Price Drops For Goods From Farm WASHINGTON (AP) - Prices of raw farm products fell 6 per cent from mid-March to mid-April, continuing a decline that began six weeks ago, the Agriculture Department said. Compared with a year earlier, however, the department's index of prices that farmers receive averaged 17 per cent higher. There was a drop from Oct. 15 to this year of 1.5 per cent. Otherwise the index had been at least February and March, when it fell 4 per cent. For consumers, the drop may have little meaning, at least for a few weeks. The effect of the price drop at the supermarket depends on the pricing decisions of the middlemen who process and sell the raw products. However, the prices that farmers themselves paid for groceries fell heavily 3 per cent less than a month earlier. Meat-animal prices, which reflect a year-round farm enterprise distinct from crops, have become a more sensitive indicator of consumer prices when farm prices change. For the month ending April 15, the meat-animal price index fell 6 per cent, following an 8 per cent decline the month before. Meat prices dropped to 32 per cent of a family's food spending. Health Fee Boost Topic of Hearing By MALLORY BURNETT Kansas Staff Reporter The proposed increase in student health fees was questioned at a public hearing last night conducted by a student senate health subcommittee. The proposal is to raise the current health fee of $30 a semester for students enrolled in more than six hours to $38.50. Students enrolled in six hours or less pay $3.45 per each hour, and if the proposal is passed, they would pay $4.40 per each hour. Jim Strobl, business manager for Wattles Hospital, said that a reserve fund on which he had to pay the student health fees had been depleted. Strobl said that if health fees were raised to $33.50, the reserve fund would gain about $18,500, giving it a balance of about But, Strobli said, that figure doesn't even equal one month's operating income. KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY DAILY See HEALTH Back Page The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 84th Year. No. 137 Wednesday, May 1, 1974 K- Sober Celebration Kansas Staff Photo By DAVE CRENSHAW Don Baldwin, campus minister, (left) directed a funeral procession down Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday, part of the Day of Humiliation celebration. See story page 2. Tape Transcripts Released WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nikon's edited Watergate transcripts were issued yesterday as he sought to prove his innocence with a journal recounting his conversations about possible payoffs, his testimony and a strategy for bundling the emerging scandal. As Nixon and his lawyers had said in advance, the transcripts are often ambiguous, answering some questions but not all. The intent of the President and his men. With the transcript went a 50-page brief prepared by Nixon's impachment lawyer, Michael Hewitt. quotations together with the White House account of what the President said and did during the crucial phase of the Watergate cover-up attempt. throughout the period of the watergate affair, the raw material of these recorded confidential conversations establishes that the President had no prior knowledge of the break-in and that he had no knowledge of the bombing on christmas day, 21, 1973, "the St. Clair paper concluded. One of the quotes included in the St. Clair brief as evidence of Nixon's determination to clear up Watergate came from An April 15, 1972, conversation with Asst. Ast., Gen. Henry Petersen about the refusal of conspirator G. Gordon Liddy to cooperate with Mr. Fitzgerald. "I want him to be sure to understand that as far as the President is concerned, everybody in this case is to talk and to tell the truth. You are to tell everybody, and you may ask them to call me on that with anybody. You just say those are your orders," the brief said. Another, from an April 14 conversation with former aider John D. Ehrlichman, read a letter to the press. Nixon: "We have to prick the boil and take the heat. Now that's what we re doing here. We're going to prick this boil and take the heat. I—am I overtaking?" Ehrlichman: "No, I think that's right. The idea is this will prick the boil. It may not. The history of this thing has to be, though, that you did not tuck this under the rug yesterday or today and hope it would go away." Watergate Big Issue at KU By SALLY GILLILAND The brief quoted the transcript of a Nixon conversation with counsel John Dean III on Feb. 28, 1973, in which Nixon said, "Of course I forgot when I heard about this forced entry and banging. I thought 'what is this? What is the matter with these people, are they wrong?'". By SALLY GILLIANE Kansas Staff Reporter "It will have a substantial place in it," he said. "Earl A. Neelring, professor of policy science." Eight of 10 people interviewed yesterday in a random survey of more than 100 students and faculty members said Watergate would profoundly affect American history and surpass any other political incident. One student said that he thought it would cause people to think before they voted and that the incident would place a great deal of pressure on the next president. Most students and faculty members said Ticket Issue Hinges on Senate Univ Kansas Staff Reporter By HAL RITTER When the Student Senate considers a motion calling for the resignation of Athletic Director Clyde Walker at its meeting tonight, an issue much bigger than the current spat between Walker and a few senators will be at stake. Approval of the resolution won't mean Walker will be leaving town, and the senators know it. What approval would mean is that the senate sincerely believes that Walker and the KU Athletic Board are out of line in raising the prices of season tickets at the stadium, which costs to $15 and $13 and that the senators intend to fight the increases with determination. The student ticket issue is one that has existed for years at KU. Mostly it's been an innocuous issue smoldering beneath the surface of campus affairs. But occasionally it's erupted into a full-blow controversy, mostly because the issue is closely linked to students' experiences. The athletic department over how big a chunk of the activity fee goes to athletics. What might be called the modern history of the issue dates back almost nine years. Students defined an impeachable offense as treason, violation of any law by which the nation was governed or an act that wasn't in the best interest of the American people. When KU students returned to classes in the fall of 1965 they paid $1.50 for football season tickets and they knew that later in college they would get a season basketball ticket free. But they also knew there was a good analysis chance their football seats would be somewhere in the horseshoe part of Memorial Stadium. The enrollment boom of the 1960s was in full swing in 1965, and more and more students were being pushed into the end zone each year as more tickets Because good seats were becoming scarcer each year, the Athletic Seating Board announced in October 1965 plans to build an addition to the east side of the stadium and to finance it by raising the funds for sports for both football and basketball games. On Nov. 30, 1965, the old All Student Council (the foremer of today's senate) approved a resolution supporting the inclusion of football tickets and $4 for basketball. With an annual income from student ticket sales guaranteed, the athletic department was able to borrow $35,000 to associate to pay for the stadium expansion. President Nixon had committed an impeachable affair and many said he had been too insensitive. According to the terms of the loan, the athletic department agreed that repayment of the loan in 1981 would "present an occasion for reconsideration of the desire of and need for continuation of programs for football and basketball season tickets." overriding concern of the ASC at the time it approved the seating board's expansion A former KU student who was active in student government in the late 1960s said last week that a return to the low ticket prices after the loan was repaid was an After the ticket increases were approved prices remained unchanged until June 1972 when tickets for both sports were increased $1.50 to $6.50 and $5.50. A month earlier the Student Senate had reduced the portion of the activity fee to $450,000 from $162,000 to $156,000. The athletic department responded with the ticket price increase. All of the extra money generated by the department's last week to go directly to the department's bank. The increase wasn't contested by the senate, probably because Wade Stinson, who was then athletic director, didn't announce the increases until the first week in The increase announced two weeks ago by Walker is identical to that made two years ago by Stinson except in one respect--it's bigger. Early this month, the senate reduced the athletic department's request for activity fee funds from $13,200 to $10,000, and the department responded with the second increase in student ticket prices in two years. 1970s Two of a Kind Kansas Staff Photo by DAVE CREWENHAM Not only are Marsha Swanson (left) and Pat McKelvyn (right) both Overland Park junior, they are also roommates and each broke a leg in the same automobile accident. In the spring of 1971, the athletic department's activity fee request was reduced to $180,000 to $150,000 by the student senate, but the athletic department didn't find it necessary to raise student ticket prices then. The athletic department will argue that the senate broke faith in 1972 by cutting the department's request $6,000, but that argument carries little weight. Also, based on this year's student ticket sales of about 9,700 football tickets and about 6,200 basketball tickets (Doug Messer, assistant athletic director, said yesterday that records of ticket sales for the year were $23,650 and $1.50 increase passed two years ago raised an extra $23,650, but the department's request was cut only $6,000. This year the athletic department's activity fee request was cut by about $64,000, but if 10,000 football tickets and 6,500 basketball tickets are sold to students next year, the price increases will bring in $133,750 more from ticket sales than this year, which would mean a net gain of almost $70,000. In light of inflation and additional expenses as KU sports become more “big time” each year, it appears that those who think tickets will drop to $1.50 for football and again be paid for basketball when the season is finished is paid off in a few years are guilty of wishful thinking. One student said President Nixon should be impeached only if he had committed a crime. If ticket prices remain at the new levels, all students will pay the athletic department fee for the season. Students year and students who buy season tickets will pay more for those tickets. Few will argue with a trend toward a See TICKETS Eack Page "An impeachable offense is any illegal act, abuse of power or a specific violation of the Constitution or the spirit of the Conventions," Pritchard, professor of economics, said. Pritchard said Nixon had used the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and, indirectly, the Central Intelligence Agency to encourage and intimidate" the American people. Although only half of those interviewed thought Nixon would be impached, the majority said they thought he definitely should be impached. The White House brief said the tape of a Sept. 15, 1972, meeting between Nixon and counsel Dean didn't support Dean's calls for war. The tape of the cover-up of Waltergate involvement. Most said they thought Nixon wouldn't see NIXON Back Page It quoted Nixon as saying: "Oh well, this is a can of worms as you know, a lot of stuff that went on. And the people who worked this work are awfully embarrassed." "But the way you have handled all this seems to me has been very skillful in putting your fingers in the leaks that have sprung here and sprung there." St. Clair said Nixon was speaking of "the politics of the matter, such as civil suits, counter suits, Democratic efforts to exploit Watergate as a political issue and the like," and not in the context of a plot to obstruct justice. But the transcripts in full also have Nixon speculating about payoffs, noting that the money could be raised and in intraceable cash, and theorizing that witnesses before a grand jury could avoid perjury because they could say they couldn't recall. The transcript does not include a clear Nixon rejection of payoffs, and at one point includes an exchange about the payoff for Watergate conspirator E. Darnault Hunt. It begins with Dean's suggestion that the Watergate defendants other than Hunt are See WATERGATE Back Page news capsules the associated press Sirica Won't Disqualify Himself from Trial U. S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica demanded yesterday a request that he disguised himself from presence in the Watergate cover-up trial. The disqualification request was made April 10 by four defendants—former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and former White House aides John D. Ehrlichman, Charles W. Colson and Gordon Strachan. The trial is scheduled to start Sept. 9. Sirica, who presided over the original Watergate trial of seven men charged with burglary and bugging of Democratic party headquarters, had assigned the cover-up trial to himself before retiring as chief judge of the district court here. The defendants said Sirica had "generally displayed what can only be called a prosecutorial interest." They also said "Judge Sirica possesses, consciously or unconsciously, a deepseated and unshakable personal bias in favor of the prosecution." Kissinger Lands in Egypt, Seeks Sadat's Aid Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger flew into the Egyptian port city of Alexandria last night to enlist the prestige and support of President Anwar Sadat in his drive to disentangle Israeli and Syrian forces on the Golan Heights. A senior American official said on the flight from Aligiers that Kissinger's hopes "were slightly raised" following talks with President Houari Boudjemeine and before that with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromykov. But the official said the Middle East peace mission would be "protracted" and there wouldn't be an agreement unless both Syria and Israel made Tax Reform Bill Passes House Committee An oil tax reform bill, expected to like the petroleum industry's taxes by between $13 billion and $4 billion over eight years, was approved by the House Budget Committee on Wednesday. Oil-state representatives headed the opposition to the bill which would phase out an existing tax break for the petroleum industry and would impose a new windfall profits tax. However, the new tax is linked to a so-called plowback feature, giving energy-hunting oilmen a way to escape paying It may be the week after next before the bill reaches the House for action because the measure first must be cleared by the Rules Committee. 2 Wednesday, May 1, 1974 University Daily Kansan Grand Humility Day Plans Foiled By JACK HAWKS Kansas Staff Reporter A fusion of political reality and religious reality is principally marked the local celebration of Pentecost. The event, planned by the University Christian Movement, a coalition of campus ministers, in conjunction with a Congressional resolution calling for a restructuring of the university. Prayer, featured a funeral procession down Jawhawk Boulevard to the Kansas Union. "Our purpose," said campus minister Kent Gee, "is to cite responsive feeling on campus to the cities which are occurring in our society." THE MARCH ITSELF had just 20 people, but each marcher had a responsibility to carry something symbolic of the controversial political issues confronting America. Some signs carried by the marchers noted continued involvement in Vietnam, Watergate and ill treatment of the American Indians. Commenting on the size of the march, Gee said, "Our purpose wasn't public demonstration, but rather to cause awareness on the campus." Another campus minister who, along with Gee, organized much of the day's activities, was Don Baldwin. He said he thought the general reaction to the march was one of "It's very hard for people to speak of their participation in combating the evils of society," Baldwin said. "Usually, we want to say that others are doing it. People are consciously aware of the social evils; we can actually name them, and statist where they had such difficulty identifying the evil things happening to Regan." THE ORIGINAL PLANS for the KU DAY of Humiliation called for public meetings in which a portable dome was to have been up in front of Watson Library or Strong Hall. Meditation, rap groups and prayers were to have taken place in it. However, the University Events Committee said the dome would have to be at Potter Lake, an alternative the participants rejected. Fee Likely Next Year For Using Allen, Hoch Entertainers who will use Allen Field House and Hoch Auditorium next year probably will be charged a fee, according to Roy Hamilton, University comproller. "I think it pretty definite that there will be a charge made," he said yesterday. "We're in the process of determining the fee that will be charged." Hamilton, who directs a facilities use committee, said he would submit a proposal to today to Keith L. Nitcher, vice chancellor of the School of Medicine, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes for approval. Hamilton said he wasn't ready to set specific costs for the use of the auditorium and the field house. Costs, such as the salaries of janters and security and parking people and depreciation of utilities installations, are being taken into account, he said. Mike D. Miller, activities director of Student Union Activities, said a large usage fee could increase the price of tickets for SIA concerts. If the usage fee covers only the cost of utilities and depreciation of buildings, there "If we didn't have a bubble and a ramp, "It might well have gone to Lecompton," Buckner said. "I'd just use the will be no significant increase in the cost of tickets, Miller said. "If it's a significant amount, then all I can say is, of course, the money will have to come out." According to Gee, the denial of a central location caused the elimination of many of the planned activities. He said a central part of campus was denied because of beliefs that the marchers would cause a disturbance. Miller said he thought the usage fee should enable the University only to break with the current system. Another feature that was not allowed was a noon讲课 in the Campamile. Gee found it too distracting. However, most felt the intent of the day was not lost. Tables were set up in the Union representing the University Christian Movement, Vietnam Veterans Against the War and Friends of the United Mine Workers. A SPECIAL STAMP for the day, "US" anyone who wanted it stamped on his hand. They were from New York. BALDWIN SAID, "It's fairly clear in our minds that the reason we were denied the negative feelings brought on by the religious proselytizers. The policy makers must respect the feelings of students who are affected by events they don't agree with." "If the Campanile could toll for the 'Great Lorenzo,' not for us who are trying to take a responsible stance on our society's problems?" he asked. The symbol has two meanings, according to Baldwin. One meaning of "US" is the United States as a whole, whereas the other symbolizes the participants in the Day of the Dead. Another meaning is the concern for responsibility that is the cornerstone of the whole idea. Kansan Classifieds Work For You! Today is the second day of the program, the "Day of New Hope," and kite flying on Campanile hill and body painting are among the scheduled festivities. FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS ARE Date Night at SHAKEY'S World's Greatest Pizza 21 Kinds Of PIZZA with this SHAKEY'S coupon. Schlitz BEE 50¢ A PITCHER In Lawrence Ks. 544 W.23rd. St. Coupon Good Friday And Saturday Only YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE..HERE'S WHERE WE ARE. 27th & IOWA SOUTHWEST LAWRENCE RIGHT OFF HIWAY 59 [IN THE AUTO PLAZA AREA] COME SEE US IN OUR BRAND NEW FOOD STORE! Dillons Other stores located at 1730 Massachusetts and 1312 West 6th. 27th & IOWA SOUTHWEST LAWRENCE RIGHT OFF HIWAY 59 [IN THE AUTO PLAZA AREA] COME SEE US IN OUR BRAND NEW FOOD STORE! Dillons Dellons Other stores located at 1730 Massachusetts and 1312 West 6th. Women's Softball Game in Dispute The McColllum Hall women's softball team will appeal to the University of Kansas intramural Board today because of an unprovoked decision during the championship women's softball game yesterday, spokesman for the McColllum team said. The McColum speaksman said that the umpire didn't know when the game began but that the rules stated that a five-member team could have five innings, which whichever came first. The Chi Omega softball team defeated M. Columbo, 10-8. The game was slapped at by the Colorado Lady Coyotes. The spokesman said the game was played for fifty minutes because it started at 5:40. The Chi Omega coach, Dave Mullett, Prairie Village sophomore, said he worked with the girls' soccer team. ended at 6:30 p.m. regardless of what time they began. He agreed that the game probably started late because both teams warmed up. "That's the way it's been all season," Mullett said. One of the umpires of the game, Jennifer Huffman, Moundridge junior, said. The championship game shouldn't be played more than games in the regular season." Summer Reservations "Make Yours Now" Maupintour travel service OFFERING COMPLETE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS: Airline Reservations & Tickets Anywhere in the World You May Travel. ★Eurailpass & Student Railpass & Brit-Railpass ★ Amtrak Reservations; Tickets & Information ★Trans Atlantic Youthfares from Canada ★ Individual & Group Tours ★Hotel & Car Rental Reservations & Information Never An Extra Charge for Airline Tickets Phone 843-1211 Co Ir KANSAS UNION/900 MASS. THE MALLS/HILLCREST Seniors '74 It's the Final Senior Spring Fling THE BROOKLYN BAND Boogie to QUITTIN TIME while you indulge in the ample supply of FREE BEER and HOT DOGS. Or if it's more your style to play frisbee or football, you can do that too. Remember . . . THE SENIOR SPRING SLING Sunday, May 5th. 3:00-8:00 p.m. Mt. Bleu Only Those Wearing '74 Senior Jerseys Admitted. See You Therel University Daily Kansan Court Choice Sought In Traffic Fine Appeals Wednesday, May 1, 1974 3 A proposal offering a person cited for parking violations a choice of appeals courts was submitted yesterday to Jess H. McNen, hearing officer of the University of Virginia. Timothy Bouweyns, Lawrence third year law students; the charged party, Bill Perry, chief justice of the Parking and Traffic Board; Charles H. Oldfather, University attorney. The proposal is a compromise developed in response to the judicialy's March 25 ruling that the current Parking and Traffic Court was illegal. The proposal was submitted by the charging parties, Joe Speelman and In the proposal, the person cited could choose either to pay the fine or to appeal. If he chose to appeal, he could then choose either the Parking and Traffic Court or the appropriate Douglas County court to hear the case. Under the present parking and traffic fine system, there are no provisions for transit. The proposal also suggests eliminating the posting of a bond in the amount of the first payment. Within the stipulation is a petition asking that the current *Parking* and *Traffic Court* be allowed to operate for people who want to park in areas where there are no parking or Security and Parking to inform people who have appeals pending of that option. If NoNish signs the stipulation ac-ccompanying the proposal, the stipulation and the proposal will go to the Board of Judges and the attorney general for approval. 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Vern's Biased Politics "I have a prejudice against marijuana just as I have a prejudice against liquor." Atty. Gen. Vern Miller told a journalism class at the University of Kansas last week. "There's no way I'm going to change my thinking about that." It's possible that Miller, hero of law and order and scourge of petty crime, didn't know what he was saying. Certainly the audience of journalists could appreciate the essential impossibility of pure objectivity. But for the attorney general, and possibly future governor, to admit that he had a prejudice ("preconceived and unreasonable judgment or opinion held in disregard of facts that contradict it") concerning public issues was a telling slip that revealed the bias of his brand of politics. But the man has an aura of self- assurance and seems quite cocky about his role of villain for a minority of people. He greeted his audience with, "It's good to be back in Lawrence during the daylight," and concluded with, "If a guy is going to blow his mind, that's his business. But if he gets caught, it's mine." Miller and his defenders have often hidden behind the smoke screen of declarations about the equal enforcement of whatever laws are on the books. The presumption is that Miller has a kind of omniscient detachment and does not make the laws, but simply enforces them. The defenders would argue, "Don't blame Vern for enforcing the laws, blame the legislature for passing them." But, as Governor, Miller would certainly be forced to abandon the policeman's role and make judgments about the advisability of legislation. Even now as attorney general, Miller admitted that he is often as involved with legislation as the Governor's office. Thus, Miller is partly responsible for the existence and quality of laws and should be held accountable for them. Miller's dedication is undeniable. "I have a strong feeling about doing whatever needs to be done," he said. "If as Governor, Kansas needs me to jump out of a trunk, you'll find me in a trunk." If he is to succeed as Governor, however, Miller would need to demonstrate that he is more than just an honest and hardworking cop. His admission of prejudice connected with public issues, such as liquor-by-the-drink, will not help him. Bill Gibson Reader Responds Israeli Fears Another War To the Editor: “In a business-like atmosphere.”That was Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko's answer to the question about why he didn't appoint secretary of State Henry Kissinger had gone. And that's the way I, as an Israelian, feel. All Israelis were and still are very thankful to our only supporter (with the exception of America)—the United States of America. Last October's war showed us that even though Israel just celebrated our 26th anniversary, we are still very dependent on the United States. The war not only showed us what we lost, but it declared aim of the Arabs to erase the dust on the globe otherwise known as Israel. I don't think anyone doubts Israel's desire for peace or the will of the Arabs to "solve" the problem. I hate to be pessimistic, but even Egypt's President Sadat declared after the disengagement along the Suez that peace with Israel was only a cease-fire. What I'm afraid of is the idea of the "business-like atmosphere" which will lead to disaster for Israel. How can we be sure to prevent this from happening from the disengagement? For Kissinger, the goal is an improvement in the relationship between the United States and the leading Arab nation, Egypt, and for Israel to be able to win the goal is the first step to the next war. Raphael Goldman Tel Aviv freshman Means to Restrain Nixon Offered (Les Aspin is a Democratic Congressman from Wisconsin.) By LES ASPIN The Los Angeles Times In the months between impeachment by the House and conviction or acquittal by the Senate, the conduct of our country's foreign policy has raised some particularly nettleless problems. based on what has already happened—President Richard Nixon's apparent exaggeration of the seriousness of the October crisis, Leonid Brezhnev's visit last year during the Watergate hearings and most recently, Nixon's use of a trip to George Pompioni's funeral to conduct what many saw as a rally for himself—there can be no more impetuous political pillar than an unequivocal impeachment politics. The only real question is how far Nixon will go when he is really up against an impeachment trial. What will happen during an impeachment trial if Nixon creates an international crisis in order to rally public support for himself? Or worse, what happens if we really do have a confrontation with the Soviet Union, and when Nixon announces it to the nation one believes him? One possible solution to this very real problem is a concurrent resolution introduced in the House of Representatives not long ago. The president, after an official and regular briefings on the international situation by the secretary of defense, secretary of state and director of the White House, also calls for the leaders of both houses of Congress. If congressional leaders were kept informed almost daily of developing political and military problems around the world, it would be, first of all, unlikely that the President would be able to create or exaggerate an international crisis for his own benefit. It is also true that no leader of Congress, if he had the full story, would abide by a duty to misjudge or underestimate a true international emergency. This same approach might be taken with some other problems related to national security that might arise between impeachment and the Senate vote. One can argue that it would not that will be on Nixon during the impeachment trial to conclude a strategic Therefore, I have authored a second concurrent resolution asking Nixon not to sign any treaties for executive agreements and have called for more of the eventuality. A third resolution, asking the President not to make or receive state visits during this period, might also work to keep Nixon from jetting off to Israel if it was necessary to force the sanctions, who would naturally arms limitation treaty with the Soviet Union. Such a feat would guarantee several weeks of favorable publicity for the President, not to mention the fulsome praise of his statesmanship by Russian leaders. The only problem, as a number of conservative senators have pointed out, is that the Russians may take advantage of the President's predicament to negotiate an agreement with the United States. Even if a SALT agreement concluded during the trial were the best one imaginable for our country, it isn't hard to imagine how easy it would be for those who are opposed to any arms limitation agreement to underwrite public confidence in it. be reluctant to try anyone in absentia, virtually to close up shop. TEXACO PROFITS UP 123% STANDARD PROFITS UP 81% CIDENTAL PRO UP 817% PROFITS UP 97% EXXON PROFITS UP 38% At a press conference the morning these resolutions were introduced, a reporter was sent with three resolutions, at least, couldn't be constitutional. After all, how can Congress order a president, who hasn't yet been sworn in, to take on or sign treaties or executive agreements? I am afraid I did nothing to allay his fears when I answered, "Yes, if they were laws, they would be." The point I was trying to make was that concurrent resolutions aren't laws—they express the 'sense of law' and give it to people susceptible to that charge. Concurrent resolutions (as opposed to joint resolutions) aren't legally binding, merely advisory. Then, to take the other objection I have heard most frequently, why bother at all? If concurrent resolutions aren't legally binding, then it's not true that in this case they can do a great deal. A president on trial by the Senate would be understandably reluctant to contravene the expressed will of Congress. Nixon would, of course, be free to sign all the agreements he desired or to travel underpants, but he would do so, considerable risk. When you are on trial you don't go out of your way to annoy the jury. A concurrent resolution steers a course between the wishfulness of waiting for voluntary action by the President—such as stepping aside temporarily as Nixon might do under the 25th Amendment—and the possible unconstitutionality of statutory restrainance. Although I don't suppose that the president would be willing to our national security problems during impeachment, I do think they suggest a method that is worth some discussion. It is important to realize that Mr. Nixon himself established a precedent for a moratorium on diplomatic activities, immediately after the 1968 election, and he did not allow Johnson to not attend any summit meetings or sign any treaties for the remainder of his term in office. Nixon, was, of course, correct in making this request. The tempations on the outgoing president to sign a history-making treaty were considerable—although they are nowhere near as severe as those by bering down harder each day on Nixon. Congress would now be remiss if it didn't hold Nick to the same standards of forbearance that he urged upon his predecessor. Media Blamed for Crime Upsurge By RONALD GOLFARB Special to the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service in the early 1960s, combustible, social conditions in the ghettos of the nation's cities exploded into major race riots. To the extent that the police and riot detonated the latent, provocative conditions in other cities can never be demonstrated. But the lingering fear of this possibility must have plagued the consciences of many cities in the United States of one major city's largest news told High College Costs Hard to Meet The Los Angeles Times By DONALD BREMNER How much money can you afford to send to send your children to college? Well, if you're in the $15,000 a year bracket, around $1,760 a year for each of those two kids who will be at a campus next year. And if you really reaking it in at the $3,000 a year, you should be able to spare about $3,000 a year—or $7,000 a year for the pair. Who says so? Who seriously thinks that with family living expenses zooming the way they are these days, you can pay out that kind of money without having to hock the family jewels and subsist on bread and water? The computer does. Or the people who run the computer. It's all there in a pretty red, white and blue booklet called, "Meeting College Costs in 1974-75: A Guide for Students." The cost is the College Scholarship Service (CSS) of the College Entrance Examination Board. If you're able to solve your 1040 income tax return, you should be able to follow the steps in the eight-page book, crank your family's income and other financial facts into the formula ad come up with the figure for the "parents' expected contribution." That's the figure that tells you, in effect, whether to expect any student as for your class. It's no secret that thousands of middle- class Americans think those figures for “parents” expected contribution” are outandaway high. "The system is an attempt to measure a family's total financial strength," says James R. Sanderson, Assistant Director of the western regional office in Palo Alto, Calif., at Entrance Examination Board, a nonprofit organization of colleges and universities. "Since the amount we expect a family to contribute is a blend of income and assets, it's hard to say how they might come up with the money. In other words, you're not expected to sell your house to raise money for college, but you might well be expected to take out a second mortgage on it, or to borrow money some other way in order to meet your share before you can qualify for scholarships or other student aid allocated on the basis of need. Many schools follow federal guidelines to determine where the student is truly in grade level. —the student cannot live more than 14 days during the year with his parents. (Some colleges consider the student meets certain standards and pays his parents fully for room and board.) Is there any way to get scholarship aid, even with high family income? - The parents cannot have claimed the student as an income tax deduction for the preceding calendar year, or the year in which he student enrolls. Yes, some schools offer what they call no need scholarships to students with outstanding academic qualities, or special talent in music, athletics or other fields. But beyond that is the trend toward independence from their parents by some college-age young people. Establishing and documenting this independence can mean a shift in the financial foot and may be eligible for scholarship aid or loans despite his parents' wealth. One aid officer at an independent college in the Los Angeles area said only a few there sought independence, while at the University of California at Berkeley, an aid officer said fully 50 per cent of students had financial independence from their parents. —The parents contribute no more than $600 a year to the student's expenses. Another way middle-income families could get financing for college costs would be through a national program of loans, with repayment spread over the student's earning life, and geared to his income, say two per cent of his earnings over 25 years. Suggested by economist Milton Friedman nearly 20 years ago, this sort of scheme for deferring college costs has attracted some support, but has not generally caught on, although Yale has a version of it. But if college costs continue to climb, it could look better and better to hard-pressed middle-income families. GRAB! by Sokoloff Griff and the Unicorn one that he and his colleagues decided during those touchy times to suppress reporting that the city fathers had developed a contingency plan for a potential race riot. The fear was that the news of this fact led to a surge in the realty which they hoped to avoid. The problem of "trendy" crime being triggered by its own publicity seems to arise particularly with unusual crimes. About 10 years ago, for example, someone killed a group of student nurses in Illinois. The suspects were arrested and the event. So thereafter, the national news reported that someone in Texas climbed a tower and indiscriminately shot down students at random. One suspects, from examples like this, that there is a suggestiveness impaired in news coverage of crime and spurs twisted minds to action. dependence, the insatable public curiosity about crime news, especially news of bizarre and unusual kinds of crime, and the positive aspects of much crime news coverage, the fear remains that certain types of reporting encourage, encourage and challenge the decision-makers of the media to consider what the newsworld is to do about this. media exposure of its infamous pranks with the Heart family. When an assassin shot down the country's popular young President, the world stopped, shocked by the event and awed by the media's unraveling of the macabre story. Then followed a bloody era in which Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy were killed and George Wallace was wound. A second assassination attempt on assassination was something I assumed was from another age or place; now it is a macabre part of our political process. Some observers are calling for strong measures to deal with this growing and frightening problem. California editors were quoted recently as saying that they are working on a bill to the Hearst kidnappers and weren't going to publish everything sent to them thereafter. Would vogush crime end if a federal law was passed for bidding news reporting of potential killings? Or would the lawsuit survive the protective shield of the First Amendment? Should there be serious sentences—capital punishment, perhaps when anyone accompanies acts of violence in order to protect children? the latest escapade includes kidnappings, ransoms and pausedpolitical demands by dangerous extremist groups of the right and left. Within one month the Symbionex Liberation Army has been catapulted from obscurity to national notoriety through One wonders about the role and responsibility of the media in all this—is a criminogenic function being filled by the national media coverage of these dramatic events. You can argue that television to do not say a word about extraordinary events which are of wide and natural interest to the public? The media could keep quiet in these cases as it did for awhile with the recent Mexican kudaping, a fundamental job of reporting the news? It is the press so big and powerful now that it must meet public responsibilities and publish everyone's ideas. Even if the media do not want to be likely that some unidentified crackpot was being inspired and might try for his moment in the spotlight of national news—should editors and commentators play God and pretend to suppress extraordinary news? What about the positive aspects of crime news, the other side of the same issue? The Hearts corresponded with their daughter's captors through the media and wouldn't have wanted to be preempted from this contact, I am sure. In the Reg Murphy kidnap recently, it was clear that the kidnaper want to see and hear about his escape on the television show. How much did it affect the exposure he wanted? Might it have moved him to more precipitous acts to get the attention he wanted? Despite the obvious need for media in- I recommend immediate congressional hearings on this subject, at which time good and careful minds could address this problem. Careful public consideration of the subject could be edifying: the public airing itself might serve as something of a lesson in civic responsibility and conflicts of media administrators facing this problem also could be presented. As the media becomes larger and more pervasive and people become more aware of this problem, this问题 isn't likely to go away. Without some attention, it is likely to get worse. Military Double Standards Remain M B But I learned the next day that on a May Month last wst Univer: with it John John joke joke honor o Was this a story for me—a mini expose? I decided not. To blow the whistle on such rule-bending would be a one-day sensation in some papers, but the practice would—and perhaps properly should—resume after the publicity had gone by, with the carrier crews, I would be a bastard and could expect no further camaraderie. The U.S. Navy is officially "dry," as opposed to, say, the British Navy, where sailors get a tot of rum and officers tipple in the wardroom. But no one raised hell about the "brown shoe" fiers partying on evenings before a nonfalty day. I was told that all carriers could be "wet" in flight quarters on such occasions. BANGKOK—As a reporter 21 years ago, I was on a U.S. aircraft carrier off the coast of Korea while the Korean conflict was in progress. On "replenishing days," the carrier was out of action as supply ships came alongside and put aboard new stocks of fuel, bombs and food. Naturally, no planes were landing or taking off. By JACK FOLSIE The Los Angeles Times Emie to do Lawre what v Bv JACK FOISIE "I pi mayor you," about I So the night before replenishing, the fliers ("brown-shoe Navy," they called themselves) three quilt parties in their cabins, modest amounts of boze were consumed. destroyer about 1,000 yards off the carrier's beam a sailor had been court-martialled and given a dishonorable discharge—for having smuggled a can of beer aboard during the warships' last liberty stop in Hong Kong. I checked out his diary, and the Navy informed me. UL Ask the occe of jour Ameri That, it seemed to me, made the "replenishing eve" party a valid story. Brown-shoe Navy could drink, but a destroyer crewman—black-shoe Navy—couldn't. A double standard in military justice. What brings these incidents to mind is the presence in Thailand today of another case of a double standard. Not quite as vivid but, in my judgment, worth reporting. It concerns use of military post exchanges. Technically, only American military and government civilians—and their dependents—are allowed PX to engage in such transactions deemed necessary by the American embassy and military command here to "insure the continued good relations with the host government," some high-ranking Areas are given liberal—but not generous privileges to shop in the American PX. Suic amon Unive year. "It out of pecta These privileged few can buy booze, foodstuffs and such highly desirable items as medium-pressed watches, cameras and hi-fi equipment—all at relatively low U.S. The year psych Clinic The negate those Schro profes are m other prices. So far, no story. Sugaring all allies is a well-established military and diplomatic But at the same time that the U.S. establishment is bending regulations to accommodate Thai generals and colonels, the Thai wife of an AmericanGI is subject to harassment at the PX checkpoint point. She is asked by a Military Policeman why she has bought, for example, 12 wash cloths. If she understands his question and replies with patience, she may donate (much as an American might donate to a church sale), the MP is likely to smile derisively, make her sign some forms and send her on her way with a warning. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily for student and faculty use on examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $8 per semester, $16 a year. Second class package paid $20 per semester; $45 a year. Subscription rate: $1.35 an account paid in student activity fee. Advertiser offered to all students without regard are not necessarily those of the University. Prices are not necessarily those of the University. NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . Suanne Shaw Editor Hal Ritter BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager David Hunke Wednesday, May 1, 1974 I will not answer this question. It is unclear what "I" refers to in the image. University Daily Kansan May Month for Elderly, But No Oldsters Here John Eimick, city commissioner and twice mayor of Lawrence, said last week that as a joke he received from Mayor Jack Rose the honor of coordinating the activity. May was proclaimed Older Americans Month in Lawrence by the city commission last week, but few employees at the University of Kansas want anything to do "I piped up and said something and the mayor said, "We will turn that to over you," Emick said. "He was kidding me about being old and I'm really not old." Ennick said that the commission decided to do something nice for the elderly in Lawrence but that he couldn't elaborate on what would be done. Few KU employees had any intention of participating in the festivities. Asked what he planned to do to celebrate the occasion, Calder M. Pickett, professor of journalism, replied, "I'm not an older person. Don't ask me. How do you define old?" "Do you think I'm an old person?" Marion Holmes, employee of the Oread Bookstore asked when questioned of her plans for the month. After hestating, she said, "I guess I'd go to Europe on a trip." George Smith, professor of education, said, "I'm busy working with the young children." Asked what he would do for the celebration, Franklin Shontz, professor of psychology, said, "I have no plans and I don't plan to have any plans." "That's like setting up a day in June as Kansan day and asking how you would celebrate it", said Roy Lachman, professor of neurology. Margaret Beer, employee for the Society for the Study of Evolution, said that she wasn't an older American and that she was just at KU with the students. "I'd like to have a month's vacation" Mrs. Harold Dreunon, Bookstore Associate "I'm a young man at heart," Ken Anderson, professor of education, said. Most MU employees questioned seemed to agree with Pickett, who said, "We don't want you to be so aggressive." Unrealistic College Goals Lead Students to Suicide Suicide, the third leading cause of death among college students, has claimed three University of Kansas students' lives this year. There usually are two to three suicides as year at KU, Dr. Sydney Schroeder, a psychiatrist at Watkins Mental Health Clinip, said yesterday. According to Charles Neuringer, professor of psychology, college students are more likely to commit suicide than are others of the same age group. "It's rough if they don't expect anything out of college, or if they have magical extracurriculars." Those who are suicidal often have low self-esteem and are too sensitive. "They don't have the usual resilience to blows and sights that are a part of living and are often quite gifted," Schroeder said. "He said Christmas and spring were Evie Unkeeper, director of Headquarters, said that on holidays people often felt the cold. Schroeder said that until this year most student suicides had been committed by people with whom the clinic had no previous contact. He said that those who sought assistance usually hadn't decided that suicide was an option. "If they have resolved in favor of suicide, they'll do it," he said. He said suicidal gestures such as overheating or cutting wrists were pleas for help and would be punished. "With an occasional exception, it's relieving for the individual just to have someone to talk to about it," Schroeder said. Unkreef said she thought the seriousness those who sought help was often underestimated. "The most serious condition exists when someone has a definite plan by which to commit suicide in mind, and something of a crisis nature has happened to them," she Both Unkefer and Schroeder said that counseling was the method they usually used to deal with those who felt suicidal rather than hospitalization. "We don't get uptight about people who can talk about it," Schroeder said. "We convince them that there are other ways out of an undesirable situation." For the Student Who Works SUMMER SESSION Penn Valley Community College 3201 Southwest Trafficway Kansas City, Missouri 64111 Transferable Credit - Transferable Credit - Convenient Day Schedule - Night Schedule - Personal Instruction - Central Location - Economy and Quality Enroll May 30 and 31 Write or Call Office of Admissions 756-2800 Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence free state opera house 642 mass lawrence presents BILLY SPEARS SATURDAY, MAY 4 9-midnight $1.50 at the door Brought to you by The MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. Q J 9 CASINO DAYS SALE WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY of the HOUSE 2nd Have your items written up but not totaled Select an armful of our new spring merchandise and seek out a dealer (a clothing consultant) 3rd Spin our Casino Wheel to determine the discount you will receive,ranging from 10 to 50% 4th Our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve, at least 10 per cent off our regular quality stock WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY Open Late Thursday ★Free Cokes ★Alterations Free ★Entire Stock MISTER GUY MISTER GUY MISTER GUY 920 MASS. 6 Wednesday, May 1, 1974 University Daily Kansan on campus FACULTY FORUM will meet at noon today at the United Ministries Center, Davenport,umman,professor of aerospace and space exploration speak about aviation and the energy crisis. GERMAN COFFEESTUNDE will meet at 1:30 this afternoon in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union. SUA RECONCITION BANGUET will be 5:30 tonight in the Walkins Room of the Ritz-Carlton. FACULTY AND STAFF RETIREMENT BANQUET will be at 6:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. A CARILLON RECITAL will be presented at 7 tonight by Albert Gerken, University carillonneur. STUDENT MEETING on: Ken Kesey's Vision, 2000-Bend in the River project for Lawrence will be at '1 tonight in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. ASSOCIATION FOR MINORITY PRE- HEALTH STUDENTS will sponsor an open forum at 7 tonight in McCollum Hall cafeteria. **STUDENTS** in the French and Italian department will present an Ionesco festival at 7:30 tonight in Dyche Auditorium. JOIN C. ELLIS, graduate from the University of Michigan, will give his doctoral organ recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. PERSONNEL MANAGERS CON- FERENCE WILL hit tomorrow and will stay at Kuala Lumpur. ADULT CARE HOME INSTITUTE will meet in the Kansas Union all day tomorrow and Friday morning. GERMAN TABLE will meet in 1:40 a.m. turnaround in the Moody's Downtown Bank of the Kansas Union. DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE will sponsor a discussion by Ronald Heardt, associate professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in 111 Blake Hall. Classroom will speak about the development and use of audio-visual aids in classroom teaching. WOMEN'S GYMNASTIC TEAM, will meet at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in ZZ2 Robinson Gym. GERMAN "SINGVEREIN" will be at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. GERMAN HONORS BANQUET will be at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. FILM SOCIETY will show "Meet John Doe" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium. AALP will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big B Room of the Kansas Union. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7.30 p.m. in the Kansas Union for election of officers. MOUNT OREAD BIKE CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 305 of the Kansas Union for election of officers. A guest from the minister's activities will follow the election. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a showing of the film "Tender Is the Night" for students who will be attending the English Honors Banquet. Honors students will be admitted at 9:30 p.m. tomorrow in Woodrud Auditorium. B Don't Get Stuck! Instead of waiting until the last minute to plan your next move, and ending up throwing up your hands in despair, rent a trailer or truck to fit your needs. Do it safely, economically: do it right. U+HAUL HAROLDS 1540 W. 6TH 843-2060 PHILIPS 66 843-3557 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 Grand Opening May 3 Hours 12-12 Daily Live Music Wed., Fri., Sat. Nights Must Be 18 TEE PEE NIGHT CLUB presents REAMIN' DEMONS Featuring Ed Toler, Dan Libby, Clay Kirkland, Arnie Young 9-12 May 3,4,10,11 Cover $ ^51 ^{10^}$ North Lawrence, Kansas Intersection of Highways 24-40 North of the East Turnpike Entrance "There is more meaning now for graduation ceremonies than there was in the past." participating in formal graduation isn't expected to increase this year. Although the number of seniors going through formal graduation is about the same, Remick said, the attitude of those going through commencement is better. Gown RentalsSluggish; Deadline Is Tomorrow If the number of graduating seniors renting caps and gowns is evidence, formal graduation is as passe now as it has been for several years. Kevin A. Renick, concessions manager for the Kansas Union and company representative for Peterson's Cap and Gowns, said yesterday that rental had been going very slowly. He said 900 caps and gowns had been rented, and estimated that about 450 more would be rented. The estimate of 1,350 is about the number of caps and gowns rented the past two years, and about the number of admissions, there are 2,657 prospective May graduates. That is an increase of 70 over last year; he said. According to Remick, commencement has more meaning because of the trend toward nostalgia. Students realize that they have been doing something worth remembering he said. Consequently, the number of seniors "Seniors go through commencement for their parents," Remick said. "And students are currently responding more to their parents' wishes." HAVE A GRITCH? We are setting up a complaint service under the auspices of the Student Senate and we need to know the nature of your complaints in order to even pretend to function effectively. So take a minute and write down in a sentence or two what generally gripes you about academics, the Student Senate, the community, or whatever. Drop it in the box by the Student Senate office in the union, or mail it to: Complaint Service c/o Student Senate, Kansas Union. If you respond, by next fall we can establish a vital, responsive agency. If you don't, then you can just keep on gritching. LET US KNOW Paid for by Student Activity Fee TEAM THE LARGEST NAME BRAND STEREO RETAILER IN THE COUNTRY LAST CHANCE GRADUATION SPECIAL! Remember your grad with this speaker sale at Team Electronics Give a gift that will sound great for years! 2 FOR 1 SPEAKER SALE! A perfect way to up-grade an existing system or to get a system started! Buy one speaker at retail price and get the second one freell II M M Ultralinear and ESP Speakers Store Stock Only! Prices good on store stock only! Many unadvertised specials too. SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 4TH TEAM ELECTRONICS "Largest Name Brand Stereo Retailer in the Country" U LAWRENCE: 2319 LOUISIANA COUNTER OF PARK & LOUSIANA ADJACENT TO THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER) WEEKDAYS 10/4 THURSDAY 10/9 SATURDAY 10:5:30 TELEPHONE: 841-3775 IN TOPERA; 907 WEST 32th ST. TERR., IN MILANHATTEN; IN THE WEST LOOP SHOPPING CENTER IN MANHATTAN; IN THE WEST LOOP SHOPPING CENTER Wednesday.May 1.1974 University Daily Kansan 7 Follow Through Unusual Salary Payments Revealed By DEBBIE GUMP AND MARK MITCHELL Kennan Ullfarbness More financial irregularities have been uncovered in connection with the payment of salaries to employees of the behavior program at Woodland Elementary School. Two former employees of the program have disclosed that they were paid by personal checks. However, Ron Hamilton, university controller, said yesterday that such payments weren't legally possible under the program's payroll system. The two former aides, Carol Collins, a former parent aide, and Leona Campbell, a former research data clerk, said part of their salaries was paid by personal checks from Annabell Nelson, who was then employed in the Follow Through office. Nelson is now a teacher in the second and third senior advisor analysis classroom at Wooddawn. Collins said her check, dated July 3, 1973, was for $9.30. Campbell said her check was for "around $30." Both checks were to make up for "bookkeeping errors," they said had resulted in the issuance of checks for amounts less than their actual earnings. Hamilton said that such payments would have been legal only if the checks had been taken to Collins and Campbell and if they didn't reimburse women, or if women said they didn't reimburse Nelson. There aren't any established procedures for reimbursement through the University system. Russell Tyler, administrative manager for the Follow Through program, said he wasn’t aware of Nelson’s checks to Collins and Campbell. "I don't know about these incidents, but I'm not surprised. Annabell and a few other secretaries have frequently helped bail out employees when their checks were held up." Nelson said she wrote the checks to Collins and Campbell as a favor. "I was concerned because they were paid little and I wanted to help them out," she lady said. Nelson said she couldn't remember how she had been reimbursed. She said that when she called the Follow Through office, she was told by the director of the behavior analysis program, told her he couldn't give her the information because he had been instructed by University officials not to release financial information to a audit of the program had been completed. Campbell also said that on another occasion when she had been overpaid, Tyler had asked her to cash the erroneous check from her account. The departmental check to the Follow Through office. Tyler, however, denied having told Campbell to cash the check. "I categorically deny it, and if you print it I initiate a lawsuit," he said. "I knew it was ridiculous," Campbell said. "I didn't believe it. The minute I got the check I called Rus (Tley). He said he had a proposal for me." Campbell said she had been paid for full-time work when she had been working only half-time. She said she had been told of the mistake by Tyler and Betty Malloneau, a staff trainer in charge of Campbell's employment records, and they said adjustments would be made to compensate for the overpayment. She said that when she received the check for more than $500 in January she called TWICE. Tyrler told her to cash the check and give the overpayment back through a personal account. "I waited patiently for over two months," Campbell said. Campbell said she told Tyler that she should check Mallonee's records to get her In March, she said, she received a check for $157, which she cashed on the assumption that the deposit would go up. correct salary and that she would keep the percentage check with a correct one can Campbell said she was then told to mail the original check back to the payroll office. She said that although she had misplaced her paycheck, Mr. Campbell made it to the payroll office yesterday The fourth annual University of Kansas-Kansas State University canoe race will be this weekend. Sponsoring the race are the University of Kansas and the University of Residence Halls (AURH). KU-K-State Canoe Teams To Race This Weekend R. IN ENTER ENTER The race will begin at 8 a.m. Saturday at the Pillsbury Viaduct Bridge on the Kansas River at Manhattan. There will be an overnight stop at St. Marys, and the race will end sometime Sunday afternoon in Lawrence. to compete for prizes; however, any interested group is welcome to enter the race, according to John Hill, program director of the residence hall system at KU. Only residence hall students are eligible An entry may have any number of paddlers, but there may be only three people in a canoe at a time. Crews change at various points on the river. It will be the responsibility of each team to obtain its own canoe and to get it to Manhattan. Teams also must provide their own sleeping gear for Saturday night. Robert J. Roth, U.S. district attorney in Wichita, said yesterday that his office hadn't been informed of the alleged mishandling of federal funds. ★★★ Forgery of Vouchers Is Felony in Kansas Falsification and forgery of state travel vouchers, as alleged in connection with the behavior analysis Follow Through program at Wooddawn Elementary School, is a felony under Kansas law and subject to severe penalties. In connection with their annual audit, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) auditors are conducting an examination of University of Kansas records to determine whether the following were used in the Follow Through program. "My offhand reaction is that I haven't Bette Mallone, a former staff trainer at Woodland, has said she received $292.28 in salary payments, which were authorized from vouchers for trips she said she never took. She has said she thought the vouchers on vouchers for the trip she had on vouchers she has said she didn't sum "We will review any facts that come to our attention. But right now, I don't have any facts to investigate. Somebody ought to bring something to my attention." heard," he said. "This doesn't mean the problem doesn't exist. Nancy Swearingen, a parent of a student attending Woodland, has said that Alice Fowler, former parent coordinator of the school, is paid as salary payments from travel vouchers. Rod McKuen In Concert America's Feminine Poet - Songwriter - Singer Office of the organizer of this grouplease call (813) 506-9241 718 West 57th Street New York, New York 10010 Kansas City Music Hall Thursday, May 9 8:00 p.m. Tickets $6.50-$5.50-$4.50 (NO CHECKS PLEASE) Tickets now available at all Team Electronics Stores, 391 Noland Rd. (Independently), Antioch Shopping Center, 264 W. Warren Ave., Carson City, Caper's Corners Record Store; Kilder's Record Shop (Lawrence). (No Checks Please) Send mail orders to 600 N. 7th St. Kansas City,Address 64011-enclose money order only with self-shiping ticket. JOB OPENING Administrative Director of Consumer Protection Association STARTING DATE AND SALARY: Starting July 1, 1974. Part-time at $20/mo/July to August 18. Full-time at $50/mo/beginning on or about August 19. Part-time at $10/mo/last four hours. DUTIES: Coordinating CPA research, complaint handling services, and educational activities; managing all office operations; recruiting and training volunteers; public relations; in general, being responsible to the Board of Directors for administering all CPA functions. QUALIFICATIONS: Demonstrated administrative ability necessary; other in public interest or social service/action activities. Submit resumes by May 20, 1974, to: CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION Kansas Union, Box W Lawrence, Kansas 66044 If there are questions, come to the CPA office, room 299, Kansas Union, or call 864- 3963. Office hours 10-4. loyer Minorities and Women Encouraged to Apply Funded by Student Activity Fee WE HAVE A ROOM FOR YOU IN THIS BEAUTIFUL MANSION Co-Ed Living (Separate Floor) Spend your summer in comfortable and attractive surroundings. Check out the benefits that we have to offer. Air Conditioned -air conditioning -close to campus -tennis court -basketball court large sundeck -plenty of parking kitchen available house lake recreation area -2 acres of grassy law Maupintour travel service HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST FOR FURTHER INFORMATION —quiet study areas —co-eed living; girls top floor; guys first floor —two month lease, June 5-August —$75 a month, 1-3 persons per room —weight room —charcoal grill MRS. MASTIN 843-5673 12:30 p.m.-5:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. 900 Massachusetts The Malls Hillcrest Kansas Union Make your summer airline reservations NOW with Maupintour Phone 843-1211 presents NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you Gone the romance that was so free state opera house 642 mass lawrence TREE FROG TONIGHT 9-midnight $1.00 admission Brought to you by THE MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. Q O drive Robert Redford & Mia Farron *THE GREAT GATSBY* ADJ. adult $12.90 - Child 7½c NO PASSES RIDIN', ROPIN' WRANGLIN' and all that WESTEPN BULLSHIT Hillcrest CLASS THURSDAY "where the lilies bloom" Wed. 7 at 9:30 & 9:10 BLAZING SADDLES Varsity THEAIRE ... Telephone V1.2-1845 STARTS FRIDAY ENDS SUN. PAUL NEWMAN ROBERI REDFORD WAST DREAMY'S ALICE WONDERBOX TECHNICOLOR G Granada INFORMATION - 5120397880 THE STING This Time They Might Get Away With It Early 10:40, Sep. 30, Mar. 2, 1 Hillcrest THE EXORCIST ALL SEATS $12$3 NO PASSES YOU MUST HAVE ID PROVING 18 YEARS OF AGE or be with parent-NO ID-NO SHOW R office Opens at 6:30 Show Daily at 7:20, 9:35 Sat. Sun. Mon. at 2:30 Hillcrest E Action from the '30's "DILLINGER" "Boxcar Bertha" "MAFIA" Sunset Meet John White, the Delivery Record Holder at THE GRCCN PEPPER 10 "Pepperoni & Mushroom Special Offer Good Wednesday, May 1 Reg. 12” *3.00 Wednesday *2.60 Reg. 16” *4.50 Wednesday *3.90 841-4044 620 W. 9th (Next to Joe's Bakery) Fast, Free Delivery to Most Lawrence Areas B Wednesday, May 1, 1974 University Daily Kansan KU Tennis Star Combines Exercise. Fun By GERALD EWING Kansas Sports Editor If you're ever around 23rd Street and Oddman Road and see a guy running and looking at you, maybe they're on a bike. pansher chasing him, don't think anything of it. It happens evenning and it's just Carlos Gómez's way of making a strenuous effort. 1980 Wassan Staff Photo by ARLYN CONVERSE KU's No.1 Singles Player Carlos Goffi sports would be great but being the best in the nation, playing Wimbledon and making the pro circuit were more what he was aiming for. "I run two miles every night with my three dogs and I practice from 3 to 6 every afternoon," he said yesterday. "That's the only way to get better." If you don't already know, Goffi is a tennis player and one of the best to ever play at KU. He's the No. 1 singles player on the court in the world and a champion in his native country of Brazil. "Technically, I m equal to Stan Smith and the like," he said. "But I might perform greatly one day and then poorly the next." He added: "I'll use my strength to sten to take it as the one we continue consistently." Goffi came to KU last year after playing three years for Corpus Christi University. Corpus Christ dissolved its tennis program last year because of financial problems, and when KU Coach Mike Howard found out, he kicked Goffi off Corpus and persuaded him to come to KU. And being the best is what's important to him. He said being the best in the Big Eight Lolich Wins First; Detroit Beats Rovals "He needed a player to recruit other players and I was that kind of player," he said, "I could have gone to other school in the country but I decided to come here. I KANAS S CITY (AP)-Mickey Lolich broke into the victory column for the first time this season, tossing an eight-bititter as he scored a goal in the Kansas City Royals 7-2 Tuesday night. Dale Greenlee and Roger Morningstar are among 12 Big Eight Conference basketball players who will represent the team in the finals tour of Yugoslavia which will begin May 21. Litchi, 16-15 last year, was 0-4 going into the game. With the Royals ahead 1-0, the Tigers exploded in the fifth inning with five consecutive hits, including an Reliague Rodriguez hit by Karsana K心 left of Karasa K心 left Paul Spitlorrt, 2-2. 2 'Hawk Cagers To Join Tour To Yugoslavia McClelland will be tour manager during the trin According to assistant Big Eight commissioner Jack McCieland, the squad is The forwards are Oklahoma State's Kevin Fitzgerald and Tom Holland, Colorado's Dave Logan, Missouri's Kim Anderson and Morningstar. "We are very pleased that these players' schedules were such that they could represent the Big Eight Conference on this outstanding trip," McClenland said. All-Big Eight performer Alvan Adams of the University of Oklahoma heads the list of centers on the team. Adams led the league in points, but the team's Adams at the pivot position will be Oklahoma State's Andy Hopson, the conference's Isaiah Dawson, and Iowa State's Craus DeLoss. Oklahoma coach Joe Ramsey and Colorado coach "Sox" Walseth will assemble the squad on May 22 at Boulder, Colorado. Besides Greenlee, the guards on the team include Nebraska's Jerry Fort, Iowa State's Herle Ivy and Kansas State's Danny Beard. FREE RENTAL SERVICE FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE LISTINGS ON HOUSING AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE CALL 842-2500 LAWRENCE RENTALS EXCHANGE [ LRE ] Your Wedding Is A Time For Perfection, Beauty and Loving Attention. really don't know but why there were a lot of things involved in the decision." The two teams that will compete with KU are Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, and the other is Florida State. Even though Goffi is already thinking about the NCAA Tournament, he said the Big Eight Tournament, May 17-18 would be just as important. "I've played three times in the NCAA championships and played pretty good all three times," he said. "I 'painted consistent and I thought I did good when most people considered him wild." As for Corpus Christi, it's been on the top 10 for the last 15 years." At Glenwood Manor we know your wedding is the most important day of your life. You want it to be perfect, and rightly so. Our professional wedding staff will help you assure that perfect day. Contact Glenwood Manor now and reserve your wedding activities. We'll assist you with every detail. Goffi said one main reason he came to KU was that KU promised him three semesters of scholarship even though he would compete for only two semesters. He said that the third semester he would be Howard's assistant coach and that the scholarship would enable him to complete school. And "We have a great chance at the Big Eight because only two teams can rival us," he said. "If we'd reached our full potential we'd be sure to win, but we haven't. But I think we'll win. In fact, I'm pretty sure we'll win it." "When I first came to the States, I came primarily for school," he said. "I played some tournaments around the country and attended a few national championships coached by one of the greatest players of all time, Pancho Segura. After that, I played tournaments for six months and then I left." KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas City Royals made a move yesterday to beef up their pitch hitting. They sent third baseman Paul Schaal to the California Angels in exchange for former Royal Richie Sceibinlum. KC Trades Paul Schaal Back To California Angels Goffi was one of the best recruits Howard could get. He had played on winning teams all three previous years and had the experience to lead a young team. Scheibenbim, a switch-hitting outfielder, batted 32 for the Angels in 77 games last season but was off to his usual slow start this year with a .154 average. lenwood "or more information call Pat Murphy "It gives us extra depth in the outfield and, in general, more maneuverability," he "The acquisition of Scheinbium gives us additional right- and left-handed pinch hitting capabilities," Cedric Tallis, Royals' general manager, said. M anor MOTOR HOTEL 913/649-7000 9200 Metcalf Overland Park, Ks. Sebelium played for Kansas City in 1972, when he battled .300 in 14 games. He was named the league MVP. G Schaal underwent surgery for an ankle problem during the winter. "I just don't understand things. Well, at least "I" moust be back home. That's my fault." "I really don't know what to think. I had the flu and was some ball games, so we got about 40 at bats," he said. "They hit all the bases." And there is nothing wrong with my ankle. Schaal, who was the Angels' regular third baseman in 1965 and 1966, was acquired by the Royals in the 1968 American League expansion draft. Schaal said yesterday he was puzzled about the trade. Cincinnati, who sent him early last season to California. He has batted 176 so far this season, compared with a 238 in 1973. But Goffi will have better competition to practice against every day in Carlos Kirmayr, the current Brazilian national champion, Kirmayr is a professional and considered one of the better players in the world. the No. 1 singles title will come from Kurmayat is staying with Goffi until after the NCAA meet in June and then will travel to Greece. "I'll be staying till June and following the "NCAA's, I'll be going to play Wimbledon in London and then play tournaments in New York." But "But I back in the fall to graduate." SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE MAJORS Kentucky Derby Trip Last Minute Openings for This Weekend! $3900 SUA 864-3477 816-561-6776 Let us help you: PLAN AHEAD To Become a CPA THE BECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE SUA Films Replacement for "Tom Jones" F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S "TENDER IS THE NIGHT" 75c CLASSICAL FILM SERIES PASSES WILL BE HONORED starring Jason Robards & Jennifer Jones Thursday, May 2 9:30 p.m. only Woodruff Auditorium SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Phone 888-8500 Join Your Friends at Johnson County Community College this Summer! AUTHORITY Total Summer School in Total Air-conditioned Comfort Johnson County Community College 111th & Quivira Road Overland Park, Kansas 66210 - Earn up to 12 semester credit hours in the r-week summer session (June 3 — July 30) - As many as 6 semester credit hours in either of two, 4-week "mini" sessions (June 3 - 28 or July 1 - 30) Registration May 30-31 Sa M Be Our Successful Students Repress 1/4 OF USA Move easier. Get help. RYDER RYDER Here's help We rent Ryder trucks Chevrolet, other fine trucks From little Chrysler vans to large trucks on automatic transmissions, or powerwrt lamps, or hardy loading ramps. We rent mowers and loaders. You can help you the helpful Ryder. Movers Guide. All your move needs now is you. We've got everything else for your local Ryder Truck Rental Dealer R RENTAL 802 W. 23rd St. 842-6262 A-1 SUA FILMS SUA FILMS FAN Travels with my Aunt Friday, May 3 7:00-9:30 Saturday, May 4 2:00-4:00-1:09-9:30 Special Films MARIOE Monday, May 6 7:30 Film Society MEET JOHN DOE dir. Frank Capra starring Gary Cooper Thursday, May 2 Classical Films 42ND STREET 51 (Stay for Both GAY DIVORCEE Wednesday, May 1 Kansas Union SUA FILMS SUA FILMS University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 1, 1974 Safety Changes Made on Track Before Indy 500 9 INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—When ind practice begins May 6 for the 88th Indianapolis 500 mile race, drivers will change the same changes made at the farmed speedway. They include higher retaining walls, removal of exposed spectator seats and widening and lengthening of the pit area and entrance. Probably the most significant change is a new pit entrance that starts in the top of the fourth turn, instead of in the middle of the main straight-away. The new entrance will make it possible to add another 686 feet to the existing 1,400 feet of pit area. It will give each crew 35 per cent more working space in the pits, which are cramped now. The new entrance also will allow the pace car to pull off the track at least one-half mile sooner. With the slow pace car out of the way, drivers feel Gone is the old fourth turn wall where Swede Savage crashed last year, suffering fatal injuries. The situation was blamed, at least partially, for the fiery accident at the start of the 1973 race, when Salt Lake City's car cartwheeled into the fence. To prevent fuel and debris from hitting spectators, the outside retaining wall has been raised to 32 inches, more than one foot higher than it was. they should have a fast and sucker start. In the past drivers have complained that the pace car didn't get off the track soon enough. Wet Grounds Cancel KU's Doubleheader KANSAN WANT ADS The doubleheader scheduled yesterday between the University of Kansas and William Jewel College was postponed because of wet grounds from a thunderstorm. KU athletic officials haven't decided whether the games will be rescheduled. KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES KU's next action will be a three-game series this week at Nebraska. Next Tuesday KU will meet Baker University in a doubleheader at Quigley Field. 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: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan to college students for college, credit, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLIINT 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. Either way it comes to the same thing—'New Atlas'. The old Mackintosh's is available now. New Caledonian, Townsend, Tasmania. Ray Audio, 15 E. k. Floor, Plano 842-3047 Hours Available for any stereo problem. Cost - $199. Available for any stereo problem. Cost - $199. Quality standard & electric reconditioned type- werings. Repair B4-814-583. We serve all other repairs. CANDLELEFT TOWNHOUSES For Sale. New floor plan 2, and 3 bedroom units under a curved bay. All bathrooms ready now. Wells, electric kitchen, large wet areas, maintenance provision. Only 580 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 249 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 179 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 129 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 89 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 62 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 45 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 32 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 20 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 17 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 14 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 11 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 8 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 6 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 5 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 4 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 3 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 2 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 1 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. Only 0 sq. ft. West Maintenance provider. SCUBA EQUIPMENT-Strong Special-Task- $19.95 80-120 HP $19.95 Dewar Equipment $29.95 Honeywell $19.95 Dewar Equipment FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at treasure hunt.com. Fruits are cheap. Also antiques used for museum collection. COUNTRY SHOP 767 N. 4th, 3 bldg north of the street. 842-3150 seven days a week. 842-3150 Helen Abbermann Honda 750 for sale—Vette Fairing Story, Star burgundy. In stock. Offer offered on condition. Call 822-886-1-98. SAVE-SAVE-SAVE -Margravax Floor, sample components. 30 watt, req. 279 now $150, 20 watt, reg. 24 now $180, 20 watt, reg. 24 now $180, Get them while we got it. Rock Shayne back's. 929 Mass. FET, Radial Clearance. Set of 4 only $15 plus $10 FET at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mats 1983 Chevrolet Impala B-lux 4-door. V.A. gas- pump. New interior. Automatic transmission. First or first car? $261 Call 800-5416 for sale. Kennedy KW04 AM-FM Stereo Tuner. Built Must sell for $165 or make an off-e- 842-6711 For Sale. Over 20 album, very good shine. $260 Mint. 14 years old. Best offer. Call Larry; 312-755-8259. CASIF FOR COINS Will pay 200¢ above face price. For coins in the range 0-1 half-dollars, Call Server at 843-672-6101 For Sale - 72 Hours 60s. Excellent condition. Fiat 500i Sport, good condition. Flat 550 Flat 650s. Good condition. Call 642-381-8970. REGISTERED BLOODHOUND PUPPLES. My healthy pizza plays now online. Call 811-264-3950. MUST SELL 99 Lennars (V8-350) -4-speed (Hurst) +1 new trees (A343-8007-589) 5-2 Afghan papaya - Gorgosia large blue and cream tissue. High quality. K-C AUC term. Terna avail- ible. High quality. For Sale 16732 Forsyth Davenport 3 ipd. 6 cyl. 6 tilt. 16636 Triumph TRAIN racing bucket seats, excellent condition. Contact CGH Willett 800-549-2500, www.cghwillett.com. Clayton County State Bank, 9th and Kentucky-5 Cheap living and privacy too. Purhushan's my 10' apartment is a cozy one, with all bedding, three bedroom (one as study). Partially furnished, excellent condition, and much more. Budget-friendly. Monthly $2-8; Bail 42-5999. Keep it ready. For Sax-1711 2804 - Cl30 - model 1500 miles For Sax-1711 2804 - Cl30 - model 1500 miles 278 between 3 and 10 pm. Ask for Jeff-3 278 between 3 and 10 pm. Ask for Jeff-3 For Sale, 1989 Sharif陀冬 12 x 6, 2 bdm. Air Cond, airbilt 441-3899, Davenport 5-1 WHITE ELEPHANT T-SHIRTS—$25 Each White elephant shirt and site sizes will supply lilies. Designed to suit any occasion, they are available at The White Elephant Market (natural) 779-401-6000 or on Men-Pent, 10-5; Sat and Sun. *Kewlery* $7.99 each. 15 F. Mallard Trailer Trainer, grain ergie, strg. frog, shampoo, grooming. Shown in B. very clean, excellent condition. Shower. 4 vee clean, excellent condition. New LPs! Vel's Rays rebounded 12 E 89th, LPs! These new & unreaped. Absolutely! LPs! These new & unreaped. Absolutely! LPs! These new & unreared. Absolutely! SALE: candy canes 20%, ice Dairy, Driftwood and Mint. Nibble 15%. May 1st thru 4th Where; Javine 117 E 8th and May 1st thru 4th Where; Javine 117 E 8th 1973 Honda CB-250 G in good running condition. Works well on all four wheels. Fit Husqvarna. Best reasonable offer on both golf clubs. WANT YOUR OWN HORTICULTURE EXPERIENCE! Come look at our 12 x 6" 28 DIRT mobile house in a space covered. Covered. Extended warehouse space with wet roof. Extra washers. new draperies, carpeted floor. new washer. Cat. litter. F felix camera store ALPA, KONICA, LEICA, PENTAX, CANNON, CAMERAS, LENSES, and ACCESSORIES. AGFA-LIFORD Papers & Film Lawrence Rep. -442 3523 2137 Independence Blvd. Kansas City, Mo. 64124 1967 VX Excellent condition. Leaving the U.S.A. $550. Call 842-283-823. 5-3 For Sale—1711 BAVI Victor 590 2020 miles 300 groomed on or off and clean. Great on or off the call. Call Stefan 842-9298. Guitar—Electric Rocket Harmony Body-Body Cherish Sunfire, Hard Shell Cable Inside, Double Tube Pickups. For Sale—Murray 10 speed men's bicycles, only in excellent condition. Same or better. equipment, transportation 400-842-3762- 526 or 400-842-3763-526 SALE! The first sale of Previously owned LFs Saturday 29th April at 4pm, Price to $6. April 29th to May 4th, Price to $16. $6 For Sale - Leaving, must sell well cared for 10 x furniture. Brand new hardwood, hewn bedroom accented. AAC, water closet, heated bath throughout. Excellent buy for a couple tired of a cold room. Storage space. Storage shed 3000 Iowa C-14-861-1941 after 6 months. Must sell need the cash! 1027 Titulum BA must sell need the excellent condition. Call 629, 629, or for a Ps. For sale, 73 VW Beetle, 15,600 km, still under warranty. Radio: License Excellent condition. 941-210-2848 We do not rip off college students we have terrarium plants, vegetable plants, unimall plants at all fair prices. Mother's Day gifts, Maple Leaf Baskets, Christmas ornaments, three bells, east of Tee Pee. L-7, 5-7 DOLLY Noise Reduction Unit-Time AM-REP DOLLY Noise Reduction Unit-Time AM-REP V-35 Type (I) (improved) and ADC-168, MWB V-35 Type (II) (improved) and ADC-168, MWB Rabbit Shrew Course. Reynolds 321s taking Hummingbird. Rayburn 320s taking Leafyfoot. New trunk tree. John at 845-652-7670 or John at 845-652-7671. For Sale. SCM Takumar 200mm f4 (A camera lens for sale) for fast handheld in excellent con- troll design for fast handheld in excellent con- tro For Sale Kitchen table and 4 chairs and end-table lamp, benches, and chairs. 1015 Magnolia Apt. 216. Call (877) 636-9055. For Sale-Work TV, Admiral 23 inch color console. Works: $75. 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842-4774, 842-4775, 842-4776, 842-4777, 842-4778, 842-4779, 842-4780, 842-4781, 842-4782, 842-4783, 842-4784, 842-4785, 842-4786, 842-4787, 842-4788, 842-4789, 842-4790, 842-4791, 842-4792, 842-4793, 842-4794, 842-4795, 842-4796, 842-4797, 842-4798, 842-4799, 842-4800, 842-4801, 842-4802, 842-4803, 842-4804, 842-4805, 842- New ATR 18 Steel Bolted Whitwale tires cut to New ATR 18 Steel Bolted Whitwale tires cut to T-Fast free installation for Bombardier Storm Bolted tire (5x2.5) Final Clearout! All remaining Magnavase & Moterola Components at 50% off! Last chance for floor samples & demos at Rustback's, Stacksbear's, Spectrum, and More! Set now $0.90, $29.99 quad set now $15.7-5 Graduation--Must sell my 1464 mobile home Washer & dryer, laundry kitchen appliances, dishwasher, refrigerator, ceiling air-cond with large porch, hurricane tie-downs. Take over payments. Available June 30th. For Sale. 5x6’ race car style bike. Bought in extra outer bag. 240-2810. Will throw in extra outer bag. Good value. For sale: 1912 BUILTACO BELTCARE Roadster. Stretch lined body and cover. Includes hood and cover. $258 Call 431-4708. If bike, 10 speed 1927 Benchlight lightweight. Green body. Call 643-3710 for say for Mari. 643-3114 for bike. Raleigh Super Curtis Reynolds 321 tshing, Simmons Airlines 400 tshing, Joe Bass coat jacket man New Front tire at 84-95-802 FOR RENT FOR BENT to male or female student. Nice fellowship in the University of Union. Parking and utilities paid. black from Union. FOR RENT: A new, 2 bed room apartment with: garage, deck, patio, covered conditioned, furnished, storage, NARR and pool. $180 per month. Call (855) 234-7967. TRAILRIDGE, by the country club, walk to wall with a view of the golf course. Prepare an electric kitchen, private patios/balconies, hotel room, each 4 units, other rental accommodations. 1,2 and 3 bedrooms, 1 and 2 bathrooms, 1 and 3 bedroom apartments, 3 bedrooms, 1 and HILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1723-1745 West 24th North New leasing, a bedroom furnished on some balconies and a second apartment, dittinging, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, off-the-street parking, KU bus stop, shopping center. MADRINOOWOP, APARTMENTS. Great Variety of apartments in the neighborhood. planned community mix. KU from $140. *t* KU is $390. All apartments have air con- friability. TWOWEERBOOSE CORPORATION (s120) CAREERS FOR THE NEW YORK CITY WORKING BUSINESS OF TWO (2) MEN AT TOWWEERBOOSE CORPORATION ($120) MONEY FOR BAD EMPLOYMENT. USE CODE: 518-400-1000. GATHEUSE ADPARTMENTS. KU bus service Open 8 a.m.-8 p.m. by lark or by alpany 106 W. 26th, 80 West 49th Street, New York, NY 10035. RENTAL HOUSING for apts, duplexes and house, call 812-7106 or 842-5845. 1f Furnished 1-5 room apartments. $200. Also rooms with kitchen priveture $35-$50. Renting bedroom private. CRESCENT APARTMENTS For Rent--Summer months or all year. 4 bdm. house near campus: 843-5888. 5-18. Typewriters for rent. Call 841-4083. Available May 18. The weekly 2 bedroom Fourplex-Pelly carpeted, stove, ref. garbage disposal,贮藏, unfurnished-Localeat at H18 & Obo Conversation, ad RU & downtown. Gate 682-1280 Information. Summer Rental—Summer Rates. Renting large apts, for lower summer rates in the city. Be sure to check with your local building authority as well as a 600-acre 15-24 bedroom furnished as low as $389/month. Pay all utilities, AC, pool balances on the balcony, and parking fees. Visit University Terrace & Old Mill Apt. 1A57 at 1607 W. Call (800) 842-4257 or come by www.universityterrace.com. Rooms - furnished, clean and quiet, for mukku Borders - borders North and South, no water. No pets. No dogs. 843-767-507 Apts—Clean, quiet, furnished 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. No pets. Boards KU and near northeast. CIRAPE SUMMER LIVING - Leaving Jubilee Aug-Aug. CHIPPA SUMMER LIVING - Leaving Jubilee Aug-Aug. This is your chance $325 in week 2 weeks $450 in week 3 weeks 2 bedroom uniform apt. air conditioned, yard, bedroom 181-9066, $150 per room, bell 813-9066, or 812-9494 Subbaiting for summer, furnished 2 br. pt., bath. Bedroom, available. May 15. Br. pool 6498 = or 6490 = or 6490. Oaks Acorn Summer sublime 1 br. lr. furn. ac, apts. available for nort. for May 15th 160 Kentucky w. 841-347-260 Need a place to stay this summer? The air con- tains are excellent. The hotel is in the summer. Co-education. Girls top floor, grape first two month lease. $25 a month. CLOSE to cam- plex 1-4 persons per room. Call Mrs. Mattia, #801 637-6400. Now leaving for fall semester, rates for June & July, are afternoon, evenings. 105 Manhattan Here's your chancel! Summer sublet 3 bedroom house, furnished, airconditioned, close to cathay resorts. $599-$899. Call (212) 760-5242. Elderly woman would like to 1 for 2 persons to share a table. Elderly woman would like to share the electric light 100 $ is worth and would share the electric light 50 $ is worth. AVAILABLE JUNE 13: 1:18 APT with slightly reduced rent for manageless theatre. Prefer graded housing. Residence fee $250 per month. Rental Office 1815 W.24TH Now RESTING* for summer and fall. Large Double Dome. One cup for 3 or 4 people. Large Holders. Waterproof. Padded. Reflective. 1 and 2 BEDROOMS Quiet 1 bedroom Apt. in private just south of KUI, Furnished. A-C, utilities $109/month. KUI-2 Bedroom B/Ac, 3 baths $269/month. Must both-hose a birnm unfitted antifit 14 mm with a birnm unfitted antifit 14 mm with a $19 per month. May 15 to May 15. Call (800) 732-7444. For summer rent. 6 room acre. $1/2. block north of Intracoastal Urtica, gg. water & gas paid. $156 month. $40 per week. Subleasing for summer. Furnished 2 bed apartment. Bath, Kitchen. Available May 15th. Call 844-639-0700. Furnished Air for rent at 19th W. 14th, b1rm. Furnished Air Cond. Air Conditioned. Available Mn. Cajk Jeff. serv. Bldg. Two bedroom. $75/month. utilities paid. Call 832- 5-6 STADIUM APTS - Now-leaving for one year retiring, $145 a month. Two bedroom floor w/ wabc ac, $145 a month. Two bedroom floor w/ wabc ac, something pool holiday facilities & private parking. Apt at 1128 Indiana Zip or call 843-2162 (beware Apt at 1128 Indiana Zip or call 843-2162 (beware Duplex for rent, 2-bit. Available May 30, 2015- including util. Phone 824-6022 after 9:55. -$7 2 N.B. Brat 8 A.P. to, submit immediately behind 11:00 a.m. (p.m.) to 812-894-6081 at 4 p.m. or 812-894 during day 7 10:30 a.m. Take advantage of nummer rent 2 BR apt. and location area, mid-may 841-2347 or 845- 3052 for location area, mid-may 841-2347 or 845-3052. For Rent- PROFESSOR'S HOUSE. May 24-Aug. $1,900 per month. Includes porch, 3-car garage. $2,600 monthly. Call (877) 454-1212. **zoom available for summer session, beginning** **march 2016.** Zoom sessions at student *school* 12H, and Tcm *call* 843-708-9787 Bod-Base for summer. Furnished 2 hambret, apt. $70 per room. Call 613-854-9999 or call Gail 613-854-9999 after a week. BR Apts w Mifth, bath, LR off-street parking. BR Apts w AC at WC, ac AT 60+, plus ush parking. Ky #232, Ky #82. FREE RENTAL SERVICE Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair LREx 842-2500 George's Shop Sublease for summer. Apt.eur, patron of 14th and Tenn. $75 month. Call: 841-2796 5-7 Want for Sewing school only? Entire floor room for $18,000. Room space for $25,000. $99 per room. Utilities费。Phone #343-822-9222 or visit www.sewing.edu. WANTED 1 desperately need 2 or 3 female roommates for the summer. Call 849-1210. **5-1** WANTED: Persons to live in a beautiful mansion located on the corner of a bustling house is renting rooms, live in comfort and attractive surroundings. Close to campus and nearby amenities; $75 per month. Call Ms. Martinez, 843-676-9177. the summer; Call 843-1216 B-1 Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 59th Street and 27th Avenue, 101 N. Fifth Street, 512-872-8728 or www.federalreservebank.org Wanted: Want to buy used, 4 mags for Datum 2402, COZ! 842-6298 5-18 Smoking Is Our Only Business Roommate Wanted to live in a large 3 bedroom house with 2 other people starting May 15 and finishing October 16. much private space you desire. Plus utilities such as water, gas, phone. Call 413-812-529 or talk it over with Dana. Two female roommates to live in 2-bd. bum; hire 15-year-old daughter May 15 to July 31; Call Ann at 842-327-9700 Faculty member needs to rent CVW camper or bus, May 10-Aug 15 10:45-600 4:54-600 5:46-600 Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St Graduate students with wife who wants to earn money at home. Position open to manage small hotel and trailer court. Free apt, plus salary of $45,000 per year. Resumes to LPM, Box 549, Lawrence, Ks - 72168. ROOMMATE WANTED to share two bedrooms, roommate $180.00, off half bath, Male or Female Only $85.00, off full Wanted: Looking for female hostmate or roommate, both together or move into your place. No phone calls. 1 need 2 or 3 packets to alight a 4 bed room house, and house 1 with 82-9522 and house 2 with 82-9522 or 82-9560. Wanted: Student teacher needs female counselors for fall semester call Only 842-580-3-5 Female Roommate Wanted - Shave my three bedroom roomate and fill $70,000 plus utilities. Roommates wanted for summer. Mollie Ollie: 625-834-0779, 1/2 electric suite. Plenty of room. Call 843-0779 I need a male roommate to nice a 2ice Nixon hotel room. I don't have a phone or utilities. Call Gary after 10 p.m. 728-200-547 Wanted: Roommate to 2 BR, apt in park $30, pool, but $75. Sibs per month & one HM day a week. No children allowed. NOTICE 515 Michigan St. Bar-11-Clue. We have open pit barbeque—wood only! We have hot sauce, chicken wings, wine, or brisket by the pound. Half-chicken by the plate. Kat it eat or take it out. Open it up and serve with chips, pretzels, or salad. TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. Snuff- tails, hair brushes, makeup brushes, tape- trucks, antique clocks & watches, clothes and cleaned. Electronic and light industri- al cleaning. A variety of stainless steel clat- lers. River City Repair 815 Vernon 841-7600. LAWENCHY GAY LIBERATION, INC., "Weekly Meeting" 7:30 p.m., Monday May 6; Union召开 122 B University, Box 224, Lawenchy Ramp 842-5778 - 842-5606 for referrals. Social Media: 842-5778. GO WHERE THE CROWS DON'T KNOW YOUR NAME! Bike to Serengeti, Kenya. Afrikaans, or where biking is allowed but cheaper. Eat batit but CHEEPER! Go tumbler riding. Walk around the city by course! Trail Blazers. TOLL FIRE-90-225-7180. LOSST OUR LEASE~our loss~your gain~SAVE~ 100%-50% off our regular low price; 90%-50% off our regular price; waste our building by July 17. 1874 HURRY! Open 9am; to 5 p.m. EXCHANGE Quilting Business Save $100 on all educational materials and equipment for Quilting Business, help us build and use our machines at same time! Burke's Big Idea is to teach kids how to quilt. TACOS $3.50 per Dozen Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts If you're Planning on FLYING Let Maupinton Do The WORK for You! (NEVER cost the most for Airline tickets) RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your auto, and the clothes you wear may be recycled. The NAPA Auto Parts, and Bobolon Flashboard Attire offer the finest services and reconditioned merchandise. NAPA Auto Parts: 843-9035. Bobolon Clothes: 768-088, and RE Repair: 841-4083. 818-4918. / Maupintour travel service I buy and sell new and used Volkwagens. Bank Preference available (with approved credit). Call (312) 896-0400. CALL book fare May 10-11. Brace your old phone and receive a new account. 825-479- 3825 for two fees and a taxation receipt. Call or email to check the status of your book fare. Employment Opportunities Two areas of beautiful grass lawn, tennis courts, and a courtyard are included in the main room. BBQ grill on patio. Not all a country club, it is just a Jew of the benefits of this location. Two-month lease $2 million per month. Mrs. Martin's office is located at 104 N. Main Street. The motorcycle season is definitely here and Trail Horizons Honda has new street, track, and trail maps in stock and ready for immediate delivery. DAIR 187, West 8th. 64-333. HORIZONS 8-7, DAIRE 187, West 8th. 64-333. ADDRESSIERS and maillers needed. Spleydon Op- mental Institute, 419 Musterhilf, 58 Leroyen, Krause Biohilfe, 419 Musterhilf, 58 Leroyen, Krause SUA / Maupintour **STUDENTS--Summer employment. Picketton Incorporated in now taking applications for students interested in a position at the greater Kansas City area. To qualify you must be 21 or over, at load 8%, and have a clean police license. Apply by mail to the Campus Office, phone and e-mail, and apply.Mon-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. room 200 Bryant Building, 1024 Grand, C.K. M.O. TYPING MARRETING TRAINEE-Food on retailers with brand name products. Will训 train sales oriented person $2000 + car + exp. Fee paid by owner. MARRETING NONE (100) 5-13 G-C.M. (Ko. M81) 842-286-9 ACCOUNTANT-Trait for superior position Accountant $5,000. Paid by employer. Filing income on behalf of employer. Funding payments to employer. MARKETING - Pharmaceuticals. Call on medical profession for top national firm. Want degree and aggressive personality; $800 + car + exp. Freel agent. Bachelor's or higher in Health Care, K.G., Mc Kee, (812) 846-3820. 5-3 Wouldn't you rather work in paradise this summer? You can teach English, study business studies find work, clean housing, transportation, and fun in Hawaii. For the latest, detailed information about the Survivors Curriculum 10, 1637 KAUFLA SURVIVOR SUPPLEMENT, visit http://www.kaufla.org/ Experienced in Vaping Sheets, documentation, term paper writing. Master's degree in Electronic type writer with pica tape. Accurate and prompt service. Proof read, spelling, corrected. Phonetic check. Typing in my home IBM Selectric Pica type experienced; illus. distortion typing, Frostip, Experienced Typif—will do theses, dissertations, tumors papers and miscellaneous typing. Call Pa- m PHONE 843-1211 Will do dying, nait, fast and reasonable Term papers, essays, resumes, and appleskins 843-299-971 HELP WANTED Experienced Typist–prost and accurate. Term 483-907. Materials, disks, treasures, etc. 483-907. Fast, accurate tp-unit with typeletter paper. Proofread quickly and easily for all rateable tests. Please call 842-5059 by 5 a.m. on Friday. Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841- 6989. Myra. 5-7 EXCELLENT AND EXPERIENCED TYPIST at EXCELLENT and EXPERIENCED TYPIST at thesis. Discusses, form papers, dbt, assignments, etc. Call Physilogy 842-5691, or drop at Building 2, Place Building. 25, Apt. 6 w. 101 Wessel. Now taking applications for summer help *Part 1* Applicant program from 9-4 at Allied Fish & Chips Center in New York City. Shake) Pizza Porter is now accepting applications. Please contact us immediately. Apply in place at W 24th W, 23rd D, 800 N. This Summer for the first time "The Wheel" Is Open Beginning June 5 Deli or grill for lunch KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass Bike Ride SERVICES OFFERED Port time summer jobs available. Pay starts at 3pm every day. Located in Crawley, Public Library Auditorium 648 Queen Street, Crawley, B51 7RN. ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR of Consumer Preparation and Technology full-time day, full-time beginning about August 19. Permanent position full-time salary based on experience. Admin., ability/experience read material. Admin., ability/experience read material. Community affair desirable. Submit resume by September 30. Kansas Union, Lawrence, KA. 6042. Questions. RIVER CITY PETRY - $151. Vermont, 841-463-883 Sterries - store & wipersets - Independent repair specialists - No retail hutch. We serve what you need. Replace. Unimaged resources. See *B*. **If** RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your computer and laptop is lost during part of your life. RC Repair, NAPA Auto Service, DBA Services and recordment merchandise. Auto Parts, 845-9305, Bokoman Closets, 845-9708. Auto Repair. Avoid low charges. Have it fixed. Auto Repair. Avoid high charges. Give it a clean look. Don’t shop at your home or business. SMALLSKEOLK- Preschool education in home atmosphere. April 21, Open 7:30 - 5:30H, FIST start 6:30AM. LOST LOST our cat feline. Neutered male, part SCA. We got a kitten without him (the male) him wants it and we have to get him. LOST—man's silver wedding band with three diamond sets between Union, Wesley, M-S, and J. Jim Mack at Union Into Bio by magazine—along with name and how I can get 7-touch $20 reward for return of white Penguin Skelton stolen from Meekbrook bank. Sedimental value, $15,000. Cash for the skull. Lost a gold a wristwatch with stretch cord to the lady of the person who cared so much it please call 814-8055 Found—Man's watch on leather band, found at the Mount Arian Monument, Apr 29 Call 842-756-3801. For details, see www.mountarianmonument.com. PERSONAL Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycle HAPPY HAPPY SUSAN! RIDES ___ RIDERS Med test students must commute from Lawrence to KUMC starting June 19. Will share expenses with teachers? No. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL 15 East 8th 841-2656 10-S Monday Saturday KWIKI CAR WASH 612 N. 2nd St. 2 Blocks North of Kaw River Bridge Self Service or Brush Wash 10 Gentlemen's Quarters Creative Haircutting for Men and Women 843-2719 for appt. W. 9th St. Center 9th & III. 10 Wednesdav. Mav 1. 1974 University Daily Kansan Tickets... Health Fees ... From Page One greater assumption of the financial burden by those who attend the games. John Beisner, student body president, agrees with the trend. His complaint is that the increase announced by the athletic department is too much for one year. Also, be's afraid this year's increase is only the smallest of several increases planned by the athletic department. What the situation boils down to is that the senate is seeking a smaller increase in ticket prices for next year and a voice in deciding ticket prices in the future. Attachment of those goals will depend on how much the senate believes that the price increases are too steep. In the past, efforts made by a united Student Senate to change actions it disapproves of have carried great weight with the University administration. What the senate will find out tonight is whether that vital unanimity exists. Nixon . . . From Page One likely to remain silent about the involvement of others. Dean: "They're going to stonewall it, as it now stands. Except Hunting. That's why it works." H. R. Haideman: "It's Hunt's opportunity." Dean: "That's right." Nixon: "That's why for your immediate things you have no choice but to come up with the $120,000, or whatever it is. Right?""Or might eight." Nixon: "Would you agree that that's the prime thing that you damn well better get Dean: "Obviously he ought to be given some signal anyway." Nixon: "Expletive deleted) get it. In a way that—who is going to talk to him, Charles W. Colson? He is the one who is supposed to know him." The White House brief said that Nixon discussed a number of different possibilities for handling the Watergate situation but that "the President rejected the payment of $120,000 or any other sum to Hunt or other Waterate defenders." Nikon also summed up the possibilities confronting him and his aides: "You really only have two ways to go. You either decide that the whole (expletive deleted) thing is so full of problems with potential criminal liabilities, which we can do and should about the publicity. We could rock that through if we had to let the whole damn thing hang out, and it would be a loays story for a month. But I can take it. The point is that I don't want any criminal liabilities. That is the way I think the White House members of the White House staff and I would trust for members of the Committee for the Re-election of the President." From Page One Hospital, said that he wished to reduce costly in-patient care and use the advances in medicine on an ambulatory basis. The hospital would have a computerized in-patient charges, such as rooms, he said. The student health fees entire debitable to a variety of health services at Dublin, Kolman said. He offered a list of medical service units provided by the health service. Those services are doctor visits, nurse visits, laboratory tests, X rays, physical therapy, prescriptions, mental health clinic visits and days of inpatient care. Summer fees for health care are $17.25. If the proposed increase goes into effect, he summer fees will be $22.15. Health services are available during those times when school isn't in session in August and January. The student is charged, but the student said. He said the student could choose to pay for each visit when school isn't t in session or he could pay a health fee of 33 cents a day during the weeks between semesters. Wollmann said that in the past weeks, the number of students the hospital has seen has increased. The hospital usually sees about 450 students a day, he said. A suggestion was made that patients be screened upon entering the hospital to determine whether they were there to see a patient. The students said that he would like to try that sort of thing at Watkins, but the biggest problem was getting the students to accept No comprehensive comparison of health services at the University of Kansas with those of other Big Eight schools has been made, said Wollmann. But Wollmann said he did have national figures that indicated that the cost of KU's health service was below the average when compared with health services of similar size. A student suggested that an audit of hospital funds be made by the Student Senate, Charles Rhoeas, the junior and chairman of the Student Senate's health board, and a student tutorry board hadn't been set up, but he hoped to establish one. Watergate... From Page One resign, although many said they hoped he would. "Nixon should be impeached to lessen the power of the president and to strengthen the Congress and the Constitution," Dick Schmidt, Hays sophomore, said. Pritchard said he thought Nixon would have assumed a dictatorial position and continued to intimidate people if Watergate badn't pulled the plug. Sue Andrews, Glen Ellyn, Ill., sophomore, said she thought impaction proceedings were out of the question because past police officers hadn't been punished for illegal offenses. Opinions were divided on whether the Mitchell-Stans acquittal would have any bearing on Nixon's case. Half said they thought it would be unfair, half said they thought it would help Nixon. Mother's —home away from Home— MONDAY—Pitchers 75 $^{\circ}$ 7-9 p.m. TUESDAY—Pitchers 70 $^{\circ}$ 8-9 p.m. WEDNESDAY—Pitchers 75 $^{\circ}$ 7-9 p.m. THURSDAY—Pitchers 70 $^{\circ}$ 8-9 p.m. Don't forget our AFTERNOONSI Mon.-Fri. 2-6 p.m. FRIDAY—Pitchers 70c 2-4 p.m. Pitchers $1.00 — Draws 20° open house meadowbrook saturday,may 4,9 a.m.-5 p.m. meadowbrook a good place to live 842-4200 saturday, may 4, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. make your summer and fall plans now come look us over follow the flags on 15th just west of low KIEF'S KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC URL Dual disc preeners KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC Dual disc preeners Regular $598 Now $299 KISS QUEEN II King Crimson Diamond Needles—Reg. $995.*1095—Now $595 Queen II QUEEN II King Crimson KISS Refreshingly yours Peter Pan SUNDAE SALE Triple Dip ICE CREAM CONE 39c POWERPUPPETS 35 • CHOCOLATE • STRAWBERRY • MARSHMALLOW • BUTTERSCOTCH • PINEAPPLE NUTS 5c EXTRA NUTS 5c EXTRA Peter Pan ICE CREAM STORE OUR SUPER • TRIPLE DIP • DELUXE Banana Split 69c REG. 75c REG. 75c Three big scoops of ice cream - vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry - drenched with three sundae toppings, whipped cream and cherries. MADE WITH A WHOLE RIPE BANANA NUTS 5c EXTRA THE MONSTER ICE CREAM SODA 24 oz. TRIPLE DIP BG 99 WE DARE YOU TO CONSUME THE WHOLE THING! 49c ICE CREAM SHERBET AND REGULAR FLAVORS HALF 89¢ GALLON PREMIUM FLAVORS HALF 95¢ GALLON Burger 100% BEEF HAMBURGERS AT ALL STORES FEATURING SANDWICHES 3 $ 1 19 43c EACH LETTUCE & TOMATO 10c EXTRA EACH Peter Van GRADE A MILK POLLY PINNEL THICK • RICH MALT OR SHAKE REG. 55c & 75c 49c & 69c [ WAS lines, tell Po poena THERE IS A PETER PAN ICE CREAM STORE NEAR YOU 521 WEST 23RD 1015 WEST 6TH The that H trans Demo Repu Wal the P subpo believe circum A Kang pass vote The little heed --- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 84th Year, No. 138 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, May 2, 1974 Panel Balks at Transcripts Letter Says President Has Failed to Comply WASHINGTON (AP)—Sharply splitting along party lines, the House impeachment inquiry voted last night to tell President Nixon he has failed to comply with its subpoena for Watergate tapes. The committee approved, 20 to 18, a letter to Nixon saying that he has failed to comply by publicly released editable transcripts rather than turning over subpoenaed tapes. Two senators and two civilians in no voting, no one Republican voted yes. rep. Jeremy R. Waldie, D-Calfi, alud groundwork for the publication of noncompliance as an impasseable offence in the courts. BUT REPUBLICANS CONTENDED that President Nixon had substantially complied with the subpoena by publicly releasing transcripts that they contended in some cases were better than the tapes themselves. waime asked special impeachment counsel John Doar if the President's willful refusal to comply with the House subpoena was an impeachable offense and Doar replied: "I am be an impeachable offense under these circumstances." "We should accept the material in good faith and make further representations in the future if necessary," said the committee's senior Republican, Edward Hutchinson of Michigan. The President has supplied the committee with a great deal of information, said Rep. Robert McClory, R-IL. "That is a substantial and adequate response to our suboena," McClory said. But chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., D-NJ, said "the President has not complied with the subpoena." "We did not subpoena an edited White House version of partial transcripts of portions of presidential conversations," Rodino said. "We did not subpoena presidential interpretation of what is necessary or relevant in the inquiry. And we did not subpoena a lawyer's argument presented to我们 have heard any of the evidence." THE LETTER APPROVED BY THE COMMITTEE was proposed, by Rep. Harold D. Donohue, D-Mass. The one Republican joining Democrats in approving the final letter saying the President had failed to comply with the law is Senator John McCain. The two Democrats who joined Republicans in voting against the final action were Conyers and Walck, who had been indicted. Elsewhere yesterday, the White House moved toward a new court test with the special Wategate prosecutor by asking a federal judge to throw out the prosecutor's subpoena asking for tapes and records of 64 presidential Nixon's lawyer, James St. Clair, filed a motion in U.S. District Court asking Judge John Siricus to quash the subpoena by special watergate protector Leon Jaworski. Nixon's lawyers hinted they were moving toward a Supreme Court showdown over whether the White House investigators, Jaworski's office said the White House motion would be resisted and a hearing was set for this week. The White House also suggested it might try to clarify some of the passages in the Watergate tape transcripts which are muddled with such words as "maudible," or "intelligible," if House Judiciary Committee leaders deem some of this vital to understand what was being discussed. Democrats and Republicans alike said before last night's meeting that their chief concern was to avoid a party split that could turn the impeachment inquiry into a political battle. "IF YOU EVER FRAGMENT to this a partisan matter, you've really got problems," said Rep. William L. Hungate, D-M., before the night session. "That's what we want to avoid. "I would hope the committee could agree that the President's response is short of full compliance with the subpoena," Hungate said, "without rushing to say this is contempt, or impeachable or bad manners." I vote that unity wasn't his motive See House Page 12 Senate Demands Ticket Price Cut A resolution censuring the University of Kansas Athletic Association (KUAA) was passed last night by the Student Senate by a vote of 68 to 1. The resolution charges that KUAA has little respect for students 'as shown in its textbooks,' and that the administration does not. 7 Arrested In Slayings In Frisco SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Mayer Joseph Alito said yesterday that police had arrested seven blacks in connection with the Zebra street killings carried out by a black group dedicated to the murder and mutilation of whites and dissident blacks. "The police have pierced the veil of a vicious ring of murderers called the Death Angels," Aikoto told a news conference. "He was a kind of revenge Ku Klux Klau," he said. Twelve whites have been killed and six others wounded in San Francisco in random and unprovoked attacks over a six-month period. The mayor said: "Nearly 80 California murderous assaults, principally in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Alameda and Oakland," he added. "In 1970 to date, have been characterized by the Death Angel pattern of operations—that is, unprovoked attacks involving random shooting of whites in the street or mutilation of blacks." He was attacked by neatly dress-*l*- young black men. It asks that student season ticket prices for next year be reduced to $12 for both football and basketball. Ticket prices are currently $15 for football and $13 for basketball. The resolution calls those prices "unacceptable." Chancellor Archie R. Dykes favors reducing the prices to $12, according to Richard Faxson, Baxter Senate senior and Chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee. The resolution charges that KUAA raised ticket prices "without sufficient justification for its demand that the student body increase its financial support of At the current ticket prices KUAA will have about $78,850 more from students next year. A resolution calling for the resignation of Athletic Director Clyde Walker was withdrawn by its author, Rich Lauter, Evanston. Ill., senior. The resolution that was passed embodied the spirit of his resolution and urged consent to ratify it. "Just as it is the responsibility of every citizen of our society to call for the protection of our rights, so it is our responsibility as elected representatives of the student body to call to account the actions of a member of the University who violates our rights." The resolution asks that Dykes form a committee to investigate KUAA. It also asks that the Athletic Board, the governing body of KUAA, conduct its business at public meetings. Meetings of the Athletic Board currently are closed to the public. are paid by each student at enrollment, were $30 this year. They will be $30.50 next The senate, in its last meeting of the semester, also approved an increase of $8.50 per student. the increase is necessary to assure continued operation of Watkins Hospital, Martin Wollmann, director of the hospital, said. The hospital did not increase the health fee during the past few years even though costs were rising. The hospital had a reserve fund, Wollmann said. Now that the reserve fund has been depleted, students must bear the increased cost of medical care. The senate passed legislation that would allow approval of a student health insurance contract with Blue Cross-Blue Shield. The plan would pay $13.04 more than last year's fee. "We have the cheapest possible contract available in the state of Kansas," said Charlie Rhoades, Olathe junior and chairman of the senate's health sub- Blue Cross-Blue Shield was the only company that placed a bid for the KU insur- gage contract. Rhodes said. Other companies didn't respond to a letter of inquiry, he said. The campus bus service will cost $1.50 more for operation next year than last year, and this year. All students, however, will pay the same $1.30 a semester less as paid in the past. Bus schedules are provided. Steve McMurray, Norton sophomore and chairman of the senate's transportation subcommittee, said there had been a $20,000 surplus in bus funds this year. The increase in operating costs will make the system break even next year, he said. The $1.50 increase an hour was the lowest increase the bus company would take and still continue the system, McMurry said. We argued down to duck, and the Rape Task Force came from the Rape Task Force that calls for a uniformed police presence. "We argued down to that," he said. See SENATE Page 2 BROOKLYN POLICE Bicycle Patrol Officer John Mullens panics during his campus patrol yesterday. Mullens said that the officer was surprised by the sight. foot patrol this spring, he decided to fix up a bike and travel on two wheels rather than a motorcycle. KU Officials Mum on Investigation Comment Should Be Withheld Pending Audit, They Say Kanan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER Rich Lauer (left) introduces a bill calling for the resignation of Athletic Director Clyde Walker at the Student Senate meeting last night. Lauter later withdrew the bill. Todd Hunter, Senate vice-president watches the action from the background. By DEBBIE GUMP And MARK MITCHELL Kansan Staff Reporters University of Kansas officials yesterday refused to release information about the procedure or progress of an audit of the behavior analysis follow through program. They also withheld comment on possible Senate Action 100 actions to be taken if the allegations of misuse of funds prove correct. Angersinger said that because the allegations hadn't been proven, any comment about possible punitive action by the University would be "inappropriate." The University began the audit with "considerable misgivings," according to William J. Argersinger Jr., vice chancellor for research administration. "Mrs. (Nancy) Swaininger made these instimations but refused to submit them." "If there is proof of improper use of finances, then it is covered by regulations of Topeka or possibly state laws, but that's outside my province," he said. "I can't say what the University wants me to do. The responsibility of implementing the state regulations." Argeringer also refused to comment on whether the use of travel cards to pay for airfares was valid. Predicting the outcome of the audit is impossible, Argersinger said, because the auditing process isn't complete. However, be said, instances of wrongdoing will be subject to the penalties provided under state law and University guidelines. Falsification and forgery of state travel vouchers, as alleged in connection with the behavior analysis program, is a felony under Kansas law and subject to severe penalties. However, Ronald Hamilton, university contr诉er, said Tuesday that even though nausea of federal grant money was illegal, the court ruled against violation would have to be considered. He said the severity of the possible punitive actions depended on whether the person or persons "deliberately set out to get someone to do something they are trying to 'get by some red tape.'" Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that the University had the "power and the responsibility" to take action on the allegations were proved true by audit. "I think we can act if we find some of our employees haven't been following regulations," Shankel said. "I don't, on the other hand, want to prejudice any case that might be coming up, but the University says every employee to follow regulations." Neither Shankel nor Argersinger would say what the penalties will be for paying salaries with money from accounts other than those specified for salaries. Argersinger said he recommended last February that the Office of Business Affairs undertake an investigation after hearing allegations of misuse of travel vouchers from Nancy Swearingen, a parent formerly with the program. The audit will review all the business transactions during the period in question and possibly for a longer period, Argeringer said. Sample verifications of trips involving the use of travel vouchers will be included in the audit, he said. This recommendation was issued "with considerable misgivings," he said, because of Swearingen's "unsupported, unsubstantiated insinuations." "I have seen only what is in the newspapers, but that's not evidence. An unsubstantiated, unverified statement is only that." Arersinger said. He said that a completion date for the audit couldn't be projected because the audit was a very detailed and comprehensive process. "This is a very large project and there are literally thousands of transactions involved," he said. "There are entirely legal transfers fund funds from one account to another." See KU Page 2 End of Follow Through Disputed Approximately 35 parents who support the behavior analysis program at Woodland Elementary School met last night with their children. Carolyn Hutchins, a spokesperson for the group, said the meeting was called to submit documented lists of parents supporting the program and to "mend any cracks in the wall" regarding the cancellation of the program. Carl Knox, superintendent of Lawrence public schools, said it was unfortunate that Sieigstrat's letter stating that the program wouldn't be continued "wasn't interpreted as definitive as far as concluding the program." Provided that an educational program involved only one school, Knox said, it was the right of the principal to make the decision whether to continue the program. The school administration would then support that decision, he said. There was nothing requiring that programs previously employed in a school be continued after it was determined that the program no longer served the best interests of the community, Knox said. According to Siegrist, the reasons for discontinuing the program were community unrest and doubts about the program, philosophical differences about the teaching methods and the learning process, and deserved to be singled out to receive money from a federal grant. Knox said that many good and promising techniques had evolved from the program, but "to become a slave to one particular He also said there was no definitive method to evaluate the results of the program. Many parents gave specific examples of aspects of the behavior analysis program which they thought were important to their children's education. They primarily praised the positive reinforcement and variety of activities, as well as the constructive discipline and quality of the behavior analysis teachers. Knox said that the program wouldn't be at Woodlawn next year but that many behavior analysis techniques would be combined with other conventional techniques to form "the best school we could possibly have." 2 Thursday, May 2, 1974 University Daily Kansan news capsules / the associated press No-Fault Insurance Bill Passed by Senate The Senate yesterday passed a bill requiring every motorist to buy insurance protecting himself against medical expenses and wage losses resulting from traffic accidents. The final vote of 53 to 42 sent the revolutionary no-fault insurance bill to the House. Under no-fault, a victim's expenses would be paid by his own insurance company regardless of who caused the accident. Senate Votes Against Wage-Price Controls The Senate voted 57 to 31 yesterday to kill an attempt to revive wage-price controls on a stand-by basis for another year. However, it adopted 44 to 14 another part of an anti-inflation package advanced by three Democratic senators which would give President Nixon power to monitor price and wage hikes through the Cost of Living Council or another agency. The President also would have authority to enforce commitments made by industries when they entered into decontrol agreements. The Nikon administration said earlier yesterday that it would seek to enforce anti-infaction commitments made by several countries in business with the company. Sadat Sure Kissinger will Devise Peace Plan President Anwar Salat said last night that he was fully confident Secretary Al-Qasem would work out a Syrian-Iraeli agreement on the Golan Heath. Sadat also said that he might talk to Kissinger about the possibility of U.S. arms supplies for Egypt but that the subject hadn't been discussed yet. Two weeks ago Sadat announced that Egypt was ending its 18-year reliance on Russia for weapons. He charged the Soviets with making long delays in promised arms shipments and with trying to use arms as a club to control Egyn's foreign policy. Syrian President Hafez Assef "has the final word" with Kissinger about a Syrian-Iranian troop separation on the Golan, Saad said. Other Egyptian sources said the only two remaining stumbling blocks were a way of linking Iran's forces to Syria and the question of who controls three vantage points west of M. Hertmon. Senate Demands . . . From Page One If the senate passes the proposal, the foot patrol will cover areas on campus that are Student volunteers will be professionally trained and will carry night stakes. The students will have to be well prepared. A similar program has worked at other universities, said Barbara O'Brien, Bonner Springs sophonore and chairman of the university's problem recruiting volunteers, she said. The task force also recommended that the University administration make increased lighting on campus a priority. The senate passed a resolution that calls for a periodic review by students of the advising program for freshman and senior in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Chrisr Davis, Leawood junior and chairman of the Academic Affairs Committee, suggested that students' evaluation of a faculty member's effectiveness in advising be considered when awarding promotion and salary increases. KU Officials Mum... From Page One But he said that the legal methods wouldn't include the alleged method of issuing travel vouchers for trips not taken. Argerstein refused to check his records to see whether the program had made such a request to transfer funds. The University audit should suffice, he said, and there should be a limit to how much detailed "rummaging around" by outside sources should be permitted. "They are an irresponsible crew, in my opinion," he said. He said he was tired of answering the same questions by reporters and that he was considering cutting off communication with the press pending the outcome of the HAPPINESS IS A TACO JOHN'S TACO! Russell Tyler, administrative manager for the program, said Monday that because the program was administered by the university issue had become a University matter. TACO BAR TACOS Although Tyler said he would "no longer tolerate irresponsible persons running around making statements they can't understand," he hadn't begun an investigation of his own. Special May 2-9 3 Burritos ... 90c 3 Tacos ... $1.00 'Have a Ball!' PLAY PUTT-PUTT TONITE AT PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSES 23rd & Ousdahl Hours Sun. Thur. 10:30.Mid. Fri. & Sat. 10:30-2 a.m. --- K.U. NIGHT TONIGHT A KALEIDOSCOPE -FREE- LIVE MUSIC with your K.U. I.D. YUK IT UP at the YUK DOWN Live Music 6 Nights a Week HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners 9 1000 ATCO POSITIVELY BONNAROO Dr. John Regular '59 Now $299 Diamond Needles—Reg. '995-'1095—Now '595 1975 Jayhawker Yearbook staff positions... up for grabs art staff buisness staff photographers writers copy editors section editors applications available rm. b115, Union for more information call Skip 843-7468 1 For mem Rayr F R FILM S SUA University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 2, 1974 3 Dinner Pays Tribute to Nichols, Retiring Faculty, Staff By TOM GAUME Kansas Staff Reporter Fourteenretire faculty and staff members, including Chancellor Emeritus Wilhelm Stern. "This group of people has made a truly remarkable contribution to the University service to the University of Kansas at a retirement dinner last night in the Kansas Funds for Women's Sports Reflect Coaches' Requests Appropriations to women's sports at the University of Kansas by the Student Senate and the Kansas Legislature were based on proposed budgets submitted by the coaches, Wayne Osness, professor of physical education, said yesterday. The departmental requests for next year were: basketball, $6,116; field hockey, $4,618; gold, $1,807; gymnastics, $5,828; softball, $7,778; swimming, $5,996; tennis, $2,413; track and field, $5,409; volleyball, $5,688. Distribution of the money won't be final until a women's athletic director is selected, He said there was no intent to discriminate between the sports, and that some sports were costlier than others in terms of equipment and travel expenses. Judy Jones, gymnastics coach, said the requests were based on this year's budgets, the number of participants and travel expenses. The women's gymnastics team hasn't been emphasized in the past, said Cindy Bowers, Wichita freshman. She said she was concerned that the gymnastics team wouldn't get an equal share of the money, and that the only way to build the gymnastics team was to get the money for scholarships. The gymnastics team requested $5,826 for next year. Jones said she didn't anticipate any changes to her schedule. SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA SUA Films Replacement for "Tom Jones" F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S "TENDER IS THE NIGHT" starring Jason Robards & Jennifer Jones Thursday, May 2 9:30 p.m. only Woodruff Auditorium 75c CLASSICAL FILM SERIES PASSES WILL BE HONORED Place a Kansan want ad.Call 864-4358 and to the students and faculty of the University, Chancellor Ariel R. Dykes The 14 people represented more than 470 years of service to the University, he said. Nichols was honored for 45 years of service to the University. Besides being chancellor during his final year at KU, he has been in charge of liaison with the Board of Regents, legislature, State Department of Administration and other agencies. Less visible has been his role as confidant and adviser to the six chancellors under whom he has served. Others honored were: E. S. Avison, extension representative for continuing education, for 22 years of service -Gerald M. Carney, professor of music education, for 29 years of service. SUA FILMS SUA FILMS Popular Films Frank Foley, professor of geology and director of the Kansas Geological Survey, forwrote a book on FRENCH CHIEFS Richard Garrett, assistant professor of architecture and urban design, for 25 years Popular Films Travels with my Aunt Friday, May 3 7:00-9:30 Saturday, May 4 Special Films MARJOE Monday, May 6 Film Society MEET JOHN DOE dir. Frank Capra starring Gary Cooper Thursday, May 2 75c 7:30 Kansas Union —Don Haines, professor of civil engineering, for 44 years of service. SUA FILMS SUA FILMS -Anse George, professor of social welfare for 9% of service Paul G. Hausman, associate professor of engineering, for 33 years of service. -Gilbert Ulmer, professor of mathematics, for 40 years of service. Wayne Replogle, director of programs at the athletic department, for 36 years of service. This is our way of saying "thank you" for supporting us all year... Come in and take advantage of July clearance prices now!! all items in the store GAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center —Howard Rust, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, for 31 years of research. 10% off Reginald R. Strait, associate professor of physical education, for 32 years of service STUDENT APPRECIATION DAYS Thursday, Friday, & Saturday MAY 2,3,&4 —Russell W. Liley, professor of music and originator of KU Band Day for 40 years at UMass Boston Marjorie Whitney, professor of design, or 48 years of service. Summer Reservations "Make Yours Now" Maupintour travel service OFFERING COMPLETE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS: ★ Amtrak Reservations; Tickets & Information Airline Reservations & Tickets Anywhere in the World You May Travel. ★ Trans Atlantic Youthfares from Canada ★ Eurailpass & Student Railpass & Brit-Railpass *Individual & Group Tours ★ Hotel & Car Rental Reservations & Information Never An Extra Charge for Airline Tickets KANSAS UNION/900 MASS. Phone 843-1211 THE MALLS/HILLCREST Seniors '74 It's the Final Senior Spring Fling THE RUSH Boogie to QUITTIN TIME while you indulge in the ample supply of FREE BEER and HOT DOGS. Or if it's more your style to play frisbee or football, you can do that too. Remember . . . THE SENIOR SPRING SLING Sunday, May 5th, 3:00-8:00 p.m. Mt. Bleu Only Those Wearing '74 Senior Jerseys Admitted. See You Therel 4 Thursdav, May 2, 1974 University Daily Kansan KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. U.S. Aids Middlemen Next time you're at the grocery store, watching the cash register go crazy as you check out your few meager items, you may wonder where your money is going. In case you didn't already know, about two-thirds of your food dollar goes to middle men such as wholesalers, processors and retailers. Those industries, therefore, are the ones with the greatest impact on the price of food, not the farmer. According to a story in the May issue of Consumer Reports, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has concluded that that industry is making the bulk of the sales are made by a few large firms. In the cereal industry, for example, four corporations account for 90 per cent of the sales. The big four in the soft-drink industry, Cocal Cola, PepsiCola, SevenUp, and Royal CrownCola, account for 70 per cent of the total sales. According to Consumer Reports, these companies estimated the concentration in the food industry is costing consumers an extra $2.6 billion annually. Much of that "windfall" profit the food industry receives is plowed back into unneeded advertising. It would be pointless, however, merely to revile middlemen and idiotic television advertising. Without an efficient distribution system such as middlemen provide, food prices in many parts of the country would undoubtedly be much higher than they are. Advertising, besides paying for the space in which editorials like this one appear, helps to stimulate the economy. Advertising and middlemen are not the villains they sometimes are made out to be. The truly appalling aspect of this situation is the extent to which monopolistic practices in the food industry have been protected by government. In the past, according to the Consumer Reports story, the FTC had to obtain permission from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to survey 10 or more businesses at one time. The OMB, under Nixon appointee Roy Ash, masseed a new law that usually edited the embarrassing questions out of the FTC survey form. When Congress passed the Alaska pipeline bill, an amendment was attached to that bill that strengthened the FTC and made it independent of the OMB. Now, however, President Obama did that he wants Congress to repeal the legislation that gave the FTC its new powers. Congress was the hero in that story, but it is the villain in another. The FTC has filed antitrust suits against the soft-drink industry to break up the soft-drink industry. The Industry has responded by lobbying for legislative exemption from antitrust laws. Consumer Reports says that the Senate has obigued the soft-drink industry by sneaking just such a bill through without debate or a recorded vote. Hearings on the bill are expected to begin this spring before the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. It seems strange that the Congress would, on the one hand, enact antitrust legislation and empower a federal agency to enforce it and then, one by one, exempt certain laws from the law may be necessary, but the exemptions that are allowed should be for the interest of all the people, not just a few. Congress' job is not to dispense favors to the various interest groups; its job is to serve the people. The voters' job is to remind congressmen and presidents from time to time exactly who they work for. John Bender YES Should Impeachment Be Televised? M George Reedy is dean of the College of Journalism at Marquette University and a former press secretary of President Lyndon B. Johnson. By GEORGE E. REEDY Special to the Los Angeles Times The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 800 words. All letters are accepted in order to comply according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and homepage; faculty must provide their name and position; must provide their name and address. There are issues of public confidence at stake which go beyond the usual questions of press freedom and access to news—and the decision should not be made casually. AFTER ALL, IMPEACHMENT is a device whereby 353 men and women—435 through indictment and 100 through trial—can take from a man a grant of ultimate power which was given to him by all the legislators. The judge would be hazardous for a small group to reverse a decision made by the entire electorate. Our constitution provides no method for direct public participation in the deliberations. But television provides a Even though Congress still has to decide whether President Nixon should be impaired and tried, it isn't too early to give careful—and I, hope favorable—consideration to allowing full, live television coverage of the proceedings. Traditionally, both Congress and the judiciary have been reluctant to admit television cameras to their proceedings. I am aware of this reluctance for this reluctance even though I am not certain the reasons are wise. But impachment is an extraordinary procedure, and whatever may be the morals of the court, I believe it is safe to without some unusual logical aerobics. letters policy method for direct public witnessing of the process, and there are values to this are incurred. Admittedly, no device can make the final decision satisfactory to everyone. President Nikon's implacable foes—those who nated him even before Watergate—would regard anything less than 100 per cent impaction and conviction as evidence of legislative cowardice. His last-ditch defenders would regard anything less than 100 percent of a suspect plot to railroad their here. A senate vote somewhere between 50 per cent and the two-thirds required to convict would open up nightmares of recriminations. Legislatures, of course, have always resisted the presence of television cameras during legislative sessions. The reason is simply that floor sessions are only a small part of the legislative process and here the lens can distort because it makes one—and not the most interesting—part look like the whole. BUT THE ULTIMATE popular verdict will rest upon the majority which is in between the two poles. This is a group which can render a reasonable judgment—especially when its members have seen events with their own eyes. In terms of the legal verdict, the publicary verdict is fully as important as the legislative verdict. There should be no barriers whatsoever between the public and the facts. But an impeachment session would not be a legislative session. All of the events of major importance would take place right on the floors of the House and Senate. Such an event would upon to be present and to listen to the arguments. The speeches would be relevant and cogent. And finally, there would be no precedent established other than the presence of television during an impeachment session—not during a legislative session. WHEN EVERYTHING is added together, it seems to me that there is more than ample justification for televising the dinners in both the House and the Senate. The President should have an interest in having his side of the case stated directly to the people as well as to the Congress. The Congress should have an interest in giving the people an opportunity to see for themselves that the legislative committee has made a decision should have an interest in permitting the readers to observe for themselves that interpretation and background is based upon fact and not faction. But the most important interest to be served is that of the people themselves. The presidency belongs to them—not to the Congress or to the media. If Congress is to direct a change in the outcome of the election, to be least as spectators, and there could be grave consequences were they to be denied a right so readily available. Energy Crisis: Battlefield for PR Experts AMERICA'S GREATEST DAYS LIE AHEAD. THE ECONOMY IS UPSWINGING AND INFLATION IS DOWNTURNING--- The energy shortage is a revealing demonstration of deception in practice. The crossfire of statistics and political bickering has sufficiently clouded the scene so that the situation is difficult to view in simple, trustworthy terms. OH, WHAT OPPORTUNITY! WHAT PROSPERITY! WHAT FREEDOM! WEVE NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD! ---AMERICAS GREATEST DAYS LIE AHEAD THE ECONOMY IS UPSWINGING AND INFLATION IS DOWNTURNING--- OH, WHAT OPPORTUNITY! WHAT PROSPERITY! WHAT FREEDOM! WEVE NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD! SPONSORED BY Mobil OIL COMPANY The befuddled public has become reliant upon the symbols that the persuaders are using to manipulate opinions by simplifying complex matters. That reduces the dispute over the causes and solutions of the energy shortage to a battle of public relations experts. There are plentiful symbols for both sides of the dispute. The anti-oil company advocates need only to point to the long gas lines, rising gas prices, trucker strikes, 55 m.p.h. limits and vast increases in oil company profits. Those symbols, many of which confront the average person every day, are certain to cause public arousal. out the cash at the gas station, but he can have the satisfaction of knowing that he is planting the seeds of a glorious bean stalk of future energy. The implication is that the oil companies are doing a public service by emptying Joe's pocketbook. But the oil companies, despite their laments about lack of access to the media, the conspiracy of editors and unfair publicity, have a stock set of symbols of their own to insure public quiescence. It would seem difficult to explain to Joe Citizen why he must be tolerant of all the inconveniences. But, through symbols, Joe has been gently taught that he is the real villain and must pay the price. He is wasteful and greedy like the dog in the Concoq ad who lost both bones. And Joe mustn't complain or he would be somehow threatening free enterprise and future economic growth. The oil companies think that they have been maligned because their message is complex and unappealing. Thus they spend most of their public relations efforts simply explaining their woes and providing the most entertaining and uncomplicated, if irrelevant, messages. They think that their problem is complex and the public response is too slick and deceptive exchange of editorial ads that subdue Joe but leave him with a vague feeling that he is being fingled. SPONSORED BY Mobil OIL COMPANY In one of its editorial ads, Shell proclaimed: "After all, we have basically the same ends in mind; that is, providing for the needs of the American consumer as well and fully as possible." That is absurd. The purpose of Shell Oil Company is to make money. The advantage of capitalism is that Joe's needs and Shell's profit motive often coincide, though not intentionally. Joe can be sure that Shell is interested in his money, not his welfare. The government would seem to be a neutral arbiter that would be more accountable to Joe, even if it is not more concerned about him. But the government, an institution, has an interest in maintaining the status quo, just as the oil industry does. The government will use the An illustration of the self-interest of the oil industry and the inadequacy of government concern for the consumer was a set of facts revealed in a series of Philadelphia stories. Among the facts were these: oil company for a scapegoat but probably will not seek fundamental changes in the political-social system. d deliberately expanded its market it in Europe and Asia despite the weakness of global demand. He may wince when he shovels The Nixon administration failed to lift oil import restrictions after taking —The oil industry has The American taxpayer is subsidizing the sale of oil abroad through a variety of tax allowances to American oil companies. Jerome Barron, professor of law at George Washington University, is a member of the American Bar Association's legal advisory committee on fair trial and free press. That is an example of industry looking after its own interests and government cooperation. The free enterprise-related symbols have so far kept Americans acquiescent. But the society may have to come to grips with an endless energy shortage that may force a restructuring of the society to handle the crisis. NO Bill Gibson By JEROME A. BARRON Special to the Los Angeles Times Impeachment trials, fortunately, are such rare events in this country that there is little direct, authoritative guidance on whether impeachment of a president should be televised; we have no experience on the nature of mixing impeachment with television. M TB In an impeachment proceeding, the senators are the jurors. When the Billie Sol Estes case came before the Supreme Court in 1965, Justice Tom C. Clark, speaking for the court, said that the "chief function" of judicial machinery was to "ascertain the truth." Rather tarty, the court said: "The use of authority to contribute materially to this objective." In an impeachment proceeding, the IN AN IMPEACHMENT, the Senate is in effect, a courtroom, and we therefore should remember the counsel of Chief Justice Earl Warren in his separate opinion in the Estes case: "We must take notice of the inherent conventions of law and rule that its presence is inconsistent with the 'fundamental conception' of what a trial should be." "IF THE COMMUNITY be hostile to an accused, a televised juror, realizing that he must return to neighbors who saw the trial balance nice, nice, nice, and true between the state and the accused," the Supreme Court said. Furthermore, is there any real answer to the court's anxiety that television coverage is the camera rather than on the testimony? In an era when the law has extended due process concepts to more and more areas of American life, surely it is hard to argue that due process and its implications for criminal trials should not also apply to the question of televising an impeachment. IT MAY BE said that hearings of the Senate Watergate Committee were televised, and that if the proceedings of the committee that led to an impachment could be televised, why shouldn't the impachment trial itself also be televised? The two are not comparable. Only at the outsetperimeters of its legislative jurisdiction do they have the matte touch on questions of guilt or innocence as they might affect criminal defendants. The raison d'etre of the imminent danger is that the guilt or innocence of the accused. Excluding the television cameras would not deprive the public of its right to know. Coverage by the print press of any imprints on television would be free and freewheeling. News and commentary on radio and television would be similarly free and extensive, that is our tradition, and the precedent of the Andrew Johnson trial. The public would allow publicity to become all pervasive. I think the conclusion is clear: televising the national torment of a president's influence. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansas Telephone Numbers Newsroom, N.Y. Hauptsitz Office--UN 4-4338 Published at the University of Kansas daily in the academic period. Mail subscription rates: $8 a semester, $15 a year and $6645. Student subscription rate: $1.30 a student paid in student funds and employment advertised offered to all students without regard to gender. Students are not necessarily those of the university; parents are not necessarily those of the university. NEWS STAFF NEWS STAFF Adviser . . . Susanne Shaw Editor Hal Ritter Associate Editors Charlie Cummings Case Manager Elaine Zimmerman Campaign Editor Bill Gibson Feature Editor Jim Lester Gerry Fawkes Reviewers Editor Don Kinney, Bob McMurran Reviewer Ann McFerren, Bob McMurran Copy Chiefs Ann McFerren, Bob McMurran John Ritter, Katy Taisy, Elaine Zimmerman Walter Leigh Elaine Zimmerman Assistant Campus Editors Larry Fish Assistant Campus Editors Jill Wills Assistant Feature Editor Diana Planett Assistant Planett Dana Planett Editorial Editor John Muller Juniper Muller, Bob Shipman Photographers Carl Daw Carwright, Dave Reger Cartoonists Steve Capenter, David Skokof Makeup Artist Mike Recke, Mike Recke, Ann McFerren, Chuck Potter, Mike Recke, RUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser .. Mel Adams Business Manager David Hume Manager, Accounting Assistant Business Manager Beeve Logan Brieve Logan National Advertising Manager Tumi Tharp Assistant Advertising Manager Daniel Carvalho Carvalho Griff and the Unicorn WOW, HERE'S A POEM ABOUT A COW THAT JUMPED OVER THE MOON! HA! THAT'S NOT HARD TO DO... WATCH ME! LOWER THE MOON, PLEASE WOW... HERE'S A POEM ABOUT A COW THAT JUMPED OVER THE MOON! HA! THAT'S NOT HARD TO DO... WATCH ME! LOWER THE MOON, PLEASE THANKS! HE'S STEALING MY ACT!! TA-DAH! THANKS! by Sokoloff Reader Responds MY ACT!! TA-DAH! Garter-Belted Legs Overplayed To the Editor: The editors of the Kanan showed a deplorable, though perhaps not unusual, lack of news judgment in their handling of the controversy. After gathering garner bells published Tuesday. In addition, the picture was hardly an illustration of garter belts as a fashion trend as much as "what's inside them," the main focus of this article. The best accord according to a quote from the story. Not only was the four-column picture approximately twice as big as the story it accompanied, but it was also misrepresentative of trends at KU. We have yet to see one woman on the KU stage display "fashionable" garter belt, but the Kansas seems to think it is a fad that deserves considerable attention. It was refreshing to note that at least one man quoted in the story considered the comfort and appearance of women in his comments. Garter belts may indeed be part of the upcoming fashion trends for some women. However, Bryan Richards may be surprised to learn that at least some women don't dress solely to make their bodies "more accessible" to men. Ann Gardner Ann Gardner McPherson junior Sheila Jones Wichita sophomore Byrdy Wichita junior Robin Glozbach Topeka freshman Cindy Halderman Concordia sophomore Teresa Garcia Kansas City Kan., junior Lawrence sophomore Auer Harlensk Wichita sophomore University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 2, 1974 5 March, Rally To Be Held Before Trial Bennett is charged with assault and mutiny for refusing to voluntarily submit to a rectal examination before a court hearing on Aug. 22, 1973. A struggle ensured, during which Bennett bit one officer who was trying to gag him. Five guards forced the rectal examination, according to a Leavenworth Brothers Offense-Defense Committee news release The total budget is $2,900, March 8. The Leavenworth Brothers Offense-Defense Committee and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War Winter Soldier Organization are sponsoring a "March for Justice" May 4, 5 and 6 to obtain publicity for the trial Monday of Odell Bennett in the U.S. District Court in Topeka. One of Bennett's lawyers, director of the National Conference of Black Lawyers, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday at the United Ministries in Higher Education Building at 1294 Oread. Mike Mazzetti, member of both organizations, said yesterday at an organizational meeting at the United Ministries in Higher Education Building that Dave Dellinger, former Chicago 7 defendant, will possibly be brought up to speak about the Leavenworth Brothers and Bennett. Bennett is one of seven Leavenworth Brothers who will go to trial this year for charges stemming from the death of their father, Bennett. The "March for Justice" will assemble at 1 a.m. in Lecompten behind the old capital, and will march 11 miles the first day. Sunday the marches will complete their journey, arriving at Forest Park in Topeka in the evening. Monday they will proceed to the Federal Courthouse Bob Mayer, Midwest coordinator for the War Resistance League and member of the committee, said yesterday that the committee was trying to obtain Howard Moore, lawyer who defended Angela Bennett. and listen to Lennox Hinds during a pre-trial rally. A former inmate and friend of Bennett, who preferred to remain undefended because he was still on parole, said at an organizational meeting last night that he is being released up for his rights and what he believes is right." AAUP Report Urges More Study of Exigency Financial exigency guidelines at the University of Kansas should be approved only after careful study by all segments of the university, according to a report released recently. The report was prepared by the executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) in response to the University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) report on financial exigency. The SexEx report defines financial exigency as "the fiscal situation in which the University is no longer able to carry out its educational mission and goals without eliminating the position of one or more tenured members of the faculty." The AAUP report said: "We strongly urge that the work thus far be regarded as both initial and tentative, and that the University community be given sufficient time for proper consideration of both issues. We also request that measures regarding financial exigency." Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies and KU AAUP president, said yesterday at an AAUP executive council meeting that a motion to amend the AAUP's meeting today to "assure a thorough and careful study of financial exigency." "SOMEBODY WILL SUGGEST that the SenEx Committee report and other pertinent documents be referred to the council's Planning and Resources Committee and that the committee give their report on the council's 1975 meeting of the council," he said. James E. Seaver, professor of history and Western civilization and SenEx chairman, said the suggestion might be out of order. "I don't think this sort of thing (a decision on exigency) should be rushed," he said. "In it, you are under the gun for a decision this spring." Sally Sedelow, professor of computer science and linguistics, said many professors hadn't received all the exigency documents. "If they have received them," she said, "they haven't had a chance to study them." The text says that the timing of the study might be that there was no agreement in the University on whether financial exigency should be declared by individual academic unit or by the entire institution. The KU AAUP position, according to its report, is that financial exigency should be the main consideration. "We feel that efforts to structure exigency on a unit basis will lead, at best, to an increase in the number of staff." educational experience both for the students and the faculty," the report said, IN A RELATED DEVELOPMENT, J. Bunker KL, associate professor of music history, the national AAUP had approved a resolution on faculty participation "The resolution was written specifically with the University of Kansas in mind," he said. In a separate development, Goodman said the AAUP would consider sending letters to state legislators expressing appeal against the job in approving the recent salary increases. According to the resolution, the threat of financial exigency requires faculty participation in all decision processes as a means of protecting "the tenure, academic freedom and general morale of the faculty." Goodman also announced that the next chapter meeting would be at 7:30 tonight in the Hilton Garden Inn. 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Dozens of uses. $120.00 less $ 20.00 with coupon $100.00 Coupon may be used on any computer watch in stock. 6 Thursday, May 2, 1974 University Daily Kansan Private Planes Aren't Fuel Hogs General Aviation Is Victim of Bad Image, Prof Says The amount of fuel used by general aviation airplanes is almost insignificant when compared with the amount used by cars and the other means of transportation. David Kohlman, professor of aerospace engineering, will yesterday at a Faculty Forum meeting. Kohlman said airplanes used fuel more efficiently than did many cars. Many of the facts related to flying, according to Kohman, aren't well-publicized and there are many misconceptions about what the facts are. Kohlman said that general aviation. Dyche Museum Has Reinstalled Sound System The sound system in the panorama area of the Dyche Museum of Natural History has been improved by the addition of tape recordings of descriptive narrations, animal and bird noises and special recordings for children. The sound system includes nine listening stations, three of which are for children. The system has been reinstalled this week after being imperative for more than a The system, which is called Panorama Commentary, has been a popular feature, according to Marion Mengel, adjutant museum curator. "We had a lot of criticism from the public when it wasn't working," Mengel said earlier. The sound system was installed to replace one which previously had been in the panorama, but which had broken down. The cost of replacing the system was $1,500, and "a tremendous amount of volunteer labor," according to Mengel. The narration for the tapes was done by members of the University of Kansas American Speed Center 790 N. 2nd 842-6828 Featuring all major brands of quality speed equipment Many people, Kohnman said, view general aviation primarily as a rich man's hobby. They think that most of the flying is done for personal enjoyment and that little useful purpose is served by it; he said. which covers all flying activities except commercial and military flying, had suffered, particularly in the last few years, from a bad image. Contrary to popular opinion, Kohlman said, 54 per cent of the miles flown by general aviation airplanes aren't flown for pleasure but for business. ABOUT 85 PER CENT of intercity highway travel. Kohlenham added, is essentially a commuter route. "If non-essential travel should be cut back more than business-related travel," Kohlman said, "then the automobile is the most important route that regulates the vast majority of the fuel usage." In the wake of the energy crisis, Kohlman said, Charles DiBono, assistant to former energy chief John Love, recommended before one of the congressional committees that all general aviation airplanes be grounded for the duration of the energy crisis. "If every one of the general aviation airplanes gets grounded," Kohlman said, "the net result would be the saving of only 4 per cent of the gasoline used in travel" * Grounding general aviation airplanes would force people to use cars or other means of transportation, Kohlman said. In that case, he said, people would be using more gas to travel than they would by private airplanes. If you have an economy car, "Kohlman said, 'you would get an average of 11 to 20 miles per gallon.'" `if you take a small airline, a Cessna `it will take an average $2.50 per mile.` The text is cut off at the end. Let's re-read it carefully. "if you take a small airline, a Cessna `it will take an average $2.50 per mile.` Another advantage the airplane has, said Kohlman, is that airplanes travel in straight lines resulting in a savings of about 15 to 30 percent of the actual miles traveled. JOIN LOVE, former chief of the Federal Energy Office, had authorized 40 to 50 per cent cuts in fuel allocations for general aviation. Kohlman said. A lot of lobbying, painful protest and presentation of facts took place which resulted in a modified reduction of about 15 per cent. Kohlman said. And amendment had been introduced in Congress, primarily at the urging of the House. Commercial airliners aren't really inefficient, Kohman said. A Boeing 747 gets about 90 percent fuel efficiency. segment of the transportation business be penalized more than the others, Kohlman "That sounds pretty bad. But how much more efficient is the 747 in carrying people from point A to point B? It carries approximately 350 passengers. This comes out to 48.5 passenger miles a gallon, which is better than most cars." Kohman said. The jet airplane, according to Kohlian, has made international travel cheap and In 1939, there were 500,000 passengers who left the United States on transoceanic voyages. In 1971, the figure for airplanes alone, was 17.6 million, Kohman said. Decisions about traveling, Kohlman said, should be based on such variables as fuel, time, cost, environmental impact and safety. His own bias for flying, he said, is well-illustrated by a placard which is on the instrument panel of a BD-5 airplane. The statement on the plastic placard reads, "I am placed on earth to fly. All time not spent in flying or preparing to fly is wasted." FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS ARE at SHAKEY'S 21 Kinds Of PIZZA World's Greatest Pizza with this SHAKEY'S coupon. Schlitz BEER 50¢ A PITCHER In Lawrence Ks. 544 W.23rd St. Coupon Good Friday And Saturday Only Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358. [Image of a woman making a hand gesture]. FREE BEER featuring "Salutations at the lotus feet of Pure Love" 1 & 2 bedroom apartments By the Grace of Guru Mabaraj Ji a Satsong discourse will be given by his chosen disciple, MAHATMA GURU CHARNANAND JI 7:30 Friday night 3 & 4 bedroom duplexes edarwood Forum Room Kansas Union Cedarwood apartments PRE-FINALS PARTY & Open House Saturday, May 4 843-1116 2:00 til ? 2414 Ousdahl ST IOWA 23rd ST NAISMITH DR 24th Cedarwood ORSAHILL "Week End" Special! ALL CORD JEANS 25% off all— Pants Jeans Tops Bresses 10% off! BRUSHED DENIM JEANS 25% ALL THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ALLEY SHOP off 843 Mass. THE ATTIC 927 Mass. University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 2, 1974 7 on campus PERSONNEL MANAGERS CON- tence with all day today and temperature in Kansas. ADULT CARE HOME INSTITUTE will meet in the Kansas Union all day today and GERMAN TABLE will meet at 11:45 a.m. the Meadowland Room of the Kansas Union. DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE will sponsor a discussion by Ronald Hedlund, associate professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, at 2:30 p.m. today in Room 111 Blake Hall. Hedlund will speak about the development and use of audiovisual aids in classroom teaching. GERMAN "SINGVEIREN" will be at 4 p.m. today in the Oream Room of the Kansas WOMEN'S GYMNASTIC TASK will in Room 2:30 p.m. today in Room 12:30 n.e.t. GERMAN HONORS BANQUET will be at the Centennial Room of the Kansas City Convention FILM SOCIETY will show "Meet John Dalton" at 7:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. AUP will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. WESTERN CIVILIZATION EXAMINATION registration will end tomorrow. Students may register at Window 4, Registrar's Office, Strong Hall. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Kanaan State for election of officers. MOUNT OREADE BIKE CLUB will meet at 7:30 tonight in room 395 of the Kansas Union for election of officers. A slide show on the minister's activities will follow the election. **ENGLISH DEPARTMENT** is sponsoring a showing of the film "Tender Is the Night" for students who will be attending the English Honors Banquet. Honors students will be admitted at 9:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. RECREATION DEPARTMENT needs officials for summer intramurals. Interested persons should contact Larry Heeb, associate professor of physical education in Room 108 Robinson or call 864-3371. Dvkes Discusses Ticket Prices, Exigency As the semester draws to an end, University administrators still have projects, reports and investigations pending. We are expecting a visit yesterday at his biewley news conference. Dykes expressed some concern over the controversy involving Clyde Walker, athletic director, and the increased ticket prices. He was optimistic, however. "I think if the students and Mr. Walker can talk together they will discover their goals are very similar. I don't think there is any basic incompatibility between what Mr. Walker would like to achieve for the athletic students would like to achieve," Dykes said. Dykes said he and Walker favored open athletic board meetings, but said it was up to the board to make the rules on this matter. Dykes couldn't explain why the meetings remain closed, however, saying the policy was not in line with the others. "I have suggested that open meetings might be a very positive step in securing a greater degree of confidence and support greater input into the decisions," he said. The Office of Compilier is conducting an audit of the Follow Through program at Woodland Elementary School. Dykes said he would be completed and he said he wouldn't Similarly, Dykes said no action would be taken on the report on financial exigency until some decision was made by the University Council. speculate an administrative action until the spidt, was completed. "We haven't thought beyond the University Council hearing," Dykes said. No severe drop in student enrollment is expected next fall, he said, and so the University isn't in any hurry to implement the plan. Dykes rejected the idea of implementing any preventive procedures for financial exigency, saying that the University needed to wait until the entire plan was drawn up. Dykes said workers were being made to work in the existing system to a formulated budget that would take into account factors other than student credit-hour production. - $ ^{s}1.20/case for flavor of the month The best strategy,he said,would be to - $ 2.00/case for all other 10 oz. bottles 5c Pop Is Back! at the Mini Plaza 19th & Haskell The ROTC advisory committee has recommended that the College reconsider its decision, Dykes said. If the College decides against accepting the ROTC hours, the Chancellor could reverse the decision, a step Dykes said he didn't want to take. ROTC cades currently must take seven to 18 extra credit hours to make up for ROTC courses the College won't accept for graduation. To combat the crime problem at KU, Dykes said a consultant soon would come to Buy 5 cases and get one case free When asked whether he thought the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences should grant credit for ROTC courses, Dykes said he would favor giving credit for the courses if the subject matter and faculty qualifications merited such. push for the regents' three-year program for improved funds. This plan asks for a 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries and the operating budget funds. The POP DOCK 10-8 Mon.-Thur. 10-10 Fri. & Sat. the university to evaluate the present security program and offer suggestions to improve it. RU's security force is smaller than the universities of comparable size, Dykes used. receiving a ticket could either pay the fine or appeal the citation to one of two courts. The appellate courts would be either the superior court or the appropriate Douglas County court. Unfavorable publicity had given KU and Lawrence the image of being more dangerous than other comparable towns, an image that statistics don't support, he said. "I don't think there should be different between students and faculty." The University asked for funds for more security officers in the last budget and thb Although the system is presently being used at Kansas State University, he questioned the legality of such a program. He said it would not allow for appeal to a county court. Although Dykes said he knew very little about the recently proposed traffic court system, he said he thought it was a "step in the direction because of the equity of the system." FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST Dykes expressed hesitancy about adopting a program of withholding faculty check cards or students' diplomas until parking fines were paid. 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Offer Ends May 9!!! RMS is proud to announce the addition of Cermin-Vega speakers to our ever expanding library of high-quality audio equipment. Our Cermin-Vega speakers designed to handle enormous amounts of power but only need very little power over-whim you with sound. Even their least expensive speaker at $119.95 will handle 100 watts of continuous power and it carries a lifetime warranty. The Cermin-Vga speaker is also available. ATTENTION rms ELECTRONICS (Where the Pros go) 724 Mass. 841-2672 Daily 10-6 Thur. 10-8 master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Financing Available open house meadowbrook saturday,may 4,9 a.m.-5 p.m. make your summer and fall plans now come look us over follow the flags on 15th just west of Iowa meadowbrook a good place to live 842-4200 8 Thursday, May 2.1974 University Daily Kansas KU Relays Lose Money; Walker Blames Weather By KEN STEPHENS Kaman Sports Writer According to preliminary figures, the water-logged 49th running of the Kansas Relays lost about $5,000 dollars. Clyde Walker, University of Kansas athletic team Walter said that final finance figures on the reeds were not available because of a failure to pay them. A preliminary estimate, according to Walker, indicated that the relays had about $22,000 in expenses. Income was only about $12,000. High winds, hail and one-fourth inch of rain held attendance and income down at the 1974 relays, the annual highlight of serene sports activity at KU. Major expenses included payment for triplines, officials' fees, labor, guards, security, gate keepers and travel expenses for some of the leading competitors. Ticket sales were the only significant source of income, Walker said. Other sources included program sales and small entry fees for contestants and concessions. Walker said that attendance, held down by the poor weather, was the cause of the drop. Walker said that expenses might have mounted to $50,000 or $60,000 if it weren't that 'an awful lot of people donated their time and effort.' ever, though poor weather has plaged the relays and caused them to lose money in each of the last two years, no consideration is being given to discontinuing the relays, be "I take you a ten-year history, the relays not have just money," Walker said. Bob Timmons, lead track coach, said that the financial success of the relays could be a key factor. "No one is in this to make big sums of Detroit Downs Kansas City,2-1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Lerrin LaGrow's five-hit pitching and Ed Brinkman's two-un single last night brought the Detroit Tigers their fifth straight baseball victory, a 2-1 triumph over the Kansas City Royals. The Royals' run was unearned, Frank White, who reached base on a fielder's solemn in third innings, scored a solo home run and went the way home when first baseman Mickey Stanley booted a grounder by Cookie Rojas and made a wild throw to LaGrow covering first Al Kaline and Willie Horton started the second inning for the Tigers with singles. Jerry Moses was walked intentionally, filling the bases. With one out, Brinkman delivered his single that scored Kaline and Horton. money," he said. "But then no one wants to lose money on the relays. That's not what were in this for. There will be years when we take it on the chin because of the weather and there will be other years when we want it is good and everything works out great." Walker agreed that the key to the success of the relays would always be the weather. If it's rainy, there's no relay. If it's sunny, there's a relay. Walker called the reef, but it wouldn't have a chance to make up the last until next year. Walker said that the loss wouldn't affect the athletic department budget for next year. The loss will be absorbed within the athletic department. "One idea is that in those years when we make money, we put it into a fund to offset the loss of our assets. Currently any money made from the relays is placed in the general operating budget." Walker said that the financial success of the relays couldn't be assured by advance pricing. "With an arena of our size, people can wait to see how the weather is and then come down and buy tickets on the day of the relays," he said. Timmons said that KU would be able to move some of the events inside to Allen Field House if the poor weather repeated itself next year. Renovations, which are continuing in Allen Field House, prevented any of the events being moved inside. "if it is an absolute necessity we can move all the jumping events inside the field." Timmons said that the rain made many of the jumping events dangerous, especially when he was carrying a bag. We Write Motorcycle Insurance GENE DOANE AGENCY 843-3012 824 Mass. St. "One of the great encounters of this presents" The Music Lounge Rod McKuen In Concert American Favorite Poet Song writer-Singer A Renaissance Festival Exclusive Management Trust Durham (023) 854-7317 Kansas City Music Hal Thursday, May 9 8:00 p.m. Tickets $6.50-$5.50-$4.50 (NO CHECKS) PLEASE) Tickets now available at all Team Electronics Stores, 2916 Noland Rd. (Indepot). Antioch Shopting Ctr. Frumman Corners Shopping Ctr. Ward Kwey Jr. Record Store Ctr. 's Record Store (Lawrence). (No Checks Please) Send mail orders to 400 N. 7th S. Kansas City, Missouri for money order only with self-addressed envelope Griff's 100% U.S. GOUT Come on down to GRIFF'S for some Real Good Fixins this weekend 100% U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED BEEF HAMBURGERS only 25¢ DELICIOUS! NUTRITIOUS! PIPING HOT! 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University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 2, 1974 9 Former Shot Ace Tossing in Pros Bv MIKE FITZGERALD Kansan Staff Reporter Graduating college trackstars can look to a future in their sport that is even less promising than the future for stars in other sports. Few track stars are able to pursue a professional career, and even fewer are able to make a livem from it. Karl Salb, former University of Kansas shot-pot ice, is one of the lucky ones. He graduated in 1972 and a year later joined the new International Track Association pro track circuit. Now he is trying to make a living from it. Salb said yesterday, however, that the money needed for a pro track performer to live on just wasn't there yet. "Pro track is great for someone who has another job," he said. "The money isn't there for it to be a year-round profession. But once people begin to appreciate the athletes, I don't see how people can become disinterested." But whether people are interested in pro- tract or not, Saub seems to be doing well this week. It will probably be a bit more difficult. Wait, let me look at the word "pro-" It's "pro-tract" or "pro-traduct"? No, it's "pro- tract". The 't' is clear. Let's look at the word "traduct". It's "traduct". The 't' is clear. Okay, I'm ready to output the text. But whether people are interested in pro- tract or not, Saub seems to be doing well this week. It will probably be a bit more difficult. Wait, let me look at the word "traduct". It's "traduct". The 't' is clear. Okay, I'm ready to output the text. F Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER Former KU Shot Putter Karl Salb WE'VE! Rent your car from John Haddock Ford. Ford RENT-A-CAR season, Salb is in second place in total points among the shot-putters. 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 miles $55.00 plus 9c miles $60.00 plus 10c miles $65.00 plus 11c miles Week-end $5.33 plus 8c miles $6.00 plus 9c miles $7.00 plus 10c miles $8.00 plus 11c miles "I it'sooking a lot better this year," he said. "At EA Pass last week I had a warm-up stroke of 71 feet. In competition I took third place with a 684% throw, my second best of the year. I also beat (Randy) Matson by a fourth of an inch." Cereal is offering in homes for total points at the end of the season. Five points are awarded for first place, three for second, two for third and one for fourth. "D'Bernardii has first place wrapped up," Salb said, "I'm in second place, and Ouldief and Matson are fighting it out for third. I'm holding on to second in these last three masters." free state opera house 642 mass lawrence Salb is doing better this year because of the new type of throwing technique he has developed. Instead of the old team-and-backwards types of throw, Salb has invented a discuse type of throw that relies on a spinning action for its momentum. Third place may seem great until discovering that a performer gets only $100 for third, and that there were only four players who received the top spot week in the pro track shot-tot: Fred Debernard, the leader in total points for the season, Randy Matson, Brian Oieldand and Danny Reid. "I developed this in mid-season of year and have stuck with it," he said. "I haven't quite got it perfected yet. I'm not driving into the shot. Sometimes I get so up in app technique that I lose sight of what I can do to do, throw the shot as far as I can. presents BILLY SPEARS "I all try to do is, instead of driving back, I try to get body motion and eliminate stopping. I've got to make the transition easier between moving and throwing." "We usually sit around and drink Cokes and get nervous together," he said. "The more nervous you are the better you'll do. We just try to get keyed up. Each of us wants the other to do well because it helps us, the crowds and pro track. This may not sound like competition, but when you're in money for money there's competition." SATURDAY,MAY4 9-midnight Because the pro track circuit is as unpredictable as it is low-paying, Salb is seriously considering a pro football contract which recently sent to him by the Houston Celtics. when Saib talks about money, he usually doesn't mean the $500 first prize, the $250 second prize, the $100 third prize or the $50 fourth prize. He means the $10,000 that Post Salb said that the four shot-putters were good friends, and even though the competition was tough, they always gave help an encouragement to each other. Although the competition is the same at every meet, Salb said the results varied every weekend of the four-month, 16-meet circuit. "They would have to make a good offer," Sail said. "I almost love track too much to give it up. It also would probably take up too much of my time and have to decide between football and track." $1.50 at the door Q Brought to you by The MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. 9 9 TV Don't Get Stuck! Instead of waiting until the last minute to plan your next move, and ending up throwing up your hands in despair, rent a trailer or truck to fit your needs. Do it safely, economically: do it right. U-HAUL 843-2060 PHILIPS 66 1540 W. 6TH HAROLDS PHILIPHS 66 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 843-3557 Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop MARILYN MORRIS The "Woolworth" sandal from Bare-Trap. Soft lattigo leather on a wooden wedge. Comfort and style all in one super package. Try a pair—now. Bunny Blacks Royal Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS VI 3-4255 Schneider's Retail Liquor Store the Wine Shoppe in Lawrence Between Griff's & the Pizza Hut on 23rd Street 843-3212 VISTABURGER SPECIAL —TAKE OUT— WE FIX IT LIKE YOU LIKE IT. BUY 5 Vistaburgers At The REGULAR PRICE ... AND AND GET ONE FREE! LIMITED TIME ONLY Vista 1527 West 6th Phone 842-4311 Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358. 10 Thursday, May 2, 1974 University Daily Kansan Tau Sigma Performance Represents Months of Work By JAN HYATT Kensan Rexlewr For almost half of them it was their first encounter on stage. For everyone it was the culmination of uncounted hours of exercise, discussion, learning and teaching. Tina Sigma, a dance ensemble, presented its spring concert last weekend with varying degrees of expertise and amateurism. Though Saturday night's barrage of technical failures produced an impatient and tense audience, and a few angry dancers, smooth Friday and Sunday performances have been production starts with choreography, but the choreography starts in a variety of ways and largely reflects the personality of the choreographer. "Some start with a story idea, some with a mood or feeling," said Elizabeth Sherbon, associate professor of physical education and faculty director of the concert. "Sometimes a dance movement will get going that comes from inside someplace, and develops into a composition," she said. A selection of music may suggest the direction of a dance, and searches for with an idea and then searches for the music to match it, Sherbon said. the choreographer and dancers are satisfied. The skill of the dancers influences the performances. None of the Tau Sigma dancers use dance notation to read and write dances, so a finished composition is the result of doing it correctly. In other words, changing movements and directions until Costumes are developed concurrently with the dance. The ten student choreographers in the Tau Gigma production selected costumes in consultation with Sherbon and students in a dance production class. "The costumes help set the stage. They should augment the dance and not cover it up. They should bring out the movement," Sherbon said. Sherbon tells the dancers that when they go to the dressing room to change costumes, Most theatre lighting is from the front of the stage to emphasize facial expression, front view and body postures of individual actors. In dance, lighting comes from he front, back, sides and overhead, and stronger colors are used. ween lighting design for theatre and for dance... "You're not really lighting a dancer, but a form moving through space," be said. "I're really like putting on the next dance," she said. Gebhart talked with the choreographer of each dance to exchange ideas. He also joined in the dances. "I asked them which scenic elements were most important, such as line, shape or form. I also asked whether the dance was happy, sad or tense, and whether the choreographer wanted lighting effects to separate the chorea." Gebhart said. Gebhart used about 80 lights for the exhibition, but only 12 were placed in front of it. Dancers and technical crew met April 22 to work out lighting cues. wore a sweatshirt that announced, "To live is to dance, and to dance is to live." "You're all too far forward," she said to three male dancers who had moved out of the light. When the dance ended and the band stopped, they set it down to "set that set off quietly and quietly." With so many novice performers, many of her instructions dealt with stage appearances. Sometimes the music ended before the curtain dropped. Inexperienced performers "Keep going till the curtain is down, whatever happens," Sherbon shouted. Downstairs in dressing rooms the dancers moved swiftly through a melange of costumes and make-up. The men asked the women how to apply eye shadow and liner. The women used a handheld voice loudly announced over the intercom that "Willy's dust is next," or asked, "Could someone send Reggie to the stage please?"" someone send reeggle to the stage please?* After rehearsal the ensemble met with Sheron on stage to practice curtain call and hear her critique. Dance costumes are simple and designed to allow maximum freedom of movement. Women's costumes for modern dance often are made with chiffon and other sheer materials to enhance the flow of line and shape in the dance. On the Thursday before the performance she told them they seemed to have "loot that suspension feeling," and asked them to warm-up exercises before the performance. The dancers were tired and some were aching and exhausted. The next three nights were dress rehearsals. Sherbon sat on the dark theater watching the dancers prepare for their performance, encouraging and positive attitude was evident in her even attire: she Rhinoceros' Highlights Ionesco Presentions Lighting is a crucial part of dance production. Mike Gebart, St. Louis, Mo., senior, was the lighting designer for the Tau Sigma concert. "I'm looking forward to tomorrow. Somehow I just feel like I've been in too much." "Rhinoceros" invaded Dyche Auditorium last night in an Ionese festival presented by students of the French and Italian department. The festival also included three Italian works in An Italian poem and excerpted from *Contraste Chantecue* 'and' a duet. "A Doutre." By MICHELE M. LONSDORFER Kanan Reviewer Under the supervision of Jeff Oskowicz and Jean Salem, assistant instructors of physical education at St. Joseph's School. While they put away clothes and dressed, someone collected money to buy a new car. "La Cantatrice Chave" was introduced by Chopin's minute waltz. The classicism contrasted with the deluge of words, contradictions and coincidences. villagers start turning into rhinoceroses. They also play in small cottages. Unimial behavior desertions of usual facts are recurrent themes in the excerpts presented. They had worked months for Friday's opening performance, but they were ready to give their best effort. And that was just what they did. In a chance meeting, a man and a woman discover they live in the same town and in the same apartment. Each has a daughter who lives in another place. Thus, they conclude they are married. reviews A huge red cardboard box representing the gourcery story and a few stools and tables did wonders to create the particular look of the room, the gossip inherent to a small town cafe. The scenery also enhanced the festival. "Riuocereo" takes place in a small town with a mountainous backdrop. Thiery Rouvier, Paris graduate student, the students performed with brio and brie. After only five weeks of rehearsal, the performers are to be commended for their effort in presenting the excerpts entirely in French. This was an achievement because Ionesco's style is intricate and the action in his plays moves rapidly. Commotion and fear build up as the As in most loneso plays, the final absurdity is in the finale. Although the daughters have the same strange eye color combination, the positions are opposite. The man and woman thus realize they are total strangers. In "Scene a Quatre" defy performed by Salien, Rouvier, and Wendy Jones, Prairie Village, sophomore, the irrational logic goes from a petty fight to a philosophical one. lonesco's absurdity is logical in its irrationality. The humor of the plays comes from details which are pursued to the extreme. Watching an Inesco play makes the viewer feel as if he is on a scenic railway where he can't catch his breath until the of the play, Gina Vincent Overland Park, and continues with her relief and concluded the evening, with how Italian ballad. "Letter to Pinochio." The festival was a courageous enterprise and a nice tribute to one of France's great artists. We also deliver Gebhart noted several differences bet- Lasagna and Spaghetti 843-9111 Campers Hideaway XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Grand Opening May 3 Hours 12-12 Daily Live Music Wed., Fri., Sat. Nights Must Be 18 TEE PEE NIGHT CLUB presents REAMIN' DEMONS Featuring Ed Toler, Dan Libby, Clay Kirkland, Arnie Young 9-12 May 3, 4, 10, 11 Cover $1.00 North Lawrence, Kansas Intersection of Highways 24-40 North of the East Turnpike Entrance CALL FREE RENTAL SERVICE LISTINGS ON HOUSING FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE 842-2500 LAWRENCE RENTALS EXCHANGE LRe Today's fashion look and feel in go-together pants and jackets Soft, comfy denim trimmed with colorfu prints, buttons and eyelet lace! LEFT: jacket $16 pants $14 RIGHT: jacket $22 pants $18 the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass. Those faded denim blues! 's fashion ' feel in pants ' unim florful plaza metcalf south prairie village blue ridge mall lawrence, kans. WHEN NATURE CALLS, WHY RUN DOWN LONG HALLS? When you move in at our place, you'll have a private bath adjoining your own room! Come join us at 跑进走廊 Naismith Hall Fully equipped darkroom—Weekly maid service Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking Color TV—Close to campus Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 THE GREEN PCPCR Really Gets It Together! THE GREEN PEPPER GREEN PEPPER Tonight-FREE Green Pepper on any pizza if requested. Offer Good Thursday, May 2 841-4044 620 W.9th (Next to Joe's Bakery) Fast, Free Delivery to Most Lawrence Areas University Daily Kansan KANSAN WANT ADS Thursday, May 2, 1974 11 One Day 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three Days 25 words or fewer: $2.00 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Five Days 25 words or fewer: $2.50 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their gender. ALL CLEARANCE FORENSAL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT HALL FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! here 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 disa Either way it comes to the same thing—New Analysis of Western Town Cities is Available now. The Town Cities are Ry Audio, 15 E. 9th, 9th Pl., M1-32-877. Hours available for any声密 problem. Get to: (304) 645-6420. Quality standard & electric reconditioned type whether replace. 841-7638. We serve it whenever replace. CANDLETTE TOWNHOUSES For Sale. New free piano and 2 bedrooms. A few units ready now. Upgrade to a new unit, ready now. Inspects, attached garage. Outside doors. Phone: 852-3444 or 852-3754. fax: 852-3444. FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at reasonable prices. Also used, antiques, furniture, collectible souvenirs. Country SHOP: 707 N. Burch Street, SIDE COUNTRY SHOP: 707 N. Burch Street, SIDE COUNTRY SHOP: 825-830 HERB Allergenic. CUBA EQUIPMENT - Surcharge Special-Tank, $199.00, $249.00, $309.00, $369.00 $9.90 Tank, $19.95 Tank, $24.95 Tank, $30.95 Tank, $36.95 Tank, $41.95 Tank, $46.95 Tank, $51.95 Tank, $56.95 Tank, $61.95 Tank, $66.95 Tank, $71.95 Tank, $76.95 Tank, $81.95 Tank, $86.95 Tank, $91.95 Tank, $96.95 Tank, $101.95 Tank, $106.95 Tank, $111.95 Tank, $116.95 Tank, $121.95 Tank, $126.95 Tank, $131.95 Tank, $136.95 Tank, $141.95 Tank, $146.95 Tank, $151.95 Tank, $156.95 Tank, $161.95 Tank, $166.95 Tank, $171.95 Tank, $176.95 Tank, $181.95 Tank, $186.95 Tank, $191.95 Tank, $196.95 Tank, $201.95 Tank, $206.95 Tank, $211.95 Tank, $216.95 Tank, $221.95 Tank, $226.95 Tank, $231.95 Tank, $236.95 Tank, $241.95 Tank, REGISTERED BLOODFOUND FOUND. My client asked me to register her healthy pink tissue orders now. Call JOHN 610-328-9111. Afghan pupisus - Gorgeous large blue and cream pupisus with white markings. High tide high cabin A-K-C AKE. Terms swamp, wetland, flooded. MUST HURT | 60 Lentans (V5-205) -4-speed (Hurst) | 4 new tires -834-1007-5895 | 5-2 Cheap living and privacy too. Purchase my '10 bedroom suite. Three-bedroom one (as study, Partly furnished, excellent condition, and much more $100 down and refinance, present $6 monthly) room for up to two months. For Sale: 1871 - 1971 Honda 350s CL model=1200 miles For Sale: 1871 - 1971 Honda 350s CL model=1200 miles ATL 845; between 6.5 and 10.0 km/h; ATL 845; between 6.5 and 10.0 km/h; For Sale. 1972 Ford Mavrick 3 pdd, 6 cyl, a new condition. 1986 Triumph TR4 racing bucket seats, excellent condition. Contact Cliff Willett (506) 692-5460. Riverside County State Bank, 7th and Kentucky-3 1972 Honda CB-350-G in good running condition. Honda Honda Regular. Rewritable on both, on belt. New LPs). Vital Reals Recruited Sounds. 12 E. H. 98. Vocalists. Dancers. Performers. There are also Impersonators. Absolutely no Music! WHITE ELEPHANT - T-SHIRTS--$2.50 Fashionable white shirt with black trim and sleeve. Hurry while supply lasts. Deducted to be 3 clean, dry shirts available. Availible from Elephant Man. Elephant Man. New Hampshire. 1-5 Mon.-Fr., 10-5 Sat. and Sun. Elephant Man. Elephant Man. SALK. canoes 200, off Sand. Dirtwood and Burney. May 17 th. Where? Javenna. 117 E. 5th Rd. WANT YOUR OWN HORTICULTURE EXPERIENCE? Look at our 12 x 6 HR double home office located in For Sale—1731 BKA Vivet 200. Only 3200 miles. Great on or off, the road. Call Server at 842-828-6988. 1967 WV Excellent condition. Leaving the U.S.A. 5500 Call 842-2832. Guitar—Electric Rocket Harmony Hollow Body Bass—Midnight Rod Shell Case Included exclamation mark—$324.00 SALE! The first sale of Previously owned LP's 1.50 April 29th to May 3rd. Price I.e. to $1.50-$4. Sale ends June 3rd. Price I.e. to $6-4 For Sale-Leaving, mature sell well cared for 10 x Samsung Cordless Craft mobile home with two bedrooms. Room covered by carpet. Accepted throughout. Excellent buy for a couple tired of renting. Delivery service. Storage shop 320 IYC Iowa C-14-861941 after 6. Must sell, need the cash! 1972 Triumba BA Excellent condition. Call Baja 6279, or for Pa. Baja For sale 72 VW Beetle 15,000 km, still uss, warranty one year. Radio Excellent condition we do our trip on college暑假, we have air- rarium plants, vegetable plants, unusual plants at fair prices. Mother's Day gifts, Maple Leaf Bread, Bunny Pillow, Green Grasshouse, 3 binks, caitie of two Eggs... 5-7 DOLBY Noise Reduction Unit-Tone AN-80, AN-120, AN-160, AN-240, AN-320, Voice Type (improved) and ADC-106 MHz Meter. Brabell Super Course, Regina 531 tubing. Timber frame, double hung garage with heated bathroom. New Front Tree at 843-925-6333. For Sale, MSC Takaraon 20mm f4 lens camera designed for "fair but垫底" in excellent condition, designed for "fair but垫底" in excellent condition. For Sale Kitchen table and 4 chairs, end table, desk, and chairs or call 862-384-7530, Friday, May 14, at 8:38 a.m. by 862-384-7530. For Sale-Works TV, Admiral 23 inch color console. Works $75. T Jersey, 842-5278. 5-3 Ford F70-174 Wide Belt Bull Poly, Fiberglass. Price cut. Ford Tahoe (Tahoe) 539. Mass. On-line thin parking blocks. AWM ATM 15 Steel Belled Whitewall cut out to a 19" steel wall. Free installation. Key Stone Wallcap 290 Max. Final Closeout! All remaining Marvellous & Mo- tal components at 50% off! Last chance to reserve! See www.marvellous.com/mo- taldowns. Open Thursday night (9:39am) at now $20.99, $29.99 and up $15.00-7. Graduating-Must sell my 1464 home mobile. house, kitchen appliances, raised living room with chair, desk, ceiling, air-cend, with large porch, hurricane tree, storage rack. Available. Avail. Jan-7 Batch 843-1458 or 843-2004 For Sale, 5 speed 26" rear style bikes. Bought in April of this year. Will throw 30-10. extra inner tube. Good condition. For sale: 1792-BUYACO BUYACO Roadside- Roadside- includes helmet and cover $265; Cail 1840-BUYACO - Bilce: 10 speed 1972 Roncini lightweight Green Lance: 45" 1973 Roncini heavyweight Green 64-371-210 for ask for Mary 64-371-210 for ask for Mary Raleyh Sauser Course Center 231 tubing, Timing, Location (Cedar Rapids) 9:45am to 10:30am, New York Tire (Johns Hopkins 842-953-6550) Give your girl a bit of spring all her own with the Hodge Bundle. 15, W. 9th, $7- The Hodge Bundle. 15, W. 9th, $7- FOR SALE-1966 VW, real cherry shape, call 5-7 833-9463-00 Fifte. Suite - Armstrong, Open-Hole. Shipling Battery in good condition. Call 842-8379 or 848-7870. Leaving town—mint will meet) 10 speed Florent (24) leaving town—mint will meet) 15 speed Florent (64) kam, 164/2922 (10) (p yy, 842/703 - 50) kam, 164/2922 (10) (p yy, 842/703 - 50) Camera outfit for: Pentax Body, 200 mm Vivitar lens, 28 mm. Vivitar Wide-angle, 50 mm. Mimiya Sekor lens, Gessar Light-Meter, Carsim gear, $175. If interested, Call Dave. 617-345-6200. Soln-Harmonizer 6-String and case 920 total pool. Soln-Harmonizer 6-String and case 920 total pool. Aluminum intake details: 864-7810 after 6:30 and 864-7810 before 6:30. For Sale 1966 Chevy Spur Sports Vans rebuilt 6 cyl. powered electric chrome wheels, wide tires, 824-425 rear. Must include: transmission, 4x4, roller skates. beautiful Scallopint Siamow keeps 8 weeks old. A beautiful box training kit. each. Call 812-345- 4394 anytime. Wait, is it "Siamow" or "Siamow"? The character in the image looks like "Siamow". So it's "Siamow". No, BACKPACK TENT $7.99 Net Worth 1 year old BAGPACK TENT $4.99 Net Worth 3 years old will for sale $22 Call Dat at 864-264-2928 FOR RENT FOR IRNT A...new 2-bedroom apartment with fresh furnishings, new carpeting, new storage, laundry, NEAR Hospital. FOR BANK to make of female student. Nice BENY to block union. Parking andDITed payers. Bank to make of female student. Nice HILLWELL APARTMENTS, 1735-1743 West 24th. New leasing 1 and 3 bedroom farmhouse on 16 acres of land adjacent to Hillwell dining, carport, disjoint, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, bi-direcet parking, KB suite, commercial office, 800 sq. ft. TRAILRIDGE, by the country club, wall to wall carpeting. High ceilings. Private kitchen/electric kitchens, private bathrooms, laundry room, each 4 units, each 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments 3 bedrooms. 5 bedrooms. TWG HEDROGM APAFMENTS-1318 room 902-645-7500, house office 9:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Bid 822-205-6400 RENTAL HOSPITING for apts, duplexes and houses. call 842-7100 or 842-8454. tt MEADOWRIDGE, APARTMENTS. Great Variety of apartments planned community凯人 KU从 $140 to $280 per room. Call 617-539-5700. GATEHUSE APMENTS KU but service Dorn or, unfure. Kata large apartment. 50th Floor. 1990 W. 26th Floor. 1990 W. 26th Floor. Summer Benthal—Summer Rates. Benthal largest property in the city and provides rentals from May 20 and June 1 and ending August 15. 1-bedroom furnished as low as $80 a month. Room upgrades required. All paid utilities. AC, pool balances on the premises. Paid utilities to the University Terrace & Old Milk Hall AJ at 1327 to 1607 W 9th St Call 843-1252 or 842-1257 or come by the hotel. Available May 18th. Very size 2 bedroom Fourplex-Pully铺室, carpet, store, garbage disposal, central air. Unfurnished-Located at 11th & Albion KU RD & downstairs. Call 842-513-0148 information. Furnished 1-5 room apartments $200. Also: Bedroom and bathroom setups $450. Benting amount and summer rent $750. Rooms—furnished, clean and quiet, for males with or without children; Borges KY—furnished, clean and quiet. Here's your channel *Summer sublet*, 3 bedroom suite, close to Cherry Hill, 19th month. Call 641-8212. Need a place to stay this summer? The air conditioned Stigma Nu house is renting rooms for the following: 1 person room; Two month lease, $7 a month. CLOSE to camp; 1-3 persons per room. Call Mr. Maule, 862-3673 Now BENTING+ summer and fall LABORATORY Guests. One gift for 3 or 4 No. 1 Guest Will Hold a LABORATORY G Apt6- Clean, quiet, furnished 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms. Board Rows & Bed near 835 AVAILABLE JUNE 16th 1 BR APT with slightly reduced iron for manoeuvrable pregranular grout. Pregranular grout is not available. For summer rent. 6 room kit, 15 block north of Washington Avenue, water & gas watered. $168/mo. Call at Dax 427-309-4600 or Email info@northwestresort.com Two ants for rent-Avalable June 1—choose off-street parking-AC 3-Bedroom CA Typewriters for rent. Call 841-4083. Furnished Apt. for rent at 19th W. 10th H. Good amenity rates. Airl Cond Available Mo- ppeled rates. Subbasement for summer. Furnished 2 bedroom kit. 195-346-0155. Available May 15th. Call 648-656-0155. 839-3411. Two bedroom. $75/month, utility paid. Call 843-2027 5-6 Foy Rem..PROFESSOR'S HOUSE Mar-24 Aug- 15 30 min. door, 2-car garage recovered, perch, 2 car garage $200 money STADIUM APTs - Now leaving for any year reservation $150 + $115 tax. Two bedroom bath w/ wet bar, laundry room, swimming pool-pool laundry facilities-private park space-Apts at 123 Indiana Jax or call 817-3216 between 2 NB IAP at 8 p.m. to submit immediately behind theatre entrance. After 8 p.m., NB IAP 6031 after 7 p.m. or 8:43-6044 during day 75 Displey for rent, 2 rent. Available May 20 $15.55 included. Till 824-929 after 529. Take advantage of summer rent. 2 BR appt. 806-349-1780, garden area, avail mid-May. 814-207 or 814-207. Call for details. Sub-base for summer: Furnished 2 bdm apt, central air, laundry facilities, dishwashers, refrigerators. JB Apts 8, w/hatch, bthh. LR, Off-street parking 24 Hours. At $10/month. At $0/month, plus a 1000 Km. K9y 842-8768 Room available for summer session, beginning in September. Send resume to: student_id, 12th and Term, Call 842-7295 Rent for Summer school only. Entire second floor 4 bedroom furniture, for 3 or 4 girls. June 1 to ugly. 1 Cheap to campus and 8th St & town St. girl. Utilities paid. Phone 84-823-600 5 p.m. Subhua for summer. Apt. corner of 14th and Temr. Tenns call. Mail 841-2796 5-7 Must rent for summer, two bedrooms apartments. Furnished, carpeted, AC, closet to campground. No smoking. $425/month. For men-2 rooms, 1-studio apl. All AC carpets, staircases, ceilings. All furnished campus- cars. Scholars of prd. 847-7627. 5-6 Summer Subset (May 15-Aug. 15) $100/mo. & utilities. 1 BR furnished apt. on second floor—swimming pool air conditioning, discount, off-loading pool equipment. Three-bed High Height. 824-848 or 344-881. S. Haraska. For rent-1 Bed, Apt. for summer Very near Campus. Kitchen. $100/room. 5-6 Sub-lease 2 bedroom, air conditioned duplex for a couple, carpeted, carpet, shaded yard. Quiet neighborhood. *Bedroom set, pretentious entrances, all street parking* *elevator, elevator to upper floor, stairway* *accession floor, front door, ample room* *January 1 for outdoor and or full 842-831-7650* **Prices are subject to change.** Roommate Wanted to live in a large 3 bedroom apartment on the third floor of August 15 for $89-300 depending upon how much private space you desire. Plus utilities. It can be camped down. Call 817-279-0062 to talk to him. Faculty witen wishes to sublume fabrics duplex for number, camper, N48-12288 5-7 WANTED: Persons to live in a beautiful mansion for the summer. The air conditioned stuga has comfortable furnishings and attractive surroundings. Close to campus and several other benefits, $75 per month. Call Ms. Roberts at 212-834-5900. WANTED Two female roommates to live in 2-bed house: £50 per month plus utilities. To be 18 to July 19, a full-time equivalent job is required. Faculty member to雇用 * rent VCAM or boy, May 10-Aug. 15 83-8400 8404-8568 5-16 nostalgic clothing and furnishings Graduate couple with wife who wants to earn more and is in the job market. Trainee police officer and trainee court proffessor. Plain skim of job description, no salary. We've got what it takes to out. 1 need 2 or 3 people to airplanes at 4 bedrooms, house- based and house. 845-7232-8900 or 845-7245-8900 or 845-7266-8900. in your house and you in the cheapest and nicest way. Wanted: Student teacher needs female matrons for fall school only. Call 843-6800, 5-3 Female Roommate Wanted~Share my three bedrooms, autumn curtains, and $150 to rent. (or 866-249-7350, or 866-249-7350) Roomsmant wanted for summer. Malu Old Engle Room 101, 150° E, 1/2 electric Plenty of room. Call 837-0978 Puppy - 5 months old, blinding combination Lab/ Svp Southern Call: 841-6941, area good, hospital Call: 841-6941 706 Mass. Wanted: Looking for female tennis or roommate. Wanting: Go to the gym or move into your play. Call Desk # 84572787 Need female roommate for fall semester to share beautiful, furnished apartment with me. Would have your even bedroom and bath. Your half is in our basement. Must be comfortable. Call 842-5025. 5-7 ROOMMATE WANTED to share two heatmaps in our kitchen. One will be on the counter, one will be built in. Made of solid wood. One is 24 inches wide. One is 36 inches deep. Female volunteers to share an apartment at Jeg- erston on the north side of Carrall or Karelyn on the premium 1/2 floor. Call Marle or Karelyn at (800) 67-5364. One friendly female to share our house for a moment, she will be comfortable in no less glamorous places, to camp in low rent houses and on the beach. I need a male mate to share a piece 2 Mtr of a long cable. I can contact us if you utilize Cailly Age after 19 52-726-6000. Formate female wanted. Will move into your sit or can locate one together 841-6838, Mardia Kimberly. Wanted: Roommate to share 2 BR, in park in Dallas. Req's: Bachelor's or equivalent, Call 432-7297, call Tom or Charley. Would like to borrow a screen of Dr. Hook in the Metlicite Show on KURL. Will pay bill now. Wanted: Remonstrate to share large, lovely 3 bedrooms with 2 baths. Send resume to philip.jillson@presto.edu Call after 6:30pm. Prefer graduate Fri call after 6:30pm. NOTICE Rominatews wanted to live in Jackson County, Missouri and move into a home in Kansas. Call Dugal @ 523-2652 after 6pm. Need one female teenager. Summarize of summer or nursery. Send resume to the agency. $40, no. Available May 15. Becky M., age 23, in Tampa, FL. Female roommates needed to share large house with working girl girl Call 842-8915 New York was at 350 West 67th Street. 315 Michigan State B-St-Bar. We have open pit barbecue—wine only. We have two ovens, and we can serve sandwiches or brieked by the pound. Half-chikens by the plate. Eat it before or take it on. 10-20 off. Tilt it over the fire to keep the hotness from burning. Wanted—two male trainers for summer Call Bob or John at 822-8628. Apartment ready after Seeking 1 or 2 persons to share expenses on small U-Haul Van in exchange for transportation of your equipment to your possessions, Kwu. Rx., and May Vee. 1971. Phill M. Wagner, 1924-56 Upsupport rear uprats --at Johnson Furn. 722 Mass. 843-2448 LOST OUR LEASE—our loss—your gain—SAVE: 100–500 $ per month, our off regular sale price 30,000 $ per month. Please contact us for details on our building by July 1 2014 HURBY Open 9 am. to 5 am. JUNE 1 2014 BOOK EXCHANGE 9 am. to 5 am. JULY 1 2014 GO WHILE THE CHOWDS KNOW YOUR NAME GO WHERE THE CHOWDS KNOW YOU'RE FROM Russia, England, Africa, Sundinville or where biking; eat bettie but CHEAPER. Go further. Buy yourself a TABAC. By yourself Your Trail Bachelors TOLL FREE 24/7 LAWRENCE GAV LIBERATION, Inc. Warehouse 3150 N. 72nd St. Boston, MA 02106 5 Baskin Plaza referral. Something to do with your business? Quitting Business-Save 50%, on educational books and most others. All prices are drastically cut for fast removal. Save yourself a list of discounted items at same time. Bestseller- 5-7 Oxchange. 924 Mass. HALF AS MUCH RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your auto, and the clothes you wear, can be recycled. Repair NAPA Auto Parts, and Bekonon Flashback Attire offer the finest services and reconditioning services on records last. NAPA Auto Parts, 843-995. Bekonon Clothes, 843-996. RE Repair, 841-898. 831-997. Mount I buy and sell new and used Volkwagens. Bank has a service (with approved credit) (#644- 863-2033). KWIKI CAR WASH Self Service or Open Brush Wash 612 N. 2nd St. 2 Blocks North of Kaw River Bridge CRESCENT APARTMENTS Crescent Heights APARTMENTS ●Oaks ●Acorn ●Gaslight Rental Office 1815 W.24TH 1 and 2 BEDROOMS --at Johnson Furn. 722 Mass. 843-2448 CALL L book fare. May 19, 2013. Reserve your old book fee or a new one for the next year, for free and a tax receipt due 2-7 JULY 2014. FREE BEER CANS) 1000 1968 Metheloc 04600 8 oz. Cans, Unlimited, Available and last Available on May 19, 1969. Call 822-523-9282 STUDENTS--Summer employment. Pentwater Inc. will offer a summer work in its security grandries in the state of Maine. The job will include a clear resort traffic violations included in the job description. Room 809 Building, 182 Grand, K.C. MD 809 Room Building, 182 Grand, K.C. MD The motorcycle season is definitely here and Horizons Honda has new street, track, and trail models in stock and ready for immediate delivery. **HORIZONS HORIZONS** 181 West 6th 84-33323 Monarch's P.S. School now welcoming children from kindergarten to grade 7. For further information call 843-270-1658. Employment Opportunities Two acres of beautiful grass lawn, tennis courts, a two-story brick classroom, a national room. BBQ grill on patio. No, it's not a courtyard chic. Loving book of the benefits of the Tenement. Sigma Nine. Home for Twentythousand base 75% mail. Call Mr. Martin. Hedge Prodge—has your head in mind. All piles molecules, and all parapharynchia 25% off. 5-7 ADDRESSERS and mailers needed. Splendid top- line baiters, 412 Mugwale 81; Lawyers, Kansas 147 Mugwale 81. **FREE** * 100 GIFT CERTIFICATES* worth over $2,500. **REQUESTS FOR THE QUALITY MOBILE HOME INFLATION FIGHTER SALE. Come out and see the new selection of machines and KLWNs. DLx. Free Cues for all.* Free long stemmed carbons to females. Don't miss it! Quality Mobiles Home, H3S N 2nd ND, KLWN, QLNT. MARKETING TRAINEE-Food on retailers with brand name products. Will train sales oriented person @ $800 - car + exp. Foe paid by employer. MAILING ONLINE, NENEL, 153-4 K.C. Mo. (816) 824-3800. 5-3 MARKETING - Pharmaceuticals. Call on medical profession for top national firm. Want degree and aggressive personal experience. Exp. FANNING PERSONAL, Grand K. C, McU. (810) 842-3800. 5-3 Wouldn't you rather work in jobseekers this summer, where students can learn real-world skills, charge busings, transportation, and fun in Hawaii. For the label detailed below, click on the image to read the Sunrises. Dept. 10, 167 Kalaulaua Lake, 45 Honolulu. Sunrises. Dept. 10, 167 Kalaulaua Lake, 45 Honolulu. ACQUaintANT-Train for supervisory position 2018-11-13, New York, NY Payed $1,950.00. Paid to employer: Farming Land Trust $3,150.00 TYPING Experienced Typist—will do typing, dissertations, term papers and miscellaneous types. Call Fax 1-800-652-4230. Typing its my home IIM Sellate Pixa type Information Call. Call Katie, 811-255-7000, Formerly 811-255-6800. Experienced Typist-group and accurate. Term assignments, briefs, dissertations, etc. CP 2490-1813. Will do typing, neat, fast and reasonable Term paper submission. resumes, student and application forms. Call 843-5817. Expected in typing files, dissertation term papers, research reports and scientific articles. Proof- reading and editing required. First proof- reading spelling corrections. Prep- tion of grammar. HELP WANTED EXCELLENT AND EXPERIENCED TYPIST at BASE, 1247 W. 39th St. Thu., thesis. Theses, dissertation terms, attests, assignments etc. Call Phyllus, 842-6916; or drop in another沸点 Place, Building 25. 9, or 9, drop off Fast, accurate typhus with typewriter pinyin. Proof-Tested. Color: Red. Please call 843-600-2 after 5 a.m. to pick up the kit. Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 814-7 4980. Myra. Help wanted: Student for light house work and call 842-6729 for children. To begin in summer. Call 842-6729. Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. FREE RENTAL SERVICE 842-2500 TACOS $3.50 per Dozen ROx This Summer for the first time "The Wheel" Is Open Beginning June 5 Deli or grill for lunch 1105 Massachusetts FINE BOOKS Phone 843-6424 ADVENTURE a bookstore We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail. Casa de Taco HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Come By Use Kansan Classifieds Call or NEED FURNITURE FOR YOUR UNFURNISHED APT.? 843-9880 SECRETARY with typing skills for Interferential Company Corp. in Seattle, WA beginning a full time job满分结束 about 19 Permanent position Flexible hours, Adjuvant, 19 Percentage Compensation Kansas州 Laws fraternity Center 683-323-5000 683-323-5000 Furniture for one bedroom apartment starting at $2450 ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR of Consumer Procurement for the City of Charlotte January 1, full-time beginning about August 19. Permit position, $200. Annual salary $375. Position requires $200. Bachelor's degree. Admin. ability (experience readiness, community affairs desirable). Submit resume by September 18. Kaukaus County Kaukaus Union, Lawrence, Kaewa 6041. Questions email: admin@kaukausunion.com FINE SERVICE SERVICES OFFERED J-F Rent on a 9-month minimum basis, last month Free, or portion thereof. Summer Rental Available Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. Business Services Associates wants ambitious people for the summer or permanently. You can arrange your place online at www.businessservicesassociates.com/new service web. Interviews Tuesday only at the Holiday Inn. Call N Bates after 10 a.m. at (212) 543-1700. RENTAL Avita Residency. Avoid low charges if you have it fixed. Provide your resume at your home or business. For all MLSs of Avita Residency. Part time summer jobs available. Pay starts at 12:00. Lawrence, Public Library Auditorium, Library of Congress, New York City. Furniture for two bedroom apartment starting at $2950 RIVER CITY REPAY - 815 Vermont. 841-6032 Stereos - watchers - typewriters. Independent repair specialists. Unr profit business. We serve what you need. Repairer. Untrusted resources. See www. www.rivercityrepay.com RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to phone, everything in your life. Lacking parts of your life, RC Repair, NAPA Auto Repair. Reconditioned vehicles, finest services and reconditioned merchandise. AUTO Parts: 841-9760, Bokton Clarken, 843-9760. SMALLSBOOL - Preschool ad - in home SMALLSBOOL - Preschool ad - M-F, S-M-F Call 453-4579 Call 453-4579 May Day—Nest a gift! Straw flowers, jewelry, carnival masks, mix rack. At Hodge Park W. 5th CUSTOM JEWELRY Wedding套件, personal jewelry, and matching accessories. BFA. wide variety of stones and unim- deal gemstones. LOST Lost a gold women's wristwatch with stretch strap and worn by the person who found it phone number 842-763-0511 LOST—man's silver wedding band with three diamond sets intertwined, Union, Wesley, Leave, Leave and Jim Mack at Union Into Boots by magazine—touch along with name and how I can get touch. LOST. our cat Fugian. Neutered male, part 841-2098. We can't find him without him! If you see him call 842-2094 or hire him by 842-2096. Halt! Very important. Please return it. 841-2094 LOST Two labs cat, one has white paw prints and the other has a black print. Contact Scott. 1416 Terrace, 222-897-1891 if found Found..Man's watch on leather band, found at Sand Mountain Mon., Apr 29 Call 844-735- and ask for Ski. FOUND PERSONAL Safety arm lights only 99c at Ride On Bicycles. RIDES----RIDERS YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL 15 East 8th 841-2656 10-5 Monday Saturday SUMMER IN WISCONSIN One of America's outstanding prizes, Wisconsin announces a limited number of openings on the staff for the position. Competition is under Ust 16. Compensation includes salary, round trip transportation, living quarters, board, and laundry. This award will be given to those Consequently, only men of the highest character and integrity will be accepted, write D. C. Broadbridge, 2863 Shannon Court, Northbrook, IL. love is . . . A B ... wanting to take care of each other ... in your own home purchased from RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES 3020 Iowa St. Lawrence, Kansas 812-964-7533 Open 7 a day A week 12 Thursday, May 2, 1974 University Daily Kansan House Panel Balks . . . From Page One "I just think we should tell him he hasn't complied," Donahue said. "In my opinion he's dictating to the committee and attempting to be judge and jury of his own Hutchison and other Republicans said Nixon's offer to let Rodino and Hutchison compare the public transcripts to the tapes sent by Nixon in compliance with the subpoena. Rodino repeatedly contended the week before Nixon turned over the transcripts that the President wouldn't be in compliance unless Rodino, Hutchinson and卜替 upheld screen the subpoenaed tapes to determine what the committee should get. At the outset of the rare evening session, the congressmen were told by special impeachment counsel John Doar that the committee's staff had already deciphered SenEx Agrees to Change In Schedule of Committee The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) agreed yesterday on a recommendation that would change the time schedule to the Faculty Senate committee. James E. Seaver, professor of history and Western Civilization and SenEx chairman, said yesterday that SenEx would recommend that the committee form in October, submit an interim report in April and end with a final report the following October. The committee's term is currently based on a year that begins in April and ends the following April, he said. The committee, which has representatives from all major universities of the University, made recommendations concerning university research policies. The change is being made, he said, to insure continuity of information because important decisions must be made in late spring and during the summer. "We think that these decisions should be made by those people who made decisions for them." Seaver said SenEx also discussed a number of items with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus. "One item we discussed with him was the matter of consultation and other compensated activities that are not a part of the University work," Seaver said. According to Seaver, the guidelines allow one day a week for such activities. The Kansas Board of Regents is considering making its own rule, he said, and it will be announced when the governor makes a decision. portions of the key March 21, 1973, White House discussion of huh money for the Watergate burglaries The portions are accessed from the University of Nixon release to the public Tuesday. "Perhaps we should be keeping better records," he said. "We will continue to be." That tape, which wasn't included in the committee's subpoena, was given to the panel earlier by the White House when Nixon agreed to let the committee have all the tapes that had been previously turned over to the special prosecutor. Dou opposed Nixon's offer to let only Rodino and Hutchinson go to the White House to compare the edited transcripts with the original tapes to be sure all relevant material had been put into the transcripts. Dear told the committee that, with all due respect, he didn't believe it would be prudent for the two senior congressmen to try to determine relevancy of 200 tapes at the White House without benefit of trained lawyers. He also told the committee that the White House hadn't delivered notes and memoranda by the President and his aides by the president, as well as the tapes of 42 conversations. Then he said that the committee could make better transcripts on its own equipment than the White House did on its equipment. In related developments: A special subcommittee unanimously approved procedures for presentation of assembled impeachment evidence to the full committee starting next week. The procedures permit SL. Clair to see the evidence, recommend witnesses and ask witnesses questions -subject to controls by Rodino and the committee. THIS WEEKEND...A "THANK YOU" SALE!! 20% to 50% off... on everything in the shop. . . The girls in the Country House say "thank you" to all of our great customers from K.U. and Lawrence for another great year by having a special sale of all our super new spring and summer fashions at fantastic prices. So, stop in this weekend and pick out your warm weather sports and active wear . . . Thank you and Best wishes for summer . . . Christmas Village 839 Massachusetts Downtown Country House At the back of the Town Shop THE sirloin THE sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place We will be open Graduation Night, Monday, May 20, for your accommodation. Make your reservations now. Thank you for your wonderful patronage this year. Ken Kirby, Owner 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 Sirloin Personal DINING Selling something? Call us. The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358. Jayhawker Distribution Strong Hall May 6,7 & 8 9:30 to 4:30 D Forecast: Mostly cloudy, scattered showers. High 70s, low 40s. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 84th Year, No.139 Some Stores Using Unit Prices The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas See Story Back Page Friday, May 3, 1974 RANGER'S BALKETT VINCENT G. MARTIN Scat, Cat Kansas Staff Photos by BILL KERR I'll be there. I'll be there. I'll be there. Nixon Gains Delay in Tapes Fight WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Nixon gained a six-day delay yesterday in his fight against a Watergate subpoena, and a panel of experts said it would have another report tomorrow on the 18½-minute gap in a crucial White House tape. A subpoena issued against Nixon by the Watergate special prosecutor had a deadline of yesterday morning. But after the White House petitioned the court to quash the subpoena, U.S. District Court lawyers additional time to file briefs. In a session with lawyers in the Watergate cover-up case and White House attorneys, Sirica gave them until Monday to file an objection. In another motion, Sirica set a hearing for Wednesday. In a similar struggle last fall, Sirica BULLETIN LEAWENWORTH-The Leavenworth Police Department and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation are questioning a teenaged boy in connection with the death of Robert F. Doby, wife of an Army Lieutenant Colonel. The youth was picked up in City Kansas, Kan., driving a car that fit the description of one on a pick-up order from Leavenworth authorities. The thought to have been involved in the dispute with one of the Doby children. rejected White House claims of executive privilege and ordered Nixon to turn over several tape recordings of presidential conversations. The U.S. Court of Appeals here upheld the Supreme's decision, but Nixon was not able to appeal without appealing to the Supreme Court. There were strong indications from both sides, however, that this time the final decision was not made. Meanwhile, two members of the panel of tape recording experts said they would present their report to Sirica tomorrow. The gap since November. Sirica said the meeting tomorrow with Richard Bolt, former professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and would be held in Washington to would be held in the judge's chambers. Sirica said that details of the report wouldn't be made public immediately, but that further proceedings in connection with the report would be decided at the meetings. At the White House yesterday, Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the House Judiciary Committee, which is considering impeachment, had received the full story of Watergate when Nixon turned in his resignation as secretary ofcripts of tapes conversations Tuesday. The committee voted to inform Nixon that he had failed to comply with its subpoena, which had asked for the tapes, not edited transcripts. Motive, Suspect Lacking In Leavenworth Shooting LEAVENWORTH (AP)—Investigators said they had found no motive and no suspects in the mystery slayer lying early in the night. The suspects were a colonel stationed at Ft. Leavenworth. Robertson said Mrs. Doby was awakened about 3 a.m. when a rock was thrown through the window of a downstairs bathroom. "We're interviewing other residents of the neighborhood to see if they heard or saw it," said Amanda. Mrs. Doby apparently couldn't find the stone and returned to bed. "We don't have any substantial leads, haven't made any arrests and don't have any suspects," said Frank Robertson II, Leavenworth chief of police. About 3:30 a.m. a window in a downstairs hallway also was smashed. Sue was killed by a bullet fired through a window after a rock and a firebomb had hit her. Robertson said Col. Doby carried the firebomb into the yard and then drove his wife to Cushing Memorial Hospital, about two blocks away where she later died. Police found three shell casings outside the house. Mrs. Doby went down the second time and yelled for help when Col. Dog and some of the five children got downstairs they found a burning bottle bomb that hadn't exploded and discovered Mrs. Doby had been shot. The bullet hit her in a shoulder and poured a fireball into their area, apparently as she was bending over to pick up or extinguish the fire bomb. Col. Dohy retired in April of 1973 from a tour of duty in Southeast Asia and was assigned to tactical research and development at the General Staff College at Ft. Leavenworth, Warren said the committee members had received 'the facts on which they can move ahead.' Mrs. Dohy operated Brower's Corner, an arts and craft shop in a southside shopping district. He also defended Nixon's offer to allow committee chairman Peter Rodino, D-N.J., and Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich., but no other committee or staff members, to listen to the tapes in private and verify the transcripts. From Senate sources came reports that Alexander M. Haig Jr., current White House chief of staff, had refused to answer questions from the Senate Watergate "We feel we have made a very fair, full and responsible offer." Warren said. At an executive session of the panel, Hair presented a letter from Nixon saying, "It would be wholly inappropriate for the committee to examine you about your activities as chief of staff or about information that has come to you in that committee by saying he had been instructed by the President not to do so. Vice President Gerald R. Ford said yesterday that after reading some of the newly released Watergate transcripts he believed that Nixon was innocent of any wrongdoing. Transcripts Show McCord Letter Sparked Change WASHINGTON (AP) — The tone and focus of White House discussions about Watergate changed markedly after convicted burglar James W. McCord Jr blew the lid off the scandal with his public charge that higher-ups were involved in the wristwriting raid, according to edited transcripts of taped interpersonal conversations released Tuesday. On March 21, 1973, President Nixon discussed with John W. Dean III which payoffs and clemency might be handled for original Watergate case defendants so they The White House has consistently maintained that Nixon cut off on that day any idea of paying money for silence. The White House tape transcripts of this key meeting are ambiguous in many places where Nixon discusses the idea. But that same day, McCord delivered to U.S. District Court Judge J. Sirica his letter of allegations stating that Dean, the White House counsel, and Jeb S. Magruder, Nixon's 1972 campaign deputy director, were also involved in Watergate. The one White House transcript of a March 22 meeting has no reference to payoffs or clemency, dealing rather with strategy on executive privilege and with Dean's assignment to write a report on the affair. On March 23, McCord's letter was read in on March 1. court he talked to Senate Watergate investigators, and within three days his specific allegations were publicly known. From March 27, the date of the next White House transcript, there is never again any mention of Mr. Clinton's death. In a national address April 30, Nixon said that as a result of disclosures made to him March 21 by Dean, he on that day "personally assumed the responsibility for coordinating intensive new inquiries into the matter and I personally ordered those allegations to get all the facts and to report them directly to me right here in this office. With McCarthy's disclosures reheating the case and options clearly changed, Nixon and his aides discussed other strategic possibilities for handling disclosure of Watergate facts, usually falking of ways to be least harmful to the presidency. "I again ordered that all persons in the government or at the re-election committee should cooperate fully with the FBI, the prosecutors and the grand jury." On April 17, Nixon announced that because of the March 21 disclosures he had ordered intensive new inquiries into Watergate, and said there had been major problems with the White House counsel that he had told White House staff members to appear and testify voluntarily before the Senate Watergate committee. The transcript for March 21 shows a different attitude toward the Watergate committee and another view on the grand jury. Nixon said: This presidential instruction came on April 17. "I think I want another grand jury proceeding and we will have the White House appear before them . . . I want everybody in the White House called. And that gives you a reason not to have to go before the Ervin and Barker Senate Committee." You can say I can't recall. I can't give any answer to that that I can recall." Nixon has maintained in a series of public statements that although he discussed husky money and clemency for defendants in the trial, he did not commit March 21, 1973, he told Dean such action would be wrong. The transcript shows that in a discussion of clemency, Nixon said: "I have never been so proud." But Dacan has testified he interpreted the motion as meaning the Watergate coverage was too broad. "What the hell does one disclose that isn't owing to blow something?" At the end of a second meeting on March 21, Nixon observed: The White House transcripts for subsequent meetings quote payoff only in the context of Nixon recalling to others that he would be wrong. On April 17, for example: Haldeman: "No." Nixon: "I didn't tell him to go get the money, did I?" The tone of meetings shifted after March 21 from concern that Hunt or Magruder might talk to concern about what Dean might tell prosecutors and to explorations of risk that able to make charges against top Nixon administration H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrhachman. Said Nixon about Dean April 17. "He's going to do anything to save his ass." Nixon in this period talked repeatedly of getting the truth out. On April 17, however, he observed to Assit. Atty Gen. Henry Petersen: "I don't want to be a leader." Ten days later in another conversation with Petersen during rising clamor and charges, Nixon said he had told acting FBI director William Rucklekshaus: "I leave no stone unturned and I don't give a damn who it hurts." To Petersen directly Nixon added: "You've got to knock that—crack down. If there's one thing you have to do, you need it to maintain the presidency out of this." Dairy Man Affirms Milk Price Deal WASHINGTON (AP)—Former milk-producer lobbist Bob A. Lilly is quoted in court papers as saying his A lilly told him campaign donations were pledged to President Nixon "in conjunction with the 1971 price support" increase. The statement is the first to be attributed to a dairy cooperative official alleging a link between Nixon's order to raise federal milk price supports in 1971 and the dairymen's promises of up to $2 million in campaign donations. In a White House statement made last January, the President specifically denied that he ordered prices increased in return for campaign money. He conceded that "traditional political considerations" played a part in his decision to overrule the Agriculture Department's desire to keep prices steady. The House Judiciary Committee is investigating the milk price matter as part of its impeachment inquiry, and the legal prosecution force also is looking into it. Lilly's statement surfaced in the subpoenaed papers that were made public in connection with the Justice Department's anti-trust suit against the nation's largest dairy-farmer cooperative, Associated Milk Producers, Inc. Lilly was interviewed by former American Bar Association President Edward L. Wright last Dec. 27 and 28 during Wright's investigation of the milk producer's political activities. He concurred with Wright's invitation for the coop's board of directors. According to Wright's typewritten notes of the interview, Lilly said he was told on April 4, 1972 about "a commitment" of funds to *t*. Nikon's re-election campaign. On that date Lilly attended a meeting that included his boss, the milk producers' general manager, George L. Mehren, and former general manager, Harold S. Nelson, who demoted to a 100-1000-year "consultant." "Mehren and Nelson talked about a commitment have been made," Lilly is told. "There was a prior commitment of money made in conjunction with the 1971 price support. The commitment was made by the corporation, Parr, Marron Harrison and Jacobsen." David L. Part had been Nelson's special assistant. Harrison was a Washington State alumnus. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in dairymen's campaign donations passed through his office on the way to the Nixon campaign after the price increase was Jake Jacobsen is a Texas lawyer now under indictment for perjury in connection with $10,000 allegedly earmarked for former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally. Connally has denied taking money from the dairy cooperative. According to the document, Lilly continued: "There was a big argument over how much money had been committed. The manager said that Jacobson contacted Connally in March of 1971 about the contribution. Connally said there had to be new money or additional money." The White House has said sums as high as $2 million were pledged to Nixon's fund raisers by the dairymen before the price increase was granted. White House documents indicate the pledge was cut to $1 million. Eventually, at least $427,000 was given by the milk producers and two sister dairy cooperatives. At the time the money was given, Lilly was secretary of the milk producer's political fund, and signed checks for political donations. Silver Lake Mines Investigated By GLENN MEYER Kansan Staff Reporter Silver Lake Mines of Norman, Okla., is being investigated by four, overages for possible fraudulent advertising. The agencies are the consumer protection division of the Kansas attorney general's office, the Lawrence Consumer Protection Association (CPA), the Consumer Relations Board at Kansas State University and the police department of Norman. The Kansan ran a classified advertisement from Silver Lake Mines about three weeks ago. The ad said that jobs were open at a Colorado gold mine in the "San Luis de Cristo" wilderness area and that people who wanted to apply had to pay $2 fee. However, Joseph B. Smith, Colorado liaison officer for the U.S. Bureau of Mines, said Wednesday that no area in Colorado was called San Luis de Cristo, and that he couldn't find silver Lake Mineral Springs or any other location in Minnesota or the Colorado State Bureau of Mines. "They could have the company and have claims to be developed without ever having registered with us or the state department." The mine, he said, may be in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in Colorado. A creek named the San Luis is west of the mountains James E. Porch of Norman, operator of Silver Lake Mines, said the mines were in the Lake Creek mining district, 40 miles south of Salida, Colo., in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. He said the location listed in the advertisement was a spelling error on the map. He said that eight claims were filed in Westcliffe, Colo., for the mises and that the claims dated back to at least the 1940s. The mines are owned by him, his grandmother and two other people. Porch said, and had to be worked on every year to keep them. He said crews had been contracted to work the claims in the past, but this year the mines' owners had decided to form a company to work the mines. Silver Lake Mines is the name of the mine owned by the company themselves. Perch said he was the only person in the company. See SILVER LAKE Page 2 2 Friday, May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan news capsules the associated press Agnew Is Disbarred by Maryland Court Describing Spiro T. Agnew as a man who consciously cheated the federal government, the Maryland Court of Appeals disbarred the former vice president yesterday. The court's decision affirmed a recommendation made in January by a three-lodge Circuit Court panel. Agnew wasn't available for comment on the decision in the disciplinary action brought by the state bar association. The Court of Appeals ruling isn't subject to appeal, although Agnew could petition the court at any time for restatement as a lawyer, his profession being that of solicitor. Agnew wasn't a member of the federal bar, and his disbarment in Maryland prevents his practicing law elsewhere. U.S. Steel Corp. Hikes Prices 5.7 Per Cent U. S. Steel Corp., the nation's largest steel producer, joined others in the industry yesterday and announced price increases that were less than $10 per pound. The companies were uffred U. S. Steel said it would hike prices on its full product line by an average of 5.7 per cent, effective today. It gave no further breakdown of the increases. Industry observers had predicted increases of between 13 and 20 per cent, following elimination of price controls. A broad range of steel products, from airplanes and automobiles to bolts, boats and bobble pins, will be affected by the increases which were announced one day after the Cost of Living Council's wage and price controls expired. No Progress Made in Kissinger-Israeli Talks Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger conducted three rounds of talks yesterday with Israeli Premier Golde Meir's government in Jerusalem to try to end the fighting on the Syrian front, but Israeli officials reported no progress. Kissinger said that raging artillery and air fighting were hampering his peace efforts. Israel's military command reported Syrian artillery and rockets blaced across the ceasefire line for the 32nd day, and said Israeli jets spread the air war into Lebanon, attacking Arab guerrilla on the slopes Israeli Information Minister Shimon Peres said Kissinger would take Israel's proposals to Syria and return to Jerusalem Sunday for tougher sanctions against Russia. U.S. Ambassador Denies Cease-fire Violation U. S. Ambassador Graham A. Martin said yesterday in Saigon that the CIA's airline was used to transport North Vietnamese prisoners, but denied the action violated the cease-fire. Field reports said Saigon forces returned to South Vietnam after a four-day incursion into Cambodia in violation of the truce. In Cambodia, insurgents shelled a camp 25 miles from Phnom Penh, where a diplomatic source said there were more than 30,000 civilians held up in desperate need Martin said he authorized use of an Air America flight for "humanitarian reasons" after being injured by a transport wounded prisoner. He said he had been forced to power POWs in the war. Martin admitted the plane was used after photographs taken Tuesday in the Mekong Delta showed seven North Vietnam FOWS being led aboard the aircraft. (AP) Discussion Deferred On Exigency Report By DAVE BURPEE Kansas Staff Reporter The University Council, after a lengthy debate, agreed yesterday to postpone until Thursday further discussion of a report on financial exigency. The report had been submitted to the council by the University Senate Executive Committee ad hoc committee on financial exigency. Robert Adams, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and chairman of the ad hoc committee, moved that the report be approved by the council. During the discussion, he explained that the council's approving the report wouldn't result in a binding action on the University or Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. The council's acceptance of the document would be only a suggestion to the chancellor of the procedures to be followed, Adams and Manning, he said, would make the final decision. "Accepting the report would not bind the University or the chancellor," he said, "but it would at least get us into the position of having an official position that could con- une to be discussed and perhaps modified in conditions changed." Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies, presented an alternate motion that the report be referred to the council's Planning and Resources Committee for study, open hearings and a report of findings in December 1974. Arthur Breipohl, professor of electrical engineering and a member of the planning committee, said referring the report would burden the committee and detract from its primary purpose of recommending efficient use of planning and resources. Phil McKnight, assistant professor of education, said he thought the council should assume the responsibility of approving and discussing the report. "Referring the report to the committee would be a mistake," he said. Both the motion to refer and a separate motion to postpone any action on the report are called 'reporting'. In a separate development, the council approved the 1975-1978 University calendar. The calendar establishes the school dates for each semester and the 1976 spring and summer semesters. Silver Lake Mines . . . From Page One He said he was waiting for an aunt in california to send him the numbers for the band. The application fee, he said, will be refunded to all the people that weren't hired. "If anybody doesn't receive their refund by May 15," he said, "I certainly would like to give it to you." Bill Pendergraf, detective with the Norman police department, said his investigation of the mimes wouldn't be over until it was established that the mimes were If Porch doesn't furnish the information to prove that the mines exist at the end of two weeks, "Pindergeraff said," the federal investigation will probably take over the investigation. If the mines don't appear to be legitimate, he said, the federal government might investigate Silver Lake Mines for mail advertisement. He had solicited advertising through the mail. He said the advertisement also had been sent to the student newspaper of the University of Oklahoma and might have been used in Colorado or Colorado State University. He said he had received calls from people in the geological surveys of Kansas, Colorado and Oklahoma wanting more information on Silver Lake Mines. The investigation by CPA began when several University of Kansas students asked about the Silver Lake Mines advertisement. One student has filed a formal complaint with the CPA against Silver Lake Mines. Dick Retrum, director of the Consumer Relations Board at K-State, said the same advertisement had been sent to the Kansas State Collegian, but the newspaper refused to run it because of the $2 job-application fee the ad requested. Retrum said it was the policy of the Collegian to not accept advertisements in which the job-seeker was asked to pay for them and to deal with the employer or placement agency. David Hunke, business manager of the Kansan, said the Kansan had no policy similar to the Collegian's. "We run the ad because there was nothing objectionable about it," he said. "When ads come in the mail, we won't run them unless money to cover the cost of running them. "We don't have time to check out their validity." SUA Northwest Tour Have a Summer Vacation and Visit the Following Places: —ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK — YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK —GRAND TETONS —GLACIER NATIONAL PARK EXPO '74: SPOKANE, WASHINGTON —DENVER —SALT LAKE CITY AUGUST 5-16 If you are interested in the trip please contact the SUA Office (864-3477) and sign up on the mailing list. Final information and price will be available in June. 1975 Jayhawker yearbook staff positions... up for grabs art staff business staff photographers writers copy editors section editors applications available rm. b115, Union for more information call Skip 843-7468 f e n .ion 7468 D.RiHland University Daily Kansan Friday, May 3,1974 3 KU Summer Theatre To Honor Playwright Summer theatre at the University of Kansas with fans like Inge, a Kansas player died last week. "The World of William Inge" is the first of three summer festivals planned to celebrate the American Bicentennial by presenting works of American playwrights, according to Tom Rea, associate director of the University Theatre. A photographic portrait of Inge will be dedicated and hung in Murphy Hall in a memorial ceremony July 12, and the Exhibition will open on August 13 the William Ine Memorial Theatre. Jack T. Brooking, professor of speech and drama, will direct the festival. The festival will comprise three plays, "The Glass Menagerie" by Tennessee Williams will be presented June 28 and 29 and July 5 and 6. This play was chosen to open the festival because Williams encouraged Ineau to become a playwright. Paltizer Prize for drama in 1953, will show July 11, 12 and 13. "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs," he last successful work will be presented in a memoir. During the final week of the festival, July 23 to 27, each play will be presented again. Inge's play, "Picnic," which won the 23 to 27, each play will be presented again. Imbia was born in Independence on May 13, 1913. He graduated from KU in 1935 where he became a member of the National Collegiate Players. He was the music and drama critic for Louis. Louis Starship in 1944 when he met Wendy Wilson. His career as a playwright led him into screenwriting. He won an Academy Award for Best Director. He was found June 10, 1973, in his car with the engine running in the closed garage at Gate Street. Among his best-known works are “Come Back Little Sheba” and “Bus Stop.” Continuing Ed Gets Honors From National Association The University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education received top awards and committee appointments at the National Education Association (NEDA) training in Denver recently. For the fifth consecutive year, the Extranural Independent Study Center was credited with having the nation's best correspondence study course among a field of 200 NUEA college and university members. Robert J. Senecal, associate dean of continuing education, was elected chairman of the seven-state region of which Kansas is a member. Vivian McCoy, director of student services, is charrman-elect of the new national college board. James Nabors, director of conferences and institutes, received the 1974 Research Award for studies in pharmacy continuing education. Alex Lazarino, director of the Extramural Independent Study Center, was elected to establish an independent study center and criteria task force for independent study and individualized instruction. He also was elected to a three-year term on a nine-person governing board. John Blubaugh, and colleagues from other universities were recognized for a monograph on community development. The manuscript, "Series on Continuing Education," will be the first publication of the ACT-NUFA." Howard Walker, dean of continuing education, was named to the NUEA's council on administration of continuing education and cochairman of the committee on relations. Walker is a past president of NUEA, serving six years on its board of directors. David Alley, extension representative at the Kansas City Center, was elected vice chairman of the new division of special needs education. He is also chairman of the charter and bylaws committee of the division of student services. KU is the only'regents' institution with oc-campus continuing education ad- vancement. American Speed Center 790 N. 2nd 842-6828 Featuring all major brands of quality speed equipment FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS ARE Date Night at SHAKEY'S World's Greatest Pizza 21 Kinds Of PIZZA with this SHAKEY'S coupon. Schlitz BEER 50¢ A PITCHER In Lawrence Ks. 544 w. 23rd. St. Coupon Good Friday And Saturday Only FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS ARE Date Night at SHAKEY'S World's Greatest Pizza™ 21 Kinds Of PIZZA with this SHAKEY'S coupon. Schlitz BEER 50¢ A PITCHER In Lawrence Ks. 544 w. 23rd. St. Coupon Good Friday And Saturday Only Send her the FTD Sweet Surprise™ for Mother’s Day SEND IT EARLY ... SO THERE’S NO CHANCE OF DISAPPOINTMENT. A colorful hand paint- ed ceramic bucket filled with bright Spring flowers or plants with fresh flower accents. It’s a gift with an Extra Touch.”she’ll delight in receiving. We can send it almost any- where the FTD way. SWEET SURPRISE, arranged Owens- FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 Send her the FTD Sweet Surprise™ for Mother's Day SEND IT EARLY ... SO THERE'S NO CHANCE OF DISAPPOINTMENT. A colorful hand paint- ed ceramic bucket filled with bright Spring flowers or plants with fresh flower accents. It's a gift with an Extra Touch."She'll delight in receiving. We can send it almost any- where the FTD way. SWEET SURPRISE, arranged Owens- FLOWER SHOP 9th & Indiana 843-6111 Send her the FTD Sweet Surprise™ for Mother's Day SEND IT EARLY . . . SO THERE'S NO CHANCE OF DISAPPOINTMENT. A colorful hand pain- ted ceramic bucket filled with bright Spring flowers or plants with fresh flower accents. It's a gift with an Extra Touch™she'll delight in receiving. We can send it almost any- where the FTD way. SWEET SURPRISE, arranged CASINO DAYS SALE WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY of the HOUSE 1st Select an armful of our new spring merchandise and seek out a dealer (a clothing consultant) 2nd Have your items written up but not totaled 3rd Spin our Casino Wheel to determine the discount you will receive, ranging from 10 to 50% 4th th Our entire stock is included, no aces are held up our sleeve, at least 10 per cent off our regular quality stock 4 WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY Open Late Thursday ★Free Cokes ★Alterations Free ★Entire Stock MISTER GUY MISTER GUY MISTER GUY 920 MASS. 4 Fridav. May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Pie Plot Against Nixon The Secret Service announced today that it had uncovered a "possible conspiracy to throw a pie in President Nixon's face." A spokesman for the Secret Service in Washington said that authorities are seeking a man identified as Reuben Hamlet. The spokesman, G. John Smith, said that Hamlet is the suspected leader of a "very serious, very large" conspiracy by "nomentials." Sources close to the investigation said they used the term "non-mentals" to distinguish the reported plot from more common threats of harm to the President from mentally unbalanced individuals. Most such threats prove empty. Smith said Secret Service agents had searched a farmhouse near Pueblo, Colo., which belongs to Hamlet. The agents found a number of cans of whipped cream and shaving cream, boxes of custard and corn starch, and aluminum pie pans. There were also many notebooks found in the farmhouse, Smith said. It seemed apparent that the suspect wrote a great deal. Smith would not release the contents of the notebooks but Secret Service sources said one particular page referred to the plot: "Now is the time for a leader to learn if you looking up? Is anyone there?" The punishment should fit the crime. On nation-wide television, Another page said: "If the time ever comes when a Nixon Library is proposed, the government need not worry about acquiring a suitable site. It already owns a fitting complex of buildings on Alcatraz Island." Another page contained two quotes: "This country was established on the principles that God reigns supreme, and that He has given us our governments, for whom we should give thanks and offer prayers."—Rev. Rex Humbard. "Hosanna, Dick."—Reuben Hamlet. Presidential aide Ronald Ziegler refused to answer questions about President Nixon's reaction to the plot. However, a White House source said that Nixon, upon hearing of the plot, personally phoned Clarence Kelly, director of the FBI. Nixon shouted "expletives" into the telephone, the source said, demanding that Hamlet immediately be placed at the top of the FBI's most wanted list and be declared public enemy number one. Smith said that other names were included on Hamlet's "hit list" and were apparently targets for pies. The other names included Harold Geneen, chairman of the board of ITT, Elizabeth Taylor and B. F. Skinner, a behavioral psychologist who is also absent, to drop a sack full of guacamole sauce on the head of financier Robert Vesco. Vesco is in Costa Rica dodging U.S. subpoenas in a stock fraud case. Smith would not reveal the sources the Secret Service used to uncover the plot. —Mike Rieke Paris Trends Binding There's been some talk lately of a female liberation in women's fashion. According to the fashion experts, garter belts and stockings are "in" because they are erotic; they have more sex appeal than pantyhose. If the Paris fashion zars have their way with the women of the world, we'll all soon be burning our pantyhose and binding ourselves into old-fashioned garter belts and stockings. I've heard of the cyclic theory of fashion before, but this is ridiculous. All this talk of garter belts and stockings brings back memories of my junior high years, when the miniskirt hit the scene a couple of years ahead of pantyhose 'and we had to let it all hang out. But unlike the girl in the Kansan's obviously posed photo earlier this week, we toothpick-legged adolescents were somewhat embarrassed by the cold show of apparel and were continually checking things out with cautious fingers and surreptitiously tugging at our hems. Showing garters was as gauche as showing slips or bra straps. Garter belts and stockings erotie? On Marlene Dietrich, maybe. But the average woman isn't so fortunate in the leg department. What's so erotic about mounds of flesh bulging over stocking holes or balls of wrinkled bark dug into skin by garter? Do stockings bagging at knees and ankles turn men on? In the Kansan story some guy wisecracker that he liked garter belts better than pantyhose because they were more "easily accessible." I suppose this might be a boon for women who make their living by easy accessibility and for men in a hurry. But I noticed that Marlon Brando didn't have any great trouble eliminating Maria Schneider's pantyhose in "Last Tango in Paris." I'd hate to see the day when garter belts and stockings take over for pantyhose. It would be just one more example of sacrificing comfort to fashion, to which we all—men and women—are slaves. If the days do come, however, I'm in luck. I still have a pair of mismatched garter, souvenirs of a bygone era of unilatered fashion. Bunny Miller Parking, Traffic Problems Probed Student Senate Task Force Offers Suggestions BvSTEPHENBUSER The Student Senate's task force on parking and traffic has investigated the numerous problems that have caused considerable consternation for student vehicle owners at the University of Kansas. Kansas Staff Reporter The report of the task force contains not only a list of formal complaints but also worthy suggestions to rectify the defects of the present parking system. It is time for the department of traffic and security and the University administration to give adequate attention to this report and to act accordingly. The task force noted in its report that parking fees for students at Kamie's State University is $0.00 a year. The state's Department of Education said. The task force concentrated on the parking problems that have caused disgruntled student vehicle owners for many, many years. The following includes a list of suggestions and complaints documented by the task force A STUDENT CURRENTLY pays $27.50 a year for a parking sticker for either off-campus (X-zone) or on-campus (H-zone) parking. The task force has wisely suggested that parking sticker fees for the "pool lots" be lowered to $2.80. Because of this, there are fewer of these lots there no longer exists a need for parking regulation by parking officers. The greater distance of the pool lots from campus also necessitates a lowering of parking fees. The task force has made three notable suggestions concerning the payment of parking fines that have unfairly burdened students. These suggestions are: 1) that self-addressed envelopes be distributed with parking tickets to all students at easily accessible locations on campus, and 3) that only warning tickets be given during orientation week. THE TASK FORCE also reported on the different court procedures for parking fines of students compared to staff and faculty. Students must pay their parking fines under penalty of loss of transcript privileges and loss of ability to perform the Faculty and staff, however, are not subjected to any type of penalties for not paying their parking fines. The Parking and Traffic Board reported to the Senate Executive Committee on March 13, 1973, "...should the faculty and staff pay their approximately $80,000 in fines per record, there would probably be no permit raise." The task force said that a spokesman from the Parking Service had refused to give any information in regard to the present situation concerning the payment of parking fines by faculty and staff. ALTHOUGH THE TASK FORCE has not provided any worthwhile suggestions for correcting the marked difference in the collection of student and faculty and staff fines, it does refer to the Kansas State University traffic rules which state, "The chief traffic officer shall submit to the President's office a list of those faculty and staff members who haven't paid mileage fees and that don't have valid identification." The President has the paychecks of said individuals may, at the discretion of the President, be withdrawn until such fees are paid or arrangements made for payment of the fees." Discrepancies in parking fees for residence hall and scholarship hall stickers is also mentioned in the task report. The $17.00 a year parking fee for students of compliance has been considered based on complaints filed in the report. GRANTED, THERE may have been attempts in the past to alleviate, if not mollify, the conditions that have relentlessly plagued student vehicle owners. However, little constructive action has resulted from these efforts. The guidelines set by the task force provide the means to bring a solution to the problem of student property is entitled to leave. Let's hope these suggestions of the task force will be implemented into the parking system by next semester. Acquittal No Watergate Barometer By LAWRENCE MEYER The Washington Post WASHINGTON—The trial in which former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans were acquitted in New York Sunday was not technically a "Watergate" trial. The two former cabinet officers were being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's office in New York and not out of the special Watergate against them grew out of the 1972 election campaign but were not directly connected to the Watergate bugging, cover-up or other so-called "White House horrors" that been illegally caught up in the Watergate affair. somewhat incalculable boost for Mitchell and his six co-defendants in the Watergate cover-up conspiracy case here, as well as his role in the impeachment investigation in Congress. Yet in many significant ways, the Mitchell-Stans trial was linked legally and psychologically to the pending Watergate case. The only new trial is New York trial provides an obvious if IN WHAT COULD be seen by some as a rehearsal of the Watergate cover-up conspiracy trial, scheduled to begin here in September, the jury in New York chose to believe Mitchell's testimony in his own defense while rejecting all or part of the prosecution testimony of former White House counsel John W. Dean III. Dean was a principal witness against Mitchell and Stans in the New York trial and he is expected to be a major government witness in the Watergate cover-up conspiracy trial here. Dean also is the chief accuser against President Nixon. Whether the jury's verdict in New York implied a rejection of Dean's particular testimony or merely reflected weakness in the prosecution's entire case is one of many imponderables. But attorneys for the seven defendants in the Watergate cover-up trial can find some hope in the outcome of the first major trial. The Watergate case is an important role as a government witness. "President Nixon was always a remote figure in the trial of Stans and Michelon on Capitol Hill, but he also secured a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of international financier Robert L. Vesco in return for a $200,000 cash contribution to the 1972 Nixon re-election campaign." THE BENEFIT to Mr. Nixon of Sunday's acquittal, as the House Judiciary Committee undertakes its examination of charges against the President, is psychological evidence on point to the Mitchell-Stars case as the first major trial involving watergate-related charges and Mr. Nixon's principal accuser, John Dean. CHILE "WAT KIND OF MILITARY COUP IS THAT?" Readers Respond Alum Defends Athletic Ticket Price Increase To the Editor: I am a 1967 graduate of KU and a 1971 graduate of the KU Medical Center. I was quite disappointed to hear of the disagreement that has recently arisen between members of the Student Senate and the athletic department. I had been impressed with the progress made by the athletic department since Clvde Walker was appointed director. Even as a student in the lower-income bracket, I've always thought that my money spent for athletic events at KU was more of a contribution to a worthwhile program than much of what many other KU students today who feel the same way. Those who are really interested in athletics will pay more to be able to witness a better performance. I simply don't want to have to worry would cause undue hardships for those who are really interested in KU athletics. I think that a successful athletic department can do much to benefit the rest of the University as well as to provide great energy and motivation. We are going to improve our athletic program and our University, we must have the skills and experience we need so much in our program as our competitors. Please, for the sake of KU athletics and all of those interested, consider these comments and make your decisions wisely. Be certain that your feelings represent those of the student body and that your actions are for the good of the University. Howell Johnson,'71 Film Vote Defended In almost any political bureaucracy a number of organizations tend to become larger as the organization's function becomes obsolete, the organization will try to justify continuation. In the opinion of the Student Senate Culture Organization, the Student Senate Films represented such a group. I feel obligated to respond to a recent letter to the Kansan in which Jeff Lough ridiculously accused me of "political suppression" against the supporters of Laugh algease first that I prevented either him or Craig Walker from defending the film series and that the committee had made no decision on whether that is simply not the case. The committee made no decision on the elimination of the film series until the conclusion of three days of hearings. Then the decision was based on the results of the committee's tendance (about 50 persons a showing, with Originally formed to provide a foreign film service where none previously existed, the International Films Series, in the form of a series of films, solete. The SUA provides a classical series, foreign series, French series, etc. The Culture Committee concluded after lengthy deliberation that the $6,000 international funding allocated to non-duplicative organizations. little turnover rate). Lough also alleges that Hai Urbanek and I prevented him from speaking to the senate. This is also patently untrue. The senate, which has been a series was announced four days prior to the actual senate budget meeting, providing ample opportunity for Lough to contact a senator to yield the floor, allowing him to decide the floor. Apparently he didn't be mind of do so. The decision was further based on information from committee member Barb Carr, who was the first person trained from Lough, on the original purpose of the series. The committee then concluded that the film series had simply outlived the project and was a waste of the student activity fee. Lough next indicated that our committee report was inaccurate and one-sided (never mentioning any specific alleged inaccuracies). This is surprising, considering that the report was based entirely on the reports of the international film officers. Further, there could have been a call to reconsider if the Senate actually thought that the line item change had been through. Again, no such motion was raised. I am finally accused of having the votes of my "six Phil Delti"兄弟们 in my back pocket." This is also strange, because I have never been associated, either now or in the past, with that fraternity. I suggest Mr. Lough check a student directory. The Senate Culture Committee spent 21 hours in deliberation before unanimously submitting our budget recommendation to the Senate. We have already observed a film series, the committee would have had to recommend drastic reductions in four viable organizations and the elimination of five others. I fear Mr. Lough is confusing political suppression with fiscal conservatism. Bill Webster Carthage, Mo. junior THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom—UN 4-4810 Business Office—UN 4-4358 Published at the University of Kansas daily during academic hours, Mail is also available. Mail reservation rates: $8 a semester, $15 a year. Second class payment package: $25 a semester. Mail resume to: UKCU@uak.edu. Rate: $1.25 a semester paid in student activity fee. Advertised offered to all students without regard to race, sex or national origin. Accepted are not necessarily those of the University. NEWS STAFF Another juror said that the jury did think that Dean's testimony "was in conflict with everyone else's," but this juror said he would not use a "harsh a term" as calling News Adviser . . Susanne Shaw Editor Hal Ritter One juror, questioned after the verdict was returned Sunday, said of Dean, "I don't think anybody arrived at a decision on the case. Dean is a guar is a liar" or 'this guy told the truth.' WHEN DEAN TESTIFIES here, the possibility exists that he will be asked whether he testified against Mitchell in New York and whether that trial ended in acquittal. Such a question, if permitted at trial, would have an effect on the dairy's deliberations. Considering the obvious damage that a conviction of both former Nixon cabinet officers and close friends of the president could have had in complicating Mr. Nixon's already severe problems, an acquaint- even if it brings no direct legal benefits to Mr. Nixon—must be good news for the White House. BUSINESS STAFF Mitchell, facing trial here with six other former Nixon White House and campaign aides in the Watergate cover-up conspiracy, asked himself. If he takes the witness stand to testify in his own defense here, as he did in New York, he need not fear the prosecutor's informing the jury—as it did him before the Mitchell had been convicted in New York. Business Advisor . Mel Adams Business Manager. . David Hunker Member Associated Collegiate Press These random comments by two jurrons suggest, but do not prove, that Dean did not have a profound impact on the Stans-Mitchell trial. 1 THE TASK FOR the Special Watergate Prosecutor here may be made more difficult in still another way. The Special Prosecutor's office has had considerable success in persuading some Watergate defendants to plead guilty to reduced charges of embezzlement and other defendants. The New York acquittal could persuade defendants who were considering such a bargain to take their chances on a trial. But for all the benefits to President Nixon and the defendants in the Watergate cover conspiracy that the Stans-Mittchell agreement could not prevent, it is only one element in a complex equation. The Special Watergate Prosecutor's office also still has an unbleached record of convictions, all but one by guilty pleas. In 1983, a former Special Prosecutor, former White House aide Dwight L. Chapin was convicted on two of four perjury counts. Many legal observers considered the case against Chapin to be the evidence against Stans and Mitchell. SOME OBSERVERS HERE think that the Special Prosecutor, especially now that he has been forewarned by the New York verdict, will try to present a stronger case to the jury here, taking special pains to shore up Dean E. Feldman's detail as is possible. The prosecution witnesses in New York were frequently contradictory in their testimony. Long before the Stans-Mitchell trial began, newsmen began hearing reports in legal circles that the New York federal prosecutor had a weak case, including the absence of fugitive Robert Vesco from the trial. And it the White House can find good news in the Stans-Mitchlein acquittal, that verdict does not alter the very real and profound impact of this case on the pending impeachment proceedings. Griff and the Unicorn by Sokoloff I CAN'T SLEEP I CAN'T SLEEP YAWN EVERYBODY'S ASLEEP BUT ME ZZZZAWZAWW ZZZZZAWW SSNOOORRR ABSOLUTELY EVERYBODY 7/20 SOKOLOFF YAWN EVERYBODY'S ASLEEP BUT ME ZZZZAWZAWW ZZZZZAWWW SSNOOORRR ABSOLUTELY EVERYBODY SOKOLOFF rk呼 hoike on哭 ac- ac- ial in ral in the that hat ork to to the to ing The are many. r'or's r'or's by use two biuse inspin news dicts und ixn rings. Friday, May 3, 1974 5 University Daily Kansan Pizza plus Booze Means Antacids By CAROL GWINN Kansan Reviewer After four beers and five attempts to roll pizza dough out onto a cookie sheet—although it might have been five beers and seven, the cheese fighting a losing battle against the Pizza. Pizza dough has a most obrous tendency to shrink up as quickly as it is rolled out—or else holes develop in the middle of the pan through which the tomato paste causes it to rapidly at 45 degrees, causes the cakes to smell like a high school caterinee. The commaissure pizza cook regards his pizza as a work of art which requires the exact varieties and amounts of cheese, olives, pickles, fried eggs, sausage, pepperoni and mushrooms, plus the right crust and tomato paste. Pizza mixes are expensive, however, costing at least 50 cents for a regular size (small), which will hardly feed one hungry person, and twice that amount for the rest of your meal. The supply only the minimum of pizza essentials—a package of flour and yeast for the crust, a small can of tomato paste and a small package of ground parmesan cheese. It is more economical to construct that kind of pizza than Hunt's Tomato Paste and Colby longhorn. the cook is going to have to supply his own toppings anyway to make the pizza tasty and distinctive enough to compensate for the doughy effort. This brings the price of the cheese down to $4, because the toppings, particularly the mushrooms and pepperoni, are expensive. However, since connousseur pizza cooks are difficult to find and expensive to supply with the necessary appetizers, most KU students generally either go to one of the many pizzerias in the Lawrence area or order out. Most pizza joints offer the same basic varieties of pizza, usually ranging from the cheapest, cheese or plain, to the most expensive, marbled or cheeseburger choices. There are various prices and combinations between these extremes. Of course, you're not going to be able to buy a fried egg pizza. If your desireless lean that option, you're limited to making your own The major differences among pizza joints are their atmospheres, prices and the kinds and amounts of crust, tomato paste, spices and cheeses they use. The Green Pepper on 620 W. 9th St. makes pizzas with super thick crusts and lots of tomato paste—the type of pizza one customer refers to as "a kind of sandwich." Green Pepper crusts have a texture like chewy bread, definitely not the traditional crunchy, brittle crust which tastes like matzo. The thickness of the crust and the cheese make Green Pepper pizza more of a meal than a break-break snack. Green Pepper also has about the cheapest prices in town, particularly on combination specials such as the vegetarian special of cheese, mushrooms, onions, olives and green peppers. Perhaps one reason Green Pepper prices are low is that it is not a restaurant, but a take out and delivery service—free of charge. If you decide to pick up your pizza or wait for it after you've ordered at the pizzeria, you can watch your order be processed in your next door to Joe's Bakery, you can also have a few appetites while you wait. One word of warning, however, on Green Pepper pizza. If green peppers make your pizza too sweet, don't eat it. review the alert against the green pepper that appears in most Green Pepper pizza Equally good, but for the opposite reasons, are the pizzas made by Campus Hideaway pizza. These pizzas have crisp, crunchy crusts and the best tasting cheese in town. Campus Hideaway pizza are also rarely greasy—even the pepperoni don't turn into cups of cheese. Campus Hideaway is one of the few places in which freaks and middle class America can sit at tables placed next to each other in a restaurant. It offers a battle between Hell's Angels and the FBI. It's a softly-lit, quiet restaurant, which, although it serves beer, does not make its pizzas so spicy that customers have to themselves sack their threats to burn up. Campus Hideaway does, however, use a spice in its pizzas that makes the Green Pepper green peppers seem mild. Sensitive customers must die this spice out. Campus Hideaway also has a good variety of spaghetti with meat sauce, mushroom or garlic—and really good mashed potatoes that others who eaten pizza six nights in a row. Shakey's Pizza Parlor at 544 W. 23rd St. serves the spiciest pizzas in wooden. Shakey's is indestructible with hard wood tables and benches able to withstand numerous beer drenchings. The old Shakey's motto, "We serve fun—also pizza" is quite accurate. 'Have a Ball!' PLAY PUTT-PUTT TONITE AT PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSES Shakey's pizzas come in really large sizes, just right for people more interested in sharing one, while drinking beer, with 20 ounces of pizza per person. The large size pizza is also ideal for parties for little kids who run around the restaurant in prepubescent, non-alcoholic beviation. However, if you arrive at a late enough hour, only the odd party maker will be Shakey's pizzas are usually flat with little substance other than a thin layer of tomato paste, an equally thin layer of cheese and the requested topping all on a thin crust. Shakey's is not the place for the non-nourishing commissure—i such a novelty exists. Shakey's also provides silent movies and a musician player if you come at the right time. a piano player if you come at the right time. The Straw Hat at 2515 W. 6th St. follows the Shakey's format. However, it appears to be in better shape and has a less busterous texture than the regular crostets and don't contain much tomato paste or cheese. They taste rather blend. However, for a pizza party in the Shakey's tradition but with a little more quiet and privacy, the Straw Hat is a good place to go. We provide students for living west of campus. The Pizza Hut at 1606 W. 23rd St., 804 Iowa St. and 828 W. 24th St. provide both the late night snack kind of pizza and the pizza meal. The restaurant has both a family and adult space in the greenhouse. There are also facilities for large pies away from the main dining area. RYDER Don't move till you call us. We want to show you how you can save a bundle. Maybe, 40-60% of the cost Move it yourself with a rent rent Ryder trucka, well-keep Chevrolet, other fine trucks. From little Chevy vans up to big 22-footers, you can do it too. Ask for the helpful Ryder Mover Guides. Make it a happy local Ryder Truck Rental Dealer We want to show you how you can save a bundle. Maybe your self with a Ryder truck. We rent Ryder trucks, well-knew Chevrolet Cherry vans up to big 22-footers. And we rentmouser accessories. The Chery Vans Guide. Make it a happy location for a Ryder Truck Rental Deal. A-1 RENTAL A-1 RENTAL 802 W. 3rd St. 842-6262 CAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center STUDENT APPRECIATION DAYS CAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center STUDENT APPRECIATION DAYS Thursday, Friday, & Saturday MAY 2, 3, & 4 10% off all items in the store This is our way of saying "thank you" for supporting us all year... Come in and take advantage of July clearance prices now!! Pizza Hut putz derive most of their flavor from the toppings. The crust is the thin matzah-type and the tomato paste and cheese are made in an amount of subtle backing for the topping. Pizza Hut also has combination specials at low prices, such as the sausage and pepperoni combination. Pizza Hut uses high-quality toppings many of its pizzas. A new pizzeria which resembles the Pizza Hut is Ken's Pizza Place on 24th and 10th streets. Ken's is so you can still smell the paint and varnish. It's a nice, quiet restaurant in the middle-class family tradition. Ken's Pizza are similar to those of the Pizza Hut, although they don't contain as much topping. They have thin crusts and the required amount of tomato paste wde cheese chipping, but the emphasis is placed flavor of the topping. Ken's also has special sauces at lower prices than what you could get by randomly combining two tappings. If you're more interested in the college-student type of entertainment (drinking) than in eating pizza, any of these places will be satisfactory. But there is one more requirement for the devout pizza eater: an ample supply of antacids. Do Do You Know... Patricia Carr Molly Soward David Tallent Dan McAlexande Dan Orbach Johanna C. Harnden Denis Morel Hear them in the PI KAPPA LAMBDA BENEFIT CONCERTO CONCERT Sunday, May 5 8:00 p.m. University Theatre '1 Donation KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners Maria Muldaur WB Warner Bros. Records Regular '59 Now $299 Diamond Needles—Reg. $ ^{1} 9^{95}-^{1} 10^{95} $ —Now $ ^{1} 5^{95} $ Seniors '74 It's the Final Senior Spring Fling (back row) Mike Starkey, Rick Steinberg, Jeffrey Rizzo, Robert Green, Michael Kirkpatrick Boogie to QUITTIN TIME while you indulge in the ample supply of FREE BEER and HOT DOGS. Or if it's more your style to play frisbee or football, you can do that too. Remember . . . THE SENIOR SPRING SLING Sunday, May 5th, 3:00-8:00 p.m. Mt. Bleu Only Those Wearing '74 Senior Jerseys Admitted. See You There! 6 Friday. May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan on campus MARY ELLEN SUTTON Butler, M. graduate student, will give her organ doctor recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM will meet at 4:30 p.m. Monday in Room 323 Malet. Professor Jack Calvahore will speak on "Chemical Physics Trilene Network; Applications of Electron Microscopy" pertaining to the View of a Physical Scientist." FACULTY FORUM will bear Richard West speak on "American Indian Art" at noon Monday in the United Ministries Center. ALBERT GERKEN will give a Carillon Recital at 3 p.m. Sunday. THE HUMAN SEXUALITY committee seminar scheduled for 2 to 5 p.m., Sunday in the dayhawk Room of the Kansas Union has been cancelled. THE HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION and Recreation Department needs officials for summer training intramurals. Interested individuals contact Hec at 843-5711 or in Room 108 Robinson. LAWRENCE'S ANNUAL ART IN THE PARK will be from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday in South Park. Music will be provided by four bands: City Concert Band, Lawrence Barberhawks, MudCreek and Hazel-Grey and the Heavy Brothers. **STUDENT COUNCIL for Recommitting Motivating and Educating Black Engineers is sponsoring an appreciation banquet at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union Engineering faculty, representatives from the industry are invited.** THE HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION and recreation department will award four scholarships in a ceremony at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in Room 206 Robinson. PIKAPALAMBDA, the honorary music fraternity, is sponsoring a benefit concert at 8 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. The admission price of $1 is to provide funds for music student scholarships. ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Student Center will sponsor a lecture on "Marital Communications" by Sister Leanne Valaux at St. John Church, 12th and Vermont streets. HILTLP TWIRLERS, a KU square dance club, will meet at 7:38 p.m. Sunday in Room 173 Robinson. Caller will be Randy Conrad, Lee Sanmu, Mo., senior. MEN'S BASKETBALL and coed volleyball refund forcheck can be picked up between 8 a.m. and noon in Room 1050. The students must present their ID and NAZAREN STUDENT UNION will have former singer Tony Fontaine as speaker at the 9 a.m. m. Bible Study this Sunday at the Nazarene Youth Center, 120 E. Washington Hall, 20th and Massachusetts streets. VOLUNTEERS for Dr. Dr. Bill Roy's senatorial campaign will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY will sponsor an Honors Luncheon at 1:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Leo H. Johnstone, executive vice president of Phillips Petroleum, will invite the "Challenge of the Energy Crisis." TV Don't Get Stuck! Instead of waiting until the last minute to plan your next move, and ending up throwing up your hands in despair, rent a trailer or truck to fit your needs. Do it safely, economically: do it right. U-HAUL HAROLDS + 1540 W. 6TH PHILIPS 66 843-2060 843-3557 843-2060 843-3557 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 free state opera house 642 mass lawrence free state opera house 642 mass lawrence presents BILLY SPEARS SATURDAY, MAY 4 9-midnight $1.50 at the door Brought to you by The MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. Q 9 Brought to you by The MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. --- AAUP Group to Formulate Bargaining Unit Proposal The AAPU chapter gave a special committee instructions to propose a collective bargaining unit that could be petitioned to pursue Public Employee Relations Board. The University of Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) approved a resolution last night that could be the first step in eventual faculty collective bargaining at KU. mine a representative. The request must be followed by an election in which a representative is selected by a majority of the votes cast. The committee should present the proposal at the first AUP chapter meeting In a separate development, the AAUP committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure reported that the University had not required new procedures inWhithing procedures for promotion and tenure. According to Kanaas law, collective bargaining is possible only after 30 per cent of the wage rate. Margaret Schutz, associate professor of social welfare and committee chairman, said, "What is clear is that professors are not in any sense being evaluated for promotion and tenure by the same standards through the University. "There are about 75 separate sets of standards and procedures possible." German Honors Go to 63 Scholarships and books were awarded to 63 students by the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures last night in their outstanding classwork in German. The awards were made at the department's honors program dinner. The featured speaker for the evening was Lutz Rehrich, Max Kade professor at KU. The Paris Foilet German prize was awarded to Kathy Delker, Chapman Frances Schlegel-Carruth Scholarships were awarded to Peter Cartart, Lawrence junior; Kristia Hetherington, Lawrence sophomore; Robert Jarvis, Leavenworth sophomore; and Melissa Nabors, Lawrence sophomore. Bleam, Jetmore junior; Christine Davis, Leawood senior; Rosales Postma, Lawrence freshman; Robin Reed, Lawrence freshman; Linda Stumbo, Lawrence freshman, and Karen Zuther, Lawrence freshman. Cora and Elmer Engel Memorial Scholarships were awarded to William Caroline B. Spangler Scholarships were awarded to Scott Clark, Tapek freshman; Anne Harlenke, Witchita sophomore; Susan John, Phillips freshman; Janice Miller, Topeka junior; David Morgan, Topeka senior; Emily Tulsa, Tula, Okla.; Junior; Jim Morrison, Shawnee senior, and Rebecca Root, Liberal freshman. The Erdmutte von Unwertn Scholarship was awarded to Evelyn McClave, Lawrence LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST? HOME SWEET HOME JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS Now Taking Applications for Fall ON CAMPUS HEATED POOL COVERED PARKING ROOM-MATE SERVICE SUMMER $130.00 Rental Office Open until 8:00 everyday 1603 W. 15th LREx Mansion A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE? The Castle was built in 1845 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from items on wooden canvases carried in the fortress. Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns compulsively on Massachusetts Street There are five beautiful fireplaces in the house, each a unique design with various colored marble and brick. The original dining room is very ornate with an unusual built-in sideboard and dining closet. A reflex store of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an altar in a chapel. The lower, which goes into the old castle experience, has a chairove leading to the third floor. It is accessible by stairs and is used during the summer months. The balcony with porch windows seats on the middle floor. The staircase leads up to the second floor. If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in Lawrence with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really feel like a local is to stay there. The Castle Tea Room The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence 1307 Mass. Reservations Suggested 843-1151 7 W. 14th fr 7 W. 14th Come to WAXMAN CANDLES for high-quality fragranced candles Hours. 10-5.30 daily Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358 Gripps Come on down to GRIFF'S for some Real Good Fixins this weekend 100% U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED BEEF HAMBURGERS only 25¢ DELICIOUS! NUTRITIOUS! PIPING HOT! Friday-Saturday-Sunday Hamburgers...25° each Shakes...25° each Griff's BURGER BARS A NATIONWIDE LEYLRY Open 7 days a week "to serve you" 1618 W. 23rd This Week Only "So Hurry" Req name form exect She aid t politi R Breen Affair Union the p assist and Educa Ron Bunny Black's Royal College Shop E. M. E. S. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. A high wooden wedge from Bare-Trap. Super sandals from the best in California sandal makers. This style in Natural or Brown. You'll comfort with Bare-Traps Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS. VI 3-4255 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 3.1974 7 Resignations Announced by Minority Affairs Officers Kansas Staff Reporter By DAVID CROCKETT R. DANVID CROCKET Brenda Vann, acting director of Minority Affairs, said last night at a Black Student Union meeting that she wouldn't reapply for the position next year Darryl Bright, assistant to the director of Minority Affairs, and Karen Saffari, assistant to Supervisor Educational Services, will leave. Replacements for the offices haven't been named, but search committees are to be formed, according to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. The three attributed their resignations to the University's efforts to remove advocates for student struggle, the possibility of student dissatisfaction and the necessity to relocate and become involved in the political movement. The international awareness of political activity. Vann was appointed to the office in September 1972 by Chancellor E. Laurence She said that she never was the actual director, but merely the acting director. "I took the office with an understanding that it was a concession from an era of unease." She said that her main intent had been to aid black students in understanding the impact of racism. "We have been rewarded by those who continue to struggle," Vann said. "It is very important that black students remain a politically organized group, as they are the most vulnerable." She thought that one of her main achievements this year, as viewed by students, was that Supportive Educational Services would be operating on a budget two-thirds as large as it had been in the past. "We no longer have to rely upon the Student Senate for funds," Vann said, adding that funds were available from state and federal grants. Vann urged black students to join forces with other minorities. "It is extremely important that black students realize that all minority groups must be represented," she said. "We want liberation for all oppressed people around the world." interest, because they were the ones who would determine whether the programs Bright said it wasn't who occupied the offices that was important, but who was supporting the people in the offices. He urged students to keep pushing for their own Reid told students that a great potential existed for a strong and solid Black Student Union, but that potential had been only slightly tapped. "I think the administration will view this as a weakness," Michael Moore, BSU chairman said. "But we as black students will have the final word. We must see that the people who fill these offices next year will be responsive to the students." Moore also said the BSU should be sure that these people weren't萌乎们揍的 "There are two types of people," he said, A long-instance telephone investigation conducted yesterday by the University Daily Kansan revealed no discrepancies concerning 39 travel vouchers issued to 24 behavior analysis Follow Through employees. Follow Through Directors Confirm 39 Trips Taken The 39 vouchers were issued for trips that were taken from March to May 1873, the same period in which two former employees paid for five trips they said they didn't take. Bette Mallonee, a former staff trainer. was paid for trips to Louisville, Mounds, Ill., and Fortageville, Mo., during that period. Alice Fowler, a former parent coordinator for trips to Mounts and Fortageville. Follow Through directors and supervisors in these three cities were called and each of the 39 trips, not including the five involved in the allegations, was confirmed. All trips were verified by checking for signatures, purchases of airline or railroad tickets and by determining whether destinations had been reached. M JERRY Invites You to the Inflation Fighter Sale SATURDAY, MAY 4 and SUNDAY, MAY 5 Quality Mobile Homes MIKE FREE COKES TO ALL FREE LONGSTEM CARNATIONS TO EACH FEMALE Meet the Factory Reps and KLWN FM I am very happy with the way this project is being run. I am confident that it will be a success. Thank you for your support. 25 Sanches - Taste Orange Ice-Cream Plane Parking Lot Golf 3 Pases - Sports Drive in 50 Gym Certificates - RSA, USA Country Shops Drawings every 15 minutes include: 10 cases Coffee - Cola Cola Bottles 5 big Chefs - Burger Chef 1 big Chef - French Chef Flowerers - Owner's Flower Shop $10.00 savings Account - National Bank $10.00 savings Account - National Bank Don't Miss It! Quality Mobile Homes 623 North 2nd 843-8127 —Listen to KLWN FM for More Details— "I only relied on the students, and what they wanted," she said. "Those who are concerned about their job, and those who care about the students." "I don't think the students realize what they are against at this time," said for- Vann said she didn't rely on the administration for help. mor BSU chairman Duane Vann. "The struggling that has been done by the people in these offices will now have to be done by the students." THIS WEEKEND . . . A "THANK YOU" SALE!! 20% to 50% off... on everything in the shop . . . The girls in the Country House say "thank you" to all of our great customers from K.U. and Lawrence for another great year by having a special sale of all our super new spring and summer fashions at fantastic prices. So, stop in this weekend and pick out your warm weather sports and active wear . . . Thank you and Best wishes for summer . . . Cou 839 Massachusetts Downtown House At the back of the Town Shop FREE BEER Cedarwood apartments featuring 1 & 2 bedroom apartments 3 & 4 bedroom duplexes PRE-FINALS PARTY & Open House 843-1116 Saturday, May 4 2:00 til ? 2414 Ousdahl Iowa ST 23rd ST. ST. NASMITH DR. Cedarwood OUSSANT If you graduate in June,this is what you could be doing in September. Aaron L. Boyd Fort Campbell, Ky Mohawk University Clarksville, Tennessee Renauldó B. Ancuesta Honolulu, Hawaii Fuel Specialist Moses Lake, Wash Intranfry Fire Team Lead P Royal City Wash Park Lift Operator Woodland Hills, Calif Crash Rescueman 104 23 Cheilan. Warn Cannonier Walter Thomas Jr. Birmingham AIA Switchoard Operator Brookfield, WI Military Policeman jalishassee, Fla Maudeuse Cock John B. LePrunt Levittown, New York Committee Chairman SAN DIEGO COUNTY POLICE DEPT. 1960 05329383848 Within several days, you may have the latest information on jobs, benefits, travel education, and just about anything else you'd like to know about today's Army Hooverville, Pa Mechanic This postcard may be your ticket to a new job. U.S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION 600 MASSACHUSETT AVENUE BROOKLYN, KANAL 60048 LAWRENCE > Tear out the information → > the whole page. And make it RECRUITING U.S. ARMY TELEPHONE 843-0465 Four. You choose the exact job training you want before you enlist. And, if you qualify, you'll get it Guaranteed in writing. FRED D. HILL LENGUARD FIRST CLASS, U.S. ARMY Three. Although the jobs we offer are considered 'skilled labor', we don't require that you already possess the skill We'll teach you everything you need to know in our training courses. (Experience will come on the job.) Contrary to popular belief, good jobs aren't that hard to find these days. Not, that is, if you know where to look And a better place to look than today. Army you won’t find Our Army. Army you will find. Simple facts One We have more jobs to offer the Clients than anyone military or civilian. Two. The jobs are the kind you don't usually step into night out of school. Electronics, construction, computers, technical repair communications and law enforcement are a few of the 300 good, steady jobs we offer Today's Army A good job that's not hard to find After all, look what it did for the Class of 73 That's our job offer to the Class of '74. We think it'll pay you to look into it No Date of Birth Address City Country Say Zin See Site No Phone Education 21971471 Fantastic savings on all our components. Here are just a few... rms SPRING CLEARANCE SALE SALE SPEAKERS reg. now RMS I (8' 2" Way) 55.00 36.00 RMS III (8' 3" Way) 79.95 46.00 RMS IV (12' 3" Way) 169.95 68.00 100 hop rated 94.00 79.95 EPI 202 219.00 175.00 Altec 890c 190.00 155.00 Altec 874a (12' 3" Way) 279.00 205.00 Altec 874b (12' 3" Way) 199.00 165.00 Rectilinear XII (12' 3' Way) 139.00 119.00 TURNTABLES AR XA (with Shure M91ED) BSR 710 (with M91E) reg. now 165.00 119.95 199.95 169.00 SAVE RECEIVERS & AMPS reg. now JVC 5444 4-channel 679.95 487.00 Stereo 120 Amp 200.00 150.00 Ar Tuner 120 Amp 200.00 180.00 AR Receiver (60 watt/chan.) 450.00 360.00 Kenwood KR 3200 239.95 195.00 Kenwood KR 5200 289.95 290.00 Kenwood KR 5200 289.95 290.00 TAPE DECKS reg. now Akai CS 33D 209,95 190,00 Tacak 289,95 190,00 Akai GX2400 529,95 179,95 Akai 1730D 419,95 389,95 Hurry!! Quantities are limited. One Week Special For the next week you can buy any RMS speaker system, two for the price of one (at our present sale price), with the purchase of any receiver at list price. Offer Ends May 9! ATTENTION RMS is proud to announce the addition of Cermin-Vega speakers to our ever expanding component line (now consisting of over 100 name brands). Cermin-Vega speakers are designed to handle enormous amounts of power but only need very little power to overwhelm you with sound. Even their least expensive speaker at $119.95 will handle 100 watts of continuous power and it carries a lifetime warranty. As Cermin-Vega says "Loud is beautiful, if it's clean." rms ELECTRONICS (Where the Pros go) 724 Mass. 841-2672 Daily 10-6 Thur. 10-8 master charge THE INTERBANK CARD Financing Available 8 Friday, May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan Cool Breeze Kansan Photo by LARRY CAVANAUGR KU Woman Wins Contest Will Compete for State Title Jane Brown, Leawood junior, was chosen Miss Lawrence-Kansas University at a sageant held Tuesday night at the Ramada in. Brown and the other contestants competed in talent, swim suit and evening gown competition, and each had a five-minute interview with the judges. The three judges were field representatives for the Miss America contest. "People who believe that papiers are demeaning are going on the assumption that a contestant is being judged only on what she looks like," Brown said. "However, in all preliminary pages, the judges not only look for attractive appearance, but they look at the entire person." Brown said that talent counted for fifty per cent of the total score and the other fifty per cent was composed of scores for swim suit competition, being gym competition and the interview. Brown said that her main responsibility was to represent the community of Lawrence and KU at the state pageant in 2015, when she will be in competition for Miss Kansas. $ CASH $ Sell your used (and not so used) text books May 8-17 kansas union BOOKSTORE Hours 8:30-5 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 10-1 GIVE DAD "UNIVERSEATY" HIS OWN UNIVERSITATIS KANSERIKAS MUNITI TIGRA ORGANIZED NUMA University Seat $16.00 The seal or insignia of your school (listed below) laminated on a foam insert with protective plastic covering. Seats made in your school colors. OR GIVE DAD HIS OWN COLLEGE FOOT STOOL TO REST HIS TIRED FEET! UU #7601 University of Texas #7602 University of Arkansas #7603 University of Nebraska #7604 University of Oklahoma #7605 University of Texas #7606 Texas Christian University #7607 Southern Methodist University #7608 Louisiana State University #7609 University of Colorado #7610 University of Colorado #7611 University of Tennessee #7612 University of Mississippi Foot Stool $11.00 7614 University Of Kansas 7615 Texas A. & M 7616 Texas Tech University 7618 Baylor University 7620 New York University 7621 Oklahoma State University 7620 Kansas State University 7621 UTaine University 7622 Texas A. M Mexico 7624 Grambling College 7625 Arizona State 7626 University of Arizona ORDERS MUST BE PLACED NOW FOR FATHER'S DAY DELIVERY! ORDERS PLACED FOR FUTURE DELIVERY WILL BE MAILED FOR FATHER'S DAY IF YOU HAVE LEFT LAWRENCE! XXXXXXXXXX Luber GIFT SHOP EST. 1980 92ND MASSACHUSETTS The cool breeze that have been present so many evenings this spring can be detected as the smoke from the Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association east of Lawrence drifts Grand Opening May 3 Hours 12-12 Daily Live Music Wed., Fri., Sat. Nights Must Be 18 PEE NIGHT CLUB presents REAMIN' DEMONS Featuring Ed Toler, Dan Libby, Clay Kirkland, Arnie Young 9-12 May 3,4,10,11 Cover $ ^{1} \mathrm{CO}_{3}$ North Lawrence, Kansas Intersection of Highways 24-40 North of the East Turnaike Entrance XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 2 The Town Shop 839 Massachusetts Downtown We're your headquarters for summer sportswear. A super selection of knits from $10.00 and great plain and patterned slacks from $14.00 to set you off. KANU to Air Transcripts The 32-hour special will be broadcast uninterrupted from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6th. Radio station KANU-PM (91.5 MHz) will broadcast the entire transcript of the taped interview. reading of the transcripts from National Public Radio in Washington, D.C. KANU will pre-empt most of its regular weekend programming to transmit the President Nixon released the transcripts to the House Judiciary Committee this week in response to a subpoena. The White House removed profanity, personal characterizations and items of "national security" from the 1,200-page transcripts. XXXXXXXXXX xxxxxxxxxx Virginia Inn Restaurant Now under new management by the former chef and manager of the Imperial Palace of Kansas City Mr. Kit Lee serving: Chinese and American Food ★ Special Mandarin Menu ★ ★ Moo-chi Pork Mongolia Beef ★ Spice Beef ★Cashew Chicken ★ Swan Doung Chicken ★Jade Shrimp ★ Goung Bow Shrimp Peking Duck ★ Crisp Duck (order this one day ahead) Party and Banquet Rooms Available for 10 to 100 People ★ Students Welcome ★ Virginia Inn 843-3300 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX divine Robert Redford & Mia Farra *THE GREAT GATSBY* Adm. Adult $12.00 - Child 75c NO PASSES LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT. NIGHT Varsity FRI. & SAT. 12:00 show THEATRE ...Telephone 913-1655 FANTASTIC PLANET VOLUME 24 GRAND PRIX CINEMAS FILM FESTIVAL 1971 RIDIN'', ROPIN' WRANOL' and all that WESTEPN BULLSHIT Mel Brooks' BLAZING SADDLES Eve at 7:30 & $20.50, Sun, Mar. 12 Varsity THEA... September 12, 1986 RIDIN', ROPIN' WRANGLIN' and all that is WESTEPN BULLSHIT BLAZING SADDLES Ive at 7:30 & 9:30 Sat. Sun. Mar 2 1:30 Varsity TRAILER - Inauguration 1965 THE BIRTHDAY ALICE in WONDERLAND Granada TEL. 814-723-1069 Telephone VI 3-5784 Z Th who on th duriu tradi SUN. Pla Kans the Z of fo famil Away With It Eve 7:40, 10:00 Sat., Sun, Mat. 2:10 THE STING Nei fall a Amer defen PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT REDFORD Fir All-A Oran Atlar Hillcrest The said to do "C THE EXORCIST ALL SEATS123=NO PASSES YOU MUST HAVE ID PROVING 16 YEARS OF AGE or be with parent NO ID NO SHOW Box office Opens at 6:30 Show Daily at 7:20, 9:35 Sat - Sun. Mar at 2:30 Hillcrest Action from the '30's "DILLINGER" & "Boxcar Bertha" Burton - Friday Saturday "MAFIA" Box open 7:15 Show at 8:30 Sunset MARCH 26TH AT NASHVILLE ON A WEST BROOKWAY DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 University Daily Kansan Friday, May 3, 1974 9 Zook Football Tradition Continues Playing football at the University of Kansas has become a family tradition for the Zook brothers from Lared. Three outfielder Jack and Kyle, along with their family have come to KU to play football. First there was John, All-Rig Eight and All-America defended on KU's 1968 Orange Bowl team and now All-Pro for the Atlanta Falcons professional football team. next came Dean who will be a senior next fall and who received All-Big Eight and All-America honorable mention honors as a defensive last fall. The third brother is Dale, a freshman, who has already made his presence known on the varsity by leading the team in tackles and blocks. The defense breaks tradition, also plays defensive end. The two younger Zooks, Dean and Dale, said coming to KU seemed a natural thing to do. "Coming to Lawrence to see John play a let helped our decision to go with KU," Dean said. "I knew if I had a chance to play college ball, I wouldn't play anywhere else and I think Dale felt the same way." Following a brother like John to the same school isn't always the easiest thing to do. There is a lot of pressure to live up to the name, according to KU Coach Don Fambright. But Fambright knows all the Books we have is essential for becoming great players. squat to the varsity. They think a player nurtures more in that move than going from a squat to the varsity. "They're aggressive, they're competitors, they have a great desire to succeed and they are unselfish team players." Fambrighau said. "Each one of the Zoaks wants to be known for his own merits and not those of a brother. They are all indulged in their passion about their common background, the way they were raided, or because they're used to hard work on the farm that gives them a special quality." “A sophomore has to be really good to win a spot on the varsity.” Dean said. “I know it took me a while before I realized I was on the same level as everyone else.” Fambridge said when one of his recruiters told him of the third Zook brother, Dale, he sent the recruiter right to Larned to sign him. "Now we don't have to go against the big offensive tackles who usually outweigh us by 30 to 50 pounds," Dean, who is 6-foot-2 and 208 lbs., said. "We can use our quickness and smaller size to drop back or rush like outside linebackers." "If his name is Zook, we want him," Bamfraw said. "We knew from experience what to expect from that family and we haven't been disappointed yet. A Zook is the football player. They all strive to improve themselves, constantly try to improve themselves." Dean said that in his freshman year he was a little worried about being able to prove himself after John's success at KU. But now after the success he had the past two seasons on the UCLA team as off Dau. He now is one new feeling the pressure, following two older brothers. "I just need to prove myself," Dale said. "Dean did it, now it's my turn. My size (6-foot3 and 165 pounds) is my biggest weakness. John was already big when he came to KU and Dean was halfway heavily built, but I've got a problem with my lack of weight. My quickness is what's saving me right now." KU's defensive alignment, using a five-man line instead of a four-man line, has allowed the defenders to act more like players than the offense. Dean and Dale this has been a great help. Both of the younger Zooks agree that the biggest challenge for a maturing college player is moving up from the freshman When all three brothers are back home in the summer, they don't have much time to talk seriously about football. But they said they like to kid each other about who will have the best season the next fall. Long hours of farm work and playing on the family softball team take up much of their time in the summer. Tennis Team Will Host OU The University of Kansas tennis team returns to its home courts this weekend for its biggest challenge of the season. The Hawks will face champion Oklahoma in a dual match at 10:30 am, Saturday. Before the 'Hawks face the Sooners, the team will host the Air Force Academy today at 2 p.m. UB defeated the Air Force, 7-2, at the Rocky Mountain Invitational Tournament earlier in the spring. KU and Oklahoma will enter the match Saturday fighting for the league lead along with Oklahoma State. The Hawks are 5-1 in the Big Ten, but the Nets can match with an umblemished mark against conference opponents. "The match should be a very close one, and the winner will have a chance to win," said tournament," coach Mike Howard said yesterday." "But there is no doubt the league championship will be determined at the Big Eight meet." Although KU dropped close matches to No. 16 ranked Southern Illinois (5-4) and No. 8 ranked Tennessee (6-3) in last week's play, Joey Hawkins continued to turn in outstanding individual performances. "Consistency has been a major factor in our success," Howard said. "Bill Tompkins, Steve Vann and Paul Waltz have all been extremely consistent in their play. Everyone seems to be putting their game together. This makes us strong throughout the lineup." K-State Final Track Foe In Championship Tune-up a preview of the battle for the Big Eight track championship will take place Saturday at Memorial Stadium when the North Carolina State face each other in a dual meet. The dual meet will be the last for KU before the conference championship May 17-18 at Nebraska, KU and KState are the winners of the championship at the Bue Eight meet. "I don't think there is any sense in playing it down," KU coach Bob Timmons said yesterday. "Kansas State is an excellent team with outstanding balance. Our team is well built and has a strong wall. I know we re excited and looking forward to it and I'm sure K-Sate is too." Baseball Team Travels to NU The University of Kansas baseball team travels to Nebraska today to face the lastplace Cornhaskers in a weekend series. A schedule is scheduled for today and a suture Saturday. Rob Allander, Roger Slagle and Kurt Hawkes were expected to handle the pitching for the Hawks. KU is 14-20 overall and 5-10 in the league, but according to KU coach Floyd Temple the series against Nebraska could be exerted on by his Hawks who are only a game out of fifth place. The Jayhawks will return home Tuesday for a doubleheader with Baker University. According to Timmons, the KU entry list for Saturday has been termed "tentative" because of the condition of Mark Lutz. Latz will muscle last weekend at the Drake Relays. 5c Pop Is Back! Meade Hall presents . . . DEUVINGER Lawrence's own western melodrama Friday, May 3 8:15 p.m. 10:15 p.m. Adults $1.50 Kids 75' FREE POPCORN JENKINS UPSTAIRS BACKDOOR THEATRE 926½ Mills ★ 1.20/case for flavor of the month $ ^{ \star } $2.00/case for all other 10 oz. bottles ★Buy 5 cases and get one case free Private baths—Fully equipped darkroom—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 LUBER GIFT SHOP Says Don't Forget MOTHER'S GIFT We Have a Wide Selection of Beauti- ful Mother's Day Gifts! WE WRAP FOR MAILING Luber GIFT SHOP 834-5160 924 Mass. The POP DOCK at the Mini Plaza 19th & Haskell 10-8 Mon.-Thur. 10-10 Fri. & Sat. ... into our heated pool! Take the Plunge .. a jumping boy above the railing Come join us at Naismith Hall The Staff of CROSS REFERENCE You Are Invited To Our OPEN HOUSE Saturday, May 4, 1974 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. CROSS REFERENCE Malls Shopping Center 913-842-1553 invites you to celebrate with us the opening of our new larger store on the west side of the Malls Shopping Center. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence free state opera house 642 mass lawrence CANCELED MUD CLOSED FRIDAY CEEK FRIDAY JULY 3 9-midnight $1.50 at the door Brought to you by The MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. @ JOOO TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Sanchos Get 1 SANCHO FREE! Good Every Day Except Wednesday Offer Expires May 31 9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd 1974-Year of the Taco FREE RENTAL SERVICE FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE LISTINGS ON HOUSING AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE 842-2500 LAWRENCE RENTALS EXCHANGE CALL LREx McDonald's Once there was a McDonald's restaurant in a neighborhood just like yours. One day the McDonald's owner looked around and thought how nice it would be to have more flowers growing here and there. They looked so pretty and smelled so good that he wanted all his neighbors to have flowers tool. So, now you can go into your neighborhood McDonald's and get a free packet of approximately 100 Marigold seeds with any sandwich purchase. That's over 60 million new flowers we can have growing in our community. Something Nice for the Heart of America Something Nice for the Heart of America Watch the want ads in the Kansan 10 Friday, May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan Student Taught Meditation, Says It Helped Prisoners By ALAN MANSAGER Kansas Staff Reporter mud over matter" could be the panacea for the lilies that confront our nation's penal system. "Transcendental Meditation may be a technique which, for some inmates, is a way to turn them around." David Ballou, Lexington, Mass., graduate student and teacher of Transcendental Meditation (TM), said yesterday. Ballion is working on his doctoral thesis in social anthropology and spent a year in Minnesota's Stillwater State Prison for nearly a year to study the effects on their rehabilitation efforts. "Prison correction is a tremendous problem," be said. "Nothing seems to be valuable in stopping former inmates from crimes after they've been released." He said a lot of rehabilitation techniques had been tried but none had been really successful. *EARLY PAROLE, vocational and cultural education, job training, nothing seems to work*. *Ballou said.* "Severely per piece present in prison have been there before." He said in a study done in a California prison, inmates involved in group therapy actually caused an increase in disciplinary problems. But, according to Ballon, after the use of TM in Sililwater Prison, the results were *Two-thirds of those inmates who mediated had a marked decrease in disciplinary write-ups and they started committing less infractions of disciplinary Ballou was first introduced to TM, as taught by Maharishi Masyogi Wey, in 1968. He learned the technique and taught it for a few months before going to Stillwater. THE STUDY ON TM was presented to 75 inmates, he said, of which 50 wanted to participate. All inmates came from the D block, an area of the prison for inmates with special problems, such as drug use, alcoholism and emotional difficulties. It was administered to a racially representative group whose ages ranged from 20 to 60. Balloon he started the program with a two-week initiation period, followed by TM itself. He ended with a follow-up program to insure that all participants were progressing satisfactorily. He was the sole administrator of the program. The Stillwater program to investigate the effects of TM on prisoners was one of the first in the United States. The research was sponsored by the International Meditation Society and funded by Harvard Medical School. Harvard was one of the first institutions to study aspects of TM on inmates. Bailou said, He said that physiological changes in the prisoners were noted. "There is a connection between mental and physiological processes," he said. "If you fall asleep, your metabolism slows down. If you become angry, it speeds up." THE PRACTICE OF the technique produces significant physiological changes. FILMS SUA FILM Popular Films SUA FILMS SUA FILMS Popular Films Travels with my Aunt Friday, May 3 7:00-9:30 Saturday, May 4 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 75c Kansas Union Special Films MARJOE Monday, May 6 7:30 75c Kansas union Popular Films Travels with my Aunt Friday, May 3 7:00-9:30 Saturday, May 4 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 75c Kansas Un drops 18 to 20 per cent, and in normal sleep it drowses only from six to 10 per cent." Balloon and other changes show there is a 50 per cent drop in blood lactates, signifying the need for more frequent testing. Relaxation is achieved strictly by using the mind in TM, according to Ballou. READINGS "TM is a technique for refining all mental activity without having to lose consciousness," he said. He defined consciousness as the act of being aware of Handwriting Analysis and Cards Will Answer Any Questions on All Matters of Life. "Although we have a concept of consciousness," he said, "we don't really know." There are three states of consciousness, he said, waking, sleeping and dreaming to which TM introduces a fourth state of consciousness in terms of body metabolism and brainwaves. "IN MEDITATION, the brainwave pattern shows the mind isn't asleep," Ballou said. "It still gives off alpha and theta waves." Stop In Today. Call 843-5899 2246 Ohio—Corner of 23rd St. Lawrence He said that thought processes actually become less active under TM, and become more passive. "TM involves no effort, concentration, contemplation, control of the mind or physical exercise." Ballou said. "Nor does it involve unrestored posture or change in diet or lifestyle." But he said that doesn't mean the brain is sleeping. He added that TM isn't a philosophy or way of life nor is it hyposis, parapsychology analyses or encounter group therapy. He said that instruction must be personal, but that a person doesn't necessarily have to believe in the technique to make it work. "We've taught a lot of skepedics," he said. He said that after TM therapy, drug use dropped off dramatically because, 'feelings from meditation are much more like those which result from drugs.' BALLOU SAID it was difficult to contact paroles from the program, but that concerning 10 of them who were reached, the program seemed to be of value to them. one prisoner who participated in the program said, "All my life I have been hot- tempered, but lately my temper has been cool and calm." Another said TM increased his thinking and gave him a better understanding of HAPPY BABIES ... wanting to take care of each other ... in your own home purchased from RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES 2020 Iowa St. Lawrence, Kansas 843-8499 Open 7 days a week Balloon said there are 350,000 people in the United States who practice TM and 200 people on the Lawrence campus who have been trained to teach Students International Meditation Society. love is . . . Gentlemen's Quarters Creative Haircutting for Men and Women David Hinchman, chairman of International Meditation Society in Kansas City, Mo., said that prisoners in Lansing and Indianapolis were taken to the jail but that processors wouldn't start there. T. M. Srinivasan 843-2719 for appt. W. 9th St. Center "Salutations at the lotus feet of Pure Love By the Grace of Guru Mabaraj Ji a Satsong discourse will be given by his chosen disciple, MAHATMA GURU CHARNANAND JI 7:30 Friday night Forum Room Kansas Union He said there might be a program set up to help the police department there could find the funds to keep the police academy in existence. He said he wanted to set up a TM program for it. 'THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT has beard of the effects of TM and wants to try SWING DOWN TO SANDY'S NEW Deluxe Sandee SWING DOWN TO SANDY'S NEW Deluxe Sandee 1/4 pound chopped beefsteak Sandy's lovers start here Sesame bun Melted Cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Not just meat, but chopped beefsteak Sandy's 2120 W. 9th Across from Hillcrest Sandy's PUTS THE FUN INTO EATING OUT Sandee lovers start here Sesame bun Melted cheese Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beefsteak Sandy's 2120 W. 9th Across from Hillcrest quickly, he said. Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair George's Shop to do something using it as an effective way to eliminate stress," Hincman said. Policemen are subject to great stress and pressure, and the physicality to react and to think more Smoking Is Our Only Business Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St. O Ballou said TM could also help students. "You improve academically and students get better grades as their LQ, increases after practicing meditation," he said. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence MUSEUM GIFT SHOP - Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry - Books, Gifts - Stained Glass 1-5 Sun. Open 8-5 1-5 Mon.-Sat. Sun. Museum of Natural History Dyche Hall presents QUITTIN TIME TUESDAY, MAY 7 9-midnight FREE BEER, LOVE, LUST and SIN once Inside the door Q $2.00 admission Q Brought to you by the MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. --- S. U.A. Fine Arts & University Friends of Art Present Kenneth Clark's CIVILISATION THE FALLACIES OF HOPE MAY 5 The dreams of the Eighteenth Century were blasted by the betrayals of the Nineteenth. When Beethoven heard that Napoleon had declared himself Emperor, the great composer had to forcibly be restrained from destroying his kingdom, which he had intended to deceive him. The city, Cezanne, Varg, Gogou, and Guigau turned to Impressionism, beauty without either form of substance, as of light striking water. Woodruff Auditorium 7:00 p.m. EMANCIDATION: FOR STUDENTS, CYCLISTS, HIKERS, AND FOOTBOUND URBANITES Carries everything you need to get through the day or overnight comfortably double shoulder, covered, cushioned, easy padding, durable shoulder leather "crompton and 'toe one'" lie-on patches allow space to carry using extra back cover even when jumping or ascending mini-fixed double contour or fruit-grain leather (optional) bottom extra leather patches for extremity bolling dums, slings, bag on the Standing Torners adjustable non-slip foam during heavy exercise honey "hanging" loop low-crusted cotton body (sandproof and layer tough!) This teardrop shaped day pack is the roomiest of them all. One large compartment enables you to carry anything from books to bulky clothing. And there's an extra pocket for small things that have to be found quickly. Completely reinforced and guaranteed against defects in workmanship or material. Only 26 ounces and a full 898 cu. inches in volume. The weight of the cordura bottom (23%) or fine grained leather bottom (27%) postpaid. (Sorry, no C.O.D.s) ASPEN MOUNTAINEERING'S '74 SUMMER CATALOG BROADWAY TO THE CITY 1000 WEST 3RD STREET NEW YORK, NY 10024 75A With 30 pages of Free-Style Ling Accessories including sleeping bags jacket and everything else you want for out-living this summer. [O]NIT ASPEN COUNTY INDUSTRIAL HOLDING L.P.O. P.O. Box 2329, Aspen, Colo. 81611 Day Packs @ CATALOGS @ 75¢ (Deductible from 1st catalog order) Enclosed is my check or money order and plus 30% sales tax COLORS □ BLUE BOTTOM □ CORUDA □ GREEN LEATHER Send to: CITY STATE ZIP WILL NOT ACCEPT COLOR SUBSTITUTE I WILL ☑ WILL NOT ☑ ACCEPT COLOR SUBSTITUTE University Daily Kansan Friday, May 3, 1974 KANSAN WANT ADS 11 One Day 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three Days 25 words or fewer: $2.00 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Five Days 25 words or fewer : $2.50 each additional word : $.03 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Rannan are offered to all students without regard to their background. ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT HALL FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1) If you use them, you them at an advantage 2) If you don't use them, you at a disadvantage adventuring Ethiopia comes to the same thing—"New Atlanta of Western Towns, Available to Travelers." Rx Audio. 15 E. W. 8th. Phone #42-3047. Hours available for any声病程. Call: 610-343-2991, Quality standard & electric reconditioned type- wear machines: 841-7032, 841-7035. We cater whatever other repairs. CANDLHEE TOWNHOUSES For Sale. New floor plants, 2 and 3 bedroom units under condominiums ready now. Poole electric house, we cater for maintenance provided. Olivia, our new residence maintains provision. 654-2544 or 654-2545. 827-3241 SCUBA EQUIPMENT - Spring Shipment, Signal-Tank, 3491 802-7655 3491 $329.00 Equipmt $1,495.00 Equipment $200.00 Equipmt $1,495.00 Equipment FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at reasonable price. Fruits are used in crafts and are used in furniture, collectibles, gift cards, jewelry, etc. COUNTRY SHOP 707 N. and 3 bins, north of KA BAY Bridge, open 10 a.m.-seven o'clock, day of the week. REGISTERED BLOODHOUND PUPPIES. MISS REGISTERED BLOODHOUND PUPPIES. MISS healthy puppies. Take orders now. Call 822- 564-9730. For Sale 1973 Ford Maverick 2 pnd. 6 cyl. a new condition, 1963 Triumph Truck racing bucket excellent, condition Contact Cliff Wallace 350-864-8777 www.cliffwallace.com Louisiana State State Bank, 9th Court, Killeen-5-3 For Sale - 1971 Honda 350. 350 miles - 1500 miles For Sale - 2006 Honda 400. 1500 miles Between 5 and 10 mph. Ask for JK 350 Between 5 and 10 mph. Ask for JK 350 WHITE, ELEPHANT I - T-SHIRTS - $25 Famous sportswear brand with a focus on dress and sleep. Hurry while supplies last. Described to be a class of the T-shirt season! Available only on Monday through Friday, 10am-5pm, Sat and Sun. New Hampshire - May 15, 195. Sat and Sun. New LPs): Vera Reys received Sounds 12 WB, 12 WM, 12 WT. Vera Reys received Sounds 12 WB, 12 WM, 12 WT. These are new and unabsorbed & unwrapped. These are new and unabsorbed & unwrapped. BALF canaries 200, off band Driftwood, 100, off band Driftwood, May 14 th Thr. Vehicle; Jviana 117 K (189). 1923. Honda CB-350-B in good running condition. Runs on 16-volt, 4-watt battery and last reasonable offer on both battery. 846-6630 Buy Sale - 1972 BSA Victory V400. Only 320,000 units. Great on or off the road. Call Steve at 843-925-6828. Or visit www.bsa.com. 1967 VW. Excellent condition. Leaving the U.S. $550. Call 842-283-283. WANT YOUR OWN HORTICULTURE EXPERIENCE? Look at our 12 x 6 ft OR 18 ft HRH home layout. Come look at our 12 x 6 ft OR 18 ft HRH home layout. Locate a room for vegetable garden. Extra include of Guitar-Electric Socket Harmony Hollow Body Guitar Sunburst Fender, Hard Shell Couch Body Guitar Sunburst Fender SALE! The first sale of Previously owned LP $1 April 29th to May 4th. Priced 19c to $1.60 Must sell me, need the cash! 1972 Triumph B429 must meet your excellent condition Call 852- 6279, or add for $A. For sale. 73 WV Beetle, 15,000 km, still under warranty. One owner. Radio. Excellent condition. Ships free. For Sale-Leasing. must sell well cared for 10 x 10 Ski Dart. Craft mobile home. 2 bedroom home throughout. Excellent buy for a couple tired of storage. stored 800 sq ft. storage shed. 3000 coworking. LOW CRAWFORD. 1043-83191 after 6 Brabight Supper Center 521 tabling, tilting, half-opening, 4'8" wide. Use for display on leather mat. New front tire John at #93-8250 and back tire John at #93-8260. We do not tip off college students. We have terrarium plants, vegetable plants, unmanual plants at fair price and our Birth Day gifts Maile Leah at 12pm. Our Greenhouse, Lale-Shore, 3 bikki, eaft of Tee Fee, Land-$5 For Sale. S&P Tekamax 20mm LAF camera lens for Sale. S&P Tekamax 20mm LAF camera lens designed for fast handheld photography in excellent quality and performance. (Call 800-749-5631) For Sale Kitchen table and 4 chairs, end table. Kitchen table and 4 chairs, end table. Friday May 3, 6 p.m. or call 842-812-9589 For Sale-Work TV, Admiral 23 inch color coat- work. Works $75. Jerry. 812-527-328. 5-3 PFB-140 Wide Body Pull. Fiberglass. Price cut. Hawkeye Hopback (839) 659-7299. Max Parking for parking house. Fax (839) 659-7299. A new ATM 15 Steel Belted Whitewall tire cut to measurements (45" x 23") for free installation at Ray Stone Backdrop. 692 Mips. Final Clearout! All remaining Magnavore & MotoRolla Components at 50% off list! Last chance on floor samples! Just in time for Thursday night! Stoneback's set now $0.00 $299.99 quad set now $150.7- Graduating—Must sell my 13442 mobile home. Fully insured, 5 yr old. Raising living room with shag carpetting & best ceiling, oiling, with large porch, hurricane tie-up. Available. Payment. Available June 7-483 1449 at payoff. For Sale, 52' x 26' race style bike bought in 1993. 400cc. 12s. 28-100. Will throw in extra inner tube. Good deal. CRESCENT APARTMENTS Gaslight Rental Office 1815 W. 24TH - Oaks - Acorn 1 and 2 BEDROOMS For sale - 1970 BULTACO Mercureo Roadster- for sale lightly, easily maintained with full leather trim. Bike. 10 speed 1627. Betuhoeight highlight. Green Blue. 36 speed 5472. Betuhoeight medium. Green Blue. 64-3110 and ask for Mar. 84-3111 for Mar. 84-3111 and ask for Mar. 84-3111 for Mar. Bailish Sugar Course Reynolds 231 tasting, Shimla. Tickets available at Bailish Sugar course and New York Trout course at 842-9450. Give your girl a bit of spring all her own with this beautiful jacket. The Hodge Dodge, 15 W 9-7 S-7 FOR SALE - 1968 VW, real crayery shape, call for 8.534-9603 5-7 FOR SALE - quality, used mobile home, 60 x 12 x 2 mold, must sell, best offer, 834-1624 *** Flat Sale> Arrmstrong, Open-Hole, Burling Billet. Flat the condition. Call 842-639 or fax 842-639. **FROSTED WATER LINES** Leaving town will must sell them 10 speed Florin®, 846-9522 (no answer, if no), 842-7503, 846- 8922 (no answer). Camera surfl. fortf, by: Pentex Body, 200 mm, Vivit lens, 28 mm. Vivit Wide-angle, 50 mm. Mimixy+Solar lens, Gossei Solar Light-Meter. ±67% ±17%. If used, Call Dave. B42- 9159 - 9159 Self-Harmony 6-String and case, xox owl eye Solo Harmony 6-String and case, xox owl eye and aluminum intake. Details: 61541200 after 30 years. (Call 800-762-7777) For Sale 1966 Chicago Sports Vans, rebuilt 6 cyl- form engines, high-performance engine, vario- ble chrome wheels, wide tire kit, 424-840-6200 and accessories. Beautiful Sealipint Stimew kitten: 8 weeks old I, mame, I look. Call me Call! Call me Call! Roxy Rexy Rexy Rexy BACKPACK TEST S7 N7 Nelson 1 year old, want for $250 new will for $25 Call Don at 864-244-294 new will for $25 Call Don at 864-244-294 FOR SALE-1971 VW. Excellent condition, new climate, clean, runnng, rug. 60k-100k after refinishing. more IC-1500 Crew Air Amps. Customer left desk with IC-1500 Crew Air Amps, IC-1500-911. No Auto Systems. IC-891-910. No Auto Systems. For Salch 1= yr. old Suzuki T25 125, 2600 km For Kawasaki 1= new heeld and many other Kawasaki D4-8023 For Sale - Unibuy bass guitar Excellent condi- tion. FM train in good shape $896-847-$177. FM train in good shape $300-250-$177. PINDALL MACHINE Big Chief, formally named Ripley, was ripped for free by a Great for Greek house $160 and $135. SAILHOAR-Doors-Scars Fleetwood, 12' large, luggage area on or after Sunday Mid-Week (8-24-21) - 824-9211 or bridgePhone Cycls. Runs need needs work and calls for a bridge phone. Call for offer and leave phone number. Call Dave 621-458-3700. Foy Sale. Hastilah Ootlaskanih 16-18, FETVY P3-P25 - Royal Safara Taperweight Best offer 48. P3-P25 - Royal Safara Taperweight Best offer 48. Put Ball-2. Two-Track. got micro-Zimuth 20°. Cover everything in perfect condition. Music will cover. Everything in perfect condition. Music will cover. For Sale $195.69 Fall Spider 862 excellent running condition. Call 843-662-7662 keep trying Porch 4, Sale-Lewning. Sale 5, Saturday, April 4, 1984 from 9 am to 7 pm, holding 39 patients on the second floor. OR SALE. Dual 212 turntable with Shure 6921 cartridge (list $180) **180-Watt Receiver** with Shure XLR, Shure RXL, Shure WS1 $60) $60 pr. Ward's AM-FM-3 Trek sound compact with speaker $80 Alien Mother, $42) $42 pr. Shure XLR FOR SALE, TV 21', B/W, RCA console, $50. Dishwasher/Stove/Basin. Seau, $11; dishwasher/stove/basin, $11. Beige, matheyage sod-bak, $60; matheyage sod-bak, $60. Beige, mahayeage sod-bak, $60; refrigerafter, $9. Refrigerator, $50; Olive carpet, x 10, $10; x 40, x 40. FOR RENT FOR BENT to male or female student. Nice scholarship available for Bent's. F/Y block from University. Parking and utilities paid. FOR BENT - A new 3 bedroom apartment with balcony, carpeted living room, garage, NEAR WEST END, carport, storage. NEAR WEST END. TRAILRIDGE by the country club, wall to wall carpeting, from door parking, walk-in spaces in the bachelor's bachelor's room, each 4 units; blue ceiling; 1.5 and 2 bedroom space; 1.5 and 2 bedroom space; 84th Street - 84th Street - 843-7333 MADBROOKWOOD, APARTMENTS. Great Variety. Historic town center of Madbrookwood. planned community near KU from $140; T to $275; condos and townhouses. HILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1723-1745 West 4th Street, Suite 100, Suite 98, 10th floor apartments from $195 and up. Air conditioning, carousel, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry room, free parking in Appt. 3. Bell 842-1652. tel.: (212) 262-1100. GATHEUSE APEMARTMENTS. KU host service available on request. Call 805-713-4211 or by appt 110 W. 26th St. at 8 am & 9 pm, or by appt 110 W. 26th St. at 11am. TWOG EHDROM APAINTMENTS -1320 room/house TWOG Outhouse daily 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Room 641-2009 Room 541-2010 Furnished 1-5 room apartments $60-$100. Also, for summer and fall 84-90, 84-95, 84-97. www.brownbrook.com Available May 18th. Very nice 2 bedroom Fourplex—Polly崭储, carpet,卫衣, garbage disposal, central air. Unfurnished—Located at 11th & Olive Convenience to KU downstream. Call 642-3128. Summer Rentals--Summer Rates. Renting largest apts, for lowest summer rates, rent to the largest apt or ending August 15. Usedom furnished as low as $95 a month and includes all utilities, AC pool, balconies on the first floor, pay Rooms—furnished, clean and quiet, for males and females. Bathrooms—Bordered. Room No. No pets. No keys. 845-707-671 RENTAL HOUSING for apts. duplexes and house, call 842-710 or 842-8453. tt Apis-Clean, quiet, furnished 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. No pet. Beds IDS and room towers. 833-947-3665. Need a place to stay this summer? The air-contributed Suitna House is renting rooms for $249 per person. Two month lease, $75 a month. CLOSE to campgrounds. 1-24 person per room. Call Mr. Camli. M-6 Now **BRUNTING** for summer and fall large groups. New **BRUNTING** for summer and fall large groups. Up to 4 or 3 for 4-9 players. Will hold for up to 15 players. For summer rent 6 room kit. water pad. 12 block north of Crownview 840-752-6399. Call Deb at 848-752-6399. Call Deb at 848-752-6399. AVAILABLE JUNK lst 1 BR ABP with slightly reduced rent for managed dudger (grazed) grassland. (800) 742-6539 Typewriters for rent. Call 841-4083. Subliming for summer. Furnished 2 bedroom apt. (815) 394-0726. Available May 15th. Bedroom 815-394- 815 or 815-394-1111. Two aps for rent-Available June 1—close for rent-addressing PCAC – 2 bedroom BG 9405 W. 67th St. felix camera Duplex for rent, 2 cell. Available May 20 $155 included until. Phone 842-6092 after 5:55 Two bedrooms. $75/month, utilities paid. Call 842-5- 8207 F Take advantage of summer rent. 2 BR apt. on campus, within a 50-minute garden area, avail mid-May; 81-347 or 81-362. Permitted Apt. for rent at 19th W 14th, 1 bbm: 631 Fifth Ave, Availability XA 801 Calif. Call: 843-6448 STADIUM APTS - New-leading for the one year rentals $145 includes two bedrooms. Two bedroom furniture w/ wi-fi access, swimming pool-family facilities-parked parking Apts at 1125 Iowa 29 or call 843-216-8286. 2 hour BJR apt to submit immediately behind their desk. BJR admits 8 p.m. or 9:34 a.m. 4631 after 7 p.m. or 9:54-10:04 during day 47 Sib-side care for amniotic Formlated 2 bernat amni- cation, for amniotic Formlated 2 bernat amni- cation, for amniotic Formlated 2 bernat amni- cation, for amniotic Formlated 2 bernat amni- cation, bills paid -Cellular 5/10/14 5-0 5/15/14 5-0 BR Aprs w/淋浴, bath, HR Off-street parking B Raptors w/2-car garage, HR Off-street parking 1900 K9, 842-8760, 5-7 3-7 For Best-PROFESSOR HOUSE May 24-Aug. 8, 2017 at 10 a.m. Best-period porch, 2-car garage $200/month Balcony, 3-car garage $200/month Sublease for summer. Apt. corner of 14th and Tenn. $75 month. Call 841-2796. 5-7 Room available for summer session beginning from 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM, with student labs (IDS) and Term. Call 642-7208-57- 4 Rent for Summer school only. Entire second floor furnished 4 bedroom kit, for 0/7 girls 4 June to Aug. 1. Cleap to campus and 9th St & town 5th St. Utilities paid. Phone 813-282-1558. 5 pm. Must rent for summer, two bedrooms apart- ment in a quiet neighborhood with 25+ plus utilities. Call 861-1950 or 861-1256 for details. Summer Subset (May 15-Aug. 1) $10/mo. & utilities. 1 BR furnished onl. second floor; pool area, pool condition; disposal off-west side; balcony. Height: Office Height: 82-648 or 844-611. S. Harkness. ALPA, KONICA, LEICA, PENTAX, CANNON, CAMERAS, LENSES, and ACCESSORIES. For men - 2 rooms - studio agt. All AC cared, wetness care, laundry, hair & beauty, wkts. Seniors / or adults 845-7827 Sub-lease 2 bedroom, air conditioned duplex for rent in the Upper West Side, carpet, carport. Quaint neighborhood. **If** you have questions, call: (212) 641-9500. For Rent: 1 bibra, Apr. for summer. Very near campus. Kitchen. $190/mo. 5-6 Meadowbrook Apartments - Great Variety. Swimming pool, tennis court, large community kitchen. Complimentary room at KU. For $1400, TICKETS AVAILABLE AT www.meadowbrookapartment.com Faculty members wish to sub-lease duplex member for summer. Call 842-1728 5-7 WANTED store Large two bedroom house, 4 blocks east of emu- sion. 882-8726, 881-9044 3-7 Now loading for full semester, rates for June & July are based on evertings of 105 Mississippi and at zx5 843-1011. WANTED: Persons to live in a beautiful mansion for the summer. The air conditioned Sigma Nu building is attractive surroundings. Close to campus and several benefits, $5 per month. Mail to: M-64-6 AGFA-ILFORD Papers & Lawrence Rep. -842.5328 2317 Independence Blvd. Kansas City, KS Graduate couple with writer who wants to earn $300K annually. Must have Bachelor's degree in Marketing or Business plus $250 per month, lived on permanent basis. Send resumes to HR@mycompany.com. Faculty member needs to rent VW camper or bus. May 10, 15 - 85346 - 8400 - 84384 - 5 Two female roommates to live in 2-bedroom house. Tuesday, May 15 at 12:30pm. Call Am; 842-327-9474 Call Ann; 842-327-9474 NOGAMATE WANTED to share two bedrooms IN A FULLY FURNISHED MASTER BEDROOM. Only $16 a month; full built. Make an offer. Call 312-544-7200. 1 need 2 or 3 people to charge a 4 bedroom house 2 need 2 or 3 people to charge a 5 bedroom house 4 need 6-8 people to charge a 7 bedroom house 6 need 6-8 people to charge a 7 bedroom house 8 need 6-8 people to charge a 7 bedroom house Wanted Looking for female roommate or room- mate to move into your place Calibra at Dale 6837 Wanted: Student teacher needs female roommates for fall semester only. Call 842-6830. 5-3 Poppy-5 days old. bland combination Lab/3 months old. all shot leaving area, good home setting. Female Roommate Wanted - Share my three bed- room rooms with me (309) 864-3624 or (860) 369-8642 Boondance for summer *Mallk Olde Eng- le* room. Wanted 1/2 electric Plenty of room. Call 434-0799. once a male roommate to share a nice 2 bathroom in Southwest Tokaua. You pay $90 and rent. We offer private bathrooms for $300 per month. Need female roommate for full semester to share beautiful, furnished apartment with me. We would have your own bedroom and bath. Your half is also available. Must be friendly. Call 842-502-3777. 5-7 Need one female resume. Summae of number or number of females in the class ($25 each). Available May 15, Brees- son Hall. Female roommates to share an apartment at Jay's, 101 W. 24th St. (3rd floor), 918-756-7500, per month ($100). Call Marie or Karen at karen@jay.com. Rimounted wives wanted in Jackson County. Children moved into home. Calling at 843-2059 after 6 p.m. Female roommate wanted. Will move into your sit or can locate one together 841-6038, Marsha Seeking *l* or 2 persons to share expenses on small U-Hauil van in exchange for transportation of year round possessions to Mnemosky, Rh. May 19, 1944. Phil Wagner, 12-6 Uairpats up rear. Need one friendly female to share our home for many weeks. Visit our office at 185 W. Atlantic Avenue, close to campus in low rent houses. Would like to borrow cassette tape of Dr. Boeh The Medicine Show on KUBL? We do! book us! Wanted. Roommate to share large, bely 3 hrs. Large room, private bathrooms, plus utilities. Prefer grad. student. Call after 6:30 a.m. Female roommate needed to large house with working girl. Call 642-8915 Non-Pet W/ Fee Watched two-male roommates for summer. Call Bob or John at 842-8262. Apartment ready call. Wanted immediately! Professionally keyboard writes to various PCs. Requires good con- struction to successful BACK, HOWE and other systems. Must have 5+ yrs of experience. I would like a roommate to share 2 bedroom apts for summer. Female or male, except that Daughter of the same parent. Wanted: one female roommate for fall assistant positions. Senior, Junior or higher preferred Call Cabbie. NOTICE TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3 day service. South- Port Manuka, QLD. A private cheek and watcher service and cleaned. Electronics repair and repair of repair specialities. River City Plumbing. MlH Vermont. *866-724-2911*. 415 Michigan St. Bar-Hi-Quar. We have open pit barbecue—we only use wood. We have rib slabs, aluminum planks, or brushed by the pound. Halite-chickens, plate. Eat it if we take it out. Guest. Eat it in its place. 820-310-7010 LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION, Inc., "Weekly meeting," 7 p.m. on Monday, May 6 Union; office 12 B University, Box 234, Lawrence Rape 642-5787 - 861-3506 for referral; Socialism 642-5787 GO WHERE THE CROWDS DON'T KNOW. Year ago, I was the founder of Biking Russia, England, Africa, South Asia, or where I went to college. I biked: Eat better than CHEAPER. Go further than biking. Eat better than CHEAPER. Go further than biking by yourself. Trail Blazers: TOLL FREE. 800-232- 9176. LOST OUR LEASE--our loss--your gain--SAVE- 100%-50% off our regular low price, $3,600 to $2,499. Call us at (877) 645-1111 or our building by July 1, 1974. HURRY! Open am to, a p.m. BUZZY'S BOOK EXCHANGE. Call (877) 645-1111. **RECYCLE IT ALL!** Everything from your watch, to your auto, and the clothes on your car, are reconditioned. B&K Repair, NAPA Auto Parts, and Bakken Flashback Attire offer the finest services and reconditioned items. We are the last, best, NAPA Auto Parts. #83-9565, Bokken Cloths. #84-908, and RE Repair. #84-1003. #81-919 or visit www.bakken.com. If You're Planning on FLYING. I buy and sell new and used Volvokwane Bank 464-20335 (with approved credit) CIRCLE 464-20335 FREE RENTAL SERVICE Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. Let Maupintour Do The LEGWORK For You!! (NEVER an extra cost for Airline tickets!) RQx SUA / Maupintour travel service PHONE 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass. Quitting Business, Save an all educational degree in one of our top colleges and begin your career at time the university's doors open. Join the university as a time-tested, Buck's Brand Student. Two areas of beautiful grass lawn, tenure courts, and two large guest rooms. BBQ grill on patio. No it’s a private room This multiplexed reason is by definition, here item 3165 refers to the multiplication of two elements. HONOZINGI ROG, WANG, WEI and WU have written: HONOZINGI ROG, WANG, WEI and WU (2004) *HONOZINGI ROG*, WANG, WEI and WU (2004). C A L L. book cover, May 18th, 1943. Reprints older addresses in the book. $25 for all and a deductible receipt for 30 pick-up days or a late payoff fee. Hoodie Pods—has your head in mind. All pieces, teed-up coats, and all parachute skirts off 15' of space. McQuillan, Pn-School now enrolling children Agt. 2) The other information call me: Agt. 3) You're my friend. FREE REER CANS! Over 1000 MIChelbite canals available and hard available May 14. Call 842-282-9820 Generous Reward! For information leading to its success, please contact: Rolf Bertschi, rbf@bertschi.com, Ralf off-side site, srite. April 20, 2015 (9am-5pm) www.bertschi.com FREE* 100 GIFT CERTIFICATES* worth over $100 to the recipient *QUALITY HOMES INFLATION FIGHTER SALE*. Come out and see the newest selection of quality homes. Meet Mecta, our dedicated staff member for all.* Free long stained carpets to females 843-8127 to KLWN for details. 5-3 HELP WANTED Help wanted: Student for light house work and work in summer. To begin in summer, B14-8279-4799 ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR of Community Protection in the District. Included full-time job from August 19 to March 30, full-time beginning about August 19. Permanent position Full-time salary range $45,000-$75,000 per year. Minimum hours. Admit ability (experience required) experience in community affairs destruive. Submit resume by April 26. Kansas Union, Lawrence, KS. 6041 Questions. Kansas Union, Lawrence, KS. 6041 Questions. Part time number jobs available Pay starts at 30% of the Lewiston Public Library Auditorium rate. Laytonen Public Library Auditorium rate. Business Services Associates want ambitions people for the summer or permanently. You can apply to any position offered by our new service interview Tuesday only at the Holiday Inn Call N Late after 10 a.m. SECRETARY WITH typing skills for Interfaithmentary work part work part time beginning May 6 & May 12. Permanent position, Flexible hours/Admits to fraternity Council 1938 Kansas Union, Law School, University of Kansas. STUDENTS. Full-time work, available in the Housing Maintenance Dept. General Lab and skill maintenance beginning May 15-Aug. 31, 2020. Contact Larry Jantz, 202-746-College Hall Student position available at Student Health Institute, 175 W. 16th St., May 19th Mk 4a, Office Title: Orderly Services $1290 (up to) changing from 11 p.m.-7am, either on Fri or Sat, or Sunday morning. Position (including break periods) Contact Mr. Cook and Women of all races are encouraged to apply. We are an equal opportunity employer. Employment Opportunities **STUDENTS:** -Summer employment Projectors who desire summer work as security mappings in the office, or who desire to work in the office or in the traffic violations includes; have car or truck 700 ft. Building 1015 Grand, K.C.M. 700 ft. Building 1015 Grand, K.C.M. MARKETING TRAINEE - Food Call on retailers with brand product name. Will train sales oriented person (car + exp) Fee paid by MARKETING TRAINER, 10th Street K.C. M.O., 842-382-8900. ACCOUNTANT - Train for superiority position Assist with various duties in: £30,000. For aid by employee: Fountain Square, Inc. MARKETING - Pharmaceuticals Call on medical profession for top national firm. Want degree and aggressive personality $6500 + car + exp (Top National firm, USA) G.C., K. Moor, 810-846-3853-3-5 Wouldn't you rather work in paradise this summer? Or could you stay in Hawaii, charge housing, transportation, and fun in Hawaii for five weeks? Or pay $2 to Hawaii Summer Days 10, 16, 37, Kalaua Suite 45, Honolulu. SUMMER IN WISCONSIN TYPING One of America's outstanding private boys camps located in northern Wisconsin offers a variety of openings on the staff for the 1974 season. Dates are June 8 & Aug. 12, fall 1975. For more information, round trip transportation, living quarters, boarding schools, laundry facilities and seasonal summer job. Consequently, only men of the high school age can be considered. For complete information, write D. C. Broadbread, 2863 Shannon Court, Northbrook, Ill. Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with penia type. Accurate and prompt typing. Send finished paper corrected. Pho: 840-8544. Mrs. Wright. Typing in my home. **IBM SILicate** Playa type Type into the keyboard. **IBM Silicate** Playa type Type into the keyboard. **Call Katie**, 414-256-2000. **Call Katie**, 414-256-2000. Experienced Typist—will do well, disertations, too many papers and miscellaneous typing. Call Pa- mph. *Pamph.* Will do lifting, neat fast and reasonable Term work. Must have excellent resumes and applies CALL 591-5971 Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841- 4980. Mwu. 5-7 Fast, accurate typed with typewriter. Proofread. Every word is checked. Mail to: cabelle@homestreet.com eastable. Call 843-869-5158 after 5 p.m. EXCELLENT and EXPERIENCED TYPIST at THREE REASONABLE RATES. Promptly and efficiently assigned assignments etc. Call Phyllis, 826-3651; or drop by 101 WELLS, Building 54, Building 61, or drop by 101 WELLS. SERVICES OFFERED RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to the back of a suitcase and lasting part of your life. ICBC Repair, NAPA Auto Service, and more. Our finest services and recouplished maintenance are available. Auto Parts: 943-8950. Booth Cleanup: 943-8956. RIVER CITY CITRY -415 Vermont. 841-6083 Stirees + watches - typewriter. Independent repair specialists - no retail hint. We服务 what repair replaces. Unimpaired resources. See #fifty. Auto Beauty: Avoid too charges, have it fixed Auto Beauty: Give auto cleaning a chance, have it done at your home or business SMALLISKOOI - Preschool ed in home atm- preschool. Call 434-6759 Call 434-6759 May Day—Me, a gift a $11! Straw flowers, jewelry, pillows, mix nix rocks. All at Hodge Paddle 15 W 99th CUSTOM JEWELRY Wedding sets, personal gifts, jewelry. 150+ styles. Mesh. BPA-free of stones and unglued metal. LOST Lost a gold woman's writetrace with stretch tape and helped the person who伤了她 414-802-5633 call 414-802-5633 LOST! our car Californie. Needed made, part wanted, to drive 10 miles from LA for 24 hours without him. You see him call me on the phone and say: *I'll go with you.* LOST - man's silver wedding hand with three diamond rings, between union rings and wedding band. Leave for Jumack at Union Into Booth by magazine sales along with name and how you can get in touch. Lost: Rev哭闹 about age 19 age inonge Lost: important. Please return if found *81-4281* or *81-5281*. LOST Two tabale cards, one has white paws and the other has black paws. Please contact Scott 1416 Trum and 845- 2017-3920. Leftof .- fr p. fir wire-crimped glasses probably outnow where new Putter. When found please call davis@sports.com FOUND Found—Mom's watch on leather band, found at Charleston Mon Mon, Apr 29 Bid #842-6447. Found: females Irish Scotts; 6 to 8 months old; 3 female Scottish Scotts; from 8 to 1,5 after 6 months old; from 8 to 1,5 after 6 months old. PERSONAL Safety arm lights only 90c at Ride On Bicycles. WANTED Gif from Garden City area interested in gardening. For more information Call Richard Cihailer RIDES ——— RIDERS Med tech student must commute from Lawrence and share experience with medical students at 842-800- or car pool. CAT at 842-800-. This Summer for the first time "The Wheel" Is Open Beginning June 5 Call or Come By J-F Deli or grill for lunch NEED FURNITURE FOR YOUR UNFURNISHED APT.? Furniture for one bedroom apartment starting at $2450 RENTAL at Johnson Furn. 722 Mass. 843-2448 Furniture for two bedroom apartment starting at $2950 Rent on a 9-month minimum basis, last month Free, or portion thereof. Semester Rental Available 12 Friday, May 3, 1974 University Daily Kansan Stores Differ on Pricing Term AAP Dillen's 4th Street Diller's Markethouses Street Dillen's Inez Street Falley's Krager's downtown Krager's 2nd Street Rusty's 2nd Street Rusty's Hickory Safety AVERAGE PRICE AVERAGE PRICE LAST WEEK AVERAGE PRICE ONE MONTH AGO Gravaol, Herland, plate, 18 oz. Cereal, Tahoe, corn, 12 oz. 99.37 11.04 10.54 Cork Fahrenheit, 12 oz. Ounce, milk, Corn Fahrenheit, 12 oz. Ounce, milk, Old Fashioned, 12 oz. Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Bread, whole, 10 oz. store brand Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Fleur, white, 3 lb.pkg Gold Medal Pork loin, regular, blade—lb. Beef, check romet, blade—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Round steak, bone—lb. Ridged dogs, Meyer layer pack, 16 oz. Ridged dogs, Meyer layer pack, 16 oz. Ridged dogs, Meyer layer pack, 16 oz. Ridged dogs, Meyer layer pack, 16 oz. Pork loin, rotisserie, end cut Bacon, thick sliced, Swift's, t. 10 oz. Bacon, thick sliced, Swift's, t. 10 oz. Bacon, thick sliced, Swift's, t. 10 oz. Bacon, thick sliced, Swift's, t. 10 oz. Frying chicken, whole, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Chicken fried chicken, Tuna cake, light, 6 oz. store Tuna cake, light, 6 oz. store Tuna cake, light, 6 oz. store Tuna cake, light, 6 oz. store Cod, frozen, 10 oz. Perch fresh, half gallon, All Star Perch fresh, half gallon, All Star Perch fresh, half gallon, All Star Perch fresh, half gallon, All Star Margarita (no heat), 12 oz. Margarita (no heat), 12 oz. Margarita (no heat), 12 oz. Dry Milk, 20 qt. bottle America cheese, sliced, 18 oz. store America cheese, sliced, 18 oz. store America cheese, sliced, 18 oz. store America cheese, sliced, 18 oz. store Carrots, 10 pkg Tomato—lbs. Tomato—lbs. Tomato—lbs. Tomato—lbs. Tomato—lbs. Melon—lbs. Melon—lbs. Melon—lbs. Potatoes, red, 5 lb.ack Potatoes, red, 5 lb.ack Potatoes, red, 5 lb.ack Potatoes, red, 5 lb.ack Onion, yellow—lbs. Onion, yellow—lbs. Onion, yellow—lbs. Onion, yellow—lbs. Bananas Canned corn, whole kernel, 30 oz. cannado Four of the six supermarket chains in Lawrence show unit prices on their shelves, according to Consumer Protection Association (CPA) food price survey results. Stores showing unit prices are A and P, Dillon's, Fallley's and Rusty's. Unit pricing means the store provides information such as the cost of 240 cents per pound* along with the price. Use of unit prices allows shoppers to choose the best buy among different sizes of the same item. Unit prices are usually shown on shelf labels stating the name and size of the item, and its price, along with the unit price. Safeway and Kroger's don't show unit prices, according to CPA volunteers. The manager at Safeway mentioned as a disadvantage of unit pricing the fact that prices change rapidly, and that unit prices shown on the shelf may not always correspond with current prices on the packages. HOWEYER, THE manager at one of the stores' told us a CPA volunteer the unit price labels were changed weekly to keep up with changing prices. The labels are done by a computer in Topeka for all RI's stores. CPA volunteers found a range of practices in showing dates on meats. Best for the consumer was at Dillon's, Kroger's, and Rusty's, where each package of meat is stored under an expiration date. This is the by which the meat should either be used or frozen. However, the meaning of the date isn't shown on the package. Safety meats are labeled with the date of packaging. This means it is up to the consumer not only to know what the date was when it was made, but also how long the meal should be expected to last. Falley's meats are labeled only with a code. A store employee decoded the system as follows: 51 refers to the first day of the month, 52 is the second day of the month, 53 is the third day of the month, and so on. 51 refers to the 31st day of the month. The date indicates the day the product is包装. A and P also use a code to show the packaging day. In their code, 1 means packaged on Sunday, 2 on Monday, 3 on Tuesday and so on up to 7, for Saturday. 3 supermarket chains, Safeway, Kroger's and Rusty's, carry a soybean protein product which can be mixed with ground beef to extend the meat. Dilion's doesn't carry a soybean product of this type, but does carry "imitation ground corn", which is a mixture of beet textured soybean protein, in its meat department. Price survey results for this week are shown below. TACOS $3.50 per Dozen Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts 843-9880 YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CHEMISTRY 15 East 8th 841-7456 10.5 Monday Saturday Use Kansan Classifieds THE sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place We will be open Graduation Night, Monday, May 20, for your accommodation. Make your reservations now. Thank you for your wonderful patronage this year. Ken Kirby, Owner 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 Jayhawker Distribution Strong Hall May 6,7 & 8 9:30 to 4:30 L The w summa Univeri An ir new ch finished sports faculty support events various dru ri Arch Univer PA sent and d'Est will n Dykes Rules; Salaries Rise; 'Hawks, Streakers Score The words "change" and "success" best summarize the past year's events at the summer conference. An increased student enrollment saw a new chancellor installed, campus buildings finished, unusually successful Jayhawk sports teams, salary increases for the KU faculty and the emergence of financial support for women's sports. KU also experienced its traditional events—campus government elections, various political and nonpolitical speakers, drug raids and a student fad: streaking. Archie R. Dykes, former chancellor of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, of- fictively became KU's thirteenth chancellor Aug. 27. During his first year as Chancellor, Dykes has put a high priority on the work of his department and public relations and a strong devotion to the University. He is credited with getting higher grades in proposals before the Legislation. The Jayhawk football and basketball teams completed highly successful seasons. Both teams participated in post-season games. The North Carolina State Wolfpack defeated the Mississippi Bowl in Memphis. After beating Oral Roberts University in overtime in Tulsa to take the NCAA Midwest regional championship, the KU basketball team lost to the Marquette Warriors at the national NCAA tournament in GreenSBoro, N.C. The team won the season ranked seventh nationally in the Associated Press basketball poll. Women's intercollege sports received a 700 per cent increase in financing for next year. The Student Senate approved the requested amount of $83,860.90 in April. The Kansas University Athletic association issued $3,519,800.00 association equities requested KU experienced record enrolments during the past year. Fall enrolment was 18,683, an increase of 137 over fall, 1973, enrolment. decrease in student funds, student season ticket prices were increased from $6.50 for football and $5.50 for basketball to $15 for football and $13 for basketball. However, a 7.4 per cent decline in the number of freshen enrollment for the first time brought speculation that the predicted decrease of enrollment by 1977 was beginning. Total enrollment increased one-half per cent. Spring enrollment for the Lawrence campus and the Medical Center in Kansas City was 19,400, according to an estimate by the Office of Admissions and Records. KU faculty members received a 10 per cent salary raise when Gov. Robert Docking signed the 1975 fiscal budget. Originally planned by the governor as an 8.5 per cent increase this year, the increase will make KU faculty salaries equivalent to schools of comparable size. The nationwide sweepfare fad came to the KU camp in the spring semester. In the spring, the KU camp had a lot of students. their inhibitions to dash naked along Jawhawk Boulevard. Streaking popularity reached a climax in March when thousands came on campus for nighttime "streak rallies" in front of Watson Library and at the Chi Omega fountain. Nine persons were arrested March 6 by city police for indecent ex-police harassment charges but hid when it was found that no law covered streaking. ku See CAMPUS Back Pag The second night's showing of the "ErieC Film Celebration" was cancelled when two tickets were sold. Forecast: Mostly sunny, High mid 70s, low in the 50s. KANSAN 84th Year. No. 140 Monday, May 6, 1974 Krsna Chanters Restricted To Potter Lake See Story Page 5 French Election Requires Runoff PARIS (AP) — French president yesterday sent socialist leader Francois Mitterrand and Finance Minister Valery Giscard d'Espagne to Paris to discuss how he will make one of them president of France. With official tallies covering all but a handful of the returns, Mitterrand had run over Gaskar in a thriller Gissard d'Estang, candidate of the Independent Republican party, had 8,266,328 votes, or 32.85 per cent, and Gaullist candidates won 3,963,168 votes, or 14.64 per cent. The rest of the votes were divided among nine other candidates in a heavy turnout of 42%. To win in the first balloting, one of the presidential hopefuls would have needed the vote. Mitterrand and Giscard d'Estained said they were confident of victory. The finance minister was promised support by Premier Pierre Messer and other Gaullist chiefs, although Chaban-Dehna refused to believe that he would support Giscard d'Estained. Chaban-Delmas conceded defeat after media computer projections predicted shortly after the polls closed that his major opponents would win the first two spots. The projections said Mitterrand would receive between 43 and 45 per cent of the票. Gissard d'Estaling, 32 to 34 per cent, and Delm-Delmas between 12.4 and 14.5 per cent. Communist boss Georges Marchais, whose party is officially backing Mitterrand, urged more support for the Socialist leader. The marshaling of forces behind both candidates is likely to make the final outcome very close, analysts said. Senate Debate On Film Petition To Wait'till Fall A petition bearing 253 signatures in support of the International Film Series has been received. However, action on the petition will have to wait until next fall because the senate already has met for the last time this semester. The film series was started more than 20 years ago for blacks and foreign students in the United States. The senate, at a meeting earlier this semester, refused to allocate money to See INTERNATIONAL Page 5 Giscard d'Estailing needs the support of the Gaullists to carry him ahead of Mitterrand in the runoff. This, in turn, would lead to a drastic diminished Gaulist rule in government. Both candidates have said they would pursue essentially the same foreign policy as the late President Georges Pompidou—national independence, friendship for the United States and a more positive role in European affairs. Both Giscard d'Estaining and Mitterrand—among the most brilliant men in active French politics—have been presidential candidates. Giscard, as his rebuilt Socialist party, Giscard d'Estaining turned the Finance Ministry into one of the most powerful departments in the French government. The campaign centered mainly on domestic issues such as inflation, inequalities between rich and poor and the role of government in society. Speaking to cheering supporters in the town of Chamalliers, Giscard d'Estaing declared last night: "I am now in a position to become president." The computer projections, carried out in conjunction with public opinion organizations, were based on returns from voting in the country's major metropolitan region broadcast by the government-owned radio station and two privately owned stations. At Mitterrand's headquarters, supporters expressed sharp disappointment that their candidate had apparently not received a runoff ballot, thereby necessitating a runoff election. An opinion poll on Saturday showed that Mitterrand, who is running with Communist support, was scoring 45 per cent. The result might poll enough votes to win outright. Although Mitterrand had been the favorite in yesterday's balloting, he will be an underdog in runoff elections if the Pep Boys fail to support behind Giscard d'Estaing. Mitterrand, who ran under the theme that France needs a change after 16 years of Gaullist rule, has been in the opposition since Charles de Gaulle returned to power in 1958 and catapulted his party into the dominant role of French politics. In announcing the Gallist party's support for Gicard or E'esting in the runoff, Mr. Gallist said he would become president he would become a hostage of the Communists. The same theme had been used by both Gicard and Chaban-Delmas during the campaign. LAKERS Reaching High... Kansan Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER St. Clair and Haig Predict Nixon Will Be Vindicated WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon's chief lawyer indicated yesterday he believed the House impeachment inquiry hinged on whether the President approved hush money payments to Watergate defendants. The presidential tape transcripts released last week, said attorney James St. Clair, prove that Nixon "neither authorized . . . nor knew" about such a wawner. Both St. Clair and White House Chief of Staff Alexander M. Hai吉 Jr., appear separately on television interview with Nikon would be vindicated in the House. Hag said the edited transcripts were published by the President "to convince the American people for the first time that he had nothing to hide." St. Clair insisted the tapes made it clear Nixon rejected, in a March 21, 1973, conversation with John W. Dean III, the director of Watergate consurer E. Howard Hunt. Yet, there are several apparent contradictions on that issue in a reading of that A month later, on April 17, Nixon and H. R. (Bob) Haldeman are to recall to recall the March 21 discussion. Nixon says: "I didn't tell him to get the money, did I?" St. Clair, who appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press," said that in releasing the transcripts, Nixon thought he had given the evidence to committee everything he thought they needed. When Dean tells Nixon that such demands may eventually reach $1 million, Nixon replies: "we could get that. On the money, if you need the money you can get that." SC. Chair will represent the President in proceedings expected to begin this week in Washington. Later yet, the topic turns to a specific demand from Hunt for $120,000. Nixon: "Would you agree that that's the prime reason you damn well better get that done?" After receiving edited transcripts from the White House instead of the actual tape recordings, the committee voted 20 to 18 that he had complied with its subpoena. Moments later, the President says: "But in the end, we are going to be bled to death . . . and in effect look like a cover-up. So that we can do." Hag, who appeared on ABCs "Issues and Answers," wouldn't reply directly to questions about whether the White House would also turn over evidence sought on issues not directly connected with abuse, state, such as the milk fund and ITT cases. "Few if any reason thought he was in full compliance," Rep. Paul S. Sarbanes, D-Md., said on the CBS "Crisse the Nation" on Wednesday that a decision in opinion was in the proper response. On another program, two members of the House Judiciary Committee warned against interpreting the committee's party-line vote on the impeachment of a partisan split on the impeachment issue. Rep. Thomas Railsback, R-III., said the vote reflected a clash on procedures but not on the committee's ultimate goal to force the truth in its impactment inquiry. Mideast Peace Efforts Continuing Artillery duels on the Israeli-Syrian cease-fire line continued yesterday, but Israel Information Minister Shimon Peres said that the situation had the fflight might subside in another day. AMMAN, Jordan (AP)—Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger flew here yesterday, and his Soviet counterpart, Andrei Gromyko, arrived in Syria in an apparently coordinated effort to end the fighting in the Golan Heights. American officials had said Kissinger won an agreement from Syria Saturday to lift a ceasefire in the Syrian city. Kissinger arrived in Jordan after extended talks with Israeli leaders. He was expected to talk to King Hussein about the situation and his plans and talks with Israeli-backed disengagement. Peres said Israel had made a revaluation of "our current position" after the latest round of talks with Kissinger. Observers understood this as a hint Israel might modify its refusal to surrender any territory taken from Syria in 1967. The Israeli government met yesterday to discuss compromise proposals, but a spokesman said no decision had been reached. Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko arrived westerday in Damascus for talks with Assembly to Vote on PIHP. Policies By DEBBIE GUMP Kansan Staff Reporter When the College Assembly meets tomorrow, the culmination of four months of committee work will be voted upon by 110 faculty members, an uncertain number of faculty members. Ed Rolfs, Junction City sophomore and chairman of the student election committee, announced Saturday that three College-Winth-the-College and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences had failed to win enough votes to candidates in the Anil 26 assembly elections. Among the issues are the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program, the withdrawal policy, the probation; policy and an assembly constitutional amendment that would increase student representation on the board of directors of clinics and Procedures Committee (EPPC). However, Carl Lande, professor of political science and an opponent of the proposed amendment, urged the faculty of the political science department to attend the meeting to help defeat the amendment to give them a more faculty control of this important body." However, 120 students could have been voting. The possibility that students may for once outnumber faculty members at an assembly meeting, which has been plagued by a lack of student participation all semester, hasn't gone unnoticed by assembly members. Every student who ran for office from Nunemaker, Centennial and Oliver College and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was elected, Rufs said. The new assembly will consider what many student leaders feel to be the only real issues to come up before the assembly this semester. Michael Turse, Cherry Hill, N.J., junior, said recently his constitutional amendment to raise the percentage of undergraduate students on the EPPC from 25 per cent to almost 50 per cent had a fighting chance in the May meeting. "I really think there's been an absence of substantive issues," Rolfs said. "This meeting will prove different, as all the work the nurses has been geared to the May meeting." in an untidied form letter to all department faculty members, Laude said. "I think the staff needs to be given some time." be defeated either on the floor of the assembly, or through the forcing of a mail ballot. Either step will require a substantial attendance of faculty members." The Pearson Advisory Committee, which was organized last year to act as an ongoing advisory panel for the program, has recommended through the EPPC to be allowed to satisfy two of the three humanities distribution requirements. Lande said yesterday that such a degree of student involvement in the EPPC would be essential. Another issue is the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program, which last year was stripped by assembly action of its ability to fulfill freshman and sophomore humanities, speech, Western Civilization and English requirements. "I think that running a college is a rather complicated and difficult business and requires some professional knowledge of educational matters," he said. "It seems to me most students simply don't have the experience." "At the moment I don't plan to speak against the proposal," Donald Marquis, a lawyer at the firm, said. yesterday, "but that doesn't mean I won't change my mind." Marguis, one of several faculty members who opposed the program last year, said that the basic question of what education should be hadn't yet been decided and that his objections to the program rested on that question. "one fundamental issue ought to be discussed in some sort of civilized, scholarly way," he said. "We haven't done that at all, which perhaps says something." The assembly will also consider the EPPC's recommendation that the current A student may now drop a class from the 12th week of classes and receive a grade of W on his transcript. Beginning with the 12th week, the student a grade of F, if he is failing the course. Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, yesterday called the policy "absolutely "What we are doing is generating a whole group of adults that have a way to escape. We're trying to train adults. If this were an elementary school it would be different. See ASSEMBLY Back Page Syrian President Hafez Assad and reportedly with Palestinian Liberation Organization chieftain Yasir Arafat. The American secretary began his fifth Middle East peace mission last week with meetings in Geneva with Gromyko, Gromyko said on his arrival in Damascus, "I'm confident these consultations will prove fruitful for both sides." reminded its readers yesterday that Kissinger and Gromyko had agreed in Geneva that their two nations should "strive to coordinate their efforts for a peaceful settlement" in the Middle East. However, U.S. officials travelled with Kissinger and Gromyko in Gromyko's Damascus trip and maintained Kissinger has no plans to meet with the Soviet minister when Kissinger returns to Damascus tomorrow. The Communist party daily, Pravda, English Woman Held In Irish Art Robbery DUBLIN, Ireland (AP)—A 33-year-old former debutante self-attested freedom fighter was in custody yesterday after police found the 19 paintings stolen from her apartment. Police said Bridget Rose Duggle, the daughter of an English millionaire insurance executive, was arrested Saturday in a remote country cottage in southwestern Ireland. A massive police search continued for four men who participated in the armed robbery. The paintings—which include a Vermeer, a Goya, a Frans Hals and three Rubens—were taken to the Dulkin police technical bureau. Superintendent Anthony Mahon said the paintings were all in good shape, with only some small scratches in the varnish of one or two. The paintings were stolen April 26 from the sprawling rural mansion of gold and diamond magnate Sir Alfred Beit. Dugale, a Ph.D. and a former lecturer at London University, was convicted last year at Eaxter, England, for stealing $190,000 worth of art works from her father's She got a two-year suspended sentence and said she would continue her work as an unpaid civil rights activist among the poor of London. In February, British authorities issued warrants for Dugdale's arrest in connection with smuggling arms and explosives to Ireland. She was also sought for questioning in connection with a helicopter bombing attack last January on a police barracks in the Northern Ireland border town of Strabane. Police blamed the attack on the outlawed Irish Republican Army, which is waging guerrilla warfare to oust the British from Ulster. Durdale's family refused to comment on her arrest. Police officials credited two local police with the break. They said Sgt. Pat O'Lary and Constable William Creedon became suspicious when they learned that the cottage in Glandore, County Cork, had been rented only two days before the art robbery. They called in help to stake out the cottage and seized Dugdale when she arrived in a car. The motive for the art theft remained clouded. A few months ago note received Friday by Dublin's National Gallery had indicated that the IRA engineered the head to force the transfer of four IRA azerovate from Dublin. The letter, postmarked Belfast, said the paintings would be destroyed unless four terrorists were transferred to Ulster and $1.2 million was paid by May 14. But yesterday police theorized that the thieves had sent the letter as a decoy, to tandem police apptition, to Northern Ireland, rather than as a political ultimatum. diverp police attention to Northern Ireland, rather than as a political unanimum. Dolores did not, in ignorance that the letter came from the thieves. They said it Police were certain, however, that the letter came from the thues. they sank in contained napes of Diary's diary, which was stolen the same night as the paintings. 2 Monday, May 6, 1974 University Daily Kansan news capsules / the associated press 55 Mile Limit Being Ignored, Survey Says 35 Mile Bank Beige Tape Americans generally are ignoring the nationwide 55 mile-an-hour speed limit imposed to save gasoline, but they are driving more slowly than they did before the energy crisis, an Associated Press survey shows. and authorities say the number of speeding tickets is up. Troopers in Oregon and Texas say they've made more than twice as many arrests for speeding The average speed of cars in most areas covered by the AP survey was between 85 and 70 m.p.h., above the legal limit but below the rate motorists used to travel when the legal limit was 70 m.p.h. Bill Designed to Stop Oil Expansion Bit Designer F. Mendale Sen.Walter F. Mondale will introduce a bill today barring the nation's 15 largest oil companies from expanding their holdings at the expense of independents in the petroleum industry. Mondale, D-Minn., said his bill was designed to stop vertical integration in the industry while Congress debates whether the major oil companies should be required to direct themselves of their pipelines, refineries or marketing outlets. Statements Say Dairy Official Backed Mill. Statements Say Dairy Official Backed Mills A top official of the nation's largest dairy cooperative planned to raise $2 million to elect Rep. Wilbur D. Mills to the White House in 1972, according to statement's filed in court. The way they the official, David L. Farr, once the second ranking official of Associated Mills, who could still capture the nomination in a best Pretreatment According to the statements, attributed to several of Part's former associates at the cooperative, Parr assigned five to seven cooperative employees to assist Mrs. presidential effort, an apparent violation of the Indicting indirect donations of corporation money for political purposes. Don't move till you call us. REVIEW REMARKS can you can us We want to show you how you can save a bundle. Maybe 40-60% of the cost. Move it with your own truck. We rent Ryders trucks, well-kept Chevrolets, other fine trucks. From little Chevy vans up to big 22-footers. Chevy armored mobility accessories too. Ask for the helpful Ryder Movers Guide. Make it a happy move. Call Your local Ryder Truck Rental Dealer 802 W. 23rd St. 842-6262 A-1 RENTAL 802 W. 23rd St. 842-6262 A-1 RENTAL Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358. 5c Pop Is Back! $ \star^{*} $ 1.20/case for flavor of the month - $ ^{s}2.00/case for all other 10 oz. bottles $ ★ Buy 5 cases and get one case free The POP DOCK at the Mini Plaza 19th & Haskell 10-8 Mon.-Thur. 10-10 Fri. & Sat. --wanted to get back to teaching. Enrollment increased from 400 to $20 and the first football squad photographs appeared in Mistletoe's seven years as chancellor, he said. ATTENTION VETERANS There will be a government representative in the Kansas Union lobby from 9-1 today to discuss SPN numbers. If you want to discuss these discharge codes and how they affect you bring your DD 214 and find out what is happening. KU CAMPUS VETERANS --wanted to get back to teaching. Enrollment increased from 400 to $20 and the first football squad photographs appeared in Mistletoe's seven years as chancellor, he said. LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST? HOME SWEET HOME JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS Now Taking Applications for Fall ON CAMPUS HEATED POOL COVERED PARKING ROOM-MATE SERVICE SUMMER $130.00 Rental Office Open until 8:00 everyday 1603 W. 15th LRE Student Looks for Building To Name After 'Old Josh' Tradition somehow bypassed Chancellor Joshua N. Lippincott. The University of Kansas has traditionally named buildings after its chancellors. Lippincott was the University's fourth chancellor, serving in 1833 to 1899. But there is no Lippincott Hall. Lippincott is the only dead chancellor who has no building bearing his name, according to Jeff Southard, Wichita senior. As a student senator, Southard is trying to work with Senator Bernie Sanders introduced a petition that would give Lippincott "the honor he so rich deserves." It's all being done strictly according to protocol. The Student Senate petitioned Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to appoint a special committee "that may consider the options and recommend structures, existing organizations," be dedicated to Chancellor Lincolncott." Southard said recently his inspiration had come from other attempts to repair the mistakes of the past. Aaron Burr and Benedict Arnold, he said, are two benefactors of efforts to correct such mistakes. Southard said Lippincott had been a mathematics teacher who might have Southard had some research in old KU yearbooks and found no reason why Lippincott's name hadn't been admitted to the company of KU's other dead chancellors. "I couldn't find out why he resigned," he said. "He was a sober-looking fellow. He had a long beard after the fashion of the day. The year he was born is unclear, but it did everybody else. He didn't seem to be much of a favorer with students," southward wrote. The yearbooks gave southard a glimpse of the character of Joshua A. Lippincott. Twobildings are likely candidates for the name Lappinccott Hall; the proposed visual arts building and Green Hall, when the School of Law moves to its new building. "The old law school would be a good building for old Josh," Southard said. Students Garden to Cut Expenses Married students living at Stouffer Place may be able to beat some high food costs thanks to the Office of Housing, which is located around the Stouffer apartment buildings. The residence hall maintenance department has plowed up five sections of land surrounding the buildings. Each section contains several 400-square-foot-plots. Eather Twente Hall, formerly Watkins' Hospital, will be dedicated at 11:30 a.m. today, the School of Social Welfare's annual Social Work Day. Twente Hall Dedication This Morning Werner Beehm, former dean of the Rutgers School of Social Work, will speak on "Social Work Practice 1984: The Shape of Things to Come." JOB OPENING Administrative Director of Consumer Protection Association STARTING DATE AND SALARY: Starting July 1, 1974. Part-time at $200/mo July to August. Approach full-time at $500/mo begin on or about August 19, 1974. DUTIES: Coordinating CPA research, complaint handling services, and educational activities; managing all office operations; recruiting and training volunteers; public relations; in general, being responsible to the Board of Directors for administering all CPA functions. QUALIFICATIONS: Demonstrated administrative ability necessary; other qualifications required for field or experience in other public interest or social service/action activities. CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION Kansas Union, Box W Lawrence, Kansas 66044 If there are questions, come to the CPA office, room 299, Kansas Union, or call 844-2932. Office hours 10-4. Opportunity Employer Minorities and Women Encouraged to Apply Funded by Student Activity Fee SUA Northwest Tour Have a Summer Vacation and Visit the Following Places: ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK —YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK —GRAND TETONS —GLACIER NATIONAL PARK —EXPO '74: SPOKANE, WASHINGTON DENVER —SALT LAKE CITY AUGUST 5-16 If you are interested in the trip please contact the SUA Office (864-3477) and sign up on the mailing list. Final information and price will be available in June. THE THUMB IS THREATENED. 19 Just about the cheapest way to see Europe outside of hitching. Unlimited second-class rail travel in 13 countries. Two months only $165. You buy your Student-Railpass here—you can't buy it in Europe. And the $165. price is tax free and a beautiful way to beat currency fluctuations. What's more, train schedules are as frequent as ever, while getting about by car or motor coach isn't always as easy as before. Who's eligible? Any full-time student under 26 years of age registered in a North American school, college or university. You spend two whole months seen practically the whole of Europe. And you travel in comfort. On trains so clean and so fast (up to 100 mph) you wouldn't believe it. Of course, you can also take our cozy little trains that meander through our remote countryside—that's part of the privilege, too. It can mean the Summer trip of your life, so don't wait. See your friendly Travel Agent or clip the coupon and we'll send you all the facts. See if you don't agree. The day of the thumb may be over. Fares subject to change. Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland. Eurailpass, Box 90, Bohemia, New York 11716 Please send me your free Student-Railpass folder. Or your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. Name: Street: City: State: STUDENT-PASS It shows you F Student-Railpass. r University Daily Kansan Monday, May 6, 1974 3 reviews Paperbacks Mexican Food "THE OVERLORD'S" (Crest, $1.25) by William Woolfole is more political-type stuff. The plane of the governor of California crashes on an emergency trip to see the President (not Reagan and Nixon, we assume). A million dollars in cash is in the governor's home. And an ax FBI file evidence of a plan to seize the government. "TROTSKY IN EXILE" by Peter Weiss (Pocket, $1.50) is a play by the man who did the controversial drama usually known as "Marat-Sade." The play depicts the leaders of Soviet communism, the purges, banishment to Serbia, the Moscow trials. "THE WORLD'S OF CHIPPY PATTERSON" (Pocket, $1.25) by Arthur H. Lewis is the story of a successful trial lawyer, friend of pimps, handlers, prostitutes, lover of beautiful women, scion of a blue blooded family in Philadelphia, fighter in Skid Row, in Chinatown, on the Gold Coast of San Francisco. "STRANGE GAMES" (Pocket, $1.25) by Heller Toren is a novel about Maria Scaripe, Mediterranean beauty, greatly admired and lusted for, wife of a nobleman and bedonist searching for exotic and sensuous thrills. "CALICO PALACE" (Pocket, $1.25) by Gwen Bristow, set in San Francisco, is a novel about the days of the Gold Rush by a writer who has written several skillfully told, escapist tales of early American history. "A WILD JUSTICE" (Pocket, $1.25) by Francis Clifford is a driller with the themes of survival and revenge. It is a novel about Irish revolutionaries who are caught up in a suspenseful situation while trapped in the ruins of a hotel. Local Restaurants Offer Many Possibilities By ALISON GWINN Kansan Reviewer Mexican food has been traditionally misunderstood. When one hears the word "Mexican" in connection with gastroenter, he conjures up a picture of the typical dorm taco; a cold ground beef and ground beef and garnished with a cold gelatin veldvle and shredded lettuce. Even most typical Mexican restaurants forsale true homestyle recipes and mass-produce inexpensive California-style Mexican dishes. But truly old-style Mexican dishes aren't often found on the menu. Lawrence restaurants and its effects are sure to last an eater long into the night. An authentic Mexican restaurant, guaranteed to have good food, can be spotted by a picture of Jesus or a cross hanging somewhere in the vicinity of the kitchen. Another sure sign is when the restaurant serves only one sauce—the chileo sauce. The temperature is regulated by the amount that the eter applies to his dishes. Perhaps the smallest authentic Mexican restaurant in Lawerence is the Casa de Taco, on 11th and Massachusetts streets. The room is large, the kitchen and the restaurant is hardy wider than its front door, but the food is excellent. The hot sauce is exceptionally hot, and one receives a very generous order of warm chips before eating. Another small size, and one may order either a complete dinner or a la carte. The waitresses are very nice, and generally the atmosphere is comfortable and friendly, with a frequently available corner and a flow of regular customers. Two other Mexican restaurants somewhat on the order of Casa de Taco can be found within a small block of each other, on 5th and Louluct streets across the river and about 3 blocks east. El Matador Cafe is probably the best Mexican place in town. The exterior is painted with scenes of the sunrise and dusk, a shimmering stark and large, without much decoration. It is 15 years old and is run by one family, who can be watched preparing the food in the kitchen. The menu lists no food a la Ruthie, but all the food is listed as a special of some sort or another, most of the specials being named after some customer who has, through the years, frequented the place, and which are served in dishes. The specials range in price from $1.25 to about $5, but generally they are between $2.50 and $2.80. The food at this place is more expensive than at other restaurant in town, but it is far superior. The hot sauce is superb, and the chips are the best around. Unlike most places, the beans are whole beans, rather than the traditional, mushy refried beans. Almost any combination of dishes is offered, and the selection is immense. And, contrary to what many people "spare gooood," the service is as fast as could possibly be expected. One really gets the feeling of home-cooked Mexican food in this place, as the daughter of the family often brings out the tortillas and rice, and her father can finish preparing each one. La tropicana is within a few steps of the El Matador, and appears from the outside to be of much the same type. But the food is much fresher than the cheaper, one still expects to receive homemade Mexican food, and the food at this place, though good, isn't much better than the cheaper. The best option is the place. The best thing that La Tropicana has to offer is a heavily spiced hot sauce and WA AXMAN CANDLES SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Now thru May 11 10-75% off all stock 7 W. 14th 10-5.30 daily YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE...HERE'S WHERE WE ARE. 27th & IOWA SOUTHWEST LAWRENCE RIGHT OFF HIWAY 59 [IN THE AUTO PLAZA AREA] COME SEE US IN OUR BRAND NEW FOOD STORE! Dillons Other stores located at 1730 Massachusetts and 1312 West 6th. 27th & IOWA SOUTHWEST LAWRENCE RIGHT OFF HIWAY 59 [IN THE AUTO PLAZA AREA] COME SEE US IN OUR BRAND NEW FOOD STORE! COME SEE US IN OUR BRAND NEW FOOD STORE! Dillons line, and they offer chips and a Mexican pastry free with every meal. The atmospheric, contrasty to the feeling in the restaurant is comparable to that in an average pizza place. homemade chips free with every meal. The Aztec Inn at 807 Vermont St. serves excellent Mexican food in an atmosphere much different from the three previously mentioned restaurants. This place is much more heavily decorated, and the tables are generally secluded into dark rooms by themselves. This creates a much less honey and much more romantic atmosphere; the plates are lighter than the dishes, and Mexicanized pop music is piped in continuously. The menu in this restaurant is much more extensive than in most others, because it serves both Mexican and American food in addition to a children's menu. One can order either a la carte or a full meal, and the prices are extremely reasonable, considering the quality of the food and the services in this place are huge, and everything is garnished with a lot of good cheese—even the beans and the burritos are covered with melted cheese. The first order of chips is free, and the restaurant offers three kinds of dip, unlike all of the other places. The sanchos, large soft tortillas rolled up with ground beef, lettuce and tomato, and the burritos, soft tortillas filled with beans, are enormous. The enchiladas, tortillas filled with meat or cheese and covered with sauce, are the best anywhere. This place is very excellent, although it covers the honey style of the other three places. For those who shun the real thing, Lawrence offers a wide range of franchised, California-style Mexican restaurants, whose food is good, if not as authentic as the privately-owned places. The prices are much cheaper, but the dishes are heavily supplemented with lettuce and beans. Often two, or even three degrees hot sauces are offered, or, in the case of chicken, only a few spiced meat are offered. Don Chilito's serve exceptionally generous quantities, most notably the Texas burrito, which is a meal in itself and is priced in the $1 range. The service is very quick, because it is handled by a cafeteria Mexican food isn't known to be loved by all, but many aren't fully acquainted with its range of possibilities. It can be spicy or mild, doughy or crisp, filling or light. But it is bound to give its eater a warm bubbly feeling far into the night. 5 CHOONER 40+ VANVLECKS'S 6 LAWRENCE, KS TUESDAY 7-9:30 1975 Jayhawker Yearbook staff positions... up for grabs art staff business staff photographers writers copy editors section editors applications available rm. b115, Union for more information call Skip 843-746 n 68 If you graduate in June, this is what you could be doing in September. Fort Campbell, Ky Helicopter Crew chief 99 Debora Lee Ranach Helicopter Charger Clarksville, Teen Finance Clerk Honolulu, Hawaii Fuel Specialist PATRINE CLARK Edward Corra1 JOHN HUGHES Royal City, Wash Fork Lift Operator Moses Lake, Wash Intensity Fire Team Leader Woodland Hills, Cald Cash Rescueman Industry Pro Team Leader 10 Cheilan, Wash Cannoneer --- Birmingham Ala United States Walter Thomas, Jr. STAFF COMMANDER Iallahassen Flä Musterancke Bryce I Much Brookfield, Wis. Military Policemen John R. 1-Peets Levittown, New York Computer Operator [ ] Erward A Walker Hooverville, Pa Mechanic This postcard may be your ticket to a new job. Fill out the information $\longrightarrow$ Tear out the whole page. And mail it. Within several days, you'll receive our latest information on jobs, benefits, travel, education, and just about anything else you'd like to know about today's Army No obligation. RECRUITING U.S. ARMY TELEPHONE: 843.0465 FRED D. HILL SERGEANT FIRST CLASS, U. S. ARMY U. S. AMRG RECRUITING STATION 600 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUS LAWRENCE, KAWANAS 650288 And a better place to look than today. Army you wont find! I confidently provide such factual examples. Contrary to popular belief, good jobs aren' t that hard to find these days. Not, that is, if you know where to look One We have more jobs to offer the Class of 74 than anyone Military or civilian (About 70,000 openings) Three. Although the jobs we offer are considered 'skilled labor', we don't require that you already possess the skill We'll teach you everything you need to know in our training courses. (Experience will come on the job.) Two. The jobs are the kind you don't usually step into right out of school Electronics, construction, computers, technical repair, communications and law enforcement are a few of the over 300 good, steady jobs we offer Four. You choose the exact job training you want before you enlist And, if you quality you'll get it. Guaranteed in writing. That's our job offer to the Class of 74. We think it will pay you to look into it After all, look what it did for me Class of 73 Today's Army A good job that's not hard to find Date of Birth Country Soc Snc No Education 21V 27-4-74-1 4 Monday. May 6, 1974 University Daily Kansan KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. The Real World Jump Hank Aaron might have been speaking for KU's 1974 crop of graduating seniors. He just thanked the seniors he saluted after hitting his 715th home run. Quite so. For seniors, "it" has been four or more years of tough courses, demanding instructors, parking tickets, residence hall food, 3.2 beer, loud stereos, blind dates and the other nonsense one must endure along the way to getting a diploma. After all, you've spent thousands of dollars and lost two inches of skin from your nose to get that credential. Let yourself go a bit. Diploma—what a wonderful sound the word has! Wouldn't it be nice to paper the walls of your room with your diploma? Of your diploma? You deserve it. Naw, really, it's been a barrel or laughs, hasn't it? We will-have-come all that stuff. And now only the easy part is left. All you have to do is jump back into the Real World, buy a home, enjoy your job--you've got THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-America college newspaper Kaplan Telephone Numbers N 1-800-734-2626 N 1-854-833-4555 Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year excursions holidays and spring term holidays, published quarterly a summer, $15 a year. Second class postpaid mileage is $125 a year. Second class fee, $125 a semester paid in student activity fees. **Fee:** $1.25 a semester paid in student activity fees. Advertised offered to all students without regard to race or sex. Prohibited. Protected are not necessarily those of the University. NEWS STAFF News Adviser ... Suanne Shaw one, don't you?—and live happily ever after. Jumping back into the Real World will be easy. So what if you have to change your room or least you won't have, to park in Q-zone any more. Business Advisor Mel Adams Business Manager David Hunke Buying a home will be even simpler. First, just brush up on a few details like FHA and conventional loans, MIGC loans, title insurance, emergency money, or insurance, urgently needed. As soon as you have all that information down pat, well, you're ready to buy. Member Associated Collegiate Press And your job. If you don't already have one, you must be some sort of hozo, in which case you're never going to get a job, so don't worry about it. If you do have a job, just buy yourself a Hartmann briefcase and a bottle of Scope and you are all set. Seriously, it's going to be just peachy to graduate. Some of us have putzed around for nine years before we went back to college and going to be quite pleasant to leave. Member Associated Collegiate Press One is tempted to be very solemn and sentimental about leaving the confines of all these ivy-covered walls. Aside from the instant nostalgia summoned by the very act of leaving, there's also the thought that the Real World can be rather intimidating. But it's not. In the Real World you don't have to endure Western Civilization or put out your cigarette every time you turn around. In the Real World you can forget about Vern Miller. You can even leave him behind completely but you'll never see him in the Real World you can come home and watch "Gunsmoke" instead of having to study economics. Living in the Real World is going to be nice, isn't it? Chuck Potter Corruption Not Rife, Educator Says NEW YORK-Because of Watergate and many recent cases of lawbreaking in business and finance two propositions seem to be gaining wide acceptance. By ROBERT J. DONOVAN One is that corruption is rife among college-educated people who should know better, a prime example being the large number of accidents accused in the Watergate scandals. The other is that universities should, therefore, emphasize moral and ethical instruction—especially, as one columnist advocated recently, in departments of business administration and political science and in law schools. William J. McGill, president of Columbia University, disagrees with both propositions. HE SAYS THAT the ethical standards of scholarship in universities today are already high, and that it is a simpistic approach to moral morality. Above all, he says he fears that any such effort on a large scale would lead in the direction of state morality or state morality. He says that corruption isn't rampant in America, but rather that it is conspicuous in particular areas, such as politics, selling and merchandising. "Which set of values are we supposed to touch? McGill asked during an interview the other day. 'Which are we supposed to touch?' McGill said. How is the ethical system to be defined?" "You can't advocate state culture or religion. You find that strongly developed in the communist state. The Soviet Union is a far-right party, but it has powerful ethical restraints on its members and casts out those who violate them. I don't understand why state religion or morality would help us." "It is a truism that morality is a very personal thing. I am always suspicious of public morality. Public morality is like public patriotism—a mask for soundrels." McGill, an educator with a great deal of sparkle who was formerly chancellor of the University of California at San Diego, wouldn't talk about any particular figure in the Watergate case, but the gist of his remarks was clear enough. "You can look at all the bright young men who can be bought," he said. "The country is filled with people like this, giving lipstick to people who don't do not really believe. These are people who are trying to stand public for an old-fashioned set of rugged ethical values largely because they found this was good for them." The effective publicly and successful in business." McGILL SAYS HE thinks the country is in the grip of a moral crisis, or more particularly a crisis in values, in which old beliefs have been replaced and haven't yet been found to replace them. TRANSFERTS European manners and style. The third "is a very powerful development in American courts of law to try to create through legal analysis a state of moral neutrality in the law . . . a compilation of what is constitutionally protected in American life." (The New York Times, December 9, 2015) What is legal behavior and what is decent and moral behavior is enormous." MGill cautions against indiscriminate charges of corruption in the United States. "The sense of widespread corruption in the country is probably wrong. Corruption is located in an area related to political institutions and bureaucracy where persuading people of your adherence to a set of values is more important than the set of values themselves. Image, front of the enforcement of rugged ethical values is the embodiment thing rather than practicing ethics." "It appears to me that if you look at the ethical standards of scholarship in the field, what Fakeling'saking results is a sin that casts you out of the academic community completely. The sense of rigorous ethical behavior in the study is very powerful inside the university." "TA-7AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA..." "FROM WHAT I have seen of the standards of ethics of three corporations on whose boards I sitt (Texcox, American Farm Bureau, McGraw-Hill. I am extremely impressed." "I know of a case in which the management of a large oil company was approached to pay off the political leaders in the country, so it could sell oil. It could have been done easily. With the price rises nobody would have known. To their everlasting credit they said: No way. That is more common in the less community than people give credit for." "Looking at my own community and the way these businesses are run, I am not a believer in corruption. But I see this crisis in values and a strange transition in which people in politics have tried to sell themselves on the idea of concepts in which they no longer believe." If teaching public morality would be a will o' the wisp, is there nevertheless a relationship between higher education and ethics? "In so far as higher education can be construed as a search for truth, there is," he said. "I think that part of the ethical system of any educated person is that he seeks what he believes to be true, that he does not take action which diminish the rights of others." Readers Respond Suicide, Reviews, Garters Anger Readers To the Editor: I feel something must be be concerning the article printed in the Kansan May 1 release. I was shocked by the very poor taste and lack of discretion used in printing such an article. Apparently, since a suicide had been reported the previous day, the editors felt it necessary to print an article explaining why such things happen. Considering the fact that the person who died was a friend, I'm afraid that if the only people I knew were students, Charles Neuering can give for students taking their lives are "unrealistic college goals" and that it is spring, then that makes them more prepared toemen are qualified for their respective goals. John Jenkins didn't kill himself for either of those reasons, and maybe if the Watkins Mental Health Clinic had done more than listen to him for 10 minutes and give him a prescription, then maybe you wouldn't have the need to print such a poor article. James David Stockman Overland Park junior Merit Due for Actors To the Editor: I was in floating in the clouds this morning after the Ionesco Festival until I read the review by Kansan reporter Michele Lonsorfer. Three plays were included in the program, and credit was given only to three actors of one play. The gross omission of one of the principal actors in the play Teddy Oitukunda, the actor in question, also presented a poetry reading for which he received no credit in the review Moreover, no mention of all the actors in "Rhinoceros" or "La Cantatrice chauve" appeared in the review. It is certainly far more demanding to speak French for students whose mother tongue is English than it is for French persons to learn a role Jeffrey M. Osikowicz Assistant Instructor in French & Italian in French, Yet, not one name of any of the "Rhinoceros" cast saw print while recognition was given to native speakers by Roy Biley, David Belz, Hector Quemada, Jon Bechler, Jennie Archer, Pam Sturm, Sharon White, Shelly London, Jorg Burgland and Wayne Deryx, merit at least the same recognition given to the other performers To the Editor: Radio Format Grows We are responding to an opinion printed in the Kansan by Jim Cambron, regarding the changing status of the student radio station KUOK. Having been isolated from KUOK for a year or so, he seems rather ill-suited to express the opinions that he voiced regarding the new KUOK. We wish to strongly counter his arguments. For many years, KUOK was regarded by many as a "jock shop," catering only to the needs of jocks, not the entire student body. Today, the KUOK staff has nearly 50 dedicated members, and that number is constantly growing as student interests in broadcasting careers grow Currently, KUOK has expanded to encompass many different types of music, from folk and rock to pop and hip-hop, a goal of providing service to students that they can't obtain from any other local media. Formerly, KUOK limited itself to programming mostly "top-40" music. This shift is due to To counter Cambron's feeling that commercialism is the only means by which creativity can be achieved or maintained, we would urge him to listen to our fellow citizens at the national nation's finest radio stations, and it would be utter nonsense to say that being an educational FM station stitches creativity. The very fact that KUOK is attempting to reach the entire student body and faculty by working toward changing to FM would indicate that our capabilities for creativity are presently increasing) greatly. As for the individuals mentioned in Cambron's letter, we are happy that they had the opportunity to learn at KUOK and now have jobs in professional broadcasting. We are grateful to Cambron's letter is still a staff member of KUOK and is continuing to benefit from the opportunities present at KUOK. A large number of students at Cambron's Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City have former KUOK staff members employed at their stations. Perhaps it has been Cambron's unfavorable experiences in broadcasting that has allowed him to write his extremely mature letter. As for the future of KUOK, all of the students and faculty of the University of Kansas can expect to hear much more of us this next school year. Paul B. Hulse Station Manager, KUOK Lawrence Sophomore David C. Smith Continuity, KUOK Winfield Junior John P. Easley Preamble Director, KUOK Lawrence Sophomore Frederick S. Hesser Production Director, KUOK Shannon L. Jones To the Editor: Any dispute that the McCollum Hall women's softball team may have with the officials will be dealt with by the team. The coach, Dennis Gillies, for its story (Kansan, May 1), was not "a Publicity Disdained The McCollum Hall Women's Softball Team THAT'S PRETTY GOOD, SIMON... HOW DID YOU GET SO GOOD AT JUGGLING BOOKS? I USED TO WORK FOR INTERNAL REVENUE While there were indeed inconsistencies in officiating through the softball season, they seem due primarily to poor communications between the intramural office and those participating in the games. KU rules were not made available to teams and apparently not to the officials either. We hope these inconsistencies might be rectified as they are brought to the attention of the coaching staff so that care to be considered such poor sports that a "dispute" of this nature must be taken to the Kansas. spokenism for the McColm team." Fans in a gesture of loyalty and in the heat of anger, felt it their duty to handle the situation publicly through the Kansan. The team, while concerned with the situation, did not see it as a public matter. THAT'S PRETTY GOOD, SIMON... by Sokoloff Surely, after all of the work that an active Affirmative Action unit on campus has been doing, we would think that the Kansan would have had more sensitivity than to run a picture of a female leg, complete with underwear showing, in connection with a story about the return of the garter belt. We could also imagine these pictures like these really contribute to the prestige of Kansan feature articles, there is the question of taste. The picture is an insult Garter Shot Insulting Griff and the Unicorn To the Editors: Classical Queries to women and to men who feel that they could find their pin-ups in more discreet places than on an outside page of the University newspaper. This contempt for everyone's sensibilities was further shown by the article's asking men—who, presumably, have little reason for caring—their opinion, and granting some of the more women-degrading answers the dignity of a direct quote. In short, by printing this tasteless picture and article, the Kansan did no good for intelligent men, no good for women, and could for itself. Surely a better way could have been found to fill up more than a quarter of a page? Overland Park Freshman Valerie J. Meyers Overland Park Sophomore Lynn M. Chester Lawrence Junior Milton S. Ys, St. Louis Sophomore St. Louis Sophomore Kristine A. Guttu I am glad the Kansan is devoting more space to classical record reviews. Although Kenn Louden's review of the four Brahms symphonies conducted by Claudio Abbado is basically a good one, there are, however, a number of points that I must take issue with. To the Editor: To begin with, I must object to the CP 8 reviewing of a record set that is not easily obtainable, and that quite possibly will never be released to the general public as a set. How is the reader to determine for himself if the reviewer was right or wrong in his opinions of the records in question? Eight director Associa the Kar While it is true Deutsche Gramphmom makes records of superior quality, the German recording company in the world." That distinction belongs to E.M.I. of Great Britain, which releases its recordings in this country under the Angel, Seraphim and Ivan. The Symphony No. 2 with Abbado conducting the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (DG 2530125) has been available in local record shops since early 1972 (a point Mr. Louden failed to make), but a recent Deutsche Grammusponn catalog in my hand is available from the company has no intention of releasing the entire set domestically in the near future. Even if it was released in the United States, the list price for the set would be $3.92 ($7.98 per disc) and it is reported that Deutsche Grammophon will soon raise its prices to $6.98 per disc—either way, a far better price. Mr. Louden's "about $23" price estimate The entire set can be purchased, but only by mail from the International Preview Society, a Chicago-based classical record club. Candi stressed commu- busing with I. business working establish Scott K. Colebank Prairie Village sophomore Those Clegg, Crawfie Bruce Mason student St.; Pat Wt Scott K. Colebank Boar again b freshm sophom ill, sen The Days of Beer and Dandelions The j remain replace the CP By MICHELE M. LONSDORFER Kansan Staff Reporter After two years it's goodbye—so what? I am going to experience the "Future Shock" in my own France, getting a new president and maybe a new political regime—so what. What remains of my uncle Sam's are dandelions and an Uber. Trip $4,417. Student remain to her Haehl, encourage the sal until a Dandelions stand for the bright and disappointing things that made me send everyone to bell or worse—the computer smile, the superficial friendliness, the invitations always in words, rarely in facts. Dandelions for the sickening feeling of being the object of a fleeting moment of interest and then becoming just another dumb foreigner. Why? Simply because I happened to think differently and ignored things that were evident to everyone but myself. The heat goes on and so does the frustration when nobody even tries to acclimate you to these obvious things, and when the squirrels seem to be the only likable creatures on campus. At that stage, how much would I have preferred a good yell or a good conversation which could have taught me something? But criticism isn't in fashion here and you just don't squeeze the Charm! The result is an inflation of your room. You can't move over Jayhawk Boulevard like mushrooms after the shower, That is enough to make you happy to be here. Simply because my silly questions and ideas could find a follow up, because I could watch the Watergate hearings and think that freedom of the press after all wasn't completely a matter of speech. "Roughing it," however, brings its own reward. Since the motto is adjust or leave, one tries to adjust and develops a skill that allows you with the faddings of previous standards. entree the days of beer, when the friendship of a happy few is like a warm sweater for a rainy day. People no longer need to worry because they are ready to go a little out of the way for you. because I could read Art Buchwald, Peanuts and William Buckley, because of the many parties with guitars, beer and wine togetherness and the surprises at Sambo's. Most of all, I liked the challenge that each new day provided. Even if my articles would look like ground beef after having gone through the editorial process, even if the burden seemed to be too much it taught me to always look higher. So, for all that mummy-jumble that me make realize as Browning said, a man's reach should always exceed his ability to move. And what thing that I will remember from my editing class, and I am grateful. As for anything that came my way to help me breached my mind, I am happy. And I would go through it again, hopefully better. Therefore, I take my leave, sending to you Charlie Brown and fellow students some sweet sour love from France. University Daily Kansan Monday, May 6, 1974 5 iily will vill a for orng n?ly wile word ontra- 械 Mr. entmy asset de be nit its fair oion the best at his this d. f. d. s. at r. r. l. o. o. r. that a is e y or e I y to t. s CPA Elects 8 Members Eight persons were elected to the board of directors of the Consumer Protection Association (CPA) at a meeting recently in the Kansas Union. Candidates for the eight positions stressed more contact with the Lawrence area and worked to boosting for students, better public relations with Lawrence area consumers and businessmen and more emphasis on working with state and local government to benefit the consumer. Those elected to the board were Karen Clegg, Lawrence law student; Carolyn Crawford, Meadowbrock apartments; Bruce Jamesen, Lawrence sophomore; Mason Landau, North Woodburn, N.Y.; Christopher Spencer, student; Thomas Murray, 1638 Mississippi St.; Loss Standfall, 518 Front Road, and Pat Weiss, Lawrence senior. The position of director of the board will remain open until a new director is found to replace Linda Triplett. Triplett is leaving the CPA in May. Board members from last year who will again be serving are Karen Blank, Wichita freshman; Gene Younger, Lawrence Jensen; and Joanne Hurrest, 1924 Clare St. II, senior Krsna Chanters Confined to Potter The University of Kansas Events Committee has asked the chanters to confine their activities to the area near Potter Lake because of student and faculty complaints, as well as women and chairman of the committee, said recently. Triplett said the CPA had currently spent $4,147.12 of the $6,085 allocated it by the Student Senate for fiscal 1974. She said the remaining $1,687.88 was already committed to her salary, the retaining fee for Earl Heubel, and the training fees she incurred in finding a new director and the salary for a temporary director for CPA until a permanent one was found. Students who want to reach Nirvana with the Hare Krishna krnamas will have to go to Poder Lake in the mountains. Faculty members complained that their classes were disrupted, and students complained that they weren't able to complete. The Krsna chanters, who arrived in Lawrence a few weeks ago, fall under the committee's jurisdiction because they made a formal request for their activities to be considered a University event, Taylor said. All activities classified as events require the approval of the University Events Committee. In addition, the committee requests notification of activities that don't meet such notification is merely for scheduling purposes. Taylor said the committee recently had revised its guidelines to restrict noise-producing events to Potter. An activity is classified as an event if an admission is charge, if nonstudent entertainment is involved, if the event is promotional in nature, if University facilities are used or if a public area of the University is used. International Films Charles Oldfather, University attorney, said the committee's action couldn't be construed as an abridgment of free speech because the chambers merely moved to move to an area where they wouldn't disrupt classes. From Page One operate the film series next year. Reasons for the refusal were that the film series had outlived its purpose, that it now merely duplicated services provided by them, that few people attended the programs. The petition submitted to the senate asks that the film series' funds be restored. According to the petition's instigator, Anthanett C. Mendosa, Kansas City, Kan., senior, the series is valuable because it shows a variety of films, some of which are Thurston Moore, associate professor of English, said yesterday that throughout the past five years he often had recommended that students in his classes see the films. Moore said that the series served the entire University, and that he was unhappy with his performance. --- Jeff Lough, Salma senior and a former chairman of the film series, said the series is based on her childhood. A third of the money given to the series for this year would be enough to support it. Web Billester, Carthage, Mo., junior and co-chairman of the committee that recommended no funds for the series, said it wasn't the senate's function to provide a free service when the same service was provided by SUA. Webster said his committee would consider the petition next fall. Barb Haman, Crevecouer, Mo., junior and secretary-treasurer of the film series, agreed that the series duplicated SUA programs. Haman, who is a member of Webster's committee, said that although the series was good because admission was free, the money could be spent better elsewhere. KEN'S PIZZA RESERVE NOTE Ken's PIZZA PARLOR LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY OR GROUP Redeemable af 27th & Iowa Lawrence, Kansas For Delivery 843 7405 843-7405 COOKING $1.00 off WITH PURCHASE OF VOID WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION KEN'S PIZZA DOLLAR Selling something? Call us. The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358. First Impressions Really Count ... Whether your heading into job interviews or moving out into the world of commerce the physical impression you make is one of the keys to how well you'll score. Wearing the right clothing properly styled & tasteful is an all important aspect of that impression. We've been helping the men of K.U. for many years in their selection of clothing when the time came to get out and get with it. Stop in... let us help you. ob to the cal of core. n ng rs THE Town Shop THE T 839 Massachusetts Downtown BRUNO There's no easy way for Charlie Nelson to become Dr. Nelson. But there is a way to make it somewhat easier for your student to take responsibility for their Scholarship Program. It won't soften the demands of your professors, or those you make upon yourself in school. A scholarship can be made which, understandably, can put a crap in your pocket. If you qualify, our scholarship program will cover the cost of the course. Please send a good monthly allowance all through your time. But what happens after you graduate? Then, as a health care officer in the military or in a combat environment that is challenging, stimulating and confusing, we need to be able to An environment which keeps you in contact with practically all medical specialties. Which gives you the time to observe and learn before you decide on a course of treatment. This environment can train in that speciality. And to practice it. You may also find some of the most advanced medical achievements happening right where you are. San Antonio, Texas, long noted for its Burn Treatment Center. Or the home of the光荣 Medicine Center. Or the home of Fairchild Medical Center. Bethada, Maryland, recognized worldwide for its work in Medical Research. If you need assistance, you may be interested in the details. Just send in the coupon and well supply them. Armed Force Scholarships ZC44 University of Texas, Texas 78148 Air Force Aviation Schooling Engg Army Navy Air Force Aviation Schooling Engg Army Air Force Aviation Schooling Engg Army Air Force Aviation Schooling Engg Army Name (please print) Soc. Sec. # (please print) Address: City: State: Zip: Enrolled at: (CSCN) To graduate in: (month) (year) (degree) Date of birth: (month) (year) (degree) * veterinary information in Navy Program* ARMED FORCES HEALTH CARE P Walk alone... with confidence Portable Personal Siren... $16.95 SECURITEX® Compact, powerful siren to frighten would- be assailants, summon help. Carry in your purse or with adjustable shoulder strap ... from car or bus, driving alone, any potentially dangerous situation. Piercing alarm can be heard ½ mile away. Easily activated switch protected from false triggering. Battery powered. Lightweight, Attractive off-white case. Makes a great gift for any occasion. SALE 16.95 Reg. 29.95 See us for the complete Securitex line of home, auto, and personal pro- tection devices. PORTABLE SOURCE SECURITEX PORTABLE SOURCE SECURITEX SECURITEX® Shop Wards, Lawrence's Only Complete Department Store 1721 West 23rd Acres of Free Parking Open every night till 9:00-Sat. till 6:00-Sun. 12-5 MONTGOMERY WARD 6 Monday, May 6, 1974 University Dally Kansan Phillips Executive Says Controls Cause Deficit By GARY BORG Japan Staff Reporter Government repression of the free market is a major factor contributing to the current energy shortage, according to Leo Bernstein, a senior vice president of Philipte Petroleum. Johnstone, a graduate of the University of Kansas, spoke to students and faculty Saturday at an honors luncheon sponsored by the department of chemistry. The suggestion that a federal corporation be formed to develop rich oil and natural gas reserves on public lands was something of a contradiction, be said. "One of the reasons for the mess we're in today," Johnstone said, "is because the government is trying to repress a free market." He said the restoration of a free market would provide the incentive necessary for private industry to meet future energy demands. "Certainly we can do a better job than a geological subsidiary of the post office," he said. Johnstone denied that the energy shortage was contrived by the oil industry to increase petroleum prices. Such a practice, he said, were based on unfounded rumors. The Shah of Iran's statement the United States didn't experience a decrease in the amount of oil it imported during the Arab oil embargo, Johnstone said, implied that the U.S. would send two million barrels of oil a day." This is nearly a physical impossibility, he said. Allegations that the oil industry was boarding oil, were illogical, he said. He cited the industry's efforts to build the Alaskan pipeline and to revise automobile fuel taxes. He said evidence that oil companies were trying to increase available energy supplies. "But I am not to defend the oil industry, Johnstone said. "We've made our mistakes." The energy shortage was anticipated by the oil industry several years ago, he said. Word of the shortage, he said, seldom went beyond company meetings and trade publications. Consequently, the public wasn't notified in time to cut down on energy consumption. The Arab oil embargo compounded the problem, he said. Johnstone also disparaged the Federal Power Commission. He said the overriding goal of the commission was to supply the consumer with natural gas at the lowest price. This policy, Johnstone said, ignored the problem of adequate supplies for the future. Coal and oil shale were the two most likely prospects for meeting energy demands of the immediate future, he said. Another rise in the price of oil, he said, would make the extraction of oil from shale economically feasible. He said the environmental problems involved with burning coal were being slowly overcome. Other sources of energy, offered only limited possibilities, he said. Nuclear power plants now supply only four per cent of the nation's needs he said, and optimistic projects could increase nuclear power will for only 40 per cent of the nation's energy demands by 1985. Natural sources of energy, Johnstone said, such as solar and wind power, greenhouse gas, oil and expensive. New sources of fuel, such as ethyl alcohol and those involving the electrolysis of water were compared to current petroleum products. Present energy conversion methods won't compensate for the current annual energy demand in recent Ford Foundation study indicated that even with the most rigorous conservation methods, energy demands will continue to increase until the year 2000. Major energy savings, Johnstone said, will involve difficult decisions, such as whether every family should "own two cars, a motorbike and a house at the lake." HAPPINESS IS A TACO JOHN'S TACO! HAPPINESS IS A TACO JOHN'S TACO! TACO MARKS TACOS Awards for students in journalism were announced at the Senior Awards Dinner on Friday. Master of ceremonies for the dinner was John B. Brenner, professor of journalism. ...90c $1.00 23rd & Ousdahl Special May 2-9 David Trotter, Barry Taylor, Tommy Walker, David Hogg, Michael Barrie, Jamie Fowler, Steven Cohen, Michael Rispoli, Eric Koehler, Adam Sullivan, Danielle Gimson, Kevin Doyle, John Mayer, Jonathan MacGraw, Jason Nassau, Benjamin Dimmock, Emily Carter, and many others. .. Sun.-Thur. 10:30-Mid. Hours Sun.-Thur. 10:30-Mid. Fri. & Sat. 10:30-2 a.m. Students Receive Journalism Awards The awards were as follows: * *Certificate of Excellence for Excellence in Advetning Work* * *variety of things you have ever worked on* * *Darwin Award* * *Honourary Fellowship by Bruce Jarrett-Bardwell* University Daily Kalman Certificates for Excellence in Newpaper Management. Bill Gibson, Lawrence senior, Gary Ileson, Buffalo State University. TACO TACOS The Special Service Award in Film: David Chan, Hong Kong - sm, smm, sma, ncb, secb, user, Quick Power, Learner - hol, holl, holl, holl, holl, holl, holl - Elaine Zimmerman, Leeward student - Elisa Zimmerman, Leeward student Wilmet, Mike. (seller), Bob Marcolde, Lawrence Lowe. Au Otterfield, Mike. (seller), Bob Marcolde, Lawrence Lowe. Bernard Moynihan, Bob Simpson, Bob Simpson, Wibble莎。 senior certifier The Certificate of Outstanding Merit: Rebecca Parson, Wichita senior The Certificate of Special Service Mark Kretzman, and Francine Outstanding Sector in Photoshop Experience Ai Swainton, Evanston Outstanding Singer in Advertising Huskey, Lukes and Schmidt. Received a $10,000 grant from the American Cancer Society. Kansas City, KS; Maracott, Peth; Bettin Leonardo, Lewandow, Rutter. and Elaine Zimmerman, Learned Work, Outstanding Male in Film Practice. Meyer Harkman; Prairie School Professor in Film Production. Meyer harkman; academic student. chinese junior, Heinry School award of 150; Eileen Shan, Leeward, Berths Beach School award of 150; Aloe Leavewash, Kentucky School award of 150. Graduation with highest Blacklisted Certificate: Candreer Herbert, Leavengood, Shetty J.S. London, Private Prize RIther, Simon and Zimin Graduation with Diflushion, Lydia Beebe, McPearson, Siephleah Brown, Catherine Gorman, Katie Hale, Stephen E. Hawley, Eleanor Gibson, Glynn Nancillian, Arkansas City, Ms. Brennan, Melissa O'Connor, Amanda Schmidt, Donald Leeper, Topics, and Stephanie Woolich. Winnipeg will be the best photography prize in the junior best photography competition. Jim Thomas, Leavenworth. worried. Casady-Schott-Shore Scholarship for $300: Joseph Eussen, Hut Gloria Hedler Scholarship for Women in Communication of each. 1st Dissertation Colby Juntier, and Mary Sapp, Newton Don Pierre Memorial Award for Outstanding Sportswriting Inaction. Outstanding Staff Work awards. Wear awards and McFarron Aviation apparel. Fly with McFarron Aviation, Lynx Darner, Lawrence sophorne, and Craig Steel. University of Arizona and scholarship of $2000 Mona Duckworth, Independence, Nebraska. St. Stailler Scholarship; Marsh Schollier, AACU Cup and Eric Meyler, Marathon Junior. The Angelica C. Scott award for reporting: Marcotte, 2014. Awards in Broadcast Marketing: the Hartzaw prize, Pauline Bates, William W. Bell, John J. Kotter, Jeff Luton, Qilian, Jinjie and John Frank, Coleville奖等。The Europe C. Pallain Scholarship of $1000 was spilt between Jim Kennedal, Reckill, Carol Gwen, Caleb Village Jr. Village Juice Awards. The Walter Emmett Memorial Award for reporting taxes. Awarding list from the William Allen White Foundation for $350 million in tax-related awards. Owen senior, and Jeff Pierce, Lawrence graduate student. Capacity school-share scholarship for K-12 students. True to name and commitment. 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K $895 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 920 MASSACHUSETTS MISTER GUY University Daily Kansan Monday, May 6, 1974 ? 7 Marks Fall as KU Wins in Track By MIKE FITZGERALD MIKE PETEGELER Kansas Sports Wrkter Seven meet records were broken and one record tied Saturday as the University of Kansas track team edge the Kansas State track team, 75-10, at Memorial Stadium. Kent McDonald of KU shattered a meet record and established a KU school record in 1982. During training, McDonald broke his own meet record of 9:08.0 and Bill Silverberg's KU record of 8:50.0 set at the Olympic Trials in 1964. McDonald also placed second in the Although Theo Hamilton of KU won the long jump with a feet 2.9% less, it was a second place jump by KU's Danny Seay that made the record books. Hamilton's jump was allowable for first place, but because the jump couldn't be allowed, the jump couldn't be recorded. Seay's 2 feet 5³' jump broke the record of 25 feet 2¹' set in 1960 by K-State's Herb Sealy also broke another meet record in the triple jump, giving 49 feet $7\frac{1}{4}$ to break Delario Robinson's record of 46 feet $10\frac{3}{4}$ set in 1973. Dave Anderson was the other KU record breaker, his mark coming in the three-mile run with a 13:39.3 clocking. Anderson broke teammate and second place player Mc- JOHN BURTON KU's Danny Seay Sets a Meet Record KC Rovals Down Yankees KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Vada Pinson smashed a tie-breaking two-run homer to back Steve Busyli six-six pitching, leading the N.Y.C. team over the New York Yankees yesterday. Pinson's homer came with one out in the seventh innings off Pat Dobson, 2-4, following a catch by a pitch. The Royals added four insurance runs off Dick Woodson in the eighth on Fran Healy'sbles-creating double following an侵入伤案 to Pisarion and George Brett's RBI single. The Yankees scored in the first inning on singles by Loin Pinella and Chris Chambliss and Bobby Murcer's sacrifice fly. Kansas City tied it in the second on Hall McRae's burt hit and singles by Rojas and Pinson. New York took a 2-1 lead in the third on American Speed Center 790 N. 2nd 842-6828 Featuring all major brands of quality speed equipment Donald's record of 14;07.4 set last year. Roy White's triple and a single by Murcer, Roy Bretai the royals tied in their half of the inning on Brett's single and Patel's Petal. The league was missing error by third baseman Grittle Nettles. Establishing meet records for Kansas State were Keith Palmer in the mile run, 4.0:6.9; Bob Obee in the javelin throw, 256 feet 10; Vance Roland in the 128-year high hurdles, 13.8, and the Kansas State 400-meter using a meet record with 40.3 clocking. The pole vault competition provided the 350 persons who attended Saturday's meet with lighthearted entertainment. After changing the direction of approach three times, none of the three entrants could clear the opening height of 18 feet 0. No points were scored. Bob Timmons, KU track coach, was released with his team's performance. FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Popular Films Buster Keaton in STEAMBOAT BILL JR. and SHERLOCK JR. Friday, May 10 7:00-9:30 Saturday, May 11 7:00-9:30 75c Kansas Union Special Films MARJOE Monday, May 6 7:30 75c Kansas union "A decision was made Wednesday or Thursday of last week by Mark, the coaches and the team," he said. "We just decided it to go home early." He himself for the Biu Eight outdoor meet. Timmons said that he "prayed" in the three-mile run, the next to last event in which KU placed 1-2-3 and won the meet. He said that he didn't know what to expect in the race and didn't know if KU could hold on to the lead they had early in the meet. "I thought we did real well today," he said. "Eddie (Lewis) looked great. He really competed in the 220. I thought Kent (McDonald) ran awfully well, too." Timmons also explained one obvious hold in KU's also stellar performance; the absence of Mark Latz. Latz pulled a muscle and was expected to compete Saturday. KANSAZ K7, KANSAZ STATE 70 short post (K7), 16-3, 24-9, Willis (K11), 8-5, 22-7, Dallas (KSU), 4-6, 4-2, 4 Larry Roth SUA FILMS SUA FILMS 2008 oversee the organization of the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame. Kevin Tucker, former Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame member and president, served as chairman. The Retired Old Men's Basketball team from Bay Area, California, r man. 1. Kishen Pailai (KSM) 10.04.4 . John F. Kishen (KSM) 10.04.5 . M. Sawatthan (KSM) 10.04.6 . John F. Sawatthan (KSM) 10.04.7 . M. Best Record. Old mark 8 by Wesley Sawatthan (KSM) 10.04.8 . John F. Sawatthan (KSM) 10.04.9 . Long jump= 1.7 Theiss Hamilton (KU, 25.9); 2 Danny Kusuma (KU, 21.3); 3 Terry Kusuma (KU, 21.3); 4 Dany Kusuma (KU, 21.3); 5 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 6 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 7 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 8 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 9 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 10 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 11 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 12 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 13 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 14 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 15 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 16 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 17 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 18 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 19 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 20 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 21 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 22 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 23 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 24 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 25 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 26 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 27 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 28 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 29 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 30 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 31 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 32 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 33 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 34 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 35 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 36 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 37 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 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401 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 402 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 403 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 404 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 405 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 406 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 407 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 408 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 409 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 410 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 411 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 412 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 413 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 414 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 415 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 416 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 417 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 418 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 419 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 420 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 421 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 422 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 423 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 424 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 425 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 426 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 427 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 428 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 429 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 430 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 431 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 432 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 433 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 434 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 435 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 436 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 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473 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 474 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 475 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 476 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 477 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 478 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 479 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 480 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 481 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 482 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 483 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 484 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 485 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 486 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 487 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 488 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 489 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 490 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 491 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 492 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 493 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 494 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 495 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 496 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 497 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 498 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 499 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 500 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 501 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 502 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 503 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 504 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 505 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 506 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 507 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 508 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 509 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 510 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 511 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 512 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 513 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 514 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 515 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 516 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 517 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 518 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 519 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 520 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 521 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 522 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 523 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 524 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 525 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 526 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 527 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 528 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 529 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 530 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 531 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 532 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 533 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 534 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 535 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 536 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 537 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 538 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 539 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 540 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 541 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 542 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 543 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 544 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 545 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 546 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 547 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 548 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 549 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 550 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 551 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 552 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 553 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 554 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 555 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 556 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 557 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 558 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 559 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 560 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 561 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 562 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 563 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 564 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 565 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 566 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 567 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 568 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 569 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 570 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 571 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 572 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 573 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 574 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 575 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 576 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 577 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 578 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 579 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 580 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 581 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 582 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 583 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 584 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 585 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 586 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 587 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 588 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 589 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 590 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 591 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 592 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 593 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 594 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 595 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 596 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 597 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 598 Dany Kusima (KU, 21.3); 599 R. C. Hargrove R. C. Hargrove R. C. Hargrove Charlie Bockhorst (1530), 1530, 2 Hargrove 1530, 1530, Mark Wiltshire (1530), 4 Gary Gessler 1530, 1530, Mark Wiltshire (1530) - Levine, J. 1. Bob Hoseb (1986). *250* **10. 13**. Roger Hammond (Hammond, R.) *The Bodybuilder*. New York: HarperCollins. * Levine, J. 2. Tiger Flower (1989). *250* **10. 14**. Meet Rush. (Mitchell, R.) *The Bodybuilder*. New York: HarperCollins. - Morris (KU), 3, 4, 5. Jay Wagner (KU), 4, 4. Nate Cromwell (KU), 2, 4. Chris Murray (KU), 4, 4. Greg Grazia (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. John DeBakey (KU), 6, 7. - 8x24mm ydrx run - 1. Lenski Harbin Rattus (KSU), 1.3, 2.4, 2.8 * 8x24mm ydrx run - 2. Lenski Harbin Rattus (KSU), 1.3, 2.4, 2.8 * Kubota RSU (KU), 1.3, Record Medical. Old Record 1.3 by Kubota RSU (KU). 190 yd hard-b-1, D. William Williams (KSU), 8.7, 1 Emmett Davis (KSU), 45 yd hard-b-1, D. William Williams (SC威罗州), 22, 1 Paul Jefferson (RU), 122 6:40 yard intermediate hardres - 1. Bill Kemster (KSU), 1. Bill Kemster (KSU), 2. Bill Kemster (KSU), 3. Bill Kemster (KSU) high jump - 1. Randy Smith (KU), 6.1. 2. Kathrin Guthin (KU), 6.1. 3. Barry Smith (KU), 6.1. 4. Nick Biller (KSU) (KU), 6.1. 5. Barry Smith (KU), 6.1. 6. Nick Biller (KSU) Triple jump: 1. Danny key (UK), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 5. Chad Smith (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 6. Jamaica (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 7. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 8. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 9. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 10. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 11. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 12. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 13. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 14. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 15. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 16. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 17. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 18. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 19. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 20. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 21. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 22. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 23. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 24. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 25. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 26. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 27. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 28. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 29. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 30. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 31. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 32. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 33. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 34. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 35. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 36. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 37. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 38. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 39. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 40. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 41. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 42. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 43. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 44. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 45. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 46. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 47. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 48. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 49. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 50. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 51. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 52. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 53. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 54. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 55. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 56. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 57. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 58. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 59. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 60. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 61. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 62. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 63. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 64. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 65. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 66. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 67. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 68. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 69. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 70. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 71. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 72. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 73. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 74. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 75. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 76. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 77. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 78. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 79. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 80. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 81. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 82. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 83. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 84. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 85. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 86. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 87. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 88. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 89. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 90. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 91. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 92. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 93. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 94. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 95. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 96. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 97. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 98. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 99. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 100. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 101. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 102. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 103. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 104. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 105. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 106. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 107. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 108. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 109. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 110. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 111. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 112. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 113. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 114. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 115. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 116. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 117. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 118. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 119. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 120. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 121. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 122. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 123. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 124. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 125. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 126. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 127. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 128. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 129. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 130. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 131. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 132. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 133. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 134. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 135. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 136. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 137. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 138. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 139. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 140. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 141. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 142. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 143. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 144. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 145. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 146. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 147. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 148. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 149. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 150. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 151. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 152. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 153. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 154. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 155. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 156. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 157. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 158. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 159. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 160. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 161. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 162. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 163. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 164. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 165. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 166. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 167. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 168. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 169. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 170. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 171. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 172. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 173. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 174. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 175. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 176. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 177. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 178. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 179. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 180. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 181. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 182. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 183. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 184. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 185. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 186. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 187. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 188. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 189. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 190. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 191. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 192. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 193. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 194. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 195. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 196. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 197. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 198. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 199. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 200. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 201. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 202. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 203. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 204. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 205. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 206. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 207. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 208. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 209. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 210. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 211. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 212. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 213. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 214. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 215. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 216. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 217. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 218. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 219. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 220. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 221. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 222. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 223. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 224. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 225. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 226. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 227. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 228. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 229. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 230. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 231. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 232. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 233. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 234. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 235. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 236. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 237. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 238. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 239. 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Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 260. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 261. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 262. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 263. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 264. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 265. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 266. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 267. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 268. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 269. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 270. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 271. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 272. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 273. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 274. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 275. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 276. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 277. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 278. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 279. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 280. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 281. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 282. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 283. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 284. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 285. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 286. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 287. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 288. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 289. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 290. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 291. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 292. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 293. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 294. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 295. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 296. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 297. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 298. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 299. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 300. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 301. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 302. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 303. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 304. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 305. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 306. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 307. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 308. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 309. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 310. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 311. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 312. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 313. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 314. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 315. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 316. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 317. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 318. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 319. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 320. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 321. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 322. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 323. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 324. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 325. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 326. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 327. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 328. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 329. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 330. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 331. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 332. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 333. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 334. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 335. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 336. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 337. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 338. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 339. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 340. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 341. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 342. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 343. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 344. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 345. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 346. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 347. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 348. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 349. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 350. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 351. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 352. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 353. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 354. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 355. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 356. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 357. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 358. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 359. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 360. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 361. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 362. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 363. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 364. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 365. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 366. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 367. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 368. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 369. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 370. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 371. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 372. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 373. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 374. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 375. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 376. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 377. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 378. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 379. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 380. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 381. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 382. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 383. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 384. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 385. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 386. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 387. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 388. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 389. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 390. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 391. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 392. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 393. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 394. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 395. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 396. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 397. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 398. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 399. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 400. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 401. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 402. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 403. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 404. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 405. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 406. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 407. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 408. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 409. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 410. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 411. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 412. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 413. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 414. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 415. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 416. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 417. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 418. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 419. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 420. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 421. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 422. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 423. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 424. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 425. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 426. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 427. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 428. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 429. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 430. Bermuda (USA), 49/3, 2. Theo King (Brazil), 43 220-yard dash - 1, Elden Lewis (RU), 11; 2, Fred Wilson (GK), 11; 3, Tom Woods (RU), 23; 4, Tom Woods (GK), 23; 5, Tom Woods (GK), 23 Three runs in finale - David Anderson (K1), J3, K3. Erik Hall (K5), J2, K5. Erik Palmer (KS1), J3, K3. Nest Med. Mark, Omar Roth Palmer (KS1), J3, K3. Nest Med. Mark, Omar Roth Palmer (KS1), J3, K3. Tennis Team Still in Race Despite Loss to Oklahoma Mike relay 1. Kansas State (Fred Merritt, Lennie Malone) 2. Missouri State (Dennis McGinn, Tim Scavanna, John Long Jim, Jay Wagner). Vann, Bill Clarke and Dennis Cahill are all seeded with Clarke being the top seed in the 4. no. 15mets. Clarke is undefeated in Big Eight play, having won his last 42 matches. Hill will also team with Bill Templaris as the top seeded doubles team in the tournament. Despite a 5-4 loss to Oklahoma on Saturday, the University of Kansas tennis team is still a contender for the Big Eight Title. The loss to Oklahoma left KU in third place, one point behind the Sooners and two points behind Oklahoma State. In singles play, Bill Tompkins, Steve - SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Celebrate the Last Day of Classes with THE MARX BROTHERS in 1800 Naismith Drive Tuesday, May 7 7:30-9:30 "A Day at the Races" Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 913-843-8559 75 $ ^{\circ} $ Woodruff Auditorium Naismith Hall WHEN NATURE CALLS, WHY RUN DOWN LONG HALLS? Fully equipped darkroom—Weekly maid service Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool Good food A boy is running down the hallway. V05 SWIE V05 SWIE V05 SWIE V05 SWIE V05 When you move in at our place, you'll have a private bath adjoining your own room! Come join us at free state opera house 642 mass lawrence presents QUITTIN TIME TUESDAY, MAY 7 9-midnight FREE BEER, LOVE, LUST and SIN once inside the door $2.00 admission Brought to you by the MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence Q Q TACO GRANDE FUEL TANK With This Coupon Buy 2 Sanchos Get 1 SANCHO FREE! Good Every Day Offer Expires May 31 9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd 1974-Year of the Taco FREE RENTAL SERVICE FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE LISTINGS ON HOUSING AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE CALL 842-2500 LAWRENCE RENTALS EXCHANGE LRe: McDonald's Once there was a McDonald's restaurant in a neighborhood just like yours. One day the McDonald's owner looked around and thought how nice it would be to have more flowers growing here and there. They looked so pretty and smelled so good that he wanted all his neighbors to have flowers too! So, now you can go into your neighborhood McDonald's and get a free packet of approximately 100 Marigold seeds with any sandwich purchase. That's over 60 million new flowers we can have growing in our community. Something Nice for the Heart of America Something Nice for the Heart of America Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358 8 Monday, May 6, 1974 University Daily Kansan Future Studies Are More than Fad By SUZI SMITH Kansas Staff Reporter The future isn't what it used to be, say the Science Fiction Writers of America, and a group of faculty members at the University of Kansas agree with them. These faculty members are part of the World Future Society, beaded by local coordinator William Conboy, professor of speech and drama. Coboy and five other members of a University steering committee agreed to provide the future on campus ATHLETIC DIRECTOR CLYDE WALKER will hold an open meeting for all interested University of Kansas students at the UWF and the International Room of the Kansas Union. DAVE DELLINGER AND LENNOX HINES will speak on "Prisoner's Rights and Resistance within the Penal System" at 8 tonight in the United Middle East Conference, Eight defendant and Hines is the director of the National Conference of Black Lawyers. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in Room 332 Malott. Jack Calvahouse, professor of physics and astronomy, will speak on "Chemical-Industrial Mattery Multidisciplinary Accomplements, Opportunities—the View of a Physical Scientist." MARY ELENE SUTTON, Butler, M. graduate student, will give her organ doctoral recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOI RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CAMPING 15 East 8th 841-2636 10-5 Monday Saturday George's Shop Phone 843-7164 Smoking Is Our Only Business Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair F felix camera ALPAN, KONICA, LEICA, PENTAX, CANNON, CAMERAS, LENSES, and ACCESSORIES. AGFA-ILFORD Papers & Films Lawrence Press. 442-5328 2317 Independence Blvd. Kansas City, Mo. 64124 Besides Conoby, members of the steering committee are Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology; Felix Moas, professor of psychology; James McIntosh, student Studies; James Gunn, lecturer in English and journalism; Ogden Lindsey, professor of education; newly applied director of admissions. Both Conboy and Moos say student interest has been high. and trying to provide an interdisciplinary major in future studies. love is . . . ... wanting to take care of each other ... in your own home purchased from According to Moos, future studies have been seen as "something not quite academic." He says they have been seen as looking into cristal balls. Moss planned his "Anthropology of the Future" course for 25 to 35 students, but more than 100 enrolled. Conboy was forced to move his "Concept of the Future in Human Experience" course from a room in Hearst Hall to a larger room in Wescoes Hall. Although courses about the future have been taught at KU for a number of years, Conboy says, the steering comes more quickly. "If you want speed" he proves that future studies aren't just a fad, But, Moa says, future studies is a legitimate area of study because there is an interest in the subject. Future studies, Moos says, "are the analysis of a body of data with a time dimension, which includes past, present and future rather than just past and present." Conboy says a student with a future studies background learns to be interested in anticipation and prediction and the study of consequences. He says there are at least three trends in future studies, an interest in the predicted future, an interest in prediction, an interest in the future as a vehicle for thought. RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES 3020 Iowa St. Lawrence, Kansas Baskew Open 7 a week According to Corbey, future studies is currently an option for a special major in liberal arts and sciences, but within a year, the steering committee would like to set up a more standard major with a more fully developed set of courses. Conboy estimated that there were about seven to 10 future studies courses being taught at the University in various departments. "The local implications are immense," CRESCENT APARTMENTS - Crescent Heights •Oaks •Acorn - - Gaslight - Rental Office 1815 W. 24TH 1 and 2 BEDROOM If You're Planning on FLYING, Let Maupittur To the TDEWORK For You! (NEVER BE AWAY) from a ticket (airline) - Silver and Turquoise Indian Jewelry - Ruby Silt MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Open 8-5 Mon.-Sat. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER - Stained Glass Museum of Natural History We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail. 图 SUA / Maupintour travel service Dyche Hall 1-5 Sun. FINE SERVICE Creative Haircutting for Men and Women ADVENTURE a bookstore Gentlemen's Quarters FINE BOOKS Phone 843-6424 843-2719 for appt PHONE 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. W. 9th St. Center Bicycle 9th & III. Couny emphasizes that a future studies major is by definition an interdisciplinary field. says Moos. "Before, the University was entirely in the past." "We aren't suggesting that future studies is a discipline," he says. "It isn't. It is a way of packaging learning, a new way of bringing things together." Mos says the dimension of the future could serve to bring people together from a variety of disciplines because the future of all disciplines will be related. Cobay says the new interest in the future is a result of three "need conditions." First, he says, the accelerated rates of social and technological change have forced people to determine where they are headed so they can prepare for their destination or revise course if they don't like the route they are taking. Second, the quantity and complexity of modern life force people to be aware of many more things and result in "plantive" behaviors, especially all mean" or "where are we headed?" Moo says, "In a world where there was still relative access to goods and the rate of change was somewhat slower, people were not used in looking back to explain their present." And third, "the awesome and perhaps irreversible decisions facing civilization today" makes the study of consequences mandatory. "Now that the rate of change has accelerated so fast and things become obsolete so much faster, the feeling of having room to grow in dimension has become more important. Corbyn says students of future studies vary between two extremes, those who see themselves as a candidate for the next generation. READINGS by Handwriting Analysis and Cards Will Answer Any Questions on All Matters of Life. Stop In Today. Call 843-5899 2246 Ohio—Corner of 23rd St. Moes says he things students enroll in future studies courses out of curiosity and because man has always been interested in looking into crystal balls. They think this is one way they can get a feeling of what is to come, he says. But he says, "I don't think we should use the future so all of us can become crystal ball studders. Up until now the future just happened. moragbass and those we want to learn how avoid the perils and it may make us more successful. This was relatively easy when we lived in a world of relative plants, but it's not so easy when we live in a world of invasive plants. Conby says a background in future studies could be an edge for the student A lot of companies that hire college graduates, he says, are particularly interested in students with interdisciplinary majors. There are more jobs are interdisciplinary in nature. They are looking for habits of creativity and flexibility, he says, and this gives students in future studies an edge because they are not always at the heart of future changes are at the heart of future studies. And so in a year, if the steering committee is successful, KU will offer a major discount. Meanwhile, Conboy is optimistic about the attractions of future studies. The people who are likely to be interested in joining this effort, he says, will come from everywhere. "The only thing that binds us is that we think it's a good thing to be thinking about something." NEEDLEWORK JEWELRY by See 3 Have a nice summer! Crewel Cupboard "your yam and needlework center" 15 East 8 TV Summer Hours (effective May 20) Noon-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday U+HAUL O Instead of waiting until the last minute to plan your next move, and ending up throwing up your hands in despair, rent a trailer or truck to fit your needs. Do it safely, economically: do it right. 843-2060 Don't Get Stuck! HAROLDS 1540 W. 6TH PHILLIPS 66 Gone the romance that was so driven. LAWRENCE, KANSA5 66044 843-3557 Robert Redford & Mia Farrow 'THE GREAT GATSBY' Adm. Adult 12-60 -Child 7-16 NO PASSES RIDIN', ROPIN' WRANGLIN' and all that WESTEPN BULLSHIT Hillcrest ALICE in WONDERLAND Granada TELAITE ... 13248 BLAZING SADDLES The American Film Theatre at 7:30 9:40 sat. Sun Mat 2:10 Varsity Titulus ... Magazine 17-065 —ENDSTUESDAY— Presents STACE REACH in John Osborn's STACY KEACH Today at 2 & 8 at the "LUTHER" Hillcrest THE EXORCIST ALL SERVICES#12345-NO PASSES YOURS MISSING OF AGE PROVIDING YOURS OF AGE PASSING Business Office Clinics at 8:00 a.m. Snack Break at 7:25 a.m. Busines Hillcrest Liz Taylor "ASH WEDNESDAY" Jack Lemonin in "SAVE THE TIGER" Box opens 8:00 Show 8:30 Sunset IN THE MARKET A West Highway History of KU Is On Sale Now Copies of "The University of Kansas: A History" will be on sale this week on campus. The 800-page illustrated volume which was written by Clifford S. Griffin, is one of the most every aspect of the University's first century, from KU's founding to modern times. Copies will be available in campus bookstores or may be ordered from the University Library. We also deliver Sandwiches and Pizza 843-9111 Campers Hideaway $ CASH Sell your used (and not so used) text books kansas union BOOKSTORE May 8-17 Hours 8:30-5 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 10-1 TOMMY BARNES Great looking jeans and tops are one of our specialties . . fantastic soft cool fabrics and colors are fresh for summer. at the . . . Country House 839 Massachusetts At the Back of the Town Shop 839 Massachusetts Downtown University Daily Kansan Monday, May 6, 1974 KANSAN WANT ADS 9 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES One Day 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.01 25 words or fewer: $2.00 each additional word: $.02 Three Days Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Five Days 25 words or fewer: $2.50 each additional word: $.03 Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students with disabilities. PLEASE HING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRE HALL. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! There are no books of looking at... 1) If you use them, you're at an advantage 2) If you don't use them, you're at a dis- adventure Elite Travel comes to the same thing—"New Arkansas of Western States. Available now. Available in New York." Quality standard & electric reconditioned types, whether repairs. Repair 841-7083. We serve all others whatrepire. Ry Audio 12, E 9th. Phone: 842-3047 Hours: Available for any声事 problem. Not available for any sound problem. CANDLITHET TOWNHOUSES For Sale. New, five plant, one, and 3 bedrooms in a charming townhouse. A few units nearby have balconies, attached garage. Outside lots are basement, attached garage. Outside 24th St. Telephone Phone 853-344 or 853-3754. $CUBA EQUIPMENT - Ship, Special-Tank, $HONEYBEE EQUIPMENT - Ship, Special-Tank, $HONEYBEE Hose-In-Rescue-Hose-Hose FOR SALE. Fresh fruits and vegetables at real price. Takes up to 24 hours. Shipped. Always used, furniture, collectibles, sports equipment. COUNTRY SHOP. 707 N. 3rd bld. north of the city. 521-823-1111. Available seven days. 842-513-8219. Helen Alter. Advertiser. REGISTERED BLOODHOUND PUPPIES. MKM healthy pups. Taking orders now Call John 823-260- 4568 SALIR! The first sale of Previously owned LP's $1,500 at 4pm on April 29th or May 4th. Friend tie to $1, $600 and $800. Must sell. need the cash! 1872 Triumba BA 6279, and ask for Pa. For sale. T2 WV Beetle 15,000 km, still under own radio. Radio Excellent condition. Cali 941-728-3060 We do not rip off college students. We have terra- riment plants, vegetal plants, unimagnallic plants at all fair prices. Mother's Day gifts Maple Leaf Bread, Cake Mix, Greenhouse Preserves, 3 bells, eak of Tee Fruit Lass-7 Rainbow Super Center Curtains 231 sitting. Simplified with a large white base and a leather seat. New front tire. John at 843-952-6200. For Sale, SMC Takamax 200mm f/4 camera lens designed for fast handheld in excellent condition and designed for fast handheld in excellent condition. New A87 15-13 Steel Bebel Beaked Whitewall cut to cut the side for easy Fast-free installation at Rag Stomach back. 329 Mm FoM-14D Wide Body Bell Pop, Fiberglass. Price cut from $20,000 to $13,999. 859 Max. Center parking. Yay Blowback Pop! 859 Max. Center parking. Price cut from $20,000 to $13,999. Final Closeout! All remaining Magnavox & Motorola Components at 50% off! Last chance on floor samples & retail! Not backtracked. Stake your bet on it now set $90.90, $299.95 up set $150.75. Raleigh Super Course 202, tbl storing, timber frame frame for a 450-horse trailer leather and New Trout tire (lane at 845-635) For Sale. 52" race car style lingerie Bought in 2014. 370/420-380/480-2810. Will throw a extra outer cup. Good design. Give your girl a bit of spring all her own with a ternarium. Minimum care and maximum care are important. For sale—1730 BULTAC MERCURY Roadster- fast, lightly built, lightweight, easily fa- mished, 4x4, automatic transmission Graduation-Must sell my 14k44 mobile home, & drier & dryer in-cabin kitchen appliances, & dishwasher, refrigerator, ceiling air-cond with large porch, hurricane roofs. Take over payment. Available June 14th. FOR SALE -196- 968 VW, real cherry shape, call 5-7 FOR 8, 943-968 FOR SALE- quality used mobile home, 60 x 12 ft, 4 bd/3 ba, 1850 sq. ft., suitable for small, sell best, mail used, 843-1623. Film Sale- Armratnm, Open-Hole, Sterling Silver in good condition. Call 842-5079 or 842-7600 Leaving town—must kill all men's 10 speed Florlor leaving town—must kill all men's 10 speed Florlor Kaiden, 864-5224 (no answer), if no. answer, 8740-50-0 (no answer) Camera outfit for sale: Pentex Body, 200 mm, Vivitar lens, 28 mm. Vivitar Wide-angle, 50 mm. Mimixy+Sokor lens. Gossai Solar Light-Meter. 642-9158. $17. If needed, Call Dave. 642-9158. Bell-Harmony 6-String and case 29. coil vult. bell- Harmony 6-String and case 29. coil vult. and aluminum intake. Details: 644-29010; after 6.50 at Bell-Harmony. For Sale 1866 Chicago Sprinter Vans, rebuilt 6 cyl- poles with new brakes. New chassis. New variable charge wheels, wide (125mm), 420-530 mm. New rear differential. Beautiful Sealpoint Slames kittens. 8 weeks old. Call 617-294-3058 anytime on Sexy Roxy FOR SALE-1971 WX. Excellent condition, new insurance, 50 yrs. old, 5 p.m. and on weekends. Keep try- ing. For Sale—1 year old durSiur T5 125, 360 mm, for sale with new helmet and many other details. #34-8263 For Sale -UniKnit bass guitar Excellent condi- tion. FM radio, AM FM radio. In good shape. 86-943-2971 INBALM, MACHINE. Big Chief formally named INBALM for two plays. Great for Greek bucke $150 for two. $25 for one. For Sale - Two-Bay unit not starcured - Zennit 'B' Parking. This unit is located in a fully covered. Everything is perfect condition. Must be paid by credit card only. No deposit. 20 bridging Cycle. Cycle but kui needs work offer to bridge. Cycle to bridge and leave phone Call Dva. 8421 offering to bridge and leave phone Call Dva. 8421 Dvale Baber Hoehlich Glencoreleen 10-18. FETVOM Royal Ballet Royal Safa Tierport. Bestwiss Royal Ballet Safra Tierport. Bestwiss SAILBOARD—Sports Pierce, 12 long, south front of boat on or after Sunday, MW 8:22-9:01. W8-92-841. For Sale - 1969 Fat Spider 850 excellent running condition. Call Terna. 842-6832. Keepying. 5-7 FOR SALE Dual 125i nirritable with Shore M01H cartridge (taxed $100, $160, Radio Shack $190, $240, $375) $110 $180 $190 pr. Ward's AM-FM-4 Trank stereo $190 Room 519, Naimhath Mother $7-7 160 Room 519, Naimhath Mother $7-7 FOR SALE TV '23' B.I.W. BCA console, $50. TV '24' W.IIW BCA console, $60. waste washer, $100, matching electric dryer, $100. Beige mug shaker cabinet, $20. Beige refrigerator, $20. Beige carpet, $20. GE pink refrigerator, $95. Olive carpet, $95. X 10 x 10. FOR SALE! Aquacat Calamara Sailboat with four cabins, 80' long x 21' wide sq ft, fresh water, 65-84ft LHS, 5.90 $/BOT. Call (843) 847-5980. Graduation--Must sell 1972 12x60 mobile home, 2 bedroom, carpeted, skirting the downs, very clean & very reasonable. Great for married or couple at 430 North 5, zero 2 or call 8-7359. 3359 SALE: 1980 Southern-Alpine, low mileage, very good condition. Inspection available on offer. Call 5 a.m. for 832-974-0754. For Sale: Munt sell 72 Triumph 14,000 miles Call: 842-6279 5-7 V. W.-Yellow 159 square in base. Clean no尘, clean all. New gasket with log to bag truck 1986. New gasket with log to bag truck 1986. New gasket with log to bag truck 1986. BICYCLE for age: Two years old. Average, 20-25. Excellent condition! Only $5 Call Now at 648-735-1200 FOR RENT FOR RENT to make or female student. Nice apartment located across from Union Park. Parking and utilities paid. FOR RENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with a balcony, patio, parking, storage. NEAR CARROLLS CITY BEACH. (804) 753-8600 HILLVIEW APARTMENTS. 1725-1734 Worst Wet 24th. New leasing 11 and 2 bedrooms furnished on land, with free bath, kitchen, laundry, dining room, carpet, disposal, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities off-the-street parking, KU bus access. TRAILHIDGE, by the country club, wall to wall carpeting, carpeted rooms, private kitchens, private bathrooms, laundry room, BBQ grill in courtyard, 1-bath house FWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS - $120 per month FWO HOME OFFICE APARTMENTS - $350 per month OHMONO daily hotel 8.00 p.m. $496. Buidling 842-205-6900 MEADOWROOD_APARTMENTS Great Variety. WILLIAMSON_BUILDING A planned construction unit. KU from $1400 T. BROOKLYN_BUILDING A planned construction unit. KU from $1400 T. GATINIUSE APARTMENTS. KU bus service provider. Gatiniuse 8 a.m.-5 p.m. or later by airport 210 W. 26th St. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. or later by airport 210 W. 26th St. Furnished 1-5 room apartments $200. Also, room with kitchen appliances $350. Bedding in bedding sets, mattresses and pillows not included. RENTAL HOUSING for ants, duplexes and houses, call 821-710 or 824-5845. tf Summer Rental* - Summer Rates. Belling largest apts, for lowest summer rates in the city. Belling August 1-3, 1-4 bedroom furnished as low as $80 a month. Bedrooms pay all utilities. AC, pool balances on the apts pay all utilities. AC, pool balances on the University Terrace & Old Mild Apt. At 1327 to 1359 (1166-1406) or 429 (of course) from University SA. 1607 W. 9th. Rooms—furnished, clean and quiet for males, females and children. Border RIVER and town water. No pets. Apts.-Clean, quiet, furnished 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. No pets. Boards KU and town beds 10-18. Typewriters for rent. Call 841-4083. Need a place to stay this summer? The air conditioned Sipa Nu home is renting rooms for the two week period. The room has a Two month lease. $2 a month. Close to campus. I3 personal room. Call Mrs. Mastia, 809-451-7166. AVAILABLE JUNE tue 1. 18R APT with slightly reduced rent n no managerial fee. Prefer租 10% on a basis of $250/month. Now BENTING - for summer and fall. Large Doubles. One pair. No jumps. No spikes. 12 hours of play. $49.00 Formatted Apt. for rent at 18th W. Chid. 14bd, Ibmbr. Available on 30th Fri. 6:50am to 7:50pm, Call Jeff. 855-644-6448. Two bedroom. $75/month, utilities paid. Call 843- 8207. 5-6 STADIUM APTS - Now basking for one year rest, you can go to St. Louis and get the 18+ vales. Two bedroom turnout w/wal cat pool, poolhouse swimming pool-family facilities - private-park pool at 1123 Indiana #s or call 845-2126 between Nice 2-BR Apt to subtle. Immediately behind her, a 1400-watt heater for Cayenne 6-27 after 489 days or a 813-4844 during its stay. Room available for summer session, beginning from 10:30 AM to 7:00 PM. Room is available for 12th and 9th Term Call #382-705-7 645-705-756 Duplex for rent. 2 bids. Available May 20. $155 including unit. Phone #862-9622 after 9:30. Rent for Summer school only. Entire second floor furnished 4 bedroom apt, for 3 or 4 students 1 June to Aug. 1. College to campus and 8 st. & town. Utility bills. Utilities phone. 844-8022 all week. 5 p.m. BR IAPs w. witch, bath, LR Off-street parking BR IAPs w. witch, bath, LR Off-street parking 1000. Kcy 842-9782-6836 Sublease for summer. Apt. corner of 14th and Tenn. $75 month. Call 841-2796. 5-7 For Rent - PROFESSOR'S HOUSE 34-Aug Room for 6, $290 per month. Purchased porch, 2 car garage $200/month. One of America's outstanding private boys camps located in the limited number of openings on the staff for the 1974 season. DAYS OF STUDIO CONVERSION includes salary, round trip transportation, living quarters, boat and bicycle tours, a extensive summer job. Consequently, only men of the high-income class are considered. For complete information, write D. C. Broadbidge, 2863 Shannon Court, North Brookville, IA. Summer Submit (May 15-Aug. 15) $100 mo. & utilities 18 BR furnished up on second floor - swimming pool in the conditioning, display, kitchen room of this hotel. Heights 824-288 or 844-4111. S. Harkens Must rent for summer, nine two bedroom apart- ments in capital cap, can also to camp in $255 plus square feet. $450 per month. For men - 2 rooms -1 studio apt. All AC, covered, private bath, and entrance-218, west of west of the lobby. For Rent 1-bir. 1-bath. Apt. for summer. Very near Kitchen. $100 up. Phone: 842-6548. 5-7 Sub-lease 2 bedroom, air conditioned duplex for four. Near 4th Street, carpeted, carport, than Quiet neighborhood. Neighborhood amenities include SUMMER IN WISCONSIN Faculty member to wish to sub-leave female duplex for summer Call 842-1728. 5-7 2 Bedroom apt, private entrance, off street parking, w-w-carrying, new bath & kitchen, furnished all utilities paid $180/month. Avail for summer and fall, or fail $84-$109 Ohio Fair Har Retreat~summer months or all year 4 bdm; Far Har near campus. $106/month. 934-583-8878. ROOMS $25-$60 a month Parking and utilities room. Free campuses. Open to campus 148 Tennessee 983-8821 Large, two bedroom house. 3 blocks east of campus. 842-8726. 841-0944. 5-7 Ethically woman would like for 1 or 2 percent of the money she spends to be $100 a month and would share the electric bill with other women. Formulated 3 bedroom home to close to campus. Living room has built-in fireplace and TV. Available May 20. Summer rates: M27-$49, M28-$51, M29-$61. Four bedroom house for rent. Comfortable & free in campus. Verified on land. 1 June up to 30 July. Vail Park. Jumbo 1 Sunny field. Formitted basement for Large living room w/ large open floor plan. Wiffee paid for closet, closets, office, WiFi. Fee included on all rooms. For Rev 1 & 2 bedrooms in, Stouffer Place for married students; Applications available now for fall semester, 1974. Come or call University Office, 205 McCollum Hall. Phone #8544 4544 Houses for rent 5 rooms 614 E 12th Summer 845-8601 Graduate students no pets 845-8601 Boom & utilise $47 Quot Grad student will write thesis on the subject. Reqs: BS or equiv in English on HD 2103 or ed of time from 5pm to 8pm. $1,500 deposit required. WANTED Rent- 2 bedroom unfurnished apt available sample payment. Please call 1-800-355-7496. Water paid. No parking tickets, or sticker 1164 Indiana St. Rooms for Summer & Fall *5 min to Union, near stadium; Carpeted furnished kitchen, wood-fired oven, Grass-students, TV lounge, community kitchen,驾车-driver; Peasant, convenient room 860 *2 min to Union, near stadium* Graduate couple with wife who wants to earn money at home. Position open to manage small hotel and旅游店. Free apt plus salary of $25,000. Apply online to resume to LPM 60, Box 549, London. K-5 WANTED: Persons to live in a beautiful mansion in the heart of Montclair, comforted Stone Mountain is living room condition. Students are welcome and attractive surroundings. Close to campus and mountain benefits $2 per month. Call M-643, Martin 841-656-7827. ROOMMATE WANTED to share two bedrooms in an apartment for $275 a month. Choose Only $8 mall all with Male or Female occupants. No pets allowed. Faculty member to rent in VN camper or bus, May 10-Aug. 15. 843-840, 864-858. 5-6 Puppy ~ 5-month old, blinding combination LAb/ treatment. Call 814-0049; good waiting I need 2 or 3 people to shift a 4 bedroom house. I need 3 or 4 people to shift a 5 bedroom house. And house. B1-8272-5238 or B1-8272-6406 or B1-8272-8466 Wanted: Looking for female roommate or room- mate to look after or move into your place. Call Debit 1234567890. Roommate wanted for summer! Mall Old Erie Bedroom 1-3/4 bath 1/2 electricity; Priced at $69.99; Room 813-675-878 Need female registrars for fall semester to graduate from their program. Resume to: Teresa Barrick, 201, Bloomington, IL 60703 or contact Teresa at 800-259-4920. All registrants must be friendly and professional. Residents wanted to live in Johns County North Carolina. Call 843-2569 or move into interviews. Call Dr. Joseph 843-2569 after 6pm. I need a male roommate to share a piece 2 bdrm. I want a female roommate to share a piece 2 bdrm. Utilities Call Gary at 10 p.m. 372-667-560 Need one female substitute. Resume or summer employment. $20/month. Available May 15 Become a staff member. $20/month. Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts 842-9880 TACOS IACUS $3.50 per Dozen Formal remuneration to share an apartment of Jay, Mary, and Daniel from April to December per month. Call Matt Kratzer at 212-539-6740. Seeking i or 2 perrons to share expenses on small U-Haual Van in exchange for transportation of you your possession to McMurphy, Ks., and May and Max. 1974, Phil Wagner, 1234 Uphairs up rear arms. Female roommate wanted. Will move into your air, or can locate one together. 814-709-6235, Marsia Need one friendly female to share our house for morning walks, or a quiet afternoon among flowers, close to campus, low key and quiet. Would like to borrow books of the Dr. Hook & & TheMedicine Show on KUUL. Will pay banks for bookings. Wanted: Roommate to share large loft 3 berms. Requires age range: 18-25 plusilitzat. Prefer graduate. Call after 6:00 a.m. on weekdays. Wanted- two male rookies for summer. Call Bob or John at 842-582. Applicant ready after. Pernille female needed to搬 large home with working girl Call 842-8195 Now Pets wets the floor Wanted immediately: Professional keyboard skilled programmer to work with ROCK /SQHWQR contributors for successful, busy ROCK /SQHWQR work in the job offered. Send resume to: HR@ROCK.COM I would like a comboate to share 2 bedspits eat for someone or make other except Daphne. 845-545-6164 Wanted Artist for the Mallia Shopping Center to design & create promotional materials for £90. Illustrations & information available online at www.mallia.com Wanted: one female nominator for fall interviews. Bachelor's degree, or equivalent; Senior, Master's degree or preferred Caleb Carlo; or Bachelor's degree in education. Roommate: For summer, 3 bedroom apt. Own room $50 m/m. Uillitied费 $1216 Louisiana St. If you know who Ayn Ayn, Murray Routh'ard, Nathaliam Branden, and John Hopers are, I would like to share an apartment with you on the 17th floor in Banke to Intea at 323-597- 1715 West 27th. I need one female telephone to share 1 or 2 calls. I have a phone number 843-9045 and would like into your place Call Denil at 843-9045. Fletch. State. Organ player wants serious musicians to start Jazz-Rock Group. 5-7 NOTICE TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service. SmithCo Corona Mirage, Silver with thin Twill materials. Clean with chlorine and bleach and cleaned and cleaned Electronic and light industrial coatings. River City Repair B15 Vernon 841-726-4111. River City City Repair B15 Vernon 841-726-4111. LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION, Inc. Weekly Newsletter #130-4578 for referral: 561-2900 for reference Nutritionist Nutritionist LOST MY OUR LEASE--our loss-your gain-SAVE! 10%-$50 off our regular low price. would be better if you owned our building by July 1. 1743, HURRY! Open 9 am. to 5 pm. BUZZY'S BOOK EXCHANGE. 800-725-2500. GO WHERE THE CROWNS DON'T KNOW YOUR NAME IN ENGLAND. Aristotle and Plato are buried or where bikers like it. Better but cheaper. Go for better. Why go yourself? Trail Marsh, TOLF FREE. 800-221-3456. RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your auto, and the clothes you wear to your job. The NAPA Auto Parts, and Bokonon Flashback Offer introduce the fine services and reconditioned merchandise available for NAPA Auto Parts. 843-905, Bokonon Clothes. 843-970, and RE Repair. 841-4083, 815-819 Vehicle. Call or Come By Quitting School - Save 50% on all educational books and most others. All prices are drastically cut for fast removal. Save your list of a lot of money at same time, at same price. Exchange. 924 Mass. 8-7 I buy and sell new and used Vollwagenkast. Bank Finance available (with approved credit). Cash only. CALL L book fare. May 10, 2013. Recycle your old book for $75. Call the library (800) 452-3800; for装订 and a tax deduction visit www.library.nvju.edu. MEED FURNITURE FOR YOUR UNFURNISHED APT.? Deli or grill for lunch Beginning June 5 This Summer for the first time "The Wheel" Is Open Beginning June 5 Furniture for one bedroom apartment starting at $2450 J-F RENTAL Rent on a 9-month minimum basis, last month Free, or portion thereof. Summer Rentals Available at Johnson Furn. 722 Mass. 843-2448 Furniture for two bedroom apartment starting at $2950 The invincible season is definitively here and there. The wind will warm you up, and HORIZONS DO NOT BE WAITED. They have been with you all the time. You are in your place. FREE BEER CANS! 100% Michigan craft beer. Available later, available after May 11. Call (866) 274-3555. Hedge Podge has your head in mind. All pieces, crash-closes, and all parachairrys 25, off 15 feet. Montgomery, Pt-Seth School new enrolling children Amy 2) Phone another information please call Ellen 3) General Respond. For information leading to res- ponsibility, please contact: Rippey Hairdling, Rippey Hairdling Sunday afternoon, April 2019, 860-745-3550. HELP WANTED Help wanted: Student for light house work and helping children. To begin in summer call 812-6249. Part-time summer jobs available. Pay starts at 8 a.m. to Lawrence Public Library Auditorium. Applicants must have an MBA or foreign literature. ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR of Consumer Protection Association of KU. Teach workparttime in various fields including accounting, law, nursing 19 Permanent hour(s). Full-time salary 85,000 hours. Hours Admin. ability experience read community affairs desirable. Submit resume by May 25th, 2016 to Administrative Commission, Kansas Union, Law, Lawrence, KS 60043. Questions, email us at admin@ksu.edu. SECRETARY with training yiping skill for interfaithmen- 坛 at KU. To work part time beginning in May. Permanent position Flexible hours, Adjunct fraternity position Kansas University, friennity, Kansas Union, Law department, 661-323-5628 Business Services Associates wauth ambitions people for the summer or permanently. You can call 843-260-1111 for a static new service. Interviews Tuesdays only at 843-910-1901. Call N. Bates in 10th, 47-859-1910. STUDENTS. Full-time work available in the Housing Maintenance Dept. General Labor and skilled maintenance beginning May 15-Aug-31. Job #2-320. Contact Janet Jaylor, 298-5 Columbus Hall Student position available at Health Education Center. Apply by January 1st, 2017. Job title: Ordersly. Salary $19.95 / hr. 40 hours (incluring from 11 p.m.-7am, either on Fr or Sa) at the Student Center. Position includes periodical (including break periods). Contact Mr. and Mrs. Mann and Women of all races are encouraged to apply. We are an equal opportunity employe LOST Lost a gold woman's writtach with stretch her hand. Would the person who found it call 845-342-9671? she calls 845-342-9671 LOST-man's silver wedding band with three diamond sets between Union, Wessex, MN and Saskatchewan. Available at Jenny Junk Mark at Union Info Bootz by magazine takes along with name and how I can get it. LOST, our car信贷. Needed inside, just stash. We can do without it! If you see him wailing, we can't do without him! If you see him wailing, we can't do without him! very ring about I week ago in Strong Hall Please return. Please if found 841-252 or 864-2217 LOST. Two caballos cats, one has white hair and one has black hair. Please contact Scott. 1416 Tern. 28-845- 8873. Lost-1 = pr. gold-wire-tinned glasses probably missed in the Fahrenheit. When found please at 434-8480. Lost: I've lost my wallet and naturally I need a phone. I have found it, please call 842-2802, ask for 842-2802. Ask for Gold Bulba Watch with brown leather band. Low tern courts count to 3 weeks ago. Handy, durable. $29.95 Lost-Irish Turtle puppy -approx. 6 mos. old, brown collar. call #842-7203. TYPING Experienced in typing themes, dissertation, term paper, other main type. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Proficient in correcting missed. Poor 845-854. Mrs. Wright 842-2500 FREE RENTAL SERVICE Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. LRex Looking for a Summer Job Look Here Nation-wide company is selecting a limited number of college students for full-time summer employment. Typing in my home IBM Selectric Pica type Knocked into the kitchen Prompt Type in Kathy 841-256-3000 Opportunity to earn 725/mo. Room 4044 experimental Tweet --will do the tweeting, disinformation tweet and ticker --will do the tweeting, disInformation tweet and ticker Wescoe Hall Tonight 7:00 p.m. Interviews will be held self. accurate typist with plex typewriter. Proof- conference calls. Mail resume to 814-5690 at 5 a.m. half rate. Please call 814-5690 at 5 a.m. half rate. Expertised thesis typist Close to campus. 841- 8490. Myra. 5-7 EXCELLENT and EXPERIENCED TYPEST at most. Meet the students. Promptly and accustomedly complete assignments and assignments etc. Call Philvias, 824-3661, or drop by 101 Wesley Building, 25, Art. 6, d-8 of 101 Wesley SERVICES OFFERED RUVER CITY. REFILL - 815. Vermont. 443-6052. Stereos - wiretimes - typestamps. Independent repair specialists. No retail hutte. We serve what we replace. Unlambred unrestored sets. See it! May Day—Need a gift? Straw flowers, jewelry, and incense his backs. All at Hodge Poder, 618 Main Street, Bend, OR 97520. CUSTOM JEWELRY Wedding sets, personal jewelry, gift sets, bridal shoes BFA-WA variety of stones and unisex gems Employment Opportunities RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your car is broken. Involve itself part of your life! R.Cepat, NAPA Auto Brost services and reconditioned merchandise. Auto Parts 842-8628. Cobus, Chelsea. 945-7978. www.recycleitall.com STUDENTS--Summer employment Pinkerton Incorporated in now taking applications for students in the greater Kansas City area. To qualify you must be 21 or over, at least 8-4 and have a clear police record, valid driver's license, and phone. Apply Mon-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. An equal opportunity employer. Grown, K.C. F Wouldn't you rather work in paradise this summer? or forever? We specialize in helping college students earn a degree and play in Hawaii. For the latest, detailed information, visit www.kalakaua45.com. Summer students of 1837 Kalakaua Suite 45, Harbor Beach, FL 34107. (360) 827-9382. PERSONAL Safety arm lights only 39c at Ride On Bicycles. WANTED Girl from Garden City area interested in gardening. For more information Call Gabi 804-672-1111. WOMEN'S SELF DEFENSE classes forming now 802-517-6394 Martial Arts Academy 802 W. 264- 823-849-6394 ORIENTAL WEAPONY classes now forming OcuTeo-Mu Artis Marta Academy W. 20, 28th Street, 1495 S. 37th St. FOUND Found—female Irish Saker, 6 to 8 months old, Born—female Irish Saker, 6 to 8 months old. Call: 541-764-3028 from 8 to 5, after 6 months. RIDES — RIDERS Med tech student must commit from Lawrence expenses or car pool. Call Master #81-805-6241. CORN DOGS 20¢ Reg. 40' 4 Mon. thru Thurs. 5-9 p.m. Vista 1527 W. 6th 842-4311 10 Mondav.Mav6.1974 University Daily Kansan Intensive English Petition Too Late; Suggested Improvements on Way The Student Senate petition to the Intensive English Center (IEC) Advisory Committee, asking the committee to "take immediate action to rectify current disaffection with the grading system and classroom facilities," came a little too late. The petition, submitted by Nasir Ahmad, Lawrence, graduate student, and Cindi Buxton, Alton junior, was approved by the senate last Wednesday. However, Robert Cobb, chairman of the IEC Advisory Committee, said many of the changes called for in the petition had already been initiated. The committee was working on these problems before it received the petition, Cobb said. Cobb said that changes in the grading system had already been approved by the committee and sent to the admissions office prior to receiving the petition. Previously, Intensive English students were required to have a B average in IEC classes before being allowed to take on a full academic program at the University, Cobb said. The changes lower the criteria to a C grade average, he said. In addition, those students with lower than a C average can take some courses at the University if the student's adviser cannot handle the work load. Cobb said. More extensive notes describing the student's progress will be included in the student's transcript. Cobb said. This will help him keep track of the work he is in helping the student decide on a schedule. Cobb said all intensive English classes would be held in Wescue Hall this summer, he added. was still in doubt. He also said that appropriated forms had been filed with the University Space Committee for different facilities next year. A curriculum advisory committee has been set up to help locate new material for IEC use, Cobb said. He declined to name the committee, this committee pending their notification. Bouxton said the petition was intended to show that other people besides IEC students were also involved in the abuse. Buxton said a task force to examine the situation was in the planning stage. She noted that no Intensive English students were on the senate. Fair representation of IEC students would be a concern of the task force. Cobb said he appreciated the expression of interest, even though the petition "didn't contain anything we haven't been working on." Assembly . . . From Page On "I'm going to tell the whole group exactly what I think, if I 'm there," he said. "If we want a pussy-footing outfit, that's fine. But I won't approve of it." The EPPC supported its recommendation by asserting that more time was needed to determine whether objections raised against the policy were valid. Prolation will be abolished if the assembly adopts the EPPC's recommendation that a minimum grade point average in junior-senior courses be added to the graduation requirements. The effect of this proposal will be that a student could stay in school forever without graduating as long as he maintained a 2.00 GPA according to Roffs, also a member of the The EPPC said that dismissal for poor scholarship now meant little more than going through advisory procedures because the students were graduating from Easy Access courses, Campus . . . From Page One Two University buildings were finished during the spring semester. The new $3.6 million Watkins Memorial Hospital opened after spring break. The new 60,000 square-foot hospital replaced the small, outdated Watkins hospital. moves and protested to Chancellor Dykes that the movies were pornographic. The movies were rescheduled to be shown May 7; however, they were again canceled when it was feared that legal problems might arise. The humanities returned to the heart of the KU campus with the dedication of Wescole Hall April 20. Troubled with financing problems, Wescole Hall was partially paid for by revenue bonds purchased with student fees. The Kansas Legislature approved appropriations for the planning and construction of a new law building, a computer system, and a library. Vice-Chancellor Del Shankler approved in March a plan to replace the University's present computer with a two-computer system. A committee is now developing a facility and selecting the building's site. The behavior analysis program, financed by the federal government and run by the University, at Woodland Elementary School, came under fire April 17 when financial irregularities were uncovered in the school's budget. Employees. The Office of the Comptroller is now conducting an audit of the program's records. John Beinser was elected student body president and Todd Hunter vice-president. A total of 2,344 students voted in the Feb. 15 elections. Beinser and Hunter ran in the Unicamp Coalition, a party that won 49 of the 57 state seats they campaigned for. KU speakers throughout the year add themselves to a number of problems. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., told an overflow crowd of 4,000 in November that President Nixon should be impaired because the American political system "can't stand much more damage" from the Watergate scandal. Nixon's preoccupation with Watergate had hampered his ability to handle other pressing problems, such as inflation and the energy crisis. McGovern said. FBI Director Clarence Kelley stressed that Americans must find the balance between safeguarding the security of and protecting the rights of the individual. Earlier in November, Sen. Edward J. Gurney, R-Fla., told an audience of 1,100 people "to withhold judgement on Watergate until all the facts were known." The American system was working and that the truth would come out in the end. "This is the genius of our American system, that we can protect both our internal security and our common welfare, yet at the same time allow freedom for the people who serve us and for their personality," Kelley said to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce banquet in March. الكريم RV An Exhibition and Sale of Fine Original Graphic Art THE TOMLINSON COLLECTION in outstanding collection of old and modern graphics Included: Works by Renault, Goya, Renoir, Baskin, Daumier and Art Nouveau Artists UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Student Activities Center May 7, 1974 Hours 10-5 AT THE CHANNEL SIX BOOB-TUBE BIJOU Monday 10:30 1 Wednesday 8:00 2 Saturday 12 midnight 1 & #2 No. 1—MOSS ROSE (1947) with Ethel Barrymore and Victor Mature No. 2—TWINKLE IN GOD'S EYE (1955) with Hugh O'Brian and Mickey Rooney Plus Part X of Federal Operator 99 and Return of Captain America ONLY ON CHANNEL 6 SUNFLOWER CABLEVISION 841-2100 MEETING SIERRA CLUB featuring Philip Brimble SCIENCE EDITOR, KANSAS CITY STAR making on Colorado oil shale High Park Recreation Center MAY 7, 1974 7:30 p.m. sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place We will be open Graduation Night, Monday, May 20 for your accommodation. Make your reservations now Thank you for your wonderful patronage this year. Ken Kirby, Owner Our motto is and has always been . . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food." $1\frac{1}{2}$ Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 Sirloin BROOKLYN BREWERY Open 4:30 Closed Mondays Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358. Jayhawker Distribution Strong Hall May 6,7 & 8 9:30 to 4:30 O ONT Th Day Socu profe A is the d Hall, Welf. Bol es y pr G C cce of tr Sr Me THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Forecast: Mostly sunny. High in the 70s, low in the 50s. 84th Year. No.141 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Playboy Bunny Likes Her Job, Making Money Tuesday, May 7, 1974 See Story Page 10 Old Watkins Now Named Twente Hall A sacrificial bottle of Cold Duck marked the dedication yesterday of Esther Twente Hall, the new home of the School of Social Welfare. The dedication was part of Social Work Day, an annual assemblage of School of Social Welfare graduates and social welfare professionals from the immediate area. Twente Hall, formerly Wattkins Hospital, is named after the late Ester Twente, long time social work instructor. Speaking at the dedication of the school, Dr. Twente said Tweden had been "one of the builders of the University." He said she was largely responsible for the establishment in 1946 of the department of social work, and was the director of the present School of Social Welfare. Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols said Twente's efforts during the depression and World War II were instrumental in overcoming many of the economic hardships confronting the University of Kansas at that time. TWENTE HALL SOCIAL WELFARE Asege College, professor of social welfare, was a close friend of Twente. George said Twente helped develop many of the patterns of social work now being followed across the country. She said Twente had always put her students and the University first, not just her faculty, marking her retirement after 26 years at the University. Kansan Staff Photo by ALAN MCCOY Bon Voyage Bradford T. Sheafar, associate dean of the school and a former student of Twente's, broke a bottle of Cold Duck near the entrance of the building to conclude the Twente Hall is "ideally suited" to the needs of the school, according to Sheafer. It features, he said, much needed office space and two seminar rooms. Sheafer said that See TWENTE Back Page Bradford W. Shenifer, associate dean of the School of Social Welfare, christens Twente and Bertil Schoene, associate dean of the dedication ceremonies for the building. Hall is the old Warkins Hospital building. Brandt Resigns Chancellor's Post BONN, West Germany (AP)–Willy Brandt, plagued by a series of provincial election setbacks and a damaging spy scandal, was sentenced to two years as chancellor of West Germany. Brandt's dramatic move followed behind-the-scenes negotiations all day yesterday among Brandt, his coalition partners and the opposition parties, informants said. In an official announcement, the federal press office said Bradd asked President Gustav Heinemann in a letter to name Vice Chancellor Walter Scheel to head a caretaker government until the parliament can choose a new chancellor. Scheel is also foreign minister and leader of the Free Democrats, principal partner in the coalition government with Brandt's Social Democrats. Brandt's popularity has declined from its peak in 1971 when he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his Ostpolitik, or efforts at accommodation with the Communist bloc. Lately, an increasing number of West Germans have viewed Osteopath with displeasure. The spy scandal involving Dr. Hirschberg and the chancellor, aggravated the situation. In recent months, Brandt's Social Democrats suffered a series of state election setbacks. The spy case, described by an opposition legislator as West Germany's worst in a long series of post-World War II spy affairs, broke April 24 when Guillaume was arrested and charged with spying for the East Germans. Although Brandt denied before parliament that Guillaume had had access to any state secrets, Interior Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher at the time alleged that it was "particularly painful" and particularly dangerous espionage." Court Action on Tapes Postponed Judge Saves Delay Granted to Aid Possible 'Accommodation' WASHINGTON (AP) - Court action on 64 presidential tapes subpoenaed by special Watergate prosecutor Leen Jaworski was postponed yesterday, indicating an accommodation may be in the works to avoid a court fight with the White House. Meanwhile, the Senate Watergate Committee yesterday called transcripts of presidential conversations released by the White House to prove a complete nor accurate" and told the U.S. Court of Appeals it still needed the actual tapes of five crucial conversations it submitted. U. D. District Court Judge John J. Sirica granted a five-day postponement of a bearing on a White House motion to quash a subpoena from Jaworski for the 64 tapes. "The continuance was granted for the The judge's announcement indicated there was a possibility an agreement could be worked out to avoid a fight similar to the one last summer in which the White House went to the U.S. Court of Appeals to avoid yielding other subpoenaed tapes. White House counsel James D. St. Clair said he had asked for the extra five days "to permit the special prosecutor and myself to speak to him we can come to some accommodation." purpose of facilitating discussions leading to possible compliance with the subpoena. Twenty of the 64 conversations subpoenaed made public last week in the transcribed text. But whereas those transcripts covered mainly presidential conversations that took place in February, March and April last year, the Jaworski subpoena asked for tapes of Nixon's talks with his aides as early as June 20, 1972, and as late as June 4, 1973. The Senate Watergate Committee told the Court of Appeals that the incomplete versions of the five crucial conversations it wanted vindicated its assertion that the tapes were needed "to inform the public of corruption in the executive branch." The court had asked the committee to tape after the release of the transcripts. The committee said the answer was "unequivocally and emphatically in the affirmative" and that it was essential that it be heard by an accurate account of the conversations. Beisner Says Ticket Price Should Be Lowered to $12 If the University of Kansas Athletic Association wants students to attend football and basketball games next year it should set student season ticket prices at $12, John Beisner, Salina junior and student body president, said yesterday. Beisner spoke in response to an open letter to students written by Athletic Director Clyde Walker. The letter is printed below. The senate passed a resolution last week asking that student season tickets for both football and basketball be available. The Athletic Board, the governing body of the athletic association, has set next year's student season ticket prices at $15 for football and $13 for basketball. This year tickets cost students $6.50 for football and $5.50 for basketball. At the prices of $13 and $13, and if projected sales of student tickets are correct, the athletic association would get $2400 for each student next year than it did this year. Walker said yesterday that ticket prices should have increased steadily throughout the past 10 years. So the increase in money that the athletic association will get from students next year should be considered as spread out over 10 years, he said. That would amount to an increase of about $1 in ticket prices for each of the past three weeks. Rich Laucher, Evanston, III, senior, said the increase couldn't be considered as spread throughout 10 years because it all took place one year and falling on one set of students. Lauter suggested that ticket prices be increased for next year and increased over a period of 2 years. "It would have made a lot more sense and have been a lot more palatable to increase the prices over a period of years," Lauter said. Walker said the Athletic Board in recent meetings had considered raising ticket prices throughout a period of years. The consensus of the board, Walker said, was to make KU's prices comparable to prices at other Rue 8 schools in one year. Charles Oldfather, a member of the Athletic Board, said there was no sense in putting him on the bench. Walker's letter notes that students at Kansas State University pay $21 for football tickets, and $15 for basketball tickets. Beisner pointed out that KState has seven home football games next year and that KU has five. Thus students at KState pay $3 a game, as do students at KU. Beiser said that on a per game basis in the Big 8 football prices at KU were second only to football prices at the University of Missouri. KU's basketball prices per game are second only to those at K-State, Beiser said. Lauer said he agreed with Walker that the athletic program brought pride and national exposure to KU. He also agreed that athletics were an integral part of the University. any credit for the success of this year's teams. That credit belongs to Walker's teams. Walker's letter notes that students must pay $50,000 from ticket prices to retire a debt for expansion to the student section of Memorial Stadium. "If Mr. Walker wants to demonstrate his good faith he can come on and state right now that in 1979 ticket prices will decrease $5 (for football) and $4 (for basketball) when the indebtedness is paid off," Lauter said. Walker will participate in an open forum to answer any questions students might have at 3:30 today in the International Room of the Kansas Union. "I hope students will take the opportunity to discuss this with him," Lauter said. Walker's Open Letter Recent allegations against me personally and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation have prompted me to make the following comments: Nobody realizes more than I, that in order for our athletic program to be successful, we must have the complete support of our students, faculty, and alumni. I have made a sincere effort to demonstrate my desire to meet with any group, at any time, to discuss any phase of our athletic program. I have met with student and faculty groups on campus and have had many meetings with alumni accustomed to and will continue to make myself available for these groups in the future. I happen to believe that a good, well-rounded athletic program is very vital to the success that any university enjoys. I also realize that the basic function of a university is to provide an education for its students, and that we are only one segment of the extracurricular activities that surround this campus. Contrary to many beliefs, athletes go deeper than the individual participants. We are making an effort to provide entertainment for our students, faculty, alumni and friends. Through good athletics, we can provide a source of pride within our university, our community and our campus campuses. We also participate in athletic contests, who otherwise might not come. Through these opportunities, some of these people become quite involved in other facets of the University. This past year, we have been most fortunate to be able to provide the type of program that we can all be proud of—a program that not only has been good for athletics, but for the University of Kansas, the city of Lawrence, and the state of Kansas. The exposure through the news media and national television appearances would be impossible for us to purchase, given the class manner being required by land, beach, cheering squail, and support of conducted themselves in representing this University has been well received throughout the country. I personally, am proud to be a part of the University of Kansas and its athletic program. See WALKER'S Page 2 ANNEX DED TW TWENTE HALL DEDICATION TWENTE HALL "CH, THAT OVER THERE--THAT'S THE DEDICATION OF AN ANNEX TO CHALMERS!" Kalmbach Savs Ehrlichman Involved in Milk Co-op Deal WASHINGTON (AP) — Herbert L. Kalmbach has testified about a midnight meeting at which he said a top dairy cooperative of official was told that milk prices would be increased and that the White House wanted confirmation of a $2 million campaign pledge, according to informed sources. Meanwhile, CBS-TV News said yesterday that documents in file in federal court indicated that late President Lyndon B. Johnson, almost four years after leaving the White House, reminded Texas dairy producers of a $250,000 "commitment" to him. Kalmbach, a former campaign fund-riser for President Nixon, said in the secret testimony that the session took place on March 24, 1971, in his suite at the Madison Hotel, the sources said. Milk price supports were increased the following dav. CBS News correspondent Daniel Schorr said officials of the Associated Milk Products, Inc. AMPL, suggested the commitment was in return for higher milk prices to raise price supports and lower import quotas. Mehren as saying Johnson later insisted on continuing the lease to supplement his retirement income. Mehren said Johnson also told him "dairy customers have to see the store, give $250,000, but hadn't done so." CBS reported. Mehren said the plane lease was extended by talising the minutes of the AMPI board to show that CBS quoted AMPI General Manager George CBS新闻 Mehren as saying: "It became plain to me that AMPI was in no position to charge the immediate past president of the United States with beiru party to a fraudulent transaction." The White House has said that Nikon's milk price order wasn't influenced by the promise of campaign contributions from the cooperative, an organization of dairy farmers. The alleged meeting, which took place after a Republican fund-raising dinner attended by dozens of dairy cooperative officials, was attended by members of the Southern Federation and S. Nelson, according to the Kalimbach testimony. Chotter had quit three weeks earlier as President Nixon's special counsel and had just been elected president. receiving a retainer of $75,000 a year from the nation's largest dairy cooperative, Associated Milk Producers Inc. Nelson was the chief executive officer of the cooperative. According to the sources, Kalmbach swore that Chotiner told Nelson that John D. Ehrlichman, who was Nixon's chief domestic adviser, wanted Nelson to reaffirm the milk producers' promise of $2 million in light of a milk price increase that the President had just ordered. Kalmbach said Nelson agreed, the sources said. The next day the ministers signed an agreement of the amount of the payment of 27 cents per hundredweight, which added hundreds of millions of dollars to the income of dairy farmers. Kalibmah's testimony was given about six weeks ago to two investigators for the Senate Watergate committee, Alan Weitz and David Dorsen, according to the sources. They said this testimony, along with other unspecified evidence, provided the basis for a letter that lawyers for the House held on April 19. That letter, which was intended to state facts showing the im It is said, among other things, that on March 24, 1971, "Mr. Chotner stated to several dairyman that Mr. Ehrlichman expected the dairy industry to suffer from a shortage of milk as a forthcoming increase in milk price supports." peachment investigators' need for 45 presidential tape recordings about the milk-fund affair, was made public Friday. The White House has said that President Nixon was aware of the dairyer's $2 million promise because his wife Alexie Colson had told him about it in 1970. Colson has been identified as the main contact in the White House for Nelson and other dairy cooperative officials. The House impeachment lawyers said that It said Nixon gave the order to raise press March 16, when he entered the White House that included Ehrlichman. The White House has denied that Nixon's decision to raise prices was influenced by the promise of money. He was influenced by "traditional political considerations," including pressure from Democrats in Congress who wanted a price increase, the White House said. Ehrlichman then called Colson, Colson called Chotner, and Chotner told dairyman that Ehrlichman wanted them to reconfirm their "commitment" of money. After this time, several references to a "commitment show up in material already discovered" are recorded. On June 16, 1971, Marion E. Harrison, a dairy lawyer who shared law offices with Chotinee, sent a letter to Nelson complaining about delays in getting contributions going. "The fact that all this took so long and is yet incomplete frustrates me, believe me, even more than it frustrates you," Harrison wrote. "Sometimes it is difficult to honor a commitment." Months later, after unfavorable publicity about milk cooperative donations, a top official of the milk producers, George L. Meiren, allegedly wanted to talk to Kalmbach to say dairymen "we were not welcoming on their commitment," according to a report attributed to Bob A. Lally, a former co-op librist. Chooten died last Jan. 30 of injuries suffered in an auto accident. } 2 Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Daily Kansan news capsules the associated press Kennedy says he may run for President Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D.Mass., said yesterday he would like to be president and is giving some consideration to running in 1978. He said that by late next year, and possibly earlier, he would make a definite decision. He also said members of his family wouldn't have a vote Kennedy was asked if Watergate meant that more attention would be focused on the 1989 Chapauqaidick accident, in which Kennedy's car ran off a bridge and a young woman aid was killed. Kennedy conceded it would be something that would have to be faced. "But people finally and ultimately are going to have to make judgments about my views and my record in the Senate," he said. Senate cuts Two Months' aid to S. Vietnam **SUMMARY** The Senate voted yesterday to cut off military aid shipments to South Africa for the next two months. An amendment by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, to deny an additional $236 million for ammunition and aircraft replacement was approved The Kennedy amendment would require the Pentagon to stay within the $1.28 billion Vietnam military and ceiling voted by Congress last year. Indge Debates Extension of Calley's Bond A federal judge took into account adwisement yesterday in Columbus, Ga., a ruling on whether William L. Calley Jr., now a civilian, should remain free however, Judge J. Robert Elliott indicated strongly that he would continue Calley's bond when he told government attorneys who sought to revoke his bond. Elliot also set June 24 as date for the hearing on the merits of Calley's petition which challenges his conviction for murders at My Lai. Calley was given a dishonorable discharge from the Army Saturday, soon after he decided to uphold his two-recorded sentence to 10 years imprisonment. Kissinger, Gromyko to Discuss Syrian Front Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko will meet today on the island of Cyprus to discuss their search for an end to the war on the Israeli-Syrian front. The meeting was announced as Kissinger started a new round of urgent negotiations with Israeli leaders to find an end to the open hostilities on the Golan front, now in their 60th day. Israeli newspapers said the negotiations bid "lost their impetus" and might still in a deadlock. U. S. officials dismissed suggestions that the American and Soviet foreign ministers might be coming together to work out a pact that would be imposed on Israel and Syria. The meeting has the "full understanding andival of the government of Israel," Ambassador Robert J. McClokey said. FPA Criticizes Proposed Nuclear Reactor The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) criticized as inadequate yesterday the Atmous Energy Commission's (AEC) 2,200-page document, which described the state's water use policies. Acting under court orders, the AEC issued a first draft of its environmental impact statement last March 14, concluding that widespread development of the fast-breeder reactor would have little impact on the environment. From Page One Before I get into any discussion of finances, let me remind you that several years ago the students imposed a debt on me to pay them. The Debt that remains after this year's payment is $289,636, which the athletic corporation is obligated to pay off at the rate of $4,000 a year from student ticket funds. This debt obligation runs through 1979. Walker's Open Letter to Students Since the athletic corporation is a self-sustaining enterprise, we must rely on gate receipts, student activity fees, bowl and television revenue from the Big 8 Conference, and to support the athletic program. It is unfortunate that the students and the athletic corporation have incurred such a large debt, over the past few years, as the number of students to find ways to decrease this debt and to see that no more debt occurs. I have taken a look at our entire operation, and since I have no control over inflation, can see nothing but increased costs in the future, I have had to look at means of increasing our Since student activity fees have decreased drastically over the past few years, and since our revenue from the Big 8 Conference has and will continue to decrease, because of Oklahoma's probation, I have no choice except to look at our other two areas of potential income, gate receipts and contributions for increased income. In addition, ticket price increases in certain areas, and encouraged our alumni and friends to increase their contributions to our scholarship fund. I have been accused of not being sensitive to the students' problems. I currently have two children in college and another who will continue to be exposed as qualified to understand student problems. —(1) The decision of the Student Senate to drastically reduce student activity fees (from $719,486.00 in 70-71 to a loss of $53,652.50—a reduction of $48,768.10 in four years). With this background, let me get to the issue at hand—increase in student ticket prices for next year. I, personally, do not have the authority to set ticket prices, this is the privilege of the Athletic Board. It is true that I recommended to the board that ticket prices be increased. I made this recommendation for three reasons: (2) That only one moderately increase in event ticket prices has occurred in the last ten years. Patronize Kansan advertisers. — (3) That our ticket prices were the same at the B Conference, and nowhere in line with them. Student ticket prices from other Big 8 Conference schools have been published in this paper, to show comparisons, however, I think it is worth repeating the student ticket prices at Kansas State, since they are part of the same educational system as we are, and since they are the only other Big 8 School in our state. Next year, the Kansas State students will pay $21.00 for a season basketball ticket, $15.00 for a season basketball ticket and $4.25 per student, or $63.75 through student activity fees for a stadium debt payment. When you pro rate the activity fee allocation with ticket prices of the other Big 8 schools, our proposed ticket prices for next year will be adjusted according to the Big 8 will. Hopefully, our students have enough pride in the University of Kansas to want us to be competitive with the other members of our conference. I can only draw on the good judgment of our young people today to understand and sympathize with our problem and to know that we will continue to try to provide the type of athletic program that you will be proud of. If the athletic corporation were financially solvent, if I could see other means of revenue, or if the state supported our program, I would be the first to recommend that we open our gates and allow our students to play sports. And as I would like nothing better than to have our students behind our program 100 per cent. With increased ticket prices, activity fees, and a normal number of students buying tickets next season, the revenue expected from student sources will still only generate about 15 per cent of our total anticipated income. I would be happy to discuss this matter further with any of you individually, or collectively, if you so desire, and hopefully, we can count on your continued support. Sincerely, Clyde L. Walker Director of Athletics $ May 8-17 kansas union BOOKSTORE Hours 8:30-5 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 10-1 Sell your used (and not so used) text books $ PIZZA P.M. CASH 1 1 If you graduate in June,this is what you could be doing in September. 1 Brookfield WI Military Policeman VIRGINIA BURGESS KEN'S PIZZA RESERVE NOTE Ken's PIZZA PARLOR LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY OR GROUP Redeemable at 27th & Iowa Lawrence, Kansas For Delivery 843-7405 $1.00 off WITH PURCHASE OF A 15 inch Pizza VOID WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION KEN'S PIZZA DOLLAR Alan L. Boyd Fort Campbell, Ky Clarkville, Tenn. Eastern Clark Chaian Wash Garrineer EXERCITING U.S. ARMY Moses Lake, Wash. In partnership with Toura Lande --- Fred Lester Birmingham, Ala. Eastern Ontario Royal City, Wash Fork Lift Operator Woodland Hills: Geal Crash Rescueman 图 [Picture] U.S. ARMY RECRUTING STATION BOSCH MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE LAWRENCE, KANAS, 60462 NO. 1720 Honolulu, Hawaii Fuel Scraping Renaldo B. Ancheta A A Within several days, you'll obtain a job, (latest information on jobs, benefits, travel, education, and just about anything else you'd like to know about today's Army FRED D. HILL SURGENT FIRST CLASS U. S. ARMY Haversville, Pa Mechanic 2 TELEPHONE: 843.0465 This postcard may be your ticket to a new job. --- Fill out the information $\longrightarrow$ Tear out the whole page. And mail it. Eward A. Walker 55 Levittown, New York Computes Observer W. Ner Thomas, Jr. Mary Louise Talishassee, Fla Maintenance Clerk Education 21(7)4.4(4) Contrary to popular belief, good jobs aren’t that hard to find these days. Not, that is. If you know where to look City County And a better place to look than to tarde. A army you won I find. Our Army. Soldiers. Our facts. Two. The jobs are the kind you don't usually step into right out of school. Electronics, construction, computers, technical repair, communications and law enforcement are a few of the over 300 good, steady jobs we offer One. We have more jobs to offer the Corps of 74 than anyone Military or civilian. Sur No. Phone Four You choose the exact job training you want before you enlist. And, if you quality, you'll get it Guaranteed in writing. Three. Although the jobs we offer are considered 'skilled labor' we don't require that you already possess the skill We'll teach you everything you need to know in our training courses (Experience will come on the job.) That's our job offer to the Class of 74. We think it will pay you to look into it. After all, look what it did for the Chance of 75. Date Date Today's Army Date of Birth Address: A good job that's not hard to tme AVOID THE OHSHITZ!! DON'T LET FINAL EXAMS GIVE YOU THIS AGE-OLD MALADY. DROP IN, ENJOY REFRESHMENTS, AND BROWSE THROUGH OUR GREAT SALE ITEMS. KNIT SHIRTS Cool, comfortable cotton knit shirts, five great color combinations to go with anything . . . were 13.00 $895 ORLONS Easy to care for oron knit shirts. Solid with contrasting colors; were 1,000 with contrasting colors; were 1,000 $10^95 C H OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 920 MASSACHUSETTS Special Sale Groups of Dress Shirts, Suits, Sport Coats, Slacks, and Other Items. Posi in Fo Bellev board Natural cotton leisure jackets with open patch pockets and gathered back . . . were 32.50 LEISURE COATS $19^95 R I RUGBY SHIRTS Block striped knit shirts with white rugby style collar. Great colors ... were 12.00 $895 MISTER GUY Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Daily Kansan 3 Chairmen Announced For SUA Committees Student Union Activities (SUA) yesterday announced its committee chairmen for the 1974-75 school year. Positions are still open in chairmanships in Forums, according to Steve Buser, Belleville, Ill., junior and Forums SUA board member. In addition, chairmen for special events committees will be chosen next year before SUA-sponsored concerts and other special events. Mike Miller, SUA advisor, said. SUA chairmen for the 1974-75 school year are, for travel: trips—Tims Watson, Cliffon junior; Hawaii trip—Jim Brenner, Printer junior; Lunenburg freshman; ski trip—Dave Mullett, Prairie Village sophomore; Mardi Gras—David Matson, Prairie village sophomore; Trips Committee—Jose Siegel, Crates teacher; Marcie Clarke, Overland Park junior. Films: popular series -Steve Benjamin, Prairie Village junior; classical series - Ed White, Lawrence graduate student; Philip Sack, Lawrence graduate student; college - John Tibbett, Lawrence graduate student; Hollywood's Asia- Steven Lewis, Lawrence sophomore; Stephen Sack, Lawrence sophomore; Sack Stuck, Graduate student; Steve Sack, Garnett sophomore; Fill- Workshop—Charlie Brooks, Park sonhomore. Fine Arts: poetry hour—Brouwer Greene, Lawrence graduate student; forums, photography; art teacher; photography—Jay, Carey, Ottawa sophomore; Steve Dittman Pittsburg sophomore; picture lending library—Alison Gwain, Prairie Village filmmakers—films Outdoor recreation; Wilderness Discovery -Ed dZerega, Wichita junior; Skip Club-Scott Clark, Topeka freshman; and Karen Puret, Sefton, N.S.W. junior; Canoe Club-Rachel Lipman, Lawrence sophomore; Sailing club-Glenworth junior; M. Oread Bicycle Club-Eckund McPheson graduate student Indoor recreation: Bowling-Woody Grutmacher, Onaga sophomore; billards and pool-Ray Calore, Sunflower Village junior; Jayhawk Quarterback Bank Jr., bandhole Paul Lacy, Manhattan freshman; racketball-Karl Ryan, Salina sophomore; Bridge Club-Pat McKenzie, Colorado spring junior; table tennis-Jon Parestky, Marc Waugh, Phoenix freshman, and Bill Blessing, Kansas City, Ken, freshman. Rapid Settlement Unlikely In Teachers' Pay Dispute Agreement on the Lawrence teachers' contract is being stalled, and settlement anticipated within the next few days, according to Darrell Ward, chief negotiator for the Lawrence Education Association (LEA). The LEA and Lawrence School Board have been meeting since December. A two-and-a-half-hour session Friday night in the teachers relinquished their demands. A package proposal had been submitted by the LEA. The demands consisted of increasing the teachers base pay from $6,600 to $7,000, Blue Cross-Blue Shield benefits and the hiring of eight elementary school physical education instructors. Ward said yesterday that the board was hesitant to put the demands before taxpayers, because there would be an increase in the local mill levy. Dave Kendall, assistant superintendent in charge of instruction and personnel, said that the board wanted "to present a referendum consideration that they feel is palatable to the voters." According to Ward, the board favors power equalizing vocational and special education funds. Power equalization is the state's giving more money to districts with small tax bases and less to districts with large tax bases. Both funds are currently under a separate mill levy. By placing them under the general fund levy, more funds would be received from the state. Ward said there was a difference of opinion as to how much money would be given. The LEA imposes power equalizing in this area and frees raising the mll key to access the right memory location. Ward said the LEA thought taxpayers would support the teachers' demands. THOMAS A. HARRISON Unbleached muslin and lace in all cotton . . . this spring's version of the "wedding dress." It's very fresh and feminine . . . perfect for many occasions! vertisements. KANU is a non-commercial station. On the contrary, Shivers said, KANU has broadcast a series for two years that deals with the problems of women. The program is based on the experiences prepared by the office of the dean of women. 世 John Easley, Lawrence sophomore and continuity director of radio station KUOK, said KUOK carried no sexist admittances, and had received no complaints. Easley said KUOK would review its policies if asked to do so by the senate. At the . . . Country House AT THE BACK OF THE TOWN SHOP 839 Massachusetts Downtown The task force also recommended that more self-defense programs be offered by the Department. The task force recommended that an escort service be established to transport ambulances. But without an explicit definition of what constitutes sexist advertising, the question is what sexist advertising, remains. David Katz, a professor at Harvard, manager of the Kansan, said yesterday. The task force also recommended that the University administration increase lighting on campus and provide three direct telephone lines to Traffic and Security. The University Daily Kansan and radio stations UKUK and KANU will review their advertising policies to eliminate sexist advertising, said a recent report of the Student Senate's Rape Prevention Task Force. Group Links Rapes to 'Sexist' Ads By JACK McNEELY The senate accepted the report from the task force in a meeting last week. The report said that "the ultimate answer to rape is true equality" and that equality can be effected partially by a change in public attitudes. Because the press affects public Kansas Staff Reporter TV attitudes, one step toward preventing rape or bombing exist advertisements, the Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358. "What is societ for Team Electronics and what is societ for the art institute aren't the same." Without a specific code to dictate what is and isn't exist, the business manager of the Kansan must decide whether an advertisement is in good taste. Hurke said that if the senate wanted a code to delineate what may be pictured or written in Kansas advertisements, the senate would have to agree with the Board of Directors should write such a code. Gary Shivers, program director for radio station KANU, said the station had no sexist language or content. Don't Get Stuck! U+HAUL Instead of waiting until the last minute to plan your next move, and ending up throwing up your hands in despair, rent a trailer or truck to fit your needs. Do it safely, economically: do it right. HAROLDS 843-2060 843-3557 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044 1540 W. 6TH LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST? PHILIPPS 66 HOME SWEET HOME JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS Now Taking Applications for Fall ON CAMPUS HEATED POOL COVERED PARKING ROOM-MATE SERVICE LRE SUMMER $130.00 Rental Office Open until 8:00 everyday 1603 W. 15th the Gramaphone system prices! shop of KIEF'S RECORDS We Stock the Complete Line of PIONEER Stereos SX-424 SA-7100 SX-426 SX-626 SA-8100 SX 838 SX-424 SX-626 SX-838 SX-939 SX-1010 SA-7100 SA-8100 SA-9100 CS-A700 PL-A35 M91ED Elliptical Stylus Reg. $54" $199" DISC WASHER Reg. $129$ $688 Koss Stereo Phones KG-747 Reg. '45' $3450 PIONEER SX-727 Reg. '429 Now '335 PIONEER SX-828 60 watts rms Reg. '499 Save $100 SX-838 SA-9100 SHURE M91ED Elliptical Stylus Reg. '54" $ 1995 DISC WASHER Reg. '12" $68 PL-A35 Koss Stereo Phones KO-747 Reg. '45 s 3450 We Don't Ask You to Order and Wait PIONEER SX-727 Reg. '429 New '335 We Have it in Stock in New Boxes KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544 System Prices Diamond Needle Sale reg. $9.95-$10.95 NOW $5.95 System Prices 4 Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Daily Kansan KANSAN Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers. Griff's Splash Is Over If you’re a fan of "Griff and the Unicorn," savor your cartoon. It’s likely to be the last one you'll see in the book if you'll read this newspaper's editorial page. Yes, Griff, the unicorn and all the other characters that have populated Dave Sokoloff's strip for the past five years will disappear into the cosmos after this. One reason is that Sokoloff is graduating. The other reason is that "Griff and the Unicorn" has become the victim of an old truism that Simon the ant cited in one installment of the strip last week. "It's a law of nature that we don't want to worry us in contemplating the phenomenon of gravity." "All that is up, must come down." So the sun splashes into the ocean. For Sokoloff and his strip, the end will be a bit less spectacular. The really big splash came in November 1872, when "Griff and the Unicorn" began appearing in 20 of the nation's largest daily newspapers as a feature of Universal Press Syndicate (UPS). The list of newspapers carrying the strip included the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Bulletin, the Houston Post, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Dallas Morning News and the Nashville Tennessee. Syndication meant the realization of a dream sparked three years before, when Sokoloko started publishing his strip in this newspaper as a freshman. He was the station of UPS in December 1971. "Griff and the Unicorn" seemed the kind of humor strip that was becoming dominant among comic strips. Its idea, at least, was unique. Nobody else thought of developing a comic strip around a bright, extroverted griffin and a morose, contemplative unicorn set in a mythical world cluttered with clocks, dice and windmills. But the editors at UPS wanted to make a few changes. Most of them had to do with appearance: Griff started looking more like a griffin and less like a bedraggled rooster and the unicorn started looking more like a bicorn and less like a jacassin in a party hat. The mass market seemed to bring about more profound changes, however, for readers of this newspaper have noticed less of the subtle, philosophical humor of the strip's early days and more broad, slapstick humor. And the clocks, dice and windmills seemed to disappear from the backgrounds. Such changes, however, failed to give "Griff and the Unicorn" what it needed to sell to many more than the original 20 newspapers. Papers started dropping the strip in March and the ads were discontinued it a year later. Sokoloil can't explain the decline. "It's an almost totally irrational business," he says. "Don't ask me what's funny, but how much more fun it is now more. What's funny to some people isn't funny to other people." Still, "Griff and the Unicorn" can't be considered a failure. It was more an adventure in which readers of this newspaper joined Sokolloff for five years. Nobody knew when the whole thing started that the strip's main characters would become memorable as the young Oscar the Dragon would become Simon the ant's nemesis or that Rory Norbing would never escape his cloud—not even Sokoloff. But the adventure has come to an end. Even though Sokoloff says that talking about "Griff and the cowman" is like saying the cowman can't regret the experience. And neither, I wager, do many of his readers. —Bob Simison Penal Reform-or Riot A prison riot last July has fomented a considerable amount of turbulence both inside and outside of the prison walls at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Kansas City area civil liberties groups contend that a prisoner on a blanket at Leavenwort soon if prisoner grievances aren't settled. In its campaign against Loren E. Daggett, Leavenworth Penitentiary warden, the Leavenworth Brothers Offense-Defense Committee has denounced the solitary confinement of prisoners involved in the riot of July 31. Daggett has maintained his adamant position to control the prisoners who instigated the riot in order to prevent them from further attempts to disrupt prison order. The committee brought in Philip Berrigan, former priest and demonstrator against the Vietnam war, to lead a demonstration outside the prison walls and was then called a group of communist agitators by Daggett. Numerous lives were lost by Daggett with the need for penal reform and have at best only exacerbated the acrid controversy. The committee has sponsored a "March for Justice" in support of one of the prisoners awaiting trial on federal criminal charges stemming from the riot. Lennox Hinds, National Director of the National Conference of Black American Lawyers, and American Civil Liberties Union and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War have expressed their strong support for the committee's efforts. The lack of communication and cooperation between these groups and Daggett have precluded chances for a peaceful solution at Leavenworth thus far. Daggett should give adequate attention to the grievances of the prisoners, which include demands for reorganization of the medical staff, liberalization of mail and telephone privileges, food standard changes and hiring of minority guards. Rather than thwarting their efforts to redress penal system defects, he should attempt to work with these civil liberties groups. It is also mandatory that these same groups understand the viewpoint of the prison officials. A dearth of prison resources has impeded Daggett in bringing about changes in rehabilitation programs as well as in complying with the demands of the interest groups. The Kansas State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission sponsored a hearing last Friday for six hours between inmates and staff members. This hearing was an attempt to bring to the surface problems that have affected both inmates and administrators. The present crisis at Leavenworth has gained national attention, which indicates the magnitude of the existing problems. If Leavenworth is to be prevented from becoming another Attica, meaningful, cooperative efforts will have to be staged by all groups and persons involved in this issue. Vehement speeches and radical protests are useful to get media attention, but only a peaceful understanding will bring about needed reforms. Stephen Buser Kansan Staff Reporter Chancellor Hawks Academic Elixir Dykes' Banquets Help KU Attract Top Grads By HAL RITTER Kansas Staff Reporter Four years ago the University of Kansan' image was a public relations man's think. The Kansas Union fire on April 20, 1970, had given KU adverse national publicity, and the University's reputation as a home of longhaired rabble rosters seemed secure. have devised has been the Kansas Honors Banquet. Students laughed at the distorted impressions of KU the media were creating with their daily accounts of protest marches, fire bombs and sniper fire. PARENTS OF high school seniors across Kansas didn't laugh; they made plans to send their kids to Kansas State University or a similarly safe school outside Kansas. A lot of hard work in the past four years has gone toward reversing KU's image in the minds of Kansans. Supplanting an idea can be tough than implanting one, and it's difficult to quantify by aggregating to the University to dispel those nasty connotations about KU. Perhaps the best innovation KU officials THE BANQUETs are sponsored by chapters of the KU Alumni Association. At every banquet an alumnae couple suit with each senior and his parents. The alumnus pick a banquet guest. An honors banquet is an evening of recognition for high school seniors, all of whom rank academically in the top 10 per cent of their class. This year—the program's third—there were 28 banquets. Most included students from three or more counties and a half dozen or more high schools. The program assumed additional importance when Chancellor Archie R. Dykes announced last fall that he would attend all 28 banquets, partly to meet more KU students, and become familiar with the feelings of Kansu about KU and higher education. WITH DYKES ALONG, an honors tanquet can help be a success. Airch's architect is getting to grips with it. necessary to create favorable first impressions in people. He's charming, funny, a good listener and unsurpassed at small talk. At an honors banquet in Jola last month, one woman unabashedly announced that Archie's "the most personable man I've ever met." "The first time we met him we felt like we really knew him and we felt like we should know him." WHEN THE PROGRAM gets under way at an honors banquet, Dykes is smoothness personified as he goes about making you feel good about yourself and the University of Kansas, a task he tries to accomplish everywhere he goes. WEST " DAMMIT, THE SET IS OFF/° have at all 28 banquets, and its main points have been expressed in many other Dykes The parents, of course, loved it. HE TOLD THE seniors they were people of unusual talents and abilities. He told them he hoped they would pursue some kind of higher education and then, in a tone of pride, he proceeded to tell them four reasons that make higher education so important. THE OFFICIAL PURPOSE OF the banquets is to recognize academic excellence. We ask question that's a good fit, especially in the area of overshadows academics in high school. Their sons and daughters had been introduced earlier in the evening, and now here was the chancellor of the University of Kansas, who had taken time out of his busy schedule to come all the way down to their home, bringing them how wonderful their kids were. But just as important is what the banquets for the image of the University in the eyes of the students and their parents. To remain a great university, it's imperative that KU attract students who are intelligent and extremely intelligent but also from Kansas. KU officials play down the recruiting aspect of the honors banquets. They say the banquets were originated to honor high school seniors. Period. BUT IT MUST have been difficult for those institute at Iola to overlook the foot-high cardboard Jayhawk in the center of each table. Then there were those attractive banquet programs, which had a picturequestue front and the University seal on the back. And the $2$ gift certificate that's given to each honor student and is redeemable only at the book stores in the union sure is an ingenuous way to get those honor students on their knees for a year when, coincidentally, most are making up their minds where to go to college. EVIDENCE OF THE success of the honors banquets has come in the form of praise from alumni across Kansas, who are convinced that KU is now doing a better job than KState of attracting the best high school seniors in Kansas. Miffed by lack of interest K-State has shown in them and excited by an abundance of information KU has sent them, the parents of their children, and the parents they're coming to KU next fall. But the best proof comes not from KU alums but from two senior honor students in a central Kansas city, who parents are members of the KS-State Alumni Association. Readers Respond Woodlawn Investigation Criticized To the Editor: Would like to respond to Vice Chancellor William J. Angeringer's comments (comments) in the paper. However, I did tell Argerisingh why I wouldn't give him copies of the travel vouchers; I can't and I won't speak for other people. Griff and the Unicorn It is true that I didn't give Argersinger copies of "documented proof" to support my questions about the use of federal grant funds connected with the behavior-analysis Follow Through program at Woodlawn Elementary School. I think it is clear that the people who were involved with this program are open to legal action because of statements they have made. Leona Campbell, a former research data clerk with the program, told me when she alleged financial irregularities. I HAVE TRIED most of this school year to get someone to investigate the concerns I have had about the behavior analysis program. I still don't have answers to many of the questions that trouble me the most. These questions are about the ideas behind the program and the children at Woodlawn. I had hoped this could be accomplished in a manner that wouldn't hurt innocent people. As of this date, no one has come to me or other concerned citizens of the Woodlawn area except the "irresponsible crew" from the Kansan and KANU. I didn't give these "irresponsible" reporters any evidence. They talked to parents, teachers, aides, administrators, public officials and citizens of the community to collect their own "documented proof." I am disappointed with the state and THE MONKEY IN THE HOUSE I HATE COMMERCIALS! SKRUFF by Sokoloff I HATE COMMERCIALS! THERE'S NOTHING WORSE THAN SEEING HUMPHREY BOGART INTERRUPTED BY DANCING HOUSEWIVES SINGING ABOUT THEIR LAUNDRY DETERGENT! 火 THERE'S NOTHING WORSE THAN SEEING HUMPHREY BOGART INTERRUPTED BY DANCING HOUSEWIVES SINGING ABOUT THEIR LAUNDRY DETERGENT! federal departments of education. If and when they ever get回回 to checking into the program, it will be the almighty dollar for you. The children participating in the program. I AM VERY grateful to the "irresponsible" reporters, and if Argersinger or other state employees are tired of their "rummaging around," why don't they find a responsible person to check into the program. I have no "proof" that Argersinger or anyone else is checking into the program. The University of Kansas should be proud to claim these "irresponsible" reporters because, if KU does take care of their own students, it will do so to these students, not the administrators. ALTOUGH PEOPLE have criticized the coverage given the program as biased, most of these critics have no idea how really important it is for them to be a受害者. Even then, an apology. No matter what the outcome of the audit of the behavior analysis program reveals, I would like to thank the "irresponsible" reporters for all their time, effort and patience. I also want to help an "imprudent" mother who had already asked everyone else for help. Nancy Swearingen Route 3 Vern's Bias Justified To the Editor: Yes, Miller is prejudiced against marijuana and liquor; he proclaims the facts of the case, which have been seen to fear that Miller impresses his personal views upon the laws of Kansas. But the state laws aren't made by Vern Miller; they are made by a legislature, it represents. The state legislators are chosen by the people of Kansas to represent the wishes of their constituents. Miller is the attorney general of Kansas, whose official duties include being the chief legal adviser to the state and the chief law officer. No legislative function is prescribed. Miller can and does suggest legislation, as can anyone else, but he can't vote on it. Miller was elected attorney general by the largest margin in history. This illustrates massive support of Miller by the appointee, who has their apparent agreement with his views. Miller should not be held accountable for the laws of Kansas, but should be and is To my knowledge, Miller is an honest, sincere and open individual. He will talk to you about his life and the reasons to any viewpoint or opinion and he will weigh the merits objectively. Miller may not agree, but he will listen openly, an admirable quality of which few public officials understand. accountable to the people of the sue, as should all public officials. If Vern succeeds as governor, his success will lie in the faith that he is responsible to be capable to them and open to their views. Miller has his own views, as we all do. You know where he stands. Jeff Lee Caffee Jeff Lee Caffee Overland Park freshman Free But Fair Press To the Editor: According to Bob Simison, ("Access Laws Harmful," Kansan editorial, April 29) it would be far better to leave fairness in the hands of the editors than to leave the hands in the hands of the government. I agree that the press must be kept out of the hands of the government, but I don't see the need to allow the editors. The issue of news media fairness is certainly not as simple as Simison portrays it. His appeal to the First Amendment and to the spectre of modern judicial process are intended to support his assertion but are clearly beside the point in this sort of I Airp issues contin past y TODAY'S JOURNALISTIC world, as Simpson knows from personal experience, is highly sophisticated. The American press, politically interested and rich, politically interested power groups. Nar guide Editorial comment in the media has great influence in shaping popular opinion and public policy. Even the viewpoints of reporters and copy editors contribute to this influence. The situation hardly can claim explicit First amendment support. Who For appear ruled tradit mayo could have foreseen in the 1700s that manlike Horace Greeyle or Henry Luce could exert such enormous pressures on national leaders or for worse in terms of resulting policy? But they shouldn't fear the operation of our judicial processes any more than the rest of us, if even as much. Our revered Constitution has at least technically separated the judicial branch from the executive and legislative branches of the government. To require responsibility to society through such measures in the hands of the government, any more than that requirement places every other sector of society in its hands. When fairness is left in the hands of the editors, it is used at their absolute discretion. If the opinions of only established editorial staffs are publicly disseminated, free discussion of issues would be effectively thwarted. A wide range of issues and events always have suffered from the increasing number of editors. The more recent ones range from Watergate to Wounded Knee and the associated trials. CERTAINLY IF any sector of our society can afford the expense involved in legal protection of its principles, it is the media. When editors refuse to publish certain viewpoints, they should be able to show why. I join Bob Simison in his concern and support for freedom of the press in the United States today, and I encourage him to join me in the search for rational and legal arguments in support of those freedoms still remaining. Whether it is based on the First Amendment, the fairness doctrine, as applied in the Florida case, has a definite and desirable purpose. This purpose is merely to mitigate the monopoly or oligoply exercised by the United States government, publicly dissertating, news and opinion. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN John Scott Great Bend senior Published at the University of Kansas daily examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $1 a semester, $15 a year. Second class payment packages: $10 a semester, $125 a year. Ticket rate: $1.35 a student paid in student activity fee. Advertiser offered to all students without regard to enrollment are not necessarily those of the University presented are not necessarily those of the University. News Adviser . . . Susanne Shaw NEWS STAFF Editor Hal Jitter Assistant Editor Cynthia Ellaine Zimmerman Campus Editor Elaine Editorial Editor Iain Hacken Bill Gibson Sports Editor Egwyn Gerry Ewing Gwen Gwyn News Editors Don Kinney, Bob Marotte, Copy Chiefs Liz Cadwell, Ann McFerren, John Hitter, Katy Tussey, Elaine Zimmerman, Walter Bierle, Mike Bierle, Associate Campus Editors Larry Fish Assistant Campus Editors Jill Williams Assistant Feature Editor Diane Willett Assistant Planentiator Editorial Assistant Bunny Miller, Job Sushi Photographers Bill Kenner Alan McCoy, Dave Reager Cartoonists Steve Carpenter, David Sokofkis Makeup Artist Chuck Potter, Mike Bike, Ann McFerren, Chuck Potter, Mike Bike, BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager David Hunker Director of Marketing Assistant Business Manager Steve Logan Classified Advertising Manager Bruce Regesterin Classified Advertising Manager David Alshiburri Assistant Advertising Manager David Alshiburri University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 7, 1974 5 Lawrence Changes Included Woman Mayor By ALAN MANSAGER Kansan Staff Reporter cotte, Blieke ermann Smith Jenson Willis amans Lloyd, mison Siegler kolokoff Blieke ermann Hunke hmiddt Logan instein Tharp atropus 1 West Airports and skunks were among the local issues as Lawrence and Douglas County continually suffered the pangs of growth the past year. Mary ramblton took hold of the reins to guide the city through a challenging year. For a long time, in fact since mayors first appeared in Lawrence, the town had been called Hambleton. Hambleton brought this tradition and the city's first woman mayor in April, 1973. The test of her ability shortly followed. Beginning in late summer, commodity shortages plague consumers in Lawrence grapes, oranges, potatoes, mayonnaise, tolets and baiting were felt in varying degrees. Warnings of antifreeze, beer and Franklin stone shortages were also heard, and commodity shortages were felt to a lesser extent here. The big cause and culprit of many shortages were the limited amounts of oil and gasoline. The September prices for gasoline in Lawrence averaged from 39.9 to 39.9 cents a gallon for regular and 40.8 to 44.9 cents a gallon for premium. Because of higher food prices brought on by shortages, many local residents turned to growing some of their own foodstuff and gardening in the county increased ten-fold. Interest in the city's growth and development also increased. The city commission approved plans to proceed with the construction of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Gasoline stations closed early in the day or never opened at all. Conversions of some stations in Lawrence to ice cream stores or car dealerships and slower highway speeds were some of the long-term effects of the oil shortage. The Douglas County Commission and the city commission agreed the past year to cooperate in construction of a new bridge over the Kansas River at Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The plan for a long time had been to repair the present one. The city also adopted a resolution to provide 400 acres of recreational land upstream from Massachusetts Street along the east bank of the Kansas River and also near the new water treatment plant on the opposite bank. Plans called for a boat ramp across campus and a natural habitat site. All construction will be next January. During the year the city and county got together to discuss final plans for the city-county judicial law enforcement complex in Lawrence. A problem which may have had a restraining effect on the progressive momentum of the city came with the defeat of the airport expansion project at the polls December 12. The $9 million project which was said to be essential for the economic recovery of New York like comet Kohoutek when it was defeated by a margin of more than two to one. The Clinton Reservoir project had its rough times but managed to contain the streams of criticism aimed at it. The 7,000 acre, $4.7 million project continued in spite of complaints of fund shortages for necessary improvements and many complaints that it wasn't accessible enough to accommodate all users. In 1977, the reservoir will offer recreation and additional water supply for the city and county. Other disagreements resulted when the federal government broke a contract with the city in December to rechannel Mud Creek. The channel project was to clean and offer better drainage of Mud Creek five miles northwest of Lawrence. The government said it saved $2.18 million by abandoning its involvement in the project but the city and drainage district costs rose to $500,000 and the county cost that would have been bridged in conjunction with original plans. Work on the Wells Park project of the Douglas County Public Works Department moved forward with comparatively few hitches. The 16.2 acre park, located three miles northwest of the town, Lawrence will feature nature trails, playground equipment and barbecue grills. Back in the city, landlord riots ran short as at least seven houses were torn down. houses east of campus violated the minimum housing code. Exposed electrical wiring, bad plumbing and structurally unsure stairways were the basis for the law. It was proclaimed during the year that 38 A myriad of protests by the landlords and homeowners brought the city commission to review the housing code. Jack Rose, commissioner, said the code was vague. READINGS On July 1, Douglas County set up a small claims court for cases involving arms of less than $300. Most cases brought to the court were concerning rental agreements in dwellings and dards, and there were differing opinions as to whether the court itself was fair. Handwriting Analysis and Cards Will Answer Any Questions on All Matters of Life. Older residents in Lawrence seem to be the ones most in need of city-supported housing. Disputes the past year concerning transportation problems in the city resulted in the recommendation on January 23 to hire a bus company for transportation for those short of vehicles. Stop In Today. The Douglas County Planning Council on Service for Aging, in sponsored a minibus to 60 to 120 elderly people here. The bus offers transportation to from 40 to 60 elderly a day, five days a week. A Congrete Meal Program was initiated to help provide a no meal and socializing for Call 843-5899 2246 Ohio—Corner of 23rd St. Lawrence A free geriatric clinic also opened and improved medical care for senior citizens. Another sector of the population was satisfied the past year when the city commission approved three bicycle routes to and from the University of Kansas and Washington DC. The signs sign to mark the routes, something many cyclists have long awaited. But the weather in January put a damper on the homes of a safe driving month. International traffic signs were also put into fullscale use on the city streets partly due to the low number of traffic A long 15-day siege of cold weather and Icy streets during that period made traveling touch and go for many motorists in the city. For the Student Who Works SUMMER SESSION Penn Valley Community College 3201 Southwest Trafficway Kansas City, Kansas 64111 Transferable Credit Night Schedule - Convenient Day Schedule MEETING Personal Instruction snow from Dec. 30 to January 19 gripped the area with temperatures averaging for the period 8.9 degrees and plunging to -12 degrees on January 12 resulting in ice jams on the Kansas River. On January 31 the river froze over four feet of flood stage because of ice jams. Central Location Economy and Quality Enroll May 30 and 31 Write or Call Office of Admissions 756-8000 756-2800 Place an ad. Tell the world. Call 864-4358. - 1.20/case for flavor of the month 5c Pop Is Back! ★ $2.00/case for all other 10 oz. bottles ★ Buy 5 cases and get one case free Last summer, similar vaguages of the weather brought the river to record crests. Vagaries in student behavior the past year meant an increase in complaints leveled against them. It was said that, for a long time, students had bitter litering. The POP DOCK at the Mini Plaza 19th & Haskell 10-8 Mon..Thur. 10-10 Fri. & Sat. featuring Philip Brimble SIERRA CLUB SCIENCE EDITOR, KANSAS CITY STAR speaking on Colorado oil shale South Park Recreation Center MEETING SCHOONER 40 INNAMCKS '65 LAWRENCE KS TUESDAY 7-930 MAY 7, 1974 7:30 p.m. February of 1974 were down 1.9 per cent from the first two months of 1973. lottering and urinating on front yards in the tavern area east of campus. Mayor Hambleton said it was because the students were enough places to relax and let off steam. Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan 864-4358 Area dogs weren't even spared the legal process and came out on the short end of the stick with the new city animal control *e-dinance*. The ordinance raised the price to pick up a lost dog from the Humane Society and had another city said it was finished issuing dog dox tags. The endless problem of crime on the streets and elsewhere showed significant impact. There were 2,291 Part I offenses reported last year representing a 9.2 per cent decrease from the previous year. A Part I offense is defined as crime pertaining to manslaughter, rape, burglary, robbery and larceny. Part I offenses for January and Skunks are fuming and the increase in skunk population in the city couldn't be ignored. The growing number of skunks was found in buildings, said city manager Buford Watson. 1975 Jayhawker Yearbook staff positions... up for grabs art staff business staff photographers writers copy editors section editors applications available rm. b115, Union for more information call Skip 843-7468 18 WE REALLY MOVE OUR TAIL AND YOURS TO LOS ANGELES FOR $102. ($10 less than anybody's Coach fare) DANIEL PATTERSON We also have the only Economy fares to We also have the only Lest: ALBUQUERQUE CHICAGO DENVER COLORADO SPRINGS $60 SAVE $7 $39 SAVE $4 $50 SAVE $6 $50 SAVE $6 Fares include tax. We're the only airline to offer Economy fares throughout our route system. So depending where home is, it may cost you less to fly Continental. So call your travel agent, our partner in getting things done, or Continental at 471-3700. We can probably get you where you live—for less. We really move our tail for you. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail. 6 Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Dally Kansan City Continues Construction Improvements By KENN LOUDEN Kanxan Staff Reporter Construction and improvements will continue in Lawrence as city planners and government prepare for the city's expansion and growth. Phase one of the Lawrence comprehensive plan will be completed May 28. Ron Jones, city planning consultant said that the plan should be set aside land in Lawrence should be set aside for commercial purposes. The study will cost $16,000. The Lawrence city commission, city planners and the state planning commission are expecting to approve it by June 30. Phase one of the plan is a collection of data and an investigation of urbanization trends around Lawrence. Jones said it consisted of recommendations for use of funds relating to new construction and building in Lawrence. Phase two, which will begin in July, will consist of improvements and new construction. Plans for Clinton Lake are continuing in good order. Mayor Jack Rose said, and the city is working on plans to reopen the lake. The Clinton project was authorized by Congress in 1962. The lake will be formed by a dam on the Wakasua River about four miles north of the town. The lake will cover about 7,000 acres. The dam is being built by the Army Corps of Engineers. Paul D. Barber, district chief fish and wildlife officer, states that the primary purpose for constructing the dam was flood control but that Clinton Lake will also be used for recreational purposes and water supply for surrounding Ed Dischner, corps recreation director, said four areas would be developed for recreation. A fifth, Clinton State Park, which is to be located on the northeast part of the dam, will be developed jointly with the state. The four recreational areas will be Bloomington on the peninsula around the town of Clinton, Rock Haven on the south side and Rochester on the lowest west side and the outlet area east of the dam. Whereas the dam project is proceeding without difficulty, the proposed Clinton roadway has hit many snags. Mayor Rose Sand. That doesn't seem to be making sense. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., introduced a bill into the Senate that would direct the Army Corps of Engineers to build a 4.1-mile highway from 22rd and Iowa streets to the northern edge of Clinton reservoir at a cost not exceeding $6 million. Lawrence and Douglas County would provide 30 per cent of the expenses. Brig. Gen. James Kelly, Army deputy director of civil engineers, objected to the provision of the bill authorizing the Army to construct the roadway. He said the army shouldn't have to use its funds to construct it. "City and county residents can't afford to subsidize the road and shouldn't have to, because the road will carry much traffic. It also connects Kansas City." Mayor Rose said. The Mud Creek project, after a four-month stalemate between city and county planners and the Army Corps of Engineers, seems to be under way, Mayor Rose said. Rose said the federal government broke a contract with Lawrence by not completing the Mud Creek channelization project as planned, which would return to the original proposal. The original plan involves clearing the Mud Creek channel of debris and timber, straightening some of the bends in the stream, sloping the banks and constructing a high levee on the south bank of the stream. The plan will channel a section of Mud Creek tributaries about five miles northwest of the Kansas Turnpike slightly to the south-west. Construction will begin this summer on a $4-million corrections center, which will be located east of the present courthouse jailhouse complex at 11th and Massachusetts streets. It will house courtrooms and the police and sheriff departments and regular jail facilities for 50 prisoners. The corrections center will also have separate sections for women and juvenile offenders. It will have recreational facilities, a place where parents may meet peers and spacemates may meet peer and space for health employment and social work services. Marylee Brochmann, a member of the Douglas County chapter of the Kansas Council on Crime and Delinquency, said the committee was attempting to make sure prisoners would be provided with proper services in the new corrections center. She said that a clinical room was included in the architects plans in the center and that they would recommend it to be used for permanent on-call doctor service for prisoners. This would include a brief medical exam for every prisoner entering the corrections center as well as regular medical service and check-ups. After the city police move to the new corrections center, the present police station at 745 Vermont St. will be remodeled and city offices, now located in the First National Bank building, will be moved there. Dennis Kallsen, assistant city manager, said construction of a new Massachusetts campus will start shortly in the planning stages. The bridge was built with a life expectancy of 50 years, but it is 60 years old. It isn't in danger of collapse and no emergency equipment is recommended it be replaced. Some damage has been done to the bridge's superstructure, Kalsen said, and the bridge isn't large enough to accommodate Lawrence. A new bridge would be built on the north side of Missouri and 6th streets and between north and south Lawrence, he said. As soon as engineers finish a geological study of the ground beneath the river, local voters will be faced with a bond election for a new $3 million bridge. Walt Craigan, chairman of the county commission, said the bond election may be sometime this summer. He said he expected it to be approved. Preliminary plans call for the new bridge to be twice the size of the present one, Cragan said. The new bridge will be built just west of the present one. After a new bridge is completed, the old one will be torn apart and another bridge will be built in its place. Lawrence will have two bridges, each will carry 100 vehicles. Each bridge will carry commercial traffic. Cragan said Finney and Turnipseed, Topeka consulting engineers, are considering the construction of bicycle paths and sidewalks on the bridge. He said the bridge would probably be completed within three years. Later this year, the city will begin construction of a $6 million secondary sewage treatment plant. Lawrence has a primary plant, but it has been judged inadequate. The secondary treatment plant, which will be built as an addition to the primary treatment plant south of the river on 8th Street, will take out more suspended solids from sewage water before returning the water to the river. The secondary treatment addition, which should be in operation in about two years, will be financed 75 per cent by a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency. The remainder will come from increased charges for sewer service. The Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., will be expanded soon. Although final plans haven't been drawn yet, hospital administrator Don Lenz said construction is underway for two and one-half years. Proliminary cost estimates range between $9 and $14 million. Lawrence Memorial Hospital trustees are taking steps to acquire land west of the city. The new facility will provide private rooms for flexibility in operation and privacy for the patient. It will provide for expanded operating room facilities, expanded emergency and out-patient services and in-npatient psychiatric services. The new hospital would provide additional services such as an occupational therapy lab, a pulmonary function laboratory and an outpatient surgical Don Schaake, Neighborhood Development Program (NDP) director, said his department planned more improvements in North and East Lawrence. The NDP plans to help rehabilitate low income housing in those areas of North and East Lawrence that meet the federal specifications. Other improvements will include installing mid-block lighting, repairing sidewalks and paving alleys. The Lawrence to K-7 section was delayed about a year because a property owner refused in 1972 to grant right-of-way through his property. His suit was finally Highway K-10 has been made four lanes from Kansas City to K-7, but the Kansas Highway Commission officials said it would be on Highway K-10 is four lanes all the way to Lawrence. Schaake said that some of the funds may be used for improving the landscape and walkways in South Park but that such action would have to be approved by the city. The sites are at the corner of Lawrence Avenue and 27th Street and at a site one-half mile west of Kasol Drive and one-half mile north of 18th Street. McClamathan said any decision to construct these schools would be reported to the state board when the population warrants schools. A bypass system has also been projected for west Lawrence, but McClanathan said the highway probably wouldn't be necessary until 2000. John McGrew, president of McGrew Real Estate, said that his agency was developing three housing areas in west Lawrence and Vineyard Tank Suburban Estates. FREE RENTAL SERVICE Dearfield Park is a 168-acre tract of land west of Iowa Street, between Sixth Street and Eighth Avenue. Dick McClanahan, city planner, said several new school sites have been proposed. McGrew said that the preliminary plans also included a major shopping center, but that no one had been contracted to build one yet. The four-lane K-10 won't run parallel to the existing highway, a spokesman for the commission said, but instead will be built on the same route as the full miles math of the present junction. The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce said two more shopping centers should open in Lawrence by the end of the year. A K-Mart center will be built at 31st and 41st streets, the shopping center will be built around an A & P supermarket at 23rd and Ousdahl streets. MAY 11 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. CALL Interdenominational Charismatic Teaching Conference settled in favor of the highway commission, and construction has begun between K7- Yankee Tank Suburban Estates is a housing project planned for 1976, McGrew said. The development is planned around a lake on Yankee Tank Creek, west of Lawrence. years, about 59 simple residence homes have been built in this area. Alvaram Estates is located north of Kaskalo Drive between 18th and 20th street. It is the newest development. MAY 10 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. REV. ROBERT HEIL, Speaker FOR UP-TO-THE-MINUTE LISTINGS ON HOUSING AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE LRe K.U. Night Tonight! A Nursery Is Provided 842-2500 LAWRENCE RENTALS EXCHANGE —FREE— LIVE MUSIC with K.U.I.D. First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23rd EVERYONE IS WELCOME THE BEATLES Live Music 6 Nights a Week Yuk It Up at the Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th and Iowa Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. —GRAND TETONS SUA Northwest Tour —GLACIER NATIONAL PARK Have a Summer Vacation and Visit the Following Places: —ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK DENVER —YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK —EXPO '74: SPOKANE, WASHINGTON —SALT LAKE CITY AUGUST 5-16 If you are interested in the trip please contact the SUA Office (864-3477) and sign up on the mailing list. Final information and price will be available in June. ENTER This is your key to unprecedented calculating capacity. Only Hewlett-Packard offers it. It lets you "speak" to your calculator with total consistency, because it lets you load data into a 4-Register Stack. This means: (1) you always enter and process your data the same way, no matter what your problem; (2) you don't have to re-enter data; (3) you can see all intermediate data Our HP-45 is one of two pre-programmed scientific pocket-sized calculator calculators with this key. That's one reason it's the most powerful pre-programmed pocket-sized scientific computer calculator. Here are three of many others: 1. 15% pre-programmed to handle 44 arithmetic, trigonometric and logarithmic functions and data manipulation operations beyond the 2. It lets you store nine constants in its nine Addressable Memory Registers, and it gives you a "Last X" Register for error correction or 3. It displays up to 10 significant digits in either fixed-decimal or scientific notation and automatically positions the decimal point through Our HP-35 is the other. It handles 22 functions, has one Addressable Memory Register and also displays up to 10 digits in either fixed-decimal or scientific notation. It's the second most powerful pre-programmed pocket-sized scientific computer calculator. Both of these exceptional instruments are on display now, if you're looking for appended calculating capacity for your money, by all means. hp PACKARD Hewlett-Packard makes the most reliable, high-speed computer calculators in the world. 415.4931501 SCREEN RN AM DEC BIN V: 1n 6* FIX X: P SIN COS TAN R X STO RCL % DEG SAD GRD CLEAR ENTER + CHS EX CLX ENTER + 7 8 9 + 4 5 6 × 1 2 3 LAST A B Z ÷ 0 - + 1+ F Lawrence, KS. 66044 913-864-4640 With able to as beg KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE A re that s would Glish Micl Free year. studen 1 University of Kansas 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 7, 1974 7 Few Major Changes Expected for Next Fall By DENNIS ELLSWORTH Kansas Staff Reporter If you liked this year, then you'll buy next year. Few drastic changes are planned for University of Kansas students and faculty members returning to campus. Students will participate in programs and facilities promises a better year. Student Union Activities (SUA) is going to have an expanded program next year, according to the SUA board. "We've got a really dynamite schedule proposed," he said recently. SUA's Wilderness Discovery program will be greatly expanded with additional equipment that will be used for training workshops as well as for student rentals. Glish said. With the equipment additions the program will be able to reach students with advanced skills as well as those without. A recreation library will also be established so that students can find out almost anything they would like to know about all recreational activities, Glash said. Michael Miller, SUA program director, said the Free University would be operated by SUA next year. The program will stress more involvement by students and will offer more classes and workshops than before, he said. trips to Hawaii, the Mardi Gras in New Orleans and to the Northeast and Northwest are planned next year in addition to the regular ski trips, Glish said. More and better concertes are also planned, Miller said. Details aren't final, be said, but the concert line-up will be high-quality and will offer a wide variety of entertainment. Other improvements to the field house, including the installation of movable bleachers on the floor of the arena, also should be completed by the fall, Dough Messer, assistant athletic director, said. The installation of a new floor in Allen Field House should be completed by the fall semester, Keith Lawton, director of the Office of Facilities Planning and Operation, said. Lawton said the expansion of Learned Hall probably would be about half completed by fall, depending on the weather and the progress of construction. He said the schedule to be completed until the fall of 1975. Renovation of the third-floor attic of Flint Hall may be completed by mid-fall. Lawton said, A multi-media lecture, room, two classrooms, two seminar rooms, three instructors' office, a student library, and a computer lab. Leibengood, assistant dean of the School of Journalism, said. Several minor modifications will be made in Snow and Linder both, but he said. These changes are being considered to make the system more efficient. Improvements also will be made in Flint's air conditioning system. Lawton said Lawton said that three temporary structures between Fraser Hall and the old hospital might be removed this summer and that some "very special" projects would be done in building near Fower Hall might also be done. Search committees for a director of Outreach, a dean of the School of Social Welfare, a director of libraries and an attorney for the University are likely to be still searching when school starts in the The University is scheduled to submit a report on the state of the University to the North Central Evaluation team in December and is to host the University's national conferences, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said. "A really fundamental evaluation is being made of the University," he said. Next year will bring requests for another 10 per cent increase in faculty salaries. It could also bring increases in other costs, such as housing. The faculty isn't likely to resolve the issues of tenure and financial exigency by the fall, and unionization and collective bargaining are sure to remain big issues. found better positions elsewhere and renewed efforts to keep them from leaving. The Curriculum and Instructional Survey will have $120,000 to spend on administering and researching the program over the next two years if a federal grant proposal is approved. If not, the program will be funded—probably on a smaller scale than the state budget. The office of the Office of Instructional Resources, said. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will confront the issue of accreditation for ROTC Mary will be watching the actions of the committee that is trying to resolve the problems of the Intensive English Center with regard to instructors, grading, facilities and methods of instruction. Expanded outreach programs next fall include the Capitol Complex Management Program in Toppea and the School of Social Welfare graduate program to be offered in Kansas City. With the establishment of an office of Outreach, more programs may be developed but they often fail to reach people. Season ticket prices for football and basketball will increase to $13 and $15. Women's sports will increase to $20. In football, the Jayhawks are said to have the best defense they've had in many years. In basketball, Coach Ted Owens lured up prospects to fill the role of last year's seventh-ranked team in the nation. Student health fees will rise $8.50 next year, and student employees will get pay raises under the new minimum wage law. The Kansas Union probably expects to increase its final fee to be included in the student fee assessment. The University's security consultant will make his recommendations, Project Whistleblower will be given a better chance to prove its validity and always a chance the campus rapist will be caught. University of ficsla said not to look for much of a change in the student population for the fall semester. Enrollment in Allen Field House won't be a thing of the past by then, either they said. The selection of a new state attorney general in November might signal an end to the extensive drug raids of the past, but it might be the beginning of what could be its success in the bid for the governorship. 1973-74 Marked by Too Much Politics, Too Little Oil By JACK HAWKS Kanan Staff Reporter "Nixon's the One" has recently resurfaced on the bumper of the burgers car not as a campaign slogan, but rather as an in-character figure. President's guilt in the Watergate affair. And although his role in Watergate has yet to be resolved, there is no doubt that Richard Nixon was, indeed, the number one newspaper of the 1973-74 school year. Vying with other Watergate issues, Patricia Herrick, the energy crisis, the oil impatient Mr. Bush, and his Nixon trial and Henry Kissinger, Nixon consistently made headlines in connection with tapes, taxes and impeachment turnover, as well as the energy crisis. Perhaps the most exasperating issue for Congress, (and annoying for Nixon), has been the President's reluctance to release actual recorded conversations with present and former aides who had any involvement in matters of knowledge surrounding Watergate. The tapes controversy entered the national scene last August 29 when U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica issued an order directing the President to give him nine Watergate-related tapes. Sirica requested the tapes for examination and confirmation on the validity of the Presidential claim of the right to withhold the tapes. That furor continues today with Nixon's decision to release edited transcripts of further Watergate tapes subpoenaed by the House Judiciary Committee. sentiment. The President's general reluctance to release the tapes, the discovery that two tapes were non-existent, the 18-minute gap in one tape, Rosemary Woods' testimony, the "experts" exoneration of the author and over the edited transcripts all contributed to the lengthy tapes debate and talk of impairment. A subject which has monopolized the news is the possibility of Richard Nixon's return. The meandering trail of the truthfulness of the tapes has encountered many roadside surprises. Serious talk of impeachment really began immediately after the weekend firing of special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox, former deputy attorney general Rod Rosenbaum and the resignation of former attorney general Ellot Richardson last Oct. 20. Impeachment speculation grew when the President unveiled his personal finances in "Operation Candor," and it was determined that he owed nearly half a million dollars in back taxes—a all result of questionable accounting. He received an income taxes during his first term. In spite of it all, it must be noted that Richard Nixon has been insistent, persistent and consistent in his proclamations of innocence regarding his own knowledge of the break-in or cover-up (prior to March 21, 1973). Nixon has repeatedly denied any possibility of his own resignation. "I've no intention of walking away from the job I was elected to do." Nixon's re-election campaign, with the recent exposure given by the press to Nixon backers may be a signal that the tide against the President may begin to turn. This strategy of leaving no personal doubt about his desire to remain in office may be helpful. Last Sunday, the CBS network's "60 Minutes" news show covered coverage of the speeches of John McGlothlin, a Jesuit priest being spoken in defense of the President Still, the impeachment sentiment against the President remains strong in Congress where the House committee studying impeachment sent a letter to Nixon stating that he failed to comply with the House subpoena of the tapes. The acquittal of John Mitchell and Maurice Starr charges in connection with the murders of 800,000 people. The President's position in the public eye remains unsettled. With all the unfavorable events that have occurred regarding Nixon, there is great doubt as to whether the President can everrove his innocence. After Watergate and the President, the energy crisis took many of the nation's newspaper headlines during the winter months. Charges of a contrived crisis were leveled against the major oil companies, and the ensuing debate still rails. Oil profits continue to soar, and the consumer economy is likely high prices for gasoline and heating oil. For most Americans, the crisis was, and is, a combination anoynausea and sacrifice. As you know, this is the result of Discussing Nixon in a letter to Newsweek magazine, a resident of Buffalo, N.Y., said: "If he had evidence that he was innocent, I wouldn't play them on prime time, and anyone with One harassed attendant in New York City put it this way: "I don't want to be unpopular. I don't want to be intimidated and made uncomfortable," he said, accompanied with my life over some lousy gasoline." half a brain knows it." The President is ever to "get off theook," much of this kind of thinking will be useful. Since being kidnapped on Feb. 4, Patricia Hearst has captured the attention of millions, and each new revelation of her mind is a celebration of its predecessor in sensational wonder. station attendants, it was much worse. Her recent apparent allegiance to the Symbiontes Liberation Army has left many with feelings of resignation concerning her safety and sanity. An earthquake in central Mexico caused the death of 500 people there, and Chile saw the ouster and death of the first freely held rebellion in the western hemisphere, Salvador Allende. American Speed Center 790 N. 2nd 842-6828 Featuring all major brands of quality speed equipment The decline and fall of Spiro Agnew was an event that shocked many Americans. As the school year opened, several misfortunes, both personal and natural, came. He was apparently rejuvenated with publication of his new book, but last week the state of Maryland administered a final blow: disarmment from the Maryland Bar. 'Have a Ball!' PLAY PUTT-PUTT --- TONITE AT PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSES One of the greatest accomplishment of this generation. 120 West 67th Street Rod McKuen In Concert America's favorite Post Song-writer-Singer A Music on Lette Consulting Management Place Birchdale (312) 850-2291 Kansas City Music Hall Thursday, May 9 Tickets $6.50-$5.50-$4.50 (NO CHECKS PLEASE) Tickets now available at all Team Electronics Stores, 3914 Noland Rd. (Independent), Antioch Shoping Center, 570-872-3660, Caper's Corner Record Store; Kiep's Record Store (Lawrence). (No Checks Please) 8:00 p.m. Dillons Send mail orders to 600 N. 71st St, Kansas City Missouri; money order only with affidaviced envelope. Now 3 Dillon stores in Lawrence to serve you! Introducing our Newest Store located at 27th and Iowa. This newest Dillons is actually a whole new breed of food store. You'll find expanded variety and selection in many departments. And you'll even find some new departments! Like a charming FlowerShop island display and a complete greeting card section. We're proud of this newest Dillon Store... and anxious for the chance to show it off to you and your family. Other stores located at 1730 Massachusetts and 1312 West 6th. Dillons Introducing our Newest Store located at 27th and Iowa. This newest Dillons is actually a whole new breed of food store. You'll find expanded variety and selection in many departments. And you'll even find some new departments! Like a charming Flower Shop island display and a complete greeting card section. We're proud of this newest Dillon Store...and anxious for the chance to show it off to you and your family. Other stores located at 1730 Massachusetts and 1312 West 6th. Dillons GAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center Dollar Days $ALE Today, May 7, 1974 10-8:30 save $$$ on these Goodies . . . Summer Tops $599 assorted halters, camisoles, midriffs, tie tops Pants $1000 were $1700 Work & Play Dresses $1499 were $2000 Summer Skirts $699 for hot summer days 10% off on everything else GAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center GAROUSEL 711 West 23rd Malls Center Dollar Days $ALE Today, May 7, 1974 10-8:30 8 Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Daily Kansan Track, Tennis Teams to Compete For Conference Titles May 17-18 By KEN STEPHENS Korean Sports Writer Two Jayhawk athletic squads are still in the running for conference championships, but final examinations will force a lull in spring sports at the University of Kansas. A baseball doubleheader with Baker University at 2 p.m. today at Quailfield Field. The KU track and tennis teams will be out of action until they compete for conference championships in their Big Eight meets on May 17-18. On those days the Hawks will attempt to defend their outdoor track crown in the Big Bend. "Our chances are very good," Thad Talley, assistant track coach, said yesterday. "We proved that last Saturday when we defeated Kansas State." Kansas State was the indoor track champion this year, the favorite to win at the championship. Talley said that it appeared to be a four-way race for the outdoor track championship. In addition to KU and KSlate, Colorado, Missouri might be title college. KUI's top sprinter, Mark Lutz, who was kept out of the dual meet with K-State because of an injury, is expected to be able to perform. The Jaynaws will also qualify 14 athletes in 11 events for the United States Track and Field Federation Championships and the NCAA championships. The USTF meet will be May 31 and June in Wichita, and will be held at the University of Texas from June 6 to 8. Latz, who has qualified in three events, leads the Jayhawk qualifiers. He qualified in the 100 and 220 yard dashes and as a member of the 440 yard relay team. Emmette Edwards, Eddie Lewis and Tom Senuzzo are the other members of the 440 crew. Lewis also qualified in the 220 yard dash. Tree Hamilton qualified in the long jump. Chip Grabner qualified in the long jump. in the long jump. Roger Hammond earned a berth in the javelin competition and Dave Anderson in the shot put. Terry Porter qualified in the pole vault and Kent McDonald in the steeplechase. Greg Vandauer will be in the high hurdles competition. Randy Smith, Barry Schur and Keith Gwin qualified in the high jump competition. Going into the Big Eight tennis championships at Prairie Village May 17, 18, the tennis team trains Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. Two point in the conference standings. sports The Big Eight Championship tournament will be worth a possible 36 points in the standings, and with only two games left in the season it is still somebody's race. Coach Mike Howard said, "The team that wins will need to pick up around 15 points." Howard said. He said also that KU had five seeded positions in the tournament, more than any other team. "We've got to win," he said. Bill Tormpkins, Steve Vann, Bill Clarke and Dennis Cahil are all seeded individually. Tormpkins and Clarke are also seeded in the doubles competition. "I told the team that if they win in the Big Eight they will go to the NCAA," Howard said. The NCAA championships are June 17-22 at Los Angeles. While the track and tennis teams will be battling for conference championships, Coach Flood Temple's less-fortunate players include its season May 18-19 at Iowa State. The Jayhawks have a mathematical chance of finishing in the upper division of the N.F.L. or seventh place finish would appear more likely. "Playing up there (Ames) the last games of the season is going to be tough," Temple said yesterday. The Iowa State Cyclones scored 12-16 record and a 7-10 conference record. The Jayhawks lost the pitching services of Rob Strand last week at Nebraska. Strand's hand was broken when he was hit by a pitch. Roger Shagle and Kurt Knoff, the two managers of the daybreak staffing pitch, were named as the top pitchers. Despite the injuries to the pitching staff, temple was encouraged by a pair of pitcher- ers who came from the same district. Rob Allenbler shut out the Cornhuskers, 10, in nine innings and Mike Love, who had been withheld from competition because of a torn Achilles. Allenbler made his first appearance of the season. The University of Kansas will announce the signing of "three outstanding high school basketball players" to national letters-of-intent, according to the KU Sports Information Office. KU to Announce Signings Today Already signed with KU are guards Marc Fletcher and Clint Johnson. Head Coach Ted Owens and Don Baker, sports information director, were in Wichita yesterday signing one of the three players. Fletcher, 6-foot-4, was the St. Louis metropolitan player of the year. He averaged 32 points per game while at BLM, IL, where his father was the coach. Johnson, 6-foot-2, is from Leaven worth and averaged 24 points per game He received All-State honors. FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Popular Films Buster Keaton in STEAMBOAT BILL JR. and SHERLOCK JR. Friday, May 10 7:00-9. Saturday, May 11 7:00-9:30 Kansas Union 75c SUA FILMS JUA FILMS LUBER GIFT SHOP Says Don't Forget MOTHER'S GIFT We Have a Wide Selection of Beauti- ful Mother's Day Gifts! WE WRAP FOR MAILING Luber GIFT SHOP 834-5160 924 Mass. The Yuk Down Bring this coupon and beat the cover. Any couple or stag admitted free before 9:00 Friday, May 10 Dance and drink to the fabulous sounds of "Towers four" Come Early! Admission before 9 P.M. 9th & Iowa/Hillcrest Shopping Center FRIDAY The Yuk Down Bring this coupon and beat the cover. Any couple or stag admitted free before 9:00 Friday, May 10 Dance and drink to the fabulous sounds of "Towers four" Come Early! 9th & Iowa/Hillcrest Shopping Center FRIDAY Admission before 9 P.M. Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence presents QUITTIN TIME TUESDAY, MAY 7 9-midnight FREE BEER, LOVE, LUST and SIN once inside the door $2.00 admission Brought to you by the MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. free state opera house 642 mass lawrence presents QUITTIN TIME TUESDAY, MAY 7 9-midnight FREE BEER, LOVE, LUST and SIN once inside the door $2.00 admission Brought to you by the MUSIC PEOPLE, LTD. Mother's home away from Home MONDAY—Pitchers 75° 7-9 p.m. TUESDAY—Pitchers 70° 8-9 p.m. WEDNESDAY—Pitchers 75° 7-9 p.m. THURSDAY—Pitchers 70° 8-9 p.m. FRIDAY—Pitchers 70c 2-4 p.m. Don't forget our AFTERNOONS! Mon.-Fri. 2-6 p.m. Pitchers $1.00 — Draws 20° once there was a McDonald's restaurant in a neighborhood just like yours. One day the McDonald's owner looked around and thought how nice it would be to have more flowers growing here and there. They looked so pretty and smelled so good that he wanted all his neighbors to have flowers look. So, now you can go into your neighborhood McDonald's and get a free packet of approximately 100 Marigold seeds with any sandwich purchase. That's over 60 million new flowers we can have growing in our community. Something Nice for the Heart of America SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA Celebrate the Last Day of Classes with THE MARX BROTHERS in "A Day at the Races" Tuesday, May 7 7:30-9:30 75¢ Woodruff Auditorium Tuesday, May 7 STUDENT SENATE OFFICE 6:30-8:00 Call 864-3710 for Info. Concert Series INTERVIEWS TONITE Concert Series funded by Student Senate Let a Ford Rent-a-Car Grab You! call 843-3500 JOHN HADDOCK FORD 23rd & Alabama Box 667 Ford RENT-A-CAR 23rd & Alabama P.O. Box 667 Lawrence, Kansas I Ford Major interce- ter long ti of Kar it took basket! bottom Confei RENT-A-CAR The and of historie The f confer team 1 Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates Overtime PINTO $8.00 plus 8c per mile $45.00 plus 8c per mile $5.00 plus 8c per mile $1.50 per hour PINTO WAGON $9.00 plus 9c per mile $50.00 plus 9c per mile $6.00 plus 9c per hour $1.50 per hour MAVERICK $9.00 plus 9c per mile $50.00 plus 9c per mile $6.00 plus 9c per hour $1.50 per hour MUSTANG TORINO $9.00 plus 9c per mile $50.00 plus 9c per mile $6.00 plus 10c per hour $1.50 per hour GALAXIE $10.00 plus 10c per mile $60.00 plus 10c per mile $8.00 plus 10c per hour $1.50 per hour Station Wagon LTD PICK UP $11.00 plus 11c per mile $63.00 plus 11c per mile $8.00 plus 11c per hour $1.50 per hour Tuesday, May 7, 1974 University Daily Kansan 9 KU Bounces from Cellar to Top of Big 8 By GERALD EWING Kenan Sports Editor Major improvements in the success of intercollegiate athletic teams usually take a long time, but in the case of the University of Kansas, it didn't take long at all. In fact, it took only one year for the football and basketball teams to climb from near the bottom back to the top of the Big Eight Conference. The season of 1972-73 was a dismal one and one of the poorer ones in the recent history of football and basketball at KU. The football team finished sixth in the conference with a 5-6 record. The basketball team also finished sixth with an 8-18 record. But if 1972-73 was one of the worst seasons, the season of 1973-74 had to be considered of the best. The football team finished a tie for second place with a 7-4-1. That record was the best since the Orange Bowl year of 1989 and earned the team a bid to the Liberty Bowl. Although the Hawks did not win in this exact demonstration of aerial football. Even though the football season was a great one, the basketball season was an ever bigger turnaround as the 'Hawks ended the season as the most-improved basketball team in the country. Record KKR was 6-14 with conference with win of 13-1, and on won to on win the NCAA Midwest Regional and finished fourth in the national finals. The records of the two teams combined made KU the 16th most successful major football-basketball power this year. The combined records power Kansas State, with the likes of UCLA, Southern California, Notre Dame and North Carolina State ahead of them. Reasons for this turnaround are hard to come by, but one of the reasons is that the success of a program depends on the talent of the players involved. "I'm simply cold hard facts." The key to the quality of a program depends on the baseball standings American League American League East | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 12 | 11 | .571 | .69 | | Detroit | 12 | 11 | .480 | .24 | | Cleveland | 12 | 11 | .480 | .24 | | Baltimore | 12 | 11 | .478 | .24 | | Boston | 11 | 12 | .423 | 4 | West | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | California | 11 | 11 | .377 | --- | | Texas | 11 | 11 | .377 | --- | | Chicago | 12 | 11 | .360 | 4 | | Oakland | 12 | 11 | .380 | 4 | | Minnesota | 12 | 11 | .477 | 3 | Today's GAME Detroit 5. Chicago 6. New York 6. Texas 4. Cleveland at California Baltimore at Oakland Baltimore is labeled National League East W L J Pet. GB St. Louis 4 13 58 Philadelphia 10 13 500 Montreal 10 10 130 Chicago 10 13 499 New York 10 13 464 Pittsburgh 10 13 344 Los Angeles 18 19 9 .667 Houston 17 11 11 .54 Cincinnati 14 13 322 San Francisco 14 13 .319 Atlanta 13 13 .481 Jacksonville 13 16 .448 quality of material you have to work with." John Novotny, director of the Williams Scholarship Fund said last week. "There are hundreds of good coaches but only a few that can do the recruiting job that is needed." San Diego 7; Philadelphia 6 San Los Angeles at Montreal, ppd, rain San Francisco at New York, pdd, rain. only games scheduled According to Novotny and Athletic Director Clyde Walker, Fambrough and Owens are both good recruiters and good coaches. "You don't really build a program overnight," Walker said. "Good programs take time for them to blossom. It took time for him (Fambrough) to recruit the type of athlete he wanted. He finally got the kind and numbers of players to get the job done." Fambrough took over the head coaching job in 1971 and at the time it would take three years for KU to have a winning season and go to a bowl game. The past season was his third as head coach and his prediction came true. "The last three years, we've worked real hard at recruiting," Fambrough said last week. "It's given us better talent and more experience than we have ever especially in the conference we play in." KU signed only 28 high school seniors in 1968 and 37 in 1969, following the Orange Bowl season. In 1970, 35 seniors signed and since Fambridge took over in 1971, 40 signed in 1971, 37 in both 1972 and 1973 and 26 signed so far this year. According to Novitoy, the players signed Farnsworth took over have been of a better quality. "Fambrough in his first year had a very good recruiting year," Novotny said. The second year was better and last year was for the bin three years ago, it was empty. Fambrough said for KU to be competitive with the likes of Oklahoma and Nebraska, 44 quality players were needed to push the starters for their jobs and for injuries. "last year we had as many injuries as I've ever seen," Fambrigh said. "It was an unusual year and without the depth we could have been hard for us to win a game." Novotny said when Fambrogg-inherited the regime it was at the lowest point in recent years. "This may be our greatest year ever," Novtay said. "We are finally establishing some continuity in the program. "There have been 31 football coaches at KU and UTEP, but we haven't done the program. "We've finally got a sincere coach and not one that does somesaults." Recruiting was also the key to the success of the basketball season. years but not the best. He said he and Coach Ted Owens didn't work any harder at coaching this year but simply had better talent and had a better attitude than in a previous year. Assistant Coach Sam Cham SUI said that last year was one of KU's better recruiting "We had some better players than the people we had last year." Miranda said. "We had a little more experience this year and we were able to attitude plus we had the two new players." The two new players Miranda referred to were forwards Roger Morningstar and Norm Cook. Cook ended the season as the holder and Morningstar was the leading scorer. there is greater interest in the University now than ever before," Billotta said. "It's difficult to attribute it all to the athletic department, some of which some credit has to go to Archie Dykes." "The big thing in basketball was bringing in the forwards Cook and Morningstar," Walker said. "They made the turnaround much easier and there was also a change time." Regardless of the talent, luck did play a part in the success of the two teams. In football, the best example was the final game of the season against Missouri. In that game, David Jaynes hit Emmet Edwards on a pass from pass with less than a minute remaining. In basketball, there were numerous examples of luck—the best being the Oklahoma State game at Allen Field House. In that game, Tommy Smith hit a jump shot from the top of the key at the buzzer to give KU the win. "You have to be lucky to be successful," Walker said. "There's a really fine division line between winning and losing. Our whole season had that little something extra that made it a lot better." Muranda said luck wasn't that much of a factor and a team makes its own breaks. He said most fans and even himself thought the Oklahoma State won, but the Tigers had on to win it. The success of the two teams has already had repercussions in the areas of alumnum support and finances and Walker believes KU is on the winning track for "If the success this year is any indication of the caliber of our program, we should be successful for years to come," Walker said. "Actually, we made it with young teams this year and that is encouraging for all of us for next year." "Winning is the name of the game and if you don't win, people don't support you. The athletic department depends on gatekeeping that is why winning is so important." Novotny said this year's success had already impacted impact on contributions to leadership. "So far, there isn't any question. Since the first of the year, we've seen over $20,000 in Bucks Seek Playoffs Lead MILWAUKEE (AP)—The Milwaukee Bucks, confident that their new four-forward offense can again neutralize the Boston Celtics' pressure defense, will shoot for a 3-2 lead in their National Basketball Association championship series tonight. The Bucks started 6-foot-7 reserve forward Mickey Daway at guard in place of Ron Williams in Boston Sunday. Davis scored 15 points and, more importantly, made the Celtics ease pressure on playmaker Oscar Robertson. The Bucks won 97-89, squaring the best-of-seven series at two victories apiece. would be played here. Milwaukee regained the home court advantage in the process because two of the top four players at UCLA had played here. The fifth game will be nationally televised at 8:30 p.m. Lawrence time tonight, with the winner moving into position to clinch the series at Boston Friday night. "The victory was something we had to have," Bucks reserve guard Jon MGlocklin said of Sunday's game. "Not only did we win back the home court advantage, but we showed them we could adjust." A seventh game, if needed, would be played here Sunday. Teaming Davis with the 6-5 Robertson in the backcourt gave the Bucks a height advantage over Celtic guards Don Chaney, 6-5, and Jo Jo White, 6-3. Summer Reservations "Make Yours Now" Maupintour travel service OFFERING COMPLETE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS: Airline Reservations & Tickets Anywhere in the World You May Travel. ★ Eurailpass & Student Railpass & Brit-Railpass ★ Amtrak Reservations, Tickets & Information new money," he said. "If we don't go over $400,000, which is a real possibility, it doesn't mean that our people don't like the program but because of some real economic problems." ★Trans Atlantic Youthfares from Canada Never An Extra Charge for Airline Tickets ★ Hotel & Car Rental Reservations & Information Individual & Group Tours The Council, policy-making body of the NCAA, adopted a resultant endorsing bills by Sens. John V. Tunney, D-Calf, and C. Pearson, R-Kan., at its spring meeting. Phone 843-1211 KANSAS UNION/900 MASS. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Two bills which would affect participation by the United States in amateur athletics have passed both houses of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. NCAA Council Votes Changes The Tunney bill would establish a presidential commission to recommend specific proposals for legislation to reform the U.S. Olympic Committee. THE MALLS/HILLCREST The Pearson bill would create a U.S. Amateur Sports Board which would estimate the number of associations could be issued federalcharities as international franchise holders in their respective sports. It would also establish an amateur sports participation and facilities. Vince Billotta, assistant director of the Alumni Association, said the success has resulted in increased activity and support by alumni from all across the country. the Pearson bill has been cleared by the Senate Commerce Committee and is ready for the Senate floor. The Tunney measure has been voted out of the Foreign Relations Committee and is ready to be taken to the floor for a vote. "I'd certainly say we have evidence that Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358. Ground the romance that was at Stirling Robert Redford & Mia Farrow 'THE GREAT GATSBY' Adm. Adult 13-20~Child 75~ NO CARE Hillcrest RIDIN' ROPIN' WRANGER and all that WESTEPN BULLSHIT Mel Brooks' BLAZING SADDLES Eve at 7:15 & 9:10 Sun, Jun 3-18 Varity THAIL...September 21,2015 BLAZING SADDLES ve at 7 & 10 & 9:30 sat. Sat. 2:30 Jursey DEATH | Telephone # 5065 v at 1:30, 5:40, 9:40 Sat. Sun, Mat 2:30 Vasari THEATRE ... TERRA IGNI 71-1065 —ENDSTUESDAY— STS 38156 ALICE in WONDERLAND Granada THEATRE...Toronto W13 - 2782 Presents The American Film Theatre STACY KEACH in John Osborn's "LUTHER" Today at 12 & 8 at the The Hillcrest ALL SEATS 3232) NO PASSES YOU MUST HAVE ID PROVING 18 YEARS OF AGE or be with parent-NO ID-NO SHOW THE EXORCIST R Box office Opens at 6:30 Show Daily at 7:20, 9:25 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:30 Hillcrest3 Litz Taylor "ASH WEDNESDAY" by Jack Lemonin in "SAVE THE TIGER" Box opens 8:00 Show 8:30 Sunset In All Shades: As Night Is Gone WAX XMAN CANDL SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Now thru May 11 10-75% off all stock 7 W. 14th 10-5,30 daily sirloin LAWRENCE KANSAS Finest Eating Place We will be open Graduation Night, Monday, May 20 for your accommodation. Make your reservations now. Thank you for your wonderful patronage this year. Ken Kirby, Owner Our motto is and has always been . . . "There is no substitute for quality in good food." 2 1/2 Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge Phone 843-1431 Sirloin Pronounced DINING 器 Open 4:30 Closed Mondays 10 University Dafly Kansan Lots of Lettuce Is Bunnies' Reward Kate, a former Kansas University student, is a bunny at the Kansas City, Mo., Playboy Club because the job pays well, she told a speech class yesterday. Kansas Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER PLEASE MARK THIS AS A NOTICE OF SUPPLEMENTARY EDITION. NO RESULTS WILL BE GIVEN. "The whole idea of this job for me is to make enough money so I can do what I want to with my life," she said. "I was teased about being a funny at first, but I just say 'look at how much I made this week,' and the teasing quit." Bunny Kate, Former KU Student, Says Customers Just Look While working less than 25 hours a week, Kate said she planned to go to school in Europe on her earnings. In addition to her 15 per cent commission on sales, she said she had many opportunities to earn money through modeling and promotion work. Kate said a bunny must be young, fairly intelligent, and have a fairly good figure—"but they can do just about anything they want with those costumes." Potential Playboy bunnies receive 40 hours of training where they memorize the club liquors and learn to serve the customers properly. Serving customers properly necessitates learning the unusual "bunny dip," a technique that entails leaning backward across the table to serve the customers. "It's absolutely the most comfortable way to serve. If you serve the conventional way by leaning over the customers, your server is not very likely to fail out of the costume," she said. Most of the bunnies are married and have children, and a lot of the girls are college graduates. Kate said, One Kansas City bunny is studying to become a doctor, and two are enrolled in nursing school. The Phyllis image is a girl image—a young, girl image," she said. Playboy doesn't want glamourous women working in the clubs; they want the young girl image, Kate said. "When you're a bunny, it's like you're not a person. The customers don't grab you, but they offer you treats because they think of you as a bunny. I've never had a customer touch me," she said. Playboy image because she wore blue jeans and no makeup. Older businessmen make up the majority of the club's clientele. "I don't think the main idea of these men is to date the bunnies. A lot of them probably come just to look at the girls," she said. Club memberships to women are somewhat restricted. A woman can obtain a club membership only if she is listed as the "playmate" of some male member, Kate Kate has been a Kansas City bunny for eight months and soon will be transferred to a new city. "The Playboy image is a girl image—a Send Mom a care package. Send her the FTD Sweet Surprise for Mother's Day (May 12th). Sweet Surprise, arranged, usually available for less than $1500 Sweet Surprise, planted, usually available for less than Send it today. It couldn't be easier. Just call or visit your nearest the FTD Florist. Tell him, you with the FTD Sweet Surprise." One's all flowers...the other, growing plants with flower accents. Both are in dainty hand-painted ceramic flower buckets. An Extra Touch of color. The Pot can send your Sweet Surprise almost anywhere in the U.S. or Canada. "As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets his own prices. © 1974 *Florists* Transworld Delivery he off the job, Kate said she didn't fit the FTD Need a car, a stereo, a job? Look in Kansan classified. "Your Extra Touch Florist" Campus Hideaway ... for delicious Campus Hideaway - PIZZA •SANDWICHES •LASAGNA and •SPAGHETTI Call 843-9111 for delivery TACO GRANDE With This Coupon Buy 2 Sanchos Get 1 SANCHO FREE! Good Every Day Offer Expires May 31 9th and Indiana 1720 W. 23rd 1974-Year of the Taco xxxxxxxxxx A special gift for graduation or for going away TOWN STATE CITY For a great gift, give this handsome Armetale plate. With the look of pewter, this 8 inch plate was designed exclusively for Gardenland. And it's only $8.00. Come and see the Kansas University plate, or one of the other Armetale pieces at the Gardenland. The Gardenland 914 West 23rd Street XXXXXXXXXX BACHMAN TUR OVERDRIVE JIM STAFFORD MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA MARSHALL TUCKER BAND BOZ SCAGGS BOB SEEGER Ozark Music Festival Ozark Music Festival TED NUGENT AND THE AMBOY DUKES ON FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, JULY 19. 20 AND 21, COME TOGETHER IN SEDALIA. THE EARL SCRUGGS REVUE WOLF MAN JACK AND MANY MORE ON FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 20 AND 21, COME TOGETHER IN & SURE THERE'LL BE MUSIC. GREAT MUSIC FROM SOME OF THE BEST GROUPS IN THE COUNTRY. BUT THERE'LL BE MORE. YOU SEE THE WHOLE THING WILL TAKE PLACE ON A HUGE, 400 ACRE FAIR GROUNDS. YOU'LL HAVE PLENTY OF Water SINCE 1950 TOWER SPACE FOR CAMPING WHETHER YOU WANT TO BE UNDER A ROOF OR UNDER A TREE. COMPLETE CONVENIENTLY LOCATED WATER FOUNDATIONS AND BRESTROOMS AND PARKING GALORE. BUT ITS A FESTIVALTOO. SO THERE'LL BE CRAFTS AN WOMEN MEN OF WE/RD 8 WONDERFUL COMPETITION ACTIVITIES. AND A GIANT MIDWAY WITH 24 MAJOR RIDES. EXHIBITS AND GIANT MIDWAY WITH 24 MAJOR RIDES. A girl is sitting on a bumper car. She has two hands and is looking forward. AND IT'LL BE EASY TO GEI SEDALIA IS AT THE INTERSECTION OF HIGHWAYS 50 AND 65 RIGHT ABOUT IN THE MIDDLE OF MISSOURI. AND IT'LL BE EASY TO GET TO. 50 65 MO. THE BEST PART 16 THAT YOU CAN COME, HEAR GREAT MUSIC MEET A WHOLE BUNCH OF PEOPLE, RELAX AND ENJOY YOURSELF FOR NOT A LOT OF MONEY. ONLY 15 BUCKS. THREE DAYS ON THE FAIR GROUNDS. A GOOD TIME. LET'S GET TOGETHER IN SEDALIA JULY 19, 20, AND 21. OZARK MUSIC FESTIVAL MISSOURI STATE FAIRGROUNDS SEDALIA, MISSOURI 65301 SEND THE COUPON WITH YOUR CHECK OR MONEY ORDER MADE PAYABLE TO THE OZARK MUSIC FESTIVAL. 22 NAME ___ ADDRESS ___ CITY ___ STATE ___ ZIP ___ ENCLOSED 15 $___ FOR ___ TICKETS @ $1,500 A TICKET. PLEASE ENCLOSE A SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE. ALLOW TWO WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. Westport (2) Southampton (2) Workes at Ca May 10-6 10-6 at Ca Qualif What CANIAN stone stone 24th SCU 89.99 $99.99 Colle 24th SOR SONA stone SOR SOR REC BEC 5274 all all Raleigh For wi diti New for iq beq Fire in set Fire in set Wairau for iq beq New for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq We for iq beq University Daily Kansan Tuesday, May 7, 1974 KANSAN WANT ADS 11 One Day 25 words or fewer: $1.50 each additional word: $.01 KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three Days Three Days 25 words or fewer: $2.00 each additional word: $.02 Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication Five Days 25 words or fewer: $2.50 each additional word: $.03 Acecommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kavanan are offered to all students with disabilities. DELEASE DRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLICT HALL FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale 1. If you use them, you are at an advantage. 2. If you don't use them, you are at a disadvantage. Either way, it comes to the same thing—New Airbnb in town. I bought a new one at Mallard, Town Crier, #192 Ray Auction, 15 E. 9th Street, NW 821-807-3445 Available for any stress problem. Can you allow us to adjust the price? Quality standard & electric reconditioned type with other replacements. Reqir 841-880. We strive that others replace it. CANDLITHEE TOWNHOUSES For Sale. New apartment plans with beautiful outdoor own colors. A few units ready now. Poorly located, attached garage. Outside maintenance provided. Outdoor appliances. 825-304-8254, 825-304-8254. SCUBA EQUIPMENT- String Travel-Tank- Dryer $1,995.99 $99.99 $89.99 Rocket - $1,995.99 Drives-Equipment Rocket - $1,995.99 FOR SALE: Fresh fruits and vegetables at reasonable prices. We are authorized to accept all payment methods. COUNTRY SHOP, 707 E. NORTH SIDE STREET, NASHVILLE, TN 37215-842-9129. Hakee Ashley Restaurant, 842-9129. REGISTERED BLOODHOUND PUPPET. My healthy pug takes orders now. Call 815-237-6040. We do not rip off college students. We have terrazzo plantns, vegetable plants, unusual fruits and vegetables of the teacher's day gifts. Maple Leaf Farm—hallowed by the Tee Green蔡. Bike leaves, 2 bikes at Tee Green蔡. L-5-7 Rabiah Suction Center, Reynolds 523, taking skin color from one side. The face mask is leather mask and new front tire at 434-852-6320. Fst Salz. SMC Taktomik 20mm 1,4 camera lens Fst Salz. SMC Taktomik 20mm 1,4 camera lens for fast handheld navigation in excellent condition. Pair FB-14 Wide Belly Belt Pellet, Fiberlager. Price cut from $375 to $290. May 2019. Mac House third parking lot. 606 N. 21st St., NYC. (864) 279-1400. www.fiberlager.com New A714-Si steel Beaded Whitall tread cut to the specifications. Free installation & free fire install at Rocky Mountain @ 292 McKenzie St. Final Christmas All wrapping. Magnavox & Mo- telior are in store by 10:30am. Opening hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday $89.95 coupon; Opening Thursday, night $99.95 coupon; *Sale: 129.80 BILTALCO Mercury Roadtaxi*. *Sale: 169.40 BILTALCO Mercury Roadtaxi*. *Included helmets and coverings*; $295 Cars 841-708-967 *Included helmets and coverings*; $295 Cars 841-708-967 For Sale. 52" racer style bike. Bought in extra inner tube. Good deal. Graduating-Mart sell my 14k44 mobile home, renting a living room with shag carpeting at heated ceiling, air-condu, with large porch, hurricane tide take over payment. Available June 14th FOR SALE--quality used mobile home, 60 x 12.5 ft. Fully furnished with: - high ceilings - well built, best sell, 82-1624 Railroad Super Course, Reynolds 321 tulling, Sims River; Railroad Super Course, Reynolds 321 tulling, beach and New York Train at 82-435-8200. Tulling Center, New York. FOR SALE-1068 VW, real cherry shape, ball after 5, 843-1963 5-7 Fulfe Shute—Artrumong, Ouien-Hole, Sterling Silver in good condition. Call 842-6379 or 845-7600. Give your girl a bit of spring all her own with this beautiful beauty. The Hoodie, 15 W, 9-7-8 7-5-7 Beautiful scalpel Scalped Slimee Slimee 8 weeks old 4354 amygdala $10 each $10 each Call 827-354-3854 amygdala for Sexy Roxy 827-354-3854 amygdala for Sexy Roxy For Sale 2016 Beryl Sportne Van rebuilt 6 xylene carbonate waterproofed with virgin chloride, very clean chromium, wide tire, 41-434-5490 or 814-1434-7010. **Sale Price:** $2,795. FOR SALE - 1971 VV Excellent condition, new pamph. for sale. runs well. Gustave 114-110 FDR. $250.00. For Sale—1 yr old Sudan TS 125, 200 mil. 431-802-7631 new hulien and many other 431-802-7631 For Sale - Univ-Uno bass guitar Excellent condition- AM, FM radio in good shape. 860-342-7477 AM, FM radio in good shape. 860-342-7477 PINBALL MACHINE. 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jet stereo-Zephyr II, Everything in every condition. Must sell within 60 days of shipment. or bridgeDragon Cycle. Runs helps needs work with the phone. Call Dava 842-371-6010 or offer and tank phone. Call Dava 842-371-6010 SAILBOARD-Sears Fleerwood, 12, long sail on or on after Sunday, May 8, W. 482-9421. For Sale. Healthkit Glioclassico 10-18. FETYOM P.O. Box 4200, London SW7 6RJ. Royal Safara Tafera tipiser. Best offer. Available from www.glioclassico.com For Sale: 1869 - Flat Pad 850 - excellent running condition. Call Tenn, 843-6329. Keep trying. 5-7 FOR SALE. Dial 1212 turntable with Shure Mini-500c M-400c M-600c M-1000c w. 8" wooden, 3" tweeter at $10) $10 pr. w. Ward's AM-FM-M stereo tracker M-400c M-600c M-1000c w. 8" wooden, 3" tweeter at $10) $10 pr CRESCENT APARTMENTS Crescent Heights Gaslight Rental Office - Rental Office 1815 W.24TH Oaks Acorn 1 and 2 BEDROOMS FOR SALE, TV '21', B'W, RCA, candleoil, $50. Dishwasher detergent, $19.99. Mosquito repellent, $18.99. Matching, machine oil, dryer, $19.99. Beige mabaghete oda-bed, $50.00 matching candleoil, $18.99. Refrigerator, $19.99. Olive carpet, x 9 x 16 in., $14.99. FOR SALE! Aqueous Calanurus Salmate with 40% DHA, 325 ml, qt. 15, F-7 883+828 FM 325 ml, qt. 5500 Graduating-Must sell 1872 126×60 home mobile. 2 bedroom, carpeted, skirting tile, downsie, clean & very reasonable. Great for married couples. See at 420 North S. #61 or call 855-232-8000. BALEK 100 Southbank-Aline, low nylon suit, very good condition, men's size 18-24. SALE price: $379.00; call 612-8275-7438 For Sale: Must sell 72 Triumph 14,000 miles Call 842-6279 5-7 VW - Yellow 1923 upper heater. Clean, no dent. VZ - Black 1923 lower heater. No dent. IV to steer wheels with bug buoy truck 10K IX to steer wheels with bug buoy truck 10K BECYCLE for sale. Two years old. Five-years old. BCYLCLE is sold at $3,450. Only $51 called by BCZ-825. compliant! (c) 2015. All Call to BCEZ-825. For Sale - 60 Falcon. New brakes, shocks, and tires. Good condition. Call us at (855) 312-2470. Don't use oil 60434. Lovely 4 month old camera needs a master .Hunter increases, incredible, $180. She's Master;魅影-84512-003 SEDINO-sterb0 AM/FM 8-track & changer 7 months use, 6 speakers. See price. $126-79. For Sale - 1069 Sheboyng GT-550, black point grill shovels, 8x4 inch blade. *notably original, perfect condition.* $849, +24% discount. FOR SALE #90 OoK Gadet Kailie Best offer over $775 Must tell quickly, Call 814-3528-5-7 --- *OoK Gadet Kailie* Best offer over $775 Must tell quickly, Call 814-3528-5-7 DOLLY None Resolution System (System 'A12') With Vtme Type 'I' Improved and APD '186'. Note: Skipping the DOLLY Resolution System check. FOR RENT FOR RENT to male or female student. Nice apt. $1,500/mo. 24hrs from Union. Parking and utilities paid. Kicks from Union. Parking and utilities paid. FOR BENT - A new 2 bedroom apartment with access to a swimming pool, storage, storage, NEAR BRENT CITY BEACH. HILLVIEW APARTMENTS, 1723-1745 West 25th Now leasing 1 bedroom and 2 bedrooms. Fully furnished with air conditioning, carpet, dispalual, all electric kitchen, laundry facilities, off-the-street parking, KI bus station. (Call 800-777-6911) TRAILRIDGE, by the country club, wall to wall carpeting, from entry to exit, private kitchens, private baths, laundry room, kitchen with BBQ grill in courtyard, 1 and 4 bedroom in bedroom, 2 and 3 bedroom in bedroom. TWO BERGOM APARTMENTS - $120 per month TWO BERGOM APARTMENTS - $120 per month Open daily house at 8:00 p.m. for rent: 842-256-9000 Open daily house at 8:00 p.m. for rent: 842-256-9000 MADBOOKHOOD, APARTMENTS. Great Variety. Room Rates $350 a night, planned community stay. KU from $140. TJ from $270. Credit card required. GATEHOUSES-PARENTS’ RU has business open Open 8 a.m.-8 p.m. or later by April 9th W8th, 52th, 63rd St., 10th Flr. 400-742-7620. Furnished 1-5 room apartments $60-$200. Also, room on the second floor with balcony and fall with patio. #844-847, #850-857. RENTAL HOUSING for apart, duplexes and houses, call 842-7100 or 842-5845. **tf** Summer Rentals--Summer Renting largest apartments, for lowest summer rates. 25th and 30th and ending August 15th. 15 bedroom furnished as low as $8 a month. 16 bedroom furnished as low as $10 a month. pays all utilities, AC, pool balconies on the first floor, University Terrace & Old Mid Mill Apt. 1527 to 1697 W at Wallace Mills or 82-4297 at come by www.usmortgage.com Rooms—furnished, clean and quiet, for males only without cooking (except in borders or on weekends) 842-390-1500 Apts—Clean, quiet, furnished 1, 2, and 3 bed. No pets. Boats KU and near hotel. Few Beds. NEW RENTING - four-monitor and full-Large Monitor. Fully compatible with larger Doubles. One qwf for 3 or 4, no付钱. Hold Warranty. One qwf for 2 or 3, no付钱. www.renting.com STADIUM APPS - New-leasing for one year rental $185 + utilities. Two bedroom furniture w. wainscraped swimming pool - laundry facilities and public swing AVAILABLE JUNE 1st 1-BRAT 1, with slightly reduced cost for managment data storage. 843-7258 843-7258 5-7 5-7 Nice 2 BR ApT to submit. Immediately behind the door, a second APT to a 84-264 non-beginning 7-57. Duplex for rent, 2 phone. Available May 10. $155 including until. Phone: 862-4922 after 7:30. Typewriters for rent. Call 841-4083. 1 BR Apts. w/ bhitch, bath, LR Off-street parking. 2 BR Apts. w/ bhitch, bath, LR off-street parking. 300 sq. ft. 150 Rm. Ry. Suite 400 plus a 150 Rm. Ry. Suite 400 plus a Up-to-the-minute listing of rental housing available in Lawrence. FREE RENTAL SERVICE 842-2500 LREx w soon available for summer session, beginning starting house, kitchen, etc., with gradual increase in staff and equipment. Sublease for summer. Apt. corner of 14th and Tran. 725 call. Call 841-2796. 5-7 Rent for Summer school only. Entire second floor furnished 4 bedroom room, for 3 or 6 girls June 1 to Aug. 5. Close to engenon and St. N&t.店. Girls unit. United fee. Phone 448-932-0231 at 5 pm. Summer Sublet (May 15-Ag. 15) $100/mo. & utilities. 1 IR furnished on ag, second floor—swimming pool, air conditioned, disposal, off-street parking, brick lot, Crescent Height II, 374 West 15th Street, Chicago, IL 60614 For rent: PROFESSOR'S HOUSE 34-Aug- 24-May. $850 per hour. Serviced porch, 2 car garage $200 money needed. For Red-1 barn. Apt. for summer. Very near campus. Kitchen; $100 per room. Call 842-3848. 5-7 2. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 3. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 4. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 5. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 6. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 7. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 8. Dirtbottle mix, private estimates, off street parking. 9. 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Call 842-1728 5-7 Elderly woman would like for 3 or 2 persons to stay in the apartment for $100 a month and would share the electric bills. ROOMS $25-60 a month Parking and utilities are charged. Visit campus by campus 140 Tennessee -9211 Rent-Best. month/month or all year. 4 bdm. house near campus $100/month. 843-583-889 Permitted 3 bedroom lot to camp at LUCKY BAY. Sale price $219,000. Available May 20. Summer rate: $82-$150/month. Furnished housement for Large living room w/ room to change Writer available. to choose Writer available. Available May 21 Four bedrooms house for rent. Comfortable & compact. Available June 1. $19,500. Higher for rent. 5 rooms. G41. E12. Summer Grades 12-18. Graduate students prefer. No pet. 843-8501. For Rent 1 & 2 bedroom apt in Stucco Place for married students. Applications available now for fall semester, 1974. Come or call University Office, 205 McColm Hall, Phone # 4564 BOstner & utilities BIT Quint Great School student witness to the murder of James H. W. Anson at August 10, BFD 2. K. Mimn a color of emerald. A copy is due by August 10, BFD 2. Rent: 2-bedroom unfurnished gt, available sam- ple units. Fee: $300/month. Pick up payee. No more parking tickets, or stickers. 1164 Indiana St. Roanau for Summer & Fall 5 min to Union, near station Carpenter 20 min to Lakewood for Senior & Grad students TV lounge, community淋 washer-dryer, outdoor air conditioned $75, $82 - $659, 5-7 Next to Union 2 rooms for one non-smoking room, 10 guests per room (tables/books/ shelves) and $40.00 utilities $85-$125 WANTED 2 bedroom attic apt, to sublease this summer, $125 inc. All bills paid. 628-7628 5-7 Female Roommate Wanted-Share my three bedrooms, house, kitchen, bath, laundry, etc. (905) 684-3821 or 905-684-3824 7-7 Graduate college with wife who wants to earn money at home. Position open to manage small motel and traiter court. Free apt. plus salary of $5,000 per month. Required to LPM. Box 549, Lawrence. Ks- 5726. Puppy > 5 month old, blight combination Lab/ Sys Puppy > 2 month old, leaving area, good bio- passage Call 841-0949 Roommate for summer. Malls Old Engle- land. Roommate for 1/3 electricity. Plenty of room. Call 843-707-9956. Need female roommate for fall semester to share beautiful, furnished apartment with me. We would have your own bedroom and bath. You must be friendly and must. Call 842-5023. 5-7 Female nominates to share an apartment at 1530 S. Wilkins Ave. as per the total per month. Call Marie or Karloy at (212) 634-2788. Need one friendly female to share our house for dancing, or a nice place for a girl to play in the airplane atmosphere, close to campus low elevation buildings. I need a male roommate to share a mike 2 Mdr house in Southern Tipson, Tenn. (613) 745-6292 or (613) 722-6602 - 585 Self Service or KWIKI CAR WASH 612 N. 2nd St. 2 Blocks North of Kaw River Bridge Brush Wash ADVENTURE a bookstore Wanted (immediately) Professional keyboardist in New York to contribute to successful BACK, SHIFT and TAB competencies in successful job offered. Call 1-800-275-9364. Wanted: Recommends to share large, large 2 berms. Wanted: Recommends to share large, large 2 berms. plus millitary air. Prefer grad student. Call alert. Wanted—two male teachers for summer call Bob or John at M2S-8622 Airport ready call 516-340-9711. Wanted one female reunite but fall in love with a male colleague. SeniorSenior or higher preferred Calf Callee or Bariatric Surgery. Wanted: Artists for the Main Shopping Center of the Mesa, AZ area to perform 200 Registrations & information available through Mesa Arts Council website. Female roommate needs to share large house with working girl. Call 841-8915. Now Peti will be available. Roommate: For summer; 3 bedroom apt. Own room; Utilities paid 1216 Louisiana $4859.00 If you know who Ayn Rand, Murray Ruthbard,呐曼朗德, Brandon Jensen, are I would like to share an apartment with you next week. You can go to Tipaea in Tupaca at 1715 West 27th. **3-4** I need one formate chair to share 1 of 2 chairs and two of three more. Move into your place. Call Deni at 843-285-6800. Flute, Suite. Organ player wants serious musicians to start Jazzy-Rock Group 5-7 We are a personal bookstore. We make every effort to get special orders to you promptly. We gift wrap and mail. Elderly, women would like to see 2 percent of the population have insurance. In $180 a month and would share the electric bill, seniors would get $350. Crutches needed—Refund will be given for the crutches you have checked out from Watkins Hospital are no longer used. Please check in at Watkins Hospital from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 5-7 NOTICE D tired of trying to find a quiet place to study I tried to find one. It was in my bedroom with me. Can I come in with you or look together with me? No, it was too far. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Need 1 make roommate to share ap at,麦顿brook. Starting in the fall: Hail #82-990. 5-7 Would like to HOURMORE CASSETTE TAPE BUILDER? WILL YOU BUILD A KIDS' DANCE BURGER PACKERS FOR IT? THE WORKS ARE ON. TYPEWRITER CLEANING - 3-day service Smith-Cooper Corral Bldg. W126 with two window washers and cleaned and cloaked. Electronec and light industrial client. River City Repair B18 Vermilion. 81-747-3950. LINE SERVICE 518 Michigan St. Har-It-Bar. We have open pit barbecue, we have bribbles stlrb or bars and we have knives. We can grill or brisket by the pound. Half-bench for grilling, we have a grill. We chneel in Jm Chained Sunday and Tuesday. 842-6210 LAWENECE GAY LIBERATION, Inc., "Weekly meeting;" 30 June, Monday. P.M. 6; Union office; 22 B Union. Box 224. Lawn new Raup 842-578. Mailbox 842-560 for referrals. Nalanda U 842-578. GO WHILE THE CROWS DON'T KNOW! Year after year, our favorite hikes in England, Russia, England, Africa, kenya, or where they go. They are the best hiking, bat ether hits and CHEAPER! for further details, visit www.walkers.org by yourself. Trail Blazers TOLL FREE 000-221-9888 FINE BOOKS I buy and sell new and used Volvangaster. Bank 864-263-2633 (with approved credit) CHEC 864-263-2633 Quitting Business-Save 50% on all educational books and most others. All prices are drastically cut. Removal Save your money a lot of money and buy at time. At same time, Exchange, 934 Mass. 8-7 RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to your auto, and the clothes you wear. Recharge your NAPA Auto Parts, and Bokonon Flailback Attire offer the finest services and reconditioned merchandise. NAPA Auto Parts: 843-935. Bokonon Clothes: 843-708, and RE Repair: 841-4083. 815-919 LOST YOUR LEASE--our loss-your gain-SAVE! -100%-$50 off our regular low price, 30000 loan; $250 off new 40K loan; our building by July 1, 2017. HURRY! Open 9 am, to 5 pm. BUZZY 1000 KOOK EXCHANGE. (718) 630-6241 C A L A L book fare May 19-11. Recycle your book from our warehouse for a fee of $10.00 for pick up and tax deduction receipt 2-7 www.calal.book.com Phone 843-6424 Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. The motorcycle season is definitely here and we're looking forward to seeing some of the new models. TRY out and see us at HORIZONS BROTHERS, 105 N. 26th Street, NY, NY 10019. This Summer for the first time "The Wheel" Is Open Beginning June 5 Deli or grill for lunch Hedge Podge has the head in mind at all pier- clubs, and all paraphylla at 35°. All pipe- work is built on a polyurethane base. Mintzner, Pre-School new enrolling children A.2 The first information please call 815- 436-7033. B.2 Further information please call 815- 436-7033. HELP WANTED helped wanted. Student for light house work and care children. To begin in summer 1842-4769. ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR of Customer Programming, Technology and Marketing January 7 full-time following about August 19. Permission position Fulfill salary and benefits requirements. Admin ability/experience required. Admin ability/experience required. Community affairs destiny. Submit resume by September 30. Kauai Union, Lawrence, KS 64044. Questions, email: kauaiunion@kauaiunion.org STUDENTS. Full-time work available in the Housing Maintenance Dept. General Labor and skilled maintenance maintained May 14-Aug 31, 2022. Contact Janet Jarry, 209-574-Columbi Hall Business Services Associates wants ambitious people for the summer or jerseytime. You can participate in a new job opportunity new service. Interviews Tuesday only at the Holiday Inn. Call N. Bates after 19 am. Student service available at Student Health Service. Position requires one (1) hour of contact, or twenty (20) hours (including from 11 p.m.-7 a.m. either on Fri or Sat, or Wed or Sun). Salary: $19.99 per hour (inclining from 11 p.m.-7 a.m. either on Fri or Sat, or Wed or Sun). Contact Ms. Stroud (including break periods). Contact Mr. Stroud. Welcome to the Student Health Service. We are all of race are encouraged to apply. We are an equal opportunity employe LOST Lost a gold woman's writtahand with stretch to see how the person who found it who体会. Lost: Key ring about 1 week ago in Strong Hall *528* Please return it. Find number 841-528, or 862-217. LOST-man's silver wedding band with three diamond eyes at Union, Wesley, N.J., and North Brunswick, New Jersey. Jill Mack at Union Info Bootz by magazine—tales along with name and how I can get in to meet them. LOG9, our cat Fiction. Needed male, past BUNCH. We don't want him without him if you see him kill him or be with him. I'll pay for that. love is . . . Leak=1, pr. gold win-immured glasses probably contain 40% lead. When found please gild and of all 483s at $45. TYPING Lost- Irish Setter supper-form—approx. 6 mins. old brown collard. Please call 842-7503. Gold Bulloa. Watch with brown leather band, and a white case, courts batted 3 weeks ago. Hardy. Lost: Ive lost my wallet and naturally I need someone to help. If I can, please contact me. 802-493-202 or for Firm Chambers. www.berlinchambers.com Typing in my home IEM, Select. Plex typetype for your device. Call Kit: 814-256-2947. From it. Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other paper types. However, have electric typewriter with plea type. Acoustic and prompt typewriter with punctured corrected Phonics. 843-8544. Mrs. Wright. RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES 3020 Iowa St. Lawrence, Kansas 843-8499 415 Wash. Drive RIDGEVIEW MOBILE HOMES Open 7 Days a Week ... wanting to take care of each other ... in your own home purchased from Experimented Typin = will do thetas, distortions, and mixtilene typing. Calpam 492,756 492,756 TACOS $3.50 per Dozen Casa de Taco 1105 Massachusetts 843-9880 First, account bind with pixie typewriter. Proof- of prints. Send proofs to us at info@nissan.com. Please call 842-8659 by 5 a.m. on Friday. Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841- 4900. Mrya. 5-7 Experienced techni-prompt and accurate. Ten- masters in computer science/disorientations. Rewards rate: B42 847-0223. SERVICES OFFERED HVER CITY RETY - B15 Vermont. 814-6838 Sterios - waters + typewriters. Independent repair specialist. No retail hub. We服务 what we replace. Unimpaired resources. See tp. www.hvercityrety.com May Day—Mee a gift! Straw flowers, jewelry, pillows and hiking packs. All at Hedge Dog Pond. 15 w. 98 PERSONAL RECYCLE IT ALL! Everything from your watch to the kitchen sink and all parts of your life. RC裴承; NAAPA Auto Service; Reconditioning and repairing finest services and reconditioned marketed vehicles. Auto Parts: 8-3956; Bloomsbury Clothes, 84-9788. Safety arm lights only 99e at Ride On Bicycles. CUSTOM JEWELRY Wedding sets, personal jewelry and accessories. BETWEEN B-D-A variety of stones and unusual metals. FREE SHIPPING. WANTED Girl from City City area interested in attending For more information: Call enlisted at 842-730-1955. WOMEN'S MILF DEFENSE classes forming now the Women's Artic Academy. 404 W. 265-824 824-824 after 9 a.m. ORIENTAL WEAPONY classes now forming Ocunova Marta Artic Academy 801 W. 26-29 271 S. 4th St. New York, NY 10019 Nipuns, warm and exciting are for the wair- m of $14.95 for $24.95 for $34.95 for $44.95 for $10. Heater $39 extra. Coffee Jerry at $44. $60 extra. Employment Opportunities Wouldn't you rather work in paradise this summer? Or work in the busiest city in America, student food工房, clean house, transportation, and timed driving in the safest cities and to Hawaii Summer,暑秋 10, 167, Kalaupapa State 45, Honolulu,夏威夷 167. FOUND Call or Come By **STUDENTS--Summer employment.** Pickinson Incorporated is now taking applications for students in the greater Kansas City area. To qualify you must be 21 or over, at least 18, and have a clean police license. Apply Online, by phone, and by phone. Apply Mon-Fri, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. An equal opportunity employer. Found—jacket left in 2109 West Virginia May 3. Des- pine for aid for call **Adl 643-567** and **Adl 643-658**. YARL-PATTERNS NEEDLEPOINT RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL THE CREWEL CUPBOARD 15 East 8th 841-2656 10:5 Monday Saturday J-F MEED FURNITURE FOR YOUR UNFURNISHED APT.? Furniture for one bedroom apartment starting at $2450 RENTAL at Johnson Furn. 722 Mass, 843-2448 Furniture for two bedroom apartment starting at $2950 rent on a 9-month minimum basis, last month Free, or portion thereof. Somester Rentals Available WHY NOT sell your unwanted items with a classified in the UDK مس 12 Tuesday. May 7. 1974 University Daily Kansan Urban Program May Encounter StateOpposition Duplicity of academic programs will be the major objection to starting a master's degree program in urban planning at the University of Kansas, Bernd Foerster, dean of the Kansas State University School of Architecture and Design, said Friday. Foerster said instructions had come down from the legislature and the Board of Regents, to reduce duplication. "We are being told to cut back in programs where duplication exists and here we are asking for a new program at KU that is our program at K-Slate, Forerster said. The proposal under consideration will come before the Council of Presidents of Schools for approval this month before going to the Board of Regents. The KU School of Architecture and Urban Design developed the program, which will include cooperative courses with the Schools of Law, Social Welfare, Business and the public administration program in a department, which transs city managers. The program's curriculum would emphasize three major areas of urban planning; urban development policies; natural environmental policies; and the behavior and perceptual problems in urban and environmental design. From Page One Ambrose Saricks, vice-chancellor for academic affairs, said part of the program at KU would duplicate basic courses offered at K-State. However, he said, KU had not been able to draw than K-State such as the Schools of Law and Social Welfare. the building was undergoing minor renovations and that major repairs would be made to the roof and ceiling later. He will need a window and glass still will be used for classroom space. Twente . . . The theme of this year's Social Work Day was, "Social Work Practice 1984: The Shape of Things to Come." Speakers included Werner Bohmer, former Dean of the Rutgers University School of Social Work; Robert Harder, secretary of the Kansas State Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services; and Kenton Williams, of the Kansas City, Mo. Office of Child Development under HEW. Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, was honored during morning ceremonies. Katz is stepping down from the position of Dean, which he has held since 1968. He will enter full time teaching and research. Minorities' Enrollment In Engineering Grows Enrollment of minority students in the School of Engineering has increased more than 800 per cent in the last three years, according to William E. Hogan II, assistant dean of the School of Engineering and professor of electrical engineering. Hogan said recently that although there were only about 50 minority students out of the 850 students enrolled in engineering, that number was a substantial increase from the six minority students enrolled three years ago. One of the most important reasons behind this increase, Hogan said, was the formation of the Student Council for Recruiting, a program to Educate Black Engineers (SKOMBEE). It was formed three years ago to help further opportunities in the engineering field for blacks and minority students, he said. SCORMEBE sponsored an honors banquet May 4 in the Kansan Room of the Kansas Union to recognize the success of the program and those who have helped develop career opportunities for minority students in engineering. This counseling program was originally conceived, organized and, until recently, on campus SIEIRA CLUB will meet at 7:30 tonight in South Park Recreation Center. Philip Brimble, science writer for the Kansas City Journal, spoke on oil ship development in Oklahoma. MORTAR BOARD will have a brown bag picnic at 5:30 tonight at Potter Lake. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE COLLEGE ORGANIZATION will meet at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium. RUTH ELLIOTT, a student of the supernatural from Ottawa, will speak today at 1 p.m. Room 111 Blake Hall on religion and amost entirely funded through student efforts, Hogan said. He said it was rated one of the top five counseling programs of its kind in the nation. The program is located in the office of William P. Smith, dean of engineering, at 11 Marvin Hall, and it provides financial assistance to its courses and counseling to minority students. Receiving awards for their help in establishing SCORMBEE were: James M. Russer, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs; Smith, Hogan; Floyd W. Preston, professor of petroleum engineering and adviser to SCORMBEE; Don W. Green, chairman of the department of chemical engineering and adviser to SCORMBEE; and Willie J. Nunnery, founder of SCORMBEE. Woodlawn Protest Likely Parents Expected to Appeal to School Board Some form of formal protest against the decision to discontinue the behavior analysis Follow Through program at Woodlawn Elementary School is expected to become an official requirement of the Lawrence Board of Education, according to Jim Salyer, a lawrence attorney. Salyer, the attorney representing a group of parents supporting the program, said Sunday that the group was "contemplating how to be able to be to be a formal appeal to the school board. Salyer said there was a 10-day appeal limitation after the final decision had been made, which he said he assumed was at last Wednesday's meeting of administration officials and parents supporting the program. At that meeting, Harold Siegier, Woodawn principal, rested his reasons Make your summer airline reservations FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE for discontinuing the program, and Carl Knox, school superintendent, reaffirmed that the decision was Siegrist's to make and that he would give give "complete support," Siegrist's answer. NOW Salyer said he knew of no legal actions that had been planned to fight the decision but that possible litigation could be the answer. "I don't know," she said by the group of parents he represented. parents who had consulted Salyer about possible litigation, said that Salyer had been retained to determine "what legal recourse the parents, have to keep a program that we like." Maupintour travel service with The group has three possible choices, according to Brown. The group could work with the study committee, which could be used to implement favorable aspects of the behavior analysis program into conventional classrooms. Knox suggested that the student would be a faculty protest to the school board. Or they could either individually or as a group, seek legal recourse to hopefully force reinstatement of the program. Maupintour. Carolyn Hutchins of RFD 3 Lawrence, who spoke for the parents at the Wednesday meeting, said the group was still "at a rising stage" in considering possible actions. NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you: 900 Massachusetts The Malls Hillcrest Kansas Union Linda Brown of 1320 Haskell St., one of the Phone 843-1211 There's Always Something Developing at Our Place! With our fully-equipped darkroom here at Naismith, it's only natural! Come join us at Naismith Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-8559 ATTENTION GRADS! GENERAL PROGRAM 1974 COMMENCEMENT Monday, May 20 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Private receptions, open houses. (A number of schools, departments, and honorary organizations will be holding special activities during these hours. Students will be notified by their respective organizations and academic divisions.) 10:00 a.m. School of Medicine Hooding Ceremony, Battenfeld Auditorium, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas. 1:00 p.m. School of Law Hooding Ceremony, Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union. 2:00 p.m. Graduate School Hooding Ceremony, University Theatre, Murphy Hall. Senior-Parent Supper, Kansas Union Ballroom. 5:00 p.m. Post-Graduates Buffet. Continuous buffet service to 7:00 p.m., Wescoe Hall Cafeteria and Patio. 5:00 p.m. 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. Chancellor's Reception for Graduates and their Guests with Chancellor and Mrs. Archie Dykes at their residence, 1532 Lilac Lane. Commencement, Memorial Stadium. (Graduates to be in front of Strong Hall at 7:30 p.m. If it is raining or threatening bad weather, the ceremonies will be held in Allen Field House. Graduates should then report to the main east entrance at Allen Field House.) 8:00 p.m. DIPLOMAS Graduates can pick up their diplomas in Wescoe Hall immediately after the commencement ceremonies. The following rooms in Wescoe Hall have been assigned to each school: BUSINESS 4019 LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES 4023,4025,4033,4034 ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN 4067 EDUCATION 4057,4058 ENGINEERING 4071 FINE ARTS 4040 JOURNALISM 4001 SOCIAL WELFARE (UG & Grad.) 4035 LAW 4076 MEDICINE 4041 NURSING 4043 PHARMACY 4065 MASTERS DEGREES 4002, 4007 DOCTORAL DEGREES 4008