2 October 8,1975 University Daily Kansan Sinai resolution approved WASHINGTON—The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday approved a resolution to send 300 American technicians to surveillance posts in the Sinai to help monitor the interim agreement between Israel and Egypt. The 10 to 2 vote cleared the way for probable Congressional authorization by the end of the week. This, in turn, would lead to implementation of the accord negotiated in August by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. The resolution passed by the committee contains a disclaimer stipulating that Congress isn't bound by any of the collateral understandings Kissinger reached with the two states during his shuttle diplomacy. The House version, carrying the same provision, is due for a floor vote today. Appointee recommended WASHINGTON—The Senate Interior Committee voted unanimously yesterday to recommend that the Senate confirm President Gerald R. Ford's nomination of Thomas S. Kiepe to be Undersecretary of the interior. The committee agreed to require Klepei to divest himself of all holdings in natural resource companies within the next nine months. Committee Chairman Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., said a final Senate vote on the nomination could come this week. Kleppe, 56, currently head of the Small Business Administration, was nominated after Stanley Hathaway, former governor of Wyoming, quit after less than six weeks on the job. Lennon order reversed NEW YORK—The U.S. Court of Appeals yesterday reversed a deportation order for former Beatle John Lennon and directed reconsideration of his effort to gain permanent residence in the United States. permanent residency in the U.S. The deportation order was shelved two weeks ago by the Immigration and Naturalization Service on humanitarian grounds because Lennon's wife was pregnant, but on action the order could have been resumed at any time. Today's 2-1 decision held that Lennon's 1968 British conviction for possession of hashish found in a binocular case, didn't make the singer an excludable alien, as the Board of Immigration Appeals had ruled. The court sent the matter back to the board for reconsideration in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. Soviets called dangerous TOKYO—Soviet bloc diplomats stalked out of a banquet in Peking after a top Chinese official called the Soviet Union "the most dangerous source of war," the Japanese news agency Kyodo reported yesterday. The blast helped to dispel recent speculation that relations between the two governments might be on the verge of improvement. Chinese First Vice Premier Teng Hai-ping, speaking Monday at a dinner for visiting Vugelaar Premium Diermal Bijladic, laashed out at the Russians despite publication of Soviet greetings to Pekening on Oct. 1 calling for normalization of relations and "re-establishment of friendship and cooperation." NYC budget cuts promised NEW YORK—New York Mayor Abraham Beame promised budget cuts of $200 million yesterday including the possibility of further layoffs of city employees, in a plan presented to a state-controlled board. Beame presented his preliminary proposal to eliminate the city's $200 million deficit within a three-year period to the Emergency Financial Control Board, a state agency headed by Gov. Hugh Carey. The board is designed to oversee the city's finances. In Washington, House Banking Committee Chairman Henry Reuss, D-Wis, hinted that the Ford administration might be shifting its opposition to federal aid for the city. Computers may have more to do with football at the University of Kansas than just keep tracking of ticket sales when a coach is inducted into the School Business is completed. By SHERI BALDWIN Computer use in football growing FOOTBALL PLAY analysis done by computer is becoming one of the most widespread applications of computers to athletics. The analysis systems generate statistical summaries and analyses of the plays of a given football game. The output is examined by the coaches to find the tendencies of a team. On sheets of paper every play is plotted: pass routes; offensive alignments and Computer game Bill Roach, assistant professor of business, looks over the shoulder of Woody Grutzmacher, Onaagan team, as he analyzes rival analysis for a KU football game. shifts; blocking actions; and defensive coverages. The information is fed to a computer, which provides a detailed analysis of the game. COACHES MAY LOOK at summaries of another team's offense and defense or they may look at similar summaries of their own team. The past record of the KU football team and several articles on the subject of football analysis prompted Bill Roach, assistant professor of business and Woody Hammond, who has taught on a system of football play analysis for KU. "If it works, we'll give it to the football team, Grutzmacher said Saturday. "If it works, I'll give it to the football team." In addition to detailed descriptions of football plays, variables such as weather, wind, type of playing surface, crowd size, the distance the game is played away from home and the direction of the field (north-east, east-west) are important factors. Roch said to get an accurate summary of information, all possible variables had to be examined. He also programmed to summarize data a coach would specifically request and also would print statistical readouts with all information to supplement the summary, he said. TO SAVE TIME, copies of football and sports books will be used, guides. Roach said. "Schools who do have these programs are fairly reluctant to come across with this Roach said the main reason the information was difficult to obtain was the cost involved to the schools using such a system. Ken Martin and Jack White, assistant football coaches, have assisted Roach and Grutzmacher in obtaining sample copies from other schools. Martin and White have also offered advice on what kind of training KU would be interested in, Roach said. "When the project is completed, then they'll probably utilize it." Grutzmacher said. "The accessibility will be theirs, they can use it when they want to." GRUTZMACHER SAID the system would be ready about Nov. 1, but the coaching staff probably wouldn't have time to look at it until next spring. "They'll probably use it first as a check to measure our own offensive tendencies and wait until later to plot offensive characteristics of opposing teams." Grutzmacher said. KU is now using a hit chart system that analyzes plays by hand, he said. Roch described the process as a long and tedious one that could be done by only one person so that the coding of the game plays was consistent. "Data such as play designations will be to coordinate with the KU coaching staff," he said. THE COMPUTER METHOD would probably be most beneficial to the KU coaching staff during off season, when they are viewed over and over again. Roach said. He said it would be used as a "device for simplifying analysis of game films." "You don't have to look at a film 10 times better wrenches if they are already spelled out in print." The program can receive no payment from the athletic department because he and Roach aren't professionals, Grutzmacher said. Congress enacts school lunch bill WASHINGTON (AP)—The House and Senate enacted yesterday a $2.75 billion child nutrition bill that President Ford vetoed four days earlier as too costly. It was the seventh time in the 14-month Ford presidency that the heavily Democratic Congress mustered the two-thirds needed to override a presidential veto. In the House, the tally was a lopsided 397 to 145, massive 125 votes more than two-thirds. In all, Ford has vetoed 39 bills, 12 this year. In the Senate, the vote was 79 to 13, 17 more than two-thirds. THE ACTION extends a school breakfast program which feeds 1.8 million low-income children daily and expands the school lunch program by requiring schools to offer 20 centiliters to students whose parents earn between the $5,010 poverty level and $7,70. It also continues and expands programs that provide nutritional meals to low-income mothers, pregnant women and infants. FORD SAID in casting his 12th veto of the bill that would add $1.2 billion to his budge. we will be. In Knoxville, Tenn., Ford said of the "I cannot accept such fiscal irresponsibility," he said. override, "I honestly don't think that the taxpayers as a whole should subsidize free hunches for children of families that have $9,500 a year." IN YESTERDAY'S House debate, chairman Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., of the House Education and Labor Committee said the facts don't bear that out. Sen. Carl Curtis, R-Neb., led the fight to sustain Ford's veto, contending that the measure not only surpasses the President's budget but is $23 million more than the level for the programs in the congressional budget. And he criticized the provision that requires states to give 20-cent lunches to children above the poverty level, declaring that provided a federal subsidy "for a good many families able to pay it for themselves." And in the Senate, chairman Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., of the Agriculture Committee accused the President of using his misleading statistics in his veto passage. ACTUAL FUNDS to pay for the programs RUSSELL'S BARON BURGER Choice Chopped Ground Beef on a Toasted Egg and Onion Roll With Sugar Cured Ham, Old English Cheese, Crisp Lettuce, Red Ripe Tomato, Kosher Dill, French Fried Potatoes, and Creamed Cole Slaw. The seven Ford vetores overriden so far are the largest number of defeats suffered by any military institution since Congress overrode laws by Proclamation in 1935, Truman—but over an eight year period. EARLER IN THE YEAR, Ford won battles with Congress when the House sustained his vetoes of farm, jobs, housing and strip mine measures. more funds for education than the President wanted. The action marked the third time in recent weeks that Congress had overridden a presidential veto in the social welfare area. In July, it enacted a series of health programs Ford had vetoped and last month it overrode his veto of a money bill providing Closed Tuesdays RUSSELL'S EAST 3400 West 6th Avalance 841-3530 in the bill will be included in separate appropriations legislation. However, yesterday's action was the key towards enabling the level at which they will be funded. Gutmacher is, however, receiving five hours of independent study credits, with HSS. Universities that have developed or are developing play analysis programs are TONIGHT at 7:30 in Woodruff Auditorium University of Tennessee, Dartmouth, USC, UCLA, Washington and Stanford. Many other college teams, including those in the Big Eight Conference, have or are in the process of developing play analysis programs. Films presented by SUA STEREO SPECIAL 75° SENNHEISEIR 414 List 49.75 Now 35.00 SENNHEISEIR 414 List 79.75 Now 57.50 DUAL 701 (with wood base & cover) List 400.00 Now 250.00 2-RECTILINEAR I1la List 279.95 Now 167.50 SCOTT 477 (70 watt X2) List 444.95 Now 350.00 DUAL 1216 (with wood base & cover) List 217.85 Now 125.00 M91ED SHURE CART. List 54.95 Now 19.95 2-EV16 SPK. (12" , 3-way) List 179.95 Now 75.00 RAY AUDIO 13 E. 8th St. 842-2047 THE CORDUROY SUIT Camel corduroy with a vest that reverses to a snappy houndstooth check. The coat is easily worn as a separate Still the best value around at $85. 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