador since Dean Brown left at the end of November. Ambassador-designate human Pickering, a carrier diplomat and a college professor, State Henry Kissinger, is due in Amman after Hussein's expected visit to Washington.
END WINTER BLAHS WITH
Spring Get Away
END WINTER PLAY WEEK
GRAND PRIZE Five day, all-expense vacation in FT. LAUDERDALE;
FLORIDA!
10 EACH SECOND PRIZES: Three days, all expenses, in FT. LAUDERDALE!
The Most Fantastic Vacation Contest Ever!
OVERSHOT IN PROFILE
To register, send stamped, and unstamped receipt envelope to:
Curtis Arts Center
P.O. Box 54617, Dept. 116
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
Hurry! Call R-1974
SUN
USE KANSAN WANT ADS
TAOS NEW MEXICO The Land of Deep Powder and Sun "TRIP CONFIRMED"
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TACO GRANDE
Spring Break on Skis!
MARCH 10-15 *111
Trip Includes:
Gatch, a 48-year-old bachelor from Alexandria, Va., originally planned to follow a course that would take him across the North Atlantic near Newfoundland, but back to Washington weaving southward shortly after he left the U.S. coastline near Atlantic City, N.J.
TOSTADO FREE!
1
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
Gatch left Harrisburg, Pa., Monday night in an attempt to make the first balloon flight across the Atlantic. He planned to land in southern France or northern Spain.
- Round trip chartered bus
- 5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol condominiums, kitchen, fireplace, balcony, sauna
- 4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs
- 2000 vertical feet
"We estimate that he will reach the African coast somewhere near Dakar, Senegal, tomorrow afternoon," said a spokesman for the weather service.
The Air Transport Association, a trade association of scheduled airlines, said an Iberian Airlines jet had spotted Gatchin's plane on its way to 1,300 miles east-northeast of Puerto Rico.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Upper air jet streams pushed balloonist Thomas Gatch Jr. far south of his planned course to Europe yesterday, and the National Weather Service predicted that he would end up in Africa instead of Europe.
Balloon Pushed South of Course
Only 5 spaces left . . .
*25.00 holds a reservation
Balance due February 21st
For information, call SUA
864-3477
Offer Expires March 15
1974-Year of the Taco
.
Deadline for Board Member Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27
9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Deadline for Officer Applications: 5 p.m. Friday, February 22
Officer Interviews February 26
OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
President
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
Director, Festival of the Arts
Films
Fine Arts
Forums
Free University
Public Relations
Inside Recreation
Outdoor Recreation
Special Events
Travel
Other (Define Position)
Information and Applications Available in the SUA Office
Board Member Interviews March 2
ADRIAN SMITH & co.
Saturday,
Feb. 23
You can sit and listen; you are set free to clap your hands, boogie . . . do your own thing, whatever it might be, because a good time is what's being laid down. $1.50 cover.
One show 9 midnight
One show 9-midnight
free state opera house
O
642 Mass.Ave. Lawrence
Brought to you by The Music People, Ltd.
C
Wednesday, February 20, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Raid Anxiety Illogical
There's been some rather incoherent babbling about that drug raid last week—something about the detrimental effect all those arrests might have on the University's public image or, worse, KU's fiscal fortunes in the Kansas Legislature.
Newspaper stories concentrated on assessing the impact of the raid on those arrested, on athletic wear and J.C.'s image and on the 1975 budget.
It's almost as if Atty. Gen. Vern Miller's raid was a spontaneous occurrence with no apparent reason toow, however, is to ignore the obvious.
The raid itself showed that there was plenty going on here to warrant a raid. Law enforcement agents had gathered enough evidence to bring charges against 29 persons, which is probably nowhere near the total involved in illegal drug activity.
And it's significant that only one of those 29 was charged simply with possession of an illegal substance. All the others allegedly were involved to varying degrees in the sale of marijuana, amphetamines, cocaine, opium or THC.
Of the 38 counts of violations of marijuana laws, there were only six counts of simple possession. Of 18 counts of other violations, only one was for simple possession of amuletamines.
So Miller & Co. weren't simply giving people a hard time for throwing innocent pot parties. They were after conscientious illegal traffickers.
Such persons obviously believe that the drug laws infringe on their personal freedom. Even so, there's no place for outrage when blatant violators are held accountable for their violations, especially when Miller has shown three times before that they will be.
As for the timing of the roundup, law enforcement officers have found that effective undercover agents are no longer effective once their work leads to arrests. So such agents gather evidence until some development threats to blow the case. Then there comes a general roundup. Such was the case last week. Miller said.
Indications are that this incident won't shatter the months of effort developing favorable attitudes toward the KU budget in Toneka.
Legislators who would raise a hue and cry about subsidizing a bunch of good-for-nothing pot smokers fortunately are the kind that lack influence in the legislature and need publicity back home.
More sensible and influential legislators are likely to consider drug abuse here less rampant than it was four raids age.
So perhaps it's time to stop worrying about the budget every time KU makes the news. First there were worries that showing up with a budget, then there were worries that the raid would do it.
What's the next worry to be?
That the legislature won't want to fund a University that has a rapist running loose in its town?
—Bob Simison
Who Rushes to Help the Russians?
Uncounted thousands of North American ears have thrilled to the recorded words of Canadian Broadcaster Gordon Sinclair. “What a wonderful country,” America* is heard in the background.
By MIKE MCGRAUDY Special to the Newsday
What follows is a loose translation of a record that has been enjoying enormous popularity in the Soviet Union during recent weeks. In the background, the stirring strains of "Song of the Volga Boatmen" can be heard.
The Russian ruble took another pounding this morning on German, French and British exchanges, and this Pole thinks it is time to speak up for the Russians as the most generous and possibly the least appreciated people in all the earth.
Romania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and, to a lesser extent, our native Poland were literally lifted out of the debris of war by the Russians who poured in thousands—yes, thousands-of Moscow-trained government officials and 14 rubber
AS LONG AS 20 years ago, when I first started to read party organs, I read about the uprisings breaking out in East Earl County, and modern weapons to help? The Russians did!
WHEN THE HUNGarian government was in danger of collapsing in 1956, it was the Russians who propped it up. When distant countries—even small remote islands—are attacked by outside forces, it is the Soviet Union who rushes to help. Cuba is one of the examples.
And their reward was to be insulted and swindled on the streets of Paris. Never mind that it is something that happens to them, including the French, I was there, I saw it.
Yet, this winter, hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens have been hit by frostbite and, in some instances, influenza. And nobody—but nobody—has helped.
While other countries are busy minding their own business, who is it that has sent engineers, technicians and mentions experts throughout Southeast Asia, the Middle East and Africa offering loans and technical assistance and protection? The Russians!
Who is it that built the steel mills in India and the big dams in Egypt and missile silos outside Havana? And now newspapers about the decadent war-mongering Russians!
I'd like to see one of those countries build its own intercontinental ballistic missile.
Come on, let's hear it! Does any other country in the world have a missile to equal the Soviet fractional orbit bombardment system? If so, why aren't they using them? Why do so many countries buy Soviet missiles?
Why does no other land on earth even consider putting a man in Siberia? Why has no other nation ever even tried to build a salt mine north of Irkustk?
You talk about Japanese technocracy and you get radies. You talk about German technocracy and you get automobiles. And you talk about Soviet technocracy and you get an iron curtain stretching from one pole to the other!
Other country on earth has a Sputnik or a cosmonaut. The Soviet Union has orbited more dogs than any other major power on Earth, but it isn't forget the caviar from Mastichan!
You talk about scandals, and the Russians put their right up there in Siberia so that everyone can write books about them in later years.
You talk about women's liberation and you talk about a woman getting equal pay for equal work. In the Soviet Union women have been running the pneumatic drills and building the highways and working as garbagepersons for decades!
When the Russians get out of this bind—and they will—who could blame them if they say: To hell with the rest of the world! Let someone else rush jet planes to Egypt.
someone else send rockets to North Vietnam. Let someone else circle the globe with nuclear-powered submarines.
Yes, I can name you a thousand times that the Russians have raced to the help of other people in trouble.
Can you name me even one time when someone raced to the Russians in trouble? No, Napoleon doesn't count. The Caspian who does rate of three inches a year and who is rushing into one, No, our neighbors have faced it again. And I'm one Pole who is damned tired of having them kicked around. They will come out with their flag high. And when they do they are entitled to thumb their nose at the lands that are glaring over their present troubles.
I just hope Poland is not one of them
SOVIET JUSTICE SOVIET PRISONS WRIGHT
"SERVES GOLZHENITSYN RIGHT. STRIPPING HIM OF HIG CITIZENSHIP!"
Wins, Defeats Didn't Change Him, Ryun Says
By TONY KORNHEISER
NEW YORK—He grew up in Kansas, running down the back roads of the flatlands that stretch forever, running past the wheat fields that monopolize the landscape, running past the villagers who call their skyscrapers silos and measure their lives in harvests. He ran as Glenn Canter, who Wes Santeen ran before him, but faster. The world is enough, in 1967, to set the world's record for the mile. JR run a mile in 3:51.1.
Since then Ryun has spent countless hours, days and years running farther but never losing sight of it.
Now 27 years old, married and the father of three children, Jim Ryun remains an ambassador.
carried him all over the world to a variety of lesser successes and crushing failures. Yet, through it all, Ryun says, the famer never made mistakes in his life but him rich. The defeats never traumatized him. And the public analyses that were revealed to him were wonder why people made such a dasein view.
"Everyone has his own opinion of me," Ryun said. "After I lost some races people began to get very philosophical about me and I got frustrated." And I was strange. It was a misconception that
perpetuated itself. I am a quiet person, I was only 17 years old when they started to speak English.
Ryun first received national attention in 1964 when he became the first schoolboy miler to qualify for the Olympics. By the Olympics in 1968, Ryun held the world record and was considered an invincible runner. Although he tried to accommodate the press, his races were invariably the best in the country, and he warn'd after a race, often causing reporters to miss deadlines while waiting for his post-race comments.
"I never intentionally refused an interview," Ryan said recently in a telephone
Congress Advised to Use Caution In Designing Health Insurance Plan
By WILBUR J. COHEN Special to the Los Angeles Times
Although there is general acceptance of the idea, however, serious questions remain about what type to adopt and what impact it will have on the quality and price of health care. These are important issues for healthcare professionals using medical costs that now take 2%cent more.
The long ideological dispute in this country over national health insurance has mellowed to the point where the question no longer is whether every American should be covered by Medicare, but how and when. As President Nixon recently, it is an idea whose time has come
before Social Security, suggestions for before state-centered on private plans or state program plans were presented of the constitutionality of Social Security in 1937 raised the possibility of a nationwide health insurance system, and this idea became the basis of the Blue Shield and private insurance plans.
Fears of socialized medicine didn't materialize, but Medicare demonstrated the long-term implications of broadening health insurance; greater use of medical
Medicare was a milestone; perhaps more, a watershed. It opened an era of constructive participation by government agencies and private organizations for financing and organizing health care.
services and the need to reduce unnecessary care, the demand for more trained medical people, the complex task of monitoring the quality of health care and improving its delivery while curbing rising costs.
There has been an amazing change in the old attitude that any insurance or financing mechanism should not meddle with the health delivery system. Now there is a growing opinion among the public and the medical profession that basic changes in the way care is delivered should support for group practice plans, or health maintenance organizations (HMOS).
The Nixon proposal would use both insurance companies and government subsidies. A rival plan, the Kennedy-Griffits bill backed by organized labor, calls for universal coverage financed through the American Medical Association system. The American Medical Association and industry support bills for tax subsidies and general revenue spends for health care.
All of this was the backdrop for President Nikon's recent Proposal for National Health Insurance, a bill which joins nearly a dozen varied plans pending in Connarex.
THE KENNEDY-Gritiffis bill, however, tries to correct all of the apparent faults in our system at once, and thus probably makes it worse. The Republican Congress to follow a step-by-step piece.
meal approach to solving highly complex issues such as delicate doctor-patient relations.
Realizing this, Congressional leaders should move carefully toward a more responsible and responsive health system. That is achieved through Medicaid, it is that participation by medical professionals, consumers and taxpayers is more important than the program's design. Everyone ought to be involved in the take-off as well as the landing.
But before there is any wholesale expansion of health insurance which would further burden health facilities, care should be to end unnecessary use of hospitals.
The simplicity of the Kennedy-Griffits bill contrasts sharply with the Nixon plan, which is a mass of complexities, discriminatory provisions and probably unnecessary administrative costs. The Nixon plan adds rather than cuts red tape: it would have a Rube Goldberg effect on the health delivery system.
Whatever broad, effective health insurance system is ultimately adopted will cost more money, whether in taxes or employer-employee contributions. It also will have far-reaching implications for the community and problem system. And it will create problems.
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A
GOOD DOUGHNUT WITH THE
MORNING COFFEE AND. HEY!
SLURP
SLURP
SLURP
by Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
GET OUT OF MY COFFEE, YOU CREEPY LITTLE BUG!!
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A GOOD DOUGHNUT WITH THE MORNING COFFEE AND. HEY!
SLURP
SLURP
SLURP
GET OUT OF MY COFFEE, YOU CREEPY LITTLE BUG!!
YOU CAN'T DO ANYTHING THESE DAYS WITHOUT MAKING SOMEBODY NERVOUS...
While he was dominating the middle distances, reporters were content to treat him accordingly. But when he lost decisively to Kip Keino in the 1988 Olympics at Mexico City, the aura was shattered and the questions asked, "What's wrong with Jim Runy?"
interview. It wasn't my fault, but I needed some time to myself after a race. I don't know how to explain it to someone who's never been down that same road, but after a race I couldn't speak right away. If I try to, it just comes out garbled. I needed three or four minutes to compose my thoughts. But those guys need me sooner."
DollB
"I never understood it," Ryan said.
"People figure that because I had talent I should never lose. It was assumed that I'd never lose until I died. How many times did I have to prove myself before people accused me for what I was, accepted what I did? I didn't even understand it. I people that, but it never got printed. I think people liked seeing me lose."
Gone are the days when Ryun was able to feel that his very presence in the race frightened the competition as he believed five years ago. In some of his final amateur games, he won with the ball and he fell down in his qualifying heat in the 1,500 meters at the Munich Olympics and never made the finals. Soon after Munich, Ryun turned pro, and his dream of finally winning that gold medal—which people have two separate Olympics—has all but faded.
"Realistically, it won't nappe in my lifetime," Ryan said. "But we American
runners) won't survive unless we make the Olympics open to everyone, regardless of professional standing. . . I know it's easy for me to be critical now but runners have to accept that they are not going to Olympics are only for wealthy Americans or foreign runners. I'd love to go back and try again. I think the Olympic games are not bad, but I don't think I'm going to make it more any way.
"I never thought I'd see him so influenced by the alrighlu'd dollar," said Villanova woman.
RYUN SAID HE didn't do it for the money.
"Economically, I had to do it. I have a family," Ryan said. "My goal is to help them."
His decision to turn pro may have cost him the med, but he made it eagerly.
"I am only grateful I can be somewhat of a pioneer in (pro) track and field. If the money is to come after my time, at least I will be able to make the dream come true." Ryan said.
family, krym soon... in goal is to make sure my family is caused properly." He played in the pro track tour. His official prize money was $13,000 after expenses. But he said he didn't feel any jealousy that college basketball players signed multi-year contracts for millions of dollars while the men's team competed in penny-races.
Ryan's current attitude is based on the premise that what's good for track is best when it's good for people. Riggs in Ft. Lauderdale—a race that traditional track people thought a sacrilege.
Ryun said that shock was past now, and his life as a runner—spending most of his time in the snow—was over.
"I would only get $2,000 if I won," he said before losing to Riggs, who ran a half-mile plus 10 yards compared with Ryun's mile. "I could have turned it down . . . I guess I would have turned it down five years ago . . . but it started out as a mini track meet, because I thought it might bring people out to see 'rack you hadn't seen it before.'
"Things are fine now," he said. "My head is still on my shoulders. I know where I'm going. And I'm having fun now, as much fun as I ever had before. I'm just going down that road, and I'm going to see where it eads."
( )
HUSINESS STaff
Business Adviser . . . Miss Ailee
Business Manager . . . David Burke
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
**NEWS STAFF**
News Advisor ... Sunshine Bear
Editor
An All-American college newspaper
Kaitan Telephone Numbers
Business Office - N-4-235
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Senator's Report
Vo-Tech, Special Ed Major Concerns
This is the fifth of a seven-part series by State Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita, on the 174 session of the Kansas Legislature. Hess is a law student at the University of Kansas.
Education has always been a major consideration in every legislative session. This year, besides appropriations, two areas are of great concern because of major changes--vocational education and special education.
In review, a special committee this summer heard testimony regarding changes in Kansas vocational education. The committee recommended preparation and labor demands were not congruent. That is, more professionals were being trained than the Kansas economy could absorb. However, evidence showed that many students were where vocational training was needed. Other testimony stated that the vocational education program was insufficiently funded and that career education would provide more options for high school students.
Vocational education is considered a very important aspect of education. It is also a key factor in the job market.
Funding was also a major consideration for the committee. Area vocational schools stressed that more state funding was needed in the education was to be improved and expanded.
THE COMMITTEE found that the established 2.0 mll levy was not groupt funding for certain districts. Also, each district's funding varied greatly, so the
However, the State Department of Education estimated that fewer than 40 per cent of the exceptional children were receiving special education services.
Districts would be paid an amount equal to the tuition charged students from their district who go to another district for their education.
committee asked for repeal of the 2.0 mill levy. This would allow for budgeting of the
State funds for the promotion of vocational education were also recommended to be discontinued by the committee. The committee thought its recommendation to equalize district expenditures would include funds to promote vocational education so separate funding wouldn't be necessary.
School districts are allowed to provide cooperative special education services on a shared-cost basis. Last year, 250 districts participated in these cooperatives. Federal funds are also available for school district use.
KANSA'S ROLE in special education has expanded steadily. Increased state funding and the incorporation of special education programs in school districts have resulted in more services offered to handicapped and exceptional children.
Special education services are provided by school districts, state and private institution and schools, such as the Cappar of Tampa, in Topeka, or privately framed classes.
KANAS'S LEGISLATION in 1969, required that mentally retarded children must have access to school district services. Also, in 1974, the Department of Education epithet children to be included in these services. After these two directives are implemented on July 1, 1974, the State Department of Education estimates that 90 mentally retarded children who need the service will be receiving it.
The committee thought special education services in Kansas needed to be expanded, and they agreed that attempts to provide public education by a state must be made on equal terms to all citizens. Therefore, the state assumes the responsibility for special education exceptional children.
HOUSE BILL 1672 was introduced this session to improve coordination of special education services. This bill would repeal all existing state special education laws. Funding for programs would be equalized and state aid would be increased.
Cooperative programs with other districts are encouraged, including those
The bill would also establish an advisory group to assess the development of special education in Kansas and improve the quality of the services offered.
The committee also specifically studied and recommended legislation concerning funding of elementary guidance counselors and adult education and made recommendations regarding alternative schools and teacher negotiations.
1.
City Blamed for Substandard Area
By JILL WILLIS
Kantan Staff Reporter
City leaders, not landlords, are responsible for the bad condition of apartments near the University of Kansas campus, Doug Bothe, an apartment maintenance specialist at the apartment owner Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy.
Six of Ling's houses were recently placeted by the city as substandard. Unless repairs are made on the houses, the tenants will have to move. Buehe said Ling's maintenance crew had begun making the repairs.
Wednesday, February 28.1974
Bueche accused the "money-grabbing bankers and the city commission" of trying to destroy an area they didn't know anything about.
"They wouldn't even think of driving through it," he said. "Most people on the council are so wrapped up in trying to find a way, they would never think of improving it."
Sanitation workers especially are careless, he said.
Baehe said garbage had accumulated for almost a year in several areas in the alley where the fire was extinguished.
It's no mystery that the tenants don't take
care of the houses, he said, when trash is
lying all over their yards.
"We pay the city to pick this up and yet they don't do it," he said.
James Engnehl, assistant foreman for the city sanitation department, said yesterday he would leave a note for the trash to be picked up.
Mark Creamer, one of Ling's tenants, said Sunday that the street sweepers were using a tool called
"And then they turn around and call it a bad area," he said.
Cremier said he was told the city couldn't clean the streets because parked cars were broken down.
He tried to get no parking signs installed so that the street could be swept and was told by the city commission that it would be done within two weeks, he said.
Creamer said that he went back to the commission after a month to find out why the signs hadn't been installed but that no one would talk to him.
if the street cleared to cut
down an elm tree, they can do it. But
to an oak tree, they must build a
wall.
Arnold Wiley, the city street department, said yesterday that the city
cleaned the streets in the area near campus when the students were on vacation.
Workers have gone in a number of times to hand-clean Ohio Street. Wiley said.
"We have to clean it up when the students aren't parked there. Normally Ohio Street
He said it would be a problem to install no parking signs because there was already a car in the lot.
Buethe said many of the tenants were neclectic in the care of their houses.
Both Bustee and Creamer said they had seen tenants throw garbage out of the
"One of the major problems with the
housees are the exterior. If there's 20 garage
cars, only 2 will have garage in them," he
adds.
Buhee said student renters didn't think to take care of day-to-day maintenance problems before the problems turned into major repair jobs.
They'll clean a frying pan, but they'll never think of cleaning the oven, he said.
"Then they'll call us and say the stove doesn't work," he said.
These students will abuse their houses beyond belief, he said, "then they'll pick their books up and go on the hill and be the elite of the world."
Playboy Will Publish Spiro Agnew's Novel
NEW YORK (AP)
publish the novel
President Spirt A
Agnew's agent said
YORK (AP) - Playboy Press will
the novel that former Vice
Spiro T. Agnew is writing,
its agent said yesterday.
4 Colleges to Present Plays at KU In Regional Theater Competition
By CAROL GWINN
Kansas Staff Reporter
Regional competition for the American College Theater Festival is taking place this weekend.
Four plays, which have been judged the best productions of colleges and universities in the Central Region of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska, will be presented at 8 p.m. tonight through Saturday in the University Theater.
Tonight Meramec Community College, Kirkwood, Mo., will open the festival with "110 in the Shade," a musical comedy adapted from "The Rainmaker." It is about a woman's romance and a town's hope for rain during the 1930s dumb bowls.
Tomorrow night Kansas State College of Pittsburg will present "The Serpent" by Jean-Claude van Italy, which centers on the Adam and Eve story. "The Serpent" is in the environmental theater style, which tries to create a more substantial rapport between the actors and the audience by bringing the play out of the audience.
Friday night Fort Hays State College will present "Aftermath," an original play about euthanasia written and directed by David Shelton.
"The Three Penny Opera" by Bertol
Brecht, an East German existentialist, will be presented Saturday night by Webster
College, Webster Groves, Mo. The play is a
tale of the adventures of Mackee
Messer of "Matilda the Knife" in the 1920a
Berlin underwater
After each play, said Tom Rea, associate director of theater and coordinator for the Central Region, two guest critics, Robert Darling, whose specialty is scenic design, and jerome Kilty, an author and director, with queens们with anyone enrolled in the festival.
Workshops in scenic painting, voice for
workshops, the non-dance actor in the musical,
the dance troupe.
costing and critical reviewing sponsored by the School of Journalism will be conducted for more than 400 participants from area colleges and universities.
Rea said yesterday that winners of the regional contests would go to the national contest.
The festival began six years ago, Rea
theatre to upgrade the quality of collo-
eral theater.
He said that although the exposure to Washington audiences was an advantage for performers, he added that the festival was to share theater experiences with other campuses. He said he thought performers tried harder when they performed before audiences other than him.
KU did not enter the competition this year, Rea said, "primarily because we were hosts." Last year's KU production, "Tango," went to the regional contest, and
in 1871 "Indians" won the regional competition and went to Washington.
Rea said that if KU had decided to enter the contest, last December's production, "The Doll's House," would have been the only one ready in time for the judging. Keeping the scenery intact would have been a lot of trouble, Rea said.
takes to its scenery and costumes.
Rea said the productions were picked on
the basis of the quality of scenic design,
costuming, lighting and acting.
"It's a pretty big undertaking to move scenery," Rea said.
The Mermance play required two large trucks to bring its scenery and costumes.
Ten productions are selected to go to Washington from the 52 plays at the 13 regional competitions. The American College Theater Festival is presented by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Smithsonian Institution.
NASA Urges Investigation Of Fake Skvlab Messages
WASHINGTON (AP)—The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said yesterday it had asked American Telephone & Telegraph Co. to look into reports that fake radio messages from people pretending to be the Skylab astronauts were overheard on at least four long-distance telephone calls.
The fake messages were supposedly between the astronauts and ground controllers. The alleged astronauts said that they had been sent into space, and that the station was falling into the sun.
NASA said the messages were overhearby by persons on at least four long-distance satellites.
A space agency spokesman said one call was between New York and North Carolina, another between Atlanta and New York City, the third between New York City and San Francisco and the fourth between Jacksonville and an unknown city.
the astronauts safely returned to earth Feb. 8.
NASA said it had turned the investigation to AT&T because its Bell System lines were cut.
A spokesman for AT&T said he had heard of the story but knew of no investigation by NASA. That said if an investigation was in progress, the would be conveyed to NASA.
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The Playboy bid was one of five received for the book, Pressed for financial details of the sale, the agent, Scott Meredith, said. The book sold more than $50,000 and less than $250,000.
He didn't name the other bidders for the book, which was rejected last month by Random House. He said movie rights to the book were a political intrigue involving a vice president of the United States, were still open. Publication is tentatively set for early 1975.
Seral rights to the book, whose working title is "A Very Special Relationship," were sold earlier this month to Ladies Home Journal for a reported $100,000.
Meredith said getting the book published was of special personal importance to Agnew, who resigned last October after a contest to an income tax evasion charge.
"It's important to him now to have a personal accomplishment. It represents a challenge to him that he wants at this stage," he said.
CONSUMERS WORKSHOP
The Economics of
LIFE
INSURANCE
Dr. Leland Pritchard
Professor of Economics
THURS., FEB. 21, 7:30 p.m.
KURS, FEB. 21; 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union, International Room
A project of the Consumer Protec-
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Activity Fee
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University Daily Kansan
Bogus Kidnapers Arrested In Seeking Hearst Ransom
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 43-year-old unemployed cab driver and his 21-year-old wife were arrested here over the weekend for impersonating the kidnappers of Patricia Hears in an unsuccessful attempt to collect ransom money, authorities said yesterday.
The couple, Nile Dwayne Marx, a transient from Indiana, and his wife, Mrs. Shirley Ann Marx of Columbia, Mo., were taken into custody late Saturday night and booked early Sunday in an investigation of imporational kidnappers, authorities said.
11. Charles Higbie said police were satisfied that the pair had no connection with the disappearance of the daughter of newspaper publisher Randolph A. Hearst or with the Symbionese Liberation Army, which said it held the girl.
He said the couple, who told police they had arrived in Los Angeles a week ago from
Columbia, were arrested when they appeared at the bus station and were confronted by a team of police investigators and the FBI
"It was done by telephone through the Hearts," he said. "During one phone conversation Mrs. Hearst was contacted." Two police investigators said they would seek felony complaints against the Marxes from the district attorney's office, this morning. They are expected to be arraigned today.
They gave no resistance and weren't armed, Highe said.
Higher refused to say whether any money actually was delivered to the terminal or how many contacts were made with the Hearst family.
Evenings at
7:25 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat
at 2:00
Hillcrest
Higher said materials were found on the couple that linked them to the telephone.
Many of his fellow officers considered him
the most dangerous man alive
San Honest cop
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Eve..7:40,9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:15
by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
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Marlon Brando
Last Tango in Paris
Evenings at 7:15 and 9:30
Salt Lake Attractions 10:10
Last Tango in Paris
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MADRID
8 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 27 Topeka Municipal Auditorium Advance Tickets on Sale at Better Days and Kief's in Lawrence
6
Wednesdav. February 20.1974
University Daily Kansan
Showings Increase In Movie Ban
BY NICHOLAS C. CHRISS The Los Angeles Times
HOUSTON — the skin-flick "Deep Threat" made its third debut in Houston Friday after months of legal battles during a shooting spree. The public got to see the performative movie.
Those who saw it in the interim included college students, PTA members, professors, baseball players, psychiatrists and psychologists, guests at stag parties, police officers, hangers-in on the courtyard, high school principals and even a priest.
The odyssey of "Deep Throat" began last April here in Houston when Joe Spiegel was shot by a man who wasScene material at his downtown movie house, Cinema West. It ended a few days ago when the second jury failed, 3-3, to reach a verdict. The first jury was also tied.
Actually, "Deep Throat" had been shown
in the summer of 1972 for the first time in Houston, almost a year before Spiegel got his print. But the movie passed unnoticed at the time. It was only later that the film and its star, Linda Lovelace, became known nationally.
There was still another private showing,
this time to members of the ioca press.
About 150 turned up for the late-night
performance.
Then there was another private showing,
said Spiegel, for members of the Houston
Gymnasium.
The "Deep Throat" affair began when Spiegel obtained a new print of the movie early last year and invited the players of a soccer team to attend. A team to see About 90 men turned up,
A few days later the movie opened at Cinema West, making its second debut in Houston. It played only three times. The Squad moved in and confiscated the film.
Two Students File Protest Against Religious Shouters
The shooting of religious views by so-called "Jesus freaks" on campus has offended two university of Kansas students, according to a Security and Parking report.
The report is in the form of a complaint filed Monday by Mr. and Mrs. Miller in which they said they were 'subjected to yelling and loud talking from the 'Jesus freaks' on Jayhawk Boulevard between Bailey and Snow halls.
In the complaint, the Millers also objected to what they called the offensive attitude of the preachers. Mrs. Miller, Lawrence senior, said yesterday that the shouting of the "Jesus freaks" still bothered her and her husband, Lawrence junior, and that she
resented having the preachers' religious views foisted upon her.
"If they give you handouts, you can refuse them, if they talk to you, you can talk back, but when they scream at you, what can you do?" she said.
Mrs. Miller said some of the preachers told her they would continue their preaching on Saturday.
"They're not going to quit—they say their message is too important," she said.
According to Mrs. Miller, the "Jesus freaks" said they had been told by the Dean of Men that their preaching would be more long as no public address system was used.
"If everyone gets a whistle and blows it in
ears or ears, something they'll
stop."
High School Personnel To Confer with Freshmen
Max Griffin, assistant director of admissions, said yesterday that 250 faculty members from 125 high schools across the state will be in City, Mo., would attend the conference.
Freshmen will have an opportunity to offer feedback on the strengths and weaknesses of their high school preparation for college at the principal-counselor-freshman conference tomorrow in the Kansas Union.
Griffin said that last year more than 1,000 freshmen met with their high school administrators and counselors and that 1,000 to 1,200 were expected tomorrow.
Marshall Jackson, assistant director of admissions, said one of the purposes of the conference was to inform high school students that he would best meet the needs of their students.
"The reason for the conference is to acquaint students and counselors with programs on campus. We are trying to get them involved." The students they send us," Jackson said.
Jackson said that the conference helped establish a better relationship between his team and the US.
Harlan Hess, assistant principal at Shawnee Mission North High School in Shawnee Mission, agreed with Jackson on the purpose of the conference.
Hess said by that talking to freshmen he and other school administrators could determine the strengths and weaknesses of their schools' education and counseling.
In conjunction with the conference, the Office of School Relations will offer a special workshop for high school teachers in science and physical sciences, Jackson said.
Garner's speech will center on the long-range energy plan being developed by the Federal Energy Office. Garner will also talk about the relationship of education in secondary schools to over-all public education efforts.
The program features a luncheon address by William Garner, director for research and development for the Kansas City Environmental Protection Agency.
That's when the movie's strange odyssey in Houston began. The film was shown to some members of the District Attorney's office who wanted to observe it at the police station.
But it was when the film went to the courthouse that it really began to attract
Spiegel's trial took place in a state district court, and when the movie was shown to the juries the courtroom became so jammed that a jury of everyone had to move to a larger courtroom.
Some bootleg copies of the movie began to show up around the city. One officer from the Vice Squad said he got to sit through six times at various official showings.
Spiegel said, "The District Attorney's office wanted the film all the time. They said they wanted it for staff meetings to plan their court strategy."
The District Court 12-man jury disagreed 6-6 about whether to reach a decision. A mistrial was declared, and the case was moved on to a county criminal court.
Meanwhile, the film was being shown to various groups in the interests of justice, sociology and other related causes. Dr. Chad Gordon, chairman of Rice University's sociology department, showed it to about 300 students who said it did not dffend them.
Gordon's showing was in the Media Center Auditorium, which holds about 250 persons. Gordon said that after 300 students showed up to study the film the doors had to be turned away. The professor then hurried away. The professor said that he turned a questionnaire to the students and that 92 per cent did they didn't think the movie scenes were shameful, 95 per cent did not think the scenes were morbid, and 75 per cent might most of the scenes were amusing.
Professor Gordon was asked to testify for the defense.
During the legal battle the movie was
RegentsRename Medical Center
The University of Kansas Medical Center has been renamed the College of Health Sciences.
The Kansas Board of Regents' Health Education Committee approve a motion to amend the board's policy.
William O. Rieke, executive vice chancellor of the Medical Center, said recently that the name change would permit better recognition of the impact of support of training efforts in the health fields.
The schools within the College of Health Sciences are the School of Medicine, the School of Nursing and the School of Allied Health.
shown to members of a local PTA group. They were considered potential witnesses. Hanging in the courthouse also took place when Bruce Kelley, the priest-lawyer. Rev. Bruce Kelley, was asked to view the film for the state. He said he thought the film was morally repugnant to him.
At the University of Houston "Deep Throat" made its debut before a number of psychiatrists and psychologists who wanted it. About 200 showed up for the movie.
An officer in the Police Department Vice Squad said he heard the movie was "shown socially" by some members of one county court, and Spiegel said he had been told it was shown at a Christmas party by the courthouse who had access to the film.
A local newspaper columnist, Lym Ashby of the Houston Post, wrote that a local judge took it home to show to some friends and said they were welcome at the house, but that the deities denit it.
He emphasized that neither of the judges in whose court the case came up were informed.
Spielag it didn't "happen that way. He said, "The judge's wife wouldn't have it in the house, but some of his friends showed it during the (Christmas) holidays."
An academic dean will be appointed to direct each of the three schools.
Spiegel said his side in the case desperately needed a copy to show to potential witnesses, so he finally obtained permission to make a new print.
"It was a mess, when we got it back," he said. "It was dirty and scratched. A long piece, about 20 feet, had been torn off. The film was new when we got it, and we expected it would be shown maybe 12 times officially.
"But my projectionist checked it out closely, and we estimate it had actually been shown 30 to 40 times. And that's conservatively speaking." Soiegel said.
So, after the second trial also ended with a hung jury, Spiegel got to put the flick back in his theater. He changed the setup and quarried and started charging $5 a customer.
About 30 people turned up for the first showing Friday. Spiegel said there didn't appear to be too much interest anymore in seeing the movie at his place.
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KATHY BUEHLER'S At The Flagship!!!
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Tomorrow evening treat yourself to a late dinner, or snack, or just come in for a beer and enjoy the music of KATHY BUEHLER. That's Wednesday night from 9-12 at the Flagship.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 20,1974
7
by Mayo More Subpoena Results Expected
WHAT'S THIS THING SUPPOSED TO BE?
WHAT'S THIS THING SUPPOSED TO BE?
ITS A NEW BOAT I INVENTED THAT GOES UNDER WATER + COMES BACK UP
WHAT'S IT CALLED?
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TOPEKA (AP)—A spokesman in the attorney general's office says that less than half the news media have responded to subpoenas asking information about advertising money received in the 1972 presidential election, but he expects most of them will do so.
Patrick Connolly, chief assistant attorney general for criminal matters, said yesterday there had been "great cooperation" from the media for about 75 subpoenas issued to cib. 6 by Atty. Gen. Vern Bunting and radio and television stations.
Miller asked what advertising for the campaign was accepted, who ordered it, who paid for it and how much it cost. He sought the figures for both Democratic Gov. Robert Decking and his Republican foe, Morris Kav.
Miller acknowledged he was trying to learn whether $30,000 allegedly paid to a
former Docking aide actually got into the governor's campaign.
A Shawnee County grand jury returned indictments Jan. 22 alleging a conspiracy to kick back money to Decking's campaign in the 2014 election. The University of Kansas Medical Center
Some Kansas Press Association members and the president of the Kansas Broadcasters Association have criticized issuance of the subpoena.
Miller had indicated he expected criticism. He tried to blunt some of it by having Karasaa Bureau of Investigation and the Sarasaa Bureau and return to pick up the information.
"Many of our members wonder whether it was necessary to cause the expenditure of funds to send the KBI agents across the state when most would have given the information to the other agencies G. "Ouck" Barnes, publisher of the Pratt Tribune and president of the KPA.
Barnes said KPA's legal counsel suggested Miller was fully within his rights.
Jerry Holley, president of the broadcasters association, said the subpoenas were 'uncalled for', because the information was readily available through the Federal Communications Commission files or each state's public files.
"It was a waste of the taxpayers' money to have the subpoenas typed up and have the agents serve them," Holley, an executive of WBW in Topeka, said. "We sort of feel it is obvious that we will benefit by a political candidate in an election year to garner news coverage."
Connolly said he had received no complaints and said those who had called about the orders sought only information on how to comply.
There is no deadline for compliance. The subpoenaes specify only a "reasonable fee."
Petition Asks That Erotic Films Be Shown
A petitionurging the reinstatement of "The Devil in Miss Jones" and "The Erotic Film Festival" will be presented to the Student Union Activities (SUA) Board at its meeting today. Alan Hurbut, Mission senior and a sponsor of the petition, said yesterday.
Although the petition calls for the re-statement of the films, those persons circulating the petition contend it is aimed at enabling the principle of academic freedom.
"It's not so much that we want to see the films reinstated," Mark Kaplan, Prairie Village sophomore, said, "but that we want to see the SUA Board try to represent the students rather than the chancellor and two state states."
However, Steve Warren, Hasting, Neb,
senior and SUA president, said it was an error to think the board was forced to act against its wishes.
"There was one overt error in that petition: the actions we took didn't represent our wishes," Warren said. "We wouldn't have given our wishes, we wouldn't have made them."
Warren said the decision made by the SUA could have been against the wishes of the dissenting minority, but that the actions of the SUA wished of a majority of the board members.
Both Kaplan and Hurub said they thought censorship of "The Erotic Film Festival" and "The Devil in Miss Jones" presented the greatest precedent in the academic community.
Kaplan said the next censorship activity at the University of Kansas could be aimed at a course, an instructor or a book. He said he regarded the censorship of the films as
an encroachment upon academic freedom.
Student response to the petition it has great among those who read it, Hurubil
"Of the people who read the petition, probably 90 per cent have signed."
But Kapaian said he had noticed a
student who never turned in the
students who didn't stop to read the paper.
"Eight out of 10 students," Kaplan said, "by the table and act as if it isn't here."
Hurlbut said that 1,500 people had signed the petition and that he thought that figure indicated that students had strong sentiments about reinstating the films. Especially, Hurlbut, in light of the Student Senate elections, which received greater publicity but generated only a slightly greater response.
Jim Milio, Himsdale, I., sophomore and SUA Board member, said he didn't know what effect the petition would have on the board.
Kaplan said he didn't think legal considerations had caused the SUA Board to cancel the films. By canceling the film, Kaplan said, the SUA yielded to the senators in an effort to prevent legislative cuts to the University budget.
If it has more signatures than there were votes in the Student Senate elections, it will be a vote in the governor's race.
He said "The Devil in Miss Jones" probably would not be shown at KU because it had been banned in Kansas City, Mo., for violating local obscenity standards.
"If it had become a legal matter, that would have been another story," Kaplan
The legal questions surrounding the films are still very much at issue, according to Koch.
Warren said that a legal action based on obscurity charges could have an adverse effect.
"Senators' squawking in one thing," he said. "The film being busted is another
Warren said it was possible for the SUA to reconsider its actions. But he said he didn't understand how the judge was acting.
Millo said it would look bad if the board reversed its decision now that the budget is up.
"All I can say is, I don't know what's going to happen."
"It would be like, okay, now we have the budget. Let's show it," he said.
Warren said that if support was great enough, a private group could show the students he noted that those students who were close to the petition were welcome to do just that.
---
THE BODY SHOP
FIGURE SALON
George Washington's Birthday Feb.19th-22nd,1974
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Monday, Feb. 25
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Tuesday, Feb. 26
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Thursday, Feb. 21
Children's Films
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Sunday, Feb. 24
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B
Wednesday, February 20, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Environmentalist Lashes Professor
A University of Kansas engineering professor has made statements that "go well beyond the boundaries of appropriate criticism and reflect a fundamental drespect for law," according to the history of an Indiana conservationist group.
Thomas E. Dustin, executive secretary of the Indiana division of the Izak Walton League of America, Inc., made the charges against McKenny and McKenny, professor of civil engineering.
The controversy started when McKinney spoke at a meeting of the Manufacturing Council, where he said
Speaking in a panel discussion on the environment, McKinney was quoted as savey:
"CAREFUL EXAMINATION of the environmental movement in the United States clearly shows it to be a totally democratic devoid of any 'democratic feelings.'
"The ultimate aim of the environmentalists is to establish a complete federal control under a leadership of a few people who know what is best for all the people.
*Restrictive legislation and repressive force are means for the environmentalists to control the economy.*
He also said, "There is a real need to develop a realistic program for environmental pollution control that clearly identifies industry's responsible leadership."
Asked for his reactions to Dustin's letter, Mitmey said yesterday that he had expected
ONCE YOU TAKE a stand on an issue, it will be opposed, he said, and "you have to be ready" for the challenge.
McKinney's statements were quoted in an article on the chemists' meeting. The article appeared in "Water in the News," a published weekly by University of California, edited by a soap and detergent association.
Dustin said he regularly monitored such publications for anti-environmentalist
Statements such as those made by McKinsey need to be challenged, Dustin
"I WANT A WIDER团 to understand what this man has said." Dustin said. "I want a wider group."
In his letter to McKinney, Dustin wrote,
"If you are quoted correctly and in context.
your statement does not reflect the professionalism or detachment that should be exhibited.
"To state that the environmental movement is 'totally socialistic . . . devoid of any democratic feelings' is pure hysteria and frustrated emotionalism that casts the most serious shadows on your own credibility.
"There has been no organized citizen involvement in the history of America that has participated within the democratic system than in that in the environmental movement."
While commenting on the letter from Dustin, McKinney said that he had chosen to enter the environmental engineering field in 1948.
Back then, he said, the field was called callaln engineering and was rather looked at. He said it was a way of
THE CURRENT INTEREST in the environment was started by Nixon, McKinney said, to take people's minds off Vietnam and to make people feel that the government had had some beneficial side effects.
It has demonstrated the problem, he said, and if 5 per cent of society's total efforts are applied to the problem, the United States could have a clean environment.
McKinney said the pollution problem was serious but not acute.
You don't solve a problem like this in instantaneously. It's taken 1000 years to instantiate.
Lack of U.S. Citizenship No Longer Tenure Barrier
University of Kansas faculty members who do not want to become U.S. citizens now have the option of voting.
The possibility for tenure is a result of a policy statement adopted Nov. 20 by the Board of Regents which replaced the previous policy that all faulty members "must be removed from office" and made a declaration of intent to become citizens." That policy was adopted in 1948.
The new policy resulted, in part, from a ruling in a case by the attorney general's office, said Max Bickford, executive officer of the Board of Regents.
A classified employee works for the Kansas Civil Service KU faculty members and administrative staff.
The case involved a classified employee of the state and the Kansas Civil Service, which had a policy similar to the 1948 regents policy.
In the past, the University bypassed the 1948 policy by appointing a non-citizen faculty member a visiting professorship, according to June Michal, assistant to the president of academic affairs. The professors were then reappointed as often as necessary.
Michal said, however, that faculty members who had visiting professorships
There are 29 faculty members at KU who are now on permanent visas from other countries, said Clark Coan, dean of foreign students.
"The effect of the new policy will not be very drastic," said Michal, "as there are only three faculty members at KU who have not made a declaration that they intend to
become U.S. citizens, but now even these members have tenure."
Ambrose Sarics, vice chancellor of academic affairs, said that the faculty Tenure and Promotions Committee normally handled questions of tenure but that if a faculty member stayed at KU long enough, he automatically got tenure.
ADVERTISE U
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ACME Salutes Players of the Week
DALE GREENLEE for outstanding play in the Iowa State game
CLEMSON
40
KANSAS
45
TOM KIVISTO for outstanding play in the Oklahoma game
Greenlee helped KU beat the Cyclones with 13 points and a rebounds. He also scored 26 points in Monday night's victory.
Kivistö led KU past Oklahamo
he is strong defense, super-
shooting. He had 17 points his
highest amount so far this sea-
sion.
ACME
ACME DRY CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS
10% Discount on "Cash and Carry"
DOWNTOWN
MCKINNEN SAID THAT the environmentalist movement attracted sincere people who really wanted to improve the world.
MALLS
HILLCREST
However, he said, they suffer from lack of background on the really complex issues in their schools.
1111 Massachusetts 711 West 23rd
He said many of his students seemed to think that only the federal government was capable of solving the problems of pollution. Socialist countries such as Russia are
gative body." The Democratic leaders contended in their letter, "Confidence of the people in public of office holders and in government itself are the issues."
The British are still working on pollution control, he said, and none of the European countries have implemented it.
Socialist countries such as Russia are facing the problem also, he said.
In an article written for the alumni magazine, he wrote, "Environmental pollution has been with us since the beginning of time and will be with us to the end." We cannot escape pollution, but we do not have to live in a polluted environment."
Pollution isn't a new problem, McKinney said.
Steineger and Louis said the committee they were proposing should consist of persons of "established reputation for impartiality and responsibility."
They also said that no members of the committee should have any involvement in state matters.
DUSTIN SAID THAT MCKENNY was told to his opinion, but that statements like those McKenny had made in New York could be used against the environmentalist
"Critics will take statements like that, quote it out of context and use it against environmental projects. To extend the statement is irresponsible." Dustin said.
Referring to his own comments as quoted in the article in question, McKinney said, "I'd rather have it written on the cover," he wrote.
He also said, "Dr. McKimney has been a pawn of the soap and detergent association," he added.
StateSen. Jack Steinger, D-Kansas City, Senate minority leader, and State Rep Richard Leux, D-Wichita, House minority leader, sent a letter to President Robert F. Bennett and House Speaker Duane McGill, both Republicans, in which they proposed the creation of the committee.
THE ARTICLE QUOTED him correctly and in context, McKinney said.
TOPEKA (AP)—Prevent accusations or political play in Kansas hurled by both Democrats and Republicans have led Democratic legislative leaders to seek the governor to negotiate nonpartisan citizens' committees to investigate wrongdoing in all levels of government.
Copies of Dustin's letter to McKinney were sent to the Chancellor's office and to the University Daily Kansas. Dustin said he had sent the copies because he thought the university should be aware of what one of members in a responsible position had said.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
said that he had seen the letter and the article and that he did not think the security would take any action in the matter.
Steineger and Louis a proposed new legislative investigative committee with expanded powers, which is being considered. Bennett and McGill, didn't go far enough.
Both McKinney and Dustin were expressing their individual professional opinions. Shankar said, and the team criticized it, that Tait was McKinney and the Izaak Walt Lengeau.
Citizens' Panel Sought To Probe Corruption
Steineger and Loux said that all the charges and countercharges by members of both parties during this year has distorted the facts.
"Whether such accusations are of substance or actually political should be determined by the facts."
They said that the committee's investigation shouldn't be limited to allegations brought against the executive branch but that "the committee should have the authority to direct inquiries to all branches of government at all levels of government."
The committee Steineger and Loux are proposing would be composed of eight members, two to be appointed by Gov. Robert Docking, two by McGill, two by Bennett, one by Steineger and one by Democrats and four Republicans. They propose giving Bennett and McGill veto power over the appointees, while Docking, Steineger and Loux would have similar powers over the Republican appointees.
Refreshments Open 7 to 11 p.m.
MIDNIGHT MAd nEsS
SHIRTS . . . Tables Full . . . From 4 $ ^{ \circled{0}} $
CASUAL PANTS . . Very Large Group . . From 7 $ ^{2 0} $
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KISS SLACKS ... ½ off
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Wednesday, February 20, 1974
9
University Daily Kansan
Beisner for Senate Lobby
By JACK McNEELY
John Besimer, Salina junior and student body president, said yesterday that he would use the Student Senate during the next year to lobby for students' interests.
Beisner said that he would determine students' interests by going directly to the students, as he had done in his recent campaign.
"Just because the senate has no statutory power to solve a certain problem doesn't mean we can't do it."
"The Student Senate has never really effectively been used as a lobbying group on this campus," Beamer said. "The Student Senate is not an institution that says and say, 'Pre-enrollment will exist.'"
ONE GOAL of Beisner's administration will be to reduce the foreign language requirement in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Proficiency or 16 hours in a foreign language now satisfy the requirement for graduation from the college.
But, Beisner said, the senate can do research on issues that students are concerned about and apply pressure to the appropriate University bodies.
Paxson and the College Assembly ultimately would decide whether to abolish the college.
Paxson also said the Student Senate could convince members of other departments, such as history or political science, that a student's college requirements would be in their interest.
Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and Beisner's campaign manager, said yesterday that the senate would compare the college's foreign language requirement with that of other schools and present the results to the College Assembly.
Other goals of the Beiner administration will be to implement Affirmative Action policies in the Student Senate and to establish a system of undergraduate advising.
IF THE SAME number of credits is required for graduation and there is no foreign language requirement, a student would take more courses in the other departments, which would benefit the other departments, Paxton said.
Beiser said he would introduce legislation at the first meeting of the new senate today to create the position of Affirmative Action Coordinator. The coordinator would manage meetings to ensure that they are made in accordance with Affirmative Action guidelines.
Affirmative Action is a program to guarantee positions at the University of Kansas to members of racial minority groups.
The coordinator also will actively recruit members of racial minority groups to fill positions in student government, Beissner said.
BEISNER SAID no action would be taken on the system of undergraduate advising until after members of the Academic Affairs Committee were appointed. The senate will begin appointing members to its committee today.
He said he would also introduce legislation that would establish a task force to monitor the work of the Commission.
Solzhenitsyn Still Resting
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) - Alexander Solzbenthys, a week after his arrest and exile, quietly spend yesterday shopping and visit a place for a place to live in a Western country.
On Monday he granted his first interview since his expulsion, telling The Associated Press he would continue his work and try to put down roots in a new place.
A week ago Soviet security agents and police knocked on the door of his apartment and dragged him off to prison. The next day they read him an edict stripping him of citizenship and put him aboard a plane for West Germany.
Solzhenitsyn, who has taken refuge in the quiet Zurich apartment of his Swiss lawyer, has been considering residence offers from firms in Russia that he can work with his family in Moscow by telephone.
Solzhenitsh left the apartment late in the morning and asked newsmen not to follow him on a shopping tour. When he returned with some packages that looked like clothing boxes, the author was relaxed and smiling.
Solzhentyn crossed the street to thank newsmen for leaving him alone.
In Monday's interview, Solenthynsyn inform that his family wouldn't be joining him soon. He said it was difficult for the two women and four children in his family to "liquidate an existence of many years, to forget their parent and moment when none of the children are ill."
In Moscow, friends of the family said Solizhenstyn's wife, Natalya, was making plans to take the family out of the Soviet Union and would leave them there if they would leave or where they would go.
Solzhentzyn angered the Soviet authorities with his new book on Stalinist labor camps, "Gulag Archipelago." He was exiled in 1946 after a number of official attacks on him and his work.
Attention CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS
To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4348 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
for Security and Parking operations for next year.
Beiser will submit a petition to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes asking that he take no action on recommendations by the Parking Board until the task force's plan is submitted.
The Parking and Traffic Board is expected to submit its plans for next year's budget.
REISNER SAID the petition would tell
chancellor that "we as students will not
M. R. BARNES
seismist has expressed concern that the plan being submitted by the Parking and Traffic Board would make few changes in regulations.
Beisner's bill requires the task force to submit a plan within 60 days.
John Beisner
accept the current Security and Parking regulations."
Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City junior and student body vice president, said yesterday that the new senate's biggest problem would be to get quick action.
Rich Lauter, Evanston, III., senior and vice chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday that to involve students in the Student Senate.
"BEEINNER'S PRIMARY task is not to produce lots of legislation or student services, which (previous student body president Mert) Buckley did, but to reactivate interest among the students as a whole," Lauter said. "That's more intangible and it's more difficult. But if it's not done, student government will die."
"My problem will be to convince students outside the Student Senate that if they want changes made at this University, they're going to have to go out to do it." Beisner
Beisner said his biggest problem would be to involve students outside the senate in school discussions.
Beisner said he could motivate people by directing the senate's energies toward innovation.
"ITHINK WE'VE found their interests," he said. "It's just a matter of convincing them that student government can do something about those interests."
on campus
Inset Bashar Paige, a soprano and visiting lecturer in voice; and Norman Paige, a tenor and associate professor of voice, will perform solos and duets.
THE FACULTY RECTICAL SERIES will feature three faculty members from the School of Fine Arts in a concert at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Richard Angelietti, chairman of the department of piano, will accompany them on
THE KU PARAPSYCHOLOGY CLUB will have an organizational meeting at 7 tonight in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
Kansas House Votes Today On Campaign Finance Bill
Speaker Diane McGill, R-Winfield, said the House would give the measure tentative approval today, readying the bill for a final vote that would send it back to the Senate.
McGill said the Senate was certain to reject House amendments and then send the bill to a conference committee that would write the final version.
McGill said he thought that as a result of the caucus yesterday, he knew what the Republican members wanted in the campaign finance bill.
He said that the House Republican members wanted the bill less restrictive in its scope.
language of the bill simplified and clarified He declined to be more specific.
Senate Republicans also met in caucus yesterday, but Senate President Robert F. Bennett, R-Overland Park, refused to disclose the subject.
He said he would join McGill in a statement after the House Republican met on Thursday.
The House Republican caucus yesterday didn't deal with the same subject considered by the Senate Republicans, Bennett said.
Bennett said a joint statement by the leadership could come as early as the regularly-scheduled Bennett-McGill news conference tomorrow, but no sooner.
--requests must be submitted to the Treasurer's office,
He said he didn't know when a caucus of House Republicans would take up the issue.
REMINDER
ALL CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS:
Budget request forms for Student Activity Fee funds are available in 105-B, Student Union. Budget
104-B, Union, by 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28.
No late requests will be considered.
7
--if purchased separately $319.80
CMC'smid-winter DAYSTEREO SALE
There's no shortage of good stereo sounds and we've got some special prices to help you hear them...
Asuper $200componentsystem!
By far the best $200 system we ever offered (and better than we see we seen other offer, too). The receiver has a solid 26 watts (RMS) of power and the best FM sensitivity any we receive is $38.
Save $119.80
---
Technics SA-52000AM/FM Stereo Receiver $199.95
BSR 260AX CHanger $49.95
with base, dustcover and Shure Cartridge (No Charge)
Electric-Voice EV-11 A1S speakers (pair) $69.90
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You can imagine how much sound $300 will buy until you hear this one! You expect good 'spec' in a Kenwood receiver (it has em). But the microphone mixer doesn't do that. The suspension Pioneer speakers complete a really fine system.
Kenwood KR-3200A/MF.STereo Receiver $199.95
Garard 40B Changer 49.95
Base for Garrad 5.95
Base for KR68 Garridge 9.95
Pioneer Project 60 Speakers (pair) 139.90
if purchased separately $435.70
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Sounddesign 4307 AM/FM Stereo Receiver ... $79.00
Glenium 1100 Changer ... 44.50
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CMC Kit/Kit II ... 33.90
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---
if purchased separately $157.40
FM Specials for your car!
AUDIOVOX
FM Converter
(for your AM car radio)
Sale! $28.88
AUDIOVOX
FM Converter
TAPESALE!
All $69.95 list (Code E)
B-Track or Cassette Stereo
Tapes (reg. $48.8) for
We blocked this one for three reasons: it's the most compact FFm converter around in our array. It has 16 KHz circuitry for exceptional reception, which is well known to be found with an nanoized tuning dial
$444
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Not special recordings or last years' releases, but today's hits the songs you want now by artists like .. Bachman TURNER. E.I.
Speedwagon Jim Croce Doubble Decker Chicago Aliman Brotherhood Brett Anderson Cameron Carpenter Seats & Coatr. Emerson Lake-Paul Carpenters Ne Diamond,
JOURNAL OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
1973 AUGUST 20TH
AUDIOVOX
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AUDIOVOX FM Stereo Car Radio
Sale! **$59.95**
The most compact unit of the type on the market
yet it puts out full FM stereo performance if it
Savings on Tape Gear!
AUDIOVOX
B Track Deck
Sale! $29.88
A ready dependable tape player that plugs into a
compatible system. Features automatic program changer and program indicator.
waitful finish cabinet. fine tanning control and
fine listening quality.
Good Deals on Other Stereo Stuff
Item Reg. Sale
Dynax A-25, best buy speakers $89.00 $150.00
Munz HA-603 IAM/FM X Tortoise Stereo $155.00 $195.00
Koss K-601 Stereo Headphones $29.95 $19.95
Empire 66X Ejectal cartridge (30 list) $19.95 $9.95
PE 3012 Automatic Turntable with base and $60 ADC cartridge $72.95 $99.96
Panasonic
Pocket-Size Cassette
Still $69.95
Panasonic
Pocket Size Cassette
Still $69.95
Panasonic has already raised the price to $79.95,
but we have a few left that we can sell at the old
price. Panasonic's new cassette is larger and
creates. With a built-in condenser mike and one-
hand operation it is great for note-taking, and it
works on all the same.
week only! Sale ends Feb.28th
8 stores in the Kansas City area
GRANDVIEW, 12800 S. Hwy 71, 763-319-000
INDREPENDENCE, 3100S Noland Rd.
284-9343
INDEPENDENCE, 1830S Noland Rd.
K.C. K, KANSAS, 2612 State Ave. 371-2580
MISSION, 5400 John Dr. 262-5618
NORTHWEST PARK, 3426 S. 311-2580
OVERLAND PARK, 7820 Metcalf, 381-721-600
WALDO, 8201 Wollomock Rd. 361-9300
2 stores in Topeka
2 stores in Topeka
DOWNTOWN, 330 Jackson, 232-0475
WHITE LAKES MALL, 3658 S. Topeka Blvd.
267-3446
master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
STORE COUPON
SUPER COUPON OFFER!
Our regular $6.95, Model HP-1
Stereo Headphones $2.88
Note to CMC employees: These headphones are below store coat so coupon must be attached to store receipt.
CMC
STEREO CENTERS
When the good sounds cost less
with coupon when presented at any CMC Store Center, Unit 1 set per customer.
Offer expires:
9:00 p.m. Feb. 28,
1974.
STORE COUPON
10
Wednesday, February 20.1974
University Daily Kansan
Woman's Team Beats Washburn
By BRETT MARSHALL
Kanaan Sports Writer
The University of Kansas women's basketball team used the cold shooting of Washburn and a ball-hawking defense to pump an early ankle and then coast to an easy 57-21 victory over the Ichabods last night in Allen Field House.
victory for the *Hawks* would put them in a-way for the first place in Fort Hays State. They could be the best of both worlds.
In last night's game the Jayhawks jumped to a first quarter lead of 19-0 and then increased it to 27-0 before a basket by Washburn's Marla Lindenmeyer at the 3-47 mark of the second quarter gave the Ichabods their first points of the game.
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
44-Game Baseball Season Largest in History of KU
12
The Jayhawk baseball schedule for the upcoming season was announced recently by Coach Floyd Temple. The schedule inducts the largest schedule ever for the Jayhawks.
KU will启用 the season March 11-15 in Edinburg, Tex., at the citrus Tournament. The Jahyahs will play seven games there Texas A&M, Pan American and Missouri.
KU's Vicki Shirley (12) Drives Against Washburn
The schedule includes 23 home games, another "most ever" for KU. The
team's opponents will be
THE 'HAWKS', however, continued their pressure increases and increased their lead at
March 11-15-Citrus Tournament at Edinburg, Tex (7 games); March 16-ST
Stymped throughout the contest by the KU zone defense, the Washburn players were unable to attack and were forced to the inside. They suffered from cold shooting almost the entire game.
Mary's at San Antonio, Tex. (2); March 28-
@Mary's at Missouri State University.
(3)
April 2-Friends (2); April 5-Kansas State (2); April 6-Kansas State; April 9-Ottawa (2); April 12-Oklahma State (2); April 13-Oklahma State; April 16-Emory State (2); April 19-at Colorado (2); April 20-at Colorado; April 23-Wash-burn (2); April 26-Missouri (2); April 27-Missouri; April 30-William Jewell (2).
Coach Marian Washington said she was pleased with the performance of her team in the season.
May 3- at Nebraska (2), May 4- at Nebraska (3), May 5- at Nebraska (4), May 6- at Nebraska (5). may 1- at Iowa, state.
"We've been working extremely hard all season," she said. "But tonight we were
"Steph is our team leader on the court," Washington said. "She controls and runs our offense and just does a great job. She has been most valuable to our success this season. Debbie works extremely well under the basket and has a very soft shot. She has been an excellent player."
WASHINGTON PRAISED the entire team for its effort last night but did single out Stephanie Norris, Wichita senior, and Matthew Mullen, the more prominent for their outstanding performances.
sports
able to not only move with the ball on defense but apply continuous pressure to the ball.
Washington said she thought the experience that the team had gained throughout the season had led to the improvement of its defense.
"We've had some very tough experiences this year," she said. "Some of them have been good and they have of them bad but in the long run they have made us a better team."
THE SECOND HALF was much like the first, KU continued to press Washburn into both and erratic passes and by the end of the period had gained a 30-point lead, 45-15.
Washington substituted freely throughout most of the second half in an effort to keep the score down. In an earlier meeting this season at Topeka KU beat Washburn 77-31.
The fourth quarter was marked by numerous fouls on both teams. Despite playing reserves for almost the entire final KU increased its lead to the final 36 points.
"With the way our season has gone we can't afford to get overconfident against anybody," said Washington. "We've got to play at a time and just play our type of game."
Washington said her team never became overconfident even though the margin of
WASHINGTON was obviously pleased with her team's convincing victory but was more concerned about the game Friday night against Kansas State.
"It will be extremely important for us to play our type of game against the Wildcats, and in that we must play a ball-hawking defense as we did tonight and working together as a team on the field."
She said she was pleased with the squad's smoothness last night.
"We've been somewhat erratic at times on offense," she said. "When we play together we're strong from both the inside and the outside of our offense. We have a balanced attack and don't rely on any one phase of our offense to score our points."
The fast break could be a key in the Jahyhawk game against Kansas State. KU scored many easy layups against the Ichabods.
"If we beat the Wildcats then we'll be tied for first place with them and Fort Hays State and would qualify for the state championships," Washington said. "We'll win if we lose. We beat them by only three points over here, and it should be a good game."
AMERICAN COLLEGE THEATRE FESTIVAL
CENTRAL REGION AMERICAN COLLEGE THEATRE FESTIVAL
Four Productions Presented in The University of Kansas Theatre
February 20-23,1974
"110 IN THE SHADE"
(Musical version of "The Rainmaker") from Meramec Community College Kirkwood, Missouri 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday-February 20
The two star performers made a total 34 points last night. Norris made 18 and Laudermilk 16. Cindy Linquist led Washburn in scoring with six points,
Friday-February 22
"AFTERMATH"
(Original script)
from Ft. Hays State College,
Hays, Kansas
8:00 p.m.
"THE SERPENT" by Jean-Claude van Hallie from Kansas State College at Pittsburgh Two performances: 8:00 and 10:00 p.m.
Thursday-February 21
"THE SERPENT"
(Environmental theatre-limited seating)
Saturday-February 23
TICKET RESERVATIONS: 864-3982
UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL
"THE THREE PENNY OPERA"
By Brecht from Webster College, Webster Groves, Missouri
8:00 p.m.
WASHBURR (12L)
| | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Limequail | 0 | 1 | 4 | 5 |
| Limpot | 1 | 3 | 4 | 6 |
| Morbile | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Dauk | 1 | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| Lindemeyer | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Froehle | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| German | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| German | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| TOTAL | 3 | 11 | 12 | 21 |
**RANKIN**
| | 32 | 34 | 37 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| WASHBURR | 8 | 22 | 47 |
MANASN (37)
Kalley FG FT F TP
Patterson 1 0 2 3
Curle 1 0 2 4
Norrie 2 0 2 10
Ladlemlerk 7 4 4 16
MairFardland 1 2 4 4
Haggluf 1 2 4 4
Shirley 0 1 1 2
Horowitz 0 1 1 2
Harbrow 0 0 1 0
Hardwood 0 0 1 0
TOTAL 28 13 26 97
Grandview Wins Gymnastic Meet
The University of Kansas women's gymnastics team lost to GrandVictory College here Saturday in a triangular meet. The came after KU had beaten Emporia State, Fort Hays State and Kansas State earlier in the week.
Grandview outscored KU 94.45 to 73.20.
Wichita State was third with 62.55 points.
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Plenty of Excellent Seats Remaining All Seats $2.50-$3.50
National Lampoon -- SUA Presents
The Lemmings
A SATIRICAL, JOKE, MOCK-ROCK SEMI-REVUE
THIS SATURDAY 8 p.m.
Hoch Audirotium
Village Voice columnist and author of MARMALADE ME and LESBIAN NATION establishes herself more firmly than ever in the forefront of American writers.
JillJohnston
1
FEBRUARY 21 8:00 p.m.
SUA
No Admission Fee
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
FORUM ROOM KANSAS UNION
For Information Call 864-3477
m-
re
oss
te,
in
20.
ts.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 20.1974
11
Fellini's Film Full of Sex
By JEFF LOUGH Kansan Reviewer
What is regarded by many as Frederico Fellini's masterpiece, "La Dolce Vita," will be shown at 7:30 and 9:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. It is doubtful that the director or state senators will take notice, but Fellini will seek of sex and sexual degradation
Altaa Kib莽 plays a sex goddess of the cinema who comes out of the sky to replace an older, more respected deity. The presence of the hero, Marcelo Mastriami, creates a feature of this three-hour long examination and mores of a great city in the early sixties.
The film is divided into seven dramatically unrelated episodes. Unity is brought to the film not only by the presence of the hero, but also by a rather ambiguous theme concerned with modern sexual decadence.
Some of the conventions that Fellini assumes his audience understands are rather culturally bound. For example, does one readily assume that a beautiful woman with a black eye necessarily had a fight with a boyfriend? Some of the sensations felt by Bowie were not experienced first released probably will be missed by many Kansan Protestants and anostics
Fellini's city is a jungle with many types of predators. Sexual excess leads to corruption and boredom. These rather stark characters are the conic features of the clownish pederas sprinkled throughout the film. In one episode a particularly clear note is struck: an English-speaking woman asks a man to join her as a woman. The pederas don't answer.
"Never, never in all your life?" the woman persists. Finally the师能 answers in Italian, "I don't understand foreign words and goes off to dance with a muscle man."
Lesbian to Talk About Feminism
Jill Johnston calls herself a political lesbian feminist. She will speak about her emergence as a lesbian and her involvement in the feminist movement at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Johnston has written two books: "Marmalade Me," which is a collection of essays, and "Lesbian Nation," which is an consciousness and growth as a feminist.
Last September, Johnston said in a speech at the University of Massachusetts, "Lesbianism is the feminist solution. There are classes of people—one boys, one women."
She said that boys constitute the "ruling class" and that women must "remove the feminine form."
Johnston has been a columnist for the Village Voice since 1959 and has also contributed to the New York Times, MS magazine and Harper's Bazaar.
Automatics Shot At Hellicopter
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Secret Service confirmed yesterday that automatic weapon fire was used against a stolen Army bin. The incident approached the White House last week.
Photographs taken later showed that the Army HUB HBey helicopter was riddled with bullet holes in a pattern unlike that which would be left by shotgun fire.
After the bizarre flight by an Army mechanic early Sunday, authorities reported that police shotgun fire had been fired on the craft when it approached the White House.
Asked whether security guard and Secret Service agents had also fired their pistols, rifles, or other high powered rifles or weapons, Secret Service spokesman Jack Warner reported that "an automatic weapon was used."
He would not give other details, but Secret Service agents assigned to the protection of President Nixon are known to be trained in the use of submachine guns. Such weapons are carried by the agents during motorcades and other public appearances.
Meanwhile, a White House spokesman said he expected government security agencies to "re-evaluate their procedures" in the wake of the incident.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler declined to make a specific comment or to relay President Nikon's views on the airborne surveillance device, when the airborne scandal occurred.
Pfc. Robert K. Preston, a helicopter mechanic identified by authorities as the man responsible for the blast at Meade, Md., was superfically wounded in the wild finale at the White House. He was taken to Walter Reed Army Medical Center and remained for psychiatric evaluation.
Kenneth E. Anderson, professor of education, has received a Fulbright-Hays lectureship to Colombia, South America. Anderson will conduct seminars during July and August at Colombian universities on planning in higher education, use of statistics in planning, and the development of a system of junior colleges.
in brief
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Three Days
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it!
1. If you use them, they at an advantage
2. If you don't use them, they at a disadvantage
Ray Audio 12, E with Phone. Phone #842-387-3011 Hours available for my airfare problem. Cust $150
Either way it comes to the same thing—New
Maryland. It was an ideal location, available at
Campus Mahowny, Town Creef.
Tubulara - Hutchison spirit builts $495 only at
Ride On Bicycles. 11
For Sale: Hosta '1941 - Trail 70' circle. Also
available as a 6-foot tall, 28-inch
1450 after 32 weekdays, 40-day early Saturday,
20-July
French Motored Bicycle I HP 200 MPG; w/
car seat, child seat, and 1 mo gas.
843-857-357
AM-Push button radio for T2 Pinback - $FM
AM-Push button radio for T2 Pinback - $FM
AM-Push button automatic radio - under-wired
AM-Push button automatic radio
For sale. Stereo-Harmonian KSC82 compact
for sale. Stereo-Harmonian KSC82 compact
and stand. Best offer. Bzr.
Bor, 842, 123-6789.
www.stereoharmonian.com
be the once a year Magnavox annual sale is now in store. The digital high clock radio, Tracter recorder & records, Ray Stonebuck's 929 Mass. Your Magnavox. You can always do it on Open Thurs. nights, but you can always do it on Friday.
Tire clearance? GTS-14 with white bills to cut $20 plus
the coupon. Tire clearance? GTS-14 with white bills to cut $20 plus
Cassettes (pre-recorded) in A-1 condition 158
Cassettes (pre-recorded) in A-2 condition 179
Hays's Note Boxes 12 E 9th New L.P. in A-3 condition
Sounds of E 12 E 9th New L.P. in A-4 condition
Honda 750-1972-1971. 800 miles, gold color, not
used. Price $399.00 this spring $1,800.84-$644.84
Good used KLH compact stove with remote control. Just for $230, just $10 at aJC's 928's Mass Air Conditioner.
1970 BSA 600 - extended for front forks - runs great
-5,000 miles - Call 843-309.9
2-22
For sale- 2) Niklormat FI Mtools, New, new-
used. Call Steve. 843-1638, after 6 p.m. 2-22
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at real estate stores. Also antiques, used furniture, collectibles, artworks. North SIDE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. 2nd 3 days. North SIDE KAWai River bridge, open 9-6 each day. KAWai River bridge, open 9-6 each day.
For Sale-Men's 3 speed bike. Coast King; Al-
lens used. Lade used. $750 with accustomer
842-787-9571.
For Sale Two magnificent male Perkin Catkins.
Ship shed. One ship shed. Ship stcd. 843-271-9 - 9-22
FOR SALE. Removable hardpack for MGB. Excel
condition; must for cold weather. Carat:
2-26
For sale, 1961 Rambler, 6 cyl. good running con-
dition; 842 good mileage; $50 or best offer; 842-
good mileage.
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS. AKC-Sired by West Point Sam-Sam is an 85 pound professionally trained super-energetic hunting dog who also loves to play. I will walk your dog request. 824-5594.
FOR SALE 1871-1921 x . 50 furnished mobile base. Excellent condition. Located excellent location. Make an offer 841-288-6300.
NOTICE
Ever want something warm and bright to
Ever want something warm and bright to
31 St. Hours: 8:00 - 5:30 Mon-Sat,
2-22
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
513 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. We have open pit
basketball. Try our bridge plaid basket sandwich
or basket by the pound. Half-bucket chicken.
Three-quarter pizza by the pound. 9:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m. Clover Sunday and Tuesday. 8:25-10:10 If
TYPEWITHER CLEANING - 3 day service Smith's
taxi services, auto locks and accessories,
transport, antique clocks & watches
serviced and branded. Electronic and light industrial
cars. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 811-
670-3940. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 811-
670-3940.
Free: One JCI $23 bicycle car rack if you pur-
pose to ride on a bike ride. From Ride-On bike Shop. This rack and we have nice Invalve, Cannamia, Raleigh, Praugh,
& Moosetley. Bicycles Ride-On Bicycles.
2-28
Area's Largest Selection
Montessori pre-school (age 2½ to 5) has open-
session or PM session. Information: 843-725-25
843-764-894
LAWRENCE GAV LIBERATION, INC. Meetings
and Exhibits: 2015-06-17, 2015-08-01,
2015-09-14, 2015-10-13, 2015-11-12,
2015-12-12, 2015-12-13, 2015-12-14, 2015-12-15,
2015-12-16, 2015-12-17, 2015-12-18, 2015-12-19,
2015-12-20, 2015-12-21, 2015-12-22, 2015-12-23, 2015-12-24, 2015-12-25, 2015-12-26, 2015-12-27, 2015-12-28, 2015-12-29, 2015-12-30, 2015-12-31, 2015-12-32, 2015-12-33, 2015-12-34, 2015-12-35, 2015-12-36, 2015-12-37, 2015-12-38, 2015-12-39, 2015-12-40, 2015-12-41, 2015-12-42, 2015-12-43, 2015-12-44, 2015-12-45, 2015-12-46, 2015-12-47, 2015-12-48, 2015-12-49, 2015-12-50, 2015-12-51, 2015-12-52, 2015-12-53, 2015-12-54, 2015-12-55, 2015-12-56, 2015-12-57, 2015-12-58, 2015-12-59, 2015-12-60, 2015-12-61, 2015-12-62, 2015-12-63, 2015-12-64, 2015-12-65, 2015-12-66, 2015-12-67, 2015-12-68, 2015-12-69, 2015-12-70, 2015-12-71, 2015-12-72, 2015-12-73, 2015-12-74, 2015-12-75, 2015-12-76, 2015-12-77, 2015-12-78, 2015-12-79, 2015-12-80, 2015-12-81, 2015-12-82, 2015-12-83, 2015-12-84, 2015-12-85, 2015-12-86, 2015-12-87, 2015-12-88, 2015-12-89, 2015-12-90, 2015-12-91, 2015-12-92, 2015-12-93, 2015-12-94, 2015-12-95, 2015-12-96, 2015-12-97, 2015-12-98, 2015-12-99, 2015-12-100, 2015-12-101, 2015-12-102, 2015-12-103, 2015-12-104, 2015-12-105, 2015-12-106, 2015-12-107, 2015-12-108, 2015-12-109, 2015-12-110, 2015-12-111, 2015-12-112, 2015-12-113, 2015-12-114, 2015-12-115, 2015-12-116, 2015-12-117, 2015-12-118, 2015-12-119, 2015-12-120, 2015-12-121, 2015-12-122, 2015-12-123, 2015-12-124, 2015-12-125, 2015-12-126, 2015-12-127, 2015-12-128, 2015-12-129, 2015-12-130, 2015-12-131, 2015-12-132, 2015-12-133, 2015-12-134, 2015-12-135, 2015-12-136, 2015-12-137, 2015-12-138, 2015-12-139, 2015-12-140, 2015-12-141, 2015-12-142, 2015-12-143, 2015-12-144, 2015-12-145, 2015-12-146, 2015-12-147, 2015-12-148, 2015-12-149, 2015-12-150, 2015-12-151, 2015-12-152, 2015-12-153, 2015-12-154, 2015-12-155, 2015-12-156, 2015-12-157, 2015-12-158, 2015-12-159, 2015-12-160, 2015-12-161, 2015-12-162, 2015-12-163, 2015-12-164, 2015-12-165, 2015-12-166, 2015-12-167, 2015-12-168, 2015-12-169, 2015-12-170, 2015-12-171, 2015-12-172, 2015-12-173, 2015-12-174, 2015-12-175, 2015-12-176, 2015-12-177, 2015-12-178, 2015-12-179, 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2015-12-950, 2015-12-951, 2015-12-952, 2015-12-953, 2015-12-954, 2015-12-955, 2015-12-956, 2015-12-957,
MOTORCYCLE—repair and tune All make-
satisfaction guaranteed. Pick-up and delivery
service. Minor训甩 $21. Spring service per
$41. Tom for appointment. 845-837-521
2-22
Most Blue Party Lounge now available for private phone. Phone 842-3253 4 a.m. for pickup.
WANEDT Square舞衣能偶尔给 giving or receiving a fee. 20min 25min 20min 25min Calk Dane Kick Dance 845-906 or 643-173
MICKEY MOUSE IS A PUT-ON... Put him on your table. Mickey Mouse Jewelry is now available only at The White Elephant Market in Lawnware. These are made of white elephant leather with 12 k. gold. All items are distributed by The Walt Disney Distribution Co.-No cheap copies allowed. Mickey Mouse Market, 737 New Hampden, Open White Elephant Market, 737 New Hampden.
SERVICE PROBLEMS! You don't need to them like
this. Send the correct list of client needs. 18: W. 40th, Lawrence, Kaitlan
LEICA DENONSTRATION and rap session with
TOMMY CAMERA. Camera Store, 2117 Independence
Boyd Street
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Joe or Judy at the Quick Copy Center for your record copies of this lesson.
TITISH BINDING and capturing service available
Fast Service and reasonable prices. Phone:
814-790-5611.
Fast Service and reasonable prices. Phone:
814-790-5611.
FOR RENT
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
FOR BENT to male or female student. Nice job! Check out our website: www.freshforbent.com/Job/1-Block from Union, Parking and utilities paid.
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APAITM-SENSITIVE, clean and quiet 2 bed,
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JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS are on
square 10th floor with utilities paid by
villees paid by 843-699-8278.
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
Johnnie's
One and two efficiency, furniture. For males.
Near downtown. No pets. Nb. 543-7567. ff
a new beer place.
Open Evenings
Guitar Strings ½ Price
Friday Nite
(conner of Bth & New Nampshire)
745 new hampshire
Rose KEYBOARD
- Rental Office 1815 W.24TH
Crescent Heights
Hall.
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
FOR RENT—A new 2 bedroom apartment with
a pool, large kitchen, garage, NAS
conditioned, equipped storage, NEAM
residential.
- Oaks •Acorn
•Coollight
HILLWARE APARTMENTS, 1723-1745 West 8th
new landing & 2 bedroom furnished or unim-
pact, all furnishings in room, dining,
dining, carpet, disposal, all kitchen, hi-
tchen, laundry, bathroom. Resident in
Resident in App. 3. B412_6412, ife-
lled, Headed in App. 3. B412_6412, ife-
lled.
--for Airline tickets)
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
1903 Mass. 843-3007 Open Evenings
Gaslight
For dorm Bort-Very cheap room if occupied by
a student. Plenty furnished 4 bedrooms. Call
801-326-7522.
Permitted apartment for rent at 19 W. 1410,
75th St. 885 Gas and water paid. Call Tom.
685-726-3810.
WANTED
CATHEDRHEA APARTMENTS No lease requirements.
Call 954-5424 Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., or later.
Call 954-5424
Want to Bev? Hand work need shearens
Want to Bev? Hand work need shearens
your rent. Call Raih B341-84664 2-231
Raih B341-84664 2-231
Square dance either canake of giving instructor,
dancing in line, or calling for Duck Call Handkerchiefs 853-9900 or 842-7651
LOST
Organic Chemistry lab book, and notebooks from
their instructor. The two are them as they contain all my lab work done this semester, and can't be replaced. No questions
about it and generous reward offered. Call Pa-
843-4843
Case is lifting for BMI Company in Colorado.
Case has reopened health facility to 5 passengers. Requested quick
Female Rommitee needed: To share size, larger
rommitee required. Only Tally. Monthly Utilities call 841-267-0354.
WANTED - Large room or heated Garage (preferably on ground level) For ceramic studio. Capable in water or electric, will pay any applicable taxes and wheel and K.c. K.C.) call Linda, 843-506-3068.
If You're Planning on FLYING, Let Marvin训
WANTED: Need钥匙 (any number—student or traveler) to call, email or March 6. If you are interested, call: cell. call: 817-240-5053.
I've lost a harddisk blue lowland notebook. If you've found one, please call me: 842-8528. 2-20
Lost in Union, in flowered bag- "Whitfield塑片"
Lost in Union, in flowered bag- "Whitfield塑片"
Plain paper plate-Back-Curdles 4931 in Classical
Limited Edition Plain Paper Pad-Back-Curdles 4931
Lost gold ring-top on top, Friday the 2d.
Please phone 843-6000 REWARD. 7:20
LOST Brief case in Watson Library. Contact: johndoe@watsonlibrary.com of contents. Call 843-1057. No questions asked.
Do The LEGWORK For You! (NEVER an extra cost)
PHONE 843-1211
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
SUA / Maupintour
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
15 EAST 841.2656
Smoking Is Our Only Business
Let Maupintour
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
George's Shop
travel service
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
Use Kansan Classifieds
TREK
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
Gym Shorts
HELP WANTED
Festival of the Arts- March 24-30, 1500 tickets still available for all 7 nights. $7 coins for entire week can now be purchased at the SSA Individual night ticket sales start next month.
2-4-24
- Coaching Jackets
Rag
Tag
Part-time help for dairy farm general farming throughout the US. Must have tramway-trainer experience. Must have tramway-trainer experience. Must have tramway-trainer experience.
Interested in no-frills low-cost let travel to New York or Washington? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for you to travel. Go to phone in at 800-225-3691.
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
- Party Favors
- Tennis Shoes
SERVICES OFFERED
Meditation Research, Packing meditators at heart
and mind with deeper insight into their lives and
deeper values. For more information call
(800) 267-3144.
- Handball Equipment
PERSONAL
NINE-HOLE MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
are scheduled for 10 am and 2 pm. Information
about exhibitions, booth details, work
shows, and other information is available.
Call (804) 736-5233.
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles
Wanted: Navy veteran (on 8 years or less) for service as an Sailor, Captain, and borne crew. For details visit www.harborforce.org.
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
Need a secretary—general office skills required. Send resume to The Music People, Ltd. of State Office #1234567890.
Business matters needed for research projects. Pro-
grams required include:
*业绩-based business plans. Volunteers paid $400
per month.
*Master's degree in Business Administration or
equiv.
RIVER CITY REPAIR - 813. Vermont, 414-6938.
Switches +衣物 - Upkeepers. Independent repair specialists. No retail店. We service what repair replaces. Unimounted repairs. See blds.
- Sweat Suits
- Golf & Tennis Shirts
Tired of Housewarming? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and washing. Work dumps proffer a reasonable price. Please contact us for more information or ask Randy or Buff, #343-380 afterwards and evening.
- Tube Socks
Get ready for spring Gardens lilited. Organic
Garden Supply. Call 812-4731 or 812-3286
for 5 p.m.
Lawrence Rental Exchange
Casa de Taco
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
LMUSINEE & CHAIPEUFER SERVICE Univonne
Univonne plus gis
Negotiable Call 617-250-3984
- T-Shirts
K
842-2500
DOWNTOWN
The number to call for up-to-the minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
TWICE AN HOUR 25 & 45 past the hour
Town Tavern (formerly Johnle's)
401 N. 2nd
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
"KU ON WHEELS"
--atmosphere'
- Jersey's (cotton, double knit nylon mesh)
Another Student Senate Service
WE FEATURE:
Corner of 12th and Indiana
842.1059
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
Bud & Evelyn
Employment Opportunities
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
STUDENT ASSISTANT. Assist student in suggested Requirements:
Master of Public Administration degree. Expere-
nience in a state budget project. Some knowledge of the
Oklahoma Regional Commission activities would be
required. Commencement March 1, 1944 through June
30, 1974. Permit to work at the OARKS Regional Commission.
research grant. Salary $700 per month. Perform
scholarship assistant on a project concerning Kansas
scholarship on a project concerning Kansas
scholarship on the administrative financial and budget
data of the state of Kansas. Application Dressage: March 1,
1944. Please apply at the Institute for Social and
Environmental Studies. Apply online at www.ias.edu.
STUDIES EQUAL OPERFFENCY
EMployer QUALIFIED MEN AND WOMEN
ALL RACE ARE ENCOURAGED TO
TO PLY
Wanted Navy seals (out 8 years or less) for
assistance in conducting human resource
pay and benefits are required. For details
visit http://www.marinecare.com/.
Special three year enlistment program for women with mental ability who qualify to attend the Army equipment furnished and you will earn at least $600 per year. Students must be 18 years old or older, between Birmingham and Atlanta on two weeks. A normal year consists of two months of military training. May at the Army Reserve Center in Lawrence, Massachusetts, receive a commendation.
TYPING
Experienced Typist—will do typing, dissertations,
taper papers and miscellaneous typing. Call Pa-
meter 1207.
Typing in up home IBI Electr. Pica type
Typeing in up home IBI Electr. Pica type
Typeing in up home IBI Electr. Pica type
Confess to call. Call Kate. 841-256-9000.
off
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4980, Myra. 2-26
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Plea for type. Accurate and prompt writing. Have typed corrections corrected. PhD: 832-9543. Mrs. Wright
THE BODY SHOP
THE BODY SHOP
Vitamins & Supplements
843-9412
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
THE LINCOLN SCHOOL FOR BOYS
- Stained Glass
1-5 Sun.
2406 Iowa
843-9764
Open 8-5 Mon.-Sat.
MOTHER'S
Museum of Natural History
Dyche Hall
2408 Iowa
843-9844
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
- Books, Gifts
'Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties'
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
K
---
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
NIGHT CLASSES?
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RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
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ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
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1811 W. 6th, Lawrence, Kansas
843-3333
Parts & Accessories
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M
www
12
Wednesday, February 20.1974
University Daily Kansan
Kissinger Goes to Mideast Monday
WASHINGTON (AP)—Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger will begin a second round of shuttle diplomacy in the Middle East Monday, this time seeking a formula to separate Israeli and Syrian forces on the Golan Heights.
President Nixon announced Kissinger's new mission yesterday appearing in the White House Rose Garden. He was flanked by the foreign ministers of Egypt and Saudi Arabia. The purpose of the mission, Nixon said, is "to get the talks started."
Nixon conferred for 90 minutes with Ismail Fahmy of Egypt and Omar Sakkaf of Saudi Arabia. Their meeting, with Kissinger participating, marked the end of a three-day visit of the two Arab ministers to Washington.
Fahmy and Sakafkib brought a message to Nixon from the heads of state of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Algeria who met in Agliurs Thursday. What the message said neither the two ministers nor American officials repeated termed it as good news.
There was, however, no doubt that the news meant an Arab proposal worked out at the Aljiers minisitum and aimed at ending the deadlock between Syria and Israel.
The meeting here focused on the Syrian
City ...
From Page One
Sunset Drive in a letter she distributed to members of the board and the local media.
members of the board and the local media. In the letter, she said that the board didn't provide minutes of meetings on June 28 and July 23. Minutes of later meetings, she said, referred to "special meetings" of the board on those days, including action taken June 14 by representatives from Good Health to make a survey of the hospital's operations.
The hospital board was scheduled to meet today at 9:30 a.m.
-Lawrence-Douglas County Public
Bath Depot, $28,500 for remodeling, rent
and supplies.
In other action, the commission authorized the following allocations of city funds:
—Council on Aging, $7,500 for recreation,
an information and referral program,
and other benefits.
- Lawrence Public Library, $15,000 for the purchase of new books.
North Lawrence Improvement Assn. $10,000 for projects of its choosing.
-East Lawrence Improvement Assn,
$1,378 for improved street lighting.
The commission also authorized the use of $35,000 for renovation of the community building.
Next week the commission will discuss requests of $13,000 from Ballard Center, $12,500 from Cash Mental Health Center, $15,000 from Youth Corp., $8,650 from the Summer Teenage Employment Program (STEP) $9,000 from the Lawrence Housing Authority.
Revenue sharing allocations for 1974 will be drawn from funds the city will have received between July 1, 1973, and June 30, 1974. A total of about $61,000 in revenue sharing funds will have been received during this period.
Also scheduled for next week's meeting is a discussion of the possible funding of a new maintenance garage for city vehicles and could be financed by revenue sharing funds.
Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager, told the commission that construction of the garage could be financed with about $100,000. But the commission allocated but not used. That amount includes about $100,000 that had been allocated for repair of the hospital. Those funds haven't been used, he said, because of a new way by the hospital's board of trustees.
Another $221,000 has been allocated for conversion of the fire-police department facility at 745 Vermont St. into city offices. But Kallsen indicated that the facility wouldn't be vacated before 1977, the anticipated completion date for the new national facility. These funds could be used for construction of the garage, he said.
Use of those funds and about $250,000 that could be drawn from future revenue sharing allotments would bring the total of revenue to around $498,000. The garage project to $698,000, Kallsen said.
The city will still need to decide on a site for the garage before detailed plans can be drawn up.
A public hearing on the garage possibility will take place at next week's meeting of the council.
Israeli disengagement issue, but the question of lifting the oil embargo also came
When asked whether the disengagement talks and the lifting of the embargo were connected, Kissinger replied, "Not at all, the way you think they are connected."
We Also Deliver Sandwiches 843-9111
"Once we see that intentions are good, the embargo might be lifted . . . who knows, it might be lifted in one or two months," Sakkaf said.
But then, pressed repeatedly on this point and asked whether the Syrians held the key to the embargo, the Saudi minister said; "In a way, yes."
Neither Nixon nor the two Arab ministers mentioned the oil question when they made brief remarks in the Rose Garden, but Sakkaf said: "We believe something will happen soon for the benefit of the United States and the world."
Nixon stressed that he was seeking a
Because Kissinger has a date later this week in Mexico City for a conference of Western Hemisphere ministers there seems little chance of immediate negotiations. But he may wind up later this month in Geneva or in Jerusalem and Damascus using shuttle diplomacy to bridge the enmity between the October War foes.
permanent settlement in the Middle East, but added that the immediate problem was the lack of a military base.
Syria has refused to participate in peace talks until Israel gives up the territory taken after it was attacked by Syria. Israel, under preconditions, had been placed on the precondition of a list of warrants for Syria and visits to them by the Red Cross. Over the last month Kissinger is known to have been working on a compromise by which the prisoner lists would be obtained from Syria. On the other stage, A key question is how much of the strategic territory Israel is willing to yield.
Campus Hideaway
TOPEKA (AP)—State Republican Chairman Jack Ranson has told a news conference the GOP "has nothing to hide and we want the truth out" in reply to charges that a researcher hired by Republicans offered to aid and become a double agent.
Democratic state headquarters released a statement yesterday that contained excerpts from a diary. Mary Hanfelt, Gov. Rick's personal secretary, said she kept.
The excerpts alleged that the researcher, J. Wayne Poucher of Nashville, Tenn., proposed to "doctor" a tape recording so that Docking could accuse Republicans of splicing the tape and thus discredit the GOP.
"Only people in the Docking administration can answer that," Ranson said when asked whether it was true. "I know nothing about it."
GOP Answers Democrat Charges
Poucher denied, in conversations with the Associated Press last weekend, that he was not fired.
Ranson told his news conference.
yesterday he had been told that Democratic State Chairman Norbert Drelling was going to make the tape-splitting allegation public, and that that was the only knowledge he had of it.
Ranson said he had not asked Poucher about validity of the Democrats' assertion. He said he called the news conference "to set the record straight."
Ranson told the news conference Poucher did this without his knowledge. Ransud said he had spotted discrepancies in what Poucher had told him in different conversations since the Democrats made their charges.
"I have to conclude from the information I've seen so far that he received nothing which turned over information which went clear on the scope of his assignment from us."
Miss Handelt in an attempt to exchange information with her.
“At times, I felt he was telling me things in conversations which were somewhat different from what he said earlier.” Ranson said. “I think he was sitting in judgment on his credibility
"That is ridiculous," he said.
Agents of the attorney general's office attended the news conference armed with a subpoena for Poucher to appear before the Shawnee County grand jury next Tuesday. But Poucher was not at the news conference.
Ramson said Poucher had confirmed to him that he turned a tape recording, at least one of his own.
That assignment, Ranson reiterated, was for Poucher to assess the political situation in Kansas as it relates to U.S. Sen. Bob Dole. Docking and other top potential candidates and to investigate rumors of wrongdoing in the Docking administration.
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
INTRODUCTORY
INTRODUCTORY
LECTURE Wed., Feb. 20, 8:00 p.m.
PREPARATORY LECTURE
Fri., Feb. 22, 8:00 p.m.
LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
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Forecast: Colder with rain likely. High near 50, low near 30.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mrs. Dykes Also Busy
84th Year, No. 95
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, February 21, 1974
See Story Page 6
10
Dyche Hall Now Stands on Campsite of L. L. Dyche
KU Promoted by Early Professors
Editor's Note: This is one of a series of stories about the men for whom KU burgled the museum.
By RANDY SCHUYLER Kansan Staff Reporter
Gargoyles stare distainfully from the walls of Dyche Hall, named in honor of L. L. Dyche, professor of natural history, who ordered for construction of the building in 1899.
Dyche came to KU in 1877. He was broke. He camped out where the building is now and supported himself by hunting. He distinguished himself in 1893 by exhibiting a
panorama at the Chicago World's Fair. The exhibit included the stuffed horse Comanche, the last non-Indian survivor of Custer's last stand.
He was so well known by 1877 that when the state legislature made cuts in all the faculty members' salaries, Dyche was the only one exempted. In 1899, he began lobbying in Lawrence for a new museum where his exhibits could be shown.
The building was built in 1902 and Dyche was the first curator.
Dyche was successful in publicizing KU, but Francis Huntington Snow, the fifth wife of Dyche, died.
foundation for the museum's huge collections which now have more than 500,000 books.
Snow was one of the first three professors hired by KU at its inception. To get specimens for his biology classes, he went out and hunted animals himself.
One day Snow went fishing on the Wakarawa river. He fell in. His foot hit something hard and he pulled out the lower jaw of a mastodon. This became the nucleus
Snow also distinguished himself in the field of entomology, collecting large
See DYCHE Page 5
By LINDA A. HALES
Kennes Staff Recruitment
Budget to Cut LA&S Staff
Kansas Staff Reporter
Severe budget cuts in the College or Liberal Arts and Sciences will result in numerous cutbacks in teaching assistants and even some faculty positions next year.
The college may lose between $277,000 and $135,000, depending on the method used to figure the amount, George Waggoner, dean of the college, said yesterday.
"We are unhappy with the cuts," Waggoner said, "and realize that they looked at the credit-hour totals of the bank. We were down some 10,000 credit hours."
At least 44 teaching assistant positions and seven faculty positions will probably be eliminated by the cutback. The full-time faculty positions are primarily visiting professors and existing vacancies that won't be filled.
"We are not proposing, to drop anyone who has tenure." Wacquer said.
Department chairmen said news of the teaching position cutbacks came as a result of the department's closures at their regular monthly meeting and were informed only of the cuts in their own
Bryant Freeman, chairman of the French department, said, there was "a guy at the club."
The envelopes, he said, contained names of people whose positions could be eliminated, in the opinion of college administrators.
Waggoner said that before the chairmen's meeting, he had been instructed by Ambrose Sarics, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to prepare a budget for the college that would fall within the confines of the cutback.
"We reduced the budget, taking into account, first, the needs of the departments and then, the rigidity of the budget as it legally exists," Waggoner said. "We looked at all things that were detachable, both full-time and part-time, to the minimum needs of the department's."
Waggoner said a "total analysis" was submitted to the department heads.
"We said, 'look at the aspects of the weather that could be dropped, then tell us what the consequences would be for each case.'" We responded that they couldn't drop anything.
Waggoner said that most departments
Ten states were given five per cent more gasoline, and 10 states got another two per cent. The increases announced Tuesday are based on a report announced Feb. 9, creating some confusion.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The latest Federal Energy Office (FEO) effort to smooth out February's gasoline distribution has given regulators more effect on service station lines is unclear.
Here, in question and answer form, is the latest, possibly final, word as explained by them.
FEO Increases Gas Allotments to 20 States
Q. You've lost me already. What was supposed to happen in February in the first week?
A. February was supposed to be the first month in which gasoline, and some other petroleum products, were distributed from refineries to suppliers, to dealers and sometimes to customers according to a new set of federal regulations.
The purpose was to provide a fair distribution during the present shortage. Farming, on which the nation depends for 80% of its food supply, it required, before anyone else was served.
Certain essential services, which purchase gasoline in bulk quantities, were also
to receive all they need. Other services, including service stations, were to receive as much gasoline as they received in February 1972, but those allocations would be reduced, if necessary, in proportion to the shortage.
Q. Yes, I remember now, but I sort of argue that while I was waiting in line an employee asked me to pay the bill.
A. Well, you see, there was one little hitch in the program. The regulation was not designed for getting equal amounts of money from the dealers or areas or anything like that.
The allocations were to be carried out by粗油 oil company, based on its own supply
Some companies had larger supplies than others. Some served certain areas more heavily than others. The FEO says the February allocation would have reflected historical distribution patterns, and there would have been imbalances in some areas.
Q. But I thought that the energy office told all the states exactly how much they would pay for the job.
Wait, the word "energy" is clearly visible.
The whole sentence is:
Q. But I thought that the energy office told all the states exactly how much they would pay for the job.
A. That's right. On Feb 6, the energy
Office gave newsmen a 55-page computer
However, it wasn't an official allocation, but only the oil companies' estimates for each state. The FEO says those estimates were largely inaccurate.
printout listing the gasoline allocations to each state. They presented it, at first, as the
A. They sent special study teams into 20 states that seemed to have particularly tough problems of gasoline supply to check those estimates, and energy chief William E. Simon said Tuesday study teams would be sent to all 50 states.
A. On Feb 9, the energy office asked the oil companies to transfer some gasoline from 10 states with relatively good supplies to the district of Columbia, all having poor supplies.
Q. Well, what are they going to do about it?
Q. That's very nice and I hope they get their straight in time for March, but what?
Nominations of Teachers Sought For Four KU Teaching Awards
Q. How much?
A. Up to two per cent of each state's original February supply.
A. Not necessarily. The companies had to make the transfers only to the extent practicable and considering limitation of their distribution systems. That means they didn't have to do it at all, if they could find a good excuse not to.
A. No, Up to two per cent. It could be less.
Q. Well, at least it's more than they had been.
Nominations for four University of Kansas distinguished teaching awards are now being received at the Office of the Vice President in Academic Affairs. The deadline is March 8.
As previous winners, these faculty members are ineligible: Anthropology; Felix Moos, Business; Kirk S. Prentice; Kenneth W. Knopf; Chemical and Petroleum Engineering; Don W. Green, George W. Swift; Chemistry; Clark E. Bricker; Education: Flora Wast; English; Peter Casmrangle; Roy E. Roy; Dennis B. Nickelck, Dennis B. Gunn; Elizabeth Schultz.
Q. Two per cent?
Chancellor Ambrose Saricks in 231 Strong Hall
Q. Which states, under the F. 9 order, may get from two to two per cent more land?
Funds for one of the awards were donated by H. Bernerdorf of Topkea, a 1931 firm, for whom the award is named. The funds are financed by the Amoco Foundation, Inc.
The selection committee is anonymous and comprises both faculty members and students.
A. Right, I left illinois, Maryland, New Jersey and Virginia because they no longer fit in that group. I'll explain about them in a minute.
French and Italian: Barbara Craig,
Geography: Robert W. McCall; Geology:
Albert J. Rowell, German: Helga Viiglano,
History of Art: Jaume Stump; History of
Art: Jeanne Stump; Journalism:
John Bremner, Calder M. Pickett, Lee F.
Young, Mathematics: Fred S. Van Vleck;
Mechanical Engineering: Louis Burmeister,
Music Theory: John W. Pozdzik;
Philosophy: Afonso de la Pesquisa e
Political Science: Anael Pezzani;
David S. Holmes, Slavic Languages and
Literatures: Sam Anderson, Spanish:
Andrew Debicki.
A. Arkansas, Delaware, the District of
Columbia, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi,
Missouri
Q. That’s only nine; you said 12 plus the District of Columbia.
There is neither form nor formula for nomination. The committee, however, requests that letters of nomination include a letter of support and a list of Letters should be addressed to Vice
The four awards, each carrying a $1,000 stipend, will be presented at *Commitment*
A. Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma.
Q. O.K., now which states may lose anywhere from nothing to two per cent in inflation?
Any KU teacher may be nominated by any faculty member, student, school, department, campus organization or group of individuals.
Q. What now about those four you left out?
A. They also appeared on the list of 20 states announced Tuesday by the FEO.
None of the others were listed twice.
Q. What does that mean?
weren't happy with the reduction and that he and other college administrators sympathized.
The decision on which positions to eliminate, he said, was left for the department.
A. On Tuesday, the FEO listed 10 states whose February gasoline supply would be increased five per cent: Alabama, Arizona, Texas, Florida, and New Jersey; Vermont, West Virginia, and New Jersey
Several chairmen indicated that they approved of Waggoner's handling of the problem.
The department hasn't hired a full-time faculty member since 1971, he said, because of funding and "the way the administration perceives our enrollment."
Enrollment in the department has declined some, but is stabilizing. he said.
Brower Burchill, chairman of biological sciences, said only one of two faculty vacancies would be filled because of the cutback.
and Virginia. Those last two were on the old list. Their previous "maybe" two per cent in now included in their definite five per cent, but those must provide those five per cent increases.
The February supplies of gasoline were also increased two per cent Tuesday for Connecticut, Florida, Indiana Massachusetts, Missouri, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Illinois and Maryland.
These last two also were on the old list. Their "maybe" two per cent now has been made a definite two per cent which the oil companies must provide.
"It's a complex situation and it has been dealt with very well," said Rex Martin, chairman of the philosophy department. "In thought, though, the students will be burt."
Oliver J. Phillips, chairman of classes and classical archaeology, said, "Waggoner promised to help us but I don't know if he's ever been caught in this kind of bind."
Freeman said the chairmen were given 24 hours to defend in writing the positions that they have agreed to.
The English department will lose seven assistant instructors and one full-time position will not be filled, George J. Worth, chairman of the English department said,
will lose four part-turtles teaching assistants,
one assistant professor and one visiting
fact of this c time is due in part, he said,
to the fact that assistant professors must be
notified by March 1 if their contracts aren't
to be renewed.
"I wish it could have been with more advance notice, more lead time." Freeman
"I'm disappointed but I think I understand why it's necessary," he said.
The French department, Freeman said.
Although Burchell had the option of filling the faculty positions at the expense of teaching assistant positions, he said he really had no choice.
See LA&S Page 10
"We traded teaching assistants for faculty last year. he said. "To do it again we had to hire a new instructor."
the wall wouldn't leave the same marks,
the experts said they hadn't done that but
were certain that pulling the plug would not
leave marks.
2 Challenges Emerge From Tape Reports
The challenge came from Allan D. Bell Jr., president of Dektor Counterintelligence and Security, Inc., who appeared first on a Washington television interview program. He said the team had been linked to the power input on the machine, could have caused pulses that would have left the same marks the experts said were caused by pushing of buttons on the computer.
Members of the White House staff suggested to reporters that they watch the televised debates.
The chemistry department will lose three out-of-time equivalent teaching assistants,
And both challenges were factors that prompted U.S. District judge John J. Sirica on Tuesday to order all those involved in the trial to further public discussion of the matter.
One challenge came from a volunteer, the other from an unnamed expert consulted by James D. St. Clair, President Richard Nixon's chief Watergate attorney.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Following encouragement from the White House, two challenges have emerged from a crucial moment in the Watergate scandal, examining the subpoenaed Watergate tapes.
The experts also testified that they had found a defective part in Miss Woods' recorder and replaced it. That action was the basis of the publicized challenge.
At issue is the report of the six-member panel of exports on the 18th - minute gap in the tape of a June 20, 1972, conversation between the President and H. R. Haldenman.
The panel, chosen jointly by the White House and the special prosecutor's office, and then appointed by Sirica, told the court it had determined that the Uber 5000 recorder on which Rose Mary Woods, the President's secretary, had listened to the complaint was dismissed and started manually at least five times during the 18%-minute segment.
The experts said they based their conclusion on the electronic marks made by the record and erase heads on the Uber wiper head. The head is left on the tape when the record key pops up and sends a momentary pulse of electricity through the heads just before
St. Clair questioned the experts about whether they were certain that decapitating animals could cause brain damage.
But Ziegler also told reporters at a briefing on Tuesday that Bell wasn't the expert St. Clair has cited in statements of the committee. Hussein has refused to name the experts.
More recently, when Bell's theory was discussed favorably in an article in Science magazine, a publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science House Press Secretary L. Ziegler told reporters they should read the article.
Bell said in a telephone interview that his conclusions were drawn from an examination of the panel's report. He said he had no access to either the tapes or the recorders that were turned over to the court-appointed group.
Vets Fight for Academic Survival
By BOB MARCOTTE
Kansas Staff Reporter
Steven Wheelseh, Lawrence freshman, enlisted in the Navy in October 1984 and served four years, most of them aboard landing ships in the Orient and the Pacific, to evacuate some of the last marines to live Vietnam and was shot at by the enemy.
He's now one of about 1,100 veterans enrolled at the University of Kansas, some of whom are Vietnam veterans like himself. The transitions he had to make after leaving the service and coming to KU are in many representative of the experiences of others.
Wheelhouse isn't one to brag about his military service, but he said the experience had given him a different outlook from most students.
"A LOT OF PEOPLE are here only to party," he said. He spent three years barbring in the navy, he said, found it a waste of time and money, and after another week, he left.
His experiences in the service taught him that "40 per cent of the people you meet outside of school only can you as a friend for the advantage they can take of you. A lot of students don't know what it's like out there."
"They think the only thing on your mind is sex and booze—in that order." he said.
He said he hadn't encountered any resentment from fellow students; but when he first came to KU, he said, he encountered a joke, especially among girls, of the navy man.
Because of that, he said, he usually doesn't tell other persons that he is a veteran until he has "talked to them for at least 10 minutes."
"THEY HAVE TO KNOW what is really inside of me before I let them know."
One of the reasons he enlisted, he said, was to keep his parents from having to put him through college. He had a sister attending KU at the time of his enlistment.
He drew $220 a month in GI benefits after coming to KU from the service. It wasn't enough to cover all his expenses, he said, and he ended up having to get money from KU or from another month or so to help with big expenses such as payments for car insurance and tutition.
"I was over there doing a job. I went in to
she else wouldn't have to." he said.
He applied for part-time work at four or five places when he first came to KU, but he said he hadn't received a reply from any of them.
RENT ALONE EQUALS about one-half of his monthly check, he said.
His benefits went up $40 a month after he married in December, he said, but the total still equaled only about one-third of the pay and benefits he got while he was in the
DEAN KACLEY, AN ADVISER in the dean of men's office, said he had talked with Mr. McPherson.
He has at least a casual acquaintance with about 15 or 20 other veterans on campus. He is philosophical about his military service.
But it hasn't been all hardship for him since he got out of the service. He is now in his third semester at KU and his training in geography has made a huge difference in meteorology and geography.
Kackley said he hesitated to make generalizations about campus veterans, but
They face the same challenges, he said, as other students who come back to school.
he said most were older and more independent than many students and faced the challenge of acclimatizing themselves to a very different social environment.
"A lot of veterans did not crack a book to study for four years," he said. Some of them went into the military because they didn't like the "academic bag," he said, but later found that they didn't care much for military life either.
For these, the process of becoming students again is a tedious one of disciplining themselves to sit down to study. For those who are among veterans on campus, he said, is finance. The sole source of income for most veterans, he said, are the benefits provided by the GI Bill. The benefits, he said, are just enough to get the veteran through school. But GI benefits are often not enough, he said, for a veteran to buy civilian clothes or to purchase a set of pots and pans for his household. Most veterans persons straight out of high school would already own or could borrow from their families.
Several veterans are interested in jobs, he said, but have been unable to find any.
Other veterans he has talked with, he said, seemed as though they were lost.
"They seem indefinite about what they want to do. They get here and feel like they know."
AFTER THEIR EXPERIENCES in the military, Karkley said, "we view things differently."
He has noticed a camaraderie among campaver students, and not in the sense of friendship.
See CAMPUS Page 2
2
Thursday, February 21, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news capsules / the associated press
Military Spying Encouraged, Yeoman Says
Yveyanne Charles E. Radford testified yesterday in Washington that for a year he secretly obtained volumes of sensitive diplomatic information from the U.S. Department of State.
Testifying before a closed session of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Radford said he was carefully trained by two admirals to obtain
Rafford said he acted at all times at the request of his military superiors, who cautioned him to keep accret the funneling of White House files to the
Maryland Suing Simon, 20 Oil Companies
The state of Maryland filed suit against federal energy chief William E. Simon and 20 major oil companies yesterday in an effort to increase an interest rate on gasoline.
The action came as authorities in 20 states, including Maryland, worked to decide where to use a one-time gasoline allocation given by the agency.
In Annapolis, Md., Gov. Marvin Mandel said the suit filed in U.S. District Court by the state sought an injunction against Simon, a regional energy official and 20 oil companies to force them to revise the amount of gasoline required from him by law. The judge told defendants until 11 p.m. Friday to show why the injunction should not be issued.
By HALRITTER
Kansas State Reporter
Trustees Reject Good Health Pact
The board of trustees of Lawrence Memorial Hospital unanimously rejected yesterday a contract proposed by Good Health Care Management, Inc., to serve as project managers for the building of a new hospital in Lawrence.
Three trustees voted to reject Good Health's proposed contract. Trustee Dolph C. Simons Jr. abstained and trustee Gene Burnett was out of town.
Lenz's main objection to the contract was that it did not allow the board to negotiate separate contracts for the consultant and architect or provide that the consultant would be offered a flat fee based on projected construction costs at the time the contract was signed.
The board's vote came after hospital administrator Don Lenz read a memorandum containing 11 reasons for not approving the contract. The memorandum was written after Lenz had studied the contract and decided its implications in a number of hospital administrators and Kansas Hospital Association representatives."
The proposed contract would have allowed good Health to select an architectural firm and to pay it 4 per cent of construction costs out of the 8.5 per cent of total costs incurred in such projects received as its fee. Good Health also wanted its payment to be based on final con-
Officers of Campus Veterans, a student-sponsored organization aimed at helping the veteran on campus, said the veterans had been given additional problems and obtaining tutorial assistance.
Also in the memorandum, Lenz said to $7\frac{1}{2}$ per cent was a more acceptable range for total project fees, according to the memorandum. The hospital administrators he had talked to
described it as an "immediate sense of identity, and said veterans often found it a blessing."
HALBETT SAID FETERANS attending KU could pay for their semester tuition in three installments. Veterans can pay one-third at enrollment and pay the rest in two later installments. The dates for the two weeks in semester, he said, are March 1 and April 1.
Questions from veterans, according to Stephen Halbett, secretary-treasurer of the organization, usually concern the arrival of benefit checks on time.
From Page One
In addition to providing information for veterans, the organization has worked to obtain for them tutorial assistance. Veterans are entitled under the GI Bill, which requires completion of a test of $80 a month. Halbert said Campus Veterans had contacted department heads for lists of tutors and had divided the lists into veterans and non-veterans.
struction costs rather than projected construction costs.
Board president Warren Rhodes had supported Lenz's 7 to 7/3 per cent figure earlier in the meeting when he presented proposals from two other consulting firms, which listed project fees of 7 per cent and seven and five-eighths per cent.
"We try to get vets to tutor vets," Halbett said.
Campus Veterans Fight . . .
Dole has introduced a bill in the senate that will come before the Veteran's Affairs Committee in March. Dole's bill would provide:
BOTH HALBETT AND JOE LEVOTA,
president of Campus Veterans, said they had had favorable responses from Kansas legislators regarding bills now before the U.S. House and Senate. The bills would increase education benefits to veterans.
-a tuition payment to veterans for costs
allow $400 a year, applicable for total
tuition
LeVota said Sens. Bob Dole and James Pearson and Reps. Kate Seibelius, Garner Shriver and Larry Winn had written Campus Veterans to express their support for any measures that would increase benefits for veterans.
— an increase of 13.6 per cent in benefits
or vocational in vocational rehabilitation and
other services.
In addition to the tutorial service, he said, Campus Veterans sponsors intramural sports.
Among Lenz's other objections was that the one-half per cent for administrative fees, included in Good Health's 8.5 per cent fee, should be removed and handled by the owner.
- an extension from 36 months to 45 months for benefit eligibility.
Lenz also said the consultant was expected to "advise and assist the hospital in obtaining certificate of need, making presentations before area and regional planning organizations and in public hearings or legal proceedings," yet those responsibilities were excluded under the proposed contract.
Dr. John Simons, president of Good Health, agreed with some of Lenz's criticisms and disputed others. Simons said Good Health would assume some of the responsibilities Lenz had said the contract neglected to include.
—an extension from eight years to 10 years after discharge during which a veterinar can complete his education with the help of the GI Bill.
ANOTHER BILL, INTRODUCED by Sen. Vance Hankie, D-Ind., would increase the benefit rate for veterans attending school to 30% from the current increase from $220 a month to $720 and for students with one dependent from $261 to $321 a month. The bill would also increase the limit on tutorial benefits from $50 to $60 and the maximum for tutorial assistance from nine to 12 months.
LeVota said a bill had been introduced in the house that would increase benefits by 13.6 per cent. All three bills will probably be passed by Parliament, joint house and senate committee, he said.
Legislation introduced this session in the Kansas Legislature to make tuition loans less expensive for veterans was defeated in committee, LeVota said.
The bill would have provided for 5 per cent interest on tuition loans to veterans, he said, and would have permitted a 10 per cent reduction of the loan debt for each year the veteran remained in Kansas after graduation.
Trustee Ben Barteles said his negative response to a new contract was based on the results of a report made earlier in the meeting, which he called "shocking."
town the board needs to get together and talk over a lot of things," said Rhodes.
The report, by the Arthur Andersen & Co-accounting firm, told the effect that building a new hospital would have on room rates.
According to the report, even if prices are increased $7\%$ per cent each year through 1983, which is currently the maximum annual increase allowed under federal Phase IV regulations, the hospital will have deficits of more than $3.9 million by 1982.
The cost report estimates were based on the issuance of $13,969,000 worth of 7 per cent tax-exempt industrial revenue bonds, which would be paid off in monthly installments of $83,000 over a 36-year period.
"That's fine but the contract doesn't say in paper what you're saying verbally." Lenz said. "It would be very foolish for this board to sign a contract in that case."
With an increase in costs of 75 per cent a year, hospital room rates would increase from $34 to $78 in 1983, and the average cost would increase from $216 to $260. The increase from $62 a day to $183 by 1983.
Because of the projected deficit, Barteledes said he thought the board had some things to consider before it would be ready to look at a new contract.
Lenz said patient would increase in those contained in the report regardless of the actual number of patients.
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After the board voted, Simons asked whether the board wanted him to prepare a new contract. Trustee Bob Billings said yes and added he thought the differences that existed could be worked out. Two other 'rustees disagreed.
In other action that concerned a new hospital, the board voted unanimously to build a hospital next to the existing hospital, to attach it to the 1969 wing of Lawrence Memorial and to demolish the rest of the hospital.
"I feel that when we can get five people in
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CHAMPAGNE DE FRANCE
The KU CONCERT SERIES presents . . .
The Awaji Puppet Theatre of Japan
PERFORMANCE
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, February 24
University Theatre
DEMONSTRATION 8:00 p.m.
Monday, February 25
University Theatre
XXX XXX XXX
The AWAJI PUPPET THEATRE is a unique Japanese art form which evolved among the rural classes of medieval Japan. An "intangible national treasure," it is being preserved by the people of Awaji Island. The Awaji puppets are larger in size than the well-known bunraku puppets from Osaka and each pupet is worked by three puppeteers. Accompaniment is provided by a narrator who chants the story and takes on the roles of all the puppets, as well as by a shamisen (a stringed, banjo-like instrument). The AWAJI PUPPET THEATRE will provide a truly theatrical experience.
For those interested in learning more about the Puppet Theatre a free demonstration will be held by the artists Monday evening at 8:00 p.m., in the University Theatre.
TICKETS CAN BE OBTAINED FOR THE SUNDAY PERFORMANCE AT MURPHY BOX OFFICE (while they last)
TICKETS FREE WITH KU STUDENT ID
PUBLIC TICKETS . . . $3.00-$3.50-$4.00
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 21, 1974
3
P
nsan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
Blood Donor Salute
The raised arms of blood donors are a common sight in the Kansas Ballroom but they are not common enough. The Red Cross drive on the KU campus is
still 712 pipes short of its goal to 1,200 piles of blood. Students will be able to donate blood today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Templin Hall.
Tree Restoration Funds Denied by Legislation
The state legislature has turned up a request for funds to replace trees destroyed by last summer's windstorms. Raymond Murray, an aransas chancellor emeritus, said yesterday.
"We'll have to find the money somewhere," Nichols said.
Nichols said 77 trees were lost because of the storms last summer. He said he could not place a dollar figure on the loss because cost would depend upon whether the trees were replaced by mature trees similar in size to those destroyed or by young sainthals.
"We'd like to get something other than saplings." Nichols said.
Nichols said Alton C. Thomas, landscape architect for the University, was drawing inspiration from his childhood.
"We're going to begin replacing the trees this spring," Nichols said, "but it will probably take several years to replace them all."
Harold E. Bitch, grounds supervisor for the University, said trees on campus were not insured because of the high cost of insurance premiums.
"It would cost too much to insure the
UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will discuss the interpretation of Faculty Senate membership and meet with faculty representatives at 3:30 p.m. today in 180 Blake Hall.
SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL
JOURNALISTS must Delta Hc, meeting,
the annual meeting of the Society.
JON VINCENT, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, will speak on Joao Guamaras Rosa, a contemporary Latin American fiction writer, at 8 tonight in the Pine Room Kamas Union. The speech is sponsored by Sigma Delta FI, the Spanish honors society.
on campus
trees.” Blitch said. “If trees are lost we to ask for legislation for repair.” He replies, “I will be able to replace them.”
Biltish said the buildings and grounds department had removed all of the trees that had died prior to winter and that tree and shrub planting had begun, but that the city would still be "routine landscaping" around the Wescoce Hall and the new Watkins Hospital.
"Almost all of the materials for this landscaping have been purchased," Bilch said, "but that doesn't mean that all the planting will be done at once."
He said approximately 75 per cent of the trees and shrubs would be delivered in the spring if weather permitted, and landscape completion was scheduled for this fall.
"We receive spring and fall deliveries of plants from dealers across the United States," Bitch said, "but sometimes rain or snow can stop planting immediately after delivery."
Bilch said donations of plants or trees to the University should be directed first to R. Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning and operations. Funds to pay for proposed donations of trees or shrubs should be given to Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the National Park Management Association. Thomas will then determine where donated trees will be placed.
Any trees donated through the Endowment Association will probably be purchased locally, Bitch said. If state funds are not available, the agency approved by the State Purchasing Office.
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Thursday, February 21, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
"No More Watergates"
One of the side effects of the Watergate scandal and its manifold appendages may be a concerted effort on the part of politicians and citizens to reform the federal government.
The cry of "No More Watergates" may be as vehemently sounded as the cry of "No More Vietnams" or "No More Koreans. A number of proposals have already been made to elevate the conditions that supposedly led to the Watergate scandals.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., has said that the Senate Watergate Committee may propose that presidential advisers be subject to Senate confirmation. Another proposal is to limit the presidency to one six-year term in office. A plan for reauthorization would have presidential campaigns paid for with public funds.
These proposals are rather limited in the sense that they would fit into the existing framework of the government. Some observers have suggested more sweeping reforms, however. It has been pointed out that under the British system of parliamentary democracy, a discredited prime minister can be positioned more easily as a trusted president can be under the American system. Thus, one proposal for safeguarding against further Watergate is that the president be removed from office on a vote of no confidence by the Congress.
Obviously, such a plan would have implications far beyond making it easier to change presidents. A switch toward a more democratic system would profound effects on our political system, almost from top to bottom. Our political parties would have to be drastically reformed, and
greater party loyalty would be required to maintain a president in office against purely political attempts to oust him.
All of these problems notwithstanding, there is perhaps a more basic fallacy in the reform proposals. These proposals concentrate almost exclusively on the system. Americans seem to enjoy reforming systems. It is as if we believed that by reforming the system we can magically transform all of nature.
What we need to remember is that a system, any system, is only as good as the people who work within that system. None of the proposed reforms would make government scandals impossible. No matter what new rules or procedures are invented, someone will find a way to bend those rules to his advantage or even break the rules outright and then cover his trail with a tortuous jungle of legalisms and obfuscation. Nothing, perhaps, is more ingenious than the devious side of the human spirit.
Granted, some of the proposals may make the kind of excesses that occurred in the Watergate scandal more difficult, but they may also make other kinds of corruption more likely. So should be subjected to the closest scrutiny to make sure that no adverse side effects will result.
If any truly effective and sweeping reform is to come out of the Watergate scandal, it would be to put rest the my-voicedoesn't count myth. The interest and involvement of the people in the political processes would deter improper conduct and would expedite the correction of improprieties when they do occur. Essentially, it is time we stoppee placing our faith in systems instead of in people.
John Bender
Lawrence Joins Encounter Scene
By JEROME LLOYD
Kansas Staff Reporter
Exploring Life
Jerry Nolly and Nancy Hoffman are the most impressive encounter group leaders in Lawrence. Both are Esalen-trained. Nelly, who is completing a dissertation on meditation, has taught introductory psychology and a course in altered states of consciousness at the University of Kansas. She has led encounter groups in Wisconsin.
Nolly and Hofmann try to elucidate meaningful material in the presence of heightened feeling. it is hoped that the notion of uncharted territory and emerge with a valid
At the University of Kansas, there is only a sprinkling of offerings in encounter. James Stachowiak is currently teaching a course called toward a psychology of personal growth and fulfillment, which includes a laboratory in encounter. The human relations department features some rather flavorless courses in encounter.
Encounter groups have become popular across the country. They are an outgrowth of the church's contact, unbassed exploration and spiritualism, echo a recent past of political confrontation, excruciatingly loud rock festivals and armed barriers of the academy at its tide.
Ideally, you will let down your defenses and cross your darkest psychic terrain—the darker the better –prodred and supported by the insights and the inflexibility honest about what you can do to help your job to add what you can to the “energy level” and the “truth level” of the group.
In encounter groups, man, stripped of the sham that is perhaps not essential to him, is the only medium. Encounter groups probably have staggering implications for men in its more conventional forms can be so optionally pinched and cruelly formalized.
As you channel your point of view into the present moment and leave behind your timid good manners or your defensive posturing, you may find yourself examining yourself and others with increased sensitivity. After a few sessions, perhaps you will develop the hearing ability to drop barriers in favor of increased awareness.
You join a circle of people for growth—even for entertainment—rather than for therapy. You express how you feel right now, both toward yourself and toward the members. Escape into detailed biography or abstraction is almost always discouraged.
log for future reference, increased strength and verified honesty and courage. These qualities are difficult to acquire without experience. Personality change and growth are desired. Leading an encounter group requires continual sensitivity and tact under pressure.
necessary danger through programs of carefully selected exercises. These encourage a sense of trust in one's own body and reinforce the self in its relationship to others. Afterwards, most people feel more clear-headed and more benignly disposed.
the encounter groups, which are held in their home, frequently last an entire week.
"The social scale seems to explode when one watches other group members limp or rush through their own emotional forests."
talented in the sense that they successfully direct and elucidate a flow of feeling. Tact? There is always the possibility that a group member will come face to face with himself and shatter. It is this danger that the detectors of encounter groups so often utilize.
The group leaders try to eliminate un-
end. During this period, groups members end out and eat at home. Theoretically, everything is allowed except punches and broken furniture must be paid for. What usually ends up taking place is seldom very orgiastic. Jerry Nolly finds the balance between impulsiveness and constructive behavior in his groups "just about right."
About 15 years ago, highly structured encounter groups were developed in the National Training Laboratories in Maine. Shortly thereafter, groups of a more exploratory nature were established at Esalen, in Big Sur, Calif. Somewhat later, the group leaders were dismayed by the bad weather that LSD was having upon many people. Among other things, they wanted to create a site way to get high.
Not surprisingly, a certain exposev liberalism is bult into the encounter-group leader who is not anti-intellectual in the most broadening and democratizing sense of the word, or one who is incapable of a common generosity is probably a contradiction in terms. Without a strong focus of energy an encounter group simply collapses.
Encourage curiosity seem most promising. They liberate curiosity in a way that is revolutionary. One can actually attend them and develop an ability to explore real environments when one watches other group members rush through their own emotional forests.
KJ
KK
Selling of the Pentagon '74
THIS COUNTRY WILL PUT A MAN IN JAIL
FOR SOMETHING HES WRITTEN
That is how the parts of Schlesinger's plan fit together.
WASHINGTON- Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger, with an awesome array of military power at his command, was a key figure in the best new weapon in defending a record peaceetime Pentagon budget before Congress. "Where there is no vision," Schlesinger said before the Senate and Office of Services committees, "the people perish."
BY MICHAEL GETLER The Washington Post
That ancient message, he claims, is still relevant to understanding why the United States must not shrink from high defense budgets and global responsibilities even during Vietnam and in the so-called era of defense. And in its words, Schlesinger has been skillfully spinning a web of explanations for almost everything the Pentagon wants to do;
—Because the Soviet Union continues to invest heavily in new nuclear-tipped missiles, the United States must be prepared to "match" those developments as so not to lose the strategic edge or even be perceived by others as having lost it.
In laying that out, he sets forth his view.
"In recent years, we have begun to
—Because both of these factors—the pledge to keep racing the Russians if necessary and the flexibility to respond in kind to any type of nuclear attack—make nuclear war even less likely than it was before. We are on the arena for combat would be with conventional forces. Thus, we have to strengthen and maintain those forces.
--Because previous strategies of massive retaliation to deter a nuclear attack leave the United States only with a "suicide or surrender" choice, the United States must now have a strategy to respond in kind to lethal an all-out attack. In other words, the United States has the ability to strike back in a limited and against certain military targets in the hope that an automatic escalation to mutual "city bashing" can be avoided.
lose the vision about the role of the United States in the world. There has been a trend . perhaps understandable . to self-flagellation and carving.
"But the burden for the maintenance of free societies around the world can only be borne by the United States. We must accept that," he says, "There is no alternative. If the United States drops the torch, there is no one else that can pick it up."
In Schlesinger, the Pentagon has its most articulate warrior-philosopher-spokesman
While that seems like a good idea, the larger question is whether the United States
In contrast to the parade of civilian and military officials who come before committees to read formal, drowsy statements, Schlesinger's informal and more scholarly dissertations have been described as impressive—and possibly disarming—even by critics on the mostly friendly Armed Services committees.
Aside from Schlesinger's performance, this is an election year for Congress. An economic downturn and still higher unemployment crisis and talk of impaction are attracting most attention. All of these factors, some lawmakers believe, will tend to reduce Congressional scruiting this year of the worst possible important defense budget in a decade.
The budget contains the seeds for a major new round of nuclear weapons developments as "budgets" against lack of Soviet forces in Afghanistan. This, but in the past, weapons planners have usually found new rationales for development and production as original reasons faded.
The budget also reflects complex and far-reaching shifts in war-fighting strategy that have been made against certain hardware projects. Schlesinger, for example, has said that by "beating fat into swords" the Army will be able to kill divisions without increasing manpower.
The critics agree, and some have been arguing lately with increased enthusiasm for the United States to press the Soviets for some mutual reductions in land-based missiles to remove what critics view as the major cause of uncertainty and suspicion between two superpowers armed to the teeth.
Critics have always argued that still more accurate missiles would enable hawks in the Kremilin—despite U.S. disclaimers—to argue that the United States is attempting to develop a first-strike force able to knock out enemy aircraft, however, are working on the same improvements, and this creates temptations for either superpower to launch its missiles first rather than lose them. Because missile firing submarines are virtually vulnerable to attack, neither superpower effectively achieve a true first-strike force.
Schlesinger argues that adding this capability to respond in a "limited" way deters nuclear warfare at any level and helps keep the irrational or accidental attack from getting out of hand. Others argue that talking is limited "nuclear warfare requires deference and increases the acceptance that some form of limited atomic war is possible."
It is Schlesinger's plans in the nuclear field, however, that are perhaps most important and deserve the "national debate" that he has called for. Hovering for years over the issue of introducing a limited nuclear war fighting capability has been the question of what could conceivably be so difficult to accomplish, to prompt them to launch a limited nuclear attack against the United States and risk being destroyed in return.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
After the initial effects subsided, I was reminded of the bothersome realization (hardly unique) that such states of mind are much a part of our "game plan" political culture. Consider the recent decision by the Board of Regents to allow $180,000 in student funds to be spent on a new basketball floor.
We are told that athletics profit the University and apparently we are very attentive. But can the new basketball floor enhance the University in any meaningful sense? Those with a vested interest in athletics argue that it does will, and we
We have faculty positions being cut (and not necessarily in departments where enrollments are dropping), a library that stays open on weekends because of a grant from the chancellor's office, an inadequate student-faculty ratio that gives an impersonal and detached flavor to university curricula, and fronted with the fact that many of our coaches are being paid considerably more than many of our faculty.
An All-American college newspaper
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A few months ago, while the White House claimed widespread support for the President, I attempted to telephone my disapproval by placing a person-to-person call to the President. The White House responded by calling me the purpose of my call and upon hearing my wish to express disapproval, he responded, "Who do you think you are, calling the White House? Must be some kind of nut. Do you think you can cast Castro in Cuba or Khruschechin in Russia?" The state of mind depended on whether I had more success in calling Castro or even Khruschech since he's dead.
needs 14 divisions rather than 13. If not, shouldn't the "fat" simply be removed from the Army and the budget? Schlesinger has offered similar "bargains" to the other question; is it existing force levels are correct, why not just remove the fat altogether?
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor ... Susanne Shaw
Editors
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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To the Editor:
Basketball Floor a Top Priority?
Readers Respond
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Griff and the Unicorn
GRRRR...
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A mouse and a ant are sitting at a table. The mouse is holding a cup of coffee, while the ant is reaching for it.
Michael D. Smith
listen. Meanwhile, faculty leave the library closes earlier and earlier, and a sense of detachment creeps in. And where in hell are we? Where are our priorities?
Michael D. Smith New Orleans graduate student
Fans Conduct Booed
To the Editor:
As a concerned fan, I was pleased to see the notice in the Kansas a few weeks ago concerning good sportsmanship signed by a former Kansan and by the next three home games were con-
suserably better in the realm of sport-
smanship.
But Monday night was worse than ever. I must admit it was the worst refered game of the year. It is said when there are three or four referees on a play away from the play has to call the infraction. But this is definitely no reason to shower the referees with ice as they leave the court.
I think we need to work a little harder on controlling our tempers. Next home game we need to show K.S.U, not only who has the best basketball team, but also the best fans, and hopeably, we won't have such poor refereeing.
Martin Hubbard Waterville freshman
Even Ivy League Faces Student Finance Crisis
By ERIC WENTWORTH The Washington Post
Washington—Even those well-endowed Ivy League colleges have boosted their own scholarship outouts as about as far as they can and must increasingly steer students into federally insured loans to keep pace with ever-rising tuition rates.
This was the message of a report on student finances released Thursday by Dartmouth, Harvard and seven other well-known private institutions. Their student and squeeze reflected problems at universities reflect the country, most of them in far worse financial shape.
the report, "Paying for College," is funded by the Alfred P. Slogan Foundation, said the group. It also benefits of their undergraduates' access to federally insured private loans. The schools can be lenders themselves or make arrangements with banks or other lending institutions.
Because of federal insurance, interest subsidies to many young borrowers while they're studying and other benefits, the government's loan program over a wholly private scheme such as Yale's deferred tuition program. Under The Yale approach, graduates reimburse their school in future years by providing a small percentage of their incomes.
The Sloan study called for several reforms in the federal program, however, including more flexibility in student work requirements and analysis" to identify which students qualify for interest
subsidies and the size of the loans they should receive. Bills to drop the "needs analysis," which has been blamed for keeping many middle-income students from getting adequate aid this year, already are needing in Congress.
The report said undergraduate loan demand on the nine campuses was approaching an annual $10 million and could double within the next decade.
From 1962 to 1972, the nine colleges tripled their own scholarship spending from $6.2 million to $18.6 million a year. The average individual scholarship rose $2 per cent to $1,763 from $970 and a growing percentage of students required aid.
The report said outside scholarship resources, including federal and state grants and National Merit Scholarship Corp. stipends, had risen for the nine colleges to $2.9 million by 1971-72 but were down to 15 per cent of the schools' own outlaws.
The new federal "basic opportunity grant" program, the report added, would increase scholarship resources if funded—but only for low-income students.
Meanwhile, the study warned, infiltration cost pressures, including the current energy crisis, will perpetuate high costs with increases probable every year.
The nine schools cooperating in the Sloan study were Dartmouth, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mount Vernon, Amherst, Mount Boulder Holyke, Wellesley and Wesleyan.
Thursday, February 21.1974
University Daily Kansan
5
FEO Official Says Conserving Helps
By ROY CLEVENGER Kansan Staff Reporter
Gasoline supplies will be critically short this summer, but rationing can be avoided through voluntary conservation, James Newman, regional director of the Federal Energy Office (FEO), said at a press conference here yesterday.
Newman, former assistant chief of police in Kansas City, Mo., was in Lawrence for a Chamber of Commerce seminar on tourism and the energy crisis.
*Whether we have enough gasoline for June, July and August depends on our ac-
tivity.*
supplies now, there won't be much left at vacation time."
He said summer supplies supplies woke he 30 per cent less than the amount
"We'll be in critical shape this summer," he said "but next year it should be better."
Organized car pools and mass transit could help significantly in another year, he
A gasoline supply shuffle announced Tuesday by FEO chief William Simon didn't mean that Kansas would lose any more of its allocation to hard-hit eastern and southern states, Newman said. Simon had announced before the latest shuffle that
Kansas would lose about 2 per cent of its February allocation. He also said Tuesday that Kansas' allocation might be increased as summer demands at harvest time this summer.
Energy officials decided against cutting Kansas supplies because of a lack of adequate figures on supply distribution within the state. Newman said.
He said voluntary conservation had reduced gasoline use by 12 per cent of last year's consumption and by almost one-fourth of the expected demand. But conservation hasn't been satisfactory recently, he said.
Victims Review Vern's First Raid
When President Nixon requested conservation, everyone drove at 50 miles an hour and gasoline stations closed religiously on Sundays," he said. "But now many people are driving at 70 agon on the highways, and more stations are staying open Sundays.
By JAY GLICK
BY JAT GLICK
Kansan Staff Reporter
Three years ago this week, Atty. Genuine Miller made good his pledge to "land in Lawrence with both feet" in an effort to halt the use of illegal drugs in Lawrence. Of the 30 persons arrested in thatraid, only six still live in Lawrence.
Twenty-four of those arrested in the raid were found guilty. Nineteen were sentenced to three years in prison. The Kansas State Industrial Reformatory in Dushutchon and fined $500. All but five of the 19 sentences were suspended, and the 19 were placed on three-year probation instead.
Six of the cases were dropped.
Now, three years after their arrests, survivors of the first Miller raid were uncertain of the effect it would have on their lives.
"It hasn't altered my lifestyle at all," she said.
Maura Biesemeyer of 1229 New Jersey, is nearing the completion of her probation period. She recently said that her arrest hadn't created any problems for her.
But she did express concern over the fact that she had a criminal record. She said she hoped to have the record of her conviction documented and provided in the Youthful Offenders Act.
Thus far, Biesemeyer said, she hadn't experienced any difficulty in gaining employment, but she knew of others who had. Most people who suffered from the raid did so because they were again arrested for drug violations, she said.
A person who was convicted of selling one ounce of marijuana and conspiracy to sell LSD and who wished to remain unidentified, said it was too early to tell if he would have difficulty getting a job because of his criminal record.
"I just got out of the joint six months ago," he said, "I really don't know how long it was."
He said he'd known others from the Lawrence drug raid who also were in the reformatory in Hutchinson. But he said he was not concerned in the raid was still confined there.
Most of those who were sent to Hutchinson had been students, he said, and most planned to continue their education, but not at the University of Kansas.
Those who were confined to the reformatory had experienced much unintended harm.
"A year ago, they were rough on drug offenders," he said of officials at the reformate. People who are in for armed combat or quicker than people who are in for dope.
He said that because Miller had made public statements urging a stance on the treatment of drug offenders, the defense at Hutchinson could have improved.
Another person who was arrested in the raid and who also wished to remain unidentified said he thought his arrest and being held in jail would cause problems for him in the future.
"I'm sure I'm going to take some flak," he said. "A lot of corporations will come down to you."
College graduates seek executive positions that might be off-limits for drug offenders, he said, while lesser employment positions that non-college graduates would fill would be available regardless of drug convictions. "He said he, too, was hoping to have the
He said the stigma is greater for college graduates than it would be for others.
He said be, too, was hoping to have the record of his conviction expunged.
He said he hoped employers would look on his conviction as a mistake that a misguided college student would make in following a fad.
Summer employment has presented no problems, he said.
Attention
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To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4348 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
But, he said, he thought applications for permanent employment would be checked
"Where it says, 'Have you ever been convicted of a felony?' I just put no."
Newman said petroleum shortages would remain significant until new energy sources become more accessible.
"By the early '80s, we should be able to end regulation of crude oil and have mandatory conservation," he said. "We must also protect oil by 1990, but not necessarily crude oil."
Nixon's nips for energy independence by 1880 may succeed, Newman said, but only because it is too complicated.
He said the United States currently imported one-third of its oil and might import another.
Newman said gasoline prices were stable but would rise to support profit margins of oil corporations and to finance research and development of additional oil wells.
"A political embargo then would be a real benefit," he said, "making today look like a very powerful force."
He said the switch to other energy sources didn't have to cause chronic inflation, government controls on business and massive reordering of life-styles.
American ingenuity and technology will help remove slack in industries hit by shortages and create new industries, Newman said.
"Work is going on in developing combustion systems using oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen," he said. "If any of these reactors are used, they would be abundant sources of energy."
Dyche Hall .
From Page One
numbers of insects, some of which are named after him. One account credits him with inoculating chinch bugs with a concoction made from corn and wheat destructive to grasses and grain crops.
Snow was chancellor of KU from 1890 to 1901. It is said that he liked to "coast down Mt. Orca on his bicycle with his feet up and his coattails living in the wind."
These two riven and others helped to develop the museum into one of the best in the city.
Dyce Hall was designed in Venetian-
Romanesque style in 1902 for 500 dollars. Sixty
years later when the addition was built, it
cost $750,000. The gargoyles on the building
were carved on the spot by an Italian stone
cutter.
The building was declared unsafe in 1932 by the state architect. The concrete floors, lad when concrete reinforcing was just coming into use, had been strengthened with steel and reinforced stronger bars. The floors swayed slightly and officials feared they might collapse.
The museum remained closed for eight years. Repairs were slowed down by legislative wrangling about appropriating funds.
Originally, just the floors were going to be redone. Then officials decided to remodel the museum. It finally reopened in 1940.
Today the museum has five divisions, according to Ray Ashen, coordinator of public education for the museum. They are herpetology, ichthyology, vertebrate paleontology, mammalogy and ornithology, or in other words, the study of reptiles, fish, amphibians, birds, mammals, manual and reptile collections. Ashen said, are among the best in the world.
Ashton said the museum is slowly getting away from public education by use of stuffed animals. It offers classes for adults, children and families. It sponsors field trips to museums and local schools. The vivarium which is, a group of live exhibits, most snakes, on display in the building.
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Thursday, February 21, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Mrs. Dykes Likes Job's Social Life
By BUNNY MILLER
Kansas Stuff Reporter
Although the spotlight is usually on her husband, Nancy Hauk Dykes isn't a woman
Slender, dark-haired attractive, Dykes has a busy schedule as the chancellor's wife and a new manager.
"It seems as if we're on the go," she said Tuesday. "We've been caught in a situation where we can't get out."
Dykes said she and her husband have
engagement 'a good four or five
years'
"But we do enjoy it, if there's not any
BEST SELLER
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN MCCOY
Nancy Haun Dykes
Many of her daytime hours are spent attending club meetings. Dykes is a member of PEO, the 20th Century Club, the American Association of University Women and a bridge club. She said she planned to do some volunteer work in Lawrence.
pressure from anything else," she said with a soft southern drawl,
"I've always done some sort of volunteer work every place we've lived," she said. "In Knoxville, the last place we lived, I went every week in my son's school library."
Dykes has a degree in elementary education from Memphis State University and has had training in library science. She taught for five years in the Memphis city schools in Champaign, IL, and in Knoxville, NC, to plan to return to teaching soon, she said.
Dykes said she liked to travel with her husband
"But I haven't done as much as I'd like to this year. It's been harder for me to get away up to this point because I'd have to leave my son here alone," she said. The year agoht to help this situation. Then my son will know more people he can stay with.
"I wouldn't have time as long as Archie's in this kind of position," she said. "But I probably would go back to it if he ever went back to teaching."
Dykes said that she thought that she and her husband had met almost everyone in faculty and administration and that they eventually meet with every student group.
"I see my role as a supportive role to my husband," she said. "One of the real plusses in having a husband in a position like this is that your social life is almost ready-made."
"Besides, we've been so busy just here in the Lawrence area," she said. "It seems as if we always spend the first year getting acquainted with everyone."
"ready-made" situation was especially helpful in the move to Kansas, especial help in the move to Kansas.
"Before, we always moved within the University of Tennessee system where we already had friends," she said. "But here you are absolutely cold. Everybody was new to us."
The Dykes like Kansas and Lawrence very much, she said, and they have found that the people are a lot like Tennesseans. Dykes said she thought KU students and the atmosphere of the KU campus was more like that at the University of Tennessee.
Dykes grew up on a farm in eastern Tennessee and lived there until she married Archie R. Dykes in 1953. The Dykes have two sons, John age, 18 is a student at Rice
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"For members and guests 21 or older"
She enjoys reading, but doesn't have much time for pleasure reading. Dykes
"We subscribe to four daily papers and a wide range of magazines, including Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, and I take the Architectural Digest for myself because I like it better than the women's
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She likes to listen to radio music but doesn't watch much television, she said.
Dykes can almost always be seen accompanying her husband at athletic events. She said both she and her husband liked all sports.
"I don't care to take that much time out to sit down and watch it," she said. "I guess there's always something else I'd rather be doing."
Friends describe her style of dress as conservative, 'she said. But she said she was a very fun girl.'
"It's healthy that they don't put as much emphasis on dress as we did when we were grown up."
In general, Dykes said, the Dykes think their year at KU has been productive and they are looking forward to a trip to Europe in June with the Alumni Association.
Distributors Predict Shortages Of Farm Fertilizer This Spring
By DON LEVY
Kansas Staff Remitter
Farm fertilizer will be in short supply this spring, Glenn Deiker, manager of Lawrence Mobil Oil Distributors, said yesterday.
Customers of the Lawrence Farmers Cooperative Association will be able to purchase the same amount of fertilizer as a farmer on Nieder, fertilizer department manager.
Farm and lawn fertilizers are manufactured from natural gas, now in short supply. Because of the recent release of natural gas from price controls, the price of both types of fertilizer is expected to increase.
The association sells fertilizers to farmers' cooperatives in Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri. These cooperatives have established allocation systems to distribute the fertilizers evenly, Hoffman said.
Allen Hoffman, general manager of Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association, said the fertilizer shortage was the result of increased demand combined with an increase in farm planting.
Hoffman said the association plant had increased production but had been unable to grow enough for harvest.
The area distributor for association products, Farmers Cooperative with permission, will allocate allocation equal to the amount of fertilizer it purchased last year, according to Nieder.
The cooperative is able to sell fertilizer only to old customers and only in the amounts they purchased last year, Nieder said.
Deiker said he had been out of farm
takers for weeks and did not know when he
was back.
"I haven't been told yet. I don't think I'll get any," he said.
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Thursday, February 21, 1974
University Daily Kansan
7
Gymnast Leads KU Toward Better Season
Bv MARK ZELIGMAN
Kansan Sports Writer
The University of Kansas basketball team is not the only KU athletic team on the rise. After finishing fifth for the past two seasons, the team has been raising a bid for one of the Big Eight's ten jobs.
One of the reasons for the gymnasts' fine showing so far has been all-around perfor-
Whitehead, a junior from Topeka,
finished 10th in the horizontal bar in the Big
Eight last season and is hoping for a higher
finish in this year's meet.
"I enjoy the high bar the most," Whitehead said. "But I seem to put more work into the sidehouse than any other event, probably because it's the most difficult event. It combines everything—balance, strength, quickness and flexibility."
In last Friday's meet against the University of Nebraska, Whitehead scored a
personal high on the side horse, 8.5, and the parallel bars, 8.8. Earlier this year he scored a 9.2 in the horizontal bar, his best event.
WHITENEED DIDNT participate in an outstanding high school gymnastics program.
"At Seaman High in Topeka, I finished second in the regimentals in the high bar and all-round competition," he said. "We just had a few guys on the team. My senior year was the last year of the gymnastics program and we was dropped because of lack of interest."
Although there is enough interest at KU to keep it going gymnastics remains in the park.
"I WISH IT would get at least as much publicity as the major sports." Whitehead said. "It is nice to know that there are some people who don't have to worry. I is, I know some people who had never gone
Whitehead said that gymnastics was a year-round sport that required work even in the summer.
to a meet, but once they did, they really enlightened it. Our gym is filling up more now that we have done this.
*Officially, practice starts the first day we get up here in August and lasts until the
sports
NCAA Championships in April," he said. "But if you lay off it too much in the summer, it takes too long to get back into shape. You get tired of it. but it's fun."
sports
THE FIRST THREE months in the fall are used for calisthenics and weightlifting.
"Coach Lockwood fits us into a personal workout," he said. "If you're strong in one area, you don't work at it very much and go to another area. Once we get strength and flexibility we work on our routines and stunts."
Gymnastics routines are divided into two parts: compulsions and options. Only optional routines are performed in dual meets. For the invitational meets and the Big Eight Championships, both optional and compulsory routines must be performed.
"Compulsories are harder to do than options," Whitehead said. "The tricks aren't that difficult, but the combination of them is hard." He added that you must have the ability to do them.
"IN THE BIG EIGHT championships it comes down to how well you can do the competition."
The formula for becoming a good gymnast, Whitehead said, includes more than inmate ability.
*Talent is about 50 per cent of it*, he said.
*Determination and hard work are also*
*important.*
He said strength was important, but much more than strength was needed.
"On the rings, for example, a strong guy can do crosses all day," he said, "but if he can't swing or keep his balance he won't be able to maintain orientation and balance are most important."
THE BIG EIGHT Championships are only a month away and Whitehead expressed interest in participating.
"For the first time since I've been here the team is showing some depth," he said. "For the first time if somebody misses a routine, there's somebody to back him up. Before we were lucky to get three men who score well."
The Jayhawks have scored more than 150 points the last three dual meet and are in the midst of a national tour.
"The new coaches, Ken Snow and Brian Cooper, have helped a lot." Whitehead said. "The freshmen are good and we're just a better, well-rounded team this year. We're hoping for third place in the Big Eight meet."
"Kansas high school gymnastics programs are being emphasized more." More
"The major part of our team will be
the next year, and the next year will be
one of the better years for us."
HE SAID THAT the outlook for next year's team was even brighter.
"Personally, I've still got things to improve on for next year. But I've gained confidence this year and will be even more confident next year."
Fight to the Finish Likely in Big 8
By DON PFANNENSTIEL Assistant Sports Editor
Their conference and overall records are identical. Their rankings in the two national polls are about the same. Their remaining schedules are similar.
So it won't be a surprise if these two teams, the University of Kansas and Kansas State University, fight until the final day of the season before state superiority and the basketball championship of the Big Eight conference are decided.
K-State and KU have 9-1 conference records, 17-5 overall records and each team has two remaining home games and two games on the road. The 'Hawks must face Colorado and Nebraska on the road and Kansas State and Missouri at home. K-State must play Oklahoma and Nebraska at home and besides KU, they have to play at Missouri.
"The schedules are pretty even," KU coach Ted Owens said yesterday. "Everything's going well."
have two tough home games, so but do they,
Nebraska and Colorado are always tough
places to play at, but K-State has to play us
here."
The Hawks are currently ranked 16th in the Associated Press poll and 14th by United Press International. K-State is close behind, ranked 18th by AP and 15th by UPI.
Oklahoma, whose Big Eight title hopes are still alive, is two games behind KU and K-State. The Sooners must win at K-State Saturday night to remain a contender. Oklahoma defeated K-State 65-63 in January in its conference opener.
Owens also said that Oklahoma was definitely in the race, but that they would have to work hard to win.
"If they do win Saturday their remaining
Dark Back as A's Manager
OAKLAND (AP) - Alvin Dark, one of 10 managers fired by Charles O'Fenley, owner of the Oakland A's in the past, was the last manager to manage to manage the Oakland A's this season.
"Yes, he has been manager of this club before. Yes, he was fired. Yes, he is back to manage this club. Yes, he expects to be back with the club." I smile as smile as he announces the return of Dark.
'Mistakes were made on both sides and things have changed. I'm more concerned with what's going to happen, not what has happened.' Dark said at the news conference here.
Dark, now 52, managed the A's in Kansas City, MN, in 1966 and part of 1967 before Philadelphia.
The A's will open spring training under Dark in Mesa, Ariz., on Friday.
schedule is favorable." Owens said. "Their schedule isn't too difficult. They have to play Missouri and Iowa State at home and Oklahoma State at Stillwater."
The Big Eight Tournament champion, Missouri, has not won a game since its conference opener when it defeated Iowa State. The Tigers are now 1-9 and last in the Big Eight. However, Missouri must still play Kate on KU again. Earlier in the season KKU scored twice at three points, 70-67. Missouri can still be a determining factor in the race.
Still Life
"Before Missouri can be in the spieler's role, they've got to stop loss." Owens said. "That might sound ridiculous, but first Missouri will have to win at Saturday. Right then, they doubt themselves and they are psyched out. The only thing to stop this is to win."
(Tonight-Saturday)
K.U. NIGHT TONIGHT!
PETER RUSSELL
Free LIVE MUSIC WITH K.U. I.D.
Yuk It Up At The Yuk Down
Hillcrest Shopping Center
K-State has won the last two Big Eight championships and the Wildcats have four starters who were members of those championship teams. On the other hand, none of their players has participated in the championship squad. The Hawks' last title was in 1971 when this year's co-captains Dave Taylor and Tom Kivisto were freshmen. However, Owens said K-State can an advantage because some of their players have participated in a tide race before.
Bill Campfield, a running back from Derby, has become the tenth high school senior to sign a Big Eight Conference letter of intent with the University of Kansas.
Head Coach Don Fambroch said Camp-
head coach this week following his father's
head coach.
Campfield Signs KU Intent Letter For Big Eight
9th and Iowa
Campfield was a consensus pick on all state teams and a member of the All-America team selected by Who's Who in National High School Athletics.
Campfield, 6-foot 1 and 180 pounds, rushed for 862 yards in 121 carries for an average of 7.1 yards a carry. He ranked second in the league in rushing and third in total offense.
---
"We both have played a lot of pressure games this season," he said. "And we both know that our success under pressure They are starting to lose their grip and they are also playing men with experience."
Festival of the Arts
announcing the Creative Writing Contest
Two Categories: Short Fiction and Poetry
Entry Blanks and Rules Are Available at the SUA Office
Entries May Be Submitted Feb. 1-25, 1974
Among the prize sponsors are:
ADVENTURE BOOK STORE
TOWN CRIER
Lawrence
THE HUB
Kansas City
BENNETT SCHNEIDER
Kansas City
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
Maupintour travel service
Make your airline reservations NOW for Spring Break with
NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you:
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Many of his fellow officers considered him
the most dangerous man alive,
an honest cop.
AL PACINO
"SERPICO"
R
Evenings at
7:25 & 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat.
at 2:00
Hillcrest
"Dublin" at 17:15 & 10:45
"Flocker" at 19:00
STARTS FRIDAY
John
Wayne as *Mc Q*
Rated PG
"SON OF FLUBBER"
"SUPERDAD"
& G
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ENDS THURSDAY
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Granada
THEATRE...telephone V13-5789
THE WAY WE WERE
STREISAND & REDFORD
Evenings
afternoon 12-15
Sat. Sun, Mar.
Varsity
by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
"ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH"
A view of the Soviet Union's penal system by its most respected victim Ive. 7:40, 9:30, Sat., Sun. Mar. 1:25
Eve., 7:40, 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat, 2:15
Hillcrest
Marlon Brando
Last Tango in Paris
Evenings at 7:15 and 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Matinees at 2:10
Hillcrest
HILLCREST LANDSCAPE, FLORIDA, USA
the balcony NEW PRIVATE CLASS 'B' CLUB
DANCE
The Midwest's Finest Bands Nightly Appearing This Week
Tide
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grandmothers a fine drinking empire
a fine drinking emporium 417 W.37th, Topeka, Kansas
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8
Thursday, February 21, 1974
University Daliy Kansan
'Kind and Usual Punishment'Flays Myths, Injustice of Penal System
By STEVE BUSER
"KIND AND USUAL PUNISHMENT" by Jessica Mitford (340 pages; Knopf; 1973; $7.95)
Jessica Mitford pried open prison gates across the nation for three years to investigate the designation of a system in which inmates with coastal reference to the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution which prohibits "cruel and unusual punishment," "Kind and Usual Punishment" is aAgent documentation of the incarceration that incarcerates 1.33 million Americans.
Based on the premise that all penal institutions are intrinsically evil, "Kind and Usual Punishment" attacks the myths of prison reform, the injustice of the determinate sentence, the sordid experimental drug research on prisoners, pretensions of rehabilitation and other prevarications of "correction facilities."
MITFORD ASSERTS that the prison population reflects not justice but the structure and prejudices of society. F.B.I. crime-reporting is shrewdly tailored to focus attention on crimes committed by the poverty-striken and racial minorities.
Absent from the reports, she contends, are crimes committed by the rich and powerful: slum landlord violations of health and safety codes, embezzlement, fraudulent advertising and organized crime that depends on corruption of politicians.
She backs this contention with the Presidential Crime Commission Report, which estimates that price-fixing by 29 electrical equipment companies alone publicizes the fact therefore the public more money than all the bargains committed in one year.
ALTHOUGH WARDENS and prison officials blame lack of money for their problems, Mitford disputes this claim. She contends that when money is available it invariably leads to a lucrative bureaucracy for architects, contractors, researchers and other professionals.
Because only 1.5 per cent of the nine million crimes in a typical year are punished, she refutes the belief that the penal system extricates society from criminals. She also flays the validity of her concept attributed to the length of sentences.
As an example, between 1861 and 1966 the penalty in California for assaulting a
reviews
policeman with a deadly weapon rose from a minimal sentence of one year to a minimum of five years and a maximum of life. During that period, attacks on Los Angeles policemen rose from 8.4 per cent a year to 15.8.
THE INDETERMINATE sentence is a somewhat innovative measure that is supposed to remove the duration of the punishment from the responsibility of judges to an expert parole board of behaviorists. Mitford denounces the indeterminate sentence as a "psychological intruder" and the frivolous fiction. Because no falt sentence is affixed to the prisoner, prison officials can beat any prisoner into submission.
A sociologist noted, "The man under the indeterminate sentence has all the answers."
The most appalling segments of the book are centered on the treatment of prisoners as experimental subjects. "Volunteers" from prisons are used by drug companies to study how prisoners use products and skills. Such experiments entail the inducement of scurvy and severe deficiencies as well as studies on "pain tolerance." One of the researchers remarked, "Most issues in our pens are fine material; most issues are much cheaper than chimpanzees."
UNDER THE GUISE of behavior modification, prison reform has taken a terrifying step backward. Prisoners are subjected to chemotherapy, which is the use of "behavior modifiers"; including the treatment. According to its manufacturer, E.R. Shipman, prisoners have extended duration of effect with possible adverse side effects.
Other "advancements" of prison reform include the substitution of correction techniques with euphemistic terms. Solitary confinement is now called "sensor deprivation" or "adjustment"; the use of medical procedures that cause pain and impairment is desired change or behavior modification is known as "aversion therapy."
"KIND AND USUAL PUNISHMENT" depicts an American penal system that in some ways can be related to the despicable crimes of the American concentration camps and Russia's labor carams.
Although Miford's revelation of the prison system is superb, she doesn't offer any concrete solutions. Her call for the abolishment of the entire penal system can't be taken seriously. If her book arouses America's interest in the prison system, however, her mission has been partially fulfilled.
"LEMMINGS"? The National Lampoon magazine's satirical-comedy about the pop music scene. 8 p.m. Saturday at Hoch Auditorium.
MOVIES
"SERPICIO"-Al Pacino stars as a policeman who cleans up the corruption in the New York City Police Department. 7:30 and 9:40 at the Hillcrest L.
"THE WAY WE WERE"-Barbara Streisand stars as a radical Jewish girl whose relationship with an all-American woman evokes fights, 7:30 and 9:30 at the Varsity Theatre.
The Duke a Cop in 'McQ'
"ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN
DENISOVIH"-Alexander Solzhenitsy story about life in a Russian prison camp in Siberia. 7:20 and 9:30 p.m., at the Hillcrest
"MMC"—John Wayne stars as a detective who goes through car chases and gun battles to break a drug ring and fight criminals at 9:30 p.m. at the Grand Theatre.
"LAST TANGO IN PARIS"-Marlon Brando stars as a middle-aged American living in Paris who isolates himself through a room at a country club. 7:40 and 9:30 p.m. at the Hillcrest III.
"BEHIND THE VEIL" and "THE QUEEN" - Women in film movies, the first about women living in a harem and the first about men living in a hotel. 7:30 p.m. tonight in Woodford Auditorium.
"LADY SINGS THE BLUES!" -Diana Ross stars as the blues singer Billie Holiday who becomes a drug addict 7 and 8 years later. At 6 p.m. on Saturday in Woodruff Auditorium,
"AFRICAN LION"-Walt Disney wildlife feature on African animals, especially the lion. 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium.
Jill Johnston, who will speak tonight in the
lecture room, "radicalalesian. An outspoken, thoroughly
human, witty radicalalesian, Johnston helps to
diapet the heterosexual fear of lesbianism
Perhaps Johnston is able to dispel this fear because she has overcome her own fear or guilt or unknowingness about her own sexuality, and in telling her personal experiences through the 1950s and 1960s, Johnston is able to tear down the heterosexual fears and misunderstandings in American sexual separation.
David W. Heron will resign as director of the University of Kansas libraries on July 1 to become the university librarian at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Heron made the announcement yesterday. Chancellor Archie R. Dykes had told a group of legislators Monday that the director of libraries was leaving, but Heron had declined to confirm or deny Dykes' statement.
"1LESBIAN NATION: THE FEMINIST
OLDSMAN and SCHUTZ; 1973: 97.98
pages."
"Lesbian Nation" is a highly personal account of the experience of maturing not only as a lesbian, but as a woman—or, more appropriately, as a non-male—in the 1950s and 1960s when man and culture, according to Johnston, are synonymous.
As an account of the individual human experience of Johnston, the book gradually shows the transition from 1950s lesbianism, in which Johnston didn't yet consider herself a lesbian although she had had homosexual relationships, to the emergence of lesbians in the 1960s with the gay liberation front, whose political position gradually moved towards wanting to grant rights to finally demanding recognition as a ruggedly group.
Jill Johnston
THE LESBIAN IN THE United States,
Johnston writes, is doubly penalized;
besides being considered subnormal by "normal"
'heterosexuals for her lesbianism, she carries the additional burden of being a woman in a male-oriented society.
Feminist Advocates Lesbianism
"FEMINISM AT HEART is a massive complaint." Johnston write "Lesbianism
All women are lesbians, according to Johnaton, and lesbianism is the revolution.
Johnston, who is the mother of two
In the 1960s, Johnston writes, "most of us didn't know yet that it was wrong to be a woman but we did know it was wrong to be a man" (23). We were wrong for people to make us wrong.
By CAROL GWINN
Kangan Reviewer
Heron to Resign
Entertainment
--document of lesbianism in the mid-20th century. It is also important as a discussion of an alternative life-style for the aware woman and as an introduction to the lesbian as a human being and radical feminist, not some kind of pervert.
$
"SATYRICON""-Fellini film based on Petronius" "Satyricon", in which Rome is inhabited by albino hermaphrodites, dwarfs, prostitutes, nymphomaniacs and homosexualus girls. 7:30 p.m. Monday in Woodruff Auditorium.
ALL CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS:
REMINDER
Budget request forms for Student Activity Fee funds are available in 105-B, Student Union. Budget requests must be submitted to the Treasurer's office, 104-B, Union, by 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28.
No late requests will be considered.
"THE BLACK CAT" and "BLACK SUNDAY"-Two horror films, the first one starring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosa about a mad architect who encases young girls' corps in glass, and the second one starring Jack Nicholson at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Woodruff Auditorium.
No late requests will be considered.
$
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
Offer Expires March 15
TOSTADO FREE!
The person who is interested in an honest attempt to fight male sexism through female sexism by an aware woman should read "Lesbian Nation," one of the few well-thought-out, pro-lelisian works which regards lesbianism as not only normal, but desirable as a means to combat a male-dominated society.
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
"THE HERO AS ARTIST"-Kenneth Clark "Civilisation" film about the coming of the Renaissance in Italy, 7 p.m. Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium.
1720 W. 23rd
TACO GRANDE
9th and Indiana
MOTOR
1974-Year of the Taco
children, calls woman the primal parent because only the woman can be biologically positive that the woman she bears is hers. The man can never know for sure that a child is
"Lesbian Nation" is written in an almost unpunctulated style which is somewhat difficult at first to read, but which becomes very flowing after the reader be accustomed to it. The lack of punctuation adds to the easy tone of the book and to the comfortableness with which Johnston relates details of her life.
"Lesbian Nation" is important as a
"LES VISITEURS DU SOIR"—French film made in 1947 which shows the post-war French philosophy of life: 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Wednesday in Wooldruff Auditorium.
quality travel since 1951
THEATER
Telephone 843-1211—Kansas Union Plus 3 Other Locations: 900 Massachusetts / The Malls / Hillcrest
Theater Festival (ACTF) production by Kansas State College of Pittsburg based on the Adam and Eve story. 8 p.m. tonight in the University Theatre.
- Club group travel
- Sports holidays
"THE THREE PENNY OPERA"—ACTE play presented by Webster College, Webster Groves, Mo., and written by Bretolt Brecht. The play concerns the underworld adoration of Mate the Knife in the 1920's in Berlin. bp.m. saturday in the University Theatre.
Your Campus Travel Agent
SUA / Maupintour travel service
- Car rentals
- Hotel reservations
"AFTERMATH"—ACTF production by Fort Hays State College which deals with euthanasia. 8 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre.
THE SERPENT"—American College
- Incentive travel
- Airline reservations/tickets
(No charge, shanghai)
- Resort reservations
- Weekend holidays
- Amtrak train reservations/tickets
- Cruise/ship reservations
- Escorted tours
- Private group programs
- Independent travel
NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
2nd and iowa Streets
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
(Near Tupuke West Exit)
All Exhibits for Sale
DAILY PRIZE DRAWING
SHOW HOURS:
Friday: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sunday: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
- Motorcoach charter tours
Victoria B. Krumsick manager
Saturday, Feb. 23
2:00 4:20 7:00 8:20
WAJAI PUPPET THEATRE-Classic Japanese puppetry, in which the puppets will enact a variety of dramatic plots. 8 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
- Worlds of Fun tickets
SUA Popular Films
"THE FLATS" - Experimental Theatre production of the modern Irish play by John Boyd. 8 p.m. Feb. 27-28, and Mar. 1-2 in Murphy Hall.
DIANA
ROSS
IS BILLIE
HOLIDAY
16th Annual Lawrence Antique Show
Horror Films
THE BLACK CAT
Boris Karloff - Bela Lugos
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Friday, Feb. 22
7:00-9:30
75c Kansas Union
MARCH 1,2 & 3
LADY
SINGS
THE
BLUES
A PHANTOM PICTURE
I rent in PARAMOUNT'S
IN COLOR
Special Films SATYRICON d. Feltini Monday, Feb. 25
1974
The Pilot Club of Lawrence Sponsor
ADMISSION S1.00; one day or all inclusive
BLACK SUNDAY
d. Bann - 9:30
Tuesday, Feb. 26
Kansas Union
Classical Films
LES VISITEURS DU SOIR
d. Marcel Carne
75c $1.00 for Both Kansas Union
Wednesday, Feb. 27
Wednesday, Feb. 27
7:30-9:30
Kansas Union
Film Society
Film Society BEHIND THE VEIL d.Eve Arnold THE QUEEN Thursday, Feb. 21
THE AFRICAN LION
Walt Disney
Sunday, Feb. 24
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Kansas Union Children's Films
WIFE 705 SWIFE 705 SWIFE 705 SWIFE 705 SWIFE
WE'VE
Ford RENT-A-CAR
LOWERED
Rent your car from John Haddock Ford.
Phone 843-3500
PRICES
| Make | Pinto | Pinto Wagon Maverick Mustang Torino | Galaxie Pickup | LTD PU Wagon |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Daily | $8.00 plus 8c mile | $9.00 plus 9c mile | $10.00 plus 10c mile | $11.00 plus 11c mile |
| Weekly | $45.00 plus 8c mile | $55.00 plus 9c mile | $60.00 plus 10c mile | $65.00 plus 11c mile |
| Week-end | $5.33 plus 8c mile | $6.00 plus 9c mile | $7.00 plus 10c mile | $8.00 plus 11c mile |
Especially in this free-spirit, sporty sandal! GEei back to the basics in soft, unlined leather uppers cross-banded, ankle-strapped and set on a nappy wedge heel. The new young natural ... a natural for any wardrobe! "Brazil" also in bergundy leather uppers.
footnotes™
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McCall's
Put Yourself in our Shoes
McCall's
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Downtown Lawrence
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 21. 1974
9
A petition opposing the continuance of current rules and regulations of Security and Parking for next year will be submitted to the Student Senate. R. Dykes today by the Student Senate.
Senate Opposes Status Quo on Parking Regulations
The petition, passed by the newly elected senate at its first meeting last night, asks that Dykes take no action on proposals submitted by the Parking and Traffic Board until the senate can submit an alternative proposal.
The senate also passed a bill authorizing John Beinser, Salina minja and student body president, to appoint a three-member task force to study the operations of Security and Parking and submit an alternative proposal within 30 days.
Beisner said that the student body presidenactually had the power to appoint such a task force but that he wanted the approval of the senate before he did so.
The petition and the bill, both sponsored by Heinner, were passed unanimously by
Beisner was authorized by anothe-
nous vote to appoint an affirmative
committee to represent her interests.
The coordinator will oversee appointment and election processes of the senate, act as a source of information about affirmative action and recruit women and minority group members into University governance.
Tim Cox, Wichita law student, suggested an amendment to the bill which would make the appointment subject to approval by the Senate. The senate defeated the amendment 24-46
"Every president needs some control on him." Cox said.
Steve McMurray, Norton sophomore, said, "I don't think we should blanket okay everything that comes from the president's office."
Rhodes Scholar From Scranton 20th from KU
Becoming the University of Kansas' 20th Rhodes Scholar was a months-long process of travel and interviews for Ted Burk, Scranton senior.
Burk was selected in December as one of 32 American men who will receive two to three years of study at Oxford University in England.
The selection process began last fall when KU's selection committee picked three candidates after viewing applications and transcripts and conducting interviews.
C.
ex
New
pro
The three candidates joined college candidates from throughout the state at
1970
Ted Burk
another interview in Topeka. There a state committee composed of ex-Rhodes Scholars chose Burk and another Kansas man to compete in the six-state regional
Four candidates were selected from each of the eight regional areas to attend the national elimination in December at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. There Burk was told he had won a Rhodes Scholarship.
Burk said he had begun considering the possibility of becoming a Rhodes Scholar as a graduate student.
A Rhodes Scholar, Burk said, is chosen for his intellectual capabilities, physical vigor and interest in social and political affairs.
"I was just sure it was something I definitely wanted to try for." he said.
Burk's special area of interest is animal behavior. He plans to continue his study in that area at Oxford, he said, and receive a PhD. Burk also says the degree is equivalent to an American master's degree.
T.G.I.F.
Today
3-6 p.m.,
Monday-Friday
$ 80^{\mathrm{c}} $ Pitchers
A
Cox said he wanted the senate to have legislative review of every possible appointment. He said he thought the new senators were "getting ramrodred."
Opponents to the amendment said that the student body president had a legal right to make appointments without the consent of the senate and that requiring consent of the senate on this appointment would allow the senate to override the agreement for the senate's standing committees.
A resolution opposing any proposal by the
The Ball Park
Hillcrest Shopping Center
College Assembly that would require a more restrictive policy on withdrawal from classes for students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was passed 56-10 by the
Jon Jisserand, Johnson sophomore and
jonor of the resolution, said students
weren't being represented in the College
class because student members didn't
go to meetings.
Josserand said he had brought the resolution to the senate because he wanted to
The committee will interview senators and non-senators interested in serving on the senate's eight standing committees and appoint members of the committees.
Jeff Southard, Wichita senior, said he thought that the question should be resolved in the College Assembly and that the senate didn't do anything about the issue anyway.
Howard Reese, Toppea graduate student, said he opposed the resolution because a little bit of his policy allowed students to drop a course later than the semester, thus wasting the taxpayer's money.
see some "official student input" in to the College Assembly.
The outgoing senate met briefly before the new senate's meeting and elected Don Kinney, Leawood senior; Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and member of the committee; Marilyn Lumley, junior committee; and Ed Rolfs, Junction city junior, to hold over seats on this year's senate.
The new senate elected Paxson, Cindy Buxton, Alton, Ill., junior, and Jasperand to the Oklahoma Clip Junior and student body vice president on the Committee at Committees.
KANSAN WANT ADS
A motion by Cox to delay election of the Committee on Committees members until the next senate meeting was ruled out of order by hunter because it was in violation of the rules. The committee on Committees members must be elected at the first senate meeting.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their background. NIRH CLASSIFIED IN 1101 FLANT HILL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. In the image.
2. In the text.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
1) If you use them, they are at an advantage.
2) If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—New
York City. You can book a visit at
Campbellwood Mall, Town Crier.
Ray Audio, 12 E. Wah, Phone 843-2047 1-Hour
availability for any stereo problem. Cable (100)
available for any stereo problem. Cable (100)
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
French Motorized Bicycle 1 HP, 200 MPG; XF-
848-9378 can seat, child and one, gas. 625 g
848-9378
1905 Old Cuisine-$400 or best call-Call 832-
9654 after s and weekends.
AM-Push button radio for T3 Pin=$$ AM-Push
button radio for T4 Pin=$$
automatic (radi-) underfaster
automatic (radi-) underfaster
The once a year Magnavox sale is now on! Save now. Color TV, Stereo, Components, Electronics, Accessories, Clothes, Dios. Ray Stoneback, 329 Mass. Your Magnavox downtown. Where you can always do better.
Horses 750-1927), 4800 miles, gold color, note:
this horse has a $3,125 MCI-644. Witches 22-
this horse has a $3,125 MCI-644.
Cassettes (pre-recorded) in J.A.1-condition 158
Cassette tape reels in J.A.2-condition 158
Sounds of 12 E.9 new LPs, 13 new LPs as well as 20 used
Tire clearance: GZ1-14 with white bulb cut to $25 plus
$50 tax. Tire clearance: GZ1-16 with white bulb cut to $35 plus
$50 tax. Tire clearance: GZ1-18 with white bulb cut to $45 plus
$50 tax. Tire clearance: GZ1-20 with white bulb cut to $55 plus
$50 tax. Tire clearance: GZ1-22 with white bulb cut to $75 plus
$50 tax.
Good used KLIJ compact stand with remote control. $280, just $100 at $13 The Stonebake's 292 Men $38.
For sale-1) Niklormaf Fm Modies, New, never.
Call. Steve C. 843-1638, after 6 p.m. 2-22
www.niklormaf.com
1970 BSA 4000 - extended front forks - runa great
- 5,000 miles - Call 643-3089
2-22
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at real estate stores. Also antiques, used furniture, collectibles, decorative items. COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. 2nd, 3 bikes, 1 week. River bridge, open 9-4 each day a week. 500 S. Michigan Ave.
For Sale Two magnificent male Persian Kittens
Girld. aired from show stock 843-2711. 9-25
Airdriven. on show stock 843-2711. 9-25
For Sale-Men's 3 speed bike Coast King: Al-
manuel 250r/65s, with aces, 12.5x24, Call 841-7896 to me
Call 841-7896 to me
FOR SALE: Removable hard for MOB. Excel
1163. A must for cold weather. Cars:
$28
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS AKC-Sired by Westpoint Sam-Sam is an 85 pound professionally trained super-successful hunting dog who also works with a dog. I will show you request. 842-5384 2-26
For male, 1961 Rambler, 6 cyl, good running condition, good gas mileage; $7.00 or less offer. C25 (MARITIME).
FOR SALE 1971-12" x 20" furnished mobile
office. Excellent Condition. Make an offer. 841-256-
8370. Excellent Condition. Make an offer. 841-256-
8370.
NEW VENTURA TENOR BANO Beautiful instrument case with cappuccino and applique, instrument box, case and applique.
For sale. Conn Acoustic Guitar with new Svacew
for your needs. Good condition. Send wifi.
814-703-2922, good condition. WWW.SVCW
.COM
50 MPG - 1972 Triumph, Tiger 650. Perfect condition.
995, 843-1616. 2-27
Stere speakers-large corner loaded folded horns. Extremely efficient. Must heat to appreciate. $165 or best offer, or will consider trading for a small guitar amp. wanted. 2-27 keep trying
YARN - PATTERNN - NEEDLEPOIN
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 6th 841-2656
15 East 6th
MIG 285 mal. gal. New batteries, good condi-
tion. Battery is in excellent condition or Frt or 6- of atal
11500 lbs. MIG 342-8838 or Frt or 6- of atal
11500 lbs. MIG 342-8838 or Frt or 6- of atal
Trayason YGL-3 Guitar Amp w. speakers, Wurzelson T280 Tube 16" Portable Tankable with Shure TS440 Tankable with Shure TS440
Some new records added to our used tapes. Beat the Beast at Roy's Recording Sound. The records at Ray's Recording Sound.
NOTICE
MOB RADIOSET--1967, everything in perfect
condition. Shipment ready.
engines 60,000 ml total on car bon. B48-7523,
b48-7525
LECIA M-2 CAMBA4, top condition, below dealers price. W-50 mm summermate f-2 lens, close up studer, & case 35 mm summermate F-3 lens. LECIA M-2 summermate MC meter M-843-288 forft 2-21
Ever want something warm and bright to come
at 14 Hours. St 10:00 - 3:00 Mon - Sat.
2-22
Oocillopsis and Garrard changer-Tokrone-
tion dye sequencing 3076; 1545; 2,47
dye sequencing $$$$ 891; 6417; 2,47
TYPEWRITER CLAMING - 3-day service Smith-Corona Mathtuits. 4-day service Washable clutch and cleaned clutch Electricite and light industrial loaded and cleaned Electricite and light industrial loaded. River City Rage 815 Vermont. 815 Vermont. River City Rage 815 Vermont.
Mont Blair Party Lounge now available for private parties. Phone 843-2638 for 4 p.m. for dinner.
MOTORCYCLE--repair and tune. All makes-
satisfaction guaranteed. Pick-up and delivery
service. Minor tune up $12. Spring service spe-
cialty. Tom for appointment. 843-857-835
ninja. 2-22
James Gang Foreign Auto Parts Now Open Parts for ALL Foreign Cars
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Quare. We have open pit
and brick dining room. Try our bride plate, brick andwishes or brush by the pound. Hall-Citizen by the pound. Brush by the pound. 9:30 p.m. Sunday and Tuesday. 842-8510. ff.
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBRARIES, INC. Meetings for
SOCIAL FORAÇÃO 482-5177, earnings
for SOCIAL FORAÇÃO 482-5177, earnings
WANTED Square dance caller capable of giving
dance instructions. May be hired for 32nd,
March 2011, Call District Rachel
843-960-9000
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Joue or Judy at the Quick Copy Center. Your regrep. kit can be purchased from any local pharmacy.
MICKY MOUKEY IS A PUT-ON. —, Putin Mickey Mouse Jewelry is now available only at Mickey Mouse Jewelry in now available only at the Lawrence. These pieces are of gold-color pottery. Items are distributed by the Wall Dish Store. Items are distributed by the High quality at a reasonable price $1-$3. The high quality at a reasonable price $1-$3. Every afternoon & weekends. —2-26
LEICA DEMONSTRATION and rap session with
Jonathan Levin. 21st Century Fox,
Palm Beach Store, 2137 Independence Blvd.
(951) 420-8500. jonathan.levin@fox.com
THEIS, BINDING, and cooping service available.
Fast Service and reasonable prices. Call 841-7600.
Fast Service and reasonable prices. Call 841-7600.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT at the Quick
Computer. Mail resume to:
1,100 exp. $120.10 Tele: 849-6000-327
1,100 exp. $120.10 Tele: 849-6000-327
SERVICE PROBLEM! You don't need them here.
I'll just give you the password. 181 w. 60 Lawrence, Katsu-
484-533-353
SERVICE PROBLEM! You don't need them here.
I'll just give you the password. 181 w. 60 Lawrence, Katsu-
484-533-353
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. Phone Order
843 7685 We Deliver - 9th & 10th
THE HILE in the WALL
NIGHT CLASSES?
Crescent Heights
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
Oaks Acorn
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS
UNABLE TO PARK?
Free: One JCI $25 bicycle ride if you pick up a ride from Ride-On Bike Shop. It is a nice rack and we have nice iNakeau, Cambanita, Rahalog, Pengouet, Ride-On Bicycles, Ride-On Bicycles, 2:28
Mauschuttas
FOR RENT
5:45 - 10:15
Gaslight
WANTED
MEDITATION WORKSHOP within a Christian
Community, 21 West 57th Street,
Ovead For registration, drug in or call 800-
349-6540.
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice
location. Walk to parking lot and just a
block from club. Parking and villa paid use.
APARTMENT-motorcycle, clean and quiet 2 bed (base)
1400 sq. ft., W/3BR, 2BATHS, 1500
Ohio, 10:30-12:30 PM, and T59-600 p.m.
4-bedroom, 2-bathroom, 2-car garage
Rental Office
COUPLES KENINICIMENT Future visioning Life-Planning Wellington, New Zealand - Bachelor's in Social Studies or United States MPH-8933
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
Wall to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious walk-in closets, complete electric kitchen appliances, clear blue swimming pool, gas BIQ grill units, clean blue swimming pool, bathroom bedrooms, bedroom bath townhouses. 2500 W. Sixth Street bedroom bath townhouses. 2500 W. Sixth Street bedroom bath townhouses.
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
a spacious, updated parking, storage NEAR
NASHVILLE.
Corporaiship apartment for rent at 11 W. Church St.
8525 Broomfield, CO 80214.
BSS $250 apartment and $750 landlord fee.
BSS & GRADE rent and warehouse fees.
BSS & GRADE landlord fees.
Room $47.50 per month in cooperative living
Room $12.90 per month in private
mature students. Good location near store,
parking, and bus stop. Room $20.90 per
month in cooperative living.
1. bedroom - furnished upstairs and Large living room (furnished upstairs). Call 843-5222 between 6:10
afternoon, 11:30am. Call 843-5222 between 6:10
afternoon, 11:30am.
GATHOUSE APARTMENTS. No booze required.
CARTE CINEMA. Open 8 am to 6 pm, or
at 4:30 or 7:30.
Call 455-234-1234.
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS 914-862-2370 or
jayhawkertowers.com with utilities paid 852-982-4397
1815 W. 24TH
One and two efficiency, furnished. For males.
Near downtown. No pets. 835-7677. tf
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1733-1745 Worth 24th St.
Furnished apartments from $185 and up. AV
conditioning, carrot, diaposit, all electric kitchen,
laundry facilities, off-the-street parking. NU bus
service. Parking.
Want to Rent. Working band needs rehearsal
want to Rent. Working band needs help you need
to Rent Call: 843-864-8644 - 2-21
House for Rent - Very cheap rent if occupied by a person or family. Fully furnished 4 bedrooms. Call 866-750-1234.
842-2500
Private Home needed: To-share size, large town Only $70/month. Utilities paid. Car rental.
WANTED—Large room or heated Garage (preferably on ground level) For ceramic studio. Electricity, wiring for electricity. Will pay or share use of battery wall and Kill Z. K.C.) call Linda. 843-963-306
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
WANTED Need tickets (any number) - student or adult. Phone 1-855-297-3434. If you have tickets to will call *M-181-8513*.
SINGLE WOMEN WANTED FOR BAD MEN
woops we mean women's singles contest on Badminton Day. Feb 23, 9am-11am. Come to Robbie
$546. Involved by inframural Office; 222-7466.
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles.
Interested in no-frills low-cost jet travel to
tropical destinations? Explore our education
practically, practically? EDUCATION FLIGHTS
can help you find the least expensive way for
getting where you want to go. Phone us at
(612) 478-5900.
SIX-HOUR MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
Information orientation brief daily with witness,
volunteers, and parents.
Information orientation brief daily with witness,
volunteers, and parents.
Festival of the Arts, March 4-26, 1985 tickets
Theater Center of Atlanta will present a weekly work that is purchased at the Atlanta Opera. Tickets are $20 per person.
Meditation Research, Seeking meditators at least 50 years old to participate. Apply by mail or email and awareness. For more information contact Meditation Research.
SERVICES OFFERED
Happy Anniversary Vera, Paul. 2-21
RIVER CITY REPAIR -815 Vermont, 481-6435
Stereo - waters + watchers. Independent repair specialist...No retail hustle. We service what others replace. Impressources resources. See No.
www.rivercityrepair.com
Get ready for spring. Gardens 4751 filled, Organic
lawn available. Call 842-4751 or 842-3883 for more.
http://www.gardencities.com
Tired of Housewarm? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and waxing. Work done professionally by machine at a reasonable price. For rent, call 843-2944 afternoons and evenings Riff or Biff, 843-2944 afternoons and evenings
LIMOUSINE & CHAFFEUR SERVICE Ultimate
plus gas plus gas. Negotiate. Call 855-
231-7900.
Private sewing instruction. Groups of 3 or 4 Beginning and advanced sewing or knitting
HELP WANTED
Wanted: Navy veterans (not 8 years, or less) for Wanted: Navy veterans (not 8 years, or less). Pay and benefits are excellent. For details see www.careers.com/benefits.
Business硕士 needed for research project. Pur-
pose: To provide technical assistance to simulated
industrial firm. Volunteers paid $2,000 a
month.
Fun job for full-time students: 1-3 nights a week. Work at Lawreens and Eagle's Place, where you need good pay and work to apply. Work in person, 1-4 PM; TIME to PEAPE. **60** W. 9th, [next to] **BAKERY】**
McDonald's will be opening its new dining room soon. We need part time day & evening room. Male or female. Starting wage $46 per hour. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree of 2 to 5 & 7-10 days. 2-27
a new beer Johnnie's
a new beer place.
795 new hampshire Hall.
JAMC
[corner of 8th E. New Hampshire]
ADVENTURE a bookstore
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail.
FINE SERVICE
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
FINE BOOKS
Phone 843-6424
Special three year enlistment program for women with musted ability who qualify for one of the three training programs offered. Ninched and you will win at least 1000 per year. McClellan, by Birmingham and Atlanta) McClellan, by Birmingham and Atlanta) works plus twelve weeks (August through March) the Army Reserve Center in Lawrenry Hall 452-329-6780.
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL Research, Assistant. Suggested Requirements: Master of Public Administration degree. Experiential state budget process. Some knowledge of the state budget process. Experience in Orakes Regional Commission activities would be helpful. Duration: March to 1974 through June 1975. Participation in research grant. Salary $200 per month. Perform research on a project concerning Kansas research search at
Wanted Navy veteran (oil & 8 years or less) for:
Wanted Navy veteran (oil & 8 years or less)
Service Pay and bonuses are excellent. For details
visit http://www.donate.nv.us/workforce.
TYPING
Employment Opportunities
Typing in my home. IBM Electrical, Pica type.
Using a keyboard. Formatting. From
accurate work. Call Katie, 841-252-9300.
Experienced in typing themes, dissertation, term papers, other mize, typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt use of a word processor. Corrected writing. Photographs 84-554, Ms. Wright
Experimented Typid=will—watl types, dissertations
tetra letters and miscellaneous typing. Call PhD.
Typeid=will.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4980. Myra. 2-26
LOST. Bird clutch in case in Wasson Library. Conten-
tion of contents: Call 843-1075. No questions asked.
Organic Chemistry lab book, and notebooks from the laboratory. We will teach them as they contain all my lab work done this semester, and can't be replaced. No questions answered; generous reward offered. Contact: 853-943-2222
Lest-Pure, gray kitty, half-gown male. 'last'
Please call Kwik, 84-6268, Reward
2-27
Please call Kwik, 84-6268, Reward
2-27
TACOS $3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
K
DOWNTOWN
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
804-569
Open 7 Days a Week
'KU ON WHEELS'
love is . . .
A baby is hugging another baby.
TWICE AN HOUR
25 & 45 past the hour
... wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
Another Student Senate Service
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1871 W. 6th Lawrence, Kansas
843-3333
Parts & Accessories
W
10
Thursdav. February 21. 1974
University Daily Kansan
Search for Privacy Cited as Cause for Dorm Decline
Editor's Note: This is the first of two stories on housing conditions and trends in
By SUZI SMITH and JILL WILLIS
Kansas St. Anfarniere
The need for privacy has caused more and more University of Kansas students to move into apartments during the past five years.
According to a KU housing report, 53.1 per cent of KU students now live in campus rooms or apartments. This compares with 31.5 per cent in the fall of 1969.
Bob House, Wichita senior, said recently that he had moved into an apartment complex from a fraternity house this year, mainly because he wanted more privacy.
HOWSIE SAID HE LIKED apartment living more than fraternity living because it was a place to relax and enjoy life.
and the obligations were fewer.
Carol Patterson, Carthage, Moe, graduate student, said her apartment, which is in a building near the university.
Patterson said she chose an apartment in a house instead of a complex because she said the apartment complexes were poor and their walls were thin.
Charlie McCord, Kansas City, Mo., junior, who also moved out of a fraternity, shares a house with two other men. He said he didn't like eating at specific times, as he had to do in the fraternity. He said living in the house was more flexible.
THE HOUSE IS MORE quiet and more private for studying, he said. The only disadvantage, he said, was in getting things around because the landlord lived in Philadelphia.
Shari Brooks, St. Louis sophomore, said
Brooks said she lived in a residence hall last year and didn't like it. She said she didn't like the idea of living in a sorority house "with 60 other chicks."
JOHN BEISNER, SALINA JUNIOR and former president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said students would benefit the Halls for economic and convenience reasons.
With rising food prices, it's cheaper for a student to have the food prepared for him by a local vendor.
The number of students living in KU residence hills has dropped 8.5 per cent in the past five years. Now 16.9 per cent of KU students live in residence halls.
situé elle en office de bureau commercial intérieur
t du bureau commercial intérieur
d la maison d'un employeur.
"You have the mixed benefits of living in
LA&S Budget Forces Faculty
From Page One
according to John Landgrebe, chairman of the department.
“It’s going to hurt,” he said. “It could put a punch to sections at the freshman in line.”
The geology department will lose four teaching assistants, Ernest Angino, chairman of the department, said. The department now has eight teaching assistants, a decrease of six over the past few years.
"It is going to cripple one of the stronger geology programs in the country," Angloin
Three teaching assistants and one visiting lecturer will be lost, he said. One position left open because of a sabbatical won't be filled.
The German department may have to reduce graduate offerings and options currently available to undergraduate students in beginning courses, Helmut Huelsbergen, chairman of the department, said.
New and expanded programs in the
history and political science departments will suffer because of teaching cutbacks,
Earl Eehrling, chairman of the political science department, said one assistant professor has been charged with stealing money.
"We were going to use the vacancy for U. politics and public administration jobs."
Charles Sidman, chairman of the history department, said he would lose two graduate assistants but no faculty members.
"At the moment, department morale is
he said, and "I think I can sustain it
for a year."
However, Sidman said faculty members were developing new courses and teaching off campus and at night, "and paying it out of their own pockets."
One faculty member could have been let go legally, he said, but wasn't, possibly because the history department had ex-cep tions to a "tremendous increase" in enrollment.
The psychology department has lost one
--full professor in the past year and is being allowed to fill the vacancy with an assistant professor, Charles Kiesler, chairman of the department, said.
Jodi Deutsch, New Shrewbury, N.J. senior, and originator of Whistle Stop, said yesterday that the project would serve a dual purpose.
Whistle Plan Tries to Stop Rapes
However, he said University funds had accounted for only 60 per cent of the full professor's salary, so the dollar in return to the department wasn't substantial.
Liz Witt, co-president of the Lawrence
A community wide effort to reduce sex crimes by urging women to carry whistles and making alone will be studied by the dean of law enforcement and Lawrence law enforcement officers.
The sociology department will be allowed to negotiate one faculty position, Marston McCluggage, chairman of the department, said.
chapter of the National Organization for Women, said the whistle campaign would also serve as a symbol of solidarity among women trying to stop attacks.
A proposal, called Whistle Stop, was discussed yesterday afternoon at a meeting of about 35 university and city officials and the Kansas City mayor in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
McCluggage said that his department had been understaffed, but that in light of other cutbacks, "We don't have anything to kick about."
According to Deutsch, a whistle could startle the attacker long enough to allow the victim to get away. Deutsch also said that if people were aware of the project, they would know to come to the aid of the victim or call the police.
Lawrence expired of Police Richard Stanix expressed concern that a whistle would only excite the attacker and cause him to seriously injure the victim. However, when he did not give his whistle on the attacker would probably be little different from that of a scream or shout.
Anthropology department chairman Henry Lordsgaard he said would lose two teaching assistants and one and one-half faculty members. The "half" faculty anthropological linguistics and is also employed in the linguistics department.
"The faster we can get the information, the better off we are," said John Thomas, who worked with the company.
Law enforcement officials at the meeting stressed the importance of immediate action.
Lawrence police also urged citizens to use Crime Alerts, a telephone number that anyone may call to give information to law enforcement officers are not required to identify themselves.
Lindaugaard the elimination of that position would mean the end of a sub-region. A sub-region is
an organized housing situation while still having independence," he said.
Graduate students studying an-
thropological linguistics have protested in a
charter to Charlene Archie R. Dykes, and
Landgraf Schmidt had appealed to
Dykes, without success.
"At the high administrative levels the priority is on vocational training," he said. "We're not deemed quite as relevant. The whole notion of the liberal arts college is being challenged like never before. It's disgusting."
Mark Hanson, Shawnee Mission freshman, said an advantage of a residence hall is the opportunity to work with other students.
THER'S ALWAYS PLENTY of hot water,
he said, and the plumbing and heating are
Hanson complained, however, about noise and a lack of privacy.
WANT TO TEACH IN LAWRENCE SCHOOLS?
Information Meeting
February 25
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Student Union
Jayhawk Room
"When there are 500 people stacked on top of each other," he said. "It's impossible to stay up."
Although there are fewer persons living in a scholarship hall as compared with a residence hall, she said, there is still a lack of privacy.
TAOS NEW MEXICO The Land of Deep Powder and Sun "TRIP CONFIRMED"
Joel CoX, Wichita senior, said there wasn't much privacy in his scholarship hall, but she had a room.
Sara Henderson, Webster Groves, Mo,
juniar, she moved from Nainshi Mall to an apartment because she didn't like the city. She said she she said she appreciated the mall service.
Cox said the advantages of his scholarship hall were low cost and closeness to campus.
cooperative living situation, said Pam Hoover, Lawrence freshman.
relaxed and studious atmosphere in the house during the week.
A
SINCE 1969, THE percentage of the student who has divided from 9.6 to 7.0 per cent sorbites from 4.8 per cent to 4.2 per cent. The fraternal system has, however, shown a decrease in this ratio.
AT TIMES YOU WOULD think there was a lack of privacy in the fraternity, he said, but there is always a quiet place in the house to study.
"WE GET TO DECIDE pretty much how things go and that's something you don't run into much," she said. "You have room for change."
He said he preferred fraternity living because of the possibilities for self-government and because of the lasting relationships he thought he would make.
Mary Babbey, Salina sophomore and
Mary Babbey, Omega sorority, said she felt
she was in love with her.
Deadline Today For information, call SUA 864-3477
Spring Break
on Skis!
MARCH 10-15 *111
Trip Includes:
—Round trip chartered bus
—5 nights lodging at Sierra del Sol
condominiums, kitchen, fire-
place, balcony, sauna
—4 days skiing on all lifts, 52 runs
—2900 vertical feet
*25.00 holds a reservation
Women aren't permitted upstairs at Bengston's fraternity except Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings. Bengston said he thought this rule permitted a more
Greg Bengston, Greg sophomore and a member of Phta Delta Theta, said he liked the team's ability to work in a group.
"You don't have a bunch of people you don't know when you're in the TV room," she said.
Barbee said she also got to know many people through house activities.
Another advantage, she said, is that there someone to help her with school work — maybe even a homework helper.
Henderson said it was easier to study in her apartment because there has been no person in the house.
The Flamingo Club now presents daily Candy Topless Disc Jockey from K.C.
"THEY GIVE YOU a lot of freedom but they make you feel like you’re constantly under surveillance," she said. "They try to screw you when they can as far as money is."
The number of students living in scholarship halls has increased slightly, but the percentage of the entire student body in these halls has remained unchanged.
An advantage of a scholarship hall is the
D
Memberships Available
Open Everyday 9:00 in the Morning-3:00 a.m.
TOPLESS DANCERS EVERYDAY
2:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
This week June and Laurie Love are here!
Bands every Friday & Saturday Night 10:30 p.m.-3:00 a.m.
Dance to the sounds of MARSYAS Fri., Feb. 22 and Sat., Feb. 23
TOPLESS DANCERS ALSO APPEAR WITH THE BAND
Private Party Facilities Available
CONSUMERS WORKSHOP
The Economics of
LIFE
INSURANCE
Dr. Leland Pritchard
Professor of Economics
501 N. 9th 843-9800
THURS., FEB. 21, 7:30 p.m.
Kansas University, International Room
A project of the Consumer Protec-
tive funded by the Student
Activity Fee
Harmon Brand
Special Purchase!
Spring Jackets Here #9.00
Now #5.88
Great Prints
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
ADRIAN SMITH & co.
Saturday,
Feb. 23
You can sit and listen; you are set free to clap your hands, boogle . . do your own thing, whatever it might be, because a good time is what's being laid down. $1.50 cover. One show 9-midnight
free state opera house 642 Mass.Ave. Lawrence
5
Brought to you by The Music People, Ltd.
I
Forecast: Cloudy, chance of snow. High 40s, low 20s.
KANSAN
84th Year, No.96
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Enrollment Shifts To Elicit Reallocation
Friday, February 22, 1974
See Story Page 5
news the associated capsules press
Lawyer Indicted on Lying About Milk Fund
A Watergate grand jury indicted Texas lawyer Jake Jacobsen yesterday and accused him of lying under oath about milk fund money allegedly involved in the 1982 case.
The indictment said Jacobson lied to the federal grand jury when he swore he left $10,000 in a bank safe-denotation box for 2% years.
The indictment held the grand jury had evidence that Jacobson withdrew the $10,000 from his client, the Associated Milk Producers Inc., and that he claimed it "was to be paid to a public official for his assistance" in getting President Nixon to raise federal milk price supports in March 1971.
Solzhenitsyn to Arrive in Copenhagen
Alexander Solzenhinten, the Nobel Prize-winner who was expelled from the Soviet Union, left Switzerland by train and headed for Copenhagen.
In Moscow, Solzenittsyn's wife said she and her family had been assured of quick approval of their application for exit vias to join Solzenittsyn.
Nixon Asks Stiffer Penalty for Drug Dealers
Nixon Asks Stiffer Penalty for Drug Dealers President Nixon asked Congress for new minimum jail sentences for narcotics traffickers.
"More than a quarter of those who are convicted of narcotics trafficking don't serve a single day behind here." Nixon said.
He asked Congress to close that and other loopholes in the criminal justice system.
Admiral Denies Advocating Military Spying
Navy admiral Robert O. Welander, accused by Yeoman Charles E. Radford of fostering military spying inside the White House said in Washington, D.C. that the allegations were "irresponsible distortions of fact."
Welander said his attempts to close off leaks of classified material to the press in 1971 were twisted into accusations that he spied for the military.
Radford had testified that Welander and his predecessor, Rear Adm. Bremond,Robert Rush, and the lieutenant, the yelman to procure a mission to top U.S. military leaders.
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Welander insisted there was no need for military spying because of the free flow of information between Moorer and Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's former chief national security adviser and now the secretary of state.
Kissinger Says He Won't Resign
In Mexico City, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was a published report that said he would resign if President Nixon was impeached.
The Washington Star-News had reported that Kissinger had told senior members of Congress he would be compelled to resign if the House of Representatives passed a law.
Kissinger began three days of meetings with 24 Latin American and Caribbean foreign ministers amid signs that some of them would press for a cease-fire in the Middle East.
Kidnapers of Atlanta Editor Demand $700,000 Ransom
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - People claiming to be the kidnappers of Reg Murphy, editor of the Atlanta Constitution, sent a tape-recorded message from Murphy to the newspaper last night and demanded $700,000 ransom.
William H. Fields, executive editor of the Constitution and the Atlanta Journal, said that Mr. Trump's administration is
Fields played the tape at a news conference but didn't say how the tape was
"I have been kidnapped by the American Revolutionary Army," she voice identified as Murphy's said in the tape recording. "I wish I was not in that situation and the children that I am all right, that I have
been treated with courtesy and that I have not been abused.
"The American Revolutionary Army, as I understand it, feels that the American news media have been too leftist and too liberal. That is the cause for my abdication."
Murphy said the kidnappers were demanding a ransom of $700,000. "They understand that I don't have that kind of wealth and they don't take it personally," he said. "They make it (the demand) towards the corporation. They tell me that for or to be in five-dollar, ten-dollar, twenty-dollar, fifty-dollar denominations."
Murphy disappeared from his home Wednesday night after being asked by a
Hearst Kidnapers Demand $4 Million More for Food
★ ★
"This is in no way implying that Mr. Hearest will or will not meet the demands. It is clear that he will not meet the demands."
HILLSBOROUGH, Calif. (AP) — The kidnappers of Patricia Heather yesterday accused her father of "throwing a few crumbs to the people" and demanded he add another $4 million within 24 hours to a $2 million food giveaway program.
While Kramer said he expected to have that much food available, he declined to characterize it as a response to the new SLA. He suggested in a tape-recorded message yesterday
The administrator of the food plan said that he was confident that donations of food to the school would be received.
"There is no question that we would be far in excess of that, no question at all," said A. Ludlow Kramer, secretary of state of Washington State.
The Symbionce Liberation Army said the funds should be made available within 24 hours and that the entire $6 million worth of money raised should be sent to any family seeking the groceries should get $70 worth each, declared "Ginque," who himself self-generated field marshal of the SA.
be made to carry out the food bank program that he authorized," he said.
But Keneth Baxter, purchasing agent for the Hearst program, said a tight food market and transportation problems might make it impossible to scrape up another $4 million worth of food even if the money is made available.
Baxter said he had "to scrape the bottom of the barrel" to get enough food for the cattle.
Kramer said distribution would begin at four points Friday noon—one each in Oakland, San Francisco, Richmond and East Palo Alto.
Each family can take what it needs, no questions asked, Kramer said. The SLA demand was that each family receive $70 worth of food in the first month.
Other distribution centers demanded by
the SLM will be opened on the weekend,
In another development, the FBI agent in charge of the case, Charles Bates, said he was convinced by the latest tape that Miss Hearst still was alive. But Bates declined to speculate further on the prospects of her being freed.
"I'm sure she's alive and just hope and pray that she's released safely sometime. But I
Committee OKs 10% KU Pav Raise
Bv BETH RETONDE
By BEST RESTOND
Kansas Staff Reporter
The 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries requested by the Kansas Board of Regents for the next fiscal year was approved by the Ways and Means Committee of the Kansas House of Representatives last night.
The committee will present its appropriations recommendations for the regents' and the six state-supported schools' budgets to the entire House Monday. From there, the bill will go to the Senate.
The legislature usually rubberstamp what the ways and means committee appoints.
The committee also approved the regents' request of $58,575 for women's intercollegiate athletics at KU. The vote came after a reconsideration of the request which turned down lower when some members of the 2-SN committee were absent.
B Clubs Seem Willing To Break Liquor Law
Kansan Staff Reporter
By CRAIG STOCK
Employees of the Mad Hatter, Flamingo, Flame, Shire and Bodehole told a Kansas reporter that they would ignore legal issues and other liquor-like-drink requirements.
At least five Class B private clubs in Lawrence are apparently willing to violate the law.
Kansas law, said Evans, requires that members of Class B clubs be at least 21 years old, be of decent moral character, pay a minimum of $10 for the membership and wait at least 30 days from the date of apprehension or the date of the granting of membership.
According to W. Boyd Evans, an attorney for the Kansas Alcoholic Beverage Control office, requirements for membership. Class B private clubs were set by state law.
The reporter, saying that he was a new student at the University of Kansas and that he didn't understand Kansas liquor laws, asked each cell how he could get a drink.
B, in telephone conversations with five Class B clubs, it was indicated that various students were in this class.
A spokesman for the Mad Hatter at 700
Hampton St. said yesterday that a protest
was planned.
The law also states that patrons of Class Club must bring their own liquor to the club and that no liquor may be sold over the bar by the club.
out a membership application, pay $1 and be at least 21 years old. The spokesman said no wait would be necessary to receive the membership. The spokesman did say that the member would have to bring his own wallet. The spokesman would have to have a Kansas liquor stamp.
A woman at the Shire at 806 Massachusetts St. said that she couldn't give the reporter too much information over the phone because he might be an agent. After further questioning, however, she said the 30-day waiting period could be waived.
A spokesman for the Flame at $119\frac{1}{2}$ E. 6th St., said the 30-day waiting period could be waived if the prospective member knew a member of the club.
A woman at the Flamingo at 501 N. 9th St, said that a membership there would cost $31. She said she waited for a waiting period for the membership. However, upon further questioning, she said that if the prospective member knew that her membership club, the 30 day period might be waived.
The woman also said that although technically a member was required to bring his own bottle, he could be served liquor-by-the-drink over the bar.
"We could see what we could do," she said.
"If you show me a student ID and I'm sure you're not an agent, you'll fix up you."
Action on a requests request to expand the KU computation center was delayed until MEM
A woman at the Bodega at 6% E. 7th St.
See CLASS R Page 2
Gov. Robert Docking recommended an 8.5 per cent salary increase for the six schools in his budget message to the school board that he had neglected no money, for women's athletics.
Faculty salary increases for the other five state-supported schools were also approved.
The request for a 10 per cent increase in other operating expenditures at KU was turned down and the governor's recommendation approved.
Docking recommended the following operating expenditures for KU: a 7.4 per cent increase in the educational program, an 8 per cent increase for operating the physical plant, a 6 per cent increase for the geological survey, a 3.5 per cent increase for other research and a 6 per cent increase for extension and public service costs.
The relegits said the increases were necessary to keep the six schools competitive with similar institutions and to retain top quality faculty members. The salary increase will be distributed on a merit basis.
The salary increase for KU, according to officials here, was necessary to help catch up with losses suffered by the University during 1972 and voted no salary increases during 1972.
The faculty salary increase was listed as the top priority item in the budget request committee.
In a statement to the committee Feb. 11, Carl L. Courter, chairman of the board of regents, said that in addition to the fact that no salary increases were granted in 1972, some faculty members were interested in learning the purpose of bargaining for better salaries.
man to help distribute $100,000 worth of heating oil for needy causes.
Although faculty organization isn't necessarily wrong, he said, the regents support give adequate salaries before graduation and have to organize into bargaining units.
The money for women's intercollegiate athletics was requested by the regents to pay for coaching, training, supplies and team travel.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus, folded the committee to focus on academic excellence.
Fields said the newspaper would pay the ransom as soon as it is “apprised of the attack.”
Sources said Murphy left with a heavy-set white man who wore a cowboy hat. The man, believed to be in his 20s, was about 6 feet tall.
requiring equitable support for both men's and women's sports were one reason the team won.
The recorded message said the kidnapers would call "at random" someone in the Atlanta metropolitan area and give that person the demand.
State Rep. Albert Campbell, D-Larned, said last night he would rather supply the funds for women's intercollegiate athletics now than wait for someone to take legal action and perils win a court decision that would force the legislature to act.
A request for $190,000 in tuition fee waivers for KU was turned down by a one-year rule.
The waivers had been proposed as a means of easing the financial problems involved in the operation of men's intercollegiate athletics.
The request was reconsidered last night but was again turned down.
"They ... will expect the person who is called to call you," the voice on the tape
Jankin Rankin, a spokesman for the family, said Mrs. Murphy was relieved when she came to town.
Newspaper staffers and officials said the voice on the tape was definetly that of a reporter.
"The family is encouraged by the development," Rankin said. "He (Murphy) sounded very serious. There is no doubt that it was Res."
"The American Revolutionary Army tells me that they intend in the future to engage in guerrilla warfare throughout the country," Murphy said.
"They don't intend to engage in bloodshed at this time. One of their significant demands is that all federal government departments that have free elections be held in the future."
Murphy said the group originally planned to abduct him at about the same time that the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) abducted Patricia Hearst. However, there were circumstances "which made it difficult to do at that time." he said
Murphy said his abductors hadn't claimed that they were working in coorridors and made no sense to work with them.
"Virginia, I urge you to be calm, get the children to go to school, and you all pursue the kind of life you have been pursuing," he said.
Then Murphy spoke to his wife:
"Remember what William Faulkner knew. He said life and man endure, and man does endure, and this will work out, and I look forward to seeing you in the future. I would welcome your prayers, but I don't want you to be overly alarmed."
The only way he would be hurt, he said, is if "people try to trace down where I am."
When he left home at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, when according to Fields, Murphy was told he was being escorted to a lawyer's office, legal details of the heating oil demand.
A telephone caller reported about two hours after Murphy's disappearance that he had been kidnapped by the "revolutionary Army."
FBI agents combed Murphy's office yesterday seeking leads on whom he was questioned.
Impeachment Grounds Wide, House Staff Says
In its most significant finding, the memorandum states that criminal law isn't applicable to the process of removing a president from office.
The advice, quickly rejected by the ranking Republican member of the committee, was contained in a staff memorandum exploring in general terms the constitutional grounds for impeachment of a president.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The House Judiciary Committee, investigating the possible impeachment of President Nixon, was advised by its staff yesterday that impeachable offenses need not be criminal acts.
Rodino called it a useful tool that would help the members make up their individual minds when it comes time to vote on whether grounds exist for impeachment Nixon.
Hatchinson said that it spoke to the committee, not for the committee and he did not attend.
Chairman Peter W. Rodino, D-N.J., and Rep. Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich., at a news conference at which the memorandum was distributed, made it clear that the memorandum in no way reflected the views of what constitutes an impractical offense.
"It supports a broader concept of impachment than I would think wise in dealing with a president," said Hutchinson, who added that he believed criminal behavior should be required before a president was removed from office.
but the memorandum stated that there was nothing in the 400-year history of impeachment in England, the deliberations of the Constitutional Convention or the precedents of the House to support the narrow view espoused by Hutchinson.
Turning specifically to the standards by which a president must be judged, the memorandum states that no precise criteria can be listed.
"However," it says, "where the issue is presidential compliance with the constitutional requirements and limitations on the presidency, the crucial factor is not the intrinsic quality of behavior but the significance of its effect upon our constitutional system or the functioning of our government."
The memorandum says that the constitutional duty imposed on a president to "take care that the laws be faithfully enforced" is overridden by an overall con duct of the executive branch.
With the memorandum to guide it, Rodine said, the committee was ready to seek evidence from the White House. A request listing specific tapes, documents and logs is being prepared, he said, that will be sent to the White House no later than early next week.
Albert E. Jenner Jr., chief minority counsel for the committee, said the standard for impeachment set by the memorandum was "very close to
MILAN
Old Fraser Hall Was Built in 1872. See Story Page 3
2
Friday, February 22, 1974
University Daily Kansan
HIGHLAND PARK HIGH
Student Advice
Jacki Crane, Topeka freshman, talks to her high school vice principal, Robert McCormick.
high school counselor. Crane makes suggestions for the college prep program at the college.
Class B Clubs
From Page One
said that a prospective member had to fill out an application, pay $10 and show a student ID, a driver's license and a draft card. She said that there was usually no waiting period if the prospective member was a student, but that there would probably be a 30-day waiting period if he wasn't.
An employee of one of the five Class B clubs said yesterday that the waiting period requirement for Class B memberships was very seldom enforced.
The employee said that liquor law violations were common in Class B private clubs and that Lawrence police rarely enforced the liquor laws.
"Most police don't like to bust clubs because they want to have a place to go, too," he said. "This town is extremely nice and we are nice to us and we treat them right."
He said most clubs, including the one at which he worked, polite in free association with them.
Police raid only when they receive a lot of complaints about under-age violations or fights at the club or when a rookie gets "gunhog" about enforcing the laws, he said. He said that the police had difficulty handling the case because owners have a variety of excuses and loopholes to use as defenses in charges of liquor law violations.
The police harass certain clubs or their
--members on occasion, he said. Clubs bothered by harassment get the message and clean up their operations for awhile, he said.
T. G.I.F. Today
$ 80^{\circ} $ Pitchers
3-6 p.m.
Monday-Friday
The man said Class B clubs would lose money if they obeyed the law to the letter.
Evans said that ABC agents checked liquor stores and private clubs throughout the state several times a year but that they only did undercover work when they had received a complaint against a particular club or store.
10
The ABC has only 28 agents, he said, and they have to check more than 1,100 liquor stores and more than 850 private clubs in Kansas.
The Ball Park Millcrest Shopping Center
The employee of one class B club said that the club had a list of 22 suspected liquor agents and that the management didn't worry much about the state agents.
Freshmen Give Advice to Principals
By S. J. WOHLRABE Kansan Staff Reporter
Harder high school courses and more college placement courses were among suggestions by freshmen for improvement of secondary education at the Principal-Counselor-Freshman (PCF) Conference yesterday in the Kansas Union.
high school students needed more college
placement courses to prepare them to meet
Different ideas about what high school students need to know to better prepare them for college were expressed by the teachers with their former principals and counselors.
"I think that high school students should be made to do their homework more regularly," said Rick Boatright, Topeka freshman. "The biggest mistake that I found was that I entered college with an insufficient development of study skills."
"The courses were not as hard in high school, especially in a small high school," Cellers said. "I didn't take geometry back in high school and had a little trouble with math last semester because geometry was a prerequisite."
Tom Cellers, Iola freshman, said that
The major complaint of freshmen is that they needed more reading and writing back in high school, said William Goering, principal at Lindsborg High School.
Robin Reynolds, Topeka freshman, said students should place a higher priority on their studies.
"I think activities are what high school is all about," and Reynolds. "Activities are great for developing friendships and talents. Besides, you'll never get the same
chance again to be so involved in activities."
T. D. Wheat, counselor at Iola High School said that as a result of student opinions he had to allow Iola High School was not putting enough effort into its college preparatory program.
"I can see from what graduates say that Iola has a watered-down advanced placement program," said Wheat. "We are taking the feedback and are going to see how we can revise the curriculum to help the student who wants to go on to college."
Decatur Community High School in Oberlin has revised its academic program because of feedback obtained from the PCF and said her Bachelets, principal of the School.
Ron Tucker, counselor at Chance High School, said that the PCF Conference was needed to keep the high schools up to date on policies that changed at KU every year.
Nita Johnson, counselor at Shawnee Mission West High School in Overland Park said the conference shouldn't be limited to feedback from freshmen only.
NEW FROM
SUA
FOR '74-'75
These program areas are expanding-You can direct these as an SUA Board Member.
- FREE UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR Free You!
- OUTDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEMBER Explore the Outdoors!
- INDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEMBER Discover the Great Indoors!
Treat Yourself to Prettier Hair
APPLICATIONS DUE FEBRUARY 27 SUA OFFICE KANSAS UNION 864-3477
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Thursday, Feb. 21 through Saturday, March 2 (Bring this ad for 25% discount)
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Rock Chalk Revue
Tickets Available at the SUA Office & Town Criers
Tickets are $2.50 for Friday night — $3.00 for Saturday night
Hoch Auditorium
March 1 and 2, 8 p.m.
OFFICIAL
MICKEY MOUSE
CLUB communication
D
Dear Mousekateers.
Hi! What's new with you? I wanna tell you about a new mousekateer in your neighborhood. He lives at 737 New Hampshire Street and his name is Whitey Elephant. Whitye has a lot of mouske-friends in Lawrence and he wants to make sure that you're on his "best liked" list.
To help Whitey make mouseka-friends with you, I've sent him a complete line of my Mickey Mouse Mouseka-Jewelry to sell to all of you. Now you can have your very own Mouseka-Rings, Mouseka-Pendants, Mouseka-Necklaces, Mouseka-Key Rings, Mouseka-Tie Pins and Mouseka-Cuff Links! And for all you girls whose mommies have let them pierce their ears, Whitey has Mouseka-Pierced Earrings with my picture on them.
Your friend,
Stop by and see White Elephant any afternoon at 727 New Hampshire St.
Remember, M. L.C.K. E (see your mail)
Remember, M-I-C-K-E-Y (see ya' real soon), M-Q-U-S-E!
Mickey Mouse
ANNETTE
P. S. Annette says "Hil," too.
Mad Hatter
704 NEW HAMPSHIRE
J. KUBAJS
OPEN
9 p.m.-3 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
Complete Canopy of Sound with
Unique NEW Sound System
Thurs.—Ladies' Night "as usual" with Disc Jockey
Fri.-Sat.—Live Entertainment Provided By "TREEFROG"
1 1
Enjoy yourself in an atmosphere that is dedicated to pleasing you!
"For members and guests 21 or older"
MEMBERSHIP AVAILABLE
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 22,1974
3
in
gram
PCF
capital
Fraser Ain't What It Used to Be; But Then, All Things Must Pass
By RANDY SCHUYLER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Editor's Note: This is one of a series of stories about the men for whom KUBU had served.
"We our new building is ready, so we will now go over and take possession," Gen. John Fraser told his students in D. 1872. With those words he led the 27 students of the University from North College to the newly built University Hall, later renamed Fraser Hall.
Fraser, the University's second chancellor, was largely responsible for Fraser University, while another chancellor in 1867 the only building she was in North College, which was already overcrowded. He was also responsible for Fraser University's state university from a local prep school.
Before coming to KU, Fraser, a Scottish immigrant, taught at colleges in Pennsylvania. When the Civil War began he enlisted in the Union army and was so well prepared that he was sent to Army College that an entire company of his students enlisted to fight under him.
After becoming chancellor Fraser was convinced that state allocations for a new building would be more cost-effective, he paused among the people of Lawrence for the new building. He persuaded them to pass a $100,000 fund issue to pay for the construction. He gave it to a town with a population of only 8,000.
Fraser then traveled around the country at his own expense to examine possibilities for the design of the new building, and in 1672, it was remanded after Fraser in 1897.
Fraser Hall was the largest college building in America and its design was considered the most progressive. It helped transform the local prep school to the University by arousing the interest of the entire state.
The architectural style of old Fraser Hall can't be identified specifically but it was comprised of an auditorium flanked by square classroom wings and 74 rooms. At one time the building housed the chancellor's offices, the office of the Board of Regents, the library, the University Press and the mathematics, astronomy, engineering, natural history, Greek, English, philosophy and law.
When Fraser was first opened, the only sources of drinking water were five cisterns in the basement and north and south of the building. In the morning the janitors lifted the water out of the cisterns in buckets and students in the basement students to drink out of. This water was also used to soak bones from the natural history museum.
People who made speeches in Fraser Auditorium included Woolrow Wilson, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford G. Hayes, William Howard Taft, William Jennings Bryan, Harry Truman, Snow's buggy was stolen, taken apart, and reassembled on the roof of the north tower.
in the 1940s and 50s, old Fraser Hall began to show its wear and in 1690 serious talk of replacing it began. The walls were cracking, the foundations were unstable. Mr. Bray had been a hard-working obvious that something would have to be done. University officials determined that
to repair Fraser would be too costly if not impossible.
The decision to raise old Fraser Hall and replace it with a new structure was accepted with and resignation by faculty and with the plans for new Fraser were revealed.
The plans for the new building were published on March 29, 1965. Two days later the storm broke, killing five students in the University Daily Kansan from students and faculty, but many alumni and private citizens were evacuated. The school is circulated and students picketed in protest.
One professor said of the design of new Fraser, "It becomes a monument to bureaucracy. Take the root off of it and it makes one of those hotels in a 'Monopoly game.'"
Students objecting to the plans presented a plea to former Gov. William H. Avery to scrap the plans. Avery refused the plea, and Fraser rejoiced in his victory. Fraser in mid-1953. New Fraser was built in 1967.
on campus
ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER will present "Modernism: Is it alive after Vatican II?" by the Rev. Michael Mullen at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at St. John's Church, Father Mullen, teacher of history and the world Seminary in Blower Springs, Indiana, which is in its historical context, and how it relates to doctrines and changes in the church.
SUFI DANCING, a combination of chanting and spiritual dancing in meditative movements which originated in the Middle East, will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 14, for building, 1204 Oread St. No experience is necessary and instruction is provided.
KU PARAPSYCHOLOGY Club will meet
at 8 p.m. Sunday in the upper apartment at
105 West 34th Street, New York, NY 10026
My name is Carl Dumber.
Six weeks ago I was released from the keenworth Federal Penitentiary. I spent nine years in prison, starting at age 17. During that time I found a chance to do a lot of thinking and writing. Songs especially. Quite naturally it came to a point of trying to explain myself just what was going on around me — and in me. When I want to prison these students even been aviol on Sunset Strip. When I got out I found that the world for some reason, was fairly satisfied with it. But surely she no idea what goes on in its name. So if (you did) I don't think it would allow it. But that's not guaranteed. Cause I never thought I might have a chance to meet the Detryn. Detryn room with sides of the bars. Find out for yourself about yourself.
Cull Dumbar
Carl Dunbar & His Music Friday & Saturday Evening at the Flagship
$1.00 Minimum
12th & Oread
SWING DOWN TO SANDY'S Deluxe Sandee
1/4 pound chopped beefsteak
Sandee lovers start here
Sesame bun
Melted cheese
Shredded lettuce
Tomato onion pickle
Secret sauce
Not just meat but chopped beef steak
SANDY'S PUTS THE FUN INTO EATING OUT
Sandy's
2120 W. 9th
Across from Hillcrest
BASKETBALL
the balcony
NEW PRIVATE CLASS 'B' CLUB
The Midwest's Finest Bands Nightly
Appearing This Week
Tide
One Night Only Tuesday, Feb. 26
DOUG CLARK AND THE HOT NUTS
grandmothers
a fine drinking emporium
417 W. 37th, Topeka, Kansas
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
100
A high wooden wedge from Bare-Trap. Super Sandals from the best in California sandal makers. This style in Navy, Natural, or Brown. You'll find comfort with Bare-Traps.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 Mass. 843-4255
ZERCHER
PHOTO
IN-STORE Demonstration and Sale of Honeywell
STROBES
- Up to 160 flashes per set of fresh batteries
- Recycles in 10 seconds (average)
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- $ 50^{\circ} $ angle of coverage
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The Honeywell STROBONAR 100
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MORSEWELL
STROBONAR
100
See this fine strobe and all the others now on sale at Zercher's.
The Honeywell factory representative will be at Zercher Photo on Saturday, Feb.23 (tomorrow) from 12-5:30 to talk about the fine line of Honeywell photographic equipment.
Other Honeywell STROBES on Sale:
List
Strobonar 110—54.95
Strobonar 360—99.95
Strobonar 470—149.95
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39.95
69.95
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Come in on Saturday and take advantage of these savings,in addition to 20% off regular prices on all Honeywell equipment in stock!!
ZERCHER
ZERCHER
1107 Mass. PHOTO
lawrence Topeka Wichita St. Joe Omah
---
4
Friday, February 22,1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Old Grads Linger On
It's generally a bar where you meet one of them.
If the person is a man, he will be sitting alone, nursing his beer and gazing moody at the mirror behind the bar. He will either be chain-smoking or crunching Been Nuts.
"Our boys played a great game last night, didn't they? you ask
You're alone, too—these meetings always happen that way. You order a beer. After a few quiet minutes, it刚好 try to start a conversation.
"Yeah," he says. "Reminds me of wolf, and Pierre or wolf, and them dawn."
"I never saw that team play," you say. "Looks like we have a good chance to beat K-State this year."
"Oh yeah, we'll take 'em. They weren't even any good when they had that 7-foot girl—what was his name, Nick Pinio? Yeah, we'll beat
"Yeah, right," you say, and go back to sipping your beer. Can't this guy talk about now instead of then?
The chances are that he can't.
He's probably an old grad—'55, '66,
possibly later. The present doesn't
interest him. He just cares about
the good old days, back when he and Ed and Harry all drunk one night and jumped into the Chi Omega faint.
Those indeed were the good old days. The campus was calm and the new, new buildings hadn't been built yet. Everything might as well have been covered in ivy, it was all so traditional.
The trouble hadn't started yet.
The racial problems and chancellor replacements and raids by Vern Miller were still in the future. Everybody loved everybody else. It was great to be a KU student.
But now it is seven or eight years later and times have changed. The guy next to you in the bar hasn't. Oh, sure he got his degree in business—but the only job he got was in Minneapolis, and why move away when you still have friends in graduate school?
Then the job was gone, then the friends, and suddenly it is years later. He's taken a job help out with a liquor store and he's getting by.
And he's still hanging around at KU. talking about old times with whoever will listen, going to basketball games and imagining that once again he is a student.
It's tough to leave.
s tough to leave. —Chuck Potter
Foreign Students File Complaints
"The only way to improve the Intensive English Center," said a graduate student from Caracas, Venezuela, recently, "is to destroy it."
Intensive English Center Conflicts Bring Reforms
By CAROL GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
In most organizational disputes, both the administration and reformers recognize the same problems; the major controversy is whether the satisfaction solutions to those problems.
I. E.C. administrators in many cases,
The Intensive English Center (I.E.C.) has become the source of bitter controversy during the past several years and the school has been criticized for having students has grown increasingly hostile.
The conflict centers on the student's accusation that the I.E.C., mistreats them as individuals and poorly evaluates them through grades and exams.
however, have failed to recognize the problems to which the L.E.C. students object, and at times they have even refused to acknowledge that any problem exists at all.
The Intensive English Center is administered by the University and is designed to give potential college students necessary skills in the English language. Students must be accepted course with a B+ grade in order to be accepted to the University.
The administration has said that the I.E.C. students themselves are not the source of most of the conflict, "Outside agitators"-foreign students attending the University of Kansas-have caused the university to become dissatisfied, the administrators say.
This belief can be partially understood, I.E.C. students depend on KU foreign students.
SANDE
Suit Disputes Minority Admissions
WASHINGTON—If a university admits a black student to its law school, while rejecting white applicants with higher grades and test scores, is it simply compensating for the historic exclusion of blacks from the legal profession?
By LINDA MATHEWS The Los Angeles Times
Or is it practicing reverse discrimination and violating the constitutional rights of whites? These are the questions facing the Supreme Court in what may be the touchest, most troublesome civil rights case of recent years.
Riding on the Court's decision are the admissions policies of hundreds of universities which now show preference to blacks and other minorities.
THE CASE, which will be argued the week of Feb. 25 and decided by late June, has already attracted unusual attention. The Supreme Court has been blitzed by friend-of-the-court briefs from every major civil rights organization in the country, as well as from 59 law school deans, the Association for Civil Rights Commission, the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers, and a handful of Jewish groups.
Also drawn into the fray are the legal community's big guns. Ousted Watergate Prosecutor Archibald Cox filled a brief for Harvard College and former U.S. Solicitor General Ervin N. Griswold wrote a brief for the association of American Law Schools. Both Cox and Griswold favor the preferences.
The reason the case has caused such commotion is that, in the words of one Justice Department lawyer, it "represents the collision of two cherished liberal beliefs: for being kicked up to the blanks for being kicked around, and judge everyone strictly on his own merits."
"THIS TIME," the attorney said, "you can't have both."
The case was brought to the high court by Marco DeFuni Jr., of Seattle, after he was twice rejected by the University of Washington Law School.
A Phi Beta Kappa and Magna Cum Laude graduate of Washington's undergraduate college, DefoFs objected to the law school's admitting 37 minority students in institutions—grades and scores on the Law School Assessment Test were lower than his.
Law school administrators, acknowledging that they gave special consideration to minorities, argued that their policy was inadequate for the needs of representation of certain minorities in the
law school and in the membership of the bar.
A SEATTLE trial judge rejected the law school's rationale, ruled that the university had violated DeFurnis's equal protection law and could not enroll him at once in the first year class.
This ruling was reversed by the Washington Supreme Court. A six-man majority held that the 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal protection does not require a university to be "color-blind." The Justice Department missions process because "the state has an overriding interest in promoting integration of public education."
With his appeal pending, DeFuns has continued his studies at the University of Washington Law School under an order from Justice William O. Douglas, the member of the high court who oversees emergency appeals from the West Coast. DEFUNS will graduate in June and, according to Josef Diamond, one of his attorneys, done "very well academically—better than the minorities in the class."
But Defun's law school career has not been completely pleasant. This case has singled him out," explained Diamond. "It's been embarrassing for him, because his
classmates say, 'Well, there goes the smart guy who made sure a fuss.' He's had to get an unlisted phone number. I think he wishes the whole thing would just go away."
The primary argument pressed by DeFunis in his appeal is that the Constitution requires that all applicants to the law school be judged "on an equal basis." The fact that most applicants have grades and test scores be considered, but he insists that if admission officers, in the case of minority applicants, look at such subjective factors as recommendations, extracurricular activities and personal circumstances, then they are to do the same for white applicants, too.
**WHAT HAPPENED at the University of Washington is that all white applicants whose grades and test scores fell below the cut-off point automatically rejected. Those white applicants above the cut-off point—including DeFunis—then competed for places in the
But the applications of blacks and other minorities were handled differently. Even those with the lowest scores stayed in the applicant pool. The admissions committee made appropriate applications by themselves, without comparing them to the whites, and chose the best.
The result, according to Defuniis and the trial court, was that at least 30 minority students were admitted with grades and test scores so low that, had they been white, they would have been summarily rejected. But Defuniis said one had a better record than Defuni's.
DEFENDING THE University of Washington, Shade Gorton, the state attorney general, argued that the law school's decision to boost minority enrollment was supported by precedents dating from reconstruction days.
Gorton listed all the federal civil rights acts and presidential proclamations specifically designed to help "the welfare and education of the former slaves," which show, he said, that the Constitution permits "color-consciousness."
Only racial classifications that deprive minorities of rights violate the equal protection clause, Gorton continued. And no one, he said, had been injured by the law in a case where he was accused of the education of all law students, black and white, had been enriched by integration.
And added benefits flow to the public at large, which will soon have available more minority attorneys from whom to select counsel. Of these, 1 per cent of the legal profession is black.
Oil Ads Raise Credibility Question
By LOWELL PONTE
Special in the Los Angeles Times
Special to the Los Angeles Times
Did the big oil companies invent the fuel shortage to boost profits and win political concessions? One would never know from what they say in their advertisement.
—Exxon pledges: “We want you to know.”
—Texaco says: "We're working to keep your trust."
Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.) charged last month that the $22 million spent for such "image" ads by the oil companies was "an attempt to pass the buck while they rake in the dollars." Then he and five other Democratic members of Congress issued a special commission, which oversees advertising practice, compel 12 big oil companies to submit "proof" for claims made in 16 specific advertisements.
THE CONGRESSMEN challenged claims such as these: that political and environmental pressure blocked oil exploration and development of new wells, pipelines, refineries and deep-water ports; that government antipollution laws, price
*Mohm volez: "Our crews are working 24 hours a day around the world" to find more
controls, tax policies and anti-trust actions destroyed incentive for such development; that the oil companies are doing their best to provide more fuel while protecting our ecology, and that America's fuel crisis is merely part of a worldwide shortage.
BEYOND THAT, the FTC has been asked to judge the personal psychology and motivation of oil executives, as reflected in their advertising.
The oil companies defend their ads as an exercise of free speech, guaranteed by the First Amendment to every citizen, compelled to answer the questions about the time and space to present their views.
Truth of falsehood? In some instances the oil companies are right. Who would deny that environmentalist influence delayed construction of the Alaska pipeline? But environmentalists still cannot abstract to be labeled simply true or false; they are matters of interpretation.
Should the FTC decide to take action on "image" ads, which neither promote a specific testable product nor make specific provable promises, it would be something new and frightening. The door might be opened with a punch at the truth commission, able to punish anyone
whose opinions were deemed deceptive or misleading.
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ADVERTISERS are right to invoke the First Amendment, but wrong to see the issue merely as free speech. When Thomas Jefferson framed the First Amendment, he carefully combined in it the freedoms of speech and respect, and knew these freedoms were faceffers of the same gem—the right to seek and express truth as one saw it.
Yet advertising, says historian Daniel Boorstein, "has meant a reshaping of our very concept of truth." It is this idea which has brought politicians to want new restraints on advertising; they fear its influence as a version of truth contrary to their own.
by Sokoloff
THE CONTEST between differing versions of truth has almost theological overtones—which the FTC has recognized for more than a decade. A recent example is that Benjamin Nolan's show a toot be a tall teen-ager in 10 seconds by eating the stuff. In February of this year one of Bayh's co-petitioners, Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D-N.Y.), proposed legislation forbidding Wonder Bread to use the word "wonders," which it reportedly worked "wonders."
Griff and the Unicorn
Thus on one side of this epic battle are the mythical ads with St. Josephine, the plumber's comet, and the flying man from Glad—armed with promises of a world whose mundane duties are wondrous and full of magic, where toothpaste means romance, where slobs become Cinderella when the right hair dye appears. On the other hand, the hero of priesthood's white robes, standards of objective truth and cosmology.
AN EDUCATED BODY of consumers, willing to vote with its dollars, is the best insurance against excessive hucksterism—and corporate wrongheadedness.
Educating consumers may require counter commercials and other innovations. But the Constitution is consistent with the spirit of the Constitution than a federal truth commission that might gain political control over what corporations and individuals are allowed to
The L.E.C. has become a catchall symbol for many of the troubles that foreign students encounter after entering the new country. It is useful to have a grocery store clerk, for example, can be traced to the vocabulary taught in the L.E.C.: the center didn't teach the words necessary for communication in a grocery store. It is not necessary, therefore, untimely attributed to the L.E.C.
culture. Incomplete knowledge of the English language forces I.E.C. students to use KU foreign students as a voice, essentially as translators, for complaints to the bermelic American culture, which engages the local community in communication with anyone on the outside.
However, the I.E.C. has received complitious complaints. A new "policy" committee (as opposed to the previous "advisory" committee) was formed in November to consider student charges and now meets twice a month. This committee is also the C.A. are now under the jurisdiction of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The policy committee consists of representatives from the departments of education, English and lignicalia, the dean of foreign students, Associates Dean of Art and Sciences Robert Cobb and two other students who have been through the LE.C.
The major charges made by the foreign students have been:
—That the I.E.C. program isn't structured to the speed of individual student reading, it is in the same section for an entire semester; it can be transferred to a student in a lower section that he has a very slight chance of passing the course or not. It is also made necessary for admission to the University.
-That the classes are disjoint. Grammar, pattern practice, pronunciation, reading and composition subdivisions don't form a cohesive unit.
-That I.E.C. students are unfairly evaluated. Regardless of the achievement level of the student, he takes the same midterm and final, and all levels are graded on the same standards. A student from a lower level competes to complete well with a higher level student.
-That the final examination is the only basis for the letter grade given to the
—That the laboratory equipment is out-orate. The system used by the I.E.C. did not allow the student to hear his repetition of the exercise, and he couldn't judge his own ability to pronounce the problem is partially remedied by the language laboratory that has just been set up in Wesley Hall. McCollum Hall also has playback of the language laboratory on its international floor.
that the classes are too large for the individualized help. Class average sizes 15 to 20 students. The ideal size for working individually would be five to seven students.
student for the entire course. Many students are on scholarship and lose financial support if they do not maintain a certain grade point. A lower level student cannot pass the course (he is not expected to) and therefore may lose his scholarship.
—That the L.E.C. is being used as an instructional training ground for linguistics graduate students. Dr. Edward Erzamus, director of the L.E.C. since 1964, has said that the L.E.C. is providing graduate students as a form of cheap labor, and the center cannot afford to hire anyone else.
—That the mixture of students who speak many different languages in one classroom creates problems because of varied vocabulary, applicable only to individual languages.
The problems reported by foreign students have no quick and easy solutions. However, the new policy committee has written a comprehensive analysis of the situation at the I.E.C., which should bring results in correcting at least communication difficulties between the administration and students in the center.
-That the students are being treated as objects; they have no representation in administrative decisions and because they cannot speak English very well are sometimes looked down on by their own teachers.
A major difficulty has been overcome for the foreign students. The I.E.C, has finally been evaluated closely, and the "outside" foreign students in the I.E.C, have at last been able to find a viable means of working to change the system that has had autonomous control over their lives in the United States.
Readers Respond
Work Stifles Student Play
To the Editor:
They are non-flexible in the sense that even brilliant students must put in overtime to meet new requirements. They must until the new ones arrive year after present students in CS 200 must suffer an inconvenience. These courses epitomize the unreasonable devotion expected of them.
(I and I assume most other students) feel that man is basically a social animal. Times
But how do we cure this basic problem?
One way is to alleviate the workload so as to allow the average student some time to see a Monday night basketball game without having to worry about neglected homework.
Some courses do not require excessive work, but many courses are unreasonable in their expectation of the student's academic success. In fact, pharmacy and computer science are examples of such overtime courses.
What the students of this University need is a social opportunity. I am especially referring to men and women and dating. By classical precedent students should work hard when they work and play hard when they play. However, it is difficult to work efficiently when there is a fundamental overabundance of work.
The inefficiency in work arises from conflict between the students' sense of educational responsibility and his basic needs. We must understand in social experience leads to the creation of educated idists who can not communicate their thoughts and emotions to society. Many times I have seen students give up what they want to do, so why should they what they really want to do is socialize
have changed and are tending to a new sexual and social norm. The esteemed University of Kansas is now due for change. By attempting to make that change we may find ourselves exceeding our own experiences in social, as well as academic affairs.
Tony Pickett
Kansas City, Kansas junion
Gordon Elsten
Baxter Springs senior
To the person who took the purple velvet plant and the jade plant from Watson Garden.
Disappearing Plants
Either Carol Chittenden or I would have been glad to have given you cuttings of any plants that we have in the Library or from my house. The plants are there for everyone
Please return the three plants and ask for chippings instead. It seems incongruous that someone who likes plants would take them as you did. If you decide not to return them, then please take good care of them. They need U be watered twice a week.
If you want to return them, leave them anywhere in the Reference area so that we can find them. We have put work and students there, but it is much more placeive, for staff and students alike. But this is the third time someone has taken our plants. Don't force us into removing the plants because we are afraid of having them stolen. Just return the plants.
Pat Mimeau Staff. Watson Library
Exhibit Bans Watergate Souvenirs
By EUGENE L. MEYER
The Wellington Post
The Washington Post
Washington—The Watergate office-and-apartment complex has scheduled a flea market for the next week in political America, but invited dealers have received a written, capitalized admonition: "NO ANTI-NIXON ITEMS AND BOAT GAME ITEMS ARE TO BE PLAYED."
"There will be no derogatory or unfavorable items to the present administration," said M. S. Scher who is running the flea market. "It's just that (the Watergate management) didn't want to add any additional fuel to the fire."
Some of these have been distributed by pro-impeachment groups. The Republican National Committee, on the other side, has a "get off his back" humper sticker. There
At issue are the buttons, bumper stickers, games, records and other items that have become a commercial tide in the wake of Watergate. While some collectors dismant them as the products and few fast-buck items remain, many are an authentic part of political America.
The slogans displayed on the items are legion: "Nixon knew." "Wink if you think you can beat him," "Impeachment with honor." "I'm an American--don't bug me." "Nixbug me." "Richard M. Nixon P.O.W. (Prisoner of Watergate)," and "No amnesty for you."
is also a button that says simply, "Back the President," put out by the Republican Party.
Martha Mitchell items (a 1972 campaign button says "Free Martha") are forbidden. But Agnew items ("Et tu Agnew") all right because they have nothing to do with them.
Of the Nixon items, Robert Frattin, head of the American Political Items Collector, says, "I think they're curiosity pieces rather than significant. A lot may wind up being used in the 1974 campaign, which would make them more interesting."
Anyway, Fratkin predicted, "In years to come, people will look at them as being a legitimate part of campaign collecting." In another case, Fratkin said, "because they believe in what they say."
Published at the University of Kwaidan daily
on Monday, 17 January 2014. For information on examination periods, Mail subscription rates: $8 a semester, $15 for four months, $30 for six months, Kit 60003. Kit 60004. Student subscription rate: $12 a month as another student activity fee. For more information about admission offered to all students without regard to gender, please contact the university's admissions department, prepaid not necessary those of the University of Kwaidan.
News Adviser ... Susanna Shaw
Editor
Hal Ritter
HUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser ... Mel Adami
Business Manager
David Bunke
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 22, 1974
5
Enrollment Shifts Produce Budget Changes
BY LINDA A. HALES and BETH RETONDE Kansas State University
Realization of money and faculty positions in response to shifting enrollment patterns is currently under way. Delaware University will be the host for the Lawrence campus, said yesterday.
"It's just something people are talking about more open now," he said.
However, Anbrose Sarickes, vice chairman for academic affairs, said that she is "trying to get the job done."
Sarick's said the procedure for determining the budget allocations within the University hadn't undergone any major changes.
A new system of budget allocation among the professional schools and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is weighing heavily on the minds of the deans, however. And the talk of reallocation, to them, means a shift in funding of funds. For George Waggoner, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, reallocation will mean a cutback of between $277,000 and $151,000 and the loss of dozens of teaching assistant and faculty positions.
Shifting enrollment in the college has meant of loss of about 10,000 credit hours, Wagoune said, and is responsible, in part, for the budget cut.
But the professional schools have had their share of problems. Over a five year period, enrollment in the school of Social Welfare had increased by 120 per cent; in the School of Journalism, 38.8 per cent; in the School of Business, 36.6 per cent; in the School of Pharmacy, 23.9 per cent, and in the School of Education, 24.5 per cent. But universities' follow-up suit
In the Schools of Engineering and Architecture and Urban Design, however, enrollment has decreased by 27.8 per cent and 18 per cent respectively.
However, these figures are head counts, and the budget is figured on a credit-hour basis, as are the number of faculty positions allowed each school.
Charles Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said, "We are
But one of his school's biggest problems, he is, being said in the 'oldest', unrenovated building.
Lauter Resigns From Positions
Richard Lauter, Evanston, III., senior,
resigned Wednesday as vice chairman of the
University Senate Executive Committee
and a member of the University Council.
He is a member of the university board and
the presence of a new student body pres-
ident as reasons for his resignation.
Despite a decrease in total enrollment, Kahn said, the school doesn't have the resources to admit all the students who apply.
About realization of funds, Kahn said,
"It's absolutely essential. It's not easy and
hard to do."
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of
marmary, said the "underfunding of space
available to students is a huge problem."
"Once the story is told and believed by the central administration and the regents, it's our responsibility to progress toward the increased support we justify."
The School of Education also suffers from a lack of space, according to Dear Scannell, dean of the school. Scannell listed the school's problems as "too few classrooms, no teaching labs to speak of and almost no single offices."
"Recallation will have to work," he said. Bradford Sheafer, associate dean of the School of Social Welfare, said his school was "not doing a lot for the Kansas City expansion program."
Joseph Pichler, acting dean of the School of Business, said reallocation would permit the business school to hire three new faculty members, probably in the assistant
Some undergraduate students have 200
students and graduate students sometimes
have a full-time job.
"The University as a whole is underfunded," he said. "Within the University, in terms of internal allocation of resources, there are some areas where enrollment is falling and there could be a shift to those schools that are at capacity."
Thornton Gerton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said enrollment was up and that students were more confident.
Allocation is never going to satisfy everyone, Saricks said, because those who have money taken away from their department will say it's unfair and those who have more money given to their departments will say it's not enough.
occupational therapy. He cited more staff,
more space and more money as solutions.
Edward Bassett, dean of the School of Journalism, said that reallocation was necessary but that it should be reconsidered. The same reasoning should be allocated on a sliding scale.
Saricks, who refused to disclose tentative figures for the coming year, said that the allocations were based on what the governor recommended in his January budget message to the legislature, but that the legislature could either increase or decrease what the governor would determine how much each department would receive from
Funds per Student
the university, his office must try to determine what would be the best way to increase teaching effectiveness and to make the instructors' teachings "more relevant."
Funos perf *Student*
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Business 1,191.73 1,116.47
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Education 1,000.00 1,000.00
Fine Arts 1,140.49 1,288.19
Fine Arts 1,040.49 1,288.19
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CHICAGO
The KU CONCERT SERIES presents . . .
The Awaji Puppet Theatre of Japan
PERFORMANCE
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, February 24
University Theatre
DEMONSTRATION
8:00 p.m.
Monday, February 25
University Theatre
XXXXXXXXX
The AWAJI PUPPET THEATRE is a unique Japanese art form which evolved among the rural classes of medieval Japan. An "intangible national treasure," it is being preserved by the people of Awaji Island. The Awaji puppets are larger in size than the well-known bunraku puppets from Osaka and each puppet is worked by three puppeteers. Accompaniment is provided by a narrator who chants the story and takes on the roles of all the puppets, as well as by a shamisen (a stringed, banjo-like instrument). The AWAJI PUPPET THEATRE will provide a truly theatrical experience.
For those interested in learning more about the Puppet Theatre a free demonstration will be held by the artists Monday evening at 8:00 p.m., in the University Theatre.
TICKETS CAN BE OBTAINED FOR THE SUNDAY PERFORMANCE AT MURPHY BOX OFFICE (while they last)
TICKETS FREE WITH KU STUDENT ID
PUBLIC TICKETS . . $3.00-$3.50-$4.00
6
Friday, February 22, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Net Men Begin Season in Wichita
By GERALD EWING
Kansan Sports Editor
Although the weather might be dismal, the University of Kansas tennis team won't have to worry about it as it faces Wichita State's indoor dual meet in the team's history.
The meet will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the indoor courts of the Wichita Country Club.
The meet was the first meeting of the Wichita County Club. This will be the first meet of the spring and Coach Mike Howard said he hoped the team would be as successful as it had been.
The team had a record of 5-1 this fall, with the only loss to West Texas State. That loss came at the Rocky Mountain Invitational in Boulder. KU won two of three matches at Boulder, winning over Air Force and Colorado, finished second in the Big Eight last year.
In other action last fall, KU beat Daeun College, 6-0; Wichita State, 8-1; and Oral Roberts, 8-1. Oral Roberts was ranked 16th in the nation last fall.
"TM OPTIMISTIC, about it," Howard said. "We were 5- last fall and that isn't bad at all. Potentially, this is by far the best Kansas net team in the last ten years."
The KU team will have to live up to Howard's expectations to be successful. It plays its first 11 matches away and faces some of the nation's best teams. KU shouldn't have much trouble with Wichita State but Howard said it was an improving young team that was starting to build a successful program.
The meet worrying Howard is the Corpus Christi Invitational that will begin next Tuesday and last until March 2. Attending the meet will be Houston, Trinity and Southern Methodist, all ranked in the nation's top 20.
"All of our meets in the first month are away," Howard said. "They all are against top notch teams and in good weather, so it should help us in preparing for the league
race, we simply need good competition."
race. We simply need good competition." Howard said the conference race would be one of the best in Oklahoma to be one of the Colorado and KU fighting for the title. He said Oklahma, Oklahoma State and Colorado would all be ranked in the top 20.
"ONE TENNIS magazine had us rated 16th in the nation," Howard said. "But the caller of tennis in the Big Eight seems to be improving each season because of an upsurge in the court." This more tennis scholarships are now offered by Big Eight teams.
Howard said that in the next few years the Big Eight would become one of the fastest growing economies.
sports
One of the main reasons for the success of the team is the increase in the number of scholarships available. Howard said that six scholarships were available this year whereas in years past only one or two were given.
Sheldon Coleman for helping to get more scholarships for tennis players. He said Coleman, president of Coleman, Inc., of published several of the tennis scholarships.
Howard credited Dutch Lonborg and
This year's team is a completely new one, with two seniors, two sophomores and four juniors.
"Our players are very young but work hard and really want to win," Howard said. All of the players are about the same. Our goal is to win against our No. 1 man which is good for the team.
THE TOP SINGLES player is Carlos Gefft, a native of Brazil and that country's junior champion. He transferred to KU from Corpus Christi University when the school did away with its tennis program because of a lack of finances.
Goffi has competed in the NCAA tournament three times and Howard described him as a very aggressive player with a good ability to vollevellets and a solid overhead shot.
The No. 2 singles player is Bill Tompkins, a freshman from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Howard said he was a very disciplined man and did not lose a match in the fall season.
Steve Vann is the No. 3 man in singles competition. Vann, who transient from Los Angeles to New York, was the No. 1 pick.
consistent players on the team according to Howard she will be the captain of the team
Bill Clark, one of the four freshmen, is No. 4, Clarke, a two-time Kansu state high school championship champion from Shawnee Mission South, is currently ranked No. 39 in U.S. Juniors. Howard said he had the potential to knock off an in college tennis.
The No. 5 singles player is freshman Dennis Cailh from Eagle, Wis. Howard said Cailh, who was a three time Wisconsin state high school singles champion, was an aggressive player who could hit every shot in tennis.
Freshman Paul Waltz, the No. 6 man was the Pennsylvania state high school doubles champion. Waltz is from Malvern, Pa. Howard described Waltz as a smart player with a good attitude and always ready to compete.
Howard said the outcome of the team's season in the big Eight would be deter-
minated.
"Most of our players were singles players only, in high school," Howard said. "This was evident when we went to West Texas State. We were tied after the singles play, 3-3, and test two of our doubles matches in three sets."
Howard said KU's doubles had improved this fall. "We beat our Robericks, 64, not lossing."
The University of Kansas Rugby Club will open its spring season at 1:30 Saturday afternoon against the Kansas City Blues at the practice field west of Olver Hall.
KU Rugby Club Plays Saturday
On Sunday, the KU Rugby Club will also event when action it travels to Pittsburgh State University.
---
THE BODY SHOP FIGURE SALON celebrates George Washington's Birthday
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Feb. 19th-22nd, 1974
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ALL CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS:
Budget request forms for Student Activity Fee funds are available in 105-B, Student Union. Budget requests must be submitted to the Treasurer's office, 104-B, Union, by 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28.
No late requests will be considered.
$
---
S. U.A. Fine Arts & University Friends of Art Present Kenneth Clark's
CIVILISATION FILM SERIES
THE HERO AS ARTIST FEBRUARY 24
About the year 1500, we see the full power of the Renaissance strike like lightning. From a quiet medieval town Rome explodes into an expanse of imperial splendor. Over all this magnificence stands Pope Julius II. The figure of Julius II dominates this production just as he was able to dominate (by her strength of will) three creators of outstanding genius: Maximiliano, Raphael, and Bramante.
Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m.
Striped Canvas Wedges
by
Bart Carleton
819 Mass.
Arensbergs
= Shoes 6'
Where Styles Happen
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Officer Interviews
February 26
President Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
OFFICER and BOARD MEMBER INTERVIEWS
Board Member Interviews March 2
Director, Festival of the Arts
Director, Festival of th Films
Fine Arts
Forums
Free University
Public Relations
Indoor Recreation
Outdoor Recreation
Special Events
Information and Applications Available in the SUA Office
Deadline for Officer Applications: 5 p.m. Friday, February 22
Other (Define Position)
Deadline for Board Member Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 22, 1974
7
New Coach to Direct Veer Offense
Bv GARY ISAACSON
Kansan Sports Writer
There will be a change in both the coaching staff and the University of Kansas offense when the Jayhawks take to the football field next season.
Gone will be the aerial fireworks of Dave Jaynes and the offensive guidance of James Replacing the Jaynes directed pass rush. Directed pass rush Houston veer offense and replacing McCullers will be the rotund, balding and helped develop the veer, Bob Baldwin.
Baldwin, 41, a Houston native, spent nine years as the coach of the freshman team at Houston. In those nine years, Baldwin's 30 points and 400 yards total offense a game.
After so much success at Houston, who did Baldwin decide to make the move to
"THE BIGGEST thing, in my opinion, is that I will get a chance to continue to run the team," he said. "But I wouldn't have moved over." UU is a fine school and has a fine tradition.
The competition in the Big Eight also influenced Baldwin's decision.
"There's no question that right now this is the greatest conference in the country," he
Tonight's Gym Meet Postponed
The University of Kansas dual gymnastics meet at Fort Hays State scheduled for tonight has been postponed until March 7.
The 'Hawks will meet Fort Hays before traveling to Northern Colorado March 8 and Colorado March 9 where they will also compete in dual meets.
with the gymnastic meet postponed, all KU winter athletic teams including track, swimming and basketball will be idle this weekend.
said. "The players are very big, very fast and very good. We are just looking forward to playing."
The Houston vera was the first of the triple option offenses. This running offense, which consists of a kick or two to the
Bobby Baldwin
slot and the corners or perimeter of the defense. It is a flexible offense that is dangerous in any given situation against any particular defense, he said.
The basic play of the verer threatens the defense with both the run and the pass because it releases two men on the line of attack and sends two eligible receivers down field.
"I GIVES THE defense a little bit dif-
ferent look than it normally faces." Baldwin
Although the veer is predominantly a running offense, the pass is an important part of it. Badwain said in the last nine games that he has had at least 23 passes a game. He cited Elmo Wright, now with the Kansas GY Chiefs, as an example of the potency of the pass in the game.
"As a wide open of fence and the big play can come from either the run or the pass," Baldwin said. "But it is also designed to get you three or four yards when you need
Weight led the nation in total yards, average yards per catch and touchdown passes
Baldwin said he hadn't had much time to look at KU's personnel but said that the basic ingredients for a good veer offense were here.
SCOTT MeMICHAEL, heir apparent to Davie Jaynes, is a very versatile athlete and a graduate of the University.
---
--free state opera house
THE BODY SHOP
Has In Stock VITAMINS - SUPPLEMENTS
We Have
We Have
B-6 — KELP — LECITHIN
20% DISCOUNT THIS WEEK
Open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Saturday 9-1
MEMBER ACCOUNT DATE: 04/27/12 ENTERTAINMENT
We are proud to present a demonstration of
Natural-Colored Sand Pouring
Saturday, Feb. 23, 1:00-4:00 p.m.
Robert and Ellen Stoufer will present a demonstration of the art of Sand Pouring. 100% natural-colored, natural-textured sands are collected from all over the country, dried, sifted, and then poured into bottles in layers to make designs against the inside surface of the bottle. They appear as three-dimensional sand paintings. Don't miss this interesting and informative demonstration this Saturday . . .
HAAS IMPORTS
1029 MASSACHUSETTS
XXXXXXXXXX
AMERICAN COLLEGE THEATRE FESTIVAL
CENTRAL REGION AMERICAN COLLEGE THEATRE FESTIVAL
Four Productions Presented in The University of Kansas Theatre
February 20-23,1974
Wednesday-February 20
"110 IN THE SHADE"
(Musical version of "The Rainmaker")
from Meramec Community College
Kirkwood, Missouri
8:00 p.m.
Friday-February 22
Thursday-February 21 "THE SERPENT"
Friday-February 22
"AFTERMATH"
(Original script)
from Ft. Hays State College,
Hays, Kansas
8:00 p.m.
(Environmental theatre-limited seating)
NURSERY-FEBRUARY 21
"THE SERPENT"
by Jean-Claude van Itallie
from Kansas State College
at Pittsburg
Two performances:
8:00 and 10:00 p.m.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Saturday-February 23
"THE THREE PENNY OPERA"
By Brecht
By Brecht from Webster College, Webster Groves, Missouri
8:00 p.m.
TICKET RESERVATIONS: 864-3982 UNIVERSITY THEATRE MURPHY HALL
Emmet Edwards are outstanding, Badwin said. The nucleus of next year's team will be based on the players.
The major changes that will be made when the wee is instituted will be in the nature of the passing attack and the line blocking assignments, Badwin said. The pass place will be play-action instead of drop action. He said the dropping off of the ball instead of dropping back
The biggest adjustment will have to be made by the linemen because of the changes in blocking, but Baldwin said that this shouldn't present a problem.
"Anybody who has the ability to protect the passer," he said, "should be able to take it."
Between now and the start of spring practice, Baldwin said he would be formulating the offense to present to the players. He said the defensiveense would be introduced in the spring drills.
"The approach will be one of simplicity, but simplicity to the point of effectiveness," he said. "We're going to try and get in as many repetitions as possible and be sound."
QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
the UPPEP
ALL GIFT LINES
Our Prices Are Ridiculously Low.
QUITTING BUSINESS SALE
the UPPER DECK
All Gift Lines
Party Favors, Leather
Goods, Pottery, Baskets,
Straw Flowers, Jewelry, Posters,
Sweat Shirts and Wearing Apparel.
Fraternity & Sorority Plaques, &
Slippers, Incense, and K.U. Souvenirs
50% and more off on all merchandise
1144 Indiana Oread Corner
Our Prices Are Ridiculously Low.
DECK
Jayhawk
VOLKSWAGEN
Introduces
JIM NUGENT
Your University Sales Representative
Jim is attending K.U. and will be at your service for the next three years. Jim has had previous experience in Volkswagen sales.
Jim has new and used Volkswagens for sale to students, faculty, administration, alumni and friends of the university. Your sales representative works at your convenience—his hours are your hours.
Realizing the student's time and money situation, Jim will be glad to meet with you at your convenience in your home or elsewhere. There is a booth in the showroom—let the showroom come to you.
Call Jim at 844-2653 or 843-2200 anytime for a personal appointment. Look into the economy minded wolkswagen and let Jim explain the benefits of Bank financing available with approved credit.
C
A. K. S.
ADRIAN SMITH
& CO SATURDAY, FEB. 23
9-midnight $1.50 per person
COME BY and BOOGIE
5
642 Mass.Ave.Lawrence
Brought to you by The Music People, Ltd.
8
Friday, February 22, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Look Out, Apathy, It's ABC Week
Sadie Hawkins Day, art interpretations, dancing and career advising are part of a week-long variety of programs called ABC Week sponsored by Olive Hall.
ABC Week begins Monday night and continues through March 4.
David Shapiro, Clayton, Mo., freshman and resident of Oliver Hall, said yesterday that he organized the week "to burst the anathy bubble that exists."
Sapiro said that ABC Week was a code name which stood for Apathetic Bastards for the 1970s.
He said that Webster's dictionary defined apathy as no interest, that burtists referred to either sex and that condescend meant to give up.
"About three weeks ago I instaged what I called a student interest survey," he said.
"Through the survey, I hoped to find out just where the interests of Oliver Hall were."
Shapiro said he used the results of the interest survey to plan ABC Week.
A bridge tournament is scheduled from 7 to 11 p.m. Monday.
Tuesday, representatives from the SUA travel committee will talk about domestic and international travel possibilities from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday evening, a field trip to Kansas City, Mo., to hear the Kansas City Police Department.
Thursday evening, two representatives from the University of Kansas Medical Center will talk about career possibilities in the medical and paramedical fields.
Traffic Board Recommends That Fines Remain Same
The Parking and Traffic Board of the University Council recommended to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes that traffic fees be increased, and that the report reported at the Council Meet last night.
The Student Senate unanimously voted Wednesday night to ask the chancellor to defer action on this recommendation. The senate said it would offer alternative parking regulations in 30 days and alternative enforcement regulations in 60 days.
Increased costs, especially in salaries, mean that the Parking and Traffic department will probably operate at a deficit next year, according to Capt. Joseph Marzluff, professor of Navy ROTC and board chairman.
The University Council passed an amendment to the Senate Code, originally proposed by the senate, that amended the laws in the senate: Cultural Affairs and Sports.
This amendment would also insure that
student senators constitute the majority on standing committees. Standing committees have a voice regarding budget matters in the senate.
The amendment will be recommended to the University Senate.
Interviews
school of business
Feb. 26 - Avenida Life, Eastman, Kolah
Insurance Premium Company
Feb. 18—Arnstrom Cork Company, Eastman Kodak Co.
Feb. 19 Lafontz and V. Cick Vielkamp Co.
Main Lafontaine & Co. Vieck Chemical Co.
Main Lafontaine & Co. Vieck Chemical Co.
International Bank of Australia, Roebuck and Co.
Administration of National Bank, Securities,
National Bank of India.
Cargill Inc. Project and Gamble. Halpern Plains
March 1—National Bank of Tulsa, Pretzer and Gamble,
School of Engineering
Feb. 25—Bell Systems.
Feb. 26—Ell Lilly and Co. Florida Power and Light.
- Compartment, Industrial Chemical Dishroom
- Refrigerator, Electric Hot Water Heater,
Electric, Kemizer, Insurance Naval
March — central Data Corporation, Berille and Wilkis Consulting Engineers. Federal Aviation Administration.
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
SUA Popular Films
DIANA
ROSS
IS BILLIE
HOLIDAY
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Titled in RAVENGER® in COLOR
Special Films SATYRICON
University. Shapiro said a question and answer period will follow his speech.
6. Fentim
Monday, Feb. 25
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
Kansas Union
Friday, Feb. 22
7:00-9:30
BLACK SUNDAY
d. Bana----9:30
Horror Films
THE BLACK CAT
Boris Karloff - Bela Lugosi
Saturday, Feb. 23
2:00-4:30 7:00-9:30
75c Kansas Union
75c $1.00 for Both Kansas Union
Classical Films
LES VISITEURS DU SOIR
d. Marcel Carne
Wednesday, Feb. 27
7:30 9:30
75c Kansas Union
Film Society
TOKYO STORY
Monday night, March 4, artists from the residence hall and from the Lawrence community will exhibit and discuss their work.
Thursday, Feb. 28
75c Kansas Union
Children's Films
THE AFRICAN LION
Shapiro said that weeknight activities were open to anyone and that weekend activities were open only to Oliver Hall residents and their guests.
Walt Disney
Sunday afternoon, Shapiro said Oliver residents will "invade" Robinson Natatorium" during open swimming hours, 2-4 p.m. Sunday evening, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor of the Lawrence campus, will talk about the function of the
Sunday, Feb. 24
SWIE VnS SWIE VnS
Saturday will be Sadie Hawkins Day. Races and games are scheduled for the afternoon and a band will provide square dance music in the evening.
Final Cut!
On all remaining prior year model
Magnavox Components
50%
off List
Handi reduced as low a
$5.00
50%
off List
Head*
reducea
as low
$5.6
THE TRACK COUNTER
"Come to where the quality is"
New Perfumes & Makeup
only
NORELL •
Spray Cologne—$10
Soft Body Cologne—$10
Perfume Roll-on—$7.50
Perfume in a Pot—$6.50
Open 8:30 m.p.-5:30 p.m., daily and until 8:30 p.m. Thursday
C. H.R.● Face Makeup System Priming Base & Vervy Color—$16.50
'ULTIMA'• Special Edition
Eau de Spray Parfum—S3
at RANEY'S Plaza Store
Nutrient Makeup—$6.00
(also available at Raney's Downtown)
929 Mass. ● 843-4170
RAY STONEBACK'S
'ULTIMA II ® Cremefoam Makeup-$6.00 (also available at Raney's Downtown)
Revolving Charge, Budget Terms
4 ways to charge: BankAmericard, Master Charge,
Raney Plaza•1800 Mass.•843-0684
MASTER OF HORSEMANSHIP
JOHN WAYNE
"McQ"
NOW AT THE Granada
Evenings
at 7.30, 9.40
sun, 10am, mat
at 2:30
"McQ"
S. R. SANDMAN • BALDWIN • WILLIAM MURPHY
Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive-an honest cop.
THE WAY WE WERE
STREISAND PG
& REDFORD
Varsity
TELAIR ... Telephone VI 3-1045
AL PACINO
"SERPICO"
Evenings at 7:25 and 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:00 Only
Hillcrest
Evenings
at 7:30, 9:45
Sat.Sun.Mar
at 2:30
Varsity
THEATRE - Instagram @I-1865
by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Solzhenitsyn 'ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH'
Hillcrest2
Hillcrest
view of the Soviet Union's penas-
stem by its most respected victim
10: 7; 40, 9; 30, Sat., Sun. Mat, 2: 1*
Eve., 7:40, 9:30
Sat. Sun. Mat. 2:15
Evenings at 7:15 and 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Matinees at 2:10
Last Tango in Paris
Marlon Brando
Last Tango in Paris
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
POSITION OF ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF HOUSING
Applications for employment are sought for the position of Assistant Director of Housing, University of Kansas, Lawrence.
Position open immediately. Salary range $12,000 to $15,000 per year.
a minimum of five years experience in business, industry, or government at an enterprise and have some specific responsibility in the development and have experience.
To be considered, individual must have educational classification of five or from an accredited four-year college or university in the field of education and a demonstrated knowledge of
Please apply in writing to Mr. J. J. Wilson, Director of Housing, University of Kansas, 205 McCallum Hall, Lawrence, KS6045. In applying, please submit complete Personal data information. Closing date for accounting such applications is March 15.
Applicants will be interviewed by specific appointment by a special screening committee.
An Equal Opportunity Employer (EO Clause, EO-11246 and EO-11375).
CERTIFIED AUDIO CONSULTANTS KENWOOD STUDENT FINANCE AVAIL
PIONEER
RADIO
KENWOOD KR-3200
FM/AM Stereo Receiver
60-Watt (HIF) - (13.5/13.5 Watts RMS)
$23995
STEREO PACKAGE DISCOUNTS
We Service What We Sell
WHITES
916 Mass. We Service What We Sell 843-1267
Use Kansan Classified
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band & Special Guests The Pott County Pork and Bean Band
GREGORY HUBBARD
ALAN WATSON
JOHN BURNSTEIN
8 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 27
Topeka Municipal Auditorium
Advance Tickets on Sale at Better Days and Kiel's in Lawrence
NATIONAL LARPOOES
Radio Hour
"Sixty minutes of mirth merriment and racial slurs." —Los Angeles Times
Is Coming to
KUOK 630 Campus Radio
Starting Feb. 27, the National Lampoon Radio Hour will be on KUOK every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. and every Monday at 6:00 p.m.
Brought to You by
Green Pepper Pizza and
Rose Keyboards
Another reason to listen to KUOK 630 Campus Radio
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 22, 1974
9
State Dismisses Felony Charge In Hall Bombing
A felony charge filed against Dave Little, overland Park freshman, in connection with a 2013 stabbing attack at Hall has been dismissed, according to the Douglas County attorney's office. Little had been charged.
The county attorney's office said yesterday that the state dismissed the charge after Little agreed to do community service as a volunteer tutor.
Jeff Lysaught, Mission freshman, has披肩ed to a misunderstanding charge in connection with the same incident. He will be sentenced March 5 in Douglas County Court on a charge of property in an amount less than $50.
Lysaught had originally been charged with felonious possession if *a* exploded, but he was not.
Brad Wallace, Eureka freshman, still faces a charge of criminal use of explosives in connection with the bombing. He will attend a primary hearing March 5 in county court.
Campus police reported that the explosion of a small bomb or firecracker blew out a window in the north starvillar on the tenth floor of Oliver Hall. A note signed by "the Phantom Groomie" was reportedly posted in the hall shortly after the blast. Hall residents said the note demanded a sum of money under threat of more explosions.
Philip Frickey, Oberlin junior, was unanimously elected president of the Association of University Residence Halls (AUHR) last night.
AURH Elects New President
Frickey will fill vacancy left by John Beisner who resigned as president of AURH effective yesterday to become student body president.
Beisner said in his letter of resignation that the responsibilities of his new office of student body president wouldn't permit him to work during the time of duty and responsibility to AURH.
Frickey, who is also AURH treasurer, will serve a one-month interim term until the regular executive board election scheduled for March 21.
Frickey said he didn't plan to change any AURH priorities within the next month. He said, that he would concentrate on soliciting collective opinions.
correction
Students who fail the Western Civilization comprehensive examination will receive incomplete in the exam, not the course, as was incorrectly reported in the Kansan.
WANT TO TEACH IN LAWRENCE SCHOOLS?
Information Meeting
February 25
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Student Union
Jayhawk Room
K. U. Formosan Club
If you are really interested in Taiwan, we cordially invite you to the Formosan Club exhibition at the K.U. Internationale University, to be held on Sunday, March 31, at the Student Union.
In order to anticipate any possible misunderstanding, the Kansas University Formosan Club, which is the sole or member of the club, students on campus, would like to make it known that the Club is not sponsoring the upcoming slide show to be held at the Lawrence Public Library on Friday February 22, at 7:30 p.m.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
843-9111
We Also Deliver Pizza 843-9111
Campus Hibernia
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
One Day
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word : $0.2
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Karen are offered to all students without regard to gender. Students must be BORING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two waves of learning at it!
1) If you use them, they gain an advantage
2) You don't use them, you at a disadvantage
Either way it comes to the same thing—New
York. It would be better if it were at Campus
Madison, Town Crier. If not, it could be at
the City Hall.
Ray Austin, 12 E. 9th, phone 842-3017 Hours available for any声病 problem. Call 842-3017 for availability for any声病 problem.
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint bicycle $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles.
AM-Pad button radio for T2 2Pin $FM, FM
Am-Pad button automatic radio-under-
lay $FM, FM
The once a year Magnavox annual sale is now
the once a year Magnavox annual sale is now
Digital clock radio, Tape recorders & trans-
rators. Ray Stoneback . 629 Mass. Your Magnavox
Tape recorder you can always keep on
! Open Thurs. nights. 3-25
**Price changes:** G75-18 with white belt to £20 plus **shipping**
and/or **free delivery**
$25, plus **$24** MKP. **Five-star** backpack* **$25** or
$30 plus **$24** MKP. **Free delivery**
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Honda 750 - 1972-1973. 4800 miles, gold color, rooftop decals. Honda 650 - 1973-1974. 612-834-6124. Prices will go up this spring. $1,300 to $4,643.
Good used KLH compact space with remote mouse. Price for $230, just $10 at *Harbor*. Price for $98, just $6 at *Harbor*.
1970 BSA 600-extension front forks-runs great
-5,000 miles Caul 843-3880 2-22
For *n=10* (Niklormat Fim Modes, New. never.
Call. Sieve 831-6438, after 6 p.m.
2-22
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at real-
est prices. Warehouse stock. Misc.
stores. Also antiques used for furniture,
cooking, etc. NORTH SIDE
COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. FARM STREET
NORTH SIDE 0 open 2-9 week a day, a week.
843-819-3598
For Sale-Men's 3 speed bike. Coast King-Al
Call 842-789-6700 or to 1598-789-6700. Costs $2,250.
Call 842-789-6700 or to 1598-789-6700. Costs $2,250.
FOR SALE. Removable hardpack for MGB Excel-2011 condition. A must in cold weather. Call 612-537-2485.
For Sale Two magnificent male Persian Kittens.
ship sired, from show stock 843-2715. 2-22
For sale, 1961 Hamster, 6 cyd, good running comfort,
good gas mileage, $75.00 or less; 2-20
843-8299
For sale, 1961 Hamster, 6 cyd, good running comfort,
good gas mileage, $75.00 or less; 2-20
843-8299
FOR SALE 1972-17 x 20 formatted mobile,
equivalent to 450. Excellent Condition. Make us
411-8258
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS. ARC-Sired by West Point, Sam.Sam is on 45 pounds professionally trained super-successful hunting dog who also trains dogs. I will walk, I will swim, request. 842-5594 2-26
NEW VENTURA TENOR DASJO Beautiful interior and large windows. 3-seat, intricate cabinetry. 2-car transporter. 5-passenger van.
50 MPG - 1972 Titulum Tiger 650 Perfect condition.
$995. 855 or 843-165 or 842-174
2:27
For sale Cannon Acoustic Guitar with new Sovereign
Strings and Pickups. Call us at 1-800-257-9900 or
you $Good care for $15 as well. w411-700-2-27
Stereo speaker-large corner loaded, folded horns. Extremely efficient. Mint heat to appreciate. $15 or best offer, or will consider loading a small guitar, amp wanted. Keep trying. 2-27
Truvacy YGL 2 Guitar Attn w. speakers. Wet-
ness sensor. Truvacy YGL 16 Turntable with Shure
WI100. Truvacy YGL 19 Turntable with Shure
WI100.
MGR. 28 ml. /gal. New hatchers, good condition.
$120 per call. Call 345-786-9350 or fr. 6-9 or s/n.
Ship in a free box.
Some new records added to our used ones. Beat
their tunes, and listen in the library or your
records at Ray's Recycled Sound.
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
CRESCENT
Crescent Heights
APARTMENTS
- Oaks •A corn
MIG BROADSTER-136 everything in perfect
condition. Vehicle has been driven
engine 8250 kmil total on car, Mojot, 842-
792kmil, Nissan, Honda, Volkswagen, etc.
Owlclassroom and Garrard changer—TidyMate
record changer $30.00 Call 641-711-2
2-FT
old but working b-i-B-turntable, amplifier,
speaker speaker $25.84-$399.09
2-28
Gaslight
Central Office
RECOGNITION: Alternative hospital at Rays Recognized
through the 2016 American Heart Association
around $3M to rent to reft & cassette tapes awnings.
For sale,Pair @ 91% Nordica SKi Boots (80) $49
For sale,Pair @ 91% Nordica SKi Boots (80) no answer
For mat in Marin room 2-28
For mat in Marin room 2-28
USED RADIAL TIDES -Pair 165-13 Bridgeport,
165-13 Cord, 174-12 Court,
Pair 135-13 Cord, 174-12 Court,
Pair 165-13 Dirtbush, Pair 14-14 Mich,
Pair 165-13 Dirtbush, Pair 14-14 Mich,
Pair 929, Mass Your Michelin Kitchen.
2-28
Sony Cassette Recorders will record at the bank
music from the movies. All of the Sony's at Ray Stonebrook 292
408-755-8350 or raystonebrook292.com
*
Good food, round service, and plenty of privacy.
Good service. Staff are friendly, attentive, and as good as needed to make in-make, or terminate orders.
Quality products.
1815 W.24TH
Ever want something warm and bright to be in your life?
St. Hours 10:30–5:30 Mon–Sat 2–28
Dining Room Table w matching buffet, $25; cake
diners table, 480; erb w matsress, $15. 85;
cake bar, $15.
THEIS BINDING and compelling service available
Fast Service and reasonable prices. 841-7600.
Fast Service and reasonable prices. 841-7600.
NOTICE
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day services. Smith Co. Masonville, MA. 802-796-3155. Custom clocks & watches and cleaned Electricite and light industrial clocks. River City Repair 815 Vermont. 841-265-3375.
165 Michigan St. Bar-B-Quay. We have open pit michelin sandwiches and wine. Try our basket plate, platter sandwiches or brisket by the pound. Hickory-tilts by the pound. Cake and cookies at 9:30 p.m. on Sunday and Tuesday. #42-9510 ft.
MONT Bloe Party Lounge now available for private parties. Phone 842-253 4 p.m. for more information.
LAWRENCE, GAV LIBERATION, INC. Meetings
for the organization. For additional
information on SOUTHERN BASED 425-3177,
earnings and other information, visit:
www.gavliberation.com.
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Jover or
Jude at the Quick Cup Center for your repre-
tation of this story.
MOTORCYCLE—repair and tune. All mukes- satisfaction guaranteed. Pick-up and delivery service. Minute tune up $2. $19 service specimen. Toup for appointment. 846-877-3131. 2-22
Mottori preschool (ages 21) to 5) has an
or P3 session. Information: 842-787-
6904 or 842-787-6903
WANTED! Square舞场 earlier capable of carrying 20 people.
March 2nd, 2014 Cock Dial Kickback. #845-9600. www.squaredance.org
**MICKY HOUSE IS A PUT-ON...**
Put him on the Mickey Mouse jewelry is now available at The White Elephant Shop in Lawrence. These are made with 12 k. gold all items are distributed by The White Elephant Shop. The high quality at a reasonable price $1-$3. The retail price at 13, New York City $2-$6 every adult & baby. **2-26**
LEICA DEMONSTRATION and top session with
Lena, 2017. Lena's Camera Store, 2117 Independent Blvd.
New York, NY 10026.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT at the Quick
Menu (10 rows, 2 columns)
(1,000 items, 426 total) -12.10, 710 -8.91, 400 -3.97,
1,000 -4,000 -5,000 -6,000 -7,000 -8,000 -9,000 -10,000
SERVICE PROBLEMS
If your HOME is busy and they then do
your HOME's service needmed. 181 W. Hewlett
and the service needmed. 181 W. Hewlett.
Free: One JCT $25 bicycle车 if you purchase a Ride-On Ride-Bike Shop. It’s a nice rack and we have nine Naleh Camampa, Raleigh, Peugeot, & Moubly Bicycle 车 Ride-On Bicycles.
2-28
- Jersey's cotton, double knit nylon mesh
- Tennis Shoes
MICKEY MOUSE IS A PUT-ON:
Rag Tag
WE FEATURE:
Smoking Is Our Only Business
- T-Shirts
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
- Sweat Suits
George's Shop
Oo
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
- Tube Socks
Corner of 12th and Indiana
949.1059
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
- Golf & Tennis Shirts
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Gym Shorts
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
Pipe and Lighter Repair
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
842-1059
- Coaching Jackets
- Party Favors
- Handball Equipment
COMPLETE ENRICHMENT: Future visioning Life
Careers with a Master's Degree in
Information Technology, United Missions; or
a related field.
MEDITATION WORKSHOP WITH a Christian
MEDITATION instructor in New York.
Ovred for registration, drop to or call
(212) 546-3018.
We believe that if it isn't fun, it won't worth doing. We want to help the right young investors, we can help the right jewelry businesses on their own creative jewelry businesses on their own in Wichita and other areas throughout occupations in Wichita and other areas through accommodating swinging your own exciting creative jewelry business by Daisy Dietz, Mitchell, & Associates. Wishna
National Lampoon Radio Hour KUOK 8:00
National Lampoon Radio Hour KUOK 8:00
National Lampoon Radio Hour KUOK 8:00
National Lampoon Radio Hour KUOK 8:00
National Lampoon Radio Hour KUOK 8:00
Good news! The original energy-saving hack
was published in December 2017. July 7 Write "Romeo's Rocket" Harper, Harper Collins.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT to male or female student. Nike
4-piece jacket. Black shirt. 12-inch black shoes. Parxing and clothing paid.
APARTMENT-supremes, chest and upper 2 beds. Room size is 13'3" x 10'6". Each room shows a 10:30-11:30 a.m. and 9:30-10:30 p.m. breakfast.
Wall to wall carpeting. Front door parking, spa
room, bathroom, compartmentalized room. Private
private patios with pool, swimming pool, BAI gas
in courtway. 12BR, 13BA. In-law townhouses. 2500 W. SIXTH
St. 424-738-9132
JAIMAYER TOWERS APARTMENTS are
greeted with all validates call 843-990-9911
APARTMENT—Two and two room efficiency furnished. For males. Near downtown. No pool. BEG.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
entrance to private driveway, parking,
NEAR IMPROVED FIREPLACE, dormitory, NEAR
MUNICIPAL BUILDING.
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1723-758 West 24th.
Now leasing 1 room and 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished units in a spacious, ditching, carpet, disqual. all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, off-the-street parking, KU bus stop. 60% tax.
Rent £15.50 per month in cooperative living
in the city and £25.50 per month in quiet,
mature student good location new home.
A well balanced lifestyle.
Pursued apartment for rent at 19 W. 14th St.
Furnished apartment for rent at Call 702-853-6555
$55 Gas and water paid. Call 702-853-6555
1 bedroom-formatted apartments at Large Living
and Retail Properties, 57th Avenue, NYC,
$128 a month. Call 843-5222 between 10am and
3pm Monday-Friday. 604-796-8800.
Meadowbrook Apartments. Great Variety. New-
ly renovated apartment complex located plen-
ished community near KU from $140. TfH
and 307-586-7921.
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles.
**Festival of the Arts, March 31-4月**, 100 index tickets for this year's festival will be purchased at the HSA entire week and can be purchased at the HSA store until the end of April.
a new beer place.
Johnnie's
(scareer of Bth & New Nampahlo)
745 new hampshire
Vitamins & Supplements 843-9412
940 Mass. Lawrence, Ks.
THE BODY SHOP
Area's Largest Selection
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
Rose KEYBOARD
Mass. 843-3002
.Open Evenings
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
- Indian Jewelry
- Books, Gifts
- Stained Glass
Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sun.
Dyche Hall
Museum of Natural History
Meditation Research. Booking meditation at large facilities or through a virtual studio. For more information contact: meditationresearch@yahoo.com
SIX-HOUSE MARATHON ENCOUNTER GROUPS
Free to students, led by experienced Group Leaders.
Information orientations held daily this week:
308 Pint, 4 p.m., or call Tom Hepatian, 412-795-6200.
Roger—we've sorry we forget the sign—but you don't promote the last two times. Anyway, that's the way to be--we'll settle for 14 and forget the sign about "Twenty with Nebraska" —the Pit.
WANTED
CATHOUSEHouses APARTMENTS. No lease required.
Purchase price includes 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom,
Cantrell Hall. Open 8am & 6pm or 9am &
7pm on weekends. $350/month.
WANTED: New钥匙; any number - student or
other. Must be in Marlboro & Mark 6. If you have
钥匙 in cell, call 841-5237.
Permanent Home Equity is treated "Share to lien" later on, so you can pay in full. Only $78/month. Utilities paid. Call $185-423-6900.
Wanted—or 1 more ticket to KSU-k歌 Game
Reserved or call. Call Rumbie at 812-658-9282.
WANTED - Large room or heated Garage, preferably on ground level) For ceramic studio Need access to water and electricity Will pay rent $450 per month for wheel & car K.C. call LJ. call 843-7606 2-22
SINGLE, WOMAN WANTED, FOR HAD MEN-
WOOM, for men women's single closets on Bed-
mount Day. Feb. 29, 9pm-11am. Come to Rusho
Broadway, Sponsored by iTritical Attendance
"446."
SERVICES OFFERED
Tired of Housework? Let us learn. We specialize in floor cleaning and waing. Work done prior to painting is required for a reasonable price. More information at http://www.ball-randy-or-buff.com/834-2881 occasions and evenings.
Get ready for trials. Guilds 412d, illibred. Get
available at 5 p.m. 412-7511 412-8323
22-3
LIMUNINE & CHATFIELF REMEDIE ULTIMATE
Long term plus six weeks. Negotiable.
Cash $850
Phone 312-647-5676
Private sewing instruction, Groups of 3 or 4
Beginning and Advanced dressmaking or fabric-
work
Employment Opportunities
Special three year enlistment program for women with musical ability who qualify for one of the five programs offered, nibbled and you will earn at least $800 per year. McCillian, between Birmingham and Atlanta, will attend a four-week week plus twelve weeks (August through May) at the Army Reserve Center in Lawrence, Kansas.
Wanted Navy servicemen to 8 years old or below for Naval Air Station Fort Bragg. Applicants must be proficient in Pay and benefits are considered for Fallen Soldiers. No applications will be accepted.
TACOS $3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts
MOTHER'S
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
2406 lowa
843-9764
FRIDGE WAGON
2408 Iowa
843.9844
"Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties"
If You're Planning on FLYING.
Let Maupintu
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost)
(NEVER an extra cost)
for Airline tickets)
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
PHONE 843-1211
--foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
(formerly Johnnie's)
401 N. 2nd
Bud & Evelyn
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, Research Institute, Surgeried Position Research, Research Institute, Surgical Position Research in research Experiences with the Korean National Center state budget process with regard to the Korean state budget process. In brief, Duration March, 1974 through June, Research grant awarded $700 per month. Research grant awarded $700 per month. Search assistant on a project concerning Kansai University Application Deadline March 1. Search assistant on the administrative, financial and budget development of Kansai University Application Deadline March 1. INSTRUMENTAL HISTORY Room 607 BKH. INSTRUMENTAL HISTORY Room 607 BKH. STUDENT SUMMER IN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OF ALL RACES are ENcouraged TO AP-
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
Town Tavern
HELP WANTED
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
Tying in on home IBM Scalable Pica type
system. Call Kate, 811-256-3947.
*formats secure work. Call Kate, 811-256-3947.*
TYPING
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Wanted. navy veterans call 8 years or less for
warranty
Job fun for full-time students. 1-3 nights a week.
Work on kitchen, dishwashing, laundry.
Both girls and girls need good pay and play.
work to place. Apply in person, in 4pm. THE
PIECE. Peeper 630 W. 9th, (2022)
bakery)
McDonald's will be opening its dining room soon. We need part time day & evening help. Male or female. Starting wage 4.50 per hour. Minimum 2 years of experience. Hours of 2 to 6 & 7-10 days. 2-27
Experienced Typist—will provide, designate
tongues and minellaneous types, Call Pa-
sons.
Experienced in typing, desserts, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and prompt service. Poor reading, spelled corrected. Phd 801-9344. Mrs. Wright
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 811-
4900. Myra. 2-20
LOST
LOBT. Lost brief case in Watson Library. Compiled by the University of Texas Press on contents. Bk 3-1027. No question marks.
Organic Chemistry lab book, and notebooks from teu-
nance course. Included Rubinberg lab work done this
semester and can't be replaced. No questions
and generals reward offered. Call 842-943-492
Lost-Pure gray kilt, half-green male, black
Phone call Keith 842-6298 Reward 2-27
Fox
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
love is . . .
Happy family
... wanting to take care of each other . . . in your own home purchased from
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
5440 N. 80th St.
Open 7 a week
---
10
Friday, February 22,1974
University Daily Kansan
15
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Home Sweet Home
Some housing near the University campus offers the advantages of proximity and low cost.
such problems as water leakage. Other more expensive apartments offer all the amenities of a large house.
Convenience, Cost Most Important To Students Seeking Apartments
Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles about off-campus housing
By JILL WILLIIS and SUZI SMITH
Kenan Staff Recounts
A student who wants to live in off-campus housing must consider not only convenience and rent, but also the quality of life-style he wants.
If the student isn't operating on a tight budget he can get shag carpeting, air conditioning, recreation facilities and a kitchen with all the modern gadgets.
The student who can't afford these luxuries may have to settle for less space, some structural faults and ancient appliances.
For the student who wants to live near campus, there are several complexes, as well as the "student ghetto" northeast of campus.
A one bedroom apartment at the Stadium Apartments, across from Memorial Stadium, resides for $135 a month. The resort includes amenities, shag carpeting and a swimming pool.
The apartments at the Stadium are well lighted, with sliding glass doors in the living room and plenty of fixtures, and have no obvious structural faults.
For the same price as a one bedroom
The apartment has large bedrooms, but the living room was meant to be a landing at the top of the stairs. It includes a gas range and a large glass-enclosed thermostat is in the downstairs apartment.
apartment at the Stadium, a student can rent a two-bedroom updates apartment in a downtown condominium.
The student on an even smaller budget but who needs to live near campus can find a room in a converted fraternity or sorority just north of the Kansas Union.
These are only rooms; and usually the residents share a kitchen as well as the bathrooms on each floor. The rent for these rooms start at about $45. One studio apartment in the basement of an older house rents for $55.
The kitchen in this apartment consists of a hotplate and a makeshift sink. The tenant said water ran into his apartment because the rest of the house drained into the basement. The linoleum is "floating off the floor," he said.
Further from campus but still within walking distance there are the Brady Apartments. A one-bedroom apartment in this older building puts for $145 a month.
If the student wants to be near downtown, many businesses have apartments above
them. One of these apartments, over a shop on Eighth Street, rents for $50 a month.
The tenant there said that when she moved in, the baseboards were broken or missing, the plaster had holes and the apartment was roach infested. She said it took a call to the city housing inspector to force her landlord to spray for the roaches.
Further from campus, students live in large apartment complexes. Most of the complexes have carpeting, electric kitchens and swimming pools.
At the Park 25 Apartments, a one bedroom apartment rent for $130. A fur-
The buildings have inside hallways and the apartments are stacked three high.
A one bedroom unfurnished apartment at Trailridge Apartments rents for $160. For that price the student gets a swimming pool, facilities and some covered parking areas.
At Meadowbrook, the student will be placed in a special section of the complex reserved for students. A studio apartment with large windows and bedroom apartments rent as high as $175.
Meadowbrook's advertising boasts cable television, tennis courts, barbecue grills
Puppet Theater To Act Dramas Of Awaji Island
The Awaii Puppet Theater of Japan will perform the classic art of Japanese puppetry as practiced in Japan since the 15th century, the University Theatre and Monday in the University Theatre.
Four dramas will be presented: a mother who has abandoned her child finds her again but doesn't admit her parentage for the child's sake; two samurai warriors and one man kills his son instead of his opponent to honorable; a wife's prayers cause a god to marry her husband's blindness; and a warrior god dances the drunken Ibisu Dance.
Attention CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS
To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4348 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
Show Me
FOR A GREAT LAUGH AT LIFE...
IT'S THE
Show Me Scandals
Outrageous Satire with a Brand New Twist!
by DENNIS CONRAD
And All Professional Cast
TACO GRANDE
Starting March 5th at the encore room
19 E. ARMOUR K C MO
SHOW TIME: 8 and 10 P.M. Wed. - Friday. Sat.
$2.50 per person cover charge - Dancing
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
Reservations Not Necessary But Available By Calling 561.0822
TOSTADO FREE!
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
Offer Expires March 15 9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd
1974-Year of the Taco
NATIONAL LAMPOO
LEMMINGS
Is a Rock Concert!! DON'T MISS IT!!
Plenty of Excellent Seats Left!!
This Saturday, Feb. 23, at Hoch Auditorium 8 p.m. $2.50-3.50
1
Plea Bargaining Assures Humanity, Berkowitz Says
By JACK McNEELY
Kansan Staff Reporter
Most of the cases resulting from the recent drug raid in Lawrence eventually will involve plea bargaining, according to Dave Berkowitz. Douglas County attorney.
Plea bargaining, a process in which a defendant trades his right to trial for a reduced charge, is ethical and shouldn't be abolished, according to Berkowitz and three others.
Berkowitz said last week that plea bargaining put 'humidity, justice and law' into the question.
Berkowitz said very different actions often resulted in the same charge, and plea bargaining allowed the court to adapt general laws to specific cases.
"There's a tendency to think that plea bargain is unfair to the defendant," Mike Elwell, Douglas County probate judge, said. "If you go to court as a prosecutor is the key to the functioning of
plea bargaining. A good prosecutor can't concede everything and reduce all types of crimes
The National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals has recommended that plea bargaining be implemented in the criminal justice system within five years.
The commission's report said plea bargaining was based on the understanding that if a defendant was tried and found guilty, there would be no longer sentence than if he pleaded guilty first.
However, the commission said plea bargaining was dangerous to the defendant, because an innocent defendant with a bad case might plead guilty to get the best deal, and to society, because plea bargaining is not reduced by the deterent impact of the law.
"It is difficult to believe that as the criminal justice system now exists plus the law enforcement system, we can do it."
said Paul Wilson, professor of criminal law. "As long as a defendant has the right to plead guilty and a prosecutor has the right to seek any charges, charges, we will have clear bargaining."
"There may be a better way to conduct it than the prosecutor and the defense attorney getting together over coffee. There has to be some kind of meeting and discussion of compromises. Whether it should be conducted in a more judicial manner is an important issue."
Berkowitz said plen bargaining was used "quite extensively" in cases prosecuted by
"I did it'use it I would have to have four times the amount of stuff I now have."2
The commission's report said there were no statistics available about how extensively plea bargaining was used, but more than 90 per cent of the criminal
The commission said that since 1965, when a firm policy against wholesale disposition of cases through plea bargaining, was established in Philadelphia, only 32 per cent of the convicts there were obtained through guilty pleas.
conversions in some major American cities were obtained on guilty pleas.
22 convictions in Douglas County District Court since Dec. 7, 21 were based on guilty pleas. Court records show that nine individuals have been later pleaded guilty to reduced charges.
James Padlock, Douglas County district court judge, said that when a lawyer thought the evidence against his client was strong enough to warrant a conviction, it was the lawyer's duty to tell his client and to demand that charge be reduced in return for a guilty plea.
"The public interest is best served and even-landed justice best dispensed not by a
mechanical application of the letter of the law but by a flexible and individualized application of its norms through the exercise of the trained discretion of the prosecutor as an administrator of justice;" Paddock said.
However, the commission report said, "To the extent that greater flexibility is desired, it should be made available as a matter of formal law, either by changes in statutory provisions or by a modification of dispositional alternatives available to sentencing courts."
Wilson said he agreed with the American Bar Association's plea bargaining standards, which give the prosecutors the responsibility to engage in plea bargaining whenever they think it is necessary and in the interest of justice.
"It relates to the integrity of the prosecutor." Wilson said.
The commission plea bargaining tended
to make prosecutors file excessive charges against defendants.
Elwell said there often was a tendency to "overcharge" because the initial charge might have been filed by an angry victim of a violent crime. Such charges are often reduced. Elwell said, because of a lack of evidence to sustain the initial charge.
If prosecutors expect to get convictions for assault and battery, Wilson said, they often charge the defendant with aggravated assault or battery. The judge also the lesser charge of assault and battery.
"We may charge defendants with more than we want," Berkowitz said, "but never to make them pay."
The commission report said plea bargaining tended to favor repeat offenders, who knew they could trade their right to trial for reduced charges.
Berkwitz disagreed. He said all criminal lawyers knew of pleas bargaining and ad-hoc charges.
COLD Forecast: Fair with rising temperature.
Forecast: Fair with rising temperatures High in the mid 20s, low in the 20s.
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
84th Year, No. 97
W. R. JOHNSON
Monday, February 25, 1974
Aging Becomes Loneliness and Boredom For Many
Flint Hall Has Had AVaried Past
See Story Back Page
'Quartering of Elderly' Resented
By STEVEN LEWIS
Kansas Staff Reporter
Kate Wagon Smith suffered a stroke in her lawrence home one year ago, Mark, 75.
a dilemma society today is what to do with people whose minds are energetic but whose bodies are infirm. That is the dilemma of the senior citizen. The solution that society seems to have found is to better them together and then ignore them.
Related Story Page 2
A 1927 graduate of the University with a degree in sociology, Smith taught graduate courses.
has been confined to the Cherry Manor rest
home at 103. Wist 15T, st. ever.
Long ago divorced from her husband, Smith, a full-blooded Delaware Indian, has only her sister remaining. But her sister, she said recently, has no place for a triumph.
Her stroke last year left her unable to walk and paralyzed her right arm. She was told after regaining consciousness that she would be placed in a rest home. Smith said no, but there wasn't any other place for her to go.
"I don't like it here," she said, "but I accept it."
Smith has relearned to walk; however, her prognosis is for reoccurring strokes. She had another stroke shortly after Christmas and was hospitalized 10 days.
1' probably pay as much taxes as president Nixon, she said. "But I don't want to pay."
She received a pension of $7,500 a year,
she said. Out of that she comes $7,600 for
board and at the rest home. She must pay
taxes and 20 per cent of her medical bills.
"I broke last year, but then I didn't have to buy any clothes."
Smith's greatest need, she said, is someone to communicate with. She said she wanted to move to a home where the people talked about things other than farms.
"We left New York in April and got back to San Francisco in July," she said. "But it wasn't exerting. Those countries were more poverty-striken than ours."
A bright aspect of Cherry Man, Smith said, is the quality of its employees, mostly women.
"When they find that I have traveled a lot, they pay attention to me."
Smith said that among her many travels was a 1965 triam around the world.
In the meantime, Smith does quite a bit of reading one of the few at the home who
On her meager income, however, she didn't know how or where she could move.
"I want to go where people are on more an intellectual level," she said.
See SENIOR CITIZENS Page 2
Editor Identifies Captors
ATLANTA (AP)—The two accused abductors of Atlanta Constitution Editor Reg Murphy were being held here in maximum security yesterday.
Asts. U. S. Atty William Gaffney said, "At this point I know of no reason to conclude that there were more than two people involved."
Murphy, who positively identified from photographs that William A. H. Williams his capter, said that during his captivity the nurse was also another man and a woman were also involved.
The group purported to represent the hitherto unknown "American Revolutionary Army," whose existence is now being questioned.
The 40-year-old editor said Saturday he was sure there were two persons, a man and woman, but wasn't sure whether more were in there or were blindfolded during the 49-hour ordale.
Murphy was led from his home Wednesday night by a man who claimed to have 300,000 gallons of fuel oil to donate to needy causes. He said he wanted Murphy to help
After they drove away, the man pulled a gun and ordered Murphy to tape his eyes.
Williams, 33, and his wife, Betty Ruth, 26, were being held on charges of extorting money from a firm involved in interstate commerce and failure to report a crime.
Murphy was ransomed for $700,000 Friday after being held more than two days. He positively identified Williams as his Saturday from films and photographs.
The FBI said yesterday it still hadn't iniished counting the "voluminous amount of U.S. currency" found in the Williams' one story home near Atlanta.
Mrs. Williams is charged with failure to report the crime. Gaffney said she could receive a $500 fine and three years imprisonment. She is being held under bond of $500,000.
Williams was charged with violating the Hobbs Act, which carries a maximum penalty of $10,000 and 20 years in prison. He is under bond of $1 million.
The FBI refused to confirm or deny that williams kept a diary, but CRS reported it to the police.
Simon Favors Ration Plan If Long Gas Lines Persist
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal energy chief William E. Simon said yesterday that if motorists were lined up on a widespread basis for two to three hours outside service stations to buy gasoline, "it would become necessary for me to recommend ranting."
But Simon stressed in a broadcast interview that he believes the three-week-old gasoline-allocation pgram will end the "suffering and hardship and inconvenience." He repeated his opposition to coupon rationing.
Problems of intrastate distribution of gasoline have made long lines and closed stations a driving problem mainly of urban centers, he said on NBC's "The Meet the Press"
Simon acknowledged that the allocation program has inequalities which will require
By JILL WILLIS
Kansan Staff Reporter
The two-cent boost superseded a one-cent increase announced Feb. 16 for stations with less than 85 per cent allocation of 1972 supplies.
KU Computer Reliability in Danger
The increase applies to all stations not directly owned by the major oil companies and is in addition to the monthly cost pass-throughs stations already are allowed. The pass-throughs so far have averaged two or three cents a gallon, officials said.
On Saturday, Simon announced that 90 per cent of the nation's stations may raise prices this Friday by an extra two cents a gallon.
"We are stretching this system as much as we possibly can, but we are reaching the limits."
Siron said yesterday that the broader two-cent increase was thought to be "easier to administer and have less impact on the consumer" than variable rate increases.
He called the boost "a modest increase"
appressed to the "unmanageable" one
overall.
Severe financial problems and obsolete equipment are threatening the reliability of the University of Kansas computer center, the University vector of the computer center, said Saturday.
"An old tv set may give you a good picture, however it is subject to breakdowns," he said.
The main computer, a Honeywell 633, was bought by the University in 1966. Wolfe compared the use of this computer to the use of an old television set.
The most realistic goal with this equipment said, is to try to reduce the daily interruptions.
Wolfe said the problem with the computer was compounded because more people were using it every year, putting more pressure on the ability of what is normally called through-put improvements. Wolfe defined through-put improvements as the length of time it took to get a program through the computer.
besides the burden of an outmoded
system, the computer center is overcrowded and understaffed.
Because of the numerous budget cuts, Wolfe said, he had been forced to cut back on personnel in the department. There are 42 students working part time and 30 to 39 students working part time.
Woife said the cut-backs were due to a loss of federal funding from the National Science Foundation, several reductions in the University allocation, and inflation.
"During the last three years there have been increasing costs for computer supplies and training."
same supplies budget, we have to find a variety of ways to cover the costs. We have
Wolfe said he had been making budget adjustments for the last three years.
Fount Smothers Jr., associate professor of architecture and urban development, said problems with the computer center stemmed from lack of money. Because they had to pay for the machines he had to cut down on staff, and the machinery has become somewhat outdated.
"There's not a good cure for that unless
See COMPUTER CENTER Page 2
news capsules the associated press
A chairman of the Federal Trade Commission said antitrust action against the food industry seemed likely as the result of a bread investigation now underway.
Chairman Lewis A. Engman said in an interview he also expected further commission action in the energy field. The FTC already has issued a complaint that the eight major petroleum companies are engaged in anticompetitive practices.
Action Against Food Industry Is Predicted
Sadat Sees Success in Kissinger Mission
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat predicted yesterday that Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger will probably succeed in achieving a disengagement of Israeli and Syrian forces during his upcoming Middle East mission.
But the Kuwait newspaper Al-Rai Al-raai reported from Lahore, Pakistan that Syrian President Hafez Adaas said he was not optimistic about prospects of reaching a military disengagement accord with Israel. It all seemed to be a challenge to obtain complete Israeli withdrawal" from occupied Arab territories.
States Cut Back on Highway Construction
State governments are cutting back on new highway construction and delaying repairs on older roads because of a decline in gasoline tax
The Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations reported recently that gasoline tax collections this year would be 17 per cent below those in 1972—the year being used as a base for figuring fuel allocations to
The reason for the revenue drop is simple: less gasoline is being sold. Jan Landberg of the Lundberg Survey Inc. of Los Angeles, which keeps track of nation-wide gasoline sales, said four billion gallons less gas was sold in 1973 than in 1923—a drop of four per cent.
Islamic Nations Unite Against High Prices
The leaders of 37 Moslem states and the Palestinian Liberation Organization ended a three-day summit conference with a "Declaration of Labore" which pledged to make a cooperative effort to eliminate poverty, disease and ignorance from Islamic nations.
Leaders of the Islamic world agreed last night in Laheb, Pakistan to a pain to help develop nations overcome economic problems in Africa.
Congressmen, Officials May Get Pay Raise
The Senate may vote this week on the issue The House is expected to duck, whether to block a pay raise for Congress members and other top govern-
A three-step increase in congressional salaries, at a rate of 7.5 per cent a year, will take effect March 6 unless either the Senate or the House disap-
It would give Senate and House members their first pay increase in five years, from the present $42,500 to a year $7,600 this year, $49,100 next year.
By CAROL GWINN Kanaan Staff Reporter
Lesbian Feminist Sees Mother-Daughter Split
"Couldn't you have found a smaller place?" she asked as she walked into the room dressed in blue jeans and a denim jacket. "It's so stuffy."
The audience, mostly women, packed the Forum Room in the Kansas Union Thursday night and overflowed into the hallway as they waited to hear Jill Johnston, lesbian feminist and writer for the Village Voice newspaper, speak.
"I did write this last October," Johnson said, pushing her hair back from her face.
"I want to know what you want from me," Johnston said, offering the audience a choice between asking questions and listenin' Johnston read articles she had published.
No one said anything, so she began reading two articles, one she had published last October in the Village Voice and another entitled "Only the Raccoon Lady Knows."
She read in a near monotone, running the words together, eventually using phrases
nistory is not what you thought," she read. "It's what you remember. When everyone is responsible, nobody is. We are all assassins."
instead of sentences and alluding often to other works.
"I have a strong aversion to scaring people," she finally said. "I just wrote that for fun. It's when you write things for fun and they print it."
She finished reading and no one said anything for a few minutes.
Finally someone asked her, "the lebanian
finally tied in with class politics in a Marxist
park."
"I don't know," she answered, and the audience laughed.
Johnston said that she thought women were divided into "mothers" and "daughters" and that there was a schism in the mother caused by the mother-daughter split.
"Mothers' are sometimes called the straight feminists," Johnston said.
She said that "mothers" spend their lives playing their ambitions through the child's eyes.
See JOHNSTON Back Page
2
Monday, February 25, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Expanding Services Increase Help for Elderly
By NANCY SMITH
Kansas State Reporter
New services are being combined with established programs in Douglas County to meet the needs of our community.
The two-year-old Douglas County Planning Council on services for the Aging, located in the Cottonwood building at 3145 W. 31st St., is coordinating area programs, says John Donnoe, council administrator and Lawrence graduate student.
The council, a private, non-profit organization, is one of the first groups in the state to develop an anti-crime agency.
Local programs are beginning to tackle the basic needs of Douglas County senior citizens. The needs, determined by a survey of elderly county residents, include transportation, nutrition, medical aid, recreation and information. D朵oe says.
CENSUS DATA FOR 1701 show there are about 4,500 senior citizens in Douglas County. About 66 per cent live in the city, according to Donnee.
The elderly living outside the city have, for all practical purposes, new services to help them maintain their independence. Funds don't stretch far enough now to extend efficient service to rural areas, he says.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Moses are among the county's rural elderly. Mrs. Moses, who will be 81 in July, says she and her 88-year-old husband are dependent on family and friends to provide the services that allow them to remain in their farm home.
A retired teacher, Mrs. Moses says formal contacts have never been made to her. "But but she
knows of some projects from listening to radio station KLWN.
"If we needed them, it the services would be available to us," she says, "but our children have been able to do the necessary things for us so far."
The Planning Council initiated mini-bus service Aug. 14, 1973, to help transport the workers.
ABOUT 50 PERSONS are transported daily, Monday through Friday, from
wherever they are to where they want to be for 25 cents, according to Dan Evans.
There are two buses, each seating 11 persons, but only one is being operated. The other will be used for a new congregate meals program, says Cal Broughton, a mini-bus driver and Lawrence graduate student.
Average age for the mini-bus driver is 75.
They are regular customers and others use
Senior Citizens
From Page One
Charles Bartz' problems aren't as severe as Smith's, but he also years for the attention that his lifetime of experiences demand.
does, she said. This week she is reading the autobiography of Charlie Chaplin.
Although he suffers from sugar diabetes and foot and eye disorders, the 67-year-old Barts plays the stock market and intends to solve the energy crisis.
Bartz resides at Babcock Place at 1700 Massachusetts St., which is a federally-financed apartment complex for senior citizens who can take care of themselves. His fellow senior citizens have elected Bartz president of Babcock Place.
His small but modern apartment rents for one-fourth of his income, which for Bantz is $125,000.
He moved to Babcock Place from his home at 103 Connecticut St, because the
dirt and noise around him were "about to drive me crazy."
Bartret zircuit two years ago after working seven and a half years as a janitor at the University of Kansas. He has also worked as a nurse and as a traveling salesman.
Bartz said his life had been devoted to studying America and its economy. So, when Bartz isn't cooking, playing pool or cleaning his apartment, he is playing the stock market and working on a solution to the energy crisis.
Disney stock is next on Barris's purchasing agenda, he said. He is waiting for approval.
Bartz seemed most concerned about the fuel shortage.
"I'm going to write to all the auto companies and tell them if they'll make the electric auto, they'll be able to make the electricity," Bartz said. "I think we'll be able to drive a car at least 200 miles without recharging."
Carrman taught romance languages at KU from 1918 to 1967. He had no intention of teaching, but in 1918 he received a call from the KU French department, where he had earned his B.A. degree in 1917. He left his job as a French teacher to KU to teach French to members of the Student Army Training Corps who expected to fight in France during World War I.
The J. Neale Carman Memorial Library in the University of Kansas' French and Italian department was dedicated Friday, day Carman's last book was published.
Carman received his master's degree from KU in 1920 and his Ph.D. from the University of California.
the service occasionally. Riders have to be at least 62 years old.
Carman was chairman of the KU department of romance languages from 1967 to 1962. He taught only at KU until after his retirement in 1967 when he taught for
Carman Memorial Library Named for Former Prof
On Friday afternoons the bus goes to Eudora, Evans says, and sometimes special trips are made to places like Crown Center and the Eisenhower Memorial in Abilene.
three years at the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
After Carman died on Nov. 25, 1972, at the age of 75, Mrs. J. Neale Carman gave his collection of books to the KU French and Italian department in New York. He also gave the J. Neale Carman Library. Carman's last book, "From Camelot to Joyous Guard," was edited by Norris J. Lacy, associate professor of French and Italian. It is a translation of the final cycle of the medieval Arthurian legend. Its theme is the legend of Sir Knights of the Round Table, Lacy said.
Bartz has written several congressmen explaining his ideas. He said he would gladly go to Washington if he were asked to help design an electric auto.
The Arthurian legend was the basis of the musical "Camelot," and two books by E. B. White called "Sword in the Stone" and "The Once and Future King." Lacy said.
The KU Endowment Association helped to pay the cost of publishing Carman's last book, according to Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian.
Bartz, a bachelor for 19 years, said living at Babcock Place was never lonesome. He said, however, he thought senior citizens could be used more productively by society.
"I would like to be on a news program and let doctors and farmers ask me questions," he said. "Yes, I'd like to be on Meet the Press sometimes."
Bartz has to watch what he eats because of his diabetes. He has shoes with special arches that cost $41. Soon, he will have a cyst on his eyelid removed.
But apart from his infirmities, Bartz said, he enjoys retirement. He said he never wanted a lot of money. "I could have married some rich woman if I wanted to,"
"If I could do it all over again," Bartz said, "I'd be an entertainer. I wouldn't care to be a movie actor, but I'd like to be a singer and comedian."
FLORENCE E. DEMERITI, a retired teacher and president of the Pioneer Club for senior citizens, says, "The mini-bus has been a wonderful help, but Saturday and Sunday they don't run. A lot of people would like to be on town on Saturday but they can't."
His social security and state retirement payments and interest on investments keep him well off.
To demonstrate his talent, Bart played "Joy to the World" on his chord organ. He played well, in spite of his inability to read music.
The Pioneer Club is for people over 60. Demerit says it meets informally once a week to play cards and once a month for a luncheon and program. Some members come to meetings at the South Park Recreation Center by mini-bus.
Average attendance at the monthly meeting is 80 persons, she says, but when the weather is good, over 100 have attended. Dues are $1 a year.
After a covered-dish lunch, members
speakers or musical groups or
watch television.
Another popular senior citizen's group in Lawrence is the Autumn Club of the First United Methodist Church at 946 Vermont St. which meets every fourth Wednesday. The church has a carrion followed by a catered $1.25 a person meal and an afternoon card of playling.
The Planning Council will start a Congregate Meal Program on March 1, to provide a nutritious noon meal and some socializing for elderly people, according to Karen Evans, project director for the meals program.
For a $1 contribution, elderly people can get the noon meal Monday through Friday at the American Baptist Campus Center at 870 North College Road, Methodist Church at 4th and Elm streets or the Ballard Community Center at 708 Elm Street. The minibus will be available to trans-
Budget limitations restrict the program to 64 meals a day. Reservations must be made the week before and participants must be 60 years old or older.
Some recreation projects will be combined with the noon meal. Plans call for films, speakers, cards and chess, Evans savs.
Othea Blevins, chairman of the Planning Council's Committee on Nutrition, says the congregate meals are designed as a com-mittee for the four-year-old Meals in Wheels program.
Meals on Wheels is a completely voluntary project that helps homebound people, especially the elderly, receive at least one nutritious meal a day. Blevs says
CAPACITY FOR MEALS on Wheels is 50 persons, she says, and volunteer drivers are required.
Doctors must authorize this service for their patients, and a visiting nurse interviews the doctor and patient to determine nutritional needs.
Computer Center . . .
"It very definitely hurts my teaching efforts," he said.
"The facilities are inadequate for this size of university," Mike Boone, Littleton, Colo., junior, said. "The computer is outdated and the repair service is bad."
"The computer is virtually overloaded," said John Peterson, teaching assistant in computer science. "It takes a long time to run your program."
Wolfe said he was aware that the computer center was overcrowded.
"We need an area where people can sit down, almost like a reading room," he said. Wolfe said his department is working on improvements that don't cost money in the center. This work is limited to equipment other than the main computer.
"This is a crucial part because the facilities we have now are marginal," he said. "For example, if we have any trouble with our air conditioner we have to shut down."
Snoothers said he tried to interest his architecture students in working with computers, but since the computer was so small, he felt that the budding interest they might have had,"
The state legislature has tabled the money needed by the department to plan for the infrastructure.
The center has a contract with Honeywell to lease the present computer until June 30, 1976. Wolfe said, and there are no plans to renegotiate the contract. A task force has been studying the implementation of a new computing system in 1976.
He said he was mainly concerned with getting a new system so he could retain the highly competent professional staff which now works at the computer center.
If "we're going to make a change in 78 we
indicate the activity this spring," Wallee said.
they get money," he said.
"We've got to give them hope that something better is coming," he said.
the
From Page One
the UPPEP QUITTING BUSINESS SALE ALL GIFT LINES Our Prices Are Ridiculously Low
Party Favors, Leather Goods, Pottery, Baskets, Straw Flowers, Jewelry, Posters, Sweat Shirts and Wearing Apparel, Fraternity & Sorority Plaques, & Slippers, Incense, and K.U. Souvenirrs
SCHOONER 40¢
VENUELECKS' KS
LAWRENCE, KS.
TUESDAY 7-930
General medical care for the county's elderly was improved when a free geriatric clinic opened recently at Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St. A nurse and a nutritionist maintain clinic hours every Wednesday for anyone who wants to come.
on all merchandise
Mon.-Sat. 10-5
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Babcock Place supplies space and some equipment, and the Douglas County Public Health Department and Visiting Nurses Association supply the staff. Some funding for the project comes from the Planning Council.
1144 Indiana Oread Corner
Classified ads get results
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE Needs Staff For Academic Year 1974-75
For Interviews Call:
JANET WILDGEN 842-2636
After 5:30 p.m. Before March 3
People Needed for:
Recruitment Orientation
Agency Needs Co-ordination—Evaluation—
Office Management—Follow-up—Publicity
(FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE)
POSITION OF ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF HOUSING
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Applications for employment are sought for the position of Assistant Director of Housing, University of Kansas, Lawrence.
Position open immediately. Salary range $12,000 to $15,000 per year.
To be considered, individual must have educational classification or a degree from an accredited four-year college or university in the field of education.
a minimum of five years experience in business, industry, or government at an executive level, and have some specific responsibility in the field.
Please apply in writing to Mr. J. J. Wilson, Director of Hours 86045. In applying, please submit complete Personal Data information 86045. In applying, please submit complete Personal Data information 86045.
Applicants will be interviewed by specific appointment by a special screening committee.
An Equal Opportunity Employer (EO Clause, EO-11246 and EO-11375).
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I
Board Member Interviews March 2,1974
Director, Festival of the Arts Films
Forums
Fine Arts
Free University
Public Relations
Indoor Recreation
Outdoor Recreation
Special Events
information and Applications Available in the
SIIA Office. Deadline for Board Member
Other (Define Position)
Applications: 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27.
SUA Board Positions!
---
9
7.
Monday, February 25.1974
University Daily Kansan
3
Cosmic Consciousness Next Step in Evolution
By JIM HUBBELL
Kanan Heringer
"COSMIC CONSCIOUSNESS" by Richard M. Huckle (384 pages; Dudton; 1969)
The past decade has witnessed a resurgence of popular interest in the paranormal. New studies in parapsychology, the effects of hallucinogenic drugs and "altered states of consciousness" in psychiatry, the interest in the works in similar fields of early theorist theorists; Gurdjeff, P. D. Ouspensky, William James and R. J. Buck.
Bucke's book, "Cosmic Consciousness," reissued in paperback 68 years after its initial publication, is the pioneer work in the attempts to explain and quantify the phenomenon Bucke labeled "cosmic consciousness."
Buckle explains crisem consciousness as a function of man's evolution into a thinking being. The steps already evident in man are the logical, rational and logical ruled largely by instinct, and the more
advanced self-consciousness, characterized by deep logic and the beginnings of objectivity.
The next step in man's evolution is, according to Bucke, presently appearing in the form of "Cosmic Consciousness"—the entity of creation of the universe as a monastic entity.
Bucke reaches these conclusions by noting that the evolution of the intellect is a still-continuing process. Certain commonly held intellectual attributes, such as ability to perceive and conceptualize color, have evolved in comparatively recent times.
The word, "blue," for example, is derived from the same etymological root as the word, "black," in both Oriental and Occidental languages. No mention of this color is made in such ancient texts as the "Blaid" (Xi'an) and the "Vedic Striking" when one notes the "Rig Veda." is largely preoccupied with descriptions of the sky.
Children's Album First To Break Stereotypes
Kansan Reviewer
MY AND DIVIDED
Until now, their albums have been relegated to a few dubious Disney disks and have surprisingly, in the person of Jeff Husie, an and LP called "Free to Be . . . You and Me." The record isn't just another spot on the shelves but it's finally losing its long-year-lost status.
On the surface, the words and music are simple but not simplistic, and the melodies are pleasant, but that's no reason to dash to your dealer with dollars in hand. No, this is not a bad thing, first to take a successful stab at the stuttering stereotypes children are exposed to.
Thomas and Ms. magazine have drafted a whole shipload of stars to make each
By DON CREACH Kansan Reviewer
No Reason for It; But 'Way We Were' Pleasant
I don't know whether I can write this review without coping out. Am I neglecting to use as a reviewer to say that I can't really read the book, or am I reviewing of "The Way We Were," now showing at the Varsity Theatre, it seems that nothing could be more appropriate than reading the book.
This is a story where love is blind, and if it doesn't conquer all, it at least makes all tolerable. Robert Redford and Barba Streisand play lovers who are basically incompatible. What makes them incompatible is secondary.
Streisand is strongly committed to political ideas. Redford wants to share good times with good friends. The conflict betrays them, but they've enjoyed better than the forces are themselves.
Redford makes a nice statement of the human values that Stressand's politics bypass. These details of the plot make the movie more engaging, while comedies and make it fairly memorable.
But the important thing is that it is romantic comedy. And within that classification, the emphasis is on the romance, though the comic lines offered are fun. This is a love that can forgive from minor irritation to long separation.
So I feel justified in forgiving and ignoring some little bothersome factors. I had to laugh off some scenes that were so hard to understand. I nearly self-pardoned, I didn't care that Streissand and Redford looked 30 years old from college to middle age. And, perhaps mistakenly, I overlooked the maternal attack on nostalgia, "The Way We Were."
I just enjoyed a love story played by two charming stars. I hadn't seen such a film for quite some time, and I won't want to see another one soon.
I can't really ask why I'll want to see one again. But when the time comes, it will be
selection a celebration of the child as person and to poke good-natured fun at attitudes that have been taken seriously for centuries.
Hearing football star Roxy Grier's "It's All Right to Call" must make me "it for the times I didn't, and it's a delight hearing Carol Channing chanting about the hordes of deliriously happy housewives in television commercials.
Harry Belafonte is featured in a duet with Thomas, Dick Cavett does a short poem, and everyone from the New Seekers, Diana Wheeler to Tom Sawyer to Billy de Wolfe. Mel Brooks and Tom Smoores alternated with lightweight poppih tunes and snappy vignettes put across a suba-padding词:“To help girls who are the only people who they are and who they want to be.”
The album is not without its flaws. The cover graphics are annoyingly garish and the special 12-page illustrated lyric book is very dull visually. Parts of the disk are too wordy and there seems to be a need for additional material to please your everyday kid.
"Free to Be . . You and Me" is a monumental breakthrough that addresses everyone from greens to grannies. A definite five-pointer,
'Lemmings' Is in a Clash by Itself
By CHUCK POTTER
"Lemmings," the National Lampoon's
vicious, funny, obscene satirical revue,
which appeared in Hoch Adutorium
San Jose on April 12 by an old line:
"a clash by itself."
Kansan Reviewer
The first act, which was a collection of blackout skits generally based on Watergate and President Nixon, contrasted with the shock festival of Love, Peace and Death.
The Woodshuck Festival was a mass gathering of peace and drug freaks who had come together to commit mass suicide like lemmings.
Contrast Dismays Audience
The contrast between the two acts was that the first was up-to-date while the second was merely dated. The audience's how much has changed, how now the disparity weakened "lemmings."
The audience cheered and applauded nightly in the first act as the show attacked Nixon through a series of skits about an imprisonment narade.
The skits began with a parody upon the Watergate break-in. Three Cubans, bumbling around in the Watergate complex, were stopped by a ringing voice.
"This is L. Patrick Gray," it said. "Now I know in there, so come out of there with me."
Then the cast swung into "Mission; hippebraepe," followed by a devastating speech: "The people of this world will be swept away."
The first act ended, and the audience was well pleased. Nixon, everybody's whipping
boy, was getting the blasting the audience thought he deserved. The performers were amazingly good. (The touring cast included John Belushi, Chevy Chase, Nate Herman and other members of the original New York company.)
The second act opened with the appearance of Heluši, who set the theme for the play.
"Now we all know why we came here, a million of us," he said. "We came here to off
reviews
ourselves. We want you people who are into macrobiotics to off yourselves over in the south forty, to be used for organic fertilizer."
After that unlikely opening, the cast proceeded to do remarkable impersonations of several rock and pop stars. Rhonda Coulet, portraying Joni Mitchell and later Joan Baez, was particularly funny.
Throughout the second act, the show attacked young people who chose drugs as their means of enjoying life. Behulus, as well as of ceremonies, coordinated the suicides.
The audience's laughter during the
second act seemed half-hearted compared to its laughter during the first act. Saturists can get only so close to home before their satire ceases to be funny.
"Lemmings" was a genuinely funny show, particularly because it attacked establishment and the anti-establishment groups with equal ferocity. But it was weakened by the same problem that eroded its parent magazine, the National Lampoons, which sold its first few years, most of the material was genuinely witty, but lately the magazine's editors have been striving for shock value as much as humor.
The same tendency marred "Lemmings." It was unrelenting in its use of profanity and in its over-all grossness, which detracted from the viewer's enjoyment and probably offended many people.
Still, "Lemmings" was well worth seeing, only to use the audience's reaction as a tool.
open until 2 a.m. Fri & Sat
1527 W. 6th 842-4311
SPECIAL Monday - Wednesday at
WANT TO TEACH IN LAWRENCE SCHOOLS?
Information Meeting
February 25
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Student Union
Jayhawk Room
Grilled Cheese Sandwich 25c
a
Vista
--by Alexander Solzenhitsn
'ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH'
JOHN WAYNE
PG
"McQ"
NOW AT THE
Evenings:
af 1:30, 9:40
Sat, Sun, Whar
af 2:30
Granada
(Telephone V13-578)
THE WAY WE WERE
STREISAND & REDFORD PG
Evenings
at 7:30, 9:15
Saturday, May 4
at 7:30
Varsity
THALATE ... TERRAZON V13-1865
Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man they can have cop
Hillcrest
AL PACINO "SERPICO"
Evenings at 7:25 and 9:45
Sat., Sun, Mat. at 2:00 Only
view of the Soviet Union's penal
bay by its most respected victim
ave. 7,40, 9,30, Sat. Sun. Mat. 2,15
Eve., 7:40, 9:30
Sat., Sun. Mat, 2:15
Hillcrest2
Marlon Brando
Last Tango in Paris
Evenings at 7:15 and 9:30
Sat. Sun. Matinees at 2:10
Hillcrest3
SUA Popular Films
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Think of the perfect crime...
Then go one step further.
'SLEUTH'
P
SLEUTH
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX
Michael Cain
Sir Laurence Olivier
Friday, March 1
7:00-9:30
Saturday, March 2
2:00:40.3-7:00:9:30
Kansas Univ
d. Fellini
Monday, Feb. 25
7:30-9:30
Special Films
SATYRICON
BLACK SUNDAY
d. Bana - 9:30
Tuesday, Feb. 26
$11.00 for Both
Kansas Unior
Classical Films
LES VISITEURS DU SOIR
d. Marcel Carne
Wednesday, Feb. 27
7:30; 9:30
Vice President, Haven Uriah
Kansas Union
Film Society
TOKYO STORY
d. Ozu
Thursday, Feb. 28
7:30
Children's Films
7:30 75c Kansas Union
SWIF VS SWIF VS SWIF VS SWIF VS SWIF
BRATS(Laurel & Hardy)
SKINNY AND FATTY
PADDLE TO THE SEA
Sunday, March 3
Trans Atlantic Youth Fare
Tickets, Reservations, Information Available at No Extra Cost
Flights Are Filling FAST
Contact us now about your reservations and airline tickets
[FROM TORONTO, CANADA]
Phone
843-1211
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900 Mass.
Kansas Union
Festival of the Arts
March 24-30,1974
TICKET PICKUP for the FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS
will begin Wednesday, Feb. 28th, 8.30 a.m. in The Union Ballroom
In order to accelerate the process, please have all KU ID's in alphabetical order. Also, a limit of ten ticket packages per person will be enforced.
Coupons are still on sale at SUA office, and individual night tickets will go on sale March 4th in the SUA office!
Monday, February 25, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Language Requirement
Considering the bills introduced at Wednesday's Student Senate meeting, it seems John Beisner is going to make more than the normal perfunctory attempt to live up to his campaign promises.
One campaign promise Beisner didn't bring up at the meeting, though, was his promise to work to abolish the foreign language requirement of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. During his campaign for student body president, Beisner promised to eliminate the 16-hour foreign language requirement and to have the funds that are used to finance foreign language departments transferred to other college departments.
A story in the Feb. 7 Kansan paraphrased Beisner's statement that many prestigious schools had already abolished foreign language requirements; and that new students often lose interest in KU's liberal arts and sciences program because of the requirement.
Well now, isn't that too bad?
If a high school graduate wants to come to the University of Kansas to receive a liberal education, but doesn't want to study a second language, then he has no business being here.
Abolishing the foreign language requirement would only mean that KU would be flooded with still more people who didn't belong in college.
Does that sound elitist? You can bet it is.
Tradition seems to be a no-no today and relevance is the most
sacrosanct criterion of the worth and value of college courses. But things are getting out of hand.
Liberal arts majors should still be concerned with the cultivation of knowledge and, as the introduction to the college catalogue says, eager to range widely over the field of learning in order to acquaint themselves with all of its main areas.
Unfortunately again, those aren't
mature of many college ma-
ters.
Don't believe it? Ask the next liberal arts major you see whether he can name the seven liberal arts. How many liberal arts there are.
Granted that the methods of instruction used to teach students a second language aren't the best, but the solution isn't to junk foreign language departments. Rather the goal is to improve methods of instruction.
John Beisner received only 1,207 votes in the recent election—hardly a mandate from a student body of more than 18,000.
Even if Beinner could persuade the college to abolish its foreign language requirement, he wouldn't be affecting all students. The School of Journalism, for example, recently approved a new requirement making journalism majors take 16 hours of one foreign language or 10 hours each of two foreign languages; or two courses in statistics or computer science—fields with languages of their own.
Chances are the senate will not be able to effect any change in the law, so they will require the requirement. The question is, though, should the senate even try?
Fear Stalks at Night
Why shouldn't I be? Every 12 hours a day there in where in the United States is safe.
I don't have any phobias that I know_of and I'm not afraid of speaking to groups or of meeting people. But any time I have to walk somewhere alone, particularly at night on campus, I become a nervous wreck. I'm afraid of being raped
Normally, I'm not a fearful person.
We used to feel secure, knowing that things like that just didn't happen in the Lawences of the country. But that's not true any more. The police has been about one reported rape in Lawrence every week.
About 25 cases of rape or attempted rape were reported to Lawrence police over the last 18 months. A Lawrence police detective, Sgt. Francis Alexander, last week told the Kansan that one man was probably responsible for 15-20 rapes or attempted rapes, 11 of them occurring since May on the University campus.
He said that over the past nine months police and KU Security and Parking officers have checked approximately 50 leads in connection with the attacks. They are, Alexander said, up against a blank wall.
The officers' frustration can be understood, especially since many women are much too slow in reporting an attack. But what about the frustration of the woman who ran out into the street and flagged down a police car after twice struggling away from an assailant only to have the patrolmen lose the suspect.
Meanwhile, somewhere out there is a sick man who will continue to rape women until he is caught. This knowledge brings a fear that every dark shadow and every bush hides a rapist.
Women are being forced to have a male friend drive them around or accompany them to and from their cars. No man seems to understand how degrading such dependency is for most women. Men might see it as a necessary nuisance, but I see it as an unavoidable indignity.
Energy crisis be damned—more lighting in parking lots and between buildings would be one effective deterrant. Another would be a foot patrol of campus police. It may be asking too much to make the whole city safe for women, but the University should be expected to do all it can for the safety of its students.
Or do women walking alone have to continue to be afraid?
Bunny Miller
intimate to the President. The concept of a White House staff is that a president is entitled to a group of people whose loyalty runs only to him, not to the Congress and not constitutive pressure groups which often vie for the attention of cabinet and agency heads.
Solzhenitsyn Supporter Faces Party Opposition
MOSCOW-The Soviet Union is faced with another not yet problem with one of its writers, and this one could cause the Communist leader at home than the Solzhenitsyn scandal.
It is inconceivable to me that Richard Nixon hasn't been involved in every aspect of the Watergate scandals since June 17, 1973. I do not believe that Ronald Ziegler would brief the press without clearing his statements with Richard Nixon directly.
Special in Newsday
By EDMUND STEVENS
My own mishawn would be that an analysis of the presidential logs of Mr. Nixon would show that Mr. Ziegler, or whoever was doing the press briefing on a particular day, checked either that day or the night before Richard Nixon to find out what to tell the press when he press corps. A playing of each day's tapes might much more aware of the details of what his press secretaries say than most citizens realize.
While some of the older party stalwarts still eyed him with mistrust—and the putative cause, too, is a failure
witness by witness through committee hearings, and congressman by congressman during debate on the house floor.
By JOSEPH A. CALIFANO JR.
Special to the Washington Post
Veytushenk doubtless realized from his past experience that he would be in for a hard time if he protested again. But his feelings about the durges and repression of the Stalinist period are intense for personal reasons.
Kennedy wasn't misled by bad advice when there was death and violence on the house floor. Then he misled by bad advice when he lost the D.C., home rule discharge petition on the house floor. Each man was deeply involved in the legal decisions relating to the dramatic events.
EVERY ONE OF those presidents was intimately involved on a daily basis with his closest staff members—and those members don't act on their own authority in matters
And Richard Nixon is not mishled by bad advice, or unaware of what his closest aides do. Reasonable men may doubt his advice involvement in the Watergate bugging and burglary; they must recognize that he would have been unarmed of his own gun. Richard Nixon doesn't need involved in everything that followed the capture of the burearians on June 17, 1972.
This would partially explain Yevtsushenko's conviction that the abuse of the Stalin era should not be hidden from the view of new generations of Russians.
Port Veyteng Yevtushenko protested the explosion of Alexander Solzhensyn last week, and the Soviet government responded by canceling a scheduled appearance by the late Russian president. Solzhensyn far more popular here than Solzhensyn, especially with younger Russians. Only one of Solzhensyn's novels has been published, and the book is no longer available. But editions of Yevtushenko's poems have run hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions.
Even the poet's closest friends were caught by surprise by the protest. Despite his activities in the past, he never had been regarded as a dissident. Though he fell from office in 1965 and was coach protest, he has since made full protection, never straying from the party line.
Former Chiefs Knew; Does Nixon?
Yevtushenko was 5 years old in 1838, when his maternal grandfather, Ermoli Yevtushenko, was arrested and shot. A Soviet civil war hero, the grandfather had been a corps commander in the artillery section of the Red Army general staff for 12 years
selling out—his prolific verses were welcomed in the most prestigious Soviet publications, including Pravda, and he was known as a kind of cultural ambassador at large.
All of Vytushenko's recitals have been packed to overflowing, and his appearance last Friday was to have been televised nationally. This may have been behind the scandal, but it also led to a program, denying him a platform for a possible statement in support of
WASHINGTON—The founding fathers placed the impeachment process in the hands not only of a politically sensitized branch of government, but also of a politically expert one. The house and senate voted to add blue ribbon politically as juries could be.
In one sense, the Congress is likely to have a better understanding of and high tolerance for political activity which may threaten the integrity of our impeachable. This may help Mr. Nixon.
In another sense, however, they will understand better than most of us how political leaders operate—and this may hurt him.
The political leaders in the Congress are more likely than most citizens to conduct impeachment proceedings in the context of a realistic understanding of what it takes to succeed in politics—particularly the enormous need for attention to detail.
Lyndon Johnson followed major legislative proposals which bore his name.
From my own perspective as a former white house aide, if the press is to be criticized in connection with its reporting of these scandals, it is not, as Mr. Nixon and Mr. Agnew suggest, because it has been careless in printing unverified charges. It is, rather, because of its acceptance, with so little skepticism, of the myth that Mr. Nixon is somehow the uninformed victim of aides whose political entenlusion spilled over into an empathetic splinter this myth defies the reality of presidential power and the personal, political and historical ambition that accompany the exercise of such power.
Thus, John Kennedy was involved minute by minute in the desegregation of the University of Mississippi and was so deeply concerned about his 1964 re-election that he went to Texas to try to heal local political crisis.
This is particularly true where what is at stake is the very continuation of Mr. Nixon's presidential career. For what Watergate and its surrounding events involve is Mr. Nixon's place in history, Mr. Nixon's personal reputation, and whether he will be remembered of a crime or impached, remember the man who opened the door to China or as the man who headed the most corrupt administration in the history of the free world.
Presidents from Washington through Nixon have had different personalities. But every successful American politician, and presidents are the most successful, like successful lawyers, businessmen and entrepreneurs, in pays and close attention to details.
WHERETHER a President has the publicly seductive style of John Kennedy, the overbearing intensity of Lyndon Johnson or his conservative Richard Nixon, he will personally direct every major issues, particularly when those moves could decisively affect the marrow of his contemporary political career and historical judgments on the long term value.
THIS IS Ford COUNTRY
We don't have to plow through the pages of "Six Crises" to know that Mr. Nixon is most attendant to details that intimately affect his political career. One needn't work in politics, but he should be about any president who served there. One need only understand human nature, politics and fathers who are bound to be concerned about what their children think of them. Any analysis of impeachable offenses must be made against this background.
A Game We Can't Afford to Lose
By MARC SCHOGOL
BROOKVILLE, N.Y.-First, I shut down nearly all of the world's industry and stopped all of its airplanes, railroads and buses.
But my meters indicated that the world's energy supplies still were disappearing at an alarming rate and, so although it gained credibility just about every appliance on the planet.
Then, in a desalination move, I ruthlessly reduced food production to near-starvation levels and turned my nuclear reactors into a greenhouse for regulating air and water pollution that resulted.
No use. Energy levels were almost nil, time was running out and all I had left to maneuver with were the fundamental necessities of life—air conditioning, hot water and gasoline for the cars. I can't eliminate them, I thought. I just can't.
Ab. fatal hesitation. Suddenly, it no longer mattered. The needles were all pointing to zero. All energy was gone. I had brought the end of the world. And it took only 483 years.
AS I STOOD there, staring at the console at C. W. Post College, physics professor Paul Krauner walked over to see how I had done.
The game, built in limited numbers by the Atomic Energy Commission, is a large computer-like gadget that is designed to demonstrate the finite quantities of energy resources left on earth and the infinite demands made upon them.
"That's not bad," he said. Persons playing the electronic "Energy Environment Simulation Game" for the first time usually succeeded in ending the world in about 200 years or so, Kramer said. That made me feel better.
Games have been loaned to five college faculty members across the country for use in lectures to school and community organizations on the energy crisis.
The game cost the AEC about $4,000 to build and, according to a commission spokesman, there are eight in circulation, three under construction and 10 on order. Kraner, a nuclear physicist and longtime AEC associate, said that the game is a fairly realise one, based on today's energy resources and technology. I found that I ran
out of natural gas in about 30 years of game time, which, Kramer said, is the amount of time scientists say current natural-gas reserves are expected to last.
THE GAME, however, does not take into account such potential energy sources as the sun or the fusion of atoms. (Current reactors are run by fission.) Research into these reactions has laid up sources is going on, and Krutov said, "They could be breakthroughs. I hope there are."
Kramer said he believed that the energy crisis was a real one. He said that he wasn't even aware of it.
The AEC game dramatically demonstrates how little time there is. Each second of real time is one year of game time, and the lights and meters that indicate energy shortages seem to start flickering and jumping very quickly.
major oil companies were manipulating the crisis to their advantage. However, he said there was no doubt that the world was running out of oil.
Reserves may last another 100 years or so, he said. "But that's not much time, is
To stretch energy supplies for 1,000 years.
the goal of the game, I discovered that one would have to take drastic conservation measures. The need to conserve energy, water and air is increasing, EEC is trying to convey through the game.
I assured Kramer that I was all for frugality and turning off unneeded lights, but observed that to beat the game and last 1,000 years, I would have had to eliminate all technological advances made since the wheel.
Kramer agreed, and said he didn't accedate anything that extreme. "It wouldn't be dangerous," Kramer said.
China Watchers Eve 'Revolution'
The campaign could still exert profound effects on every aspect of Chinese life and policy—as did its forerunner, the great proletarian cultural revolution of 1968-69.
HONG KONG—The thought-reform revolution ordered by the Peking government so far has failed to catch fire among the masses and, almost equally unreachable, no significant changes have been discernible in China's policy of detente.
The Los Angeles Times
BY ROBERT S. ELEGANT
But the movement's failure to alter China's essentially conciliatory approach to almost all nations except the Soviet Union has surprised veteran observers.
DURING THE cultural revolution, thousands of officials were purged because of "mistakes" they had made in the past. Western businessmen feel that the leading officials of state trading organizations may simply be exercising caution until they see which way the present struggle will move. The diplomatism has become clearer, deeper, and more serving opiums.
On the equally important economic front, there are factors to indicate that a change in foreign trade will not be coming. But the slight lessening of enthusiasm for trade, which foreign merchants have detected, could have little to do with individual officials' apprehensions.
The United States is being attacked in print with slightly more vigor than has been
normal during the past two years. But the Soviet Union is still beyond question the United States and its allies.
The last South Vietnamese prisoners captured when Peking's forces overran the Paracel Islands in mid-January, 43 men in all, have just been released.
PREMIER CHOU En-Lai, according to a visiting Thailand statesman, has just promised that China will no longer give significant aid to insurgent forces within Thailand. Further, most Chinese troops and guns have been withdrawn from road Peking built through northwest Laos.
Several minor diplomatic events may indicate a slight cooling of Peking-Washington relations. But, at present, those events pressure no major alteration in the Sino-American quasi-alliance. Even the U.S.-China security chain may be more shadow than substance.
Ambassador Huang Chen, chief of Peking's liaison office in Washington, has been absent from his post since November. Ambassador David Bruce, chief of Washington's liaison office in Peking, is not scheduled to return to his post for a month.
In its relations with its Southeast Asian neighbors, Peking is, if anything, being even more conciliatory than it was before the new thought reform movement started in January. The Chinese obviously wish to retain Beijing as the Soviet to penetrate the region further.
The State Department has denied that Bruce's absence indicates any decrease in
Griff and the Unicorn
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ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME YOU GOT A HAIRCUT, SIMON?
mutual cordiality. The ambassador has been assigned to assist Henry Kissinger in Europe—where Bruce has had much experience and Kissinger has many problems. The Chinese have offered no explanation for Huang Cheng's absence.
THE ONLY substantive signs that mutual cordiality has decreased are: (1) The American mission has not been permitted to send a replacement for one officer who is on leave; (2) Nicholas Platt, chief of the political section of the mission, who was killed in a traffic accident, has not been replaced; (3) foreigners are not being permitted to travel quite so freely—with specified limits—as they were previously.
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME YOU GOT A HAIRCUT, SIMON?
The mass movement could, of course, increase in intensity at any time. If it should become violent, it is bound to affect China's foreign policy seriously. But so, far, both radicals and moderates agree publicly on the present approach to the outside world.
Nonetheless, Premier Chou En-Lai,
leader of the moderates and architect of China's foreign policy, has been criticized for going too far too fast. Should the mass movement catch fire, he could be forced to retreat a few steps in foreign policy.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kanan Telephone Numbers Newroom-U.N.4-4301 Business Office-N.J.3253
Published at the University of Kansas daily news and information period; holiday information periods. Mail subscriptions. $1 a semester, $12 a year. Second class postage paid. Mail for $15-$20. $1.25 an amateur student in student activity fee. Advertiser offered to all students without regard. Advertised not necessary those of the University are not necessarily those of the University.
NEWS STAFF
**NEWS STAFF**
News Advisor . . . Shaina Swamp
Editor
AIRPORT MANAGER
Business Manager ... Mel Adams
Business Manager ... David Hume
Member Associated Collegiate Press
2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 25.1974
Ideas Sought for 1976 Celebration
5
Hills said the commission wanted ideas from groups and individuals geared toward
tennal Commission is seeking suggestions for possible local bicentennial celebrations. Clemente Hills, vice chairman of the commission, said yesterday that the commission especially wanted to draw on the expertise of University of Kansas faculty and students.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Bicentennial Commission is seeking suggestions
the three celebration themes announced by the American Revolution Bicentennial Committee.
-Heritage 76, a re-examination of 200 years of American history.
Horizons '76, planning for the next century.
were available from her at 845 Illinois St. She said initial proposals would be considered at the commission's next meeting Feb. 28.
—Festival 78, traditional parades and celebration.
Hills said forms for submitting projects
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of Sat-1934; of Sat-1937; of Sat-1941; of Sat-1944; of Sat-1947; of Sat-1951; of Sat-1954; of Sat-1957; of Sat-1961; of Sat-1964; of Sat-1967; of Sat-1971; of Sat-1974; of Sat-1977; of Sat-1981; of Sat-1984; of Sat-1987; of Sat-1991; of Sat-1994; of Sat-1997; of Sat-2001; of Sat-2004; of Sat-2007; of Sat-2011; of Sat-2014; of Sat-2017; of Sat-2021; of Sat-2024; of Sat-2027; of Sat-2031; of Sat-2034; of Sat-2037; of Sat-2041; of Sat-2044; of Sat-2047; of Sat-2051; of Sat-2054; of Sat-2057; of Sat-2061; of Sat-2064; of Sat-2067; of Sat-2071; of Sat-2074; of Sat-2077; of Sat-2081; of Sat-2084; of Sat-2087; of Sat-2091; of Sat-2094; of Sat-2097; of Sat-2101; of Sat-2104; of Sat-2107; of Sat-2111; of Sat-2114; of Sat-2117; of Sat-2121; of Sat-2124; of Sat-2127; of Sat-2131; of Sat-2134; of Sat-2137; of Sat-2141; of Sat-2144; of Sat-2147; of Sat-2151; of Sat-2154; of Sat-2157; of Sat-2161; of Sat-2164; of Sat-2167; of Sat-2171; of Sat-2174; of Sat-2177; of Sat-2181; of Sat-2184; of Sat-2187; of Sat-2191; of Sat-2194; of Sat-2197; of Sat-2201; of Sat-2204; of Sat-2207; of Sat-2211; of Sat-2214; of Sat-2217; of Sat-2221; of Sat-2224; of Sat-2227; of Sat-2231; of Sat-2234; of Sat-2237; of Sat-2241; of Sat-2244; of Sat-2247; of Sat-2251; of Sat-2254; of Sat-2257; of Sat-2261; of Sat-2264; of Sat-2267; of Sat-2271; of Sat-2274; of Sat-2277; of Sat-2281; of Sat-2284; of Sat-2287; of Sat-2291; of Sat-2294; of Sat-2297; of Sat-2301; of Sat-2304; of Sat-2307; of Sat-2311; of Sat-2314; of Sat-2317; of Sat-2321; of Sat-2324; of Sat-2327; of Sat-2331; of Sat-2334; of Sat-2337; of Sat-2341; of Sat-2344; of Sat-2347; of Sat-2351; of Sat-2354; of Sat-2357; of Sat-2361; of Sat-2364; of Sat-2367; of Sat-2371; of Sat-2374; of Sat-2377; of Sat-2381; of Sat-2384; of Sat-2387; of Sat-2391; of Sat-2394; of Sat-2397; of Sat-2401; of Sat-2404; of Sat-2407; of Sat-2411; of Sat-2414; of Sat-2417; of Sat-2421; of Sat-2424; of Sat-2427; of Sat-2431; of Sat-2434; of Sat-2437; of Sat-2441; of Sat-2444; of Sat-2447; of Sat-2451; of Sat-2454; of Sat-2457; of Sat-2461; of Sat-2464; of Sat-2467; of Sat-2471; of Sat-2474; of Sat-2477; of Sat-2481; of Sat-2484; of Sat-2487; of Sat-2491; of Sat-2494; of Sat-2497; of Sat-2501; of Sat-2504; of Sat-2507; of Sat-2511; of Sat-2514; of Sat-2517; of Sat-2521; of Sat-2524; of Sat-2527; of Sat-2531; of Sat-2534; of Sat-2537; of Sat-2541; of Sat-2544; of Sat-2547; of Sat-2551; of Sat-2554; of Sat-2557; of Sat-2561; of Sat-2564; of Sat-2567; of Sat-2571; of Sat-2574; of Sat-2577; of Sat-2581; of Sat-2584; of Sat-2587; of Sat-2591; of Sat-2594; of Sat-2597; of Sat-2601; of Sat-2604; of Sat-2607; of Sat-2611; of Sat-2614; of Sat-2617; of Sat-2621; of Sat-2624; of Sat-2627; of Sat-2631; of Sat-2634; of Sat-2637; of Sat-2641; of Sat-2644; of Sat-2647; of Sat-2651; of Sat-2654; of Sat-2657; of Sat-2661; of Sat-2664; of Sat-2667; of Sat-2671; of Sat-2674; of Sat-2677; of Sat-2681; of Sat-2684; of Sat-2687; of Sat-2691; of Sat-2694; of Sat-2697; of Sat-2701; of Sat-2704; of Sat-2707; of Sat-2711; of Sat-2714; of Sat-2717; of Sat-2721; of Sat-2724; of Sat-2727; of Sat-2731; of Sat-2734; of Sat-2737; of Sat-2741; of Sat-2744; of Sat-2747; of Sat-2751; of Sat-2754; of Sat-2757; of Sat-2761; of Sat-2764; of Sat-2767; of Sat-2771; of Sat-2774; of Sat-2777; of Sat-2781; of Sat-2784; of Sat-2787; of Sat-2791; of Sat-2794; of Sat-2797; of Sat-2801; of Sat-2804; of Sat-2807; of Sat-2811; of Sat-2814; of Sat-2817; of Sat-2821; of Sat-2824; of Sat-2827; of Sat-2831; of Sat-2834; of Sat-2837; of Sat-2841; of Sat-2844; of Sat-2847; of Sat-2851; of Sat-2854; of Sat-2857; of Sat-2861; of Sat-2864; of Sat-2867; of Sat-2871; of Sat-2874; of Sat-2877; of Sat-2881; of Sat-2884; of Sat-2887; of Sat-2891; of Sat-2894; of Sat-2897; of Sat-2901; of Sat-2904; of Sat-2907; of Sat-2911; of Sat-2914; of Sat-2917; of Sat-2921; of Sat-2924; of Sat-2927; of Sat-2931; of Sat-2934; of Sat-2937; of Sat-2941; of Sat-2944; of Sat-2947; of Sat-2951; of Sat-2954; of Sat-2957; of Sat-2961; of Sat-2964; of Sat-2967; of Sat-2971; of Sat-2974; of Sat-2977; of Sat-2981; of Sat-2984; of Sat-2987; of Sat-2991; of Sat-2994; of Sat-2997; of Sat-3001; of Sat-3004; of Sat-3007; of Sat-3011; of Sat-3014; of Sat-3017; of Sat-3021; of Sat-3024; of Sat-3027; of Sat-3031; of Sat-3034; of Sat-3037; of Sat-3041; of Sat-3044; of Sat-3047; of Sat-3051; of Sat-3054; of Sat-3057; of Sat-3061; of Sat-3064; of Sat-3067; of Sat-3071; of Sat-3074; of Sat-3077; of Sat-3081; of Sat-3084; of Sat-3087; of Sat-3091; of Sat-3094; of Sat-3097; of Sat-3101; of Sat-3104; of Sat-3107; of Sat-3111; of Sat-3114; of Sat-3117; of Sat-3121; of Sat-3124; of Sat-3127; of Sat-3131; of Sat-3134; of Sat-3137; of Sat-3141; of Sat-3144; of Sat-3147; of Sat-3151; of Sat-3154; of Sat-3157; of Sat-3161; of Sat-3164; of Sat-3167; of Sat-3171; of Sat-3174; of Sat-3177; of Sat-3181; of Sat-3184; of Sat-3187; of Sat-3191; of Sat-3194; of Sat-3197; of Sat-3201; of Sat-3204; of Sat-3207; of Sat-3211; of Sat-3214; of Sat-3217; of Sat-3221; of Sat-3224; of Sat-3227; of Sat-3231; of Sat-3234; of Sat-3237; of Sat-3241; of Sat-3244; of Sat-3247; of Sat-3251; of Sat-3254; of Sat-3257; of Sat-3261; of Sat-3264; of Sat-3267; of Sat-3271; of Sat-3274; of Sat-3277; of Sat-3281; of Sat-3284; of Sat-3287; of Sat-3291; of Sat-3294; of Sat-3297; of Sat-3301; of Sat-3304; of Sat-3307; of Sat-3311; of Sat-3314; of Sat-3317; of Sat-3321; of Sat-3324; of Sat-3327; of Sat-3331; of Sat-3334; of Sat-3337; of Sat-3341; of Sat-3344; of Sat-3347; of Sat-3351; of Sat-3354; of Sat-3357; of Sat-3361; of Sat-3364; of Sat-3367; of Sat-3371; of Sat-3374; of Sat-3377; of Sat-3381; of Sat-3384; of Sat-3387; of Sat-3391; of Sat-3394; of Sat-3397; of Sat-3401; of Sat-3404; of Sat-3407; of Sat-3411; of Sat-3414; of Sat-3417; of Sat-3421; of Sat-3424; of Sat-3427; of Sat-3431; of Sat-3434; of Sat-3437; of Sat-3441; of Sat-3444; of Sat-3447; of Sat-3451; of Sat-3454; of Sat-3457; of Sat-3461; of Sat-3464; of Sat-3467; of Sat-3471; of Sat-3474; of Sat-3477; of Sat-3481; of Sat-3484; of Sat-3487; of Sat-3491; of Sat-3494; of Sat-3497; of Sat-3501; of Sat-3504; of Sat-3507; of Sat-3511; of Sat-3514; of Sat-3517; of Sat-3521; of Sat-3524; of Sat-3527; of Sat-3531; of Sat-3534; of Sat-3537; of Sat-3541; of Sat-3544; of Sat-3547; of Sat-3551; of Sat-3554; of Sat-3557; of Sat-3561; of Sat-3564; of Sat-3567; of Sat-3571; of Sat-3574; of Sat-3577; of Sat-3581; of Sat-3584; of Sat-3587; of Sat-3591; of Sat-3594; of Sat-3597; of Sat-3601; of Sat-3604; of Sat-3607; of Sat-3611; of Sat-3614; of Sat-3617; of Sat-3621; of Sat-3624; of Sat-3627; of Sat-3631; of Sat-3634; of Sat-3637; of Sat-3641; of Sat-3644; of Sat-3647; of Sat-3651; of Sat-3654; of Sat-3657; of Sat-3661; of Sat-3664; of Sat-3667; of Sat-3671; of Sat-3674; of Sat-3677; of Sat-3681; of Sat-3684; of Sat-3687; of Sat-3691; of Sat-3694; of Sat-3697; of Sat-3701; of Sat-3704; of Sat-3707; of Sat-3711; of Sat-3714; of Sat-3717; of Sat-3721; of Sat-3724; of Sat-3727; of Sat-3731; of Sat-3734; of Sat-3737; of Sat-3741; of Sat-3744; of Sat-3747; of Sat-3751; of Sat-3754; of Sat-3757; of Sat-3761; of Sat-3764; of Sat-3767; of Sat-3771; of Sat-3774; of Sat-3777; of Sat-3781; of Sat-3784; of Sat-3787; of Sat-3791; of Sat-3794; of Sat-3797; of Sat-3801; of Sat-3804; of Sat-3807; of Sat-3811; of Sat-3814; of Sat-3817; of Sat-3821; of Sat-3824; of Sat-3827; of Sat-3831; of Sat-3834; of Sat-3837; of Sat-3841; of Sat-3844; of Sat-3847; of Sat-3851; of Sat-3854; of Sat-3857; of Sat-3861; of Sat-3864; of Sat-3867; of Sat-3871; of Sat-3874; of Sat-3877; of Sat-3881; of Sat-3884; of Sat-3887; of Sat-3901; of Sat-3904; of Sat-3907; of Sat-3911; of Sat-3914; of Sat-3917; of Sat-3921; of Sat-3924; of Sat-3927; of Sat-3931; of Sat-3934; of Sat-3937; of Sat-3941; of Sat-3944; of Sat-3947; of Sat-3951; of Sat-3954; of Sat-3957; of Sat-3961; of Sat-3964; of Sat-3967; of Sat-3971; of Sat-3974; of Sat-3977; of Sat-3981; of Sat-3984; of Sat-3987; of Sat-3991; of Sat-3994; of Sat-3997; of Sat-4001; of Sat-4004; of Sat-4007; of Sat-4011; of Sat-4014; of Sat-4017; of Sat-4021; of Sat-4024; of Sat-4027; of Sat-4031; of Sat-4034; of Sat-4037; of Sat-4041; of Sat-4044; of Sat-4047; of Sat-4051; of Sat-4054; of Sat-4057; of Sat-4061; of Sat-4064; of Sat-4067; of Sat-4071; of Sat-4074; of Sat-4077; of Sat-4081; of Sat-4084; of Sat-4087; of Sat-4091; of Sat-4094; of Sat-4097; of Sat-4101; of Sat-4104; of Sat-4107; of Sat-4111; of Sat-4114; of Sat-4117; of Sat-4121; of Sat-4124; of Sat-4127; of Sat-4131; of Sat-4134; of Sat-4137; of Sat-4141; of Sat-4144; of Sat-4147; of Sat-4151; of Sat-4154; of Sat-4157; of Sat-4161; of Sat-4164; of Sat-4167; of Sat-4171; of Sat-4174; of Sat-4177; of Sat-4181; of Sat-4184; of Sat-4187; of Sat-4191; of Sat-4194; of Sat-4197; of Sat-4201; of Sat-4204; of Sat-4207; of Sat-4211; of Sat-4214; of Sat-4217; of Sat-4221; of Sat-4224; of Sat-4227; of Sat-4231; of Sat-4234; of Sat-4237; of Sat-4241; of Sat-4244; of Sat-4247; of Sat-4251; of Sat-4254; of Sat-4257; of Sat-4261; of Sat-4264; of Sat-4267; of Sat-4271; of Sat-4274; of Sat-4277; of Sat-4281; of Sat-4284; of Sat-4287; of Sat-4291; of Sat-4294; of Sat-4297; of Sat-4301; of Sat-4304; of Sat-4307; of Sat-4311; of Sat-4314; of Sat-4317; of Sat-4321; of Sat-4324; of Sat-4327; of Sat-4331; of Sat-4334; of Sat-4337; of Sat-4341; of Sat-4344; of Sat-4347; of Sat-4351; of Sat-4354; of Sat-4357; of Sat-4361; of Sat-4364; of Sat-4367; of Sat-4371; of Sat-4374; of Sat-4377; of Sat-4381; of Sat-4384; of Sat-4387; of Sat-4391; of Sat-4394; of Sat-4397; of Sat-4401; of Sat-4404; of Sat-4407; of Sat-4411; of Sat-4414; of Sat-4417; of Sat-4421; of Sat-4424; of Sat-4427; of Sat-4431; of Sat-4434; of Sat-4437; of Sat-4441; of Sat-4444; of Sat-4447; of Sat-4451; of Sat-4454; of Sat-4457; of Sat-4461; of Sat-4464; of Sat-4467; of Sat-4471; of Sat-4474; of Sat-4477; of Sat-4481; of Sat-4484; of Sat-4487; of Sat-4491; of Sat-4494; of Sat-4497; of Sat-4501; of Sat-4504; of Sat-4507; of Sat-4511; of Sat-4514; of Sat-4517; of Sat-4521; of Sat-4524; of Sat-4527; of Sat-4531; of Sat-4534; of Sat-4537; of Sat-4541; of Sat-4544; of Sat-4547; of Sat-4551; of Sat-4554; of Sat-4557; of Sat-4561; of Sat-4564; of Sat-4567; of Sat-4571; of Sat-4574; of Sat-4577; of Sat-4581; of Sat-4584; of Sat-4587; of Sat-4591; of Sat-4594; of Sat-4597; of Sat-4601; of Sat-4604; of Sat-4607; of Sat-4611; of Sat-4614; of Sat-4617; of Sat-4621; of Sat-4624; of Sat-4627; of Sat-4631; of Sat-4634; of Sat-4637; of Sat-4641; of Sat-4644; of Sat-4647; of Sat-4651; of Sat-4654; of Sat-4657; of Sat-4661; of Sat-4664; of Sat-4667; of Sat-4671; of Sat-4674; of Sat-4677; of Sat-4681; of Sat-4684; of Sat-4687; of Sat-4691; of Sat-4694; of Sat-4697; of Sat-4701; of Sat-4704; of Sat-4707; of Sat-4711; of Sat-4714; of Sat-4717; of Sat-4721; of Sat-4724; of Sat-4727; of Sat-4731; of Sat-4734; of Sat-4737; of Sat-4741; of Sat-4744; of Sat-4747; of Sat-4751; of Sat-4754; of Sat-4757; of Sat-4761; of Sat-4764; of Sat-4767; of Sat-4771; of Sat-4774; of Sat-4777; of Sat-4781; of Sat-4784; of Sat-4787; of Sat-4791; of Sat-4794; of Sat-4797; of Sat-4801; of Sat-4804; of Sat-4807; of Sat-4811; of Sat-4814; of Sat-4817; of Sat-4821; of Sat-4824; of Sat-4827; of Sat-4831; of Sat-4834; of Sat-4837; of Sat-4841; of Sat-4844; of Sat-4847; of Sat-4851; of Sat-4854; of Sat-4857; of Sat-4861; of Sat-4864; of Sat-4867; of Sat-4871; of Sat-4874; of Sat-4877; of Sat-4881; of Sat-4884; of Sat-4887; of Sat-4901; of Sat-4904; of Sat-4907; of Sat-4911; of Sat-4914; of Sat-4917; of Sat-4921; of Sat-4924; of Sat-4927; of Sat-4931; of Sat-4934; of Sat-4937; of Sat-4941; of Sat-4944; of Sat-4947; of Sat-4951; of Sat-4954; of Sat-4957; of Sat-4961; of Sat-4964; of Sat-4967; of Sat-4971; of Sat-4974; of Sat-4977; of Sat-4981; of Sat-4984; of Sat-4987; of Sat-4991; of Sat-4994; of Sat-4997; of Sat-4994; of Sat-4997; of Sat-4998; of Sat-4998; of Sat-4997; of Sat-4999
Stereo speaker large, come loaded folded
Speaker small, come loaded folded
Small, small guitar arm, wanted 414-2569-
small guitar arm, wanted 414-2569-
small guitar arm, wanted 414-2569-
Traynor VGCL-I Guitar Amp w. w speakers. Wurzel-
tone 2x10W. Soundproofing. Shure 32ND
speakers. Baldi 190T wattable. Shure 32ND
speakers. Baldi 190T wattable.
Some new records added to our used ones. Best of the best. We have the record at 'Rey's Recycled Sound.' Books are at 'Rey's Recycled Sound.'
Ovaloisele and Garrard changer - Tektronix
controller $25.00 Call 814-7481 3-27
record change $25.00 Call 814-7481 3-27
speaker changer $25.00 Call 814-7481 3-28
speaker speaker $25.00 Call 814-7481 3-28
bottle offer $25.00 Bottle kits $25.00
bottle offer $185.126 If no answer $25.00
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
Now Open
Parts for ALL
Foreign Cars
314 N. 3rd 843-8080
314 N. 3rd 843-6080
"KU ON WHEELS"
MGR ROADSTER-297, everything in perfect cond. include new park, car, roof, rear door, car. Rom. 842, 7230 N. Washington Blvd.
K
RICOHEDU2 . Altermitteln bei RATy Research
BICOHEDU3 . Altermitteln bei RATy Research
BICOHEDU4 . Altermitteln bei RATy Research
BICOHEDU5 . Altermitteln bei RATy Research
Sony Cassette Record will record at the bank
of your local bank. See www.sony.com.
She'll sell the Sony's at Ray Stonehill's, 925
18th Street, New York, NY 10017.
DOWNTOWN
Good food, maid service, and plenty of privacy.
The office is open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., possible to make or female,
Frank at 843-690-2166.
USED RADIAL TRIAL. Pair = 16-13 Bridgesetone,
24-13 Kneebones, 15-13 Heart.
Pair = 13-13 TWO CONDS, Pair = 13-13 CROPPED,
Pair = 12-13 DUMP, Pair = 13-13 CROPPED,
Pair = 12-13 DUMP, Pair = 14-13 MICH,
back '92. Your Mishan. Your Mishan. 2-28
Your Mishan. Your Mishan. 2-28
Dining Room Table w/ matching buffet. $24 ask.
Table w/ matching buffet. $24 ask.
1, 5, m. weekday; any weekend. 2-28
Dining Room Table w/ matching buffet. $24 ask.
Table w/ matching buffet. $24 ask.
1, 5, m. weekday; any weekend. 2-28
2. Januzon electronic speakers. Retail $29.00
3. Januzon speaker. Retail $45.00
Channel, 3 year warranty $60.00. Rod. $18.
Rod. $24.00.
Sanborn 2000A receiver-sampler 4 watt rms. Sanborn 2000B receiver-sampler 6 watt rms. Full full guarantees. $75 each. Both beautifully designed, durable, and low-powered.
TWICE AN HOUR 25 & 45 past the hour
SAAB 92 d-Seor Sdan. 1970, low mileage, one
cabin. 8935. 2214 Wearstone and inland out.
oil 341. 2219 Wearstone. 1974
Great books—new set for sale. Call 541-2880 after
6 p.m.
2-27
FOR SALE: **86 Fontana Tempest C/G**. Good mailage. Call 834-4017 4. a p.m. 3-1
Speakers for sale: 4 new E.S.P. model 2 speakers.
Call: 411-4960. 3-1
63 VW Bug-600,000 miles, AM-FM, dependable
transportation-842-412 after 5 p.m.
3-1
$15 Michigan Bat-B-Quire. We have open pit
basket, try our bridge plank, bridge sandwiches
or breeze. Try our bridge plank, bridge sandwiches
or breeze. Take the pound. Halter-bucket or
9:30 p.m. Closed Sunday and Tuesday. 842-610-7101
Another Student Senate Service
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. Smithville, MA. Temporary hardwood floor Tintables, tape transpos., antique clocks, lead and cleaned. Electronic and light industrial equipment. River City City repairs $15 Vermont. 81-649-7012. River City City repairs $15 Vermont. 81-649-7012.
NOTICE
LAWRENCE, GAY LIBERATION. INC., Membership for Veterans in BOCALIZING - 482-373-5277, events for Veterans in BOCALIZING - 482-373-5277
WANTED Square dance caller capable of giving
directions to a dance hall, 24th March
2013 Call Diet Kielder $450.95 or 695.
Call Stuart Dance Hall $275.95 or
695.
Montezori pre-school (ages 21 to 31) has open-
prior school (ages 52 to 71) information: 843-767-774
or 843-768-784.
Mont Blair Party Lounge now available for private parties Phone 845-283-3451 a. p.m. for meetings and conferences.
MICKY MOUSE IS A PUT-ON - But put him in Mickey Mouse Jewelry is now available only at the White Elephant Market in Lawrence. These are all made with 12 k. gold. All items are distributed by The White Elephant Market, 727 N.W. Hamp, Open high quality at a reasonable price. $1-$3. The White Elephant Market, 727 N.W. Hamp, Open high quality at a reasonable price. $1-$3.
THE HOME in the WALL
CRESCENT
DELICATESSEEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m — Phone Order
643 785-7 — Delivery 9th & 11th
APARTMENTS
---
- Crescent Heights
•Oaks •Acorn
•Gaslight
•Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
Town Tavern (formerly Johnnie's)
401 N. 2nd
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Joyee or
Johnson for details.
Dunlap needns 819 Massachusetts-8141-3900, 3-27
THISH BINDING and coping service available
at 6141-3900.
Post Payment and reasonable prices. 6141-3900.
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT at the Quick
Cash Counter at Massachusetts, 841-790-2600,
600 East Ave., Boston, MA 02118, 841-790-2600
SERVICE PROBLEMS You don't need them do here.
I'll show you how to set up your Honda's spring service need 181 W for the water pump.
Free: One JC1 $23 bicycle bike if you pur-
pose to ride on Ride-On bike Shop. It is a nice rack and we have nice Hivegal, Cambiaia, Raleigh, Peugeot,
Bicycles, Bicycle-Ride On Machado.
2-28
We believe that if it isn't fun, it isn't worth doing. With a surprisingly low investment, we can be excited new relational business of their own. This is the exciting new relational business of their own. This which is gaining rapid acceptance in Wikimedia & you on the right time toward awarding your own work. This is the right time toward awarding your own work. Dilez Mitchell & Ameladea Wikimedia, Kurt Bennett & Miche
FOR RENT
A friendly place for Beer & Sandwiches
MEDITATION WORKSHOP within a Christian community. A weekly workshop, 10-3pm, on Wednesday, October 14. Ored. For registration, drop in or call 518-727-3955.
COUPLES ENCICIMENT Future vision Life
Future vision Life
For information call United Ministries, 812-433-9233.
For information call United Ministries, 812-433-9233.
ESTUDENTS WELCOME!
National Lanapoo Radio Hour KUOK 630
National Channel 785 Hour KUOK 1230
Harrington Feb 27 Another reason to listen
OPEN HOUSE - The children of Creative World Day Care Center would like to invite you to their open house on Sunday, March 10th, from 1:30 to 4:00 PM. Please contact Creative World, 2401 W. 38-8, Bldg. 16, apt. 16.
FOR BENT to male or female student. Nice
location! Block off front yard. Parking and utilities paid
block from front.
MOTHER'S
APARTMENT-questions, clean and quiet 2 bed-
room apartment. 1350 sq. ft., located at 103
Allison Oaks, shown in 10319129. am and
pm, pool, tennis court, outdoor patio,
golf course.
Walt to wall carpeting, front door parking, spacious patio with private privacy panels, private gaze room, balcony rooms, units, clean blue swimming pool, bar GRQ baskets, 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2500 W. Sixth floor, 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 2500 W. Sixth
JAHAWKER TOWSERS APARTMENTS are on
room units with utilities paid. Call 843-5907.
2408 Iowa
843-9844
APARTMENT - One and two room efficiency fitted for males. Near downtown. No pet allowed.
FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with
a balcony, hardwood floors, storage, NEAK
space and a pool.
2406 Iowa
843-9764
Bud & Evelyn
"a fun, friendly atmosphere"
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1733-745 West 2nd
new-leasing + 2 bed furnished or un-
fitted apartments. 1733-745 West 2nd
dining room, correct disposal, all electric kitchen,
laundry facility off the street, KU bus
line. 1733-745 East 2nd, parking space.
B. PARKER PARK
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
"Bar-B-Q, Steaks and Sandwiches our specialties"
Smoking Is Our Only Business
SPUCK WAYON
George's Shop
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
Immort $725 per month in cooperative living
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6
Monday, February 25,1974
University Daily Kansan
Flint Hall Rose from 1898 Disaster
Disaster struck the University of Kassan one night in March of 1898. The power plant and electrical engineering shops were shut down, the building down, depriving the university of heating.
Soon afterward, L.I. Blake, professor of electrical engineering, took a train to Kansas City looking for help. Once Blake had heard George A. Gower, a meat farmer from Oklahoma, Kansas ought to be given the opportunity to learn how to use industrial machines.
So, acting on a bunch, Blake went to Kамейс City, talked to Powell for ten hours.
check for $18,000 to replace the destroyed building.
The new building was designed by a Kansas City architect and built of native Kansas stone. Its water, the power plant and the water and fire protection pumping facilities of the university. The building was named Fowler School, and the owner's Fowler's office is now called Fint Hall.
As an acknowledgment of his contribution, Fowler was invited to deliver a commencement address, but he sent KU a check for another $3,000 and went to England to avoid being involved in the commencement.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
BAYSIDE
Kansan Photo
Flint Hall
The University of Kansas tennis team successfully opened its spring season by sweeping a dual meet from Wichita State University last Saturday at the Wichita
Tennis Team Blanks WSU
The journalism department moved into the Black in 1911 and remained there for five years.
"I thought we played well but not up to our capabilities," Howard said. "We didn't need that."
All of the KU players were impressive in defeating Wichita State for the second time this school year. KU won 8-1 in a dual meet last fall.
KU won all six singles matches and all three doubles matches in winning the first indoor dual meet in which KU has participated.
KU Coach Mike Howard said that he was pleased with the win but that there was another team in town.
In singles play, four players won it in straight sets and Carlos Goeffi and Bill Tompkins took three sets to win, Geoffi, the No. 1 players played, bex Rac Keton, 6-3, 4-6 and 6-2 Tompkins, the No. 2 players played, beat Jay Lauderback, 4-6, 2-6 and 6-1.
The most impressive performance was by Paul Waltz, the No. 6 singles player. He didn't lose a game in defeating Pat Williams, 6-0, 6-0.
The next meet for the team is the Corpus
was used by medical students as a place where, one write put it, "mild students" to describe their level.
K-State Ends Season For Women's Team
All hopes for a state play-off off berth for the University of Kansas women's basketball team were eliminated Friday night when the Hawks lost to Kansas State, 67-27.
The loss left KU in second place in the conference with three defeats, while Kansas State and Fort Hays remained the co-leaders with only two losses each.
Fort Hays and Kansas State will now enter the state play-off, March 1 and 2 at Bethany College in Lindsburg. Friday's game concluded the season for KU.
80c Pitchers
8-Midnight
Tonight
& Wednesday
The Ball Park
Hillcrest Shopping Center
The lighting was poor and pipes were exposed. Every time the heat went on, the pipes rattled so badly that journalism could hardly make themselves heard.
Attention CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS
To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4381 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
Flint Hall was considered a welcome change by members of the journalism school. They had previously occupied a building known as the Shack.
In 1955, the electrical engineering department moved into the present Fowler Shops and the School of Journalism took over the vacated building. Old Fowler became Fillip Hall, remanded in honor of John W. Sternberg, professor of journalism from 1906-1941.
The Snack was the third building erected at KU. When it was built in 1883, it was called Chemistry Hall. It soon became overcrowded however, and in 1900, Bauley Hall was constructed for use as a chemistry building. From 1900 until 1911, the Snack
Christi Invitational beginning Tuesday and lasting until March 2.
Howard said his players would have to be in the mood to play if they were to be in action.
After the journalism school moved into Flint, the Shack was used for extension classes and as a university theatre room. The Shack was also a room for an extension to Watson Library.
Carl Goffen, KU,复定义 CD 费和 CAU, 6-3-4-6, 8-2-
BLI Templets, KU,复定义 DE 费和 LAuderbach, 6-3-4-6,
8-2
Vice Ram VWL, RU# defended Jerry Claminton, WS, WL, 6.7-7.4.
Vice Ram VWL, RU# defended Michael McNally, WS, WL, 6.7-7.4.
Vice Ram Cahill, BK# defeated Fawn Dwarfwell, WS, WL, 6.7-7.4.
Paul Waltz, KU. defeated Pat Williams, WSU, 6-0, 6-0.
Ralph
Goff and Vaim, KU. dedicated Coal and Landruder, WSU.
Goff and Vaim, KU. dedicated Cleaner and Schultz, WSU.
7.5-7.6 Cohort Warzal, KU; debased Claginton and Schulta, WSJ;
Cohort Waizy, KU.
Doubles
Goffe and Vann, KU, deflected Coad and Launderback, WSI
7.4.10
Clarke and Tongkma, KU, defeated Parnsworth and Williams, WSU, 61.82
The two athletes are Mike Beak from Van Horn High School in Kansas City, Mo., and Mark Boyer from Shawnee Mission Northwest High School.
Two more area high school athletes have signed Big Eight Conference letters-of-intent, Coach Don Fambrough announced last week.
Two More Sign Letters of Intent
Beal, 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, was a standout on defense for Vorn Horn. He was an all-state and All-Metro Kansas City pick during his senior year.
Boyer, 5-foot-11 and 210 pounds, was a lineman at Northwest. He was also an all-state and All-Metropic pick and averaged 24 jumps. He picked 10 fumilies and intercepted six passes.
KU has now signed 12 area prep standouts to letter-s of intent.
Johnston . . .
"Daughters are the individuals she said.
"Nobody likes the mother," Johnston wrote. "I don't."
From Page One
Jobson said she didn't want her daughter to go through the kinds of identity crises that come with being a parent.
Being Accepted for Positions of Resident Director
When her son was having trouble, Johnson said; he pat him into a male gay Johnston; and
Jonston told that although she thought all women were lesbians, she didn't know what she was talking about.
"I don't see what men see in each other," Johnston said.
Johnston, who has a son and daughter,
said, "I had a couple of kids and I gave them up a long time ago. I don't raise my children."
APPLICATIONS
Johnston said she didn't project herself into her son, but into her daughter, who she hoped would some day grow up to have sexual relationships with other women.
At one time, Johnston said, there were matriaries. She cited the myth of Demeter (earth) and Persephone (spring) as evidence of the matriarchies' existence.
You can't carry on a conversation with a man. It's like a football game or some kind of game.
Johnston said she didn't think she was in a power struggle with rmen, although she said she didn't like to have conversations with them.
"We have some exceptional males." Johnston said. "They're not in the government. I'm an armchair dyke, not a political activist."
SUA
NEW FROM
FOR '74-'75
- INDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEMBER Discover the Great Indoors!
- OUTDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEMBER Explore the Outdoors!
APPLICATIONS DUE FEBRUARY 27
SUA OFFICE KANSAS UNION 864-3477
These program areas are expanding You can direct these as an SUA Board Member.
- FREE UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR Free You!
&
Applications for Board Positions
on the 1973-74
Commission on the Status of Women
C
Resident Assistants NAISMITH HALL FOR "74"-"75"
Are Now Available in Room 222 Strong Hall. Applications are due
+
no later than Friday, March 1 in 222 Strong.
FUNDED THROUGH THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
TACO GRANDE
1
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TOSTADO FREE!
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
Offer Expires March 15
9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd
1974-Year of the Taco
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band & Special Guests The Pott County Pork and Bean Band
MARCUS MORRIS & KIM CAMPBELL
8 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 27
Topeka Municipal Auditorium
Advance Tickets on Sale at Better Days and Kiel's in Lawrence
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
Rock Chalk Revue
Tickets Available at the SUA Office & Town Criers
Tickets are $2.50 for Friday night — $3.00 for Saturday night
Hoch Auditorium
March 1 and 2, 8 p.m.
A bird running in the sunny sky.
Forecast: Clear to partly cloudy. High in mid 26s, low in upper 26s.
KANSAN
84th Year, No.98
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Ombudsman Hard to Find
Tuesday, February 26, 1974
See Story Page 2
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOY
Penny Lane
Sweet Treats
BIG BLUE CENTER
Cheryl Leslie (left), Overland Park sophomore, measures out candy for Hannelou Dependent, Mission senior, at the new penny candy store in the Kansas Union lobby. The store, which was opened last year, is a variety of candy in one-quarter and one-half pound quantities.
Penny Candy Store
Lawver Admits Fund-Raising Guilt
WASHINGTON (AP)—Herbert W. Kalimbach, a corporation lawyer who handled President Nixon's personal legal affairs, pleaded guilty yesterday to two charges stemming from his political fundraising in 1970.
One count was a technical violation of the Federal Corrupt Practices Act. The other count was a misdemeanor.
bassador a better post in return for a $100,000 contribution.
Kalimbach could be sentenced to a maximum 3 years and $1,000 on the two
In return for the guilty pleas and
kaimbach's spledge to leslie against others,
he has been released.
him in the Watergate coverup or in future political contributions cases.
The Washington Post reported in today's editions that before he pleaded guilty, Kalmach gave Watergate prosecutors an accounting of some $6 million in secret contributions and expenditures of 1970 and 1972 political campaign funds.
Kalmbach lives in New Newport Beach,
and practices law there and in Los
Angeles.
Nixon Sees Little Chance Of Resignation,Recession
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon said last night "1 do not expect to be impached," and renounced resignation as a step he said would threaten the survival of
. . . It is vitally important in this nation that the presidency of the United States not be hostage to what happens to the popularity of a president at one time or another," he told a nationally broadcast news conference.
So, although he forecast Republican successes in the 1974 congressional elections, Nixon repeated his vow that he will be impeached and face the prospect of wholesale defeats.
"... We have a work of leaf to do, more than three years left to do, and I'm going to stay here until I get it done," he emphasized his words, as jacqueline his phrases.
"IWANT my party to survive, but more important I want the presidency to survive."
One of the prime problems facing the nation is the energy crisis, which, with Watergate, impeachment and the economy, topics of the 38-minute news conference.
Nixon said he believes gasoline rationing can be avoided, but threatened to veto an emergency energy bill now pending in Congress because of its price rollback provisions.
He said the administration "will not stand by, and allow a recession to occur."
THE PRESIDENT disclosed that he had declined on constitutional grounds a request from special prosecutor Leon Jaworski that he be removed from office if offered to answer questions in writing or to meet with Jaworski personally, but the special prosecutor didn't want to proceed in such a way.
Nixon conceded that inflation remains a nagging problem, but said he expects the economic picture to improve in the second half of the year.
Nixon also said that in the judgment of White House lawyers, a criminal offense is
reach that determination. I do not expect to be impaired."
In response to a question as to whether his interest in ending the Watergate matter would be served by a full impeachment trial, Nixon said:
"Well, a full impeachment trial in the Senate under our Constitution comes only when the House determines that there is an abuse of power," the House after it conducts its injuries will not
IT WOULD TAKE a majority vote of the House to impeach Nixon, thus sending any charges against him to the Senate for trial. In the Senate, a two-thirds vote would be required to convict him and remove him from office.
required as grounds for the impeachment of a President.
See Nixon Page 2
Discussion energy problems, Nikson said he expects the Arab oil embargo will be a big blow.
By ANN GARDNER
Kansan Staff Reporter
Women Alter Activities From Fear of Attacks
The threat of rape has caused man-
university of Kansas women to alter their
behavior.
Several women interviewed recently said they thought it was unsafe for a woman to walk alone on campus at night. Some said they wouldn't leave their homes after dark alone; others said they would walk alone only if it was necessary.
"You never go to a play or a concert by yourself." Labben said.
Janet Westlake, Wichita senior, said she was especially concerned about the possibility of rape because she had known women who had been attacked.
According to Faith Labben, Shawnee freshman, women in her scholarship hall usually ask friends to walk with them if they must walk to an evening examination.
"When things like that have happened," she said, "you can't ignore it."
She said many women had been inundated with recent attacks that had occurred in her area.
"I don't like to go up to Strong to work my more," she said. "I kind of feel like my boss."
Some women said that they didn't like to
House Committee OKs Building Appropriations
walk alone but that they didn't have a choice.
Kay Turney, Hays sophomore, said that because of recent attacks on women, she would be happy to talk about them.
Although Rupert conceded that recent attacks made it more dangerous to walk on campus, she said she hadn't really changed her habits.
Terri Rupert, Topeka senior, said an attack on her roommate last spring had left four women with wounds of rape. Since then, three of the four women living in her apartment have taken some time to recover.
Turrie said she hoped the recent attacks would make women realize they must be prepared to defend themselves.
By BETH RETONDE Kaman Staff Reporter
TOPEKA- The House Ways and Means Committee yesterday approved an appropriations bill that would finance a visual representation of the law building at the University of Kansas.
The appropriations would be for fiscal years 1975 and 1976 and include $5,763,994 for the visual arts building and $133,274 for the law building.
The committee's bill, which appropriates money for the regents and the six state-supported schools, will now go before the full House for consideration. If the bill is passed there, it will go to the Kansas Senate.
"When I walk across campus, I'm more registered," she said, "but I refuse to let her do anything else."
The visual arts building and the law building were part of a capital improvements program the regents had requested for the schools.
The committee also restored a $30,000 request by the Kansas Board of Regents for the installation of the new building.
Gov. Robert B. Docking had recommended the appropriations but had proposed that the funds for the buildings be used to state general fund for appropriation later.
A total of $150,000 was added to the budget for five additional residences at the Wichita branch of the Medical Center. These are also in the family practice division.
Some of the women interviewed said they still walked alone. However, they said they took precautions such as walking in well-lit areas and making different routes when walking home.
Many of them said they were unhappy with the present security situation.
The money appropriated for the computer center was deleted in Docking's budget message, which he presented to the legislature in January.
Joanna Patterson, Derby sophomore,
said, "It personally makes me very angry"
at the N.C. State game.
However, the committee decided to specify the appropriations for the 1975 and 1980 years.
The committee's action yesterday was a continuation of last week's business. At that time, it approved faculty salary increases of 10 per cent for KU and Wichita State University, and 11 per cent increases for the three state University and the three state colleges
The committee added several items to the University of Kansas Medical Center budget, including $178,000 for 20 additional nurses' positions; $13,192 for pharmacists and $37,500 for x-ray equipment for the family practice division.
KU officials told the Ways and Means Committee earlier this month that a new computer center was necessary to relieve the present center in Summerfield Hall.
NO
HITCHHIKING
Kansen Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Hitchhiking is Illegal But Not Unpopular on Turnpike Access Roads. See Story Page 5
'Exorcist' Possesses Crowds In and Out of Theaters
Rv a KANSAN REPORTER
America's movie heroes are usually army, Army sergeant or characters from notorious movies.
The movie "The Exorcist," a story of a 14-year-old girl possessed by a demon, has drawn record crowds since it opened in 22 cities two months ago today. (It will play in Lawrence in the first part of March.) In the movie, the demon, the movie earned more than $10 million.
THEUSANDS have lined up before dawn in half-mile queues from Boston to Berkeley to see what may be the most gruesome and brutal of all. The reputation alone has attracted millions, for whom it is an unparalleled modern-day test courage to leave out the major dramatic moments.
But, for the first time since the monster movies of the '60s, the undisputed film king is a big boy.
The movie is closely based on a book of the same title by William Peter Blait. In it, Regan MacNeil, the 14-year-old daughter of a movie star who is separated from her
THE HAUNTING starts quietly, with mysterious rappings in the attic and deserations at a nearby church. Regan's personality slowly changes.
husband, is haunted and nearly consumed by a demon, perhaps the devil himself.
Batteries of medical and psychological tests suggest and then disprove diagnosis after diagnosis: a nervous disorder, epilepsy, a mental problem.
Mrs. MacNell's director dies in a fall behind Regan's house; it seems to be an accident, except the director's head was turned completely around. Isn't this supposed to be a sign of a demon? Did he fail? Or was he pushed from Regan's window?
Possession by a demon is first suggested by Damien Karras, a Jesuit priest who lost his faith. He is at first skeptical but soon believes that a demon has classified qualifications for exorcism.
Rogan grows wild, multifaceted herself with a crucifix and spewing worm on the doctors' beds.
KARRAS is too weak and inexperienced to perform therite himself; an older Jesuit,
He can do this, however, only by inviting the spirit into his own body. The spirit complies, and Karras jumps out the upper-story window, supposedly killing the demon
Father Merrim, who once performed a successful exorcism, is called in.
In the climactic exorcism scene, the priests battle but the demon is stronger than they are. Merrin dies of heart failure, but the demon fails to have faith to drive the demon from Regan.
It is the ending to the movie that has prompted the greatest debate.
MANY WHO have seen the film believe the demon has triumphed over Karras and forced him out the window. But the author says he intended Karras's suicide as an act
Blatty recently told reporters that a new ending would be filmed and tacked onto the movie. He wouldn't give details but said it would live up to the rest of the film.
Blatty's book was based on an actual case of possession that occurred in 1941. Blatty, then enrolled in a theology class at Georgetown University, head of the case,
which involved a 14-year-old boy in nearby Mt. Rainer, Md.
become objects he became devi. Puttero menezena—the mysterious moving and breaking of objects around him—became worse when he was killed in a bombing University Hospital in Washington, D.C.
**RED LETTERS** spelling "St. Louis"
parents learn things to do by relating them
to places they visit.
Word rescheduled the Catholic Church there, and a priest, the Rev. William Bowden, performed the exorcism rites hundreds of years ago, both in St. Louis and back in Washington.
The exorcist, the Rev. Bowdien, now 77,
sail lives in St. Louis but refuses to discuss
him.
The exorcism finally succeeded. The boy, who now lives a normal life near Washington, said he saw "a little ugly man" leave his body.
SOMEHOW, Blatty obtained Bowdens' diary and a letter from Bowdens confirming the validity of the case. In his book, Blatty followed the details of the case very closely.
adding only a scene in which Regan's head spin halfway around and changing the wind behind her.
If the case and book are haunting, the movie is in a class by itself.
Recent rumors have been that the case involved the daughter of actress Shirley Machine. Most probably, these grew from a 1950s phone mannequins and occupations to Blind's character.
During the exorcism, Regan levitates above her bed as the Jesuits infuse "The Hymn of Prayer," a hymn to God.
THE MOVIE has produced at least one serious injury: a 27-year-old Mill Valley,
The producer, William Friedkin, spent $11-14 million—twice what was planned. (And it cost more.)
If the movie is intended to stun its audience, it has been successful. Theatres have hired extra jailors to repair damage and clean up vomit after every showing. Managers are accustomed to people fainting when they leave during the vomit, mutilation and exorcism scenes. Many theatres have stocked smelling salts.
Cal., man who had read the book went to San Francisco a week ago Saturday to see the film. He knew what was coming and started to leave near the end.
He fainted and fell against an aisle chair, cracking three ribs. One rib punctured and ruptured.
A man at a recent Berkeley showing alarm at the screen, yelling that he would be
One Chicago psychologist has referred six moviegoers for treatment. Two claimed they had been possessed after seeing the movie.
Nationwide, priests are receiving thousands of calls requesting information and some exorcisms. In Kansas City, Mo., where "The Exorcist" is now showing, several priests have received calls for help with demons.
The movie has prompted other responses, including court obscenity hearing in at least four cases.
LAST WEEK, two Oklahoma City of-
meres, a man and the movie
of state status
See 'Exorcist' Page 5
2
Tuesday, February 26, 1974
University Daily Kans
news the capsules associated press
Watergate Panel Will Compromise on Tapes The Senate Watergate Committee told the U.S. Court of Appeals yesterday that it was willing to compromise in its battle to obtain five supersoned presidential tape recordings.
Ransom Call Received on Stolen Painting
A man with a West Indian accent telephoned a national newspaper in London last night and demanded $1.1 million worth of food for "the people of Grenada" in return for the valuable Jain Vermeer painting 'Guitar Play'. The painting was stolen from a London museum over the weekend, police said.
The panel said that as a last resort it would agree to a “stringent protective order” that would prevent disclosure of the contents of the tapes now that the company had been notified.
reported. And Yard said earlier it had expected a ransom demand for the 17th century Master dumpleister, considered too famous to be sold on the open market. British police clamped tight security on air and sea terminals to prevent the thieves from smuggling it out of the country.
Miners Strike to Protest Gas Shortage
Thousands of coal miners, protecting the lack of enough gasoline to get to work, on strike, yesterdays in West Virginia as the nationwide end-of-the-year strike began.
Richard Carter, president of the United Mine Workers district in the area, said yesterday that 4,000 miners went on strike. But Steven G. Young, president of the West Virginia Coal Association, placed the figure at 9,000. Carter said the miners apparently walked out to dramatize their demand for gasoline rationing. The action shut down production at a number of mines in the southern part of the state.
Simon Criticizes Shah's Oil Remarks
Federal energy chief William E. Simon was labeled as “irresponsible and reckless” remarks Iran that the United States was making to him before the ARA began the attack.
Before the embargo, the U.S. was importing about six million barrels of oil a day. Simon said he last week's figures showed only 4.8 million barrels a day.
The allegation made by the Shah, Simon said, would indicate that for the United States to be importing as much oil as before the boycott, several American companies had lost business.
"I suggest that's not only impossible but ridiculous," Simon said.
Part Two of 'Archinelago' to be Issued
The Swiss publishers of Alexander Solzenthyns's "Gulag Archipelago" said yesterday that they expected to bring out the second volume of the work this fall or early next year and that it would deal in part with the post-Stalin era.
A spokesman for Scherz Verlag of Bern and Munich, which has the German-language rights to the book, said the second volume would cover in part the period after 1956 when Nikita Khrushchev launched the de-Stalinization drive at the 20th Communist party congress.
The volume will comprise two or three more parts of the seven-part work, the spokesman said. He said it was up to Solzhenityn when the third and final volumes would be published.
Nixon Sees Little Chance.
He said progress toward a peace settlement in the Middle East will be helpful in improving the bilateral relationship.
lifted, but didn't say when that might happen.
If it isn't lifted, Nixon said, "I will slow down the efforts we are making on the坡" (hence the word).
From Page One
The President said he believes "there is a much better than even chance" that the nation can weather the energy crisis without gasoline rationing.
emergency energy conservation bill now before Congress would change that prospect. Nixon said he would veto that bill to give it to him with the rollback provision.
But be said price rollback provisions in an
NIXONSAID the energy shortage had led to prediction that fuel oil would be short, leading to hardships in the home and in the workplace "we have now passed through that crisis."
He acknowledged that the gasoline shortage remains severe, particularly in the Northeast.
Ombudsman Present But Unaccounted For
Need help finding the ombudsman? Good luck.
Somewhere on the University of Kansas campus there is a student ombudsman.
Need help? Call the ombudsman.
The student ombudbsman, usually a law student, is paid $471 a year to handle student complaints and questions about the University. Kiehl Rathban, Lawrence second-year law student, is the ombudbsman now.
John Beiser, Salina junior and student body president, said yesterday that he had walked past the ombudsa木 office several times, but had seen the office open only
"I haven't been able to find a law student who knows him. I'm sure he exists, this guy."
He might be doing the work somewhere besides his office though. Beasner said.
Beisner said if the student ombudsman wasn't providing the services he was paid to provide, the Student Senate might be reluctant to fund the program this spring.
is prepared to take further steps to deal win that if necessary.
Nixon said he believes the waiting lines at gasoline stations will be alleviated by the new regulations.
There are no office hours posted on the office door.
Martin Dickinson, dean of the law school,
said he was unaware the ombudsman public
service had been involved.
"The program has no official connection with the law school," he said.
“In fact that is the objective of our program and I think we will achieve it,” he
Mark Retonke, a KU graduate, said the program was set up in the spring of 1970 to explain any misunderstandings about the Senate Code.
"Later it became kind of like a clearhouse," he said, "if someone had a gripe or wanted to find out how to do something, he went to the ambassad."
The embudsmur was supposed to help the student solve his problem, Retonde said.
The original bill introduced in the senate
challenged the program simply set up the
offices he said.
Retonde told the job was left up to the discretion of the ombudsman.
“It’s pretty much whatever the ombudsman wants to do.”
The commission will consider revenue
Commission to Consider Revenue Sharing, Transit
At the same time, he said the price of gasoline isn't going to decrease until more fuel is being shipped.
Timothy Boudewyns and Joe Speelman, Lawrence three-year law students, filed the action Thursday in the hearing division of the University Judiciary.
Allocation of 1974 revenue sharing funds, public transportation for Lawrence and the advisability of constructing a city maintenance facility will be discussed by the Lawrence City Commission at 2 p.m. today. The meeting will be in the commission on the fourth floor of the First National Bank building, 94th and Massachusetts streets.
Two University of Kansas students have fled suit seeking to abolish the KU Parking System.
Boudevyns and Speelman also asked that the hearing division enforce a temporary restraining order to prevent the Parking and Traffic Court from further processing cases until a final decision was made on the court action.
If the restraining order is granted, the suit also asks that the traffic ticket appeal deadline of 14 days be suspended to protect a timely community members' right to appeal.
Suit Filed to Abolish Traffic Court
In their suit, Boudewyns and Speelman asked that the traffic court be declared in violation of Kansas law and that it be abolished.
In their court action they said, "the traffic court is merely an administrative hearing board of the University of Kansas and has no jurisdiction to handle the disposition of
criminal cases and charges such as misdemeanors under state law."
Traffic violations established under Kamas law must be dealt with in the same manner.
Because the traffic court isn't a court of "competent criminal jurisdiction," they said, a defendant is denied the right to a full bearing, the right to cross-examine all witnesses against himself and the right to a jury if he desires.
In case the hearing division refuses to abolish the traffic court, Boudewyns and Speelman have filed an alternate court action.
Due process of law is denied, they said,
because University personnel aren't able to
exercise rights granted by the Senate
Code.
The alternate action asks that "the hearing division permanently enjoy the operation of the traffic court until such time as the court adopts sufficient procedural rules to bring it into compliance with the laws set forth in procedure for procedural due process of law."
Speelman said the case would come before the hearing division sometimes than this.
Defendants are also denied the right to cross-examine the officer giving the ticket,
Charles Oldfather, University attorney, said he would probably be involved in the investigation.
Specifically denied is the right to remain silent and to be informed of that right before a court proceeding.
"We are planning to appeal the case in district court if we lose," he said.
The court action also said that defendants were denied the right to a presumption of innocence and the right to require the officer giving the ticket to prove all charges.
"The University will attempt to support the current system," he said.
The commission will also discuss the advisability of using revenue sharing funds to construct a city maintenance facility for city equipment and vehicles. Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager, told the commission last week that about $588,000 in revenue sharing funds could be made available for the fire department, which already allocated but not used, $221,000 allocated for the conversion of the fire and police department building at 745 Vermont St. and $250,000 which could be drawn from future revenue sharing funds.
" . I ... would not join . . . in kicking him when he's down," Nixon said.
Funding the conversion of the fire and police building could be deferred, he said, until the fire and police departments have vacated the building and moved into the new county judicial facility which will probably be completed in 1977.
administration. Herbert W. Kalnach, once Nixon's personal lawyer, pleaded guilty Monday to political finance violations, including one in which a campaign contribution was sought in exchange for an ambassador's nost
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
The commission will also discuss public transportation needs in the city.
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
- Commented publicity for the first time on the resignation of Spiro T. Agnew as vice president last Oct. 10, but said only that Agnew had thought it proper to step aside and embark on embarrassment facing the administration, accepted conviction for income tax evasion.
The revenue sharing funds are being allocated from a total of $661,747 that the city have received between July 1, 1973, and June 30, 1974.
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—Expressed admiration for Alexander Solzhentsym, the author expelled by the Soviet Union because of his writings, said a shift in U.S. policy wouldn't affect his fate. He said efforts at detente will continue for the sake of world peace.
Last week the commission approved requests from five other agencies totaling $62,447 and authorized the use of $25,000 for community building, 11th and Vermont streets.
Nixon said the lifting of the Arab oil embargo would have some effect on gas prices, but he didn't forecast when that would come.
sharing requests of $13,000 from Ballard Center; $7,000 from the Bert Nash Mental health center; $15,000 from the Neighborhood Youth Center; $6,850 from the Summer Image Employment Program; and $17,100 from the Lawrence Housing Authority.
--ACKNOWLEDGED that documents executing his gift of vice presidential papers to the government apparently weren't completed before repeal of the law required for the donation. The repeated that he will succeed if the deduction is found to be imprisoner
POSITION OF ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF HOUSING
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
HE SAID that Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's mission to the Middle East is aimed at disengagement of Arab and Israeli forces on the Syrian front, and said that would have a positive effect in seeking an end to the embargo.
Nixon said he believes the lifting of the embargo would be in the interest of the U.S.
Applications for employment are sought for the position of Assistant Director of Housing, University of Kansas, Lawrence.
"I believe we are going to make continued progress on the peace front," he said. "I believe that will be helpful in getting Israel back." Offered? On other topics, the President.
Position open immediately. Salary range $12,000 to $15,000 per year.
To be considered, individual must have educational classification of a doctor or candidate four-year college or university in the field of study activity (e.g., nursing, medical technology).
"Said that ambassadorships "have not for sale, to my knowledge," in his
"Said he expects 'it will be a good year' for Republican candidates allied with the Democrats."
a minimum of five years' experience in business, industry, or government as an executive and have some specific responsibility in business development.
Please apply in writing to Mr. J. W. Wilson, Director of Housing, University of Kansas, 205 Moulkall Hall, Lawrence, KS6045. In applying, please submit complete Personal Data information. Closing date for attaining such applications is March 13.
Applicants will be interviewed by specific appointment by a special screening committee.
An Equal Opportunity Employer (EO Clause, EO-11246 and EO-11375).
University of Kansas at Lawrence Kansas Union Wednesday, February 27, 1974 12 noon-8 p.m.
12 noon to 8 p.m.
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INTERNATIONAL LAW SOCIETY will sponsor a Moot Court competition at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, July 18, 2015.
KU WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS,
INC. will hold a business meeting at 12:30
PM on Friday, February 14th at the
Westin.
NATIONAL LAMPOON RADIO HOUR
will begin weekly broadcasts at 6:30 p.m. on
TV.
RABBI SHALOM WEINERG will speak at the Hillel discussion group at it tonight in Manhattan.
ATID-UNION SYNAGOGUE BOOKMOBILE will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in front of Dyche Hall. It is sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hill Counselorship.
GUSTAVE REESE, professor of music at New York University and Julland School of Music, will speak on "Early Musical Manuscripts at the Shakespeare Birthplace on Thursday in Swarthout Rectal Hall. The musical department is sponsoring the lecture.
LUTZ ROEHRHIR, visiting professor of German, will speak on "Aamad and Eve in Folkole and Folk Art" at 7:30 tion in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
INDIANA UNIVERSITY Singing Hoosiers will be giving a free concert 8-9-30 p.m. Thursday in the cafeteria at Templin Hall
KU WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS,
INC. will hold a business meeting at 12:30
p.m. Wednesday in Alcove B of the Kansas
Union.
Professors to Study Nuclear Development
Nuclear energy development and its hazards and benefits will be the emphasis of two courses for non-science and biology professors to be conducted this summer at the University of Kansas by three KU radiation biophysics professors.
The biology faculty course will meet from June 10 to June 21 and the course for faculty in the humanities and social sciences will meet June 24 to July 5.
Both will study nuclear energy policy-
making and the basics of nuclear power
Edward Shaw, program director and professor of radiation biophysics; John Zimbrick, associate professor of radiation biophysics; and Benjamin Friesen, professor of radiation biophysics will teach the courses.
By SUZI SMITH
Nanen Staff Reporter
Senators Criticize, Defend StudEx Actions
By SUE SMITH
Kansan Staff Reporter
StudEx, the executive committee of the Student Senate, has overstepped its bounds by acting in place of the senate, several weeks said in a series of recent interviews.
Leroy McDermott, Welch, Okla,
graduate student and member of StudEx,
said the committee had become more of a
biocenar body with the separate
functions.
StudEx is "potentially powerful if it's misused," said Nancy E. Archer, Anamosa, Iowa, senior and former student body vice president.
However, she said, the senate acts as a check on such minima by asking Stukes to explain why he wants to be elected.
Cindy Steineger, Kansas City, Kan,
senior and former StudEx chairman, said
the members of StudEx were senators who
experience and knowledge of the senate.
"Most of the StudEx members are 'people carriers,' " she said.
They are powerful in the senate,
Steinauer said, because they are the ones
who express opinions on legislation and they
influence the votes of the other senators.
StudEx is provided for by the University Senate Code. It began operation simultaneously with the senate at their formation in 1969.
Members of StudEx are the chairmen of the standing committees of the senate, the three student members of SenEx, and the two professor members of SenEx who acts as chairman. The student body president and treasurer serve as ex officio members, but the treasure can't be taken.
According to the code, StudIEs 'to act as an administrative body for the senate. It calls meetings, brings pertinent actions before the senate and coordinates action of the senate.'
The code also empowers StudEx to act on behalf of the senate "in all matters
Library Plant Thefts Baffle Watson Employes
There are as yet no leaves in the case of the missing Watson Library notted plants.
Five known thefts of plants from Watson have occurred since employees began deco-
partmentation.
First, a spider plant was uprooted and stolen late last semester. It was replaced, but last month its replacement was taken, not all.
Feb. 8, three more plants—two purple velvets and a idea plant—were missing
"We love our plants," Carol Chittenden, library staff member, said yesterday. "They are our personal friends. It's as if someone had stolen our Christmas tree."
Pat Mimean, the library staff member who discovered that the plants were missing, said that she watered them on a Thursday and that they were missing the flowers.
Chittenden said she thought the three thefts earlier this month were a "carefully-planned heist" because the three plants, in their recent locations, were stolen the same day.
"One of the purple velvet plants that was taken was mine," Mimeau said. "When I saw its dirt on the table, I was heartbroken."
Chittenden said the five stolen plants might sell for $-16 altogether. They were stolen from a home in Brooklyn.
"I guess they put the plants in their pockets and mutilated them." Mimeau said. "This doesn't make any sense; we give clippings away to anyone who asks."
Chittenden said the thieves apparently knew little about plants, because otherwise they would have taken only leaves, which can be transplanted.
requiring expeditious action." It is to make amonstorate reports of any such action.
McDernott said the current power of StudEx was the result of a two- or three-year drift away from the powers vested in it by the code.
Ocate Series
SHOULD MARIJUANA
BE LEGALIZED?
WITH:
Lowell Borgen
Jim McChusney
Mark Blumberg
Brian Bauerle
Clair Smissman.
Clar Smissman.
McDermott said he first served on StudEx in 1970-71. At that time, he said, it performed a necessary bureaucratic function for the senate and any action it took was very carefully circumscripted by the term "expeditious action."
←
THURSDAY, FEB. 28, 1974 7:30 p.m.
*STUDENT*
BIG EIGHT ROOM - UNION
He defined expeditious action as "action necessary for the functioning of the University or University governance that is delivered into emergency session to deal with."
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JOINT SESSION
On Feb. 10, StudEx took action in place of the senate on three pieces of legislation which had been on the agenda but hadn't been addressed at the senate meeting the week before.
This gives StudEx members a jump on the rest of the senate, he said, because they know the objections to a bill before it is considered.
If they hadn't been acted on by StudEx those pieces of legislation would have died with the 1975-74 senate, until a special case is called before the elections Feb. 13 and 14.
At that meeting StudEx passed a petition to make the position of StudEx chairman elective by the senate, defeated a bill to make the StudEx chairman presiding officer of the senate and passed a bill for $1,190 to a summer intramurals program.
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Josserand said StudEu was a place where the traditional leadership of the senate could determine its opinions on legislation before the legislation was considered by the legislature.
Mike Steinmetz, Lawrence graduate and student body treasurer, said he thought that StudEx members seemed to carry a lot of weight in the senate.
"It's not their place to do that," said Jon Jossner and Johnson sophomore and student
He said it should be used only when the action taken was absolutely necessary to prevent harm being done to the best interests of the student body.
Jouserand said the legislation could have been rewritten and acted on by the new
Rick McKernan, Salina senior, said the StudEx actions were justified because by the time the new senate could have rewritten and acted on the legislation it would have had to change from one system to another.
Civil and Sea
A
John Beissner, Salina junior and student body president, said he hoped the expedition's action clause of the code would be used snipingly during his term.
Paxson dismissed the existence of a "power elite" in the senate. If there is and elite, he said, it couldn't be located in StudEx members or a cover of StudEx members from year to year.
6
|
Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and member of StudEx, said the intramural program needed a quick decision so that plans could be made for the summer.
But Paxson said the senate had to carefully guard against StudE's exceeding
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Tuesday, February 26, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Drug Hysteria
Drug use and its prohibition has split both society and the generations more than any other issue arising in the '60s. The mysterious aura of drugs, which is so attractive to some, others, has generated a legal obsession, public hysteria and extensive naivete.
The sad part is that the drug hysteria puts a dark cloud over the entire issue so that genuine drug misuse is understood and poorly dealt with.
And drug use has become the whipping boy for every social evil. A layman's drug-revisionist theory of history has been created to explain past evils. Some now claim, for example, that the tenacity of the Japanese kamikazi pilot in World War II and the Chinese soldier in the Korean war was drug induced.
The drug issue has even prompted some all-American athletes to preach sermons via television and they probably know very little about.
Not having directly experienced the heavy drug scene, I claim no special qualification as preacher. But the legal fallacies of drug laws should be of concern to everyone in the community, and the entire issue needs to be put in perspective.
The great fear of the unknown has caused much of the public to lump all drugs and drug use into one category of horror. The distinction between hard and soft drugs and the conditions of drug use are often ignored or misunderstood.
The real question concerns which drugs are truly harmful, and whether conventional enforcement are suited to some drug offenses.
Heroin is an addictive drug which can frustrate a user into desperate theft or murder. Marjuanica, a drug of extreme, sponsors ranging from the President's Commission on Drugs
to Consumer Reports Magazine, to be less harmful than alcohol or tobacco.
The American Bar Association has recommended the abandonment of most marjuana laws. The ABA is hardly a drug-crazed association of no reason; nation's overt and judges simply believe the relative lack of necessity for those laws and the futility of enforcing them.
The widespread use of drugs has made drug law enforcement a ludicrous enterprise. If every drug offender in Lawrence were arrested, there probably wouldn't be enough cells to kill theiller would have to raid every night. The court calendar would be full for years.
Just as with prohibition in earlier era, the drug laws clog the courts with often innocuous cases. The drug trade is properly carry out its legitimate business.
The justice system becomes a grab-bag process in which a handful of offenders are occasionally caught 'and prosecuted. It becomes a game between the people and the police in which the offenders aren't discouraged from their behavior but simply work harder at not getting caught.
The issue needs re-thinking and re-evaluation. The legal process is slow, and there will be no immediate reform in that direction. Paranoid behavior by the drug paranoia be minimized among people in the community.
It should be understood that the drug user is usually not an exotic lost sheep he is a cancer on society. He or she sits beside the woman in the same limitations, playing out life's dramas in the usual ways.
He or she may be among the best students and will have just as much interest in building a livable, comfortable environment with a chance for individual growth and understanding.
Bill Gibson
Miller's Drug Raids Still Big Tavern Topic
By BUNNY MILLER
Kansan Staff Reporter
It was a typical Friday night at a typical Lawrence tavern. The kind of night when there are at least six quarters up on every foosball table and the only way to move in the aisles is to let the mob push you along.
About the only things almost everyone has in common in such a crush of people are (1) they are students and (2) they like to drink beer. But last Friday night many of them expressed another shared feeling.
"Ah, Verrn's just about the nice guy in the world as long as he stays out of Kansas," his companion responded. A response that included their beer cans in a musk roast.
“There ain't all of nice things you can say about Vern Miller,” said a student named Steve. Members of a group clustered around him at the bar nodded their heads. Some laughed and some looked irritated.
Another said, "According to the Peter Principle, he's already two steps above his level of incompetence." More laughter.
Even in the aftermath of his latest series of raids two weeks ago, students generally seemed to regard Kansas as a threat. But several tried to justify his action.
"I don't know if it's really true or not," said a student named Mike, "but I have a friend who was busted by Vern and he said he was a really nice guy who just wanted to show everyone how dumb the laws are."
"Realistically, I can't blame Vern Miller directly because he's just an
enforceer of the laws," said another. "What we need to do is change the laws through legislation."
The conversation around the bar became more serious as one student said, "I'm paying taxes for what Vern does. Hall it if goes for Vern to bust pot with me." The police told little old ladies who play Bingo. I could run the government better than that."
Several suggested that Miller should adjust his priorities.
Another student said that although he thought it was necessary for MME to must harder drugs," he was disposed of all of his arrests involved maruana.
"I think the attorney general a book should be spent on crimes with victims rather than victimless crimes," said a student named John.
"The only time he really needs to bust anybody for drugs is when he catches someone robbing or stealing to support his habit," the student said. "At that point they need to get off the street and get their heads together anyhow."
The crowd at the bar thinned as midnight approached. Someone suggested that the raids could be stopped if the drugs were legalized and he was made with a few cheers and a few shaking beads.
Still others speculated on Miller's timing of the raids. One student said he thought the raids were timed to invade an area under attack from funding in the leisuretime.
"Well, all I know," he said as he made his way toward the door, "is that a lot of people are sleeping better now that Vern's already been here."
Percv Knocks Search Procedures
By SEN. CHARLES H. PERCY, R-III
Shabbily clad, unshaven agents of the Justice Department's former Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement barged into the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Herberg Giglotto and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Askew of Collinsville, III. on April 23, 1973.
without leveling charges. That, too, was a mistake.
The agents kicked in the doors without warning, shouted obscenities and wielded weapons with known weapons. Terrified, the militants Askews were forced to stand by their houses were ransacked, their personal weapons was destroyed and their lives were threatened.
At no time during the raids did the agents satisfactorily identify themselves or explain the nature of their authority. Only later did they discover they had raided the wrong premises. Then, they simply left—no apologies, no explanations, no offers to compensate the families for the damages done.
Two days before the raids, some of the same federal agents invaded the home of John Meiners of Edwardsville, III., sacked his belongings and jailed him for three days.
These facts were revealed in testimony during recent hearings of the Senate Government Operations Committee in Chicago. But these aren't the only examples of mistaken drug raids that have taken place recently.
Similar incidents have taken place with terrifying frequency in recent years. In the name of law and order, murder,抢劫或故意伤害 have powerful tactics in making unaccounted and unlawful forcible into the dwellings of law-abiding citizens. Probable cause for search warrants is often required.
It is a national disgrace that such raids were conducted in the first place. It is a challenge for the government to prohibit the victims of these raids from suing the government directly for the damage done to their homes and persons or for the pain, suffering and humiliation they endured.
The increasing incidence of mistaken drug raids can be traced to passage of the so-called Federal No-Knock Statute, which requires that persons who Abuse Prevention and control Act of 1970.
The law permits unannounced forcible entry by federal agents pursuant to a "search warrant relating to offenses in which the defendant is charged, the penalty for which is imprisonment for one year." ("This includes more possession of marijuana in a number of states.") It was said that no knock raids, with their incarceration laws, would make drug seizures safer and sure.
Some safeguards were written into the legislation to prevent capricious raids but, unfortunately, the safeguards have proved insufficient. The law is logic underlying the law has proved faulty.
Requirements of court-issued warrants didn't prevent the Collinsville raids or any others from taking place. And police in such cases must have been armed, most sweeping no-knock laws in America — have discovered that surprise raids save only about 20 seconds and actually increase the likelihood of shootouts between surrogates and their unarmed police assailants.
Illegal trafficking of natrocites constitutes a grave national problem. Where big-time drope pushers are destroying the hearts and minds of America's young people, every
measure should be taken to enquire vigorous enforcement of the law. As long as the use of harmful drugs continues to harm a sizeable percentage of our population, it is imperative that we find new and better ways of enforcing existing drug laws.
But, in the midst of efforts to limit the availability and use of illicit drugs, an erosion of the fundamental individual liberties that have been the primary buttress of America from its beginning can't be allowed.
When homes of innocent families are broken into and ransacked—under circumstances involving gun-toting terrorism, personal abuse, the shouting of obscenes, property and threats to the lives of the victims—liberates have been seriously abused.
If this is the legacy of no-knock, it is the legacy of bad law. It is a law that breeds lawlessness and it must be changed.
Special Focus Drug Enforcement
K.U. TRAFFIC SECURITY
K.B.C. AND THE REST OF VERN'S ARMY
LAWRENCE POLICE DEPT.
"AH-HA! I KNEW WE'D FIND SOMETHING ON THIS RAID IF WE LOOKED CLOSE ENOUGH!!!"
High School Erupts After Drug Raid
By KEN RINGLE The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—the seven strangers who walked into Garfield High School in Prince William County, Va., didn't really mean to start anything—they were just teachers from Lane High school in Charlottesville paying a visit.
The student grapevine didn't know that, and within minutes the word was out—the visitors were narcotics on a drug shakedown of Garfield's 2,800 students.
Suddenly lockers and cars began emptying and small, anonymous bags of marijuana began turning up in washrooms and hallways. Non-smoking students began handling over other bags they said they found.
The Garfield cross-country team returned with a sack of marijuana they reportedly threw into the river.
Principal Samuel P. Cox blamed the sequence of events on student uncertainty over a police drug raid, Dec. 4, which netted 11 adults and 12 juveniles—five of them Garfield students—on charges involving use or sale of marijuana and hashish.
As the day went on the rumors tumbled over each other, mushroomed into mini-proteins. Demonstrations, window breaking and spray-painting vandalism spread in this week and was capped by a rash of false fire alarms, according to school officials.
Of the students at Garfield, Cox estimated that 50 per cent had experimented at one time or another with some drug, but only about十10 per cent" were regular users.
Clark said there was irony in the incidents of the last 10 days in that they came during a year when students at Garfield had been showing an increasing willingness to report the presence and use of drugs among their peers.
Cox and assistant principal George E. Clark agree that only very rarely are any hard drugs seen in the school. Most of the marijuana and occasionally a little LSD.
"More and more of them are turning the stuff in when they find it and voluntarily reporting users. They've noticed what this is happening, and we know that age and they're getting feel up," said Cox.
Strict NY Drug Law Bucks Trend
Kansas Staff Reporter
By BILL GIBSON
Kansas Stiff Reporter
The American Bar Association last fall recommended the legalization of marijuana, and almost simultaneously New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller signed the strictest drug law the nation has ever seen.
The contradiction reveals the still volatile nature of the drug issue and the inability of American law-makers to agree on how to handle it. It appears that the legal status of narcotics in the near future will be subservient to laws, seeaw of liberalization and backlash.
But many states, notably Rhode Island and New York, have maintained their tough sanctions against marijuana and have imposed even stricter penalties for hard
The reduction of penalties in many states for marijuana and hashish indicates a greater public tolerance for some soft drugs. More and more state legislatures have reduced possession charges for these drugs from a felony to a misdemeanor. This would increase recompetition for these drugs, once controlled dangerously that legalization was unthinkable.
Griff and the Unicorn
by Sokoloff
BARBER SHOP
HMM...
I NEED A HAIRCUT
SNIP
SNIP
SNIP
SNIP
JUST TAKE
A LITTLE
OFF THE TOP...
HE ALWAYS
CUTS IT
TOO SHORT...
The reduction of marijuana penalties may have been encouraged by studies and recommendations of prestigious organizations. The National Conference of Commissioners on Marijuana, the American Medical Association, for example, recommended such reductions.
At its 1973 convention, the American Bar Association went a step further and proposed complete removal of criminal charges for possession of marijuana in small amounts. Many jurists favored the removal of criminal penalties because they believed that marijuana would burden court systems. Some expressed concern that the open disregard for marijuana laws by millions of people undermines respect for all laws.
The new drug laws of the various states do not indicate a general trend toward permissiveness or敲 enforcement. They do not explicitly mention distinction between soft and hard drugs.
drug violations. The New York law provides a drug mandatory life sentence for the sale of an abused child.
Many college communities and some states have significantly reduced criminal penalties for soft drug offenses. The governor, Eric Johnson, Arch, Morh, last year voted to charge a maximum $5 fine for marijuana possession, payable by mail. In Berkeley, 90 per cent of the voters passed a "marijuana initiative" that made the state enforce their lowest priority.
Until the legislature reduced the status of soft drug offenses, 800 persons were in Texas jails on marijuana charges. Thirteen were serving life sentences and a black activist, Lee Ots Johnson, was serving up to 30 years for passing a bond to a narcotics law enforcement officer. The possession penalties to a maximum six-month sentence and a $1,000 fine.
Last year the Georgia legislature reduced its marijuana law to a misdemeanor. Up to that time virtually all of the state's narcotics laws were amended to combat marijuana sale and use. Now only
20 per cent of the state's anti-drug campaign is directed against pot.
Oregon is the only state to eliminate all criminal charges for simple possession and use of marijuana. The offense is now similar to a parking violation. No criminal record is kept, and the maximum penalty is $100.
Generally, marjuriana charges have become less severe. But in many places enforcement practices are still rigid. Maine police have stepped up their battle against poli-warming campers. During the summer they baked more than 154 vacationers and 200 inmates. In Massachusetts 47 per cent of all drug arrests are for marijuana offenses.
The severe and controversial New York drug law was designed as a deterrent for drug use and sale. Under the law, conviction for the sale of addictive drugs or hallucinatives such as LSD brings a mandatory life-term sentence. Those paroled will be placed on strict probation for life.
Many New Yorkers, incensed by the crimes committed by the city's estimated 125,000 addicts, breathed a collective sigh of relief after the signing of the new law. But the law has been much criticized by people outside and outside the law enforcement system.
Some New York policemen have complained that the new law is a "kill a cop" plan because it encourages宦佣 dealers to kill officers rather than submit to life imprisonment.
Possession of one ounce of marijuana can be punished by imprisonment for up to 15 years, although more lenient rules are applied to first-time offenders. Plea bargaining—pleading guilty to a lesser charge—has been severely restricted.
Many law enforcement officials are concerned with the possible connection between hard and soft drug use. Some argue that more studies of the effects of marijuana need to be made before enforcement is reduced.
Prosecutors are concerned that the restrictions on plea bargaining will dangerously burden New York City's struggling court system. To alleviate this problem, Rockefeller pushed through a $66 million appropriation providing for new judges, prosecutors and courthouses. Critics say it won't be enough.
Critics of the New York law have pointed out that the courts have always had the power to severely punish the big narcotics barons but the difficulty has been getting enough evidence for convictions. The new law will only punish the small offenders, the critics say, and will have no effect on the narcotics syndicates.
The New York law represents the deterent approach to solving drug problems. The comparative successes of this rigid law and the various liberal soft drug laws should determine the nature of future drug legislation.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 26.1974
5
Laws Say 'Thumbs Down,' But Hitchhiking Continues
Despite laws aimed at discouraging hitchhiking, persons on both sides of the laws agree that hitchhiking continues to be a growing travel among a growing number of persons.
Perhaps only the Volkswagen micro-bus is as emblematic of travel in the youth culture as the long-haired, denim-clad youth standing beside the road with a thumb held out, or clutching a sign advertising his destination.
Like other practices of the youth culture, hitchhiking runs counter to laws that were written before the impact of that culture was felt.
Mike Reves, patrol officer in the technical services division of the Lawrence Police Department.
mg was legal in Lawrence only if the hutchier was on the sidewalk, or at least out of it.
If a hitchhiker should stop a vehicle, both the driver of the vehicle and the hitchhiker will be harmed.
Capt, Bobby Ellison of Security and Parking said the University regulations on hitchhiking were the same as those for the city.
Ellison said that hitchbibing is discouraged, but he said there had been very few.
State laws regarding hitchhiking are more complicated, but they, too, are aimed at children.
A spokesman for the Kansas State Highway Patrol said yesterday that hitchhiking on any interstate highway in Kansas is prohibited. Any area maintained by the Kansas State Turnpike Authority is considered a part of the interstate highway system. That means you cannot drive to the patrol to tell the gate spokesman. said
A highway patrolman, who withheld his name, said that hitchhiking is prohibited on the access road to the west turnpike entrance, which runs northward from the intersection of Iowa Street and highway U.S. 40 the west turnpike gate.
The highway patrol said that hikhiking on other highways in the state is legal, and that pedestrians must walk facing oncoming traffic, and that they may not solicit a ride.
Violations of these laws are a misdemeanor, the highway patrolman said. Usually, he said, the hitchhiker is arrested and taken to the nearest county jail.
The patrolman said he thought that anyone picking up a hitchhiker could be guilty of aiding and abetting in a misdemeanor but that he wasn't sure.
The patrolman said that he had arrested
The practice of hitching a ride has grown greatly in the past three years, the patrolman says. The hitchhikers are between the 17 and 18th and the sudden rise in the number of hitchhikers to people's traveling from numerous rock festivals that were held during the last several years.
'Exorcist' Possesses Crowds In and Out . . .
They came away shaken but said the movie violated no obscurity or blasphemy laws. The movie has also brought stong reaction from religious figures.
The Division of Film and Broadcasting of the U.S. Catholic Conference rated the film A4, which means it has moral value but may confuse or offend adult viewers.
From Page One
Evangelist Billy Graham recently said the movie "pandered to man's innate superstition and fascination with the supernatural."
The young people's club of the Beltel Assembly of God Church in Rock Island, IL, recently burned copies of the book, cult, that is dangerous as pornography and drugs."
The movie has an R (restricted) rating, which means that minors can attend if accompanied by an adult. But police in C.C., have banned minors from the film.
"THE EXORCIST has received mixed reviews but has already won the Golden Globe and has been the best director for 1973 and has been nominated for 10 Oscars, including best film."
The movie has itself spun a cult of trivia, centering on Linda Blair, a 15-year-old Connecticut girl who played Regan. Blair, a distractingly normal teenager, said recently was able to perform the role without being scared or disturbed because she didn't believe the story.
Last week, Time magazine reported that another actress, Eileen Dietz Eiber, who describes herself as "over 21," calmed to some extent the most dramatic scenes of the movie.
PRODUCER FRIEDKIN disputes her claim and won't allow her to list the movie titles.
But questions have arisen over just how much of the movie role Blair did play. The producer admitted recently that the gutterman was a bit of an actress by actress Mercedes McCambridge.
The principle of rite—that Satan or lesser demons can take control of a person's senses and mind is one of the basic tenets.
Although the movie, which is expected to be the most successful of all time, contains much fantasy, real-life exorcisms are performed today.
Production of the movie was plagued by mysterious accidents, including a fire that destroyed the New York set and the death of the actor playing the director.
Blood Donations Slowed by Flu
Last week's blood drive netted 718 pints of blood, far short of the 1,200-point goal, according to Charles Rhoades. Olathe junior University Council, which sponsored the drive.
The goal wasn't reached, he said, because many students had the flu and couldn't donate. There will be a Red Cross blood collection drive on Saturday and another campus blood in October.
The ancient Egyptians believed that many illnesses were caused by spirit possession. Ancient Greek holy men performed the rite by shouting the evil spirit's name three times and forcing the victim to breathe sulfur fumes.
ACCORDING to the Bible, Christ performed numerous exorcisms, once removing a demon from a boy who had been haunted since birth by telling the spirit to "come out of him and enter no more into him."
In the last century, many of the afflictions once attained to possession have been removed.
Exorcism-although rarely performed—is still a legitimate rite in the Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican and Lutheran churches.
The rite, most often taken from the "Rituale Romanum" or "Roman Ritual," a book of religious ceremonies, requires strict adherence to its practice before an exorcism can be performed.
The victim must speak or understand languages not normally understood, be able to foretell future or distant events and be able to interpret mental powers beyond his normal abilities.
In "The Exorcist," for example, Regan could predict the future, show the strength of several men and make her bed shake and eventually rise off the floor.
EXORCISMS must be approved by a bishop. The rite is considered highly strenuous, and only the most mature and experienced priests can perform it.
The rite is a test of the priest as well as the demon. One Jesuit priest explained recently that the demon possessing the Victim's soul outloud the innermost secrets of the priest's life.
The rite, which consists of prayers, psalms and incantations, is rare. Probably less than two dozen authorized exorcisms have been performed in the United States during this century.
By coincidence, one first gained publicity less than a month after the *Exorcist*; by contrast, it was just months later.
A Jesuit from Our Lady of Fatima Russian Catholic Church in San Francisco said he had successfully exorcised a demon from a Daly City, Cal., family last summer.
THE DEMON had plagued a young couple and their two-year-old son, at times rendering the parents unconscious or placing a rocking chair on ton of the child's crib.
The Rev Kwai Patzell, the exorcist, said the terrors had succeeded after 14 attempts over a span of 12 months.
There are still church-appointed exorcists who work in the slave-finance ministers who work for a price.
THEY ALLEGEDLY convinced him that he was ill and possessed by a demon. Then they allegedly performed a phony rite, pretending to burn the money and showing him a red worm, which they claimed, was the demon removed from his brain.
Last week a White Plains, N.Y., woman and her twin daughters were charged with defrauding their landlord of $3,500 in a phony exorcism.
Many of them lack credentials.
Although denom possession is considered rare in Western cultures, many areas of the world have denomations.
The landlord became suspicious a week later and called the police.
Earlier this month, 70 Buddhist priests performed a lengthy tile to remove ghosts from the Temple.
The ceremony was ordered after the traffic commissioner complained superstitious workmen wouldn't go near the bridge. Kong Transport Department and a garage
Just what has caused the current exorcism frenzy remains unclear.
According to one, the cinema demon makes movies recognize the evil in them.
SOME PSYCHOLOGISTS have said the movie is a psychic release for people too long caught up in a society that lives by rationalizations.
Surely, it is tied in with a recent rewakening of interest in the occult.
Prof Gets Research Award
in brief
Dr. Ronald T. Borchardt, assistant professor of biochemistry, has been selected by the American Heart Association for the Established Investigatorship award. Dr. Ronald T. Borchardt, awarded given in the nation this year, will assist him in enzyme and heart research.
2 Seniors Get Music Grant
Priscilla Kingy, Kinsley senior, and Ivan Thomas, St. Louis senior, have received the Carl A. and Francis H. Preyer Award for senior pianists and singers at KU.
The award is given each year for outstanding achievement in musical perfor-
Kingy, a piano major, and Thomas, a music education major, will each receive $250.
A contract for general renovation or administrative offices at Haskell Indian Junior College has been awarded to the Kansas Construction Co. in Lawrence.
Haskell Job to Local Firm
Rep. Larry Winn Jr., K-Man, announced that the Warren Affairs was awarding the $4,317 cent prize.
The KU College of Health Sciences received a $25,306 grant on Feb. 20 by the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolic and Digestive Diseases. The money will be used to fund a study of the congenital enlargement of the colon.
Grant Funds Medical Study
Blatty said recently that the quality of his work—instead of general trend—produced the success. In fact, he is so sure, he and others have been in a future, even more grouseome horror films.
A far simpler explanation, and one that has been overlooked by most critics and patients alike, is that the patient is being scared stiff, Above all, the "The Exorcist" represents a startling break from what it was like before.
we book the book - is fascinating.
The film has a charming, charming,
own, and a bizarre one at that. There are no
T-shirts or posters, as with other movie
themes, and a noticeable under-
current of comment.
“EXORCISCE NIXON” signs have appeared at demonstrations across the country after a constituent of Rep. Robert Drinan, D-Mass., a Catholic priest, wrote him recently that exorcism should be tried on the President if impeachment wouldn't
And Lawrence—like other cities—is getting its share of exherture iokes.
Sample: What happens if you don't pay your exorcist? You get repossessed.
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Gary Ellis, a worker at Headquarters, a drug counseling service in Lawrence, said that Headquarters runs a "crusher service," which provides a place for hitchhikers to stay for two days each month free of charge.
In the mid-fifties, Jack Kerouac's book "On the Road" painted a romantic image of the free-spirited hitchhiker. In the 70s, Ed Buryn's "Vagabonding In America" is the handbook for the serious hitchhiker, telling how and why one should hitchhike.
The two said that yesterday, while hitchhiking from Kansas City, a girl who gave them a ride pulled a club with a chain on one end from beneath her shawl and placed it on the dashboard. They said they guessed she just wanted to play it safe.
Kansas Union
Ellis said that in 1972, 148 persons took advantage of the "crash service." In the period from January to March 1973, 62 people used the service, he said.
An FM radio station in Kansas City, Kan. broadcasts what they call "Hitchhiker Report," which lets hitchhikers solicit rides over the air.
Grafraid said he was once picked up by a truck driver in Ohio who took him a meal and tried to instill in him an appreciation of country music.
"You only hear about the tragedies involved with hitchhikers," he said.
Robert Banks, Prairie Village appomore, said he hitchhikes frequently. Banks said he thought many people had the wrong idea about hitchhikers.
Banks said that if more people knew how many persons hikikied and how few had any difficulty either as a hikikinder or as a driver who picked up hikikiders, more people would thumb rides and more drivers would pick them up.
David Egelston, 21, and Tom Grafath, 29, both of Kansas City, Kan., said they had just hitchhiked to Lawrence from Kansas City, yesterday. Both said they had hitchhiked throughout the Midwest and south-central states.
Egelston and Grafraff said Texas was the worst state they had ever tried to hitchhike across. They said people were unwilling to give them rides. Both said they knew Colo-rona's bad state for hitchhikers to cross secure highway patrol there barassed hitchhikers.
Neither said they worried about being arrested for hitchhiking.
"in fact," Banks said, "I got to know Dave by picking him up when he was wifed."
Banks, Egelston and Grafrah all said they hitchkicked mostly to get from place to place. But they all agreed hitchkicked had many benefits. Free meals, free beer and other treats were often offered to hitchkikers, they said.
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6
Tuesday, February 26,1974
University Daily Kansan
Rested 'Hawks Face Hot Huskers Tonight
By JIM SHELDON
Kansas Sports Writer
After a full week's rest, the University of Kansas returns to the Big Eight title battle.
KU has been idle since defeating Oklahoma in Lawrence last month. 98-80. Coach Ted Owens wasn't sure what effect the long lawff would have on the squad.
"There is no way to tell until we play."
Owens said yesterday. "Our practices have
"They've obviously been improving," Owens said. "They've won four of their last five and only lost by a point at Colorado. They say they've won at Colorado." He conference next to us and K-Site.
In an earlier meeting between KU and Nebraska, KU co-captain Kim Vikiste held Fort to 12 points. The 'Hawks won that game by a single point. Kim Vikiste will be assigned to stopping Fort.
Nebraska, which is basically a young team, has shown improvement in its recent games and has moved into fourth place in the Bue Eight standings.
Lee picked up the slack with 13 each.
"Kim Viotis has been simply tremendous," Owens said. "He has meant so much to this club I'm not sure you could ever begin to measure it, I don't know how a guard could be playing better than Tom is right now."
The two schools met one other time this year in the fifth place game at the Big Eight basketball tournament.
Last season Nebraska boat the 'Hawks three times, sweeping the season series for eight consecutive wins.
"Hawks win tonight, it will mark a reversal of last year.
Nebraska has usually been led by sophomore guard Jerry Fort, who has an 18.5 scoring average on the year. However, the Huskers displayed a balanced attack against Oklahoma State when Fort was held to four points, as Tom Novak and Brendy
The rivalry between the two schools has intensified in recent years since Jose Cipriano took over as the "Huskers' head coach." He has a secret of any secret of his delight in beating KU.
"It goes all the way back to when he (Ocriano) played for the University of Washington," Owens said. "KU beat them in the 1953 NCAA semi-finals. And also."
when he had a good team in '66 we beat them by one game for the conference
KU enters this game with a shot at another conference championship. KU is 17-25 in the series. Hawks trail first place Kansas State by one half game. The Wildcats play at Missouri
sports
Probable Starting Line-ups:
KANNA5
Robin Cush 6-8
Rooper Morning star 6-6
Danny Knight 6-10
Jake Bauer 6-9
Tom Kivlin 6-2
NEBRASKA
Brendy Lee 6-4
Bob Siegel 16-7
Larry Gox 6-4
Tom Novak 6-1
Jerry Fort 6-3
been good and we've had enough scrimmage type work so we shouldn't have lost our feel for competition. We've also had ample time to prepare for Nepal."
The Cornhuskers, meanwhile, played Saturday at home and beat Oklahoma State 71-43. The win boosted the Huskers' season to 12-10 and its conference record to 5-6.
Big Eight Standings
Fambrough Pleased with Recruiting Progress
Big Eight Standings Conf Games
Conf. Games All Games
Kansas State 10 L 11 8 W 5
Kansas 9 1 4 18 S
Oklahoma 9 1 4 16 T
Nebraska 5 1 2 17 H
Cincinnati 5 1 2 17 H
Janeville 3 7 8 12 I
Missouri 2 7 8 12 I
Wichita State 1 7 11 8 I
Bv GERALD EWING
BY GILBERT
Kanan Sports Editor
earner this year, Don Fambrough said that a better recruiting year than in past years would be essential if the University of Kansas football team was to continue its newfound success in the Big Eight Conference.
Big Eight area a athlete has been signing letters-of- intent since Feb. 12 and Fambrigh recruiting has gone exceptionally well so far.
"We're real pleased with the ones we signed so far but it's not over yet," Fambrough said. "There are still some around that haven't signed but we're still recruiting."
Fambridge also said earlier that the emphasis of this year's recruiting would be
offensive and defensive linemen, running
tacks and possibly a quarterback or tuxe.
The linemen signed are: Mike Beal, Van Horn, Kansas City, Mo.; Mark Boyer, Montana; Brian McClary, kiewzc, Shawne Ward, Kansas City, Kan.; Jim Lob, Shawnee Mission South; James Emerson, Great Bend; Frank Osborn, West Elk; and Harry Murphy, Shawnee Mission
So far, Fambrough's prediction has been correct as seven linemen and five running backs have signed Big Eight letters-of-intent to attend KU.
The running backs signed are: Caleb Rowe, Leavenworth; Percy Battles, Wichita Southeast; Dinkie Topper, Wichita Southeast; Bill Carter, Skip Johnson and Skip Johnson, Shawnee Mission South.
“An athlete could sign with Big Eight and also sign with a school in the Southwest Conference,” Fambrough said. “The athlete will have to decide between the two when he signs a national letter of intent. That is the case that those that have signed with other schools.”
Fambrough said the purpose of the Big Eight letter was to protect one member school from another. He said an athlete could sign only one letter-of-intent in the Big Eight, but could sign with other schools in different conferences.
The fact that these athletes have signed with KU doesn't mean they are obligated to play.
The signing date for national letters-of-
entire is March 6 and Farnham said that
they would be ready by April 30.
A family spokesman said Hearst planned no further public comment until he received a new communique from the armed guard. "We have been informed," Hearst a "corporate enemy of the people."
At a news conference 15 miles north in San Francisco, Ludlow Kramer, secretary of state in Washington and organizer of the food giveaway, said, "Since high-quality food as outlined by the SLA demands are purchased by Thursday, we will not open."
The Randolph A. Hearst family continued its sense vigil with no word on whether the terrorist-demanded $6 million food handout would satisfy the Symbiontes Liberation Army which claims to hold Miss Hearst as a "prisoner of war."
Supply Problems Delay Giveaway
HILSBOROUGH, Calif. (AP) — Supply problems will delay the massive food giveaway at obtaining the release of Florida's Christmas Ornament, Victoria Hearst, it was announced yesterday.
"There is nothing for us to do. It is frustrating, just waiting," said Jay Bosworth, who had worked for the company.
He said he hoped the giveaway would resume Thursday.
Kramer said People in Need had to obtain more fresh meat and vegetables and more distribution sites before it could begin banding out food again.
duced from a Berkeley apartment Nov. 4.
The People in Need food giveaway, which
began Friday and was marred by violence
and arson, is still continuing and will
continue today. Thursday and Saturday.
Meanwhile, a statement by 13 Indian organizations said members would refuse to attend.
Despite the problems, 14,000 people have received free food, Kramer said. He said he hoped the Hearst money and donations would help to feed 100,000 needy Californians indefinitely.
"If People in Need were to proceed against the demands of the SLA at this time, we are convinced further disorders would occur and the SLA requirement of food distribution in a dignified manner would never be achieved," Kramer said.
Yesterday was the fifth day since the SLA oemanded that Hearst pump another $40 million.
Fambridge said the two separate signing dates caused many problems for recruiters. He said that even though a player had signed a conference letter, the school had to continue recruiting him until the national signing date.
"We will not be co-conspirators in extortion," Indian spokesman Adam Normdwall said. "Many Indian people are hungry and hungry." He said food free until Patricia Heart is released.
Hearst said the demand was beyond his personal means. But the Hearst Corp. offered to provide the additional $4 million if he would supply of California coed is released unharmed.
Initially, Hearst personally contributed $500,000 to the food program and $1.5 million came from the nonprofit Hearst Foundation.
"I'm in hopes that there will be one signing date in the future," he said. "Two things would help; just one signing date and another." He added that he helped greatly in cutting down expenses.
Pigege Maze, acting director of People in Need, reported that donations were pouring in.
Fambrough said the reason for the emphasis on running backs and linemen was because of the conversion to a new offense—the "Houston Veer."
Fambrough described the "Veer" as a well-balanced offense that was similar to the wishbone. He said the "Veer" would utilize the running and passing ability of Bruce Adams and the ability of Bruce Adams and Emmeline Edgards and the running ability of Robert Miller.
Topeka Daily Capital. The article was about Rich Jones, a former quarterback at KU. It appeared the same day as the Big Eight letters were to be signed.
Although it was designed to reveal the problems a highly sought recruit who didn't make it faces, it was viewed as harmful by the KU athletic department.
"I know nobody will believe it, but it's only one more year for me," the Post said Maravich told a writer after the Hawks' National Basketball Association game here Saturday night with the New York Knicks. Atlanta lost 98-90.
"It certainly didn't help in recruiting," rambridge said. "But it was very strangely a lack of confidence."
One negative aspect of this year's recruiting, Fambridge said, was an article that questioned whether the university is willing to accept them.
Maravich signed a multimillion dollar contract with the Hawks in 1970 after playing college basketball at Louisiana State, where he was a three-time All-American and led the nation's collegians in scoring each of his three varsity years.
"The response has been super," she said. "People from all over the country have been sending bread, milk, frozen food, money and love."
But the Post apparently didn't take Pistol Pete too seriously, saying that Maravich had one year left to play if "you believe what he said for an exhilarating 37-point performance."
NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Post, in its Monday editions, quoted Pete Maravich as saying he will quit basketball when his three-year contract with the Atlanta Hawks expires after the 1974-75 season.
Asked what he would do, Pistol Pete said:
"I'll take Jack Palance's place. I'm the villain. I'll make a great villain."
Balance is a movie actor who has portrayed villains.
Maravich Yearns To Be a Bad Guy
Shell Oil Fails in Attempt To Disqualify Douglas
WASHINGTON (AP)—A major oil company sought and failed yesterday to dislodge Supreme Court Justice William O. Campbell from a case concerning natural gas regulation.
Shell Oil Co. asked Douglas to drop out of the case, or failing that, for his colleagues to take the unprecedented step of forcing him to disqualify himself because of a speech Douglas made, reportedly critical of oil and gas corporations.
The plea was rejected in a brief, routine order.
Shell's attempt to disqualify Douglas was prompted by a speech Jan. 28 at the University of Mississippi. Douglas was widely reported to have said that the oil companies generated the energy crisis in the interest of profit.
"Statements attributed to Mr. Justice Douglas, if in fact made by him, reflect such a point of view as to the oil and gas business, and impress such wrongdoing to them that, we submit, it would be highly improper for Mr. Justice Douglas to participate in this case." Shell had said.
The case in question involves Federal
Power Commission rate structure established in 1971 governing natural gas production in southern Louisiana, source of one-third of the nation's sunny.
In other actions the court refused to interfere with a lower court decision upholding the rule-making powers of the Federal Trade Commission.
The case arose out of a 1970 FTC ruling making it an unfair practice for a service company to use gasoline pumps. The National Petroleum Refiners Association challenged the regulation. The refiners said the FTC had violated their rights under state rules governing many types of business.
The court declined to hear a case in which a peace group said the FBI should be forced to purge its files of some information gathered in advance of 1969 antiwar demonstration. Lower courts ruled that the information was gathered by the FBI to determine the likely size of the demonstration, not to identify individuals.
The court also agreed to decide whether the federal government may continue its regulation of the sale of alcohol on privately owned land within Indian reservations.
C
Applications or Board Positions on the 1973-74 Commission on the Status of Women
Are Now Available in Room 222, Strong Hall. Applications are due
no later than Friday, March 1 in 222 Strong.
FUNDED THROUGH THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
(FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE)
People Needed for: Recruitment Orientation Agency Needs Co-ordination—Evaluation Office Management-Follow-up-Publicity
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE Needs Staff For Academic Year 1974-75
For Interviews Call:
JANET WILDGEN 842-2636
After 5:30 p.m. Before March 3
D
Shags and Layer Cuts For Men and Women
Gentlemen's Quarters
Razor Cuts
Regular Cuts
Diana Wynn
K.U. NIGHT TONIGHT!
West 9th St. Center
9th & III.
843-2719 for Appointment Rockie Browning-owner
BUTCHER
Still Life (Tonight-Saturday)
Free LIVE MUSIC WITH K.U. I.D.
Yuk It Up At The Yuk Down
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa
In the Mood
In the Mood
a dance...
sponsored by
gay liberation
sat...
march 2
ku union
8:30/12:30
$1.00
sound by RMS...
JOHN WAYNE
"McQ"
NOW AT THE Granada
B evenings
Sat 2pm
Sat-Sun Meet
Sat-Sun Meet
af 2:30
INLATRE...TV3-5817
THE WAY WE WERE
STREISAND & REDFORD
Evenings
n7/30, 14
Sat., Satur. Mat.
Varsity
THIRD FIELD ... BRIDGEMAN VIC 1985
Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive all tugged cop
Evenings at 7:35 and 9:45
Sat. Sat. Mat. at 20:00 Only
Hillcrest
AL PACINO "SERPICO"
THE WAY WE WERE PG
STREISAND & REDFORD
Evenings
at 7.30, 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat.
at 12:28
Varsity
THEATRE... Telephone No. 1065
Marlon Brando
Last Tango in Paris
X
Evenings at 7:15 and 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Matinees at 2:10
The Hillcrest 3
by Alexander Solzhenitsyn "ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH"
A view of the Soviet Union's penal system by its most respected victim
Ev. 7.40; 9.30; 10.30; Sun. Mat. 2:15
Eve., 7:40, 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:15
hillcrest2
Last Tango in Paris
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 26, 1974
7
Lawrence's Founder Kept University Here
Gov. Charles Robinson saved the University of Kansas from being sold up the river to Manhattan. Although both houses of the state legislature voted to locate the University in Manhattan, he promptly for wantig it in Lawrence. He had befited for
Robinson came west from Massachusetts in a covered wagon in 1849, lured to California by the gold rush. Instead of prospecting, however, he got involved in a land rights dispute. He was wounded and imprisoned in a battle between the squatters and the opposition. He was charged with one count of pardner and two counts of assault.
While in jail, however, he was elected to the legislature. After his election, the candidate won.
Citizens' Study Of Penitentiary To Be Released
"Doing Your Own Time," a citizens' study of the Kansas State Pententious tornado killers Lansing will be released torroriously during dinner meeting at the Ramada Inn in Topeka.
Delmar Huebner, director of the Bureau of Probation and Parole, Division of Corrections for Wisconsin, will be the featured speaker.
The study was made by the Committee on Penal Reform of the Ramsay Association for Magistrates.
Forrest Swall, lecturer in Social Welfare and a member of the committee, said yesterday that the book represented 2,000 hours of work by Kansas citizens.
During the last 20 months, members of the committee have talked to inmates and prio officials to compile a report on the training, training and services offered at KSP.
Swall said the report had already brought about significant legislative changes in the penal system of Kansas. The impact of the law was felt by many inmates in the correctional institutions themselves.
Attention
CAMPUS
ORGANIZATIONS
To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4381 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
He later returned to Massachusetts by way of the Isthmus of Panama. At that time the struggle for determination of Kansas as a free state or slave state was beginning.
The New England Emigrant Aid Society was formed in Massachusetts for the express purpose of setting slavery to prevent it from becoming a slave state.
Sponored by the Society, Robinson led a group of settlers to Kansas in 1854 to found Lawrence, which became the center of Free State activity.
An election was held Nov. 29, 1854, to form a territorial legislature to decide the slavery question in Kansas. The election won by the Democratic-Macon Missouri who voted successfully for slavery.
The Freestaters refused to be defeated, however. Under Robinson's leadership in 1855, 600 residents of Lawrence fought off 1200 of their enemies in the Wakarana War.
During that time, Robinson's house was burned by the Sheriff of Douglas County, Texas.
In 1856, the Freestaffs held their own constitutional convention at Topeka and Robbins held his own convention. However, the pro-slavery legislature by the federal government and Robinson's actions were looked upon as an act of resistance to slavery he held for a time, but he never went to trial.
When Kansas entered the Union in 1861, Robinson was elected governor, a position he held for one term during which the location of the University came up.
Robinson Gymnastium bears his name. He was erected in 1908 in recognition of the achievements of the gymnasts.
The first facilities for athletics at KU consisted of a room in the basement of old Fraser. The floor was covered with sawnwood to mask its roughness and the equipment consisted of a set of parallel bars and some dumbbells.
For 40 years, beginning in 1893, an anat-
istic program for freshmen and sophi-
sophants was developed.
The gymnasium cost $100,000, was considered one of the best in the country and was unique because several sports could be conducted at once. It was located on the site of Wescoe Hall. The land was donated by Governor Robinson.
In late 1967, the building was razed.
SCHOONER 40TH
VANVECKS'S 65
COOKIE
LAWRENCE, KS
TUESDAY 7-930
HELP
WANTED
STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEE POSITIONS ARE NOW BEING FILLED:
★ Academic Affairs
★Communication
★Finance & Auditing
★Housing
★Student Rights
★Student Services
★Culture
★Sports
Sports
(Application Deadline Friday, March 1)
★ Coordinator for Affirmative Action
★ Parking & Traffic Task Force
APPLICATION DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, FEB. 27)
For Further Information and Applications, Contact Your Student Senate Office 105-B Union 864-3710
(Financed by Student Activity Fee)
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
Abiomodulators, good, services and sophistication.
Inhibitors of apoptosis, cell death and programmed cell death.
NCT01385294. gp175-binding protein 175b. BIN60
BIN1150. GFP-gfp binding protein 1150. GFP
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1.
1) if you use them, you're at an advantage
2) if you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage
Elderly, it comes to the same time — ... Artists of America, Town Clerk, Town Clerk
Rox Audio, 13 K. E. Hours 842-364-1875
Available for any stereo problem. Costs $150-
available for any stereo problem. Costs $150-
Three Days
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at
Ride On Bicycles
GOLDEN RETRIEVRYES ARC-Sired by West Point Sam-Stam is an 85 pound professionally trained super-sucessful hunting dog who also trains a horse. I will walk 1 dog for 842-3504 2-26
The once a year Magnaquan annual sale is now
open. You can visit our Digital clock radio, tape recorders & i-
tronics, Ray Stonebank's 929 Mass Your Magnaquan
Radio, Stonebank's 929 Mass Your Magnaquan
Telephone, you can always be on the go! Open Thursa. nights
2-25
Tire, clearance? G25-H1 with belts cut to $25 plus
price. Tire size: 65/40R18 KYK. Tire backscam: $65
plus price. Tire height: 35 inches. KYK backscam: $65
plus price. Tire width: 24 inches. KYK backscam: $65
plus price.
For sale, 1961 Rambler, 6 x 1.5L, running comfort-
able, gas mileage $75.00 or best offer,
2-26
2-26
FOR LAGE 1971–17 x 50" furnished multi-
wall cabinet. For HOME 1972–18 x 60"
Excellent Condition. Make offer #4427598.
For BROOKLYN 1973–17 x 80".
Good used KLH compact setter with remote control for $230, just $180 at Harper's in 939 Main Street.
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at reasonable price. We are authorized to accept food orders from any location. NORTH SIDE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. W. 8th St. NORTH SIDE COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. W. 8th St. a week a day. Hort Burd Barel 360 West 21st St. Hort Burd Barel 360 West 21st St.
FOR SALE. Removable hardware for MIB2, xce
condition. 110. A must for cold weather. Cable
insulation.
50 MPG-1972 Trumph Tiger 650 Perfect condition
850 BM-813-160 or 842-1474 2-27
For sale: Conn Acoustic Guitar with new Sewer
Fan. See photos. Price includes:
$90 you; $80. Good for cases 11/25 well; 841-700-277
and 841-700-278.
Stores: auditor-large-empty-loaded folded
folded-empty-loaded large-empty-loaded folded
large-empty-loaded small guitar song wanted 81-561-7847
small guitar song wanted 81-561-7847
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
TRAVAILY G3J-3 G-L arm Amp w. apacker. Warr.
free. Availability limited. Purchase with Share
biz offer. #42-8407. Fax number: 42-8407.
Some new records added to our used ones. Beat
the band at the Rocky's Recycled Sound.
Records at Rary's Recycled Sound.
Oocilloscopie and Garrard changer -Tektronix
record changer $35.00 Call 841-741-2-27
record changer $35.00 Call 841-741-2-27
For sale- in room 9, Nirada SK1 Boats ($or)
for sale- in room 10, Nirada SK1 Boats ($or
answer- no answer- for sale- for
ask for Mk3 in room 10, 2-28
**RECORDING:** Alternative buoying at Rays Beograd
provides a 20m depth of water. The land-
based LP vessel is used in cox and cable access
lines.
MGB ROADSTER-1367, everything in perfect
form. Receive the MGB roadster for $495.
60,000 miles on car. Rent, 842-752-3250.
Sony Casetube records will record at the back
of the console. A Sony PlayStation 2
box set up the Sony's at Ray Stoneback 379
West 66th Street, 105th Street and 48th
Floor.
USED RADIAL TISSUE Pair - 165-13 Bridgestone,
$25; Pair - 165-13 CORD, $25;
Pair - 135-13 TISSUE, $25;
Pair - 135-14 TOYO, $25;
Pair - 153-13 DURHAM, $45; Pair - 174-11 MICH,
$25; Pair - 129-12 MICH, $25;
Miss. 292 Mass. Your Michelin Dealer, 2-28
Good food, mind staff, and plenty of privacy. Good supervision is essential as soon as possible to make or form Custit Café staff.
Dining Room Table w matching buffet. $29, cash
paying for all meals. After 5 a.m., weekly any weekend.
2-28
2 Janzan electronic speakers. Retail $79.95
3 Janzan electronic speaker, chassis,
channel 3 warranty $400.00. Rud, 845-646-1850.
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. Phone Order
441 7685 We Deliver 9th & 10th
THE HIT in the WALL
Crescent Heights
- Oaks •Acorn
*Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Old but working h-b-tunnel, amplifier, Jen-
son speaker. $25.84-599.98
Barron 5000A receive-amplifier $2 watts m.,
barron 5000A receive-amplifier $2 watts m.
$2 full amps; $2 each beautiful
amplifier; $2 each beautiful
amplifier; $2 each beautiful
Great books—new set for sale. Call 841-2800 after 2-27
SAA199 9-2 door Sedan, 1979, low mileage, care
SAA188 9-2 door Sedan, 1979, low mileage, care
SAA184 212 Westhardt Street
FOR SALE: **66 Penstant Tempest C 2.1g** Good mail.
Call: 834-4037 4 after 4 p.m. 5-1
Speakers for sale: 4 new E.S.P. model 2 speakers.
811-690-8100
3-1
62 VW Bus- 80,000 miles, AM-FM, dependable
transport- 842-412 after 5 p.m.
3-1
For sale: 99 VW sedan X. cond. rebuilt engine
6623 VW stationwagen. X. cond. 1,150 $89.
6628 VW stationwagen. X. cond. 1,150 $89.
Live in Naishan? Confort, good food and friend!
Life with the family: 400-850-1362 on contract.
Call Karen at 962-755-4310.
For sale, two burntables, 1 Garnard AT8, $20. Also
available for sale as a fireplace. A great price for
$19,500. Sale for $60,482 Call 843-275-1211
115 Michigan St. Bar-Il-Qua. We have open pit burger sandwich, our brick plate burger, our brick plate burger sandwich or brisket by this pound. Half-chicken by the ear. Eat her, or take it out. Open 11 am to 8 pm on Tuesdays. $6.99.
Shi Heel—Nordica, size 10 M. Also 10r together in Shi Heel high back extensions. Sold together as a pair.
NOTICE
TYPEWHEEL CLEANING - 3-day service. Small-
leave tape cleaning. Turbidity. Tariffables.
tape transporters, antique car wash. Glass
and cement. Electronic and light industrial
cleaning. Water supply. Equal to all
evaluator. River City Mayor 815 Vermont. 814-7-
916.
MICKEY HOOSE IS A PUT-ON... Put him on your fingers, ears, curls, the needy, the needles. It'll work with all of the White Elephant Market in Lawrence. These are with 12 k. gold. All items are distributed by the 12 k. gold. Distributing Co.-No. cheap coupon High quality White Elephant Market 757 New Hampel, Open
THISIS BINDING and coping service available
at the following addresses:
* mail service and reasonable prices. 814-693-8500
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Jeeves or Judy at the Quick Center for you reproducible printable templates.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT at the Quick
Screen (on the PC) or on a terminal
computer, 400 expires 12:12, Table 843. 297
+ 297
SERVICE PROBLEMS...
Don't breed them do it.
Have a Honda's spring service need. 181 W. bch,
Houston, spring service need. 181 W. bch,
Houston, spring service need. 181 W. bch,
Free: One $21 JC$ bike can ride if you purchase two bikes during the month of February and a third bike during the month of March. You have nine lilac helmets, Cannamina, Raleigh, Peugeot, Massachusetts, Ride-On Bicycles, 2-28
Massachusetts
MEDITATION WORKSHOP within a Christian
community. Fee includes 1 hour of
24hr Oral. For registration, drop in or call
800-555-3567.
*National European Radio Hour* KNOK, 6am
*National British Radio Hour* KNOK, 10am
*Starting FEB 77* Another reason to join
*Starting MAY 31*
COPIES ENCHICEMENT. Future visioning Life
For Information Only United Ministers, 842-933-
1065.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION, Inc., Monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m., Monday, March 4; Union office 112 B Union, Box 224, Lawrence Rap; phone 842-640-2806; referral. Socialization 842-578-7977.
Pat Read Indian Room, Shop 203, Eldridge House
Pat 814-1966, will open will February 30 under
the instructions of the Board. Meet at 10 a.m.-3 p.m. After 3 p.m. by appointment. Mr. Lee has just returned from a buy-in tap; the
room is free and free to enter.
FOR BENT to male or female student. New student must be 18 years old and have a $5 block from Gates. Parking and utilities paid.
FOR RENT
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CAMP
15 East Bath, 841,266
10.5 Monday, Saturday
James Gang Foreign Auto Parts Now Open Parts for ALL Foreign Cars
APARTMENT-INSTITUTION, estate on quay near PACIFIC
Road, 1325 East 4th Avenue, New York, NY 10026.
1235 East 4th Avenue, New York, NY 10026.
dealer #71545957-1235 East 4th Avenue, New York, NY 10026.
Walt to wall carpeting; freet door parking, no stoop; private bathrooms; private private bathrooms; day rooms, each a private room; private bathrooms. Each a BQP proft in courtroom, 4, 15, and 2 beds. Walt to wall parking, 220 W St. Street #843-755-7258.
JAVAHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS are our
residential apartments in Chicago, IL.
Girls with hips past 84-92 years or
boys with hips past 83-90 years.
APARTMENT—One and two room environments furnished. For males. Near downtown. No pets.
FOR HENT : A new 2 bedroom apartment with
studio and outdoor kitchen, targeted, tasking, storage. NEARC
residential unit in the heart of Montreal.
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1733-1745 Wet Wall 204.
Now leading a kitchen and 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished. Dining room, breakfast room, dining room, carpet, decorative, kitchen冰箱, refrigerator. Move-in fee: $950. Resident停车管理 in App. 3. Cal. Bk 814-1023.
Purchased apartments for rent at 19 W. 180th St.
$35,000. Payment: $65,000. Cash and water paid. Cell phone $42,
$175.
1 bedroom apt, 5ba, sharpe elevator, redecorated kitchen,
garage, 842-6834 or Manager at 842-6116 Tilton
Mild enough for kids! Sublet set up. Use **u**, **k** black marker. **I**, **K**, **L123**, **L124**. Fill in **Bill** or **John**. No Jim being needed.
1. bedroom -Turned up air conditioner. Large living room with sliding glass door. TV placed $725 a month. Call 843-5235 between 6-10am on weekdays.
FOR RENT. Two bedroom furnished apartment
823. Bedroom rooms 53. Call 843-8270 or 842-
8210.
HELP WANTED
Want a good experience? Volunteer! Clearing-
sites, food banks, and other service staff
staffing for 1919. Call Wiltshire Wilkens for
information.
McDonald's will be opening its new dining room now. We need part time day & evening help. Male or female Starter wasing $140 per hour. There are two 2nd, 2nd between the hours of 2 to 6 & 7-10 daily. 2-27
Summer Job of Admiral Dowd Lake Reporter.
Raporters help inside and outside start the work in lieu of a supervisor. Travel includes training, keeping notes, sauna, swimming, bikram, tennis, weight loss. Resume to Raymond Cockrum,
Part-time and Full-time time: Experienced
instructors of household goods. Please
843-609-8000 or 843-609-8000.
Business majors needed for research project,
including data analysis, simulation in simulated business die. Volunteers paid $100 per hour.
SERVICES OFFERED
Private sewing instruction. Groups of 3 or 4
Beginning and advanced dressmaking
2-27
RIVER CITY REITY -815 Vermont, 403-483-8725 Stereos - washers - waterproofs. Independent repair specialists. No retail hours. We service what you replace. Unimproved resources. See #f. Refrences.
In floor cleaning and washing. Work done properly will ensure more information or an estimate, please call Randy or Biff, 843-2642 afternoons and evening.
CLASSICAL GUITAR INSTRUCTION Make this lesson easy to learn by carpentry yourself through the music of Jimi Hendrix. Students will be able to play in music fundamentals, classical guitar technique for beginners through advanced players for beginners through advanced players.
TACOS
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
The number to call for up to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
JMOSUNSE & CHAIPFEUER SERVICE Ultimate
light duty gas grill Call 455-821-0936
light duty gas grill Nosegaiter Call 455-821-0936
Employment Opportunities
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles.
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
INSTITUTE for Social and Environmental Studies,
Institute, Assistant, Suggested Required.
Master of Public Administration degree. Exp-
pense in budget process. Some knowledge of the
state budget process. Knowledge of the
Oakland Continuum activities would be
helpful. Duration: March 1, 1744 through June
1, 1945. Please submit research grant. Salary: $700 per month. Per-
scription on a project concerning Kansas
search assistant on a project concerning Kansas
financial assistant on the administrative, financial and budget
Sitting and Summer Employment - Participation
and Information
May 5th at information counter of Student Union
Interested in no-frills low-cost let travel to interested countries or simply promote yourself. EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for getting where you want to go. Phone us or visit us at www.eduflights.com.
Roger—we worry we forget the sign-al but you didn't promote the last two lines. Anyway, that's the way to be-swe we'll settle for 17 and forget the rest of twenty about Twenty-24. The Pit —
Stamp, Collections—Bought, Sold, Traced, Cali-
3-1
842-3921 or 842-2856
WANTED
Female Roomsite modeled - Two large, large rooms. Only 70% monthly. Utilities paid Call $41.35.
CATAHUSE APARTMENTS. No lease required.
CALL 843-754-6920, 8 am to 8 pm, or p.m. on
weekdays. Call 843-754-6920.
**Housemate** $25/month, wks ward
$25/month, wks bathroom
Wanted:
Housemate $15/month, wks ward
$15/month, wks bathroom
Please rent $45 plus shared utilities. Call 866-930-7000.
Wanted—4 or more tickets to KSU-KU game
Reserved or student Candy Atam at KSU-KU 2-26
Typing in .rw home IBM IECalc. Plex type
typing in .rw home IE
TYPING
Experienced in typing thesis, dissertations, term papers, other mute typing. Have electric typewriter with pua typewriter. Accurate and prompt typing. Has written corrected, polished typescript. Mt-845-6344, Ms. Wright
Experienced Typet- will do with diathesis, dissortations,
lipids and mixtures typical. Call PhD.
19352 420 6758 5630
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4909. Myra. 2-26
LOST
LOBY Black brief case in *Watson Library Compiler*
(Core 8.12) of contours B41-1047. No questions asked.
B41-1047
Lost-Pure gray kitey, half-gurned, male, lily
in life is my friend, life is my friend.
Call Me Kev 442-6280. Call Me Kev
442-6280.
--love is . . .
come
unique
antiques
candles
Artisan Bazaar
THE
magic books
custom made
25-59
1144 Indiana
ADVENTURE a bookstore
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We owl, wren and mail.
FINE SERVICE
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
FINE BOOKS
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1811 W. 6th. Lawrence, Kansas
843-3333
Parts & Accessories
Phone 843-6424
Happy Family
... wanting to take care of each other ... in your own home purchased from
RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES
3020 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
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Tuesday, February 26, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Coke
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
Still Life by KU Graduate Dennis Helm
Grad Paints Own Kind of Realism
By CAROL GWINN
Kansan Staff Reporter
A Coke bottle sits next to a beer can on a table splattered with paint. Eggs are suspended by slender strings above a plaster mask or sit in the foreground of a shiny ladie, which distorts a reflection with its convexity.
These are the paintings now being exhibited in the Seven East 7 Gallery by Dennis Helm, a University of Kansas graduate.
Helm said Friday that he used eggs in his paintings fairly often.
"I like them very much," she said. "I like
eating edits." There's something about
edits being edits.
Helm said eggs were often released to things hidden in the subconscious.
Helm said that he wasn't interested in the "slice of life" type of realism.
Hem said that in arranging his still life paintings, he "made to set objects up" in "painting a pleasant way."
"I don't paint realistically in the sense of looking at breakfast on the table and deciding to paint it as it is," he said, "but rather I try to paint things realistically the way people actually see them—more or less photographically."
"In selecting objects and putting them together in certain ways," Helm said, "there's no way to be sure how they're going to appear in the final painting."
"Formal requirements impose restrictions I can't foresee," he said, and that "they are hard to enforce."
"Very often things get into a painting that aren't there," he said.
"What I actually mean I can't express verbally."
"I wrestle aside with objects until I'm no longer affirmed," Helm said, adding that he was "offended very often" by the way things appeared in their color, or their factors.
He said that painting was essentially a spiritual exercise for him, "a struggling for self-esteem."
"I could say it's hell to paint." Helm said,
"at actually it's very easy."
He paints because of a desire to communicate on a non-verbal level, he said.
"Painting forced into language becomes distorted," he said. "I don't try to confuse people."
Helm said the only thing people needed to understand his paintings was their own particular background. He said that it took him 30 years, however, if they a background similar to his.
It doesn't bother Helm if he interpret his works incorrectly, he said. But when they "interpret in stereotypes," Helm said, it does bother him.
Helm said that his style hadn't changed very much in the past ten years as far as content but that his "voabulary" had been enriched by experience.
"It itaked me 10 years to get where I am now," Heim said when asked how long it took him to paint a picture. "If you want to paint it, might take我 15 or 20 hours. It varies."
"When they first contacted me, it was supposed to be a realism show," Helm said. "I think you'll have trouble with this title now."
The Poop, the latest effort in underground newspapers at the University, will present its budget request to the Student Senate sometime next week, Scott Frenkel, Salina septometh and member of the collective publishing The Poop, said last week.
By JAY GLICK
Kansas Staff Reporter
The 10 people in the collective are now paying for the paper and stencils necessary to create their new artwork.
The Poop Seeks Funds For Alternative Press
**MIKE Stemmetz, Lawrence graduate**
student and senate treasurer, said that The Poop was mumegrahed by the senate, but materials were provided by the collective.
The Poop has appeared weekly since Nov. 7, 1973. Freeman said.
When the newspaper began publication, Freeman said, it was too late to file for senate funds, but he said they hoped to get funds this semester.
"We really deserve funding," he said.
MEMBERS of the collective will begin circulating petitions among students in an effort to demonstrate to the senate that the newspaper does have the support of a substantial number of students, Freeman said.
According to Freeman, there were no alternative viewpoints being presented after the Haymaker ceased publication last spring.
Freeman said that The Poop had a style different from that of The Haymaker. He said The Poop was less dogmatic and easier to read than the Haymaker.
SHARON LEE, Wichita senior and a member of the collective, said some of the people who write for The Poop have had a career in working with other underground papers.
Freeman said his style was more conversational.
"Some of us have worked on things all the way back to Vortex," she said.
"I couldn't have written the things that were in The Haymaker," Freeman said, smiling.
Lee said that the tone of underground papers had changed since the days of Vortex and The Oread Daily. People's moods have changed, she said, and underground newspapers reflect the change in moods.
Class, Club Study Parapsychology
Rya Kansan Renorter
"The Exorcist," a story of a young girl possessed by a demon, has focused the attention of the American public on the occult and parapsychology, the scientific study of psychic phenomena such as extra- and perception (ESP) and life after death.
Academics First in Poll
Academics should be the No. 1 priority for the Student Senate, according to an opinion poll conducted during student elections earlier this month.
Campus affairs were listed as the second priority and political affairs as the third priority, according to figures released yesterday by Lewis D. Gregory, Wichita junior and temporary elections committee chairman.
The majority of the 1,900 students who responded to the poll said LA&S 392 courses and student organizations should be funded by the university's administration didn't fund them.
John Beinser, Salina junior and student body president, said that the student body obviously wanted academics to be the first concern of the senate.
Funding of a University building for teaching purposes and funding of Feedback shouldn't be done by the senate even if the student doesn't provide the money, the students said.
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At the University of Kansas, this interest has led to an LA&S 292 introductory course in parapsychology and the formation this week of a parapsychology club.
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Rick Sheermann, Overland Park senior and parapsychology major, teaches the psychology course.
Psychic phenomena are receiving serious attention for the first time from both scientists and the public, he said last week. But a crucial problem remains in differentiating between parapsychology and the occult, he said.
1974-Year of the Taco
Sheeerman stresses class participation and uses discussions, workshops and films
“That’s one of the main airs of the course I teach.” Sheuerman said. “I’m afraid that things like 'The Exorcist' may unfurl to be leading people in the wrong direction.”
"The first thing I do is acquaint people with the terminology of parapsychology," he said. "Then I try to give them some idea of the scope of the field itself and the problems of scientific methods in psychic research."
Scheirman said his course provided basic knowledge in a field that has produced thousands of examples.
This is the second consecutive semester a course in parapsychology has been offered here, Sheuerman said. He applied for funding for the course after he learned that seniors and graduate students could plan and teach LA&S 292 courses.
Sheuerman said he thought everyone had nschvic experiences but most people
"passed them off as intuition or too vague."
There is no formal program of parapsychological research at KU, but Souherman conducted nine credit hours of independent study. He also taught Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology.
my ratthest dream is that there may eventually be a division of parapsychology here." Sheuerman said, "It should be independent, because psychic phenomena are as close to physics as they are to psycholinguistic biology and chemistry are also involved."
The KU parapsycology club may take a step in that direction by establishing an office where students would be able to report their own psychic experiences and learn about parapsychology as a science, Sheuerman said.
Sheuerman said yesterday that one of the first goals of the club would be to sponsor a University-wide seminar to educate students about parapsychology.
The club met again Sunday night to elect officers and draft a request for $900 from the Student Senate for films, guest lecturers and workshops.
An organizational meeting of the club last week attracted about 20 persons. Shearer
"I believe there is a great deal of interest here in psychic phenomena, and we hope to give this interest an outlet," Sheuermann said.
a parapsychology research program at KU may be years away, he said, but the club may be able to arrange workshops and lectures this semester.
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She said the end of fighting in Vietnam and the ending of the draft were events that contributed most to peoples' desire for non-involvement in political causes.
"IN 1979 and 71, there was a lot more political activism," she said, "so there was
Lee said that in 1974 an underground newspaper doesn't have as many overt problems to point to and consequently it is more difficult. But in much less apparent problems instead.
The Poop has no rigid policy regarding the selection of stories. Lee said the collective votes to determine which stories appear in the newspaper.
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Most stories in The Poop are written by the ten members of the collective, Freeman said. But he added that the collective would appreciate story contributions and letters. Freeman said The Poop would print letters that objected to positions taken by the newspaper, but that it hadn't yet received any.
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Commission Considers City Dial-a-Bus System
By BOB MARCOTTE
Kansan Staff Reporter
The buses would be equipped with built-in radios, he said, which would allow a dispatcher to direct routing on the basis of time. The buses would not require notice would be required for service, he said, which would be offered between 6:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. weekdays and Saturdays. The service wouldn't run on holidays. If bus fare would be about 50 cents a ride.
The commission also authorized the city staff to send a letter to the state highway department, requesting that Lawrence be declared an urban area. Such a designation would make the city eligible for a share of about $6.6 million in federal highway funds made available to the state government.
The Lawrence City Commission yesterday heard a proposal for dial-a-bus public transportation in the city and the county. The proposal will benefit Lawrence's public transportation needs.
The system could probably be put into operation, he said, as soon as adjustments are made to the smaller窥士 to allow for a larger size, which would take no more than 45 days, he said.
Duanne Ogle, president and general manager of the Lawrence Bus Co., outlined what could be maintained if the city would be willing to provide up to $100,000 a year to cover the difference between the service cost and the revenue that could be expected.
THE DALI-A-BUS system, he said, would use two seven-passenger limousines, two 15- and six-seater cars.
"IF WE'T TALKING about something on a trial basis, I'm not interested," he told the commission. Ogle said he knew of no dual-a-bus systems now operating that were required to operate on the campus we have to provide the equivalent of $10 for each operating hour of service by the
to provide door-to-door service throughout the city six days a week.
smaller vans and $12 and hour for use of the 35-seat buses, which he said would be used primarily for back-up service during peak hours.
At most, this would cost the city about $100,000 a year, he said. Later he said that the cost to the city would probably be less and that the $100,000 figure would result only if a minimal number of people used the service.
Ogle said the service could be scheduled regularly for people who wanted to use the service every day and for children who needed rides to school.
"ICAN HANDLE all of the business you give me," he said, indicating that he could lease whatever additional equipment might be needed.
The commission didn't take action on the proposal or on a request of the Lawrence PTA that the commission authorize formation of a committee that would study public transportation needs in Lawrence and make recommendations to the city.
Sally MacKenzie, president of the Lawrence area PTA school, said a flexible bus system would suit perfectly the need for transportation among high school students and would help ease the congestion caused when parents take their children to school.
MacKenzie urged the commission to establish a committee that would include representatives of the PTA, businesses, school administrations, the city-county planning commission, KU, Haskell and other interested community groups.
Pence said it should be determined where potential riders are located in the
Commissioner Fred Pence said he was opposed to committing "large chunks of the earth" in his plans.
PLEASANT Forecast: Fair and warm today, with the high in the 60's, low in the 30's.
COMMISSIONER JOHN H. EMICA, however, that she had to attend a committee at this point and that the commissioners 'need to do a little thinking among ourselves and see what they can do.'
84th Year, No. 99
See CITY Back Page
Wednesday, February 27,1974
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NO DOGS
ALLOWED
IN BUILDING
Rock Chalk Teams Ready
See Story Page 5
Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER
By the Associated Press
Gas Price to Go Up Again
Doggone It
Motorists struggling with the end-of-the-month fuel crunch yesterday had more bad news ahead of them—price hikes within the next few days.
Contradicting the signs that have been hung in Wescow hall as well as other navy buildings, this dog waited patiently in the hall until a few hours before the ceremony.
Mandatory gasoline rationing took effect in New York and Delaware, and Rhode Island announced that a voluntary odd-even distribution system would begin Friday. Coal mines in Virginia and West Virginia because workers could not get gas to commute.
The National Petroleum Council predicted that the nation would have to rethink its energy policy.
rationing unless federal allocation measures proved more effective.
The mandatory rationing that went into effect in New York seemed to help cut the lines that had persisted during a voluntary sales distribution program introduced Peb.
Independent service stations—those not directly owned by the major oil company, Energy Office last weekend to raise prices by two cents a gallon. Then, on Monday, the government okayed another one-centa- tional price change. The price change will go into effect March 1.
DEPARTMENT ECONOMIST said food prices would keep rising at least through mid-year but could level off if farmers produced more crisps and livestock.
UDSA says that during 1974 grocery store prices might go up as much as 16 per cent from last year if record harvests do not raise the year and consumer demand continues strong.
Standard Oil Co. of California officials are planning a meeting tonight to decide what to do about prices. A spokesman would say the price increase is planned before March 1.
—President Nixon signed a proclamation removing all restrictions on imports of beef into the United States this year to try to drive retail prices down.
Higher Farm Prices Raise Retail Food Costs
In related developments;
WASHINGTON (AP) - Higher farm prices for major food items, including beef, pushed the annual retail cost of a grocery market basket to a record $1,680 in January, the Department of Agriculture said yesterday.
The company already has raised its price to dealers by five cents a gallon since Dec. 1.
Officials said the January base was up an annual rate of $30, or 1.8 per cent, from December. The data had sourced to $1,633 million months before beginning, its current rise.
-Federal Reserve Board chairman Arbur F. Burns told Congress inflation
The market basket, which includes only U.S. farm-produced food, is theoretically enough for a household of 3.2 persons for an entire year.
Retail pork prices, which were $1.16 a pound, were up less than one cent from
Exxon, Gulf and Shell Oil said they had made no decisions about new price for
The figures were compiled by USDA technicians at the request of newsmen.
The report showed that the average retail cost of beef in January was $1.43 a pound on all-cut basis. That was an increase of 6.4 from the beef average of $1.34 in December.
The January food basket cost consumers $306 on an annual basis than it did in January of 1973. Higher farm prices accounted for more than half of the gain.
THE FIGURES SHOWED, however, that middleman spreads were up 137, or 17 per cent.
couldn't be halted this year. He said the government might have to act to push the economy toward recovery but urged against a tax increase.
Middlemen, whose margins for processing and selling food had been expanding for months, had a reduced share in January of $111, a drop of $17 or 1.8 per cent from
According to department calculations, farmers received $769 in January as their share of the retail basket cost, up $47, or 6.6 per cent, from the annual rate in December. Farmers got 29.1 per cent, or $173, more than in January of 1973.
A spokesman at Mobil said a decision probably wouldn't be made until late Feb.
THE AMERICAN BAKERS Association held a 40-minute "save our bread" rally on Capitol Hill and then took its campaign to Washington, where they were lobbying to assure an adequate domestic wheat supply. The National Wheat Growth Association co-sponsored that the albeit small effort.
The Oil & Gas Journal, reporting on a 55-city survey, said the average retail price of gasoline on Feb 12, 1974, was 45.76 cents a month; on Mar 15, 1973, the average price was 36.95.
President Nixon said in his news conference Monday night that the crisis stage of the energy crisis was over. He predicted that there was a better-than-even chance the nation could avoid gasoline rationing that gasoline lines would get shorter by spring.
Docking Won't Run Party Sources Say
TOPEKA (AP) - Gov. Robert Docking has informed close friends, political associates and staff members that he won't be a candidate for political office this year, the Associated Press has learned.
Party sources said Docking's decision was "irreversible."
Coal Mine Shutdown Due to Gas Shortage
They have been told that Docking will make an announcement of his decision to leave candidate politics at the end of his current two-year term at the Democrats'
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- Mines produced 100,000 tons of coal a day were closed yesterday as miners in West Virginia and Missouri didn't get enough gasoline to get to work.
The West Virginia Coal Association said it believed about 9,000 men were out of work in mines closed in southern West Virginia would produce about 75,000 tons on an average day. Most of these mines produce metallurgical coal, a high-grade fuel used in the mine.
In Virginia, the president of the United Mine Workers district said about 40 per cent of the miners' cases were treated.
cars didn't have enough gasoline to take them to work.
One mine worker official stressed that the shutdown of the area mines was not a strike.
Rep. Carl D. Perkins, D.Ky., warned in Washington that eastern Kentucky coal miners would strike if no more gasoline was fed into the area.
A spokesman for Bethel Elkhorn Coal Corp. said four of its mines in eastern Kentucky might have to close today because there was a station in Letcher County that had any gas.
Enrollment Sets Spring Record
A spring semester record of 17,955 students enrolled at the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas, according to official figures released yesterday by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Enrollment at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., is 1,790. That makes total enrollment for the University of Kansas 45,826.
Miners said gasoline had been short in the area for the past few weeks, but the situation had grown in the final days of this month.
Lawrence campus full-time-equivalent student enrolment, on which state appropriations are based, is 17,730, an increase over last spring.
This is a decrease of 728 from last fall's enrollment when 18,683 were enrolled. However, spring semester enrollment is lower than the fall's enrollment.
Washington Day dinner here Saturday night.
Gasoline is a necessity in the sparsely populated mountains because miners living in scattered towns may have to drive 50 to 60 miles each day to get to and from work.
Party officials want Atty. Gen. Vern Miller to announce his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for governor at the same time Docking reveals he is bowing
However, sources indicated that Miller might not be ready to make such an announcement. But there appears little doubt that the source that he is a candidate for governor.
The party hierarchy also wants Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., to announce Saturday night that he will seek the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator, which some had expected Docking to seek. The seat of incumbent Bob Dole is up for re-election this year.
However, Roy is expected to reveal only that he was reconsidering his announcement made here in December that he would seek re-election to the U.S. House. Roy said at that time he would reassess his decision regarding against running for the Senate.
WIBW radio and television here reported last night that speculation was ripe among Kansas legislators that Docking had decided to retire from candidate politics. WIBW cited what it called "feverish" activity on the part of Roy's people as an indication that the 2nd District congressman might be gearing up to run against Dole.
WIBW statehouse reporter Roger N. Wilson said Roy was believed to have told the authorities that he was dead.
See DOCKING Back Page
WASHINGTON (AP)—An oil industry advisory group warned yesterday that petroleum consumption must be cut even more sharply this spring than it was this winter, or the nation may have to face gasoline rationing.
Gas Use Must Decline Advisory Group Warns
The warning from the National Petroleum Council (NPC) came after President Nixon told a news conference the nation had been running a vaccine rationing probably could be avoided.
The NPC said petroleum consumption in
Women's Sports Hurting Programs Short of Money. Facilities
Editors note: This is the first of a three-part series on Women's intercollegiate
By BETH RETONDE Kansan Staff Reporter
The biggest problems facing women's intercollegiate athletics at the University of Kansas are money and space, Sharon Drydale, assistant professor of physical education and coordinator of women's athletics here, said yesterday.
Phase two of Robinson Gymnasium construction, which should begin if the Kansas Board of Regents and the state legislature approve expansion plans, should help alleviate the space problem, Drysdale said.
The money problem is another matter. The women's athletic program is run by the Women's Intercollegiate Sports Club and is financed in part by the Student Senate. For this academic year, the senate appropriated $9,300 for the program.
The program is run with the cooperation
of the physical education department. Although the department doesn't directly fund the program, Drysdale said, it gives substantial indirect aid to the program.
THE PROGRAM uses the department's facilities and secretaries and the teachers who work for the department are released from duty so they can spend some time coaching.
Drysdale said that this semester 50 physical education courses were closed so teachers could spend more time coaching the women's teams.
Drysdale said the program was currently functioning within its budget by asking the women involved in the sports to assume some of the costs of their participation.
The additional help of state funding for the program is a possibility for next year. The program will receive $8,375 from the state to help finance the program. Although the request was deleted
One woman's father has helped to finance the team she plays on.
in the governor's budget message, the House Ways and Means committee added it to the legislative appropriations bill for the unsupported universities and colleges.
Drysdale said that if the legislature approves the $8,575 for the program, the
See ATHLETICS Back Page
STATE AND SCHOOL officials had expressed the opinion that the state had a moral and legal obligation to provide equitable funding to women's athletics.
State Rep. Albert Campbell, D-Laredo, has said that he would rather supply funds to the program now than to wait for someone to take legal action and perhaps win a court decision that would force the legislature to act.
One state representative, Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, has said that there was no defense for putting state money into men's athletics and not for women. The state gives $360,585 to men's athletics at the six state schools.
the second quarter of the year must be reduced 400,000 barrels a day more than the
Even if the Arab oil embargo, which cut off shipments to the United States last year, is lifted, normality in the energy supply system can't be achieved for some time. NPC said.
The National Petroleum Council is a semi-official group composed primarily of oil company executives, but with official participation by government officials and a mandate to advise the government on petroleum policy.
In other related developments:
—Energy chief William E. Simon defended administration oil policies from senators who said they and the public didn't believe Nixon's statement that the energy crisis had passed. Simon told the senators that all Nixon meant to say was that he was distressed by the long lines at gasoline stations and that he should locate more gasoline to relieve those lines.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Montana, told newsmen that "the shortage remains and so does the crisis" and was prepared for immediate gasoline rationing.
- Mines producing 100,000 tons of coal a day were shut down in West Virginia and Virginia as miners complained that they couldn't get enough汽油 to get to work.
- Rhode Island and California became the latest states to announce plans for a gasoline tax on motorists to buy gasoline on alternate days. The system has become mandatory in New York.
"The American Automobile Association said Atlantic Coast states and parts of the country are in need of help by the gasoline shortage. The association said its weekly check found a downward trend in gasoline availability, with stations continuing to operate for shorter hours.
2
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news associated press capsules
Staff Says Nixon Inquiry Should Go to House
Special Days
The special inspector's staff has decided that any action involving alleged incidental involvement in the Watergate scandal should be up to the House impeachment inquiry rather than a grand jury, it was learned yesterday.
That decision, reached after months of study and debate, was disclosed after President Nixon said Monday night that he had rejected a grand jury investigation.
Request for his testimony.
Sources close to the investigation said that the request for presidential testimony was made at the insistence of the grand jurors and that unless they continued to insist, no effort would be made to force Nixon to testify.
Kissinger in Syria for Disengagement Talks
Secretary of State Hate A. Kissinger arrived in Dammascot last night of hoping of getait of a list of Israel war prisoners and generating movement to Palestine.
Syria's foreign Minister, Abdul Mahmud Khadram, welcomed Kisinger at the airport and the two headed for president Hafer Asaf's palace for their meeting.
passenger arrived in Damascus after leaving London where he talked with British leaders about the energy crisis, the Middle East situation and United States policy.
Jury to Try Mitchell, Stans Nearly Complete
Federal Judge Lee Gagliardi completed a jury yesterday to try former Atty. Genn. John N. Mitchell and former Secretary Secretary
The two are charged with obstructing justice in return for a $200,000 secret contribution to President Nixon's re-election campaign.
Once S2 or more prospective jurors are approved, both the government and defense are free to exercise any or all of 34 peremptory challenges. The government is not required to approve any
Watergate Ignored in Congressional Election
Watergate has taken a back seat to energy, inflation and foreign policy in a special congressional election campaign to fill a seat vacated by a
Neither the Republican nor the Democratic candidate in next week's election in Ohio's traditionally Republican 1st District has stressed
The March election will be the third of six special congressional elections scheduled this year in the nation. The two previous elections also have been delayed because of technical problems.
Reward Offered for Return of Masterpiece
London city authorities offered a reward yesterday for the recovery of a former masterpiece taken from a London museum. The mystery deemer was identified as Mr. Coulson.
Ilydid Harrington, deputy leader of the Greater London Council, which governs the British capital, said: "We will not in any circumstances enter into a deal with the UK."
Harrisonng made the vague reward offer after a man calling himself Harry telephoned a British newspaper Monday night and demanded $1.15 million for food to be distributed to the poor of the troubled Caribbean island where he was living. The painting will be destroyed if the money isn't paid in 14 days, he said.
Rebel Soldiers Take Over Ethiopian City
Rebel army units took over Asmara, Ethiopia's second-largest city, yesterday to back demands for more pay, unofficial sources said.
There were reports that the uprising in Asmara, a city of 250,000 about 450 miles north of the capital city of Addis Ababa, had also spread 90 miles further.
Unconfirmed reports said as many as 10,000 soldiers were involved in the bloodless mutiny at Asmara. The reports said the biggest garrison of Ethiopia's four-division 45,000 man army had rebelled, but there was no official confirmation from Addis Ababa.
By BUNNY MILLER Kensan Staff Reporter
Students Can Benefit From Tax Laws
If you take the Pill or have had a legal abortion, acupuncture or sterilization surgery, you can now deduct them as part of your medical care. You return. This is just one of several recent decisions by the Internal Revenue Service that have caused more confusion than ever.
Although students are often baffled at the complexities of the income tax return form, most of them have it relatively easy, local income tax services said yesterday.
Most students use the short Form 1040A with its standardized deductions table, such as Item #275.
"The average student doesn't take the itemized deduction," said Mogens Andersen, manager of H&R Block, Inc., at 723 Massachusetts St.
A student can earn up to $2,060 a year and not have to file a return at all, be said, because anyone who joins standard a tax return will receive a standard deduction of $1,300, and a personal tax credit.
"The reasons why students who make less file tax returns is because they want to get their money withheld in taxes back," he said. "$2,000 will get all of his withholding back."
Few students benefit from using the longer form and itemizing deductions because they don't earn enough and they do not understand the secretary for Murt I. Beal Accounting and
"They usually deduct some medical expenses and contributions," she said. "In some cases then can deduct school expenses.
There are six businesses in Lawrence that process individual income tax returns. Every year probably less than 200 students use the services.
Several services, however, reported that many more students call in for information to help them fill out their forms. Often, a student's parents will take care of his tax form for him, said Jim Christening, owner of the Tax Service at 2529 Missouri St.
The services take from 15 minutes to an hour to work the average student's federal and state income tax returns, depending on the income forms and special problems the student has.
Charges vary from service to service. Sieg said his firm charged a minimum of $10 an hour. Most students pay H&R Block's minimum fee of $ .Andersson said. He added that this fee had remained the same for many years. Christiinasson said that his minimum fee
Christianson said that his minimum fee was $10 but that he charged less and sometimes nothing to persons who didn't earn very much.
Gerald Kahn, owner of Kahn Bookkeeping and Tax Service at 147 E. 23rd St., charges a base fee of $900 for he handheld the bookings for quite a few foreign clients with special social security problems.
Tax Service at 7th and Massachusetts streets.
Nixon Future Unknown House Speaker Says
WASHINGTON (AP)—House Speaker Carl Albert, D-Oklahoma, said yesterday he didn't know whether President Nixon would be impeached.
Commenting on Nixon's statement at a Monday night news conference that he didn't expect to be impeached, Albert told reporters:
"If I would see as far ahead as the "President, I'd be president instead of something else . . . I don't now what will happen."
tunning problem, Albert said. "It may it has always been a problem, 'It's still here.'"
Asked whether he agreed with Nixon's statement that the energy crises is over, Mr. Bush asked if his party would
Asked whether he would support a price rollback on crude oil, the paying energy bill provides. Albert said, "I don't think it matters," and Piper wells. That would be self-defeating."
Stripper wells are those that produce a minimum amount of oil. Their output has a much higher rate than most other wells.
When a reporter said Nixon had made
distinction between a crisis and a con-
Albert said he would support the bill as it would eventually emerge, if he were called on to vote. He normally votes only in case of a tie.
"There ought to be a price rollback on propane or the oil companies will be the most unpopular people in Oklahoma among the poor people," said Albert.
American Premiere THE FLATS
John Boyd K.U. Experimental Theatre 8:00 p.m.Feb.27,28 March1,2
Reinhardt said Preminger signed a contract yesterday to speak here on March
Otto Preminger, director of the movies "Exodus," and "Anatomy of a Murder," will replace William Friedkin in the Festival of the Arts, Curtis Reinhardt, Centralia, Mo., senior and director of the Festival, said yesterday.
Preminger Replacement For Friedkin in Festival
864-3982
Preminger's film, "The Moon Is Blue" caused a major corsetship battle in Kansas where it was defended.
Friedkin canceled his appearance, Reinhard said, because of exhaustion from directing "The Exorcist" Friedkin also wrote a memoir about the connection" and "The Rows in the Band."
the wedding's movies, scheduled to be shown the week before the festival, have also been replaced with four of Priminger's films: "Furry and Bess," "And Exodus."
first successful challenge to the Motion Picture Code.
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Think of the perfect crime...
Then go one step further
SLEUTH
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX
SUA Popular Films
Michael Cain Sir Laurence Olivier
Friday, March 1
7:00-9:30
Saturday, March 2
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30
Monday, March 4
Mort Weisinger, Editor of Superman Comics
Special Films
SUPERMAN
PRESENTATION
8:00 Free Kansas Union
Kansas Union
Film Society
TOKYO STORY
d. Otu
Thursday, Feb. 28
7:30
Kansas Union
Classical Films
LES VISITEURS DU SOIR
d. Marcel Carne
Wednesday, Feb. 27
7:30-9:30
'75c Kansas Uni
Children's Films
SWIF YOS SWIF YOS SWIF YOS SWIF YOS SWIF YOS SWIF
BRATS(Laurel&Hardy
SKINNY AND FATTY
PADDLE TO THE SEA
Sunday, March 3
A student would probably be charged $5 at Troop Tax at 1304 Massachusetts St., said Jill Carr. "It's a bit of a challenge."
B1G BOOT
SALE
Blue
Hiker
Boot
8.95
orig. 1395
14.95
Casual
Work
Boot
9.95
orig. 1495
ENGINEER BOOT (orig.2395)
Casual Work Boot
9 95
orig. 14 95
Albert L. Park, owner of Albert L. Park
Income Tax Service at 704 Massachusetts
- NYLON HIKI
Combat Boots 9¹⁸ orig.15⁹⁵
BOOT 5¹⁹ orig.8¹⁹⁵
Steel toe Rubber sole 13¹⁴ orig.21⁴⁵
Cork sole Work Boot 11¹⁵ orig.11⁴⁵
Blue Hiker Boot
895
orig.1395
1495
Casual Work Boot
995
orig.1495
*NYLON HIKE
BOOT 595 orig. 895
ALL RUBBER BOOTS DRASTICALLY REDUCED!
SUNFLOWER
SURPLUS
804 MASS 213-5000
"I'll give them instructional service for free," he said.
St. said that he had a minimum charge of
nothing, but that he often charged students
not only on time.
many more too!
OPEN
til 8 p.m.
THURS.
KU-Y Advocate Series
SHOULD MARIJANA
BE LEGALIZED?
WITH:
Lowell Borgen
Dean Burkhead
Ken Harmon
Mark Blumberg
Brian Bauerle
Bing Hart
Clair Smissman, Moderator
THURSDAY, FEB. 28, 1974 7:30 p.m.
BIG EIGHT ROOM—UNION
APPLICATIONS Being Accepted for Positions of Resident Director & Resident Assistants NAISMITH HALL FOR "74"-"75
MASS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS
Announcing:
STUDENT NIGHT
Every Wednesday from 5 p.m. to 12 Midnight
order
your total
20% off
Home of special delicatessen sand-wiches—pastrami, corned beef, smoked sausages, 12 kinds of cheeses. COORS ON TAP!
Everyone Invited!
941 Massachusetts 843-9705
Out they go at drastic reductions!
A man and woman push a cart filled with paintings. A woman is pulling a basket filled with clothes from the back of the cart.
(THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY)
TRANSFER SALE
We combined all our other stores from corner to corner, rack to rack and transferred all exciting winter fashions from our Kansas City stores to our Lawrence store at low, low prices.
the VILLAGE SET
SWEATERS
$4
reg. to $18
BLOUSES
922 Mass.
$3 & $4
reg. to '16
SKIRTS
$ 5
reg. to '36
ALL SALES FINAL
PANTS
$5
reg. to '30
JACKETS
$4 & $6
reg. to '38
COATS
$10
reg. to '50
DRESSES
$ 5
reg. to '34
ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
3
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 16th ANNUAL DOG SALE
HUGE SAVINGS ON
DISCONTINUED ITEMS, TRADE INS, DEMONSTRATORS
Doggy
See hundreds of sale items . . . all fine merchandise . . . on display and marked with special red tags! Save with all bottom dollar prices . . . this year's lowest! Come early, many unlisted values. Hurry . . . this famous brand equipment won't last long at these prices!
SALE STARTS AT 8:00 SHARP
35mm CAMERAS
CAMERA
Mamiya
| | Original Retail | Sale Price |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Mamiya S/Kerol 1000 DTL 1.8 | 295.00 | 179.00 |
| Nikon F Photomic | 250.00 | 199.00 |
| Nikon F Photomic TN (used) | 425.00 | 269.00 |
| Kodak Auto SIF 6 | 99.95 | 24.99 |
| Nikon Toshiba 100 I 4 Pro | 139.00 | 24.99 |
| Kodak Refilina I 4 | 180.00 | 98.50 |
| Kodak Infantic Reflax | 249.00 | 119.00 |
| Konica Auto Reflex F1.4 | 394.95 | 149.00 |
| Canon TLF L1.8 | 298.00 | 199.99 |
| Honeywell Spatialite I.8 | 359.00 | 199.99 |
| Honeywell Spatialite I.8 | 359.50 | 199.99 |
| Honeywell Spatialite I.8 | 389.50 | 199.99 |
| Olympus EC2 | 119.95 | 69.99 |
| Olympus EC3 | 119.95 | 69.99 |
| Leica I/cw Lens | 189.50 | 99.50 |
| Rich TLC 401 | 339.95 | 199.88 |
| Canon LV F1.8 | 289.00 | 50.00 |
| Agfa Hilt Frame | 59.95 | 9.98 |
| Availability 17 | 225.95 | 149.99 |
| Contactflex 126 | 189.50 | 99.88 |
| Topcon t1c Auto | 289.95 | 299.88 |
| Nikorex B Body | 195.00 | 59.00 |
| Nikon I/2 Body (used) | 425.00 | 199.99 |
| Mamiya/S Konica 1000 DTL Pro | 329.95 | 199.99 |
7
YOU FIX IT DELIGHT
All kinds of cameras, projectors, at crazy prices. Everything works work, but when else you buy a Single lens reflex for $5.007
99¢ to $995
LARGE FORMAT CAMERAS
99c to $9^{95}
Original SALE
Retail PRICE
Mamiya
Mamiya 220 Body 178.00 119.99
Yashica D w/case 120.00 79.09
Yashica 124W g/w case 180.00 119.99
Yashica 125W M/M 100.00 79.09
Mamiya C330 Body 305.00 129.99
Omega Rapid 150 430.00 299.98
Xena X-16 590.00 699.00
Pentax x7 998.00 698.00
Peart River Penetex 69.95 34.95
Mamiya S2A Black 69.50 39.95
Peart River 23 (used) 190.00 89.00
SLIDE SORTER
Sturdy metal construction with transu-
cent plastic slide holder. Shows 40 pic-
tures.
Reg. $6.95 Only $399
MOVIE CAMERAS
1. A firearm is a weapon used for self-defense or combat.
2. A machine gun is a weapon used for rapid fire in close combat.
FILM CAMERA
Original Retail SALE
Yashica Super 800 275.00 179.88
Kodak XL 33 119.50 19.99
Kodak XL 55 214.50 15.99
Canon 318M 145.00 79.99
Sankyo 250 XL 214.50 19.99
Sankyo 250 XL 259.95 19.99
Kodak M2 39.95 9.99
Kodak M4 159.95 9.99
Bayer Primer 8 94.99
Kodak M 30 104.50 69.99
Bell & Howell 371 99.95 49.99
Bell & Howell 491 89.95 49.99
Bauer Star XL 147.50 119.99
Bauer C3 Zoom 146.44 119.99
Bauer CIM Zoom 197.50 89.99
Bauer C伊野 119.99 59.99
Bauer C Royal RE 810.00 649.00
Bauer SXM 649.00 390.00
Sankyo CME660 269.99 189.99
Rotel S187 119.90 199.94
Ektaound 130.00 199.95 154.99
Ektaound 140.00 199.95 219.49
Bauer 100 Macro 300.00 84.99
B嚣 105 Macro 300.00 84.99
GADGET BAGS
PRICES NOT GOOD UNTIL SATURDAY MARCH 2
Leather and Vinyl Zipper top with front pouch.
Orig. Retail $19-$15.95
Now $299 to $699
Tripod
Retail Price
Quickset Super Husky 76.00 $49.99
Vivitar 110 21.95 $15.99
Vivitar 120 31.95 $19.99
Vivitar 120 31.95 $19.99
Vivitar 120 31.95 $19.99
Kafer Monopod 18.75 $49.99
Star D Pro Tripod 69.95 $54.99
Sunset Stet 4000 39.95 $33.99
Bilora Monopod 19.95 $9.99
Kalter Monopod w/head 19.95 $7.99
Castle Seal Pod 16.95 $4.99
TRIPODS
MOVIE PROJECTORS
1
Original Retail
Price
Honeywell Filmcatic A
199.95
99.95
Honeywell Super 8 Zoom
169.95
99.95
Lentar Dual 8
169.95
99.95
Kodak M03 Super 8
69.95
24.99
Vivitar Dual 8
139.95
69.95
Honeywell 890
169.50
99.95
Bell & Howell 1623
149.95
99.88
Ektacapgrade B Sound
199.95
119.00
Bolex II B 5 Series
189.50
99.95
Kodak M W
189.50
99.95
Bell & Howell 1623
199.95
129.99
Noris L100
199.95
159.90
Ektacapgrade 120
130.00
159.90
Argo 6mm
69.65
9.99
Bell & Howell 8mm
169.95
99.95
Kodak M 68
169.95
94.99
CASSETTE TAPE
30, 60, 90, 120 Minute
Famous Brands—Disc. Package Style
ALL 1/2 PRICE
>
SLIDE PROJECTORS
VOLKSWAGEN
BINOCULARS
Retail PRICE
Minolta AF2 Projector 130.00 99.99
Bell & Howell 303 69.95 19.99
Sawyer 712 Rotomatic 149.95 19.99
Kodak Carousel 80HDC (demo) 244.50 169.99
Kodak Carousel 760H 164.50 129.99
Crestrum Color 130.00 169.99
Leitz Praduald Color 390.00 150.00
Sawyer 570 Auto Focus 124.95 150.00
Bell & Howell 992D 199.95 139.99
Léica 35mm Praduald 229.00 199.99
Bell & Howell Cube 975 119.95 19.99
Bell & Howell Cube 977 119.95 19.99
Bell & Howell Autoload 89.95 19.99
| | Original Retail | SALE PRICE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 11% Bushnell Wide Angle | 59.50 | 39.99 |
| 11% Bushnell Wide Angle | 52.50 | 39.99 |
| MV/Maximilian Wide Angle | 24.50 | 19.99 |
| *7x35 Sportview* | 43.50 | 24.99 |
| *7x35 Sportview* | 51.50 | 34.99 |
| *7x50 Sportview* | 51.50 | 34.99 |
| *7x50 Featherlight* | 94.50 | 69.99 |
| *7x35 Rangemaster* | 168.50 | 109.99 |
| *7x35 17 Banner Instalocus* | 65.50 | 19.99 |
| *7x35 Featherlight* | 84.50 | 99.99 |
| *7x35 Custom Instalocus* | 137.50 | 99.99 |
ELECTRONIC FLASH UNITS
1390
Retail | Price
------- | ------
Vivitar 252 | 59.95 | 34.99
Vivitar 202 | 39.95 | 27.99
Bright BISCA | 79.95 | 49.99
Capro F1 66 | 48.50 | 24.99
Vivitar 352 Thyrium | 99.95 | 74.99
Graftlo 250 | 102.45 | 59.99
Miria 45 | 249.00 | 179.99
Capro F1 3 | 17.95 | 14.99
Bauer F1 3 Auto | 89.95 | 39.99
Honeywell 882 | 109.90 | 59.99
Honeywell 100 | 99.95 | 59.99
Vivitar 281 | 109.95 | 59.99
Vivitar 292 | 149.50 | 119.99
Rocky Sensor for 292 | 52.45 | 19.99
Honeywell 100 | 34.95 | 14.99
F
Aluminum deluxe case for those who want a rigid, rugged case. This sleek case is designed for both carrying and shipping.
AVAILABLE IN THESE
SIZES—12x12x5, 18x14x5,
22x16x5, 16x10x10, 20x10x13,
18x14x8, 22x16x10.
]
FIBERBILT ADAPT-A-CASE
ENLARGERS
Available in quick, easy, do if your partitioning system or with solid foam that is made to fit it (you equipment)
This popular Adapt-ACase made of Black ABS moulded plastic gives you the versatility of standard Adapt-ACases with lighter weight and less NOT ILLUS TRATED.
ORIGINAL RETAIL
$17.00 TO $129.00
TAPE RECORDERS
Original Retail SALE PRICE
Testrite 2x2 59.95 9.99
Omega B2 K1I 224.95 159.99
Bogen 2 K1I 114.00 159.99
Teaser 2 C II 245.00 179.99
Bogen 2 X L I 244.95 169.99
Bogen 6 Combo 149.50 119.99
Omega D2V XL 4x5 450.00 325.00
Dermal M30 I w/ items 125.95 89.95
Dermal F 20 w/ items 79.95 89.95
Testrite 4 x 5 Enlarger 109.95 99.95
ID
| Model | Mint |
| :--- | :--- |
| Sunset 100 | 99.95 | 14.99 |
| Ross 8285 | 49.95 | 14.99 |
| Hitachi 33 Compact | 89.95 | 79.99 |
| Hitachi TKR 3100 AUM/FM | 44.95 | 79.99 |
| Hitachi TKR 1000 AUM/FM | 100.95 | 79.99 |
DALITE LENTICULAR SCREEN
Original SALE
Retail PRICI
---
ENLARGING PRECIO
Argenta, Agfa, Kodak, Ilford
8x10, 11x14, 16x20
SELECTED GROUP
ALL ½ PRICE
ALL 1/2 PRICE
Retail $22.70
1600 sq. inch viewing area with heavy metal tripod.
Only
$999
7
F
A100
4
A. B. C. D.
REEL & CAN SETS
For regular 8mm Film
200' reg. 89° now 19°
400' reg. 99° now 29°
400' reg. 99' now 29'
This Fiberbit case can be used to secure a resistant Vulcanator for years if trouble free service is required for both carrying and shipping.
-
DOG SALE PRICE
$3^{49}$ to $39^{95}
DARKROOM AIDS
500
8x10 Power Rotary Print Driller 169.50 99.88
Honeywell Film Dryer 34.50 99.88
Yankee 11x14 Paper Safe 14.95 5.99
10" Paper Cutter 14.95 4.99
Grass Clitter 24.95 9.99
Patterson Major Focus Finder 17.95 9.99
Yammer 35mm Tank only 17.95 9.99
Original SALE
Retail PRICE
PRINT TRAYS
Print big pictures easily at home using these tray bargains.
11x14 Tray $1.99
Reg. retail $2.95
14x17 Tray $2.99
Reg. retail $7.95
16x20 Tray $5.99
Reg. retail $10.60
20x24 Tray $6.99
Reg. retail $17.90
>
L
POLAROID
Camera
Original SALE
Retail PRICE
Original
Retail
SALE%
Big Shot
19.95
9.95
420 Camera
19.95
44.99
Polaroid 100
159.50
44.99
Polaroid 210
19.95
29.99
Polaroid 360 w/o Flash
169.50
29.99
Polaroid 350
169.50
29.99
Polaroid 330
199.50
29.99
Polaroid 440 (used)
99.95
42.99
LENSES
---
P
SUPER TELEPHOTO
>
Reg. 89.95
400mm f 6.3 lens makes close up, nature,
sports, and scenic photos. Fits most SLR.
Cameras with adapter.
L
$39.99
For Pontax, Mamiya Sekor, Ricoh,
FUSION
20mm 1.8 Auto Vilait Used | Original Retail | PRICE
20mm 1.8 Auto Lentar | 209.95 | 99.99
21mm 1.8 Auto Venus | 169.50 | 99.99
21mm 1.8 Auto Venus | 99.95 | 99.99
21mm 1.5 Auto Lentar | 109.50 | 49.99
21mm 1.5 Auto Venus | 99.95 | 49.99
135mm 1.8 Auto Venus | 94.95 | 99.99
135mm 1.8 Auto Venus | 94.95 | 99.99
200mm 1.5 Auto Venus | 124.95 | 64.99
75/230 | 1.8 Auto Lentar | 199.95 | 99.99
35mm 2.8 Super Takumar | 179.50 | 79.50
21mm 1.8 Auto Lentar Used | 89.95 | 29.99
35mm 1.8 Auto Hanlarian Used | 89.95 | 29.99
Takumar ... 179.50 ... 89.99
For Minolta Automatic
F
| | Retail | Price |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 28mm f.2 Auto Venus | 99.95 | $9.99 |
| 35mm f.2 Auto Venus | 109.95 | $9.99 |
| 35mm f.2 Auto Rokkor Vilar | 109.95 | $9.99 |
| 135mm f.2 Auto Rokkor Used | 159.95 | $9.99 |
| 200mm f.1.5 Auto Venus Used | 124.95 | $0.00 |
| 200mm f.2 Auto Rokkor | 335.00 | $10.00 |
| 200mm f.2 Auto TAKKO | 650.00 | $10.00 |
>
200mm f 3.5 AUTO VIVITAR LENS
Mfg. Retail $173.50 ONLY $6999 COMPLETE
L
NLY $6999
Makes great distances come close
Available to fit Pentax, Nikon, Exakta,
Ritch, Minolta, Miranda, Leicaflex,
Tocon, Canon, Petri.
>
Canon Automatic Lens Original SALE
Detailed PRICE
AUTOMATIC LENS
135mm f2.8 Vivitar FL镜 119.50 $9.99
200mm f3.5 Vivitar FL镜 149.50 $7.49
200mm f3.5 Bushnell FL镜 124.50 $6.99
75/230 f4.5 Lenar Zoom 249.50 $9.99
135mm f2.5 Canon FD New 267.00 $19.00
135mm f2.5 Milda Auto 198.90 $19.00
135mm f2.5 Milda Auto 89.99 $32.98
135mm f2.8 Auto Milda 79.95 $32.98
MOTOR CARS
| MOTOR CARS | Original NICKEL Price |
| :--- | :--- |
| 21mm f 1.8 Auto Lens | 169.50 | $99.99 |
| 25mm f 3.5 Auto Lens | 109.50 | $49.99 |
| 35mm f 2.8 Auto Venus | 89.95 | $49.99 |
| 35mm f 2.8 Auto Venus Used | 124.50 | $49.99 |
| 200mm f 3.5 Auto Venus Used | 124.50 | $45.00 |
| 24mm f 1.8 Auto Nikkor Used | 269.50 | $189.99 |
| 300mm f 4.5 Auto Nikkor Used | 379.50 | $239.99 |
| 300mm f 4.5 Auto Nikcor Used | 390.00 | $299.99 |
| 135mm f 3.5 Auto Nikcor Used | 189.95 | $99.99 |
| 135mm f 3.5 Auto Nikcor Used | 189.95 | $99.99 |
| 135mm f 3.5 Auto Nikcor Used | 189.95 | $99.99 |
| 35mm f 2.8 Auto Vivitar T4 | 99.95 | $99.99 |
| 35mm f 2.8 Auto Vivitar T4 | 99.95 | $99.99 |
F
7
Pentax/Mamiya Lens Riot
Brand new lenses in the popular screw in mount now on display.
20mm f 2.8 Reg. 79.95 Now '49'
35mm f 2.8 Reg. 79.95 Now '39'
135mm f 2.8 Reg. 79.95 Now '39'
PRESET LENSES Adapt to fit most
single lens cameras
Original retail price
12mm Lens F5鱼眼
28mm Lens F5 Vivilar
35mm Lens F5 Vivilar
50mm Lens F5 Vivilar
135mm Lens F5 Lentar
105mm Lens F5 Lentar
250mm Lens Mirror
300mm Lens Mirror
300mm F5 Waco
500mm F5 Woco
500mm F5 Focus
250mm F5 Focus
29.95 89.99
83.50 49.95
59.50 39.95
59.50 39.95
59.95 24.99
59.95 19.95
59.95 19.95
149.50 119.99
89.95 119.99
124.95 124.99
59.95 124.99
59.95 19.99
WOLF COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
116 West Eighth, Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66503
4
Wednesdav, February 27, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN commer Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
No Eulogy in Burial
"I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.
The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interred with their hones."
—Antony in "Julius Caesar"
Act III, Scene n William Shakespeare
The 1973-74 Student Senate met last week to bury itself and turn the reins of student government over to the newly-elected senators.
It is good that the senate met to bury itself and not to pat itself on the back. Had the senate praised its past actions instead of letting its noble deeds be entombed, it would have been embarrassed.
The only praiseworthy action the outgoing senate could rightfully claim was its silence and approval of the deeds of student body officers Mert Buckley and Nancy Archer.
Buckley can be credited with a $2 reduction of the student activity fee that each student must pay; a nearly self-sufficient campus bus system; and a reduction in the price of a single game student football ticket. Archer can be credited for not kowtowing to the threats of pressure groups during last spring's budget hearings and the organization of Higher Education Week in November.
During their administration, the malfunctioning Emporium
Bookstore died; the ill-conceived Associated Students of Kansas (ASK) proposal was defeated; and the inmates in the Senate Code were effected.
At first glance, these accomplishments don't appear to merit a grand eulogy. But when compared to the accomplishments of previous officers, taken in the context of a military opponent's and considering a silent senate, Buckley and Archer are indeed worthy of praise.
Previous student body officers turned deaf ears to student's complaints and suggestions, but Buckley listened to them by the hour. The uniform answer in the past to criticism or talk with the legislators about it the next time I'm in Topeka."
Buckley and Archer ran unopposed for their offices. As many student politicos will candidly admit, they seek office only because it looks good on their shirts. But the bench for Buckley and Archer to have done nothing, but instead they earned their salaries.
An oligarchy such as Caesar's or Buckley and Archer's is undesirable in a democratic form of government. But they did rise from the midst of fat, sleek-headed men to earn a decent burial.
Jeffrey Stinson
States Suffer Gas Pains
Motorists in Kansas and elsewhere in the nation may soon be confronted with another adverse effect of the energy crisis. This new phenomenon too little consumption of gasoline is due to too much consumption.
As gasoline sales have declined in response to rising fuel prices and consumer restraint, state revenues from gasoline taxes have also declined. The Missouri Highway Department has reported that gasoline sales are down 17 per cent compared to sales for Jan. 1973. This decline has depleted highway department funds used for the construction and maintenance of state roads.
Caught between rising costs and declining revenues, highway departments may not be able to provide adequate service for motorists.
The situation in Kansas isn't as bad, so far. Kansas officials reported that fuel tax receipts were up slightly over last year, but it is not clear whether the worsens in the coming months Kansas fuel tax receipts will drop.
The Missouri Highway Department is planning to ask for a one or two cent increase in the gasoline sales tax to cover increased costs. At first glance, this appears to be a good solution because an increase
in the gasoline tax would tax those who benefit most from highway maintenance and would discourage consumption by increasing prices.
In the long run, increasing the gasoline tax may not provide the solution. As the price of gasoline increases, consumption will be further discouraged and tax receipts will continue to decline. Although this might help the fuel shortage somewhat, the nation's highway system would suffer. The result would be a diminution of highway safety and comfort. In spite of the rising interest in railroads and other means of transportation, cars, trucks and buses, and the highways that carry them are of primary importance for the nation's transportation system.
An alternative source of financing highway maintenance and construction should be found. The Kansas Highway Department had requested that $27 million from automobile sales taxes be diverted to the highway fund. This proposal was defeated by the Kansas House. If fuel supplies increase, the highway department will depleted. At present, however, the legislature's failure to develop some alternative form of highway financing appears to be a major mistake. —John Bender
Heroin Hysteria Recalls '50s Scare
By PATRICK OWENS
NEW YORK—Is the current hysteria behind her as盗贼 and self-defeating the anticommunity hysteria of the 1990s? I've suspected as much for a while. Now comes a writer named Steve Kissel, who has criticized of American drug control policies.
Writing in the Progressive magazine, Slade does an excellent, if necessarily brief, job of supporting the following unorthodoxy:
1. Heroin is no kind of killer. A heroin addict left alone to peacefully to attend his addiction can lead a productive life as a useful member of society.
2. The outlawing of heroin and the scourging of those who use it have resulted in the vast social pathology which is seen as the heroin problem in the United States.
For example: "In 1962, the U.S. Supreme Court characterized the adict as 'one of the walking dead.' The court's listing of the fearful symptoms which plague the addict is a piteous, contemptuous and unsupported view of addiction.
3. Opiates, including heroin, do not prompt criminal behavior. Their effect is, instead, soothing. it is the need to acquire an obsession of ostracism of addicts that leads to crime.
These are large claims. They are strongly supported.
"The recent, much-praised consumers' union report carefully traces the laborious efforts of a 1966 study in British Columbia which tried but failed to turn up scientific proof of assumed dangers of heroin. The researchers surveyed drug literature, contacted government agencies and queried addiction experts without success. This year's report, in part, helps confirm the 'amazing bland' effects of heroin on the mind and body.
"In an article a year ago in the Public interest magazine, James Q. Wilson, professor of government at Harvard and head of the President's National Advisory Council for Drug Abuse Prevention, admitted that no specific pathologies—serious illness or psychological breakdown known to benefit her use per se. Fifty years of scientific evidence support these myth-shattering conclusions."
What this all means is, of course, that junksies don't rob because they are crazy by nature.
Further: "The truth is that most addicts don't use heroin to obtain the superhigh we imagine, but to avoid withdrawal. Alfred Lindsemhus has identified the relief needs of withdrawal patients in a significant amount of incarcerated users." is the beginning user, who experiences the euphoria we hear so much about."
Does all this mean we can ship heroin into the cigar stores to compete with tobacco as a substitute? Yes, if you can.
that somon would, as a matter of fact, probably be preferable to the present harsh policy. It would also mean addiction for millions not now afflicted. No responsible student of the problem seems to have concluded that a heroin habit is a good thing to have. The point, instead, is that most people are almost everyone assumes, and represent American approaches to the problem have created a worse situation than imorning it would have.
My personal view, something of a departure from views expressed here in the book, is that I enjoy reading.
decriminalize heroin addition while seeking to limit heroin's availability.
CZA ENERGY
The best approach might well be the one the British have long followed. They permit any physician to prescribe heroin to meet the needs of an addict.
So august an organ as the Journal of the American Medical Association has proclaimed the British system a failure, reported a big increase in addiction and reported the British on their way to a U.S. style repressive approach.
Slade quotes the British Medical Journal in a rebuttal demolishing such claims. Essentially, the British seem to have suffered an increase from a jure indictment that were 1,619 addicts known to the British government in 1972, down from 1,746 in 1968. (The figure for 1982 had been 112 but much fewer.) The British report from more stringent reporting requirements.
"LET THERE BE A LITTLE LIGHT"
Slade doesn't know precisely what program the United States should adopt. But, he says, "We cannot begin to consider carefully such details until we rid ourselves of the suffocating superstitions and fears that warp our thinking."
This is surely the central point and the urgent need. No one, at least no one responsible, is suggesting heroin be welcomed with open arms. But we must understand the problem if we are to deal with it intelligently.
The analogy to the anticommunism of the '50s is instructive here. The Soviet Union, like heirin, is hardly a blessing to the world community. It is at least as aggressive, as aggressive, and as blindly egocentric as the United States. It is also a lot more tyrannical.
Ignorance of the nature of the Soviet Union, and especially over-estimates of its potential for doing harm, prompted anticommunist responses that were both successful and counterproductive. Much the same pattern is visible in American responses to drug addiction.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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Editor
Hal Ritter
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager David Hunke
By STEPHEN S. ROSENFELD The Wexbiltion Post
Ethics' Role Hazy in Detente
WASHINGTON—Alexander Solzbentzyn's expulsion has brought to a head the diplomatically, politically and intellectually difficult issue of what role the promotion of moral or human values in the Soviet Union should play in U.S. foreign policy.
While many Americans expressed shock and outrage, President Nixon passed up making any statement of his own, and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger went on record only in response to reporters' questions.
Avoiding any specific comment on the writer, Kissinger said: "The only problem that we have seen here is the extent to which our human, moral and critical concern for Mr. Solzhenitsyn and people of similar convictions should affect the day-to-day
conduct of our foreign policy." The danger of nuclear war makes detente unavailable.
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., whose intellectual vigor and presidential candidacy have made him Nigeron's chief interlocutor in foreign policy, fired back at Senator Sherrod Brown, who waffled. "Claiming that the administration had "narrowed its conception of detente to exclude issues of human rights," he said Kissinger had "posed a false choice betwixt faith with traditional values and keeping faith with traditional values, human decency and individual liberty."
In fact, the Nixon administration has cultivated a style of Rhetorical non-intervention in Soviet internal affairs. The Nixon administration's "domination" for the Baltic states, for instance, disappeared in 1973. The administration has urged and practiced "quiet diplomacy" to help Soviet Jews emigrate. The Soviets' enmity was calculated and characteristic.
Demos Exploit Nixon Issue
By LOU C'ANNON The Washington Post
“It’s Watergate but it’s more than Watergate,” says Terry Straub, field director for the Democratic National Committee. “You have Watergate but you also have the economy and the energy industry. It’s an oppressive national situation.”
WASHINGTON—The Democrats, acting more from a statistical perception than from a grand design, have devised a new strategy to combat the Republican districts. Put in its simplest form, this strategy is to run against Richard Nixon the way Democrats of another era ran against Herbert Hoover and to make his leadership of the nation the issue of every day.
The Democrats did not come easily to this conclusion, contrary to White House assertions about "lynch parties" forming up on Capitol Hill. During most of the 2016 presidential campaign congress resisted excessive partisanship less out of any spirit of generosity than out of the political conviction that it was better to allow Republicans to stew in the juice of their own national leadership, and Virginia, the Democratic candidate rejected advice to discuss the Watergate issue and won narrowly after a campaign largely confined to local issues. In Michigan, the democratic candidate was losing by a 2-1 margin when his polls in Ohio and Indiana had a heavily negative rating in most of the Watergate. He decided to make the President the issue and won the election.
Even carrying a county that had never before voted Republican.
Publicly, the Republican incumbents in the House admitted to deep concern over the Michigan result; privately, some of them were shattered. "We've got an impossible situation," said one veteran congressman, "because most of the hard-core loyalists are in our party and they're the people who do the preincinct work and pay We're going to lose them if we desert the President and lose everyone else if we don't."
"The key word in the Michigan election was not Watergate but Nixon," says John Martilla, architect of the Michigan upset. "Had we just relied on Watergate we would have lost. But the poll shows a genuine dissatisfaction with the way things are going. The people want to know who's in control of the economy and the energy shortage and we portrayed the Republican as a company man."
In the meantime, Republicans who are competing in special elections are pretty much on their own, and they are running them. But in other special election campaign in Michigan.
Should progress on human rights become, as Jackson insists, an explicit objective of detente? The administration warns that to go down the path is to risk undermining the basis for Soviet-American political ties and in a broad sense, its fears are legitimate.
It is indispensable, as Jackson himself concedes, that there is a limit to the amount of American intervention that Soviet leaders can afford. In contrast, the Russians probably believe they did Nixon a favor by just expelling Solzbentyn, rather than trying and imprisoning them. Were Nixon to read sorry, could well feel their 'good faith' had been abused.
"We're going to try to run independently without turning off the Nixon loyalists," says a Michigan Republican. "It won't be easy."
One administration rationale for this discreet approach is that—at least in respect to Soviet Jews, a special group with a powerful political ally in the American Jewish community—it has worked: about 80,000 Russian Jews have left since 1970.
Griff and the Unicorn
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WHAT KIND OF JOB?
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by Sokoloff
What neither the Nixons nor Jacksons among us can know, of course, is what if anything will bring about meaningful change inside Russia.
The trouble is that a sequence taken and evidified in a certain official Soviet-American context looks very different in the light of American public opinion and even hoped that detente would produce more Soviet political cooperation and more internal Soviet mellowing than have been so far. If those Americans had set their hopes too high, then their disappoint in business now are nonetheless very real.
This is why Jackson's full-throated protest on Solzhenitsyn suited the current mood so much better than the Nixon-Kissinger cough. Indeed, a strong case can be made that the Kremlin would have put down an uncluttered administration protest to the exigencies of American politics, and that such a statement would have given the administration more political criticism in activist settings with Moscow. As it is, Jackson now has a campaign issue. Support for detente is not so broad and assured as to relieve the President of concern for this admittedly nice political calculus.
Plucking a relatively few Jews out of the country is simple next to the problem of making the society the emigrants leave behind more open, more humane and more like our own. This is a fundamental problem which goes beyond the matter of whether we want to accept us or to our mutual feelings when the Russian government nues up its citizen's lives.
Russians themselves have been urging for centuries, usually in despair, over whether and how their country can be peacefully changed. The argument has been responded to with astonishment by Solzenitin who believes in head-on confrontation with the Kremlin, and the Medvedev brothers, who, being no less brave than Solzenitin, hold that those who would change Russia must proceed in a courageous and decisive fashion. The question does not lend itself to a neat answer and I think we have all got to go at it with care.
There are some skills that facilitate such awareness and help to establish the proper atmosphere for productive, open discussions. One skill is paraphrasing, restating what another person has said in one's own words. Paraphrasing implies a caring for what the other person has said and a mirroring of his thoughts. A useful lead-in to paraphrasing is, "I understand you said. . ."
Phil McKnight and Jerry Hutchison
Instructor's Response Can Help Discussion
If classroom discussions are to be useful, students must feel free to ask questions and to deliberate, and the instructor must provide appropriate feedback to students' responses and of his own reactions.
Another skill is behavior description, in which the instructor notes expressions and actions of his students. For example, a teacher can ask her students' student feelings by scanning the room for visual cues to such feelings. Video tape recordings made of student expressions support the notion that such expressions provide good reflections of a teacher's efficiencies.
Instructors also should tell students how they feel. Expressing feelings directly places one in a vulnerable position, but it also improves feelings of trust. Verbal expressions are less likely to be misunderstood; "I am angry," or "I feel unhappy," may be preferable to
saying nothing. "I feel that many of you are not prepared or interested; I had hoped for a more enthusiastic participation in this project; I have the feeling that some of you might be on your mind," are better than saying or implying, "This is an inferior class."
A final skill is perception checking. The teacher states his perceptions about the feelings of others. He interprets the students' feelings and internal processes rather than allows the student behavior. It is better to allow the student behavior after the teacher's perceptions. It softens criticism. For instance, "I get the impression that you are confused. Are you?" is preferable to "Why isn't this discussion getting anywhere?" The instructor's response is helpful and his attempt to react to them in a helpful way has been called responsiveness.
The ultimate hope is that increased involvement in dialogue may increase students' opportunities to understand and respond to learning problems.
Responsiveness should also generate complementary student behavior. As students perceive a teacher's willingness to listen and to respond appropriately to their needs, students should be more receptive and responsive to the teacher's contributions.
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
5
Comedies, Drama Highlight Revue
CITY OF CALIFORNIA
Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN McCOV
By CAROL GWINN
Kanan Staff Remorter
Boo!
Karen Kunz, Bismarck, N.D., junior (left), their 19k yesterday for presentation in the and Linda Seohta, Wichita senior, rehearsed **Rock Chalk Revue.**
"Excitement for this year's Rock Chalk is really great," Chris Kahler, Cheyenne Wyo., junior and director of the revenue, said yesterday. "The groups—the they're just going crazy. They're evenly matched, and that always adds to the competition."
Three comedies and a light drama performed by all-Greek casts will compete in the 24th Rock Chalk Revue at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium.
The four skits to be presented are:
"Boibles and Fables," performed by the Delta Chi fraternity and the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, which is a light drama about an old gypsy queen who informs her successor that the "go-by-the-stars" superstition adhered to by the band of gypsies is false, and that the successor must be able to recognize the formation confuses the new leader, who must decide whether to tell the other gypsies.
"WHAT'S NEW in Orleans and All That Jazz," performed by the Beta Theta Pi sorority, which is about an old couple who, looking back through their photo album, can't remember whether they ever actually went to a skirt skirt turns into a flashback of their lives.
University Daily Kansan
"Holy, Holy, Holy, or Holy, Holly,
Hollywood," presented by the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and the Pi Beta Phi sorority, which is the story of 1920s high school girls who go to the city make it big in Hollywood. They are involved with gamsters and Carrie Nation.
"How High Is the Water, Noah? or The Jayhawk of happiness" performed by Delta Upsilon fraternity and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, which shows Mr. and Mrs. Jayhawk entering Noah's Ark with the rest of the students. The Lawrence Jayhawk is left behind.
KAHLEL SAID THAT trophies would be presented Saturday night for the best original script, the best male and female performers, the best original song, the best
Ombudsmen to Resume Program
Student ombudsmen may have been "somewhat remiss" in setting up the program this semester, but there will be someone in the office today, Kim Roberts, the first-year law student and director of the ombudsman program, said yesterday.
The student ombudsmen program was established in the spring of 1970 to investigate student complaints and questions about the University.
rental. The ombudsmen receive no payment for their work.
Roberts said the office would be open from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday.
The program is allocated $475 from the Student Senate for office supplies and office
Roberts said five students would be working as ambudms this semester.
Most of the problems the busmdusm handle deal with dorm contracts, library fines, grades and traffic tickets, said Kielbauer. The student and former busmdusm director.
Rathbun said the ambushed man investigated the complaint and tried to locate someone in the administration with "the desire to change the situation and the desire to do so."
correct it," Rathburn said. "We function as mediators. We won't take it to the University Judiciary. We don't really take sides."
"We lay out the problem, tell the administrator why we think it can cause up, tell the administrator what to do."
An ombudsman isn't allowed to give legal advice, Rathbun said.
"We refer students to Legal Aid or the CPA" he said.
Rathian, said the ambushes men were successful in solving problems about half of the city.
The office hasn't been open recently, Rathbun said, because new students are taking over ambitionsmen.
Positions change every spring semester he said.
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band & Special Guests The Pott County Pork and Bean Band TONIGHT
production number, the most effective use of sets, the most effective use of costumes and the most effective use of equipment.
Advance Tickets on Sale at Better Days and Kief's in Lawrence. Tickets also on Sale at Municipal Auditorium Box Office.
COLUMBIA
8 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 27 Topeka Municipal Auditorium
Five judges will view the skits Friday and five other judges will view the skits Saturday. Judges were selected by the revue committee, Kahler said, and are members of the students who have watched the revue before and a professional in musical comedy.
**TRIED TO get a sprinkling from all different areas so the skirts wouldn't appeal to me.**
Kahler said that there was no obscurity in this year's revival and that no cuts had been made in any of the scripts by the people who had been asked to read them.
"I think groups are really sensitive about hurting people's feelings," Kahler said.
people, people and
"YOU REALLY GET close to the groups and you get to see how they have interacted."
The KU-Y sponsors the revue, which is self-supporting through ticket sales.
"We just hope we can sell enough tickets to break even," Kahler said. Tickets are $2.50 for the Friday night performance and $3 Saturday night.
"The biggest expense is the orchestra and getting the music arranged," she said. "We send the music to a professional arranger in Kansas City."
Kaulier said that each group received $300 in performance as a “often thank-you.”
Let's re-read the whole thing carefully.
Kaulier said that each group received $300 in performance as a “often thank-you.”
Bailey Hall's Namesake Chemistry Professor
By RANDY SCHUYLER
Kensan Staff Reports
Kansan Staff Reporter
University of Kansas officials congratulated themselves when the state legislature appropriated funds in 1899 for a new building, a grant to build a building allocation granted to KU that year. Chancellor Snow had been trying unintentionally in years to get the allocation approved.
Chemistry classes had originally been in a room in the basement of Fraser Hall. This was the case when E.H.S. Bailey, who originated the Rock Chalk Chant, became the University's professor of chemistry in 1883.
His class contained 35 students. When he retired 50 years later, the chemistry department had 35 instructors and 700 students.
Those who had clauses in the upper floors of Fraser complained about odors seeping through the walls.
The chemistry department shared the Shack with the School of Pharmacy and the building soon became overcrowded. A basement was dug which provided two classrooms in the atmosphere was so bad there that instructors frequently had malarial attacks.
In 1883, the legislature was persuaded to appropriate money for a new building, officially known as Chemistry Hall, nicknamed the Shack.
Finally, the new chemistry building was completed in 1900, and was known for thirty years as a model for similar buildings.
KU-Y Student Board Now Accepting Applications Position Open for Student Coordinators:
Advocate Series
Instructional Films
Rock Chalk
Workshops
— Celebrations/Retreats
—and three student advisors
The KU-Y board is a group of students committed to the building of community programs and services at the campus at large. Programs and services for the campus at large
- Freshman Camp (Aug.-74)
- International Gift Fair
Apply by March 8 at KU-Y office, 110B Union, 864-3761, between 10:30 a.m.2 p.m.
cost $55,000 to build in 1902 and cost
$65,000 to remodel in 1944. The students
were hired as teachers in 1948.
Students said the acoustics were such that a sound made in the basement could be heard outward.
No one else has it! eating & entertainment 9-12 nightly
The building looked much the same then as it does today. However, when it was built, the roof had more than a dozen chimneys to let out fumes from exhaust hoods in the labs. It was finally named to honor Bailey in 1938.
When the chemistry department moved to Malott in 1894, Halley was handed over to the Society.
Kathy Buehler—Tues.
Carl & Sue—Wed.
Beth Scalet—Thurs.
Jaime & Jim —Fri. &
Sat. Sittin' In
(Bluegrass)
You can afford
The Flagship Tonight
$1 minimum
841-5040 12th & Oread
Are you tired of movies, bar-hopping or even studying weekend and weekout?
THEN MAY WE SUGGEST AN EVENING OF RELAXATION & ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEKEND TAKE IN
ROCK CHALK REVUE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS HOCH AUDITORIUM,8 p.m.
6
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Park Service Studies Prairie Plan
By CRAIG STOCK
Kansan Staff Reporter
The continuing controversy about the proposed Talgrass Prairie National Park has cooled temporarily while the National Park Service prepares a study of the proposal.
Supporters of the park have been circulating a petition calling for Congress and the President to establish a Tallgrass Prairie National Park in Kansas. The petition drive at KU is part of a wider effort by Save the Tallgrass Parks Foundation to support the park from Kansas citizens.
John Hackney, Wichita senior and supporter of the park, said Monday that more than 1,000 signatures had been collected in the campus petition drive and that STP hoped to collect 25,000 signatures in the statewide petition drive.
STP and other supporters of the Tallgrass Prairie park contend that the preservation of an area of native tallgrass prairie is essential to the native species of plant and animal wildlife.
The size of the proposed park is one of the objections of the park's opponents. State Sen. John Crofton, I-Cedar and vice president, said using acidity large amounts of acreage for the park.
THE PARK must be at least 60,000 acres to provide enough room for large mammals, such as elk, bison and antelope, to roam freely, according to Hackney.
"The worst thing about the park is that the land would be out of production," he said.
Another point of contention between the park's opponents and supporters is the need for protecting the prairie. Wayne Rogler, a cattle rancher from Matfield Green and director of Kansas Grasslands Association, said the prairie areas in government hands hadn't been cared for as well as the prairie in private hands.
said.
Millions of pounds of beef can be raised each year on 60,000 acres of grassland, Crofoot said.
ROGLER SAID private ownership of land is better than government ownership and he be allowed to own the lands areas owned by the government in which the prairie hadn't been properly cared for.
Larry Wagner, an attorney in Shawnee Mission and an STP member, disagreed.
"They're taking care of grazing land, they're not taking care of tallgrass prairie."
A rancher could take good care of grazing land and still destroy many of the plants and animals.
The tallgrass prairie is a very complex ecosystem, Wagner said, and is made up of more than 300 species of plants besides grasses.
Wagner also said many species of animals once native to the tallgrass prairie were extinct.
Roger said Kansas beef production would suffer if 60,000 acres were set aside for the park. He said one acre of grassland raised 50 pounds of beef a year, resulting in a net loss to the Kansas industry of 3 million pounds a year.
WAGNER SAID the loss of beef production caused by the park would be only a thousandth of the total Kansas beef production. He said the land for the park and the fencing to enclose the land would probably cost about $10 million. He said very few facilities for the park would have to be built.
Opponents of the park doubt the attractions of the park to tourists.
"If you drove from Manhattan to Mafield Green to look at the lake, you'd be sick of it by the time you got to the park," Crofoot said.
ROGLER SAID the prairie wasn't a scenic area like a mountain and the idea of returning large native animals such as bison to the park was feasible.
Hackney said the tallgrass prairie would be attractive to tourists, especially European tourists whose idea of the United States been drawn from movies about the old West.
Rogger gave a much larger estimate of the cost of the park. The government would have to pay at least $10,000 per year for the land would only be a part of the cost of the park. Rogger said that after roads, fences and facilities for tourists were built, the cost of the park would increase.
Citizen Study of Prison Calls for Penal Reform
Wagner discounted the effect tourists would have on the park area. Crofoot said tourists and their campers and the facilities they use would not harm a park's environment instead of protecting it.
BY ANN GARDNER
Kansan Staff Reporter
By ANN GARDNER
Citizen participation and awareness are the most important factors in improving conditions at the Kansas State Pententiyary (KSP) at Larsen, according to a report by the Committee on Petal Reform of the Kansas Association for Mental Health.
- For those who are confined, the best thing to do is to promote systematic improvement of the institution is to let citizens in.
The report, "Doing Your Own Time," is a citizen study of KSP conducted over a 20-month period. Laymen and professionals in the field of corrections made up the 21-member committee which carried out the investigation.
Two basic conclusions were drawn by the committee in "Doing Your Own Time."
THE STUDY, SWALL said, represents about 2,000 hours of citizen work. Immates and prison officials were interviewed to understand the services, services and administration at KSP.
William Arnold, associate professor of sociology, and Forrest Swall, director of the Community Correction Center, were members of the committee and contributed
—To achieve the purpose of the correctional system, to rehabilitate offenders and thereby protect society, the best thing to do is never possible, to keep offenders of prison
THE REPORT CITED several significant deficiencies in KSP facilities and programs. According to Arnold, the single most imminent challenge for these deficiencies was increased funding.
Buildings at KSP were described in the report as "most suitable for a 19th century building."
buildings and the "custodial functions of confining, feeding and housing the inmates," consumes most of the $4.5 million annual budget for the penitentiary.
Funding is a major concern in acquiring personnel for the penitentiary. Much of the staff at KSP is poorly trained and the staff has a high rate of turnover. Arnold said the institution couldn't expect to hire better personnel unless higher wages could be offered.
ARNOLD ALSO SAID he was surprised by the degree to which the different segments of this staff were ignorant of what others on the staff were doing.
Information about inmate work and education and vocational training programs also was included in the report. The committee found that the inmates' training did not reach enough of the inmates and didn't really serve the purpose of preparing the inmate to hold a job after he left.
"I was surprised that prison industry is as bad as it is," said Swall, who conducted research.
SWALL SAID THAT in many cases the inmate would develop worse work habits while working in prison industry. Prisoners have very little incentive to work, be healed, and pay for prison industries is so low that often earn more by selling blood plasma.
"With one or two exceptions, there is little or no training in work assignments,"
Arnold said that the impact of the report would be in three areas. First, the report is intended to inform citizens about an institution which few people know anything about. Arnold also hoped that the report could help to ensure legislators working for prison reform. The effects of the report could also be helpful to KSP personnel.
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AN ALTERNATIVE to the Tallgrass Prairie National Park has been proposed by opponents to the park. The alternative proposal calls for the formation of a parkway, a scenic drive through the Flint Hills area using largely existing facilities.
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
Wagner said the park would have only primitive camping facilities and hiking trails so that campers and tourists wouldn't destroy the area. Elaborate camping facilities would be available only outside the park, Wagner said.
Offer Expires March 15 9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd
Footroot and he proposed a parkway about five years ago. Footroot's parkway would be the longest road in New York City.
TOPEKA- The Kansas Legislature will be forced to pass before March 3 a speed limit reduction bill that is currently before the House or the state could lose millions of dollars in federal highway funds, State Sen. Bob Storey, R-Topeka, said recently. Storey is the chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee.
Hackney said that the parkway idea was a cop-up by opponents to the park and that it wouldn't serve the purposes that a park would serve.
day along Kansas State Highway 177. Crofton and Rogler said that the parkway would provide tourists a scenic view of the park, which would cost much less than the proposed park.
1974-Year of the Taco
George C. Corgius, professor of law and adviser for the local chapter of the Sierra Club, said that the parkway would be counter-productive because it would draw more people through the prairie without providing more protection for the land.
By MICHAEL CACIOPPO Kansas Staff Remorter
55 Speed Must Pass To Keep Federal Funds
A figure released by State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Denawrence, estimated that the state would lose $7.25 million in federal funds. Glover said it would cost the state between $65,000 and $110,000 to change speed limit signs.
The bill would establish a maximum speed limit of 55 miles an hour in all locations other than business and residence areas. It would also require the after the governor approved the resolution.
The bill has already been passed by the Senate Transportation Committee and the Senate, State Rep. Arden Dierford, R-SMITH Center, and chairman of the House Sub-Committee on Roads and Highways, Dr. Robert O. Dyer, House Transportation Committee and is now subject to amendment or debate on the house floor, he said.
According to Storey, there is much resentment toward the federal government's tactic of "blackmailing" the states with possible loss of effort.
"People are sick and tired of federal government intervention," Dierdorff said. "Once you accept these grants and funds, you become a pawn of the federal government."
Dierdorff said that if the legislature didn't pass the bill, the state's fuel allotment could be reduced.
On the other hand, he said he thought that lowering the maximum speed limit would cause a reduction in state revenue. He said that the amount of surmption of fuel at 55 m.p.h., Derrick said
that selling fewer grams of gasoline would result in less state tax revenue.
The present fuel tax goes to the highway fund, Dierdorf said. One way to make up revenue loss is to increase the gas tax, he said.
Storey said he thought that the new law wouldn't be strictly enforced.
"If it's strictly enforced in the beginning, there wouldn't be enough highway patrolmen, sheriffs and policemen to begin to arrest all of the people who are going to be speeding, and there wouldn't be enough room in court to prosecute them," Storey
"There's been amendments offered that, while we would set the speed limit at 55 m.p.h., there would be speed tickets on the road going over 65 m.p.h." Dierdorf said.
He said he would be in favor of raising the number of traffic violations allowable a year from three to "about 10, at least temporarily."
This amendment was rejected by the Senate, but he said it may be offered on the Senate floor.
Dierderdff said he thought it wasn't there to please him to pass a bill calling for reduced speed.
Another amendment that may be offered, Dierdorf said, would call for a fine of only $100. The judge has not ruled on it.
"I really think that the governor and the highway commission, under their emergency powers, could have set the speed limit at 55 m.p.h." he said.
He said he was sure the governor would rather reduce speeds through legislation so that the police could catch more crime.
Dierdorff said he thought the proposed
wall would be a temporary law lasting until
1978.
Gas Consumption Steadies; KU Cars Taken Off Credit
Users of campus vehicles have been taken off credit card buying of gasoline and have returned to filling their tanks at University Park. A group of the KU physical plant, said yesterday.
"Our gasoline consumption has stabilized," Oudah said. "Credit cards are now used only on pool cars that have to leave Lawrence on trips."
During the first week of February, a 50 per cent reduction in gasoline allotment had forced the department of buildings and grounds to limit gasoline fillups to trucks, tractors and mowers. Other vehicles had to be refueled by credit card at local service stations.
According to figures released Feb. 5 by the Department of Buildings and Grounds, gasoline consumption by University vehicles had averaged 1,800 gallons a week. This has been reduced to about 800 to 900 gallons a week.
Ousdahl said that there had been no increase in the amount of gasoline consumed since the allocation was reduced, and that the release at that time were still accurate.
Captain Bob Ellison of the park and security said, "The bulk of the fire we use is not from the building."
on campus
FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS ticket packets will be distributed beginning at 8:30 a.m. today in the Union Ballroom. Students who attend the spring enrollment may pick up the packets.
NATIONAL WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS will have its bi-monthly meeting at 7:30 tonight in the First National Bank building.
EIGHT SEMNARMS on computer science will be offered during the next eight weeks to acquaint citizens of Lawrence with the computer resources available at KU. One seminar will be offered each week from Feb. 19 to April 16. Interested persons should contact the Kansas University Professional Programmers Group.
THE BODY SHOP
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During this time, while we're toughening up your body a little, we'll be even tougher on your mind. By asking you to complete a concentrated course of study covering all the topics you missed.
But when you return to college in the fall, you can look forward to two pretty great years.
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Army ROTC. The more you look at it, the better it looks.
John Kautz, foreman of the automotive shop, said instructors who went out of town often traveled in car pools to reduce gasoline consumption.
Ellison said that five vehicles and two scooters were filled by the department of buildings and grounds and that oil and parts also were obtained through buildings and grounds until these items were needed for emergencies at night.
"We have four teachers who go to Kanaan city and sometimes to Leavenworth who travel by boat."
and grounds. If we need fuel in the middle of the night for emergencies and building and grounds is low on fuel awaiting the next day's deliveries, we obtain the fuel commercially. For the most part we're filling up at buildings and ground."
Knauts said there had been no problems lately in obtaining gasoline locally. Ray Lawrence bulk distributor for Stanton Gas, a subsidiary of the University yesterday, he said.
Professor of Military Science
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
111 International Drive, Kansas 66044
Dear Vee Program:
Mrs. Moe
Mrs.
Address: ___ County: ___
City: ___ State: ___
Phone: ___
High School Attending:
College Planning to Attend:
Social Security Number: ___
Both Ousdahl and Kautz said strict adherence to a 55 mile an hour speed limit had helped the University minimize gasoline consumption. Neither of them would speculate about the percentage of gasoline used, or the difficulty in isolating the savings resulting from speed reduction from the savings resulting from car pools.
Attention CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS
To be funded by the Student Senate this spring you must have 1973-74 information on file with the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs. Call 864-3506 or 864-4341 before February 28 to see if your information is current.
**VOLUNTEER**
**CLEARING HOUSE**
Needs Staff For Academic Year
1974-75
For Interviews Call:
JAMES WINTER 10:32 a.m.
After 5:00 p.m. before Week 3
People Needed for:
Berkmanumum
Orientation
Agency Co-ordinator
Office Management
Office Management - Up-to-Policity
(FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE)
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The Insurance Estate Program Chosen by More College Men and Women Every Year Than Any Other Plan
Shouldn't You Find Out Why?
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ASSOCIATES
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842-4650
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 27. 1974
?
'Hawks Nip'Huskers in Second-Half Rally
By DON PFANNENSTIEL
Assistant Sports Editor
The win kept KU one-half game back of the Kansas State in the Big Eight Race. KState also last night, 68-67 over Missouri at home and won the league mark. KU is close behind at 10-1.
It was not until the 11:09 mark of the second half that a tip-in by Tommy Smith gave KU the lead for the first time since Corsair's third half trailed the Cornhuskers, 24-19 at half-time.
Smith's tip-in was followed by eight straight KU points and Nebraska came back
with the help of the "Hawks cold shooting from the free throw line and the field. The Cornhuskers regained the lead, 40-39 with 5:20 left in the game.
BUT KU), on the strength of its double post offense and offensive rebounding, fought back to grab the lead and held on for its 10th conference win.
"When we inserted the two big men, we caused them to have problems," KU Coach Ted Owens said. "During that time we outlived them, plus they were missing shots."
The Jayhawks' first-falsh play was characterized by poor shooting and the inability to get the ball to its big men inside. From the 11:02 mark until the 5:31 mark in game two, Nebraska scored eight points at the same time, Nebraska scored eight points and jumped out to a 19-14 lead.
Nebraska increased that lead to 24-15 with 3-24 left in the half.
"I knew if we could close their lead to five or six before the half end, we'd have a
sports
chance," Owens said. "I was delighted when the half ended that we were only five percent."
"Nebraska played fine defense in the first
OWENS didn't totally blame the KU squad for its poor first-half showing, in which it shot 30 per cent from the field and was out-rebounded. 19-15.
half," Owens said. "We did have a lot on open shots from 15 feet, but they just didn't fall. I just can't imagine one can shoot that poorly and still win."
For the first three minutes of the second half, KU slowly cut Nebraska's lead with aggressive defensive play. During this time it was apparent the Hawks were unable to take a second shot or grab the offensible rebound until Owens installed the double post.
"Down the stretch it was the offensive rebounding that won the game for us," Owens said. "They out-rebounded us by five percent and we end our rebounded them by three."
IT WAS evident that Rick Suttle, Danny Knight and Tommy Smith made the difference in the second half. Of the final 14 points scored by KU, the triad had 12 of them.
Many times throughout the second half, KU had several chances to capitalize on its lead but the poor free throw shooting kept the game close. After KU went into the one-and-one situation with 7:29 left, the 'Hawks' held only one of seven one-and-one situations.
"We want to win the championship so bad we finally let it affect us," Owens said. "It feels so good I could cry. But it is to our game we finished the game strong as we did."
Last night's game was KU's first in eight days but Owens was quick to point out that the team's play couldn't be attributed to the laffov.
"We played hard," he said. "We just didn't move on offense. I'm immensely proud of these guys, because it takes us to shoot as poorly as we did and still win."
Artificial Turf to Be Issue in NFL Contracts
MIAMI (AP) — The big stumbling block in upcoming contract negotiations between the National Football League (NFL) club owners and the players' association may be the refusal by each side to listen to what the other has to say.
John Thompson, executive director of the NFL Management Council (NFLMCC)—the league's governing body yesterday he was confident that a players' strike could be averted and cautioned that for reasons of strategy one side or the other may go into next month's bargaining hardness.
One major issue will be continued and expanded use of artificial playing surfaces. An independent committee on artificial turf and player safety, commissioned by the board of players, is presented at the outset by the players association, its findings at a news conference.
JOHN BRODIE, A committee member who retired at the end of the 1973 season as a quarterback for the San Francisco 48ers, has been asked to recommendations, including standardization of artificial playing surfaces, wouldn't be enthusiastically received by the players' association and that an attitude could extend to the bargaining table.
findings to be 'rejected for political reasons' because it was a moment which meant
ALSO ON THE committee as members or consultants were former Green Bay quarterback Bart Starr and linebacker Ray Simmons, who was played by Sayers and Dan Fortmann, one colgate and Bears' star lineman, Joseph Tors, Fred Allman, Allan Ryan and Robert Kerlan.
The committee recommended stan-
dardizing all artificial turf playing surfaces, consideration of local weather when scheduling games in certain regions and discontinuance of the conventional football the probability of the committee said increased the probability of a serious ankle or ankle injury.
SAN DIEGO (AP)—University of Kansas linebacker Don Goode was signed by the San Diego Chargers Monday. Terms of the football League contract weren't disclosed.
SanDiego Chargers Sign KU Linebacker
Soccer Player Champion In Superstar Competition
Thompson said the NFLMC and the NFL Players' Association, headed by executive director Ed Garvey, would open a new facility in the association headquarters in Washington.
Good, 6-foot-2, 224 pounds, was the Chargers' second-first round choice and the 15th player picked in the recent college draft. He was a co-captain of the Jayhawks and was picked to play in the East-West, Liberty and American bowl games.
ROTONDA, Fla. (AP)—Kyle Rote Jr., a 23-year-old ministerial student and soccer player, won the $2,000 first prize in the 1974 superstars competition yesterday and gave American kids a fresh, new image of the sports hero.
THEY'LL MEET AGAIN 26 for what Thompson called "a clarifying session," when management will have a chance to clear up any questions about the demands. From then on, the meetings will be held during talking between New York and Washington.
Thompson said he believed money would be a major issue in the upcoming talks. But he asked Kheel, the NFMLC's general labor bureau, to look more closely at the "player's freedom."
Rote began his two-day grind by winning the first event, tennis, and followed up with first places in swimming and bowling and spotups in golf and the mile bicycle race.
"Life has been good to me. I don't intend to keep all this money for myself, I want to share it," said the boyish 6-foot Teen after winning three of the seven events in which he competed and finishing second in two others.
He outscored such athletic giants as Dick Anderson, star safety of Miami's Super Bowl football champions; O.J. Simpson, record-snapping ball-carrier of the Buffalo Bills; pole vaulter Bob Seagran, the champion; Bob Cindyann Redd, massive shot-putter Brian Oldfield and a pair of Olympic stars from overseas.
On a 10-7-4-3-1 scale for the five top
inblers, Ralea assisted 44 points with three
thumbs.
WAXMAN CANDLES
Open 10:00-
5:30 Mon.-Sat.
KU Takes 15th Spot; Bruins To Face 10th Ranked So. Cal
1. North Carolina State (29-12) 3.
2. North Carolina (25-8) 4.
3. UCLA (16-0) 3.
4. UCLA (13-0) 3.
5. Maryland (19-4) 3.
6. Alabama (19-3) 3.
7. Alabama (19-3) 3.
8. Indiana (18-4) 3.
9. Florida Gulf Coast (30-1) 3.
10. Pittsburgh (25-8) 3.
11. Florida Gulf Coast (30-1) 3.
7 West 14th St.
CANDLE WEDDING
Roundting out the Top 10 were North Caro-
mina, Maryland, Vanderbilt, Albums, Mar-
quee, and Miami.
UCLA has two teams in front of it in the Associated Press major college basketball poll, but the Bruins are looking backward at No. 10.
Font Composer 141
912
844
774
599
520
456
399
340
325
288
250
246
North Carolina State continued to lead the nationwide poll of sports writers and sportscasters with 29 first-place votes and 912 points. Notre Dame was second with 15 first-place ballots and 444 points. UCLA got four votes for the top spot and 774 points.
The Bruins, who have won the tournam-
nent last year, will face the Southern
Southern Cal for first place in the Pacific 8. Their game March 9 figures to decide the conference championship and the Pacific 8 game.
UCLA won the first game between the two teams at Pauley Pavilion, but Southern Cal has won six consecutive games since then and will be playing the rematch on its home field.
13. Long Beach State 21-2 45
14. South Carolina State 21-2 184
15. Ramson 19-5 165
16. Texas Tech 19-5 165
17. Michigan 17-4 31
18. Arkansas 17-4 31
19. New Mexico 19-6 20
20. Others receiving votes, listed alphabetically. Brady, 20-8
21. Eastern Shore, Pennsylvania, St. John's, N.S., Southern Eastern Shore, Pennsylvania, St. John's, N.S.
By the Associated Press
"The More Fragrant Fragrance Candle"
We Also Deliver Pizza 843-9111
No. 10 in the poll announced yesterday was Southern California, the team which could keep UCLA out of the National College Athletic Association Tournament.
Campsite Hideaway
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
STUDENT EXHIBITION AND
SALE
March 8-30
Kansas Union Gallery
PRINTS AND DRAWINGS
CERAMICS, GLASS, JEWELRY, WEAVING
PRINTS AND DRAWINGS
due in gallery March 6, 8:30-5:00 for jurying
CERAMICS, GLASS, JEWELRY AND WEAVING
due March 6, 8:30-12:30 for jurying
For Further Information Contact SUA Office - 864-3477
Use Kansan Classifieds
★ Housing
STUDENT SENATE COMMITTEE POSITIONS ARE NOW BEING FILLED:
K-State still is in first place in the Big Eight by a half-game over Kansas.
'Cats Beat MU
WANTED
★ Finance & Auditing
W
Big Eight Standings
HELP
due March 6. 8:30-12:30 for jurving
Communication
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - Kansas State's Lon Kruger hit two free throws with nine seconds remaining to lift Kansas State to a 7-6 victory in basketball victory over Missouri last night.
Culture
Academic Affairs
Conf Games | W | L | AB Games |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas State | 11 | 1 | 19 |
| Oklahoma | 10 | 1 | 18 |
| Oklahoma | 7 | 4 | 16 |
| Nebraska | 5 | 4 | 12 |
| Michigan | 4 | 7 | 11 |
| Colorado | 4 | 8 | 9 |
| Minnesota | 4 | 9 | 11 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 8 | 13 |
★Student Rights
★Student Services
★ Sports
(Application Deadline Friday, March 1)
★ Coordinator for Affirmative Action
★ Parking & Traffic Task Force
APPLICATION DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, FEB. 27)
For Further Information and Applications, Contact Your Student Senate Office 105-B Union 864-3710
Kruger got the one-and-one after Kevin King had given Missouri a 67-67 tie with 35 seconds left, King, also shooting one-and-one, got his first shot but missed the second.
(Financed by Student Activity Fee)
The K-State Wildcats, 11-1 in the conference and 19-5 overall, had a 59-50 advantage with 9:18 to play before the Tigers outscored them 17:10 the rest of the wav.
Kruger led the scoring with 17 points and Dean Harris and Gene McVey had 12 each for K-State. Al Eberhardt led Missouri with 14 and all rebounds with 13.
The loss was Missouri's ninth in 10 games and dropped the Tigers to 2-4 and 11-12.
Knight led KU in scoring with 14 and Tom Kivisto had 10 points, Jerry Fort led Nebraska with 18 points and Larry Cox had 12 points.
KANSAS (51)
Cook FG-FA FF-PTA RB. PF TP TP
Knife 1.11 1.11 1.11
Knifehole 1.11 1.11 1.11
Knifehole 1.11 1.11 1.11
Knifehole 1.11 1.11 1.11
Knifehole 4.9 5.3 4 1 10
Knifehole 4.9 5.3 4 1 10
Knifehole 4.9 5.3 4 1 10
Sauté 8.6 4 4 11
Saute 8.6 4 4 11
Sauté 8.6 4 4 11
NEBRASKA (46)
FG-PGA FG-PTA FTAB. Ref. PF TP
Port 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Novak 2.5 3.0 -0.0 10 15 20
Low 1.4 1.4 -0.0 10 15 20
Low 1.4 1.4 -0.0 10 15 20
Marsh 2.7 3.0 -0.0 3 1 1
Marsh 2.7 3.0 -0.0 3 1 1
Harris 1.7 1.7 -0.0 1 1
Harris 1.7 1.7 -0.0 1 1
Taylor 0.2 0.2 -0.0 4 1
Taylor 0.2 0.2 -0.0 4 1
Taylor 0.2 0.2 -0.0 4 1
12.43 12.43 4 25 25
LOS ANGELES KU-12, NU-13
NEXRAKSA 19 28----
NEXRAKSA 19
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master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
8
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
University Daily Kansan
SenEx Asked to Study College Firing Policy
By BUNNY MILLER
Kenan Staff Reporter
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) is expected to consider tonight a professor's request that the University Senate conduct an investigation of the hiring and firing policy of the College. The College President, Seaver, SenEx president, said yesterday.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies and oriental languages and literatures, Monday submitted letters to the University of Pennsylvania where the reported firing last week of all persons in the college whose titles included the word "visitor" or "visting" appeared to him to be on the job.
This action, Leban said, is "fraught with grave implications and possible legal consequences."
Seaver said the firing was part of the senate's internal reallocation of funds. Leban's letter, he said, has brought up a "serious matter."
DEL SHAKELK, executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus, said that Mr. Lebanon's request to Lebanon's request but that he thought it might be "based on some misinformation." Shankel said he would hear the request and asked why he was fighting of the Family Senate tomorrow night.
In his letter, Leban based his complaint on these seven points:
—Since the reported termination of all
business "getting" faculty is a class-action filing,
it will not be filed here.
of previously unclassified personnel have now been revised without notice.
Unclassified status has previously been assumed to mean that conditions of employment, including duties, privileges, salary and other benefits, were subject to individual and not class negotiation. A serious violation of the new code in such a change without notice, discussion, review or sanction from proper authority.
—if, in fact, unclassified employees of the University are found to have been treated as a class, it will probably be found also that they have received none of the protections or guarantees afforded employees, a second, possibly serious, violation of the law.
THE CLASS-ACTION firing of any group of employees seems indisheathable from an industrial layoff. As such, the case for a layoff to avoid Senate investigation should therefore seek to determine whether all such requirements have been met, and if they have not been met, what legal liability has been incurred by the individuals and agencies ordering the
—The senate should also seek to define the rights of persons laid off, both individually and as a class. There should be immediate clarification of their rights of legal recourse, both through organs of the state and through the state and federal courts.
—Since the class membership of this group may in fact conceal other cogent
Food Prices Increase At Many Local Stores
Of 29 items published 15 went up in
average price, eight went down and six
went down.
Average prices of over half the items published in this week's Consumer Protection Association food price survey showed increases during the past week.
Price change included: Five pounds of granulated sugar, C and H brand, up at five of 10 stores; store brands, up at three stores.
Round steak, bone in, down at seven stores, up at one store; boneless, down at eight stores.
Oatmeal, 18 oz. box of Quaker Old
pasture milk sits cent at six of 10 stores
and down, at three.
dry milk, 28 quart box, up by 16 to 66 cents
at three stores; store brands, up by 30 cents
at five stores.
Red potatoes, 10 lb. sack, up by 10 to 30 cents at four stores.
Eigs, down by four to 20 cents a dozen for Eigs at four stores; to 14 cents at six or eight.
Folger's instant coffee, 10 oz. jar, down by four to eight cents at five stores.
—"SINCE THE PERSONS involved in this action were never informed that they were being treated collectively and were never given opportunity to organize, seek recognition, choose representatives or present themselves for bargaining as a group, the senate should determine whether there have occurred violations of federal
factors such as sex, minority membership and age, the senate should advise the faculty on the possibility of filing suit or petitioning for injunctive relief under statutes prohibiting discrimination in employment.
"Since it appears that this most indivisible form of collective bargaining is now an operative policy of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and previous assurances of the importance of individual contributions may now be inoperative, the senate should seek immediately to advise the faculty on the need to develop a new regulation, elect representatives and effect whatever other actions are required to participate in just and equitable bargaining with their employers.
and state laws governing collective bargaining.
HE SAID the term visiting applied to professors in three categories;
—Those teachers who knew they would be staying at KU for a limited time.
-Allens who were previously denied tenure under a Board of Regents rule which was challenged last week by Kansas Atty. Gen. Nerv Miller.
Teachers who couldn't otherwise be hired under university rules. This "catchall" category includes spouses of faculty members and people who received their degrees in the department they wish to teach in.
Beisner Lists Charges for Senate
RICK McLAUGHLIN, DALLAS junior and former chairman of the Student Rights Committee, said he thought the charges to the committee were good.
Manpower will be the biggest problem in implementing charges recommended by new student body president John Beisser, Salina junior, to the standing committees of the Student Senate, former members of the committee said yesterday.
Beiser listed his proposed charges for the senate's eight standing committees in a letter.
Beisner emphasized that this list was only preliminary. He said that his charges were very vague and that he intended to give the police more complete charges after spring break.
MANY OF BEISNER'S charges for the Academic Affairs Committee concerned issues that were discussed in the recent student body officers' campaign.
Beisner charged this committee to begin lobbying in the College Assembly for modification of the foreign language requirement, to work with administrators on a pre-enrollment plan and to investigate the academic advising programs.
Beisner charged the Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee to continue investigating compliance of the code with the university's rule of the 20 per cent student representation, to initiate discussions concerning a University budget, to evaluate the relevance of the Student Code of Rights, to examine the use of student resources to clarify the role of the University Judiciary.
But he said the committee would have to take into account the potential manpower it would need. He said he was disappointed with his committee's performance on the questions of 20 per cent representation and the fact that, because of the limited manpower it had
Beisner gave the Student Services Committee five charges, including investigation of a proposed satellite union in Summerfield Hall, evaluation of placement programs and reinitiation of "Operation Escort."
ANN DILLON, HUTCHINSON junior and former chairman of the Student Services Committee said that all the projects included in the charges were good, but that many others still required the services category could make the committee a "jack of all trades, master of none."
Charges to the Communications Committee, of which Beisner was chairman, are to continue a program to contact students in living groups develop publication of regular reports in the University Daily Kansas of senate activities, investigate a statewide public relations effort in cooperation with the University of Missouri to monitor a poll of student opinions on the senate.
HAL URBANEK, SALINA junior and former member of the committee, said these programs were mostly projects that have been discussed in the committee under Beiser.
Urbanek said he questioned the feasibility of the "statewide speakers program" because of conflicts with other programs in the University.
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Average Price
Average Price
Licensing Price
Cereal bowl, Gm Milk, 12 oz.
Oatmeal, Quaker Muffin, Fanched, 18 oz.
Bread, white, 16 oz. store brand
Bread, red, 16 oz. store brand
Sugar, granulated oil, 35 g, pca K4
Store brand
Store bread, rest in -10
Round steak, bone in -10
Tissue steak, rest in -
Pork loin ceal in -10, End cut
Pork loin ceal in -10, End cut
Tuna, chunk light, 5.5, Starklt
Store brand
Store bulk, All Star
Store brand
Dry milk, 24 oz., sticks, 13, Canard
Store brand
Tuna, chunk light, 7.5, Starklt
Store brand
Dry milk, 24 oz., sticks, 13, Canard
3.75 mm Screwdriver, 3.75 mm Screwdriver
Store brand
Tuna, chunk light, 7.5, Starklt
Store brand
Frozen peas in box, store brand, no can0, can0
Delimont
Tuna, chunk light, 7.5, Starklt
Frozen orange juice, 6 oz., Mindele Ma
DEADLINE!!
Remember, 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28th is the deadline to turn in your organization's Budget Request for Student Activity Fee funds to the Student Senate Treasurer's Office, 104-B. Union.
NO LATE REQUESTS WILL BE CONSIDERED
NATIONAL LAMPOON
...
JOHN
PG WAYNE
"McQ"
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.Sun.Mat. at 2:30
Granada
1801 A16—Telephone 1-3-5783
I will do my best to help you. Please don't use any images of me unless they are clearly identifiable as part of the image you are describing. I will only provide text content based on what is visible in the image.
Springing of 1902. Welcome to the promised land.
From "The Emigrants' dream,
came the settlers' struggle to survive...
Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann. PG
The New Land Hillcrest
Every Eve, af 8:00
Sat.-Sun. Mael. af 2:00
Radio Hour TONIGHT KUOK 630 6:30 p.m. Campus Radio
JOHN WAYNE "McQ"
PG
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Granada
1961-1965...Telephone VI 2-365
ARNOLD IS A SCREAM
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STELLA STEVENS McDOWALL and ARNOLD
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Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive; an honest cop.
AL PACINO NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR
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Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive-an honest cop.
AL PACINO NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR "SERPICO"
Every Eve. at 7:20 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:15 Hillcrest
Cold that killed, backbreaking toil, the great Sioux uprising of 1862. Welcome to the promised land.
From "The Emigrants' dream, came the settlers struggle to survive...
Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann. PG
Every Eve. at 8:00 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:00 The New Land Hillcrest
Beautiful. Frigid.
She is called a Snow Queen. PG
Summer Wishes. Winter Dreams
Joanne Woodward Nominated as Best Actress
Sylvia Sidney Nominated Best Supporting Actress
Eve. at 7:20 & 9:15 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:15 Hillcrest
Beisner charged the Finance and Auditing (FRA) Committee with insuring the smooth operation of the new budgeting system.
Many of his fellow
offers, considered him
the most dangerous
man alive-an honest cop.
AL PACINO
NOMINATED FOR
BEST ACTOR
"SERPICO"
Every Eve. af 7:20 & 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat. af 2:15
Hillcrest
BEAUTIFUL.
Frigid.
She is called a Snow Queen.
PG
Summer Wishes,
Winter Dreams
Joanne Worlander
Nominated as Best Actress
Sylvia Sidney
Nominated as Best
Supporting Actress
Eve. af 7:20 & 9:15
Sat. Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest
Jamison Woodyard
Nominated as Best Actress
Savior Silvestre
Nominated as Supporting Actress
Rvn. af. 30 & 9:15
Sat. Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest
HILLCREST AT THE HILLIARDS
Under the new system, all the committee will hear budget requests from individual groups seeking funds. Besner said F&S's job while the budget was being discussed would be to coordinate the work of the committees and to compile the entire budget.
JOHN
PG WAYNE "McQ"
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Granada
ARNOLD IS A SCREAM
CINEMARA RELEASES PAPER
STELLA STEVENS McDOWALL and ARAOID
PG ARAOID
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Varsity
Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive-an honest cop.
AL PACINO
NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR "SERPICO"
Every Eve. at 7:20 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:15
Hillcrest
Cold that killed, backbreaking toil, the great Sioux uprising of 1862. Welcome to the promised land.
From "The Emigrants' dream, came the settlers' struggle to survive...
Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann. PG
Every Eve. at 8:00
Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:00
Beautiful.
Frigid.
She is called a Snow Queen. PG
Summer Wishes. Winter Dreams
Joanne Woodward Nominated as Best Actress
Sylvia Sidney Nominated Best Supporting Actress
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:15
Sat.-Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest
HAZE AS MUCH
OPEN
12-5
NOSTALGIC CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS
706 MASSACHUSETTS
TWO NEW COMMITTEES, Sports and Culture, were created with the new budgetary procedure. Beesner said these projects were designed to build skills with defining their areas of activity for now,
Beautiful.
Frigid.
She is called
a Snow Queen.
PG
Summer Wishes,
Winter Dreams
Joanne
Vermeer
Nominated as
Best Actress
Lyvia Sibley
Honored as
Best
Supporting
Actress
Evv. at 2:30 & 9:15
Sat. Sun 2:10
The Hillcrest
HALF AS MUCH
HALE AS MUCH
706
OPEN
12-5
706
OPEN
12~5
NOSTALGIC CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS 706MASSACHUSETTS
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
- Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry
- Stained Glass
KASINO
OVATION
EPIPHONE
Dpen 8-5 Mon.-Sat.
1-5 Sun.
Area's Largest Selection
Museum of Natural History
Dyche Hall
GUITARS • AMPS • MUSIC
GIBSON
KUSTON
FENDER
Rose KEYBOARD
1903 Mass. Open Events
B43-3007
Guitar Stings; Price
Friday Nite
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
free state opera house presents
Saturday, March 2
9-midnight
BOOGIE
Friday, March 1
9-midnight
SUNDANCE
B
米
A BAND THAT BOOGIES
O
Brought to You by The Music People, Ltd.
O
TACO
TICO
Winter Fiesta TAGOS only 24 $^{c}$
Today & Tomorrow
To say "Gracias" for a terrific 1973. Taco Tico is having a month-long Winter Festa! That means those tasty Taco tacos are only $24\mathbf{c}$.
At Taco Tico, it's easy and economical for your taste-buds to travel south for the winter.
Taco Tice ... where the food's always in season and seasoned to please!
tacos
TACO
TICO
2340 Iowa
841-4218
TACO
TICO
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 27, 1974
9
Law Bookstore $6000 in Debt
Rising textbook costs and the law school's expanded enrollment might force liquidation of the bookstore operation, Dickinson, dean of the school, said recently.
The Student Bar Association's executive board is pondering the future of the KU Law School bookstore amid reports of past mismanagement.
Dickinson said that since the bookstore, which is 48 years old, was last reorganized
Kissam, one of two faculty advisers to the four-student bookstore committee, said the liability was incurred because a past manager of the bookstore did not include sales tax when totaling expenses. He said he thought poor management, not deceit, was
Philp C. Kissam, visiting associate professor of law; said the bookstore was solvent and would be able to pay off all liabilities by next January at the latest.
in the fall of 1971, it has incurred an outstanding liability of more than $8,000.
Harper, a former bookstore committee member, said that he didn't know how things were now but that it was discovered during his term that the financial records of the operation hadn't been audited since 1969.
responsible for the problem because no money was missing.
and $10,000 for books were discovered last fall. Of this amount, about $10,000 has been paid from profits and the sales of some inventory.
"There was definitely mismanagement but more than that," Jerry Harper third-year coach said.
Dickinson said the activities receiving funds from bookstore profits were the Student Bar Association, the Legal Aid Society, and Black Americans Law Students Association.
Kissam said debts of $6,000 for sales tax
Kissam said there might not be enough profit from the bookstore to continue fun. But he was confident.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Kissum said that if the operation grew, more bookkeeping would be required. He said written operating procedures were being drawn up.
Alternatives to liquidation of the bookstore include a system of total student management or a system run by the faculty or administration, he said.
Richard Helfand, Overland Park, first-year law student, said he had no complaints about the school.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $0.03
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students who wish to PLAARHURT ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11F LINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
1. If you use them, they're at an advantage.
2. If you don't use them, you're at a disadvantage.
advantage
Either way, the same to the same thing—New
Analysis of Western Climbing. Available now.
Available on the West Coast.
Ryan Auco, 15. E. W., Phila. 842-343-2047
Harry Auco, 15. E. W., Phila. 842-343-2047
available for any sleep problem. Cost = $ 199.
Tubulars - Hutchinson sprint butyls $4.95 only at Ride On Bicycles
The once a year MagnaVax annual sale is now
beginning. The latest lineup includes Components,
Digital clock radio, Tape recorder, Dish
ray. Stonebake's, 929 Mass Your MagnaVax
touchpad. You can always do better! Open Thurs. nights.
Tip clearance: G3-14 with white belt to $25 plus
$7 tip clearance. G3-19 with black belt to $25 plus
$7 tip clearance. $24 $26 Bike Bay. Shindock back.
Bike bag included.
Good used KIH compact store with remote
keypad for $200 for $320, just $10 at $49 per
bookmark. KIH Campus 8, 928 KIH.
50 MPG - 1972 TUFFman Tiger 600 Perfect con-
struction. 9895, 843-165 or 844-167. 2,27
NOW VENTURA TENOR BANJO. Beautiful in-
ternational design, handmade in Italy.
(includes $25 CHAIR, $100 CANAPE,
$150 SHOES)
FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at real
price. All prices include tax.
Stonegate, AL 35124. Nursery
Stonegate. Also antiques, used furniture,
collections, and decorative arts.
COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. 2nd, 3 biks, 8 days a week.
Country Shop 707 N. 2nd, 3 biks, 8 days a week.
843-819-8359 Alison Atkinson.
For sale: Conn Acoustic Guitar with new Savage
wiring. Save $400. Beige condition, for
$90. Good condition, for $1400. 2-27
For sale: Pair of N° 193rd Skis Boots. $60 (or)
for sale: Pair of N° 193rd Ski Boots. $28 (or)
for sale: Mark in room 368. **2-28**
**2-28**
Owlillesse and Garrard change-Telekroni 141D' scene, best reasonable offer. Garrard SL20 '80. Owlillesse, best reasonable offer.
Storage speculace large, loaded faded
Storrie speculace large, loaded faded
Storage speculace small, small gray angu
Storage speculace small, small gray angu
Traveler GU-12 Collar Adap w. speaker. Wired.
Traveler GU-12 Trombone Adap w. speaker. Total
190 Trombones to Traveler GU-12.
MGB ROADSTER—1867, everything in perfect
condition. 40,000 miles on car. Mon., Feb.
482-7322. 40,000 miles on car. Mon., Feb.
842-7322.
Sony Cassette Studio will record at the bank room. The recording will be sent to Sony's Mail Service. See all the Sailsy at Ray Stonehill 295 West 61st Street, New York, NY 10017.
USED RADIAL TICHES -Pair 165-13 Bridgestone,
Pair 165-12 Condor, Pair 165-10 Toyota,
Pair 155-13 TCHES, Pair 155-14 Toyota,
Pair 155-13 Dumont, Pair 155-14 Micheli
back, b'23. Mass. Your Michelin Dealer.
2-28
RECORDED: Alternative buying at Rays Recycled
and Optimum Outlets on 16th Street. On
陆地, 15'F to rock or tile capping tape avail-
able. Off-road.
Dining Room Table w matching buffet, $25; library table, $49; cob waintrasse, $18, $45-80
library table, $69; telephone, $29.95-39.95
Jusznian electrostatic speakers Retail $29.95
channel 2 year warranty $0.00, Rod. $44, $89-129
channel 3 year warranty $0.00, Rod. $44, $89-129
Old but working h1-fit-tunnel, amplifier Jensen speaker. $25.84-9099.
Samurai 2004A receive-amplifier w 2 watts rms.
Samurai 2004A receive-amplifier w 3 watts rms.
5 yrs full guarantee $79 each. Both beautifully
handmade by Samurai Audio.
SAAB 9 2- door Sedan, 170m, low mileage one
owner, excellent condition inside and out,
843km.
6 great books—new set for sale; Call 841-280-2980
2-27
fairly cheap
FOR SALE: **66 PortaTemper Tempet C** .Gly can货
call. Message 843-4017 after 4 p.m. 3-1
1
63 VW Bug- 40,600 miles, AM-FM, dependable
transportation - 842-412 after 5 p.m.
3-1
Speakers for sale: 4 new E.S.P. model 2 speakers.
Call 811-496-3100
3-1
TACOS
$3.50 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
CRESCENT APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
•Crescent Heights
•Oaks •Acorn
•Gaslight
Rental Office
1815 W. 24TH
1 and 2 BEDROOMS
For sale. 69 VW sedan, X cond. rebuilt engine.
For sale. 85 VW stationwagon, X cond. $1,250. 8633
8633
Live in Nalsham? Comfort, good food and friends.
Call Karmen at 845-260-8900 or 845-730-8700.
Call Tailor at 845-260-8900 or 845-730-8700.
Pg sale two burritos 1 Garner AT&T, $89. Also
purchase two burritos 1 Garner AT&T, $89.
Pre-order price new $15; Sell for $60. Call 603-272-5252.
SN Boot- Nordica, size 10 M. Also 1 pr. of
snap separately - 841-3635
2:28
SN Boot- Nordica, size 10 M. Also 1 pr. of
snap separately - 841-3635
2:28
FOR SALE: SALR: V1-7 arcautil 50cm or better
(condition $0 or below)
Call Mark at 843-685-2900
Call Mark at 843-685-2900
Yoshida Yamaha $30, xcel. cond. $350 $310 sko. kits,
$39 size. Lxge factory. cond. $450 - 515 - 5
- 55
TRAC (Dolby) pulse reduction for stenosis
864-357-0921 Call 911-304-5874 (after 5 p.m.) HAMMER
Call 911-304-5874 (after 5 p.m.) HAMMER
FOR SALE: SALEM AM/PM REceiver-receiver
8. 843 Calline between 5 and 8, 843-8205, 8-
5 Caline between 5 and 8, 843-8205, 8-5
35 mm. Mamiya 1000 DTL, with accessor-
ment. Sel w/ lead screw, or separately. Calibr Rik
film. Sel w/ lead screw.
For Sale. SLIR XLR Camera with 8x16 sensor-$155
For Sale. SLIR XLR Camera with 8x16 sensor-$155
For Sale. SLIR XLR Camera with 8x16 sensor-$155
Radio- 1928. Western Air Standard, good condition.
Radio- 1930. Western Air Standard, needs faint make-up mask, must use Cell Silve
Radio- 1931. Western Air Standard, needs faint make-up mask, must use Cell Silve
HELP! Need to sell Cornel Cornet, excellent 3-5
Ballpark. Same first base. 3-5
Hurry! Call Toni, evening. 825-8727
For Sale, Sharp 90 Cutlass S 350-2 baret, green
carpet, excellent condition. Call 824-2178 for
sale.
NOTICE
115 Michigan State B-Stat. B-Weave. We have open pit
baskets, sandwich baskets, and sandwich plates.
Try our bread plate, bread sandwiches
or brisket by the pound. Hall-chickens by the
pound or by the pound. 9:30 am, closed Sunday and Tuesday
8:42-10:10, 9:30 am, closed Sunday and Tuesday
8:42-10:10.
TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day service South Carolina Manual, $125 to clean cabinets and washers and cleaned Electronic and light industrial equipment. River City Repair $85 Vermont 811-470-6320 Clients River City Repair $85 Vermont 811-470-6320
REPRODUCTION CAN BE FUN. See Jorge or
Judy at the Quick Copy Center for your right.
(Call 800-256-3944.)
THEISIS BINDING and copying service available for use by customers of the following: Fast Service and reasonable prices. Call 814-760-2951.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT at the Quick
Screen: 1600 x 2400 (1.8MB)
(1,000 cph) = 8120.11 Total: 8841.90 - 237.00
= 8504.90
Free: One JC1 $23 bicycle hire if you pair it with a mountain bike. Free: Ride On-Bike Shop. It is a nice rack and we have nice Halveng, Cannamina, Raleigh, Peugeot, & Mourbridge. Bicycle: Ride On-Bike. 1041
MEDITATION WORKSHOP within a Christian
club in the city of Oslo. 14 days.
1943 Ovad. For registration, drop in or call
870-250-6800.
COUFFES ENCICIMENT Future viewing Life
Information United States, 842-933-6712,
Fax information United States, 842-933-6712.
*National Laptop Radio Hour* 7:00K, KUDOK $850
*National Laptop Radio Hour* 10:30K, KUDOK $950
*Giving FEB 27 Another reason to listen*
OPEN HOUSE—the children of Creative World Day Care Center would like to invite you to their open house on Sunday, March 10th, from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Creative World Center 240, W. 23rd St., Bldg. 16, apt. # 23
Honda shapes the world of wheels—at HORIZON,
CARLISLE, LINCOLN, SERVICE LAKE,
WEST COAST. (1) 800-765-4200.
Johnnie's
LAWENCHY GAY LIBERATION, INC. Monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m., Monday, March 4; Union, 8:00 p.m., Union Box 254; Lawrence, Bap/ Shelley - 424-5778 - 640-296 for socialization; Socialland - 424-5778
745 new hampshire
Pat Read Indian Shop, Room 203, Elkridge House,
phone 813-750-9926, w office 203, f reception
10 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday; Tuesday-
10 a.m.-5 p.m. on Friday by appointment. Mrs.
Kathryn O'Connor will be Southwest with interesting new merchandise. 34
a new beer place.
FOR RENT
FOR BENT-A—Now 2 bedroom apartment with
sunny terrace, in converted storage, NEAR
MARTINIANS CITY.
MOTORCYCLE repaint and tune. All makes-atkats-
ment. Minor tune-up on $25. Spring service special
for motors. Minor tune-up on $25. Spring service special
for motors.
FOR BENT to male or female student. Nice
access to computer, library, cafeteria,
block from Union. Parking and utilities paid.
$150/day.
APAITPAT-M-spleen, clean and quiet 3 bed-room apartment, 1585 sqm shown at 1920x1360; 1585 sqm shown at 1920x1360.
[career of 8th & New Hampshire]
TRAILRIDGE, by the country club, wall to wall
room. Complete chicest kitchen, private pau-
zonette, complete kitchen, private pa-
nionette. Swimming pool; go BBQ grill in courtyard,
swimming pool; go BBQ grill in courtyard,
bathroom
APARTMENT - One and two room efficiency furnished. For males. Near downtown. No pets. $485.00.
JAHYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS are on
703-621-4852 and with utilities aid 883-899-4582.
1 bedroom apt, sfg carpet, redecorated kitchen,
2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Call Toni at 843-8643 or
address at 843-1116.
HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1723-1745 West 24th.
Now leaning in, & bedroom furnished or unfurnished.
Kitchen, dining room, dining room, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, off-the-street parking, KU bus terminal.
Hall.
Mild enough for kids! Fish-lou art gt. ½ block
Mild enough for kids! Ace art gt. 4k for Kids!
Jim, No bumps even if Ninja emoji.
Jim, No bumps even if Ninja emoji.
1. bedroom, furnished upstairs set Large living room, $125/month; $125/month. Call M43-3322 between 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m.
Foods for Health now at 615 MASS 842-2771
FOR RENT. Two bedroom furnished apartments.
Bedrooms rooms $3 Call 843-8039 or 842-
5666.
Two-bedroom Apt. Furnished or unfurnished.
Available March 1. Air-conditioned, w/w carpet,
pool, laundry facilities, peach wall,
off-street. Entrance enough to walk to 3-
Square Stadium Apts. 843-216-119.
HELP WANTED
Nine big 3 bedroom furnished apartment for rent; 1500 sq. ft., gas, 2 bathrooms, $165 or $53 three way. Call 841-2421. Price $3,950.
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
McDowall will be the opening day dinner taking place at the Hugh Warner Center, 210 West 48th Street, New York, NY 10019. A party will be held on Friday, September 15, 2024, between the hours of 10:30 AM and 6:30 PM.
Smoking Is Our Only Business
FALL IN LOVE THIS
COMES
unique
antiques
candles
magic beads
custom made
sweaty
82558
1144 Indiana
George's Shop
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
--travel service
Want a good experience? Volunteer! Clearing-
sites, office assistants, staff openings for 1921-1927; Call Jail Wilgenden for information.
Business majors needed for research programs in the field of computer science, statistics, or in simulated baseball. Volunteer $45; graduate $60; post-bachelor $75.
Let Maupintur
Do The LEWORK For You!
(NEVER a extra cost
for airline tickets)
If You're Planning on FLYING.
*4st-time and Full-time summer*: Experienced
professor with 5+ years of good job.
Please call 843-2090 or 843-2090.
SERVICES OFFERED
RIVER CITY REIT PAYUP - 815 Vermont. 841-4638.
Stereos & watches - `typewriter`. Independent repair specialists. No retail unit. We service what you replace. Unused repair resources. See Notes 12.
Summer Job at Adrondack Lake Resort, Sports-
started married couple wanted for work just a
week from last week. May $18 weekly and your own private house-
ship, swimming, fishing, hikes, terms and golf. Pla-
ces included referrer information, referrer
references and personal history. Mr. & Ma-
rk Bordert Cерл, 1000 Sunset Drive 3-27
Private sewing instruction. Groups of 3 or 4.
Beginning and Advanced dressmaking or
2-477
LMOURNEY & CHAFFEUFFER SERVICE. Ultimate
guest service with friendly, knowledgeable,
plus plus gas. Negotiate. Call 800-721-6492.
TELEPHONE SALES for Lawrence Service Club
Sale Price $75.00 per person, 416 per hour, plus bonus. Phone 842-858-3858.
Wanted day and night waitresses, night fry cook and night didwallow. Apply in person at 99th and Iowa, Hilbert Restaurant. See Milder Nursery or morning or afterwards between 3-5 and 4 p.m.
Tired of Housework? Let us do it. We specialize in floor cleaning and washing. Work done properly is a reasonable price. For more information, call 843-3094 afternoons and evenings. Randy of Buff, 843-3094 afternoons and evenings.
Two sharp waitresses one full-time and one part-time, Ms. Chayce experienced the Yuk. Yuk experienced both onexperienced interview immediately Come by for person interview in a hotel, need to Duckwalls at Hillel Street Sneak Preview
Help Wanted: nights & weekends. Patience &
Happiness in person, permafrost & Billard.
West end of billard. Billard & Billard.
West end of billard. Billard & Billard.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEED POINT
RUGS-GANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPROARD
15 East 8th 841-7265
10-5 Monday-Saturday
SUA / Maupintour
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Lawrence Rental Exchange
X
MOTHER'S
"a fun. friendly
2406 Iowa
843-9764
PHONE 843-1211
2408 Iowa
843-9844
K
atmosphere"
Bar B. Q, Steaks
and Sandwiches
our specialties"
NOW!
THE FOUR Spring Break Reservations NOW!
Make Your
Bike Rider
KU Union—The Mails—Hillcrest—900 Mass
NIGHT CLASSES?
AFRAID TO WALK TO CAMPUS?
UNABLE TO PARK?
RIDE THE NIGHT EXPRESS 5:45 - 10:15
ANOTHER STUDENT SENATE SERVICE
CLASSICAL GUIPER INSTRUCTION. Make that realism a reality by learning to expose yourself through the music of classical guipers and instruments in music fundamentals, classical musical technology, and instructional materials for beginners through advanced players.
Pacific Island Round Spring Break can be a drag without transportation once you’re there. I’m equipped to take your bike down and back for reasonable space, call Wayne, 843-6260. Reasonable space, call Wayne, 843-6260.
Employment Opportunities
INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL POSITION
Research Assistant, Suggested Job Position
Master of Public Administration degree. Experienced in the state budget process. Some knowledge of the Kansas budget process with regard to the state budget process. Helped duration March 6 through June 13. Supported research grant $ salary $20 per month. Performed research assistant on a project concerning Kansas budget process as on the administrative, financial and budget components of future growth policies in the state budget process. Apply to INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL POSITION at
Spring and Summer Employment - Part-time
and 50% Full Time
March 5th to April information counter of Student Uni-
versity
PERSONAL
Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles.
Interested in no-frills how-ont jet travel to town or for a weekend getaway? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS can help you find the least expensive way for getting where you want to. Phone or visit www.educationalflights.com.
Stamp. Collections—Bought, Sold, Traded. Call:
3-1
846-321 or 842-8252
---
STUDENTS WELCOME!
Town Tavern
(formerly Johnnie's)
401 N. 2nd
A friendly place for
Beer & Sandwiches
STUDENTS WELCOME
Large groups please give advance notice Call 843-9728
Bud & Evelyn
WERKEND ENCOUNTER GROUP led by Jerry
Foster, 2017 fall night, Sat. Bai-
mar 3-1 March 1-2, ELF call, Thursday,
Saturday, Sunday
LOST
CATHOUSE APARTMENT. No lease required.
Cust card 1234567890. Open 8 am to 6 pm, or later.
Cust card 1234567890. Open 8 am to 6 pm, or later.
WANTED
Wanted:
HOUSEMATE* Spouse with whits
name, age 25+, at least 1 year exp.
Workings on floor and bedding.
Need $40 plus savings. Call
806-357-1000. Job #303.
JEWELRY custom made silver htrs, etc. Custom made silvery htrs and shades. Call Bob Hutchins at 843-263-0511.
Lock—pair of polarized amplifiers in an orange case, near Wescott. If found placed 84-6255.
Least in velocity of 130th and Ogb, small Siamese
and Bengal. In heat and need needs more
return. In Return is 190th and Ogb.
Lost-Pure gray hilty half-gown, male last
phone call. Evie B. 42-6398 Reward.
phone call Evie B. 42-6398 Reward.
Rag
Tag
DOWNTOWN
Experienced Typist—will do typing, dissertation,
paper texts and noncellent types. Call Page
875-230-6192.
WANTED: Keyboard or Guitar Player For Established Area Band Who Can Preferably Sing Also. We play traditional rock and roll and have engaged enquiries - job Jeff 35-839 at mki-2549.
Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other mime, type writing. Have electric-type键盘 with peta tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Have typed a letter spelling corrected. PhD: 842-9354. Mrs. Wright.
WE FEATURE:
Corner of 12th and
842-1059
Typing in my home IBM ISEM Basic Plea type
typing in a PC using the Prism Progm. Promise is
calling. Call Kaithe. 841-253-7900.
K
TYPING
TWICE AN HOUR 25 & 45 past the hour
"KU ON WHEELS"
Another Student Senate Service
- T-Shirts
- Jersey's (cotton, double knit nylon mesh)
- Sweat Suits
- Tennis Shoes
- Tube Socks
- Golf & Tennis Shirts
- Jewelry (Greek & Independent)
- Party Favors
- Coaching Jackets
- Gym Shorts
- Handball Equipment
Instant Lettering & Multi Colored Crests
HORIZONS
HONDA
Sales-Service
1811 W. 6th Lawrence, Kansas
843
Parts & Accessories
10
Wednesdav. February 27, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Scarcity of KU Women Veterans A Disadvantage, Spokesmen Say
By S.J. WOHLRABE Kansas Staff Reporter
The small number of women veterans at the University of Kansas prevents many of their graduates from receiving the and they often face added educational costs although they receive the same Gi Bill payments as men, a representation of the Kansas Veterans Commission said.
"It is obviously hard to gear services toward women when there are still relatively few women in the military," the representative, Larry Frank, said.
Frank said women were receiving the same navy benefits as men under the GI Bill.
"The GT Bill benefits for men and women were equalized across the board a few years ago."
GI Bill payments are equal for men and women, although several KU women veterans said yesterday that as women they bad additional educational costs.
Betty Reading, Lawrence freshman and a Navy veteran, said, "I have to pay for day care out of my GI Bill and that isn't tax deductable."
Reading said the GI Bill wasn't enough to support her and a child. She said her husband also received GI Bill payments, which helped to cover their living costs.
"For a long time I could not declare my husband as a dependent under the GI Bill," Lerrain Valdez, Topka senior said, "But be sure you are as dependent if a dependent school."
Two years ago the GI Bill was changed so women could claim their husbands as dependents, Joe LeVota, president of Campus Veterans, said.
Dependency and indefinity compensation payments still aren't available for
“‘R is hard for women to get into a VA hospital because they are designed on a ward basis,’ he said. ‘Women must wait for treatment until a private room becomes available.’”
widowers of women veterans, Frank said. Hospital care from the Veterans Administration (VA) is provided on a bed-available basis. Frank said.
LeVoita did the campus services for men and women veterans were exactly the same.
Valdez said the VA hospital in Topeka wouldn't handle her pregnancy-related matters although she was a disabled veteran.
"When we help a veteran we see no difference in sex," he said. "All veterans are entitled to the same benefits under the GI Bill and we don't reject women."
Dean Kackey, assistant to the dean of men and adviser to Campus Veterans, said although the veterans services were handled differently at Campus Veterans, they were handled without regard to
Several women veterans said they didn't use the campus services for various reasons.
"I don't bother with the Campus Veterans," Camilla Wagner, Lawrence graduate student, said. "I went to a couple of the meetings but they were mostly beer parties and mostly for people who couldn't adjust to their problems."
Linda Pettay, St. Marys sophomore, said that she had beer the only womens at the club because it was cooler than it is now.
"I felt uncomfortable and left," she said, "and I felt hurt because I needed anything more because I felt out of control."
Reading said she had problems getting
Washington he planned to enter the Senate race.
From Page One
Docking
Democrats have ballyhooed the approach, as likely to contain stagnant employment.
The Associated Press learned that Miller was told by a high party official over a week ago that Docking had made the decision not to allow him to return, it is believed to have gone to the Roy camp.
Attempts to talk to Docking last night regarding the speculation failed.
However, state Democratic chairman Norbert Dreling is reported to have wanted a compromise with the media, they actually were made at the dinner. News media speculation that Docking is removing himself from active politics is getting in the way of the Saturday night announcement plans.
However, James Shaffer, the governor's press secretary, said, "I can't discuss the governor's thinking on any decision he may or may not have made."
Party officials have tried unsuccessfully to dissuade Docking, sources said.
Docking is described as being disturbed by the grand jury indictments returned here Jan. 22 and their effect on him and his family. He also is described as disturbed by recurrent Republican allegations of alleged misconduct in which he chooses not to subject his family to accusations an election campaign are virtually certain to produce.
Three Democratic party sources confirmed that Docking has made his use of the campaign to get more attention and turn to his business and family interests rather than face another election campaign. One source said the decision was made Feb. 11 and some members of the governor's office have said they have received
Among those indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit bribery was the governor's brother, George R. "Duck" Docking, a Kansas City, Kan., attorney.
The inductements账封 a conspiracy two years ago to kick back $30,000 into Decking's 1972 re-election campaign in return for the award of an architectural contract on a University of Kansas Medical Center expansion project.
The indictments trace the money to Richard L. Mailow, former patronage officer at the Rockefeller Foundation.
the money actually went into Docking's
museum. Malloy was indicted on a berry
cherry charge.
Docking has said he cooperated fully with the grand jury and made no effort to stifle the investigation, which was conducted by Miller.
--information because there were so few women veterans at KU.
The governor acknowledged in public statements following the indictments' being made public that he had sustained a deep personal hurt in having his brother insisted.
Democratic party sources characterized Docking's family as being very disturbed by the indictments and pressing for the governor to retire from candidate politics.
Docking, 48, is the only person to have been elected governor for more than two terms in Kansas. He won the office in 1966 and has been re-elected to two-year terms three times. His current term expires next January.
He is the son of the late George Docking, who served as Kansas governor 1957-41. Mrs. Virginia Docking, widow of the late Governor James of the present governor, lives in Topeka.
"No one ever seemed to know what to do when a women veteran was looking for labor."
Robert Docking has two sons attending the University of Kansas.
Veterans seem to have social contacts with each other and their wives form auxiliary groups Valdez said, but, women veterans have no such groups.
"People have hang-ups about women in the military," said Vashtil Winterberg, a psychologist at the military woman is either a homosexual or a prostitute. I have never had to face trouble."
"I just told someone would realize that we are here too and it is not just one or two," she said.
Petay said she didn't tell people she was a vetener.
women veterans said that there were problems unique to women in adjusting to KU and that many of them concern the image many people have of women in the
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Kackley said he wasn't familiar with the problems of women veterans.
There are just so few women veterans at KU, and I would imagine that most of their problems of adjustment would be similar to men's." he said.
Kackley said that if women veterans had concerns they thought were unique to them that they should go to the Office of the Dean of Women for counseling.
"It would be nice to talk with some women veterans," she said. "I often get lonely and call a friend in Minnesota who is in the same position as me."
Kathleen O'Connell, Dayton graduate student, said that adjustment to KU was "not difficult."
"I would imagine that undergraduate amo single women veterans have a hard time entering a new peer group that is several years younger than them," she said.
"As a graduate student I have social contacts with people from the department who are also older and usually married," she said. "I don't have the social security I have."
city and whether they would be willing "to put a few backs on the line" as an indication that they would be willing to use a bus regularly.
From Page One
City...
The commission did pass a motion indicating that it recognized the need for public transportation in Lawrence and authorizing the city to request designation as an urban area by the state highway department.
CITY MANAGER BUFORD M. Watson said the highway funds that the designation would make available to the city could be used for planning and operating a public facility.
The commission also discussed the transportation needs of Lawrence high school students who aren't transported by the school district and the possibility of fulfilling their needs with a public transportation system.
So far, Watson said, the state has designated $6 per cent of the $6.5 million for use by Wichita, Topeka and Kansas City. Kane areas that will be filled are not specified, he said.
Ernest J. Coleman, director of federal programs for the Lawrence school district, told the commission there were about 400 schools in the area where at least $2\frac{3}{2}$ miles from school but weren't provided transportation to their schools. The school district wasn't required by state law to provide transportation for these schools, because they live within the city limits.
IF THE SCHOOL district contracted for transportation for those students by Sept. 15, he said, the school district would be eligible for about $25,000 in state aid. However, that would average only about 60 or $7 a student, and it now costs the district about $100 to transport a student to school. Commissioner Emick said the lack of transportation for these students was a "sticker for most of the people" of the city, according to the school district wasn't wasting the buses and personnel it had already contracted to transport other students by not also providing service to the 400.
Counsellor Jack Rose said he thought it should be the responsibility of the school to protect students from bullying.
Athletics . . .
From Page One
money would be used to pay for the program director's salary, coaches, secretaries, a trainer, operational expenses and special expenses such as insurance and physical examinations. The money would be used to fund contingency fund for post season competition.
SHE SAID the program would request more than $50,000 from the Student Senate this year. The money the program receives from the senate is used for supplies and expenses, capital equipment, rent and utilities, travel and personal services.
Drydale said women's athletics received no help from the KU Athletic Association for the women's basketball team.
The program has also asked for and received support from the Endowment Association during post season competition, as well as scholarships are available for women athletes.
workouts. The track team can use the field house an hour each day and the basketball court an hour each day.
students not covered by the minimum requirements of state law.
WILLIAM J. WOMACK, a member of the school board, defended the school district, saying that the school's bus services were operating near the limits set by state law.
The commission deferred for two weeks further allocation of revenue sharing funds for 1974. Mayor Nancy Hambleton said the city had been contacted to discuss a joint meeting to review city and county revenue sharing plans to check for overlapping requests.
Those laws require that no child be kept on a bus longer than one hour. He said the school district had already gone further than most school districts in Kansas by providing more flexible rules for students in the city who are farther than one mile from school.
an other action, the commission approved an ordinance creating a two-hour parking limit on the north side of 12th Street from the intersection with activity between Indiana and Louisiana streets. Shop owners in the area, also known as Oread Corner, had complained to the commission about using the parking area all day, limiting access to customers.
THE COMMISSION ALSO deferred for two weeks any action on plans for the construction of a city maintenance garage for city equipment and vehicles.
Dennis A. Kallen, assistant city manager, but the commission that about 70 percent of voters were voting for
made available for land acquisition and construction of the garage. He said the city could begin construction of the garage by late summer.
Watson said he preferred construction of a 7- to 10-acre site. The garage should in-
clude equipment and should be adequate for both paving and painting the equipment, he said.
COMMISSIONER BARKLEY CLARR questioned whether the use of revenue sharing funds for the garage would mean that the city would be unable to use revenue sharing funds for a public transportation company said it had been the city's practice to use revenue sharing funds for projects that wouldn't involve continuous costs.
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It Takes a While,but Most KU Athletes Do Graduate
By HAL RITTER
Karen Stoll Resources
Kansan Staff Regarter
Just an average student in high school, I took course to the University of Kansas to study astronomy.
That he did—and well. He was a three-year starter for the Jayhawks and made the team in 2014.
But when commencement arrives in May, Roger will be one of many students classified as seniors who won't receive a diploma.
Roger isn't a real person, but he could be because his academic record is typical for varsity athletes on the KU football, basketball and track teams.
Only one athlete in four graduates in four years.
That figure sounds bad, but it isn't the whole story of Roger and his academic career. Nearly all the musical Rogers on TV were older than he was when KU return to school after their varsity
eligibility has ended, and more than three out of four eventually earn a degree.
Those statistics are among the most important to come out of an investigation into the graduation records of seniors on the school's track teams of the 10-year, period from 1964-73.
The investigation was made by taking all 270 students listed on KU sports rosters of the past decade and comparing them with official graduation records made available by the Office of Admissions and Records. The study showed that:
—25.5 per cent of the 270 athletes graduated after four years of college.
—83 per cent of the 188 athletes in the first seven years of the study (1964-70) have graduated (Seniors of the last three years included because nunny are still in school).
37. 3 per cent of the 244 athletes in the first nine years of the study did not graduate (0.8%).
—The basketball teams compiled the highest four-year graduation rate at 35.3 per cent and the worst rate of nongraduates, also 35.3 per cent.
years or less. (1973 seniors were excluded because they haven't had a full fifth year to complete their degree.)
The football teams compiled the worst four-year graduation rate at 22.8 per cent.
—The track teams compiled the lowest nongraduate rate at 10.7 per cent.
- No new trends in graduation rates have evolved during the past 10 years. For example, the first, sixth and seventh years used the same average scores (49) for athletes (four) who graduated in four years.
KU's five-year graduation rate for the first nine years of the survey (69.3 per cent) is considerably higher than that of the only school known to have done a similar study.
That last result of the study came from comparing the KU study with studies made
The 1968 Minnesota study showed that of 202 athletes in the classes of 1960 and 1961 at Minnesota, 53 per cent graduated within five years after beginning college, compared with 76 per cent.
by the Bureau of Institutional Research at the University of Minnesota in 1965 and 1970.
The 1970 study showed that of 196 athlete in the classes of 1966 and 1967, 50.5 per cent graduated within five years, compared with 41.4 per cent of nonathletes.
Those studies included athletes in 11 sports at Minnesota, and the KU study included only those athletes in what are considered "professional sports," football, basketball and track.
Still, KU athletes' nine-year graduation rate of 69.3 per cent was far above both the national and U.S. average.
Several other studies have been made that show how many athletes who entered college as freshmen went on to graduate, but none are comparable to the KU and
Minnesota studies, which didn't consider athletes who dropped out of school between
Unfortunately, no big Eight Conference or national statistics on graduation rates of athletes exist to compare with the KU statistics.
"I've been trying to obtain that information myself," says Commissioner Charles Niemes of the Big Eight Conference. "I put out a memo to the member schools to obtain this information, and so far only schools (including KU) have responded."
Ted C. Tow, who is director of the publicity service of the National Collegiate Athletic Association at its headquarters in Kansas City, Kan., and who also handles research studies for the NCAA, is interested in graduation rates among athletes, too.
"We've had a proposal to do a research study nationwide," he says, "and that research is part of our work."
So the statistics that resulted from the study of KU's athletes stand alone. They are useful because they provide substantive evidence for what we can learn graduate and how long it takes, but there are other questions where academics and athletes are concerned that numbers can be used.
For example, do the low four-year graduation rates mean it's almost impossible for a student on a major sport team to graduate "on time?"
What special problems do athletes experience that nonathletes don't, and how much do those problems hinder academic performances of athletes?
What motivates athletes who don't earn degrees in four years to return to KU when the document that so often brought them to college has become a place toinate in collegiate athletics, no longer exists?
In reply to the first question, Tommy
Z
PLEASANT
Forecast: Partly sunny and cooler, High near 50, low in the 30s.
See TAKES Page 8
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
84th Year, No. 100
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Thursday, February 28. 1974
Paxson Resigns Amid Dispute Over Chairmen
PARK
See Story Page 9
Kansan Photo by GENE NICK
Stone blocks serve as a frame for the landscape reflection on a window on the east side of Wescoe Hall. The scene shows part of Fraser Park.
House Okays Energy Bill; Veto Expected from Nixon
Window with a View
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House passed emergency energy legislation yesterday, which provides for an oil price rollback and gives President Nixon the authority to order
THOMAS GORT, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said, "Our experience has been that the courses have very low standards. They are just bull sessions and I can't see much intellectual activity. It's a fringe kind of activity that snacks a free university."
Gorton asked he thought the quality of the courses was closely tied to the calibher of
The measure now goes to the White House where it faces an almost certain veto.
Nixon said the bill's rollback provision, which "immediately popular," would lead to further shortages "which would require a serious question, radiating all over the country."
Nixon said at his Monday news conference that he planned to veto the legislation "if it reaches my desk in its present form."
Earlier, the House reversed its Rules Committee and voted down a parliamentary bill that would limit their powers.
According to figures from a House committee the rollback provision would
The vote on final passage was 238 to 151,
short of the two-thirds vote that would be required.
Final passage came after motions to strike several of the bill's more controversial provisions, including the price for gasoline and other authority, were defeated by roll call votes.
reduce gasoline prices by up to four cents a gallon at the pump and cut propane prices
Instead, it adopted a compromise rule proposed by House Commerce Committee Chairman Harley O. Staggers, D-WVA, who made the fallcore rollback votes on the price rollback, rationing authority and a section giving the president temporary authority to put energy conservation plans into effect and first seeking congressional approval.
Most L&A® courses are offered for three hours credit, applicable toward a degree. The course is limited to enrollment to one course per unit, but the School of Fine Arts, registering its disapproval of the program, has stipulated that all course may be applied toward a degree.
A motion to strike the rollback section from the hill was defended 238 to 173.
The House turned down the parliamentary rule on a 259 to 144 vote.
—The Federal Energy Office acknowledged serious deficiencies in its crude oil allocation program and announced plans to audit the oil imports into the United States.
A federal appeals court in Washington turned down a bid by the state of Maryland to increase its gasoline allotment, reversing a lower court decision that had directed the FEO to increase the state's allotment by 16 million gallons.
provision on the grounds that it was drafted by a Senate-House conference and was never voted upon by the full House. *Notes: related development*
Under the original rule, a challenge to the legislation could have come on the rollback
Fund Cuts in College Threaten LA&S Courses
Since its inception five years ago, the program has come under attack by critics. Arguments have centered on the choice of topics, the quality of teaching, the grading system used by those teachers and the awarding of academic credit for the program.
Kansan Staff Reporter
By LINDA HALES
Cutbacks in the 1974 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences budget may have serious consequences for the LA&S program if funding cannot be procured elsewhere.
—More than 12,000 coal miners were reported off the job in West Virginia in a spreading walkout to protest a gasoline shortage.
The program, which for five years has offered interdisciplinary courses on contemporary topics, lets its Student Senate govern the university. The senate's contingency fund ran short.
"Everyone has begun to realize it is the University's responsibility to fund the program," Richard Paxton, Baxter Springs associate vice president of a committee member, said yesterday.
But whether the college budget, which will be cut by $277,000 to $151,000 and result in the elimination of dozes of faculty and staff, is cost-effective or an additional funding burden is uncertain.
AMBROSE SARICKS, vice chancellor to academic affairs, said, "As of right now, I don't think the college budget can be expanded."
to some people, the question of whether to fund the LA&S program from college allocations may be tied to the question of the program's academic value relative to established departments and appropriateness.
A belief in democracy in education, according to George Waggoner, dean of the college, is the idea behind allowing undergraduate students to teach courses. He
instructors and he objected to under- undergraduate students' teaching.
JERRY LEWIS, associate dean of the college and director of the LA&S program, admitted that grades averaged above the University norm. Three years ago, he said,
Alvin Dewey, assistant director of Centennial College and of the program, said six seniors, or 25 per class, to teaching force, teach a teaching, to remainder, he said, were being taught by graduate students and faculty members. All instructors are sponsored by faculty members.
WHEREH SPOONORING professors actually take part in the course depends on the class. Fewer than half the sponsors of this semester's classes participate actively in the course, and these classes about once a month or remain in contact with the instructor by phone, offering suggestions and exchanging ideas, instructors said. The remainder act exclusively as "nameplates," signing papers and preparing materials needed for a class printed.
said he trusted students and his belief in maximum student participation was his justification for letting students teach. In 2015, the chairman is needed to lead a discussion.
Cautions and psychiatry
See FUND Page 3
WAGGONER SAID THAT the LA&S program was an outgrowth of the honors program and that adaptation of seminar materials to honors and honor students led to LA&S courses.
Gorton said his experience was that students on probation were likely to receive 'A' grades in LAKS courses. Students should refer to the courses as pursuit or enjoyment.
"We have tried to worry more about maximum development of talents than on minimum."
Fear of low standards, however, has been a central issue among those who oppose the program and a central concern of those involved in the program's administration.
"If you're saying that self-awareness shouldn't be taught you are discounting
grades were running high enough to warrant concern and a study was done to determine just how many "A's" were being given.
"They've come down to more nearly what one would expect now," he said, but still
BOTH LEWIS AND Dewey agreed that the trend in course topics was toward self-awareness. Thirteen of 27 courses taught this semester deal with human relations.
Course content, which this semester ranges from Innovation in Marital and Other Intimate Relations and Male Awareness to Britain Today and The Natural History Museum as an Educational Resource, has raised eyebrows.
However, Lewis said he thought grades in classes of seminar size, generally ran higher than large lecture classes because there was more contact between students
Illegal Gift Discussed In Milk Co-Op Letter
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)—The largest U.S. milk cooperative made an illegal $100,000 political contribution to President Nixon's re-election campaign in 1969, according to a letter by the co-op's chief antitrust attorney.
The letter was introduced into evidence yesterday at the deposition of George L. Mehren, general manager of the MILK Association Associated Milk Producers Inc. (AMP).
The letter was written Jan. 21, 1974, by attorney E. C. Heiniger of Chicago to Kenneth Parkinson, a lawyer for the Committee to Re-Elect the President.
The letter details the intricate AMPI transactions that surrounded the con-
clave.
Heiniger said the purpose of the letter was to recoup $100,000 from the committee.
"This confirms our telephone conversation of Jan. 15, 1974, with respect to a political contribution in the amount of $100,000 to the Committee to Re-Elect the President, your client, from the corporate client, Associated Milk Producers Inc."
Federal law prohibits political contributions by corporations.
"The rather complicated factual recitation which follows establishes an
unlawful contribution from AMPI funds and, accordingly, we would like the committee to return the $100,000 to AMPI on a voluntary basis." Heininger's letter said.
The letter said a $100,000 contribution was delivered to Herbert Kalmbach, President Nixon's personal lawyer, and "it appears that he has received an offer from the Committee to Re-Elect the President."
Heininger's letter said the $100,000 was originally charged to a bank account of the Trust for Agricultural Education, the political arm of AMPL.
SUA Votes to Bring Erotic Films May 7
"The Erotic Film F celebration",
canceled at KU on Jan. 20, has been
rechieved, according to Jim Milo.
The sophomore and SUA film
board member.
The SUA board voted last night to reschedule the film for May 7.
Last Wednesday the board received a petition signed by 2,100 students who urged that the film be rescheduled.
Indians See 'a Lot on Line' at Wounded Knee
By NANCY SMITH Kansan Staff Reporter
"I can still see the butchered women and children lying heaped and scattered all along the crooked glutton as palice as when I saw a wizard and a monster, and see that something else died there in the bloody mud, and was buried in the blizzard. A People's dream died there. It was a beautiful dream ... the nation's hoop is so large now, and the nation's hoop is no longer, and the sacred tree is dead."
The last bloody clash of the 19th century between U.S. cavalrymen and Sioux Indians came in the dead of winter, 1890, at Wounded Knee, S.D., row a dusty little village inside the Pine Ridge Sioux Reservation.
Black Elk
Nearly 300 of the 350 men, women and children of Chief Big Foot's band of Sioux were massacred on the banks of Wounded Creek by the men of the seventh U.S. Cavalry.
MORE THAN 100 indictments have been handed down against Indians who participated in Wounded Knee II. The combined trial of two leaders, Rick Means and Dennis Banks of the American Indian Association, was a way earlier this month in St. Paul, Minn.
One year ago today, more than 200 angry American Indians seized historic Wounded Knee in what has been called a move of frustration and desperation. A 71-day confrontation with federal agents followed, known today as Wounded Knee II.
"If the government wanted to show good faith to the Indians, it would drop the issue of illegal immigration and problems that caused the action," Norman Forer, assistant professor of social welfare, said yesterday. "An attempt to repress dissent by tracing the nature really lays the groundwork for future actions."
Means and Banks told the court in opening statements given Feb. 12 in St. Paul. The court did not find any evidence.
EDGAR HEAP OF BIRDS, Wichita sophomore and a Cheyenne-Arapaho who is president of the University Committee on American Indian Affairs, said he thought the government was "trying to get the militant Indians."
destanding of the provisions of the FT. Laramie Treaty of 1868 and that any illegal acts committed at Wounded Knee were the responsibility of the government to abide by the treaty.
"If Means and Banks are acquitted on treaty evidence, it could cost the government a lot of money. Now treaties aren't boned, so there are no rights. There's more on the line than just the trial," said Heap of Birds.
The Ft. Laramie Treaty is the whole defense, Heap of Birds said. If the court allows its use, a precedent could be set for all Indian treaties.
ONA MZHICKTEN Kolcher, Lawrence
graduate student and Potawatami Indian,
Michigan.
to you, "If your Constitution means anything
say, to our treaties what意思 to us?"
SHE SAID scare tactics and harassment from government officials had been a very real part of the lives of Potawatomi Indians, and of reservation Indians, in the last five years.
Keltcher is vice president of the Committee on American Indian Affairs and the first KU graduate student in American Indian education.
The Potawatomi prairie band, which has a reservation near St. Marys, has many of the same problems as the Oglala Sioux of the Pine Ridge Residence. Self-determination through tribal government is one of the most important.
"It's a great thing to try to control tribal government. If the federal government controls tribal government and tribal government controls its tribe, the federal government should intervene to claim treaty rights," said Tony Garcia, Boise, Idaho, senior and Nez Perce Indian.
"Indian people are not protected by the U.S. Constitution," Forer said.
Garcia said she thought the meaning of the trials came down to whether the federal government was influencing tribal politics or that the federal government is carrying actions through tribal governments.
Their wardship status, she said, gives the government the right to act for Indians in their best interest—as the government perceives it. Most Americans aren't aware of Indians' exclusion from Constitutional protections, he said.
ALTHOUGH WARDSHIP is the real issue, sensationalized news coverage often has obscured the problem, according to Forer. He said wardship powers over Indians were assumed long ago by the federal government, but never legislated.
Administration of Indian affairs is a part of the Department of the Interior, a part of the Department of the Interior.
said that when Indians sought
See INDIANS Page 2
2
Thursday, February 28, 1974
University Daily Kansan
news associated press capsules
Docking Won't Answer Speculative Stories
Gov. Robert Docking declined yesterday requests by newsmen to discuss with him reports he has decided against seeking political office this year.
His press secretary, James Shaffer, issued a tense two-sentence statement saying Docking will make no "official response" to the "speculative stories" Shaffer said Docking would announce his political plans Saturday night at the Kansas Democrat's annual Washington Day dinner in Topeka. Informed sources reconfirmed Docking has told friends, political associates and his staff that he plans to retire from candidate politics.
British Pollsters Predicting Close Election
Public and private pollsters forecast a photo finish between Laborists and the ruling Conservatives in Britain's general elections today as the candidates face off in the polls.
But most signs last night also suggested a big-time Liberal revival in the voting. If liberal Leader Jeremy Thorpe's center party wins a substantial number of seats in the 635 member house of Commons, it would change the face of British politics, dominated for nearly a half century by Conservatives.
The crisis-ridden campaign has seen Prime Minister Edward Heath and Labor leader Harold Wilson each claiming to be the man to halt the nation's slide toward bankruptcy and conflict.
Calley Freed on $1,000 Bail Pending Appeal
LI. William L. Calley Jr., the only man convicted for the massacre of Vietnam victims in Alabama, was released from custody yesterday by a judge on Monday.
Calley signed an order allowing him to be released without paying the £1,000 bill set by U.S. District Court Judge J. Robert Elliott.
His appeal is now before Army Secretary Howard W. Callaway, who recently met with military attorneys following the yesterday.
After Callaway rules on Calley's appeal of his 20-year sentence, Nixon has said he will give the case a final review.
Indians See . . .
From Page One
redress, such as in a dispute with the BIA, they often were told that courts had no jurisdiction because of Indians' warship status and they were thereby deprived of the process.
the government, Forer said, always has maintained that AIM was a minority group and not representative of Indian people. The tribe's president said that the Oglala Sioux Tribe on Pine Ridge Reservation on Feb. 7 in the face of a 10-count federal indictment, campaigning in absentee and BIA resistance proves that AIM is a strong force among American tribes.
reep of Birds said he believed in AIM when it was stirring up a lot of awareness because it was stirring up a lot of awareness.
"AM LEADERS are really going out on a limb to do all this," he said. "If they are convicted and put in prison, I don't know who is going to pick up the leadership."
Both García and Forer said they didn'tink jailing of AIM leaders would squish the team.
The federal policy toward Indians often has resulted in the break-up of communal
"These people feel their very existence is being threatened, and the federal government is not addressing itself to the problem," Forer said.
"Taking Indians off the land breaks up their cohesive habit. If you take Indians away from their land, they lose their identity," Garcia said.
Most Americans think Indians want to leave the harsh reservation life, she said, but she's not sure.
"Tribes are trying to build up reservations. They are trying to safeguard what they have now. They want their land and their resources," she said.
Forer said the leasing issue on Sioux and other reservations was very important. BIA manipulation of tribal governments secured leases for non-Indians while providing marginal payment to Indian owners for use of the land.
Heap of Birds said, "White men can cure their grandparents, but they are still living on the streets."
"We're not asking for the land back, but we are asking the white man to think about it in the hope they will see they have a debt and be able to work from here still profiling from the initial takeover."
Forer said the failure of Indian people to safeguard tribal governments from federal officials made it impossible for them to protect their lands from encroachment.
"The big issue is resources, and the energy crisis makes it even more im-
The Indian problem, as exemplified by the Wounded Knee occupation and trial, boils down to three questions, according to Forer. Can we really have a pluralistic society? What kind of moral responsibility can be expected from the government in light of its Indian treaty violations? How secure are the rights of all Americans?
WASHINGTON-The National Student Lobby (NSL) concluded a five-day conference here yesterday after testimony before the House special subcommittee on education and a speech by Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D.
By SUN MILENIAM
Kansas Washington Correspondent
McGovern Talks to Student Lobby
Among the 80 students at the conference were representatives from Emporia State College, Washburn University and Kansas State University.
The students, representing more than 40 states, visited about three-fourths of the members of Congress during their stay, and met with NSI, legislative director刘邦 Olson Lyon.
They lobbied for the abolition of the needs test for students from families whose incomes were less than $20,000 a year, for an increase in work-study money, for low or no tuition at public two- and four-year colleges, for student stand-by fees on planes, buses and trains and against a different minimum wage for young people.
AAUP, American Association of University Professors, will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence; State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence; State Rep. Robert Koch, R-Lawrence; and State Rep. John H. Vogel, R-Lawrence, will talk on current legislative action.
on campus
CONSUMER PROTECTION AGENCY will have a consumers' workshop on tenants' rights at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union.
FACULTY SENATE will meet at 3:30 p.m., today in Wooldruff Auditorium; Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel will speak on the Kansas legislative session, and James E. Seaver, chairman of the Faculty Committee, will answer what the committee has done this year.
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Most of the delegates were neatly dressed. The majority of the men wore coats and ties, and dresses were common for the women. Yet it wasn't a conservative gathering, either. McGovern was roundly applauded when hair on the man was messed in evidence.
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The money crunch on campus is as hot an issue today as the war was two years ago, when it was a major problem.
Rodbell admitted that the delegates probably were better off economically than students in general, but he said that the representatives nevertheless had chosen to work on issues that affected low-income students.
He said the issues students had chosen reflected a shift in student values.
The four student witnesses suggested several changes in the national program of accreditation.
Those students are transient, he said. They can become an effective political force both nationally and on the state level by working with a continuing staff. The lobby represents 2.1 million students, about one-fifth of American college students.
The testimony before the special subcommittee on education yesterday was
Most of the students' suggestions were aimed at improving the operations of existing financial aid programs rather than suggesting new expenditures.
The hearing was officially conducted as part of a continuing reappraisal of a student financial aid by the subcommittee, but actually appeared to be more of an effort by subcommittee chairman James O'Hara, D-Mich., to encourage the lobby's work.
Besides financial aid, the conference considered veteran needs, sex discrimination and the student press in its workshops.
M. Gevern told about 400 students yesterday afternoon not to stay away from school.
He said that his loss in the 1972 presidential campaign might result in a victory for the country, because Watergate led to a civil war and sparted fundamental reforms.
"The only place now for the politics of Watergate is in the looser's column," he added.
He cited the disclosure of campaign and personal financing by political candidates and limits on campaign contributions as fundamental reform in the political process.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 28. 1974
2
Fund Cutbacks in College Threaten LA&S Courses
From Page One
ments," Dewey said. "It's a very traditional argument that one certain
But Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism, said in a recent speech, "There's nothing wrong with discussing sexual movies or the urban crisis, but it's not a bad thing for and why they read newspapers and magazines. It is not why they go to college."
Pickett compared the University to an "academic garbage can" because of what he sees as a trend toward curricula that are totally elective.
"ILL SAY THAT in my opinion we watered down the curriculum, in part to accommodate the demands of graduate students teaching three. We did much of our work at the university marketplace. We got the message that it would be desirable to attract students."
LA&S courses have attracted the students. Lewis said the courses were ex-
course, however, is that the student didn't know what else to take and was looking for a
"I wanted a pud," said Gary Isaacson,
Wilmette, Ill. senior.
Isaacson chose Topics and Problems in Human Relations in University Life, in part, he said, because his roommate was taking him. He had positive things to say about our lives.
ISAACSON SAID he didn't think the course was easy.
"It's an aide insofar as it makes you question the way you react," he said. "I would have liked to be very confident."
Susie Stutz, Topeka junior and a student in the same course, said, "We just get to
"You can gloss over it, treat it very lightly, but if you do, you won't get the grade," he said. "The course will help once I leave the University, which is what at a university are supposed to do. If they don't, they're a waste of time and money."
'There's nothing wrong with discussing sexual mores or movies or the urban crisis,' Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, said in a speech. 'But that is what students have bull sessions for and why they read newspapers and magazines. It is not why they go to college.'
tremely popular and generally were filled during the first day of enrollment.
An average of 25 to 30 courses a semester have taught about 1,300 students a semester. Attendance, as a whole, has not significantly from that of other departments.
Lewis has said he thought the courses were popular because they offered topics that interested him.
TWO STUDENTS who are enrolled in a course called Britain Today said they took the course because it was the only one offered on contemortory Great Britain.
know each other. We talk about dating relationships and talk about classes."
The course, a typical one, involves required readings, papers and class participation, and grading will be determined by the instructor's evaluation and assignments.
She said her helpers of the class were to get to know "other kinds of people."
STUTZ AND ISAACSON both rated the instructor highly.
A more common reason for taking a
"There was very little content," he said. "We never did any readings and just sat around and talked. We didn't learn more than we already knew."
gave his instructor and the course he took called American Violence a low rating.
Lewis and Dewey agreed that the instructor was the most significant factor in improving student learning.
Pickett said he was concerned about the number of hours a student could accumulate toward a degree by taking LA&S courses.
Lewis, however, said no one yet had come close to taking the 24 possible hours out of his schedule.
But those people involved in the administration of the program admit that problems have arisen from subject matter of some of the courses.
ONE OF THE ORIGINAL courses taught in the program was called Topics and Problems in the New Leaf. The course was taught by eight students and was popular.
However, the course aroused suspicion and concern outside the University, Lewis said, about what was being taught at the University.
A course in astrology became an issue when it was discovered that the instructor was teaching students how to写 horoscopes, according to Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science. The Liberal Arts and Sciences Governing Board, of which he is president, said the course content unacceptable, Ketzel said. The course was discontinued.
Bob Dennis. Shawnee Mission senior,
The responsibility for maintaining high standards in LAAS courses falls on the program's directors and on the LAAS governing board which is composed of six faculty members, one graduate and one undergraduate student.
THE GROUP HAS devised and revised a system of checks and balances to guard against "fad" courses, according to assistant Dewey.
He and Lewis receive applications from graduate and undergraduate students who want to teach courses. Information on the application form must include a detailed week-to-week outline for the proposed course, a required reading list, personal
since then have totaled $51,550 according to senate records.
qualifications of the instructor including grade point average and an abstract of the course. In addition, a letter of support from the sponsoring faculty member is required and must include an outline of the sponsor's own projected participation in the course.
Lewis said it was "partly a matter of tradition that the University not fund" the new courses. He said they were an exertion for students, and he had arisen elsewhere in the country so
'I think it would be a serious mistake to eliminate the (LA&S) program,' Dennis Quinn, professor of English, said. I think those courses that are the most successful should be supported as well as the hundreds of departmental courses that are supported as a matter of routine.'
of routine.
since the beginning of the program, Dewey said, in a continuing effort to upgrade the system.
"You can tell whether a course is a pad." be said. "If it might to have a read-list training you need to use a pad."
DEWEY, LEWIS and the eight-member board review the applications and attempt to weed out what Dewey referred to as the pud courses.
A proposal for a course called Topics and Problems in Skydive was recently released.
"We read it and everybody started laughing," he said. "The fact that we go into the proposal in great detail, and there's a lot of concrete academic detail to get by."
After a proposal has been approved, funded and taught for a semester, it comes before the LA&S board for review. Lewis said Feedback, a published student evaluation of courses and instructors, was given to evaluate LA&S courses and their instructors.
These requirements have been modified
"THE WAY I SEE "I", George Worth professor of English and LA& board member there. We establish first of all that there is content in the book has intellectual content. We try to be sure of the quality of instruction. We expect the sponsor to actively involve himself in the teaching."
AAUP Passes 2 Tenure Motions
The executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) unanimously passed resolutions yesterday concerning tenure and collective bargaining.
DAVID H BURD LIS
Kaman Staff Reporter
The tenure resolution called for an extension of an invitation to Carl L. Couter, president of the New York Society of Biblical Literature.
to speak at the March meeting of the local AAUP.
Inviting. Courter will give AAUP members an opportunity to discuss the relegits' position on tenure, according to Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies and local AAUP president.
By DAVID H. BURPEE
In a separate tense resolution, Goodman was asked to write a letter about tenure to the president.
Relief Sought for Suspicion Engendered by Drug Raids
The approval of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is necessary before the group can be formed, Seaver said, Dykes and Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel will attend next Wednesday's SenEx meeting to discuss the issue.
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) is considering a proposal to form a group that would meet with area law enforcement officials to discuss problems with campus drug raids, James Seaver, SenEx chairman, said yesterday.
Seaver said the presence of undercover agents had created suspicion among students. The tense situation that developed from Vern Mellor's latest drug raid, he said, could lead to a confrontation between students and law enforcement officials.
Leroy McDermott, Welch, Okla.
graduate student and member of SenEx,
said he had heard rumors that students were organizing to protect themselves.
"Apparently there have been some near situations created by these raids," McDougall said.
Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs senior and SenEx member, said he had heard rumors of fictitious at Ellsworth Hall during the latest drug raid.
had heard no rumors of residents to protect themselves against future risk.
Gary Flanigan, resident director of Ellsworth Hall, said he had seen no scuffing or interference by Ellsworth residents during the bus. Moreover, Flanigan said he
Don Harmon, resident director of Hashinger Hall, and Malcolm Robinson, assistant director of McColm Hall, said that he was among慕音cion among either residents or employees.
On the other hand, Elaine Green, resident
director of Oliver Hall, said she had noticed
that her children were very close to her.
None of the resident directors or assistant directors interviewed said they knew of any students who were considering organizing an emergency equipment officials during future drug raids.
Paxson said he hoped the University group that would work with law enforcement officials could establish procedures for conducting future raids so that the rights of those living in residence halls could be more protected.
But Flamigan expressed doubt that law enforcement officials would be willing to change their tactics. He said residence hall directors had attempted to accompany officers during past drug raids but were told intervene or they too would be arrested.
Paxson suggested that residence hall directors could accompany raiding officers to see that the residents' rights were safeguarded.
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The resolution on collective bargaining called for the publication and distribution of a questionnaire on the subject. The purpose of the questionnaire, according to the NSF-1AUP chapter in preparing to take action on the collective bargaining issue.
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In a separate development, J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history and president of the Kansas AUAP, said Dykes would make the opening address at the conference, which will be a general topic, Clark said, will be faculty participation in a university's government.
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Topics discussed by the executive committee that didn't result in resolutions in front of Congress.
The letter, Goodman said, will ask Dykes to issue a signed statement about whether he thinks the regents are still committed to academic freedom and tenure principles on academic freedom and tenure.
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A committee report was given by Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies and oriental languages and literature.
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The executive committee urged that each faculty member be told by his department chairman what salary recommendations were being made for next year.
He said that the AAPU committee on analysis and improvement of instruction would have an open meeting in late March. The subjects, he said, will include factors affecting learning, including educators affecting "professional environment", and evolution and reward of teaching.
WHITES
"The number one priority is to make sure courses students have to have to graduate are offered," Waggoner, dean of the college said.
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Liz Caldwell, Lawrence senior and former course instructor, said that in her case, the board's review was lengthy and that she did not have a lot of phrases asked questions about her course and the materials she had used. The course was written for the teacher, she said, but did not receive funding.
Limited availability of course funding restricts the number of instructors who can be paid for teaching although it does not prevent students from being profitted. Salaries over the last five years have increased from $100 to $500 a semester and have been paid from money allocated by university funds.
A Project of the Consumer Protection Assn. Funded by the Student Activity Fee
THE SENATE BEGAN funding the program in 1970 after approving a request from Catalyst, a student group formed to advocate for the university taught at the University. Senate allocations
However, his staff is aware of the problem and he has received a letter from Marilyn Stokstad, associate dean of the college, requesting him to seek more funds from the vice chancellor for academic affairs.
VICE CHANGELLER Saricks said he had not vetted received a request from the college.
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"We are going to hope to be able to help the college out later on," he said. "But in preparation of the regents' budget, we don't have any leeway to do anything."
Player of the Week TOMMY SMITH
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University did not think it appropriate to fund the courses.
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However, the University was put in the position of either funding the courses or letting the program drop in December when the senate funds were cut back.
HILLCREST 925 Iowa
Dennis Quinn, professor of English and an LA&S independent studies course, said, "I'll eliminate the program. I think those courses that are the most successful should be supported as well as the hundreds of others courses that are supported as a matter of routine.
THE LA&S PROGRAM had requested $22,000 from the fiscal 1973 budget but received only $9,000 for one semester. The University matched the $9,000 for this semester, but did not promise to take over funding of the program indefinitely.
Recent college cutbacks resulting from reallocation of the university budget for
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"As a whole, the program fulfills a need and adds a dimension to the curriculum. It has a good effect on the University as a whole in that it constitutes a challenge to the departments to make their own offerings better and more appealing to the students."
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Thursday, February 28, 1974
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Rock Chalk Integrity
A lot of work goes into the production of a Rock Chalk Review. Unfortunately, this year we have some of the work is questionable.
Inconsistencies have turned up on all sides—in the dates scripts were turned in for judging, in the judging itself and in the methods that have been used by some of the judges to together their final productions.
Although all of the groups were to have had their scripts turned in by a specific date, one fraternity-sorority team was allowed to turn in its script a day later than the first. The script had supposedly gotten lost.
A last minute change in the procedures for judging the scripts was not made clear to all of the living groups and inconsistencies in choosing the top four scripts may have resulted from the change.
The living groups that submitted scripts all were to be notified at the same time of the four scripts to be in Rock Chalk. However, two groups knew their scripts had been chosen the night before everyone else was officially notified. And one of those two groups had been told they probably should not be one of the four to compete in the Review. This gave the group an extra week for rehearsal.
Rock Chalk offers the competing groups an opportunity to demonstrate their writing, choreographic, dramatic and musical skills. But several groups are receiving aid from people who aren't living in
the fraternities or sororites involved. Not only does this defeat one of the purposes of Rock Chalk, but one of the rules for competition.
Although this may be the first year that some of these things have happened, Rock Chalk has received criticism in the past.
Two years ago, a survey indicated that the Rock Chalk Review was not representative of all students on campus and one of the residence halls was encouraged to submit a script. The McCollum Hall skit was considered to be too obscene to be part of the Review, so at the last minute it was yanked from the program.
Last year, however, Hashinger Hall, the fine arts residence hall, submitted a script that was judged to be the best overall.
This year the four competing scripts were again written by members of fraternities and sororites.
Rock Chalk is sponsored by KU-Y, a campus branch of the YMCA. The blame for any wrongdoing or problems with the Review has to be shared equally by the participants and KU-Y-KU-Y for not keeping a closer check on the competition, and the participants for taking the genuine spirit of the competition too seriously.
So although the rhythm this year may be a little off the beat and the rhyme may not be balanced, the rest of this year's theme, a sojourn in time, still holds true. After all, there's always next year.
Linda Doherty
Guest Editorial
Campus of the Future
The Processing Academy for Citizens of Kansas (PACK) opened its doors yesterday after a 10-month shutdown during which visual surveillance cameras and video systems supplement the audio-spy devices in use since 1978. Hundreds of students in red, white and blue uniforms marched and clapped in perfect union as the Chief of the State declared the campus was another great day for Kansans.
It may not have meant much to younger Kansans who were still in high school during the troubled '70s. For many of them, the ceremony marked another goodbye to a pseudo-culture that we'd much rather forget. Those were the days when the Academy, crown then as the University of Kansas was infested with hordes of students and medicalists who studied what subjects they pleased and were intolerant of state supervision of their lives.
Those old fashioned radicals spoke of obscure concepts such as freedom, human rights and democracy, though they were largely tourists to the carnival in Topeka will remember it was once the city where other citizen citizens actually participated in a festival.
The legislature and the University were evils that went with the political philosophies of those times. For example, the school's founding, before itself retiring into oblivion.
This was in the early 1980s, when the legislature managed to slash the University budget by suggesting that the already underpaid teachers had too much money for their own goods. If the qualins about this pulling back on the real reins, it was induced to look the other way by huge welfare allocations.
Soon after, legislators' interest in University matters increased and by 1975 they were issuing useful directives to students in matters of dress, education, accommodation, course, enrollment dropped to about 12,000 as the students sought more permissive environments. The budget cuts had started an exodus of teachers from college and by this time most of the better teachers and administrators had left.
In 1976 the legislature did away with the Chancellor and assumed his duties. As many as 60 vice chancellors were involved in the lives of a degenerate student body. Enrolment dropped again and this was fortunate because there were only 186
In 1977, the legislature officially took over administration of the University, closed enrollment to non-residents of Kansas and to foreigners and started to teach many obedience courses. A Lew at Wadsworth college was demolished and then rebuilt by friends of the legislators who were in the architecture and construction business. Because colossal funds were needed for this, a law was passed that required all Kansas below the age of 25 to enroll and pay for a University education.
Enrollment, down to 2,900 at the time,
rocketing upockets but the state went into an economic nose dive.
She wished she had been wished all this bad never started.
But it was too late to do anything. By 1982 the people were in arms. A mammoth rally of citizens marched to remind the legislators responsible for this state government the legislators were one jump ahead—in another country. The crowds, frustrated, tore down a 38-foot statue of George Washington near the Union in the 74th, and then went
Since that time, thanks to the wiser legislators who had no reason to run away, things have improved. Our people have enjoyed increasing prosperity in the past two years and are doing any complaint. The University is producing disciplined citizens with uniform, coordinated personalities.
Instead of teachers we have the world's best computers and the computer programs that are useful lives developed. Our unity of purpose and governmental alertness are enabling us to take great leaps and avoid without the distractions of the '70s.
The first month of this year has been filled with news of new triumphs for us. Let us hope this is true for the rest of 1984 —Zahid Iobal
Graduate student in Journalism
National Student Lobby Tries to Sway Congress
Watergate Affects Student Politics
By MARLENE CIMONS The Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON -Remember that dramatic moment last summer during the Senate interrogate hearings, when Sen. Richard Lugar asked White House aide Gordon Stranach what advice he would give young people in service and in the future of their country?
Strachan, near tears, replied: "My advice be to stay away."
Seven months have passed since those tense few seconds in the old Senate caucus room, and Strachan's words seem to have affected some members of America's student population—but not quite the way he might have anticipated.
live in this country for the rest of my life." Edwards is chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Student Lobby, and the Vice President of the lobby. The lobby is a federation of state organizations, student governments, and individuals who have come together at both the state and national levels to work for the interests of college and university students.
I can't stay away. There's no way I can stay away, Willis Edwards said. "I have to
ONE INDICATION Of Strachan's influence on students might well be in evidence as hundreds of members of the organization are offering a for five-day national conference and lobbying effort. Leaders of the organization are hoping for an attendance from 700 to 1,000, with member students paying their tuition online through the organization's schools. There will be two days of issue
workshops followed by two days of actual lobbying on capital hill."
THE LOBBY, WHICH now calls a membership of 2.4 million students and 300 member schools, grew out of a 1969 effort in California. Two state student lobbies were created then to work in Sacramento for increased student financial aid, low tuition rates and against proposed education cuts. In April 1971, encouraged by the success of the program, a group of students formed a coordinating committee for a national lobby office.
"The term lobbying has had a very negative connotation in this era of Watergate, a connotation of corruption and lies with it—and in my mind it just shouldn't be taken as such." Pressman, an 18-year-old freshman at the University of California at Berkeley, who is
gss
Griff and the Unicorn
"AS A GOP CANDIDATE THEN YOU FEEL ITS PREMATURE TO AKNOWLEDGE THE EXISTENCE OF A THROW THE RAGGON OUT TENDENCY?"
serving as California state coordinator for the lobby.
"The whole purpose of the lobby is to get students within the system," Pressman says. "It's probably the only way we're going to change from the early 1960s. This may sound like a cliché, but we're getting kids on the streets and in the halls of Congress."
by Sokoloff
seems to be common in the country, we would be the most influential lobby in Washington. That might sound idealistic, since we don't have the money of other lobbies, but we have the potential of more than 8 million students."
"Our position is that by eliminating the youth fae, they are taking away a student's mobility," Roddell said. "There are 1% million students who travel more than 500 miles by taking away youth faes they are adding 300 dollars a year to travel expenses."
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MOST OF THE CONCERNS of the national student lobby are financial. It wants to raise funding for education. It wants to keep tuition fees at a standstill. One of its biggest current priorities is the restoration of youth fare and it has already have been ordered plaused-out by the civil service.
To mobilize students who cannot lobby in person, they have run a series of ads, part of which read: "If you've flown recently, note that a youth fare ticket costs about 50 dollars. By this time next year, youth fares will be the past. Unless you do something about it."
"Student needs can no longer be met within the school system or even just at the state level," said Lee Alschuler, one of California's faculty at Berkeley, also chairman of the California Student Body Presidents Council. The support of higher education is now a federal concern. I see no other way. It's a simple fact of life that institutional services need to be provided in support—and you don't get an extra hour of support—dollars by demonstrating in Spread Plaza.
Edwards agreed, "We are concerned about every student in this country, no matter what his background is." But it's more than just a student thing—we are also representing voters, and human beings who care about their country. We are caring people—who happen to also be students."
In fact they didn't give anything anything, and a night stick to twirl around by the strap. Even more unusual than what they didn't have was what they didn't do. They didn't give out tickets, or summoners or warnings. They never arrested anyone or ford them for a routine check. They didn't track down criminals or follow big leads.
To the Editor:
Campus Foot Patrol Wanted to Prevent Crime
As a student at a small college in Pennsylvania I witnessed the implementation of a system that effectively dealt with campus crimes, a problem that faces KU today. The idea worked so well that many of the people forget why it had been started. They didn't realize that the number of thefts had increased considerably. Even one reported that there were no more raped reports during the first year. Even though vandalism wasn't eliminated there was less of it.
The situation here has been aggravated by the fact that we have two police forces that are the best available. The campus police and the Lawrence police are so well-equipped, so mechanized, so mobile and so fast that they are no longer effective.
I suggest that we adopt a plan that I know has been effective on at least one other campus. They hired a group of veterans, dressed them up in blue uniforms and told them not to do anything they did not do was far more novel. They didn't give them guns, they didn't give them cars, they didn't give them cams of mace, rot helmets, intercity communications systems, four-way short wave radios or unbreakable wired cameras.
In fact it is so good that if you happen to be in an area where there isn't a road, like between Allen Field House and Stouffer Place, you could scream for help until the sun rose in the west and no policeman could possibly hear you unless he accidentally left a window open. Everyday they see by my apartment and everyday I see them in traffic booths, but I have never seen a policeman in Lawrence not encased in glass.
Readers Respond
All the people on the security force that I knew spent most of their time walking the parks talking to people, walking through the parking lot or walking from one building to another. They checked locked doors to be sure they were locked, gave directions to them on some dark nights were even known to have escorted a woman across campus.
This solution has a built-in problem of its own. Who pays the bill? I have no idea what the cost would be, but the University could start by selling one car, one year's supply of gas, one riot gun, one pistol and one can of mace. The man previously scheduled to use them could be in charge of the new foot patrol.
I know this sounds like strange behavior for policemen and it was appalling to veterans of high crime and sophisticated police tactics. Not once during the entire year did any of them solve a crime. The only thing they did was prevent crime.
T. V. Lynott Scranton, Pa. junior
GIs Earn Benefits
To the Editor:
10 THE EDITOR:
I would like to express my appreciation for the excellent story concerning the veterans attending KU.
As a veteran myself, I have found the University as a whole to be very cooperative in situations limited to veteran affairs. Programs such as the tuition payment plan and the availability of assistance in counseling and in financial aid must be provided, and from my own point of view and from other veterans I know, appreciated.
Contrary to what sometimes is believed, such things as GI bill payments aren't mere handouts to veterans, but are like all the so-called 'benefits' connected with the military. And that is that you earn every dime of it.
I support the idea that V.A. education, benefits are for too low. Only through part time work and a reasonable income can you support
John England Lawrence senior
To the Editor:
Dubious Requirement
Hal Ratner's editorial defending the foreign language requirement is a nice emotional appeal. It would have been more effective to provide an immediate time to give reasons for the requirement.
His argument is that you don't belong in college if you don't wish to learn a foreign language because a foreign language is a skill, not a subject. You're better, but fire, why? Because Ritter says it.
However, the self-righteous indignation in his editorial proved nothing except his ability to print in ink. He should have written it himself and not from the editorial page of the Kansas.
I have always felt that learning a foreign language wasn't a necessity—perhaps an added benefit, but not a necessity. If Ritter was in charge of my school, then I would be happy to read more by him;
Wes Bartoot
Wes Bartoot
Edwardsville junior
Greek Students Resist Iron Rule
By DUSKO DODER The Washington Post
ATHENS—Greek University students after a year of antigovernment agitation which culminated in rebellion last November, have emerged as a major political force opposing the military rule in Greece.
They also have moved to radical positions. A majority reportedly accepts many communist policies if not embracing the Marxist-Leninist ideology as such.
Several hundred students are still in hiding following the bloody suppression of the November rebellion, and they are said to form the backbone of an underground student movement currently being organized. The movement is masterminded by professional activists and has spread to all phases of University life.
This picture emerges from a series of conversations with student activists and four University professors largely sympathetic to the students' cause. All asked that they not be identified by name for fear of government retaliation.
The young people's revolt last November, which was put down by tanks and mass arrests, was an important turning point in student activism.
THE BRUTAL SUPPRESSION of a nonviolent movement has made radicals of those students who were imbued with a romantic libertarianism when they joined the militants, and that he has reinforced the resolve of leftist militants-ranging from Maoists to Trotskyites—to be better prepared in their next confrontation with the government. Above all, it has convinced a large majority of the restorers to give strength for the restoration of democratic rule.
"One thing we realized last November."
sad a 21-year-old engineering student, "is that we cannot have academic freedom without political freedom. First we must have an end to the military rule."
"I can assure you," said a youthful medical student in a reply that echoed his colleagues' vebels, "that the next time around we will fight back. We will not wait for the police and the army to beat us and kill us."
Significantly, the students feel that they have political muscle. They take credit for the downfall of George Papadopoulos, the governor of Georgia in a 1967 coup and wired it without significant opposition until student agitation began last February. Papadopoulos was outed in a military coup led by Gen. Robert S. Kennedy, the suppression of the student rebellion.
THE STUDENTS SAID they would like to build a new society which would be more galtarian—"a Scandinavian type of socialism, perhaps," one said—and that they would like to see Greece leave NATO with their defense treasures with the United States.
"A vast majority of them have become leftists," said the professor. He attributed this fact largely to the bloodshed of last November and subsequent tough, unyielding policies of the new military government.
THE STUDENTS SAY their movement is spontaneous and that they would support democratic forces against the military dictatorship. "Something is bound to happen soon," said one student, "This can't go on forever."
How widespread such feelings are among the students is impossible for an outsider to determine. The students said they were speaking for most of their colleagues. Later, a distinguished Athens University professor, a man named Benton, in his field, confirmed that about eighty per cent of the students support such views.
In the next confrontation, he added, "We will be united as never before."
Since November there has been no confrontation. The students are facing the militants, who are fighting informers as well as the tough strictures of marshal law. Arrests of students and other antigovernment people are continuing and an antigovernment doesn't intend to bargain with dissidents.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
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Member Associated Collegiate Press
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 28, 1974
5
Duke Is Cop, Judge, Jury
By BYRON MYERS
Kansas Reviewer
If you're a real law and order buff and you don't mind watching a policeman bend the law to unrecognizable proportions, then you see "McQ" now showing at the Granada you think crooked cops don't really deserve it, fitted, then avoid this movie like the plaque.
"MQC," starring John Wayne as a "busted cop whose methods are illegal and so is his gun," concrerates a policeman whose career has been a personal affair and decides to find the culpits and clean their clock, regardless of whether the methods used are illegal, excessively brutal and unconscionable to a supposedly dedicated to upholding the law.
Because McQ is determined to get those bad guys at all costs and by any method, he decides to violate both drug laws and firearms laws—and the public be damned.
He coerces an informer to supply him with information by supplying her with cocaine (which he obtains illegally). And when relieved of his permit to carry firearms, he just shrugs it off and borrows a submachine gun.
He pursues his adversaries relentlessly, eventually reducing them all to candidates for a mortician's art. Very efficient, that is, he can maintain the tradition has always been to get his man.
Eddie Albert plays Wayne's superior officer in the police force. He doesn't do much in the role except to look out for him, but he also sack Wayne from the police force, but at the movie's end he admits he was wrong and Wayne was right, despite the fact that Wayne riddled two cars with submachine gun fire and brought about the untimely death of their colleague, they were alien enemies too, Albert decides to overlook Wayne's transgressions
and return him to the police force—sort of a "not guilty but don't let it happen again"
"McQ" probably isn't any worse than most of the other cop movies. It is an objectionable movie, but it can be worked with. WongWee intends to Clark Eastwood one better by using an Ingram 19mm submachine gun.
All the same, there's something wrong with the movie's attitude toward the law.
There's something wrong with setting a law enforcement officer up as judge, jury and executioner. It seems that we've had enough of that in our history and are just now beginning to get over it. To gloss such activity and hold it up for social apportion we should also make each man is equal before the law and must play by the rules to get fair treatment.
Perhaps the message of "McQ" is that men are equal before the law but some of them are a great deal more equal than others, especially John Wayne.
Superman Comics Editor to Speak; 'Sleuth,' 'New Land,' 'Arnold' in City
Entertainment
MOVIES
"TOKYO STORY"—Japanese film about the generation gap in a typical Japanese family. 7:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium.
"SLEUTH"--Michael Caine stars as a man having an affair with another man's wife, eventually entering into a lethal battle with the woman's husband, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 4 and 3:00 p.m. Saturday in Wooldruff Auditorium.
"PROTEST AND COMMUNICATION"—
"KREMCLAN Clark's 'Civilisation' series film
"PADDLE TO THE SEA" and "SKINNY AND FATTY"-Two children's stories; the first about a toy Indian launched into the sea, and the second about a relationship between two Japanese boys; 1:30 p.m. in Sunday wood Draftur auditorium.
about the Baroque period and the Reformation 7. p.m. Sundays in Woodruff hall
**MEXICO** **THE FROZEN RISE** — "Film about the Mexican revolution from 1910 to the presidents shots of Francisco Madro, Emiliano Zapata and Villa Fono, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday."
"IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT"—Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert star as an out-of-work reporter and the run-away daughter of a millionaire in this "screwball comedy" 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Wednesday in woodriff Auditorium.
"ARNOLD"—Roddy McDowell and
Stella Stevens star in this horror-suspense
comedy. 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. at the Varsity
Theatre.
HONOR RECITAL-KU School of Fine Arts will present works by Beethoven, Osborne, Straus, Ravel and Bach. 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall
"SUMMER" WISHES, WINTER DREAMS* "Jannie Woodward stars as the desperately unfulfilled wife of Martin Balsam. 7.15 and 9.30 p.m. at the Hilcrest
INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—Part of the KU Concert series, this orchestra will perform works by Beethoven, Britten, Benjamin, Arraga and Hindemith. 8 p.m. Tuesday at Hoch Auditorium.
Details Enrich Arbus' Photographs
SPEAKERS
By MIKE RIEKE Kansan Reviewer
MUSIC
Dance Apple; As Appetite Matteografy;
Bio-Arbus Apple; As Appetite Matteografy;
Bio-Arbus Apple; As Appetite Matteografy;
MORT WEISINGER—A Superman presentation will be made by Mort Weisinger, editor of Superman Comics. 8 p.m. Monday in woodruff Auditorium.
The collection of photographs, "Diane Arbus: An Aperture Motograph," looks like a coffee table book. It's large and flat and expensive. But anyone who picks up this book expecting to see more cute pictures of women is out of order of identical twin girls is in for a shock.
many of her pictures are midges, dwarfs,
transvestites and assorted misfits.
The late Diane Arbus (she committed suicide in 1971) rarely photographed cutie children; instead, to record less common realities, she focused on darinly see or choose to see. The subjects of
Such subjects must be treated with extreme care to avoid offensiveness. Arbus photographs slip past offensiveness to the private realities of their subjects.
ART
"There's a quality of legend about freaks," Arbus said in an interview quoted in the book. "Like a person in a fairy tale who stops you and demands that you answer a riddle. Most people go through life in their own way, without experience. They've (the freaks) already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats."
Linda Ronstadt Scores With 'Don't Cry Now'
Linda Ronstadt's career since her popular debut several years ago with the Stone Ponies has been one of considerable progress. Her latest album, "Don't Cry Now," continues this trend and places her among the best female vocalists of the among the best rock genre in a class with subluminaries as Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins.
By JIM HUBBELL
Kansan Reviewer
Arbus' photographs seem to sum up, in a few square inches, the whole lives of each of their subjects. Even a picture of an upper-middle-class family sunbathing in a backyard on a Sunday afternoon has much to say to those who take the time to look.
Bv JIM HUBBELJ
The man and woman are lying on their backs, each on a redwood lounge chair with plastic upholstered cushions. The wife, perhaps in her late twenties, has blonde hair and wears a dark cardigan that unveiling and unappealing bikini. Her eyes are closed. The husband, whose eyes are covered with one hand, is wearing striped seersucker bermuda shorts. Between the two chairs is a small wooded aishtray, ashtray, a cigarette lighter and an empty glass.
The album contains a wide range of material, most of which is well suited to the instruments used in the recording.
A few feet behind the couple, their son, 7- or 8-years-old, leans over a wading pool made of cast plastic. The unnaturally well-fit arm and backyard stretches out behind the family.
Each member of the family seems aloof from the others, but waiting for the next one.
"The Fast One," one of three songs on the album written by producer John David Southern, and the country and western group Neesha, demonstrate Ronstadt's fine form on up-tempo rock tunes. "Colorado" and the album's single, "Love Has No Pride," demonstrate the musical and subtlety of her approach to ballads.
reviews
The only flaw in the choice of material for the album is an otherwise fine song, "Sail Away," written by Randy Newman. The song conveys a feeling and fail to convey the irony in the original.
SPOONER ART MUSEUM—The museum will show works by Peter Thompson, associate professor of painting and sculpture, and Rick Dishinger, assistant professor of painting and sculpture. March 4-27
The cold sterility of that photograph is a great contrast to the life revealed in a photograph of three Russian midges in a living room on 100th Street in New York City. The people in this picture are dressed in a striped suit and wearing a striped dress and a floral print apron. All three midges are middle-aged or older.
The supporting musicians on the album are unobtrusive, yet quite proficient. Especially worthy of note is guitar stylist Blackwell, who although not an outstands technician, furnishes some hardeded lines that contrast well with hustad's lucid voice.
Kathy Buehler—Tues. Carl & Sue—Wed. Beth Scalet-Thurs. Jaime & Jim —Fri. & Sat. Sittin' In
No one else has it! eating & entertainment 9-12 nightly
(Bluegrass)
The album's only major flaws, excluding the aforementioned "Sail Away," are the somewhat maudlin pedal steel playing of Sneaky Pete and the superfluous string arrangements of Jimmy Haskell Sunflower, which was built by the excellence of Ronstadt's vocals and the album's overall outstanding quality in its genre.
You can afford
The Flagship
Tonight
$1 minimum
841-5040 12th & Oread
"SERPICRO"—Al Pacino stars as a policeman who fights the payday system in New York City: 7:25 and 9:45 p.m. at the Hillcrest I.
And as Arbus once said, "Nothing is ever the same as they said it was. It's what I've done." (Jane)
This book is not the kind you pick up to casually leaf through. Some pictures are harsh, some are ironical. Most of them show scenes and people we have never seen
A large wooden cabinet and a wooden dresser in the background are covered with knick-knacks and small plants. Snapsheets on the walls frame all the lights, a frame add still more life to the scene. The lighting is soft, and the people are relaxed, enjoying themselves and obviously aware of
VOLKSWAGEN
"NEW LAND"—Continuation of "The Emigrants" about Swedes who come to America. Max von Sydow and Liv Ullmann star; 7:40 p.m. 9:30 p.m. at the Hilchrest II.
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Smart little spectator ties from Famolare. In navy, camel, or red with white, on crepe soles, they look super for spring. Famolare is always one step ahead, so come in and get ahead, too.
Famolare
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 Mass. 843-4255
VOLUNTEER
CLEARING HOUSE
Needs Staff For Academic Year 1074.75
1974-75
For Interviews Call:
AMITY WORKER 641-3268
After 1:30 p.m. before Meeting 3
People Needed for:
Recruitment
Orientation
Agency Need Co-ordination - Evaluation -
Office Management - up-Public
(FUNDED BY STUDENT SENATE)
K.U. NIGHT TONIGHT!
THE MUSIC BAND
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Are you tired of movies, bar-hopping or even studying weekend and weekout?
THEN MAY WE SUGGEST AN EVENING OF RELAXATION & ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEKEND TAKE IN
ROCK CHALK REVUE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS HOCH AUDITORIUM, 8 p.m.
6
Thursday, February 28, 1974
University Daily Kansan
Mediation Board Studying Women Athletes' Complaint
Lester's Note: This is the second in a three-pair match on women's in-ground athletic activities.
By BETH RETONDE Kansan Staff Reporter
A complaint filed by some women athletes that the University of Kansas discriminates on the basis of sex is being studied by an affirmative action mediation
Although the specific charges in the
complaint won't be revealed by affirmative action, the complainants have charged that the University has denied them equal opportunity because of their sex.
The affirmative action plan, adopted by KU a year ago, calls for official support of women's intercollegiate athletics, according to Gilman, director of哎灸
"An adequate support structure for
women's intercollegiate programs shall be recommended to the Board of Regents including provisions . . . adequate to the functioning of such programs."
The official statement says:
The affirmative action procedure for hearing complaints and charges against the University is open to anyone who thinks he has been discriminated against, Gillham said.
An adviser is appointed to counsel and represent the complainants and if the
Clearing House Places Volunteers
People who want to do volunteer work can get placement assistance at the Volunteer
The clearing house channels people who have a variety of talents and interests into University and community agencies, Janet Wilden, Prairie Village senior and member of the clearing house staff, said recently.
"People who are in psychology, sociology biology, business, education and just about anything you can think of volunteer," she said.
Sue Overman, St. Louis, Mo., senior and public relations manager for the clearing house of the department.
cerned mainly with finding jobs for volunteers.
Volunteers have been guided into such programs as Headquarters Crisis Center, Audio. Ready Service and the Big Brother Big Sister program.
Ten student volunteers staff the clearing house, and KU professors and community people are on its advisory board. The clearing house was established in 1966.
Volunteers who work with certain agencies can receive University credit. Overmann said he stressed that the training work for the experience, not for the credit.
After the clearing house places a
I'll just use a simple representation of the eagle with a large body and a long beak. I'll use plain black outlines to represent the head and upper body of the eagle, and white for the body and tail.
The eagle is depicted with its wings spread wide, suggesting flight. The body is flattened, typical of a bird in motion. The beak is prominent and pointed.
The person standing below the eagle is facing forward. They are wearing a white shirt and dark pants.
The background is plain black, making it difficult to discern any specific details.
volunteer, checks are made periodically to see whether the volunteer is still active
Although no special talent or ability is required for most jobs, some agencies are looking for specialists, Overman said. And agencies require volunteers to have cars.
Kansas Staff Photo by BILL KERR
Practice Makes Perfect
There are more openings than volunteers.
"There is a big need for the Big Brother program. We really need big brothers who are willing to devote some time," she said.
KU swimming coach Dick Reason姆, over a clear eye on dive Sirve King, Overland Park junior, during practice yesterday. The Jayhawk swimming team is preparing to
defend its title in the Big Eight championships March 7-9 in Boulder, Colo. KU has won the last six Big Eight swimming and diving championships.
Volunteers also are needed for the Teen Lounge, a recreational program for adolescents. The volunteers help teenagers with any problems they may have, she said. It is sometimes difficult for the agencies to volunteers to make firm commitments.
free state opera house presents
Friday, March 1
9-midnight
SUNDANCE
The clearing house has offices in Room 18 in the Kansas Union and in the lobby of the building.
Mango
Saturday, March 2
9-midnight
BOOGIE
correction
O
Kiehl Rathbun, Lawrence second-year law student, handled complaints directed to the student ambassador's office during the past month on an unofficial voluntary basis. Rathbun's duties as director of the ambassador's office ended last December.
A BAND THAT BOOGIES
Brought to You by The Music People, Ltd.
@
Rathub was incorrectly identified in Tuesday's Kansan as the director of the umbsman program. The Kansan also incorrectly reported that Rathub received $475 for his duties as umbsman. The position isn't salaried.
An executive order issued by Lyndon Johnson while he was president forbids sex discrimination by federal contractors. Because of this order, any company or organization that employs more than 50 percent of the employees must plan to ensure the employee's rights.
Title 9 of the Higher Education Act prohibits discrimination in educational activities. What is the question whether intercollegiate athletics was considered part of a university's educational program. The Department of Education has issued its official stand on the question.
complaint can't be resolved, the adviser requests the formation of a mediation board to further study the complaint. If the mediation board doesn't solve the question, the complainants may file formal charges with the University Judiciary.
Some preliminary drafts of regulations concerning athletic programs seem to imply that athletics is part of a university's educational function, Wheeler said.
Title 7 of the Civil Rights Act states that employment can't be deprived because of sex.
Wheeler said this law had implications for the women's intercollegiate athletic program because a situation might arise in which a student would be to be a coach because she was a woman.
The right of women's athletics to receive equitable support from the University is based on several federal laws and regulations and at least one state law, Louise Wheeler, associate professor of law, said yesterday.
The mediation board met last Friday and will meet again tomorrow to study the complaint filed by the women athletes, Gilham said.
The affirmative action plan also says: The University should encourage the ADA Corporation, the Endowment Association, and other athletic to provide grants-in-aid and other support to women participating in intercollegiate athletics on the same basis to
Another federal law that has implications for women in athletics, Wheeler said, is the Equal Pay Act of 1963. This law stipulates that equal pay is to be given for equal work done. This law would apply especially to women coaches, she said.
A state law against discrimination makes it illegal to *refuse*, deny, make a distinction.
THEY'VE JUST
ARRIVED-
Santa Cruz.
Sauze Tops
at the
Alley Shop
(of course!)
ALLEY SHOP
843 Massachusetts Street
tion, directly or indirectly, or discriminate in any way against persons because of the . . . sex . . . of such persons in the full and equal use and enjoyment of the services, privileges and advantages of any institute or agency of the state of Kansas . . .
Because KU is a state agency, this law would apply to all of its services and facilities, including the athletic program, Wheeler said.
Although the women athletes haven't taken their complaint to federal or state courts, they have the option of doing so, Wheeler said.
The University can lose federal funds if it
is found guilty by a court of sex discrimination, she said.
The threat of legal action and its repercussions was one reason the Kansas Board of Regents asked the House Ways and Means Committee to reinstate a $88,575 request for state funds to support women's intercollegiate athletics.
Carl L. Courter, chairman of the regents, a committee that provisions must be made for the city to accept
"I don't like the federal threat any better than any of you, but it is there and I believe that we can make provisions for competitive athletic events in order to headforcing for trouble," he told the committee.
DEADLINE!!
Remember, 5 p.m., Thursday, February 28th is the deadline to turn in your organization's Budget Request for Student Activity Fee funds to the Student Senate Treasurer's Office, 104-B, Union.
NO LATE REQUESTS WILL BE CONSIDERED
KU-Y Student Board Now Accepting Applications Position Open for Student Coordinators:
Rock Chalk
Instructional Films
Advocate Series
— Freshman Camp (Aug.-74)
Workshops
International Gift Fair
— and three student advisors
- Celebrations/Retreats
The KU-Y board is a group of students committed to the building of community programs and services for the campus at large.
Apply by March 8 at KU-Y office, 110B Union, 864-3761, between 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
A man is stepping out of a vehicle.
JOHN PG WAYNE "McQ"
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30 Granada THEATRE...Tijuana V1-5786
ARNOLD IS A SCREAM
CINEMA CREATIVE presents
STELLA STEVENS McDOWALL and ARNOLD
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30Varsity THEATRE...Tijuana V1-5786
Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive-an horwed cop.
AL PACINO NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR
"SERPICO"
Every Eve. at 7:20 & 9:45 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:15 Hillcrest
JOHN WAYNE "McQ"
PG
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:40
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Granada
THEATRE...Kenneth V13-5783
ARNOLD IS A SCREAM
CINEMA DRILING power
STELLA STEVENS McDOWALL
OR ARROLD
Every Eve. at 7:30 & 9:30
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 2:30
Varsity
THEATRE...Leighanne V13-5783
Many of his fellow officers began him the most dangerous man alive—an honest cop.
AL PACINO
NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR
"SERPICO"
Every Eve. at 7:20 & 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 2:15
Hillcrest
Cold that killed, backbreaking toil, the great Sioux uprising of 1862. Welcome to the promised land.
From "The Emigrants" dream,
came the settlers' struggle to survive.
Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann. PG
Every Eve. at 8:00
Sat. Sun. Mat. at 2:00
Beautiful.
Frigid.
She is called a Snow Queen.
PG
Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams
Joanne Woodward Nominated Best Actress
Sylvia Sidney Nominated Best Supporting Actress
Eve. at 7:30 & 9:15
Sat. Sun. 2:10
Hillcrest
From "The Emigrants" dream, came the settlers struggle to survive...
W Nor Bet
Joanne Womeland
Nominated as
Best Actress
Sylvia Sidney
Nominated as
Supporting Actress
Rvv. atl. 261 & 915
Sat. Sun 2-19
Hillcrest
Attention!
PRE-MED/DENT/NURSING
The Student Association for the Combined Health Sciences will hold its first organizational meeting on Sunday, March 3,1974 from 2 to 3 p.m. in 3139-40 Wescoe Hall.
★ Brief comments by Vice Chancellor Balfour and Pre-Health adviser Dr. Adams.
★ Planned Activity: MCAT/DCAT reviews in the Basic Sciences with faculty members.
In the future: Career Advising
Information about application procedures Discussion with representatives from professional schools
Supported by Student Senate
Thursday, February 28, 1974
7
University Daily Kansan
DAY! 12
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8
Thursday, February 28, 1974
University Daily Kansan
From Page One
It Takes a While, but Most KU Athletes Do Graduate
Oakson, a former football player who is in his fifth year at KU, says, "I think it's getting normal for a lot of students, not just athletes, to take five years to graduate."
Bobby Skahan, who played quarterback on KU football teams in 1964-66 and now beads the academic counseling department within the athletic department, gives a more positive answer, but only slightly more so.
"It is difficult to graduate in four years,
good grades in high school and as a result,
"I really pressed to make good grades,
Prepared or unprepared, when they get to college all athletes face the same problem of trying to find time for sports, studies and leisure activities.
According to Skahan, on weekdays
Football players, for example, face a schedule during the season so rigorous as to leave little free time anytime during the week
| Years needed to graduate | 4 and summer school | $4^{1/2}$ | 5 | 5 and summer school | $5^{1/2}$ | 6 or more | Never |
|---|
| 4 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
|---|
| 1964 20 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
| 1965 29 | 15 | 2 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
| 1966 28 | 6 | 3 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 8 |
| 1967 27 | 29 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 6 | 1 |
| 1968 29 | 9 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| 1969 30 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 10 |
| 1970 25 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 8 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| 1971 27 | 9 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 12 |
| 1972 29 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 1 | 2 | - | 10 |
| 1973 26 | 4 | 0 | 4 | - | - | - | - | 18 |
| Totals: 270 | 69 | 23 | 35 | 37 | 7 | 8 | 19 | 72 |
| Per cent: 100 | 25.5 | 8.5 | 13 | 13.7 | 2.6 | 3 | 7 | 26.7 |
Qualifications: an athlete in the "55" category hasn't necessarily attended school five and one-half years continuously. He may have attended four years, dropped out
for a year and then earned his degree in one additional semester.
but it can be done, "he says. "It all depends on the dedication of the athlete."
A small number of athletes who graduated in five years may have been drafted.
Skahan cites examples like Delvin Williams, star halfback on KU's 1973 Liberty Bowl team. As a freshman, Williams had to pay expenses out of his own pocket because his college entrance exam required him to qualify for an athletic scholarship.
BUT HIS FIRST semester at KU, Williams made better than a C average, and he'll graduate in May with a degree in education after only four years of college.
But Williams is an exception, and Skahan knows it.
He knows it from his own experience. Now well on his way to an Ed.D. in higher education and administration, Shankan took one half-year to earn his B.S. in business.
Part of the reason it's so difficult to graduate in four years is that athletes often aren't as well prepared for college as nonathletes. Skahan says.
"I really wasn't prepared to go to college, he says. "I played space and tennis," he said.
"The college athlete puts a lot more emphasis on his athletic ability than academics in high school," he says. "All of us are guilty of it. We will try at excel when we are合格, but then when athletes come to college they quickly learn there's going to have to be a change."
GALE SAYERS, KU'S All-America half-book in 1963 and 1964 to now an assistant coach at the University.
"It was the same way in college for the first year and a half. But then I woke up and I thought what if I get hurt and I started thinking about getting my degree."
Of course, not all athletes ignore academics in high school.
"It depends on what your family expects out of you," says Bob Braugging, another former football player spending a fifth year at KU.
Bruegging says his older sister made
players eat breakfast at 7 a.m., attend class until 2:30 at the latest, appear on the practice field at 3:15, leave at 5:30, return to 7, study from 7 to 16 and then to be bed.
Saturdays are taken up with a game and unwinding both physically and mentally.
Sundays players play Saturday's game film and begin preparing for next week's
No matter how time-consuming a sport is, though, athletes must be enrolled in 12 hours when their sport is in season to begin training and they must pass 24 hours of courses a year.
OAKSEN SAYS IT isn't uncommon for football players to enroll in 14 or even more hours at enrollment in August and then drop to six or eight hours the day after the season ends because they are hopelessly behind and finals are approaching.
That's why many athletes must take correspondence courses during the summer months.
Keeping up with school work also depends on not wasting a lot of time each day, says Teresa Larson.
"You've got to really budget your time wisely, which I did not 'do,' he says. "I realized about my junior year what I should be doing as a freshman and sophomore."
Brugging says that he used to worry during his classes about practice in the afternoon and that he would be too tired with it, or just not even interested in studying at night.
TOM KIVISTO, a senior and captain of KU's basketball team, acknowledges the fatigue faactor and says, "It's a decision to study or to be heck with it."
Kivisto admits it's tough finding enough time to study during the season but says, "just part of the sacrifice you're going to make is not of a varsity team and to be on scholarship."
A premed major, Kivisto took $ 19 \frac{1}{2} $ hours
Archaeology Degree Altered
The archaeology degree from the department of classics is being broadened to make it available to those interested in learning about the ancient world, Michael H. Shaw, assistant professor of classics, said recently.
The degree requires a minimum proficiency in Greek and Latin because some archaeology courses aren't taught in English.
Shaw said there was a trend across the country toward such a broadened degree. He said enrollment in the classics was an issue for many majors and at other schools in the country.
in archaeology but who enjoyed learning about the ancient world.
Shaw said the degree was expanded in response to requests by archaeology departments.
There are three major requirements for the rewritten degree—a minimum proficiency in Greek or Latin, 30 hours of courses involving classics and a comprehensive examination to be taken in the final semester.
Details of each individual degree will be worked out between each student and his or her teacher.
1
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But most KU athletes aren't Tom Kivistos, and that's why KU has an academic counseling program. And it's a counseling program that has come a long way.
last semester, including chemistry and physics courses, and still made the honor roll.
"IT WAS ALMOST NIL, when I was here," he says.
Freshman football players live on the same floor in Jayhawker Towers with Skaham, attend a two-hour study hall five nights a week their first semester and participate in an orientation session during the first two weeks of study hall each fall.
Skahan, who played football with Sayers, says that when he was in school one of the football coaches handled the academic problems that existed.
1974-Year of the Taco
Skahan says freshman football players face the added burden of adapting to a different system of football in addition to being a new living and academic environment.
Skakan says athletes receive more help from his office as freshmen than during any other part of the school.
"It's extensively different now," he says. Number one, the counseling program has. "It's not that hard."
Although freshmen receive a special emphasis from Skahan, most of the academic counseling department's services are directed toward all athletes.
The department's tutorial service is one of those. The service consists of 40 tutors, who are paid $4 an hour and are capable of tutoring athletes in 70 areas.
"THAT'S PRETTY DIFFICULT for a 17 or 18 year old." he says.
"A tutor can't help unless you know the subject matter," he says. Athletes are advised by Skahan to read and study course materials before considering asking for a tutor.
Skalian cautions, though, that tutors aren't a panacea for academic difficulties
Skahan's office is also open to athletes with emotional problems. Lots of athletes, especially freshmen who are lonesome or frustrated, come in for counseling, he said.
"I've never gone in with academic problems, but I've gone in and talked to him
A question that looms even larger than the purpose of the department concerns whether academic counseling should even exist.
Critics of the program say that athletes are the recipients of enough favors, financial and otherwise, and that academic counseling is just another service that doesn't exist for the nonathlete or is available only at his own expense.
"I don't think athletic counseling is the right thing to do," says Kivisto. "A scholarship is just that, help financially, and advantageens the normal student doesn't have."
“IF ATILETES CAN’T find it on their time and in their own initiative, can’t straighten out problems on their own, then they must be doing in the type of person we’re recruiting.”
Yet Kivisto didn't attend an all-black school where academic standards are so low as to barely prepare a student for any college, let alone a major university like Purdue or one of the high academic standards. It's the black school who needs the most help, says Skahan.
Sayers says coaches used to urge the "poor kids, especially the black kids from the ghetto area" to declare a major during the season. They said the sense of direction and purpose of women
"BUT WHEN YOU GET into the school you find that after two years it isn't an easy major and you have to take a lot of difficult courses that even doctors have to take," he says.
Sayers agrees because of his own experience. Without an academic counselor to guide him, Sayers says, KU coaches pushed him into a major immediately when he came to UM. In his case it was physical violence, so the assumption that it was an easy major."
Because of such former practices, Sayers says, an athlete "needs someone like a Bobby Skahan to channel him into the right frame of mind."
Skahan does his best to get athletes into that "right frame of mind," but what about all those Rogers who, despite Skahan's efforts, haven't won a title without a desire? What brushes them out?
"Kids today for some reason have a greater interest in academics," says
Years needed to graduate
| | 4 | 4 and summer school | $4\frac{1}{2}$ | 5 | 5 and summer school | $5\frac{1}{2}$ | 6 or more | Never |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Basketball | 34 | 12 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 12 |
| Per cent: | 100 | 35.3 | 5.9 | 13.8 | 5.9 | 0 | 0 | 8.8 | 35.3 |
| Boillit | 150 | 35.3 | 10 | 8.8 | 24 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 35.3 |
| Per cent: | 100 | 22.6 | 6.5 | 8.4 | 15.5 | 3.9 | 3.2 | 6.5 | 35.3 |
| Track | 84 | 12.6 | 11 | 19 | 13 | 1 | 3 | 6 | 9 |
| Per cent: | 100 | 26.2 | 13.1 | 22.6 | 15.5 | 1.2 | 3.6 | 7.1 | 10.7 |
Sayers see the two objectives as being intertwined.
Three athletics participated in track and football and their graduation records were shown.
"MY FIRST OBJECTIVE in my job is want the kids to graduate," says Skatan. "My second objective is to make sure they know what then what it takes to remain eligible."
Skahan says football coach Don Bambrough and basketball coach Ted Owens are responsible for the evolution of the academic counseling program into a department. That raises the question of whether the department's purpose is to help students along the road to a degree or to keep them eligible for four years of competition.
about things that were bothering me," says Oakson.
number of graduation records in the three sports to 273.
"It's not a coach-player relationship," says Bruegging. "When you sit down with them, they tell you what to do."
"If an athlete is on schedule to get his degree, he will be illicensed." he says.
Kivisto disagrees. "Their prime objective, let's be honest, is to keep athletes eligible," he says. "I'm not saying that's why we're going to play, but living depends on winning and not losing."
skahan. "They're made aware in junior and senior high of the importance of a college
The athletic department also helps as many fifth-year students as it can finance.
"You wouldn't believe the number of kids Coach Owens and Coach Fambrough have put on aid (as graduate assistants) so they can graduate," he says.
Bruggueg and Oakson, for example, both helped coach the freshman football team last fall in return for full scholarships this year.
"IF YOU'RE SHOWING some progress
you'll help you through that fifty year,
says Mr. Wagner."
"Coach Fambrough stresses the point that he wants to help players graduate if they're not just wandering from area to area," Bruegging says. "If you show you're putting the effort in, they'll put the effort in also."
Oakson agrees that it's the athlete's work or lack of it that usually determines how much the athletic department will help him.
"If you've caused trouble or if you haven't
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done anything on the field then they're not going to help you," he says. "There are a lot of guys with bad attitudes that they're not going to help out. But then an employer can't be expected to give a good recommendation when you've done a crummy job."
The fact that the academic counseling department helps fifty-year students shows how far the department has come since Sayers and Skaben were in school. And if a doctoral dissertation written at Indiana University in 1971 is any indication, chances