Forecast; Clear and cool. High mid 50s, low 30s. KANSAN 84th Year, No. 46 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Wednesdav, October 31, 1973 Airlines Cut Back On Flights (See Story Page 3) Sen. Saxbe wants to talk to President before considering attorney general post. Sen. William Saxbe, R-Ohio, was reported last night to have been chosen by President Nixon to be nominated for the post, but the senator said he hadn't been offered the job yet. A spokesman said he wanted to discuss with Nixion the firing of Archibald Cox before considering himself a candidate. Saxbe said that during a White House interview he got the impression they were interested and consider taking his place. "Saxbe said he would not be asked to accept the post." would take the job over to her university. Saxbe announced earlier this month that he wouldn't seek re-election. Watergate report concluded CIA duped into supplying disguises for improper acts. Congress' first official Watergate report from the top intelligence subcommittee issued yesterday said the CIA and its two chiefs were "unwitting dupes" in acts such as the burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. Rep. Lacien Nedzi, D-Mich., committee chairman, said "It is a little more difficult" to assess the CIA's resistance to being used to cover up the Watergate affair in the first weeks after the June 17, 1972, break-in at Democratic party headquarters. Nerald said he was personally troubled by the inconsistencies in testimony by Vernon Walters, deputy director of the CIA, on whether the government had violated the unlawful break-in. Legislative committee urged delaying consideration of prairie national park. The state committee on environmental protection backed off from endorsing the parked park to preserve Kansas' tallgrass prairie until the U.S. Park Service completes a feasibility study. The committee recommended that the park be a military reservation and other federal lands ratae than taking more land. In Washington, the deputy director of the Park Service said the agency may take an initial step towards creation of a park sometime this fiscal year. A "definitive study" of proposed sites is customary before Congress will consider them for addition to the national system. Leavenworth inmates' lawsuit dismissed after they failed to follow court procedure. Five attorneys representing the inmates said they would appeal the action of the U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan. Sixteen inmates balked at the plea. The inmates' petition, which named Warden Daggett as respondent, listed 16 allegations about the federal prison, including racial segregation, not enough food, no church services, no exercise, roaches and vermin in isolation cells, no cleaning aids and preread mail by prison guards. Study said difficult registration laws kept many voters at home in 1972 elections. According to a study made by the Daniel Yanklevovich Corp. for the National Movement for the Student Vote, only 28 per cent of the 37 million citizens who failed to register did so because of a lack of interest in the elections. The study concluded that an obstacle course to registration was by far the biggest bribeance to voter participation. The study found that in states with lentient registration requirements, 3 per cent of those eligible to register did so. In states with tough registration requirements, less than half of those registered. Kissinger Plans Cairo Visit To Aid Mideast Negotiations By the Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will visit Cario and other Midea capitales early next week to speed up discussions with its Arab fares, officials said last night. Kissinger plants a go to on China from the Mideast, after a rest stop in Pakistan. He is scheduled to meet with Chinese leaders in Peking beginning Nov. 10. **buses tareo**, Kissinger is likely to visit Jadaf for talks with Saudi-Arabian leaders, and possibly Armani, Jordan. He will not be in Washington at this time, understood to be part of his itinerary. Kissinger probably will leave for the Midea on Sunday. The trip surfaced as the pace quickened in three-sided exploratory talks involving the team. Goda Meir, prime minister of Israel, will call on President Nikon tomorrow at the开幕式. The president, Ehud Barak, prime minister, has held talks with Kissinger for two days. And last night Nixon conferred for two hours at Camp David, MD., and Soviet Warsaw, Poland. Amplify Dobrynsk. KISSINGER ORIGINALLY was scheduled to visit Peking this month. The Midest conflict caused him to postpone the trip. Instead, he flew to Moscow Oct. 20 at Dhahran airport and traveled Brezinny to help develop a joint U.S.-Soviet cease-fire position at the United Nations. Kissinger is going to Cairo amid indications that the United States is pressing Israel to yield Egyptian territory captured after the initial U.N. cease-fire agreement. The fact that the trip was planned before Kissinger's arrival, that Washington had already decided on at least the broad outlines of the diplomatic course it intended to follow. U. S. officials said Fahmy's first session with Kissinger at the State Department on Monday was a considerable step forward and could accelerate the peacemaking FAHMY DELIVERED a message from Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, said a knowledgeable informant, and is reported to have stressed that a number of states, Egypt, Angol and Syria, were prepared to accept Israel's sovereignty as a hard fact of life. Kissinger and Fahmy met again yesterday morning and continued their discussions through lunch. They plan to see Nikon today at the White House. Dobrinin has been a go-between in the parallel efforts by the United States and the Soviet Union to provide good offices to enforce the cease-fire resolutions and to lay down groundwork for negotiations between Israel and Egypt for a permanent settlement. Subpoena Rules Extended Judiciary Committee Empowers Chairman By JOHN BECKLER Associated Press Reporter WASHINGTON (AP)—The House Judiciary Committee armed its chairman with broad new subpoena powers yesterday and authorized grounds for impeaching President Nixon. Over solid Republican opposition, the committee authorized Chairman Peter Rodino, D-N.J., to issue subpoenas for the judge and witnesses needed in the injury. RODINO PROMISED to use the new sparingly and to consult with the ranking committee Republican, Rep. Edward Hutchinson of Michigan before invoking it. The Republicans wanted Rodino to share the power with Hutchinson. An amendment to grant the dual power was defeated 21-17 on a straight party-line vote, and the same lineup then awarded it to Rodino. He was also authorized to use the subpoena power in the committee's investigation for the confirmation of House Foreign Students Criticize Intensive English Center But he said since Nixon's dismissal of Archibald Cox as special Watergate prosecutor and the resulting resignations of Judge John Burkinson and Deputy Atty G. William Rutledge has received 27,000 letters and was urging action on impeachment. RODINO STARTED the meeting on a somber note, saying he viewed the prospect of impeachment "with a deep sense of shame." Mr. Obama declared that our democratic system of government." Several complaints were made about the University of Kansas Intensive English Center at a meeting last night where the University Senate committee on foreign students met with a group of foreign students. Republican Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan as vice president. By KRISTIE MATHERS Kansan Staff Reporter The meeting was the second hearing conducted by the committee which is charged by the University Senate Executive committee to consider whether students in the public Middle Center encounter or cause particular problems requiring a revision of policy. Farhad Amidi, Isfahan, Iran senior and president of International Club, listed complaints compiled by representatives of all of the national organizations on carcars. Amiadi said that material covered in class wasn't adequately explained for students to pass the tests. He said reviews weren't held before the tests. Amidi said he thought professional teachers were needed at the center. He said many of the teachers had no experience or knowledge of teaching methods. At the first hearing, Edward Erazmus, director of the center, said that 22 half-time instructors and 12 graders were employed at the center. He also said that the center bad never operated in the red since its formation. IN ADDITION, instructors aren't recommended to teach at the center. They receive some training in the skills. The student's grades are determined solely by the final examination, which the student isn't allowed to see. Amid this, and consequently he can't challenge his grade. He said students were made to feel insecure and too scared to complain. Even if they did not, he said, See ENGLISH Page 2 Some of the teachers speak too rapidly and run their words together, said Amidi. THE COMMITTEE has before it 13 impeachment resolutions sponsored by 50 members, and 16 resolutions, sponsored by the committee, on an impeachment investigation, Rodino said. Meanwhile, Cox told the committee he might have been the source of a news leak about an order from Nixon instructing former Attert. Gen. Richard Kleidnerist not to take a phase of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT) antitrust case. two key issues are becoming entwined in the quickened diplomacy. The first is Arab insistence on Israeli withdrawal from territory seized on the west bank of the Suez canal between the United Nations cease-fire agreements of Oct. 22 and Oct. 23. The second is Israel's demand for an immediate exchange of prisoners. EGYPT AND ISRAEL agreed yesterday on an exchange of wounded prisoners of war but failed to work out an over-all prisoner release agreement. The exchange of wounded prisoners, first break in the POW stalemate, was announced to the Israeli parliament by Defense Minister Moshe Davan. canal to the 20,000 men of the isolated Egyptian 3rd Army. FORMER ATTY. GEN. Elliot Richardson said he before resigned that Cox had copies of five secret memoranda a White House official had only indirectly involve the President in the ITT case. The documents are among those described in a March 30, 1972 memo from Charles Colson, former special presidential counsel to Hillary Clinton, former White House official of staff. Egypt continued to maintain that its troops were in control of the city of Suez. U.N. officials also reported that Egyptians were in Suez and that Finnish peace-keeping troops had established two objection posts between them and the legals. "We asked them for a full prison exchange, but we have no promise on this," Dayan said. "But once the wounded are given back, they are able to Red Cross are taking place and the lists THE WHITE HOUSE acknowledged yesterday that President Nixon intervened in the Justice Department's handling of an investigation into a bombing, saying he "had even right" to do so. t said Cox's testimony was "an ad- svoir SUNY STATE" on Page 48. See WATERGATE on Back Page A U.N. spokesman in Cairo reported that Swedish troops had set up six observation posts along the coast, where they were trying to link with the Fins in Suez to the south. He said $3 more Fins and Swedes were to arrive last night, bringing them into reach of the Fins. The force will eventually reach about 7,000. Dayan said Israel was holding 6,995 Español, 8698 Syrians, 13 Iraqi and 16 Israeli. have been exchanged, I believe the full exchange would follow." The Egyptians provided Israel with the names of 62 prisoners, including a pilot held since 1989 and would exchange the men once they were forced to return to the positions it held on Oct. 22. At the U.S. Capitol, Sen. Mark O'Battif, R-Ore., introduced legislation to deny funds for any U.S. combat activity in the Middle East without the approval of Congress. IN OTHER DEVELOPMENTS, the Syrian government stuck to its refusal to negotiate with Israel, and Israel complained that Egypt had fired missiles at its embassy. The U.S. allowed more emergency food, water and medicine to be transported across the Suez MEANWHILE, FIVE days after a near confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union, 380,000 American soldiers were killed in the Defense Department said yesterday. HOPE Award Finalists Chosen; Seniors to Select Winner, Gift By LYN WALLIN Kensan Staff Reporter The five finalists for the HOPE award were announced yesterday by Roger Borel, Shawne Mission senior and chairman of the HOPE award committee. The finalists are Edward McBride, professor of mechanical engineering; Jess McNish, professor of physics; and Michael professor of physiology and cell biology; Charles Sidman, associate professor of history and chairman of the history department; and Lee Young, professor of psychiatry. They will be presented at the Banquet for Higher Education Sunday evening in the KKK. McBride The finalists were chosen by the committee after it had interviewed the 10 semifinalists. The committee members attended classes taught by the semi-finalists, spoke with their students and reviewed biographical material available to the committee before publication. McNish "ALL. 10 OF the semi-finalists are deserving of the award. They are all outstanding educators. The committee regrets that only one award can be presented." The award is the only honor for teaching excellence presented solely by the students of the school. The HOPE Award was founded by the 1959 graduating class, which gave a $2,000 endowment for the award to the University as its senior class gift. The annual interest The HOPE award (Honor to the Outstanding Progressive Educator) is an award given to a faculty member who demonstrates "willingness to help students, success in challenging and stimulating students and excellence in teaching ability and HOPE Award Finalists from the endowment contributes to the prize given to the winner. SENIORS MAY vote for the HOPE award winner at the HOPE, Suds and Mugs" beer and popcorn party from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the West Village on Tuesday, October 26. Voting booths will also be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 7, in strong Hall, the Kansas Union and Summerfield Hall. The finalists have been invited to the class party to give sensors the opportunity to explain their findings. The winner will be announced at the KU- Colorado game Nov. 10. The winner will receive a plaque and a $300 prize during baltime ceremonies. Final voting to select the senior class gift will also be conducted at the class party. Gift suggestions were narrowed to a 10 percent first vote at the Sept. 26 senior regalia party. The five options are: —Trees for the courtyard area of Wescoe Hall. A drinking fountain to be installed near Wescoe Hall. A cluster of planters and benches near Wescole Hall. A combination magazine rack and center case for the new student health care -ART WORK FOR Spooner Hall, Watkins Hall or Wescow Hall. Conceptual drawings of the drinking foutain, planter-bench complex and magazine-display case are being prepared for publication. They will be displayed before the voting. All senior class card holders may vote for a HOPE award winner and the gift choice. Seniors who don't have class cards may vote after paying a fee of fifty cents. This money will be contributed to the HOPE scholarship, the gift. Seniors who paid the fifty-cent fee at the Sept. 26 party should present their receipts of that payment to entitle them to vote again. The class gift will be presented during the halftime of the KU-Kansas State University basketball game March 5. You Gotta Have Class Kansas Staff Photo by DAVE REGIER Tilling her derby to a rakih angle, Laurie Anderson, Leawood sophomore, puts the finishing touches on her Halloween dance. And the M&M's, will be dancing Milk Duds and M&M's, will be dancing through the heads of small children today as they plan nocturnal forays into Candylea. For as Laurie, maybe she can get a job with G. Gordon Liddy.