Court refuses Ruby reversal AUSTIN, Tex. — (UPI)—The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals today refused to reconsider its ruling that gave Jack Ruby a new trial on his death sentence for the murder of presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. The prosecution, led by Dist. Atty. Henry Wade of Dallas, had contended the court automatically applied principles to the Ruby case that really referred to an entirely different case. Ruby was convicted in March of 1964 of murdering Oswald Nov. 24, 1963, in the basement of the Dallas City Jail. Ruby stepped forward from a group of newsmen and onlookers and shot Oswald. THE JURY THAT found him guilty assessed the death penalty. The court of criminal appeals reversed the death verdict and the guilty verdict in October and said Ruby did not get a fair trial because trial Judge Joe B. Brown failed to move the trial to another place, and because certain testimony from police officers should not have been admitted. At 8:30 this morning there were seven voters in Strong Hall and six Captain Kangaroo watchers in the Kansas Union. Between the two buildings, two girls carefully investigated the political billboard in front of Flint Hall, then walked off—away from the nearby polls in Strong Hall. Earlier this morning, in Murphy Hall, there were not enough people to open the polls. Three UP workers were there but their VOX counterparts had not yet arrived. This could cost VOX $15. THEORETICALLY, if a party does not show up to work the pells will close, Dennis Taylor, Rancho Cordova, Calif., junior, and one of the tri-chairmen of the elections, said. The party at fault has to forfeit $5 per absence. Not only was Taylor missing people, but equipment too. 'There was no ballot box, no sheet listing all organized houses and their addresses (to use to determine voters' districts), no chairs and no phone with which to coordinate activities between polls. The court issued today's denial of a rehearing without written opinion. the instruction did not say which way. He went on to explain that workers were to fold the freshman and large men's ballots—but By 11 this morning 126 people had voted in the lobby of the Kansas Union. EMPORIA-The second state university coach to resign in as many days submitted his resignation today. Two coaches quit Kansas universities By JACKI CAMPBELL Keith Kaywood, Emporia State College football coach since 1955, has resigned. No successor has been named yet. "There's no thought that he will leave the Emporia staff," said Joe Spease, Chairman of the Division of Health, Recreation, and Athletics. Spacle said he is accepting applications for a new coach from "anyone who wants to apply." There was speculation that Kaywood's job might go to one of his aides, Ron Blaylock. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY kansan Serving KU for 77 of its 101 Years Polls missing both workers, supplies "They left for reasons of health on medical withdrawals," Don Alderson, dean of men, reported this morning. He stated that the two students, their parents and University officials deemed it wise that they leave KU at that time. 77th Year, No. 43 RECORDS AT KU reveal that Busby and Kalpin both withdrew from the University in early January. Kalpin resigned on January 10, 1966 and Busby the day following. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, November 16, 1966 Busby related that he had to restrain Kalpin from jumping from a McCollum Hall window after he had taken the pill. Doctors and police were called to restrain the student, and then he was taken to Watkins Hospital. Two former students called in LSD case Two KU students, who had the hallucinogenic drug, LSD, in their possession last winter, are witnesses this week in a Boston trial. One of the duo are among five people from KU who are testifying in the trial of Alice C. Bieberman, 25, of Cambridge, Mass. She is on trial in the U.S. District Court in Boston on charges of unlawful interstate shipment of the drug. BUSBY SAID he began to correspond with Miss Bieberman after reading her article in the "Realist" magazine of February, 1965, where she offered information on such drugs as LSD to interested persons. "I GAVE ONE pill to my college pal, Robert Leo Kalpin (Wichita freshman last year) and kept the other," Busy told the judge. In testimony yesterday, Gregory Allan Busby, Wichita freshman last year, said he received two pills from Miss Bieberman by U.S. Mail in December, 1965. Kalpin lived in McCollum last year while Busby resided in Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall. Miss Bieberman, a Radcliffe College graduate, shipped the drug, improperly labeled, to California and Kansas without filing an application as required by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. A newly-remodeled suite of offices on Strong Hall's second floor is the center of operations for one of KU's busiest women. The sign outside reads "Dean of Women." Dr. Raymond Schwegler, KU health director, was scheduled to testify today. Douglas Witt, assistant resident of McCollum Hall last year, already has testified. Also subpoenaed to testify before the close of the trial are two nurses from Watkins Hospital, who cared for Kalpin after he was admitted. They are Mrs. Edythe Lee and Mrs. Audrey Kamb, both registered nurses. Head of the women's personnel division, she and her staff co-ordinate the administration of the residence halls, scholarship halls, sororities and approved housing. Regents begin Topeka meet By DAN AUSTIN Faced with legislative budget requests and the management of six state universities, the Kansas Board of Regents began a two day meeting at 1:30 p.m. today in Topeka. At 4 p.m. the Regents will hear James McCain, Kansas State University president. The other five university heads will appear before the Board beginning tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. IN THE ABSENCE of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, KU will be represented at the meeting by James Surface, provost. The Chancellor is now in Washington, D.C. Terms of three of the Regents expire Dec. 31. One of those three, Ray Evans of Prairie Village, has indicated he does not wish reappointment by Gov. William Avery. Evans has been a regent for 12 years. The other two Regents with expiring terms are A. H. Cromb of Mission Hills and Larry Morgan of Goodland. By CAROL DeBONIS KU's busiest woman is in new office Emily Taylor, counselor, advisor, and administrator, is involved in a range of activities encompassing almost every phase of campus life. ALTHOUGH "BASICALLY responsible for women's affairs and some coeducational activities," Dean Taylor is a member of several university committees. She currently serves on the Kansas Union Operating Committee, Previews Committee, Council for Student Affairs, University Human Relations and an administrative committee for the reorganization of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She is current chairman of the Watkins Scholarship Committee, the Scholarship Halls Committee and the University Events Committee. IN ADDITION to these administrative duties, the Dean of Women's office pursues its main objective—"to help women become self-sufficient, self-determining adults," in the words of Dean Taylor. This pursuit requires counseling and assistance on an individualized level. "There is something different every day," says Dean Taylor. "Nothing seems very unusual for us because everything is unusual. There is not much routine. People are never routine. Their problems are always unique." Dean Taylor has been at KU for ten years. She took her present position in 1956 after serving as dean of women at Miami University and Northern Montana University. FOLLOWING GRADUATION from Ohio State University with a B.A. in English, Dean Taylor entered graduate school at Indiana University. Dean Taylor says she intended then to go into personnel administration at the college level. A job as dean of women or similar position was part of her future plans. She finished her M.A. in counseling at Indiana University and went on to get her Ph.D. there in personnel administration. KU women are more "sophisticated, better prepared and more cognizant of the roles that women will play in today's culture" than they were ten years ago, said Dean Taylor. THEIR PROBLEMS, however, remain much the same. She Continued on page 3 DEAN EMILY TAYLOR Birth control series begins page 2