The winter-sport look in a snowflake sweater of Orlan in green, brown or navy with white at $25. Another great ski-look, this with a racing stripe in yellow, navy or camel with a boldly contrasting racing stripe at $23.50. A nice contrast with a solid sport coat is this sleeveless tennis sweater. We have a variety of striping on white, navy, camel and yellow sweaters at $16. Blazer striped sleeveless V-neck from Allan Paine, done in three combinations of three colors each, at $22. The returning classic, the lambswool V-neck that is again at a peak of popularity in five classic colors including grey and navy at $22. Our best selling sweater, Pringle's turtleneck in ten soft lambswool colours, great with slacks or sportcoats, only $24. Pringle of Scotland's lambswool crewneck at $22 is available in seven colours that we've coordinated our dress slack selection to. Mister Guy Stores: Downtown (11th & Baltimore) • 63rd & Brookside • Antioch Center • North Kansas City • Corinth Square • Lawrence • St. Joseph (East Hills) • Crown Valley Another Allan Paine shetland, this one striped in three colours at $22.50 and topping a pair of Chaps dorsure stacks at $25. can feasibly be set up—possibly as soon as March of next year. In the short run, he said, rationing would prove to be a “hassle” for people. Willer foresees more serious consequences for the long run. “It’s part of the feeling of freedom to be able to get into the car and go—but that will be stopped. Frustration will pile up, and it will have an outlet, nobody knows.” WILLER SAID the present social system wasn't conducive to artistiates for the audience. Television is relatively cheap to operate, and Wiler and families grow closer by work together. He said there was a possibility that our society would become less suburban—that people would have to live closer to their jobs. Willer said that only 10 per cent of the American people had ever been on a plane and that less than 50 per cent could afford vacations. In view of the shortage of fuel, he said, even fewer people will be able to take vacations in the future. "IT'S IRRATIONAL because it is predicated on limitations on the common man. Luxury use of gas will be the first thing to go. Rich people can still fly, but I can take my cheapie vacation to Colorado? Probably not." Willer said President Nixon's policy on the energy shortage was irrational. "There will be less geography mobility, that will make people unhappy," he said. "I'm irritated to run big cars at 50 m.p.h. be said. Why not run small cars at 10 m.p.h." Willer said one mass transit possibility was the magnetic flight system, which powers trains up to 400 miles per hour with high efficiency and low energy use. Willer also said mass transit systems should be investigated. Weller said he remembered a time when people shivered through the winter. It's possible, that we will return to that season and take steps to make sure it doesn't happen. There is another shortage-induced change in life style, said Willer, may be a decline in industry. "Maybe this will force people to begin to think they can get along without cars," said Hanson, who rides a bicycle to and from work every day. A "well-insulated house costs 5 per cent more to build and 30 or 40 per cent less." F. Allan Hanson, associate professor of anthropology, agreed that better rapid transit systems would be a partial solution to the fuel problem. He said a row of townhouses with only two external walls could be heated much more quickly. There also should be federal housing insulation regulations, said Willer. Hanson said the decision that surface travel in the United States would be by car was made during the Eisenhower administration, the interstate highway system, was begun. The Student Senate Executive Committee (StudEx) passed a petition last night asking Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to override and allow the senate to allocate the more The fund, which totals about $180,000, has been earmarked by the administration for partial use as funding for improvements in the building. Buckley, Wichita senior and student body president, said that the money would be allocated by the senate and that he would own the property. The Student Senate won't be allowed to allocate a recreational activities fund consisting of student activity fees collected in the 1950s and '60s, Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols and Charles H. Oldfather, university attorney, said yesterday. Nichols said yesterday, however, that Oldfather had ruled that the funds were never under the jurisdiction of the senate. The senate could not allocate student activity fee funds, Oldfather ruled that the allocation power wasn't retroactive and didn't include the fees for the activities. "Mr. Oldfather has determined that that money money and I think he's right," Nigel said. Nicholas's voice The StudEx petition passed by a vote of 1 to 1 and called on Dykes to "administr expenditures of any student activity fees collected and unspent prior to 1967 in the same manner as all funds currently levied and collected as student activity funds ..." The petition was signed by Buckley, Richard S. Lauter, Evanston. III, seni- ler. chairman of the senate Finance and Auditing Committee, cast the only vote against the petition. He said that the senate had enough to do without worrying about allocating the money and that the question was whether he would credit for funding the improvement program. "We're both aiming for the same goal," McKernan said. "What difference does it make who gets the credit for funding the plan?" Buckley said that the senate's legal position in the matter was doubtful but that he thought the petition was necessary as a matter of principle. "I believe we don't have a legal leg to stand on," he said. "My intent in signing the petition is an appeal to the chancellor and his personal judgment that the senate should have the right to spend those fees. It's just a matter of principle." Buckley and Nancy E. Archer, Anamasa, iowa, senior and student body vice president of the college. Buckley said yesterday, before Nichols's vote to override the governor, although he favored spending the $180,000 on the field house expansion, he thought the money should be allocated by the senate. Buckley said he favored using the money for the field house because he thought that it was the best use, other than improvement of Robinson Gymnasium, for recreational sports. He didn't want student money to be used for the gymnasium's Phase II expansion plans. "It's ( the field house) our best long-term KU Campus To Have Parking Meters Thursday, November 29, 1973 See Story Page 7 nd in Tapes White House Lawyer a record button down, she sam, would have resulted in erasing the foot pedal was degressed id she talked from 4½ to 5 minutes very most. That left at least 13 < of erasure unexplained. kydes keeps saying I kept my foot sedal," she said. "I don't know. If i that, I must emphasize, I wasn't telephone for 18 minutes." *$minute gap in the tape, which was a court Tuesay as a loud hum, the end of a presidential contest and the ag of one with Halidman. The Watergate prosecutor contended the conversation was crucial because it had occurred three days after the June 17, 1972 break-in at Democratic party headquarters and would show how much the two men had known about any illegal activity and what efforts, if any, they had made to conceal the truth from Nixon. Lay Off 2,400 aid fuel for personal pleasure and tion would be held to half of previous In a related development, the White House said Nixon would release complete information in series form that would answer "all questions . . . and misconceptions" about the President's personal finances. dent Nixon, in his Sunday night sand fuel for high-priority aviation ons, such as air-taxi services and util usages, would be curtailed 20 per d.fuel for business flying, including the jet usage, would be cut 40 per wing with Docking yesterday were James Donnell, Earl Rush, Clark County Commission chairman, De Baer, Wichita Chamber of State president, and other city and a industry representatives. er said Wichita could lose more than jobs if the President's recomotion to cut aviation fuel was adopted. The state would slide in the aerospace industry and, 000 direct aviation jobs in Wichita. Dickinson, a Chamber of Commerce nativite, said a delegation of state's would go to Washington next month. On the other hand, Dickinson said he was optimistic an effort would be successful. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said late午 after afternoon that he had been I that President Nixon now had active consideration a proposal to the original announcement with to cubbards on fuels for general. "Kansas senator said he had received ration late yesterday that the ent was reviewing a plan to restore a fuel regarding general aviation, a fuel regarding general aviation. said that since meeting with general a officials including representatives Beech and Cessna Aircraft com he had discussed "gross inequities newly announced policies with aid agencies" and had urged in reconsideration." insideration of an announced cutback allocations for the general aviation y has also been urged by Rep. Shriver, R-Kan. letter to the President's cabinet tree on energy policy released here yesterday, Shriver said it was "highly unfair to single out one mode of our transportation system with what amounts to a fuel restriction of 42.5 per cent." "Our state of Kansas is responsible for the manufacture of more than half of the general aviation aircraft and avionics in the world." Shriver wrote. "Already, notice of future layoffs and cancelled contracts have been issued by general aviation companies in Kansas and throughout the industry." Wise Fuel Plan Seen as Block To a Recession WASHINGTON (AP)—A high-level government assessment of the fuel shortage's economic impact concludes that a significant year with proper fuel-allocation policies. Nixon administration economists see the unemployment rate going up from its present 4.8 per cent but falling short of the 6 percent rate forecast widely by private economists. With the stock market in a tailspin, the administration will try to calm some of the uncertainty at a news conference tomorrow scheduled by Herbert Stein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers. The uncertainty has been fueled by fears that the economy will slide into a recession next with the jobless rate going to 8 per cent. The 1974 picture on inflation is cloudier. The economic slowdown expected next year will help moderate some price increases, but fuel prices will probably advance sharply, the government economists believe. Only if the consumer bears the heaviest burden of the shortage can a recession be avoided, the economists concluded. A decline in economic production is possible if fuel for industry is cut back any more, they say. Buckley said partial student funding of improvements for the field house might prompt the move to ahead with funding for the gymnasium. He said, however, that student contributions to the gymnasium project would only invite the state to let students continue to fund new building projects. nent for right now," he said. "I also it would push up expansion of on gym." Refused Senate "If we put the floor in Allen Field House it would give us a stronger bid for Phase II (of Robinson gymnasium)," Buckley said. "If we gave us another budget, I am afraid we get into another Wescoe." The origin and history of the recreational activities fund has been obscure since Athletic Director Clyde Walker made the request to accept a national an athletic board meeting in late October. According to Nichols, the money was collected as student fees during an almost entire semester and was said that some of the money had been allocated to University organizations each year and that the existing fund had been allocated fee money that had never been received. The fund continued to grow. Nichols said, until 1966 when it totaled $250,000. In 1968 a decision was made by Nichols, Keith L. Nitcher, now vice chancellor for business affairs, and then Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoto to set the money aside for future use for student recreational projects. Nichols also agreed that he should act as trustee for the money rather than give it to student government to allocate. The only use of the money came when former Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmeri Jr. allocated $75,000 from the fund for the construction of tennis courts north of the O Zone parking lot. The courts were completed this year at a cost of about $70,000 and the remaining allocation was returned to the recreational fund to leave the current amount of $180,000. In 1972 the Student Senate under then student body president David Miller, approved the inclusion on the 1972 spring election ballot of a referendum which would allow students to borrow up to $8,000 from the KU Endowment Association in the name of the student body. The money would have been used to augment expenditures planned by the School of Science Improve Allen Field House with the installation of an artificial floor and other items. Under the referendum plan the debt would have been added to the student debt from the East Memorial Stadium Credit and Loan Agreement. It would have been paid off by simply extending the period of the agreement and continuing to retire the indebtedness through student season athletic ticket sales. In the election the referendum passed, but the loan was never taken out because the Athletic Association didn't raise enough money to field the place field house improvement program. In a written statement to the senate dated Jan. 24, 1972, Miller said that "funding of this proposal is not possible through the University." Now, however, it is clear that the $10,000 was available for such use at that time but that those who knew of the See OLD Page 6