2 Mondav. April 28.1975 University Dally Kansan DIGEST From the Associated Press Kissinger firing urged WASHINGTON--Former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford said the imminent fall of Saigon to Communist control signaled the failure of Mr. Obama's plan to end the war. In a Washington interview, Clifford called on President Gerald R. Ford to replace Kissinger as secretary of state and senior White House foreign He said Kissinger and former President Richard Nixon needlessly sacrificed 20,000 American lives and $70 billion to $80 billion by not withdrawing American troops from Vietnam as soon as they succeeded the Democratic administration in 1969. Clifford said the United States gave the South Vietnamese "practically everything to fight with, but in reality they had no fight for. When the showdown came, they were not willing to fight and die for the Thieu government." Portuguese Socialists win LISBON—With honking horns and waving flags, the victorious Socialist party celebrated Sunday's capture of more than two-fifths of the vote in Portugal's elections for a constitutional assembly. Political maneuvering also began for a coalition. in neighboring Spain, four Madrid morning newspapers hailed the results as a victory for moderate forces. But the Soviet press said the third-place finish of the Communist party with 12.5 per cent of the vote was a win for "democracy and progress." The Socialist party, led by party chief Mario Soares, a minister without portfolios in the provincial government, emerged the clear winner in the nation's first elections since a revolution overthrew the old right-wing dictatorship one year ago. Bombs hit N. Ireland BELLAST-Terrorist bombers and snipers and angry mobs struck Belfast, almost Sunday after Saturday the security riot in Belfast, officials report. A bomb concealed in a car exploded in Bankbridge, County Down, wounding three men, one seriously. The bomb exploded as the three men In Londonderry, Northern Ireland's second largest city, troops had to fire shots into the air to disperse a mob that surrounded an army checkpoint. British army patrols in Belfast came under fire in the Catholic district of the Lower Falls. The rioting in the provincial capital was the first in months. Israel to review policies The Israeli government announced Sunday it would review its policies on the Midwest peace, indicating it might offer new proposals to the Arabs Israel's decision to hold a full-scale cabinet debate came amid mounting American pressure on Israel for new peace initiatives. The announcement did not say whether the discussion would be held before or after the United States completes a reassessment of its own Dykes says budget best in years Kansas is unique in its support for higher education, chancellor R. Dykes said in a speech. By GREG HACK Kansan Staff Reporter "I know of no other state that is doing as much for higher education as Kansas," Dykes said to about 100 people attending his state of the University address, sponsored by the KU Affairs Committee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Dykes said that, in contrast to many state universities experiencing financial difficulty, this year the University of Kansas had received its best baked in many years The people of Kansas have shown their belief in higher education both through the legislature's financial support and through their enrollment at the University, he said. The enrollment increase shows an increasing awareness by Kansas parents that KU is a good place to send their sons and daughters. Dykes said. The budget passed last week by the government and the Labor Party, the salaries to increase an average 10 per- centile of workers. Dykes said University of Michigan faculty would get only a three per cent increase, most of which would be taken from the university's operating budget. Dykes said improvements in KU's library, career counseling and computer facilities had been made possible by the new budget. and salaries for classified personnel to increase eight to 12 per cent. Dykes said the state of the University was excellent, citing the achievements of administrators, students, faculty and the Board of Regents. Dykes said the faculty was committed to the welfare of the students. He said the University would try to maintain the proper mixture of research, scholarship and teaching needed to have a faculty of high quality. He said the excellence of faculty research was reflected in a survey this year by the Academy of Educational Development, which ranked the University No. 37 in federal research support among over 200 universities. Dykes said research supported by state Rockets fall on Saigon From page one was ousted by the Americans for favoring a neutralist solution to the war. In recent days, as Communitist-led forces around the South Vietnamese capital kept an ominous silence, a sense of urgency and political negotiations over Huong's ouster. Early Sunday morning a rocket attack hit Saigon, the first since the 1937 cease-fire and heavy fighting east of the capital which was captured as a "warning" from the Viet Cong. By The Associated Press When Huoeng pulled a last minute switch early Sunday and refused to carry out a face-saving National Assembly resolution which, in effect, had politely asked him to resign in favor of the neutralist Mr. the 71-year-old president received little sympathy. Government officials and moderate politicians joined the more vocal opposition in calling for an end to over the presidency. They warned of more rocket attacks and a possible assault on American forces. Waves of American Air Force cargo planes evacuating Americans and Vietnamese from Saigon were joined Sunday by a U.S. organized sea lift. U. Ambassador Graham Martin and French ambassador Jean-Marie Merillon The Greenway, a freighter chartered by the military sea lift command, arrived at Alameda on Saturday carrying 634 passengers from Saskatoon to U.S. military spokesman said it was the first of several ships chartered for the evacuation. Finally, Senate President Tran Vam Lahily hastily called a joint session of the National Assembly, arranged for a military briefing on the deteriorating situation around Saigon to the assemblymarshalled a battlefront final victory, take the presidency away from Huong. The latest appeal for Americans to leave came after a Sunday rocket attack against the Vietnamese capital in which six people were killed, a district capital 17 miles east of Saigon. Ships assist Saigon evacuation tow turns pressuring Huoon into changing his minis sources said, as top politicians have demanded. Military and political analysts agree that Saigon is lost and that the Communist side will dominate any coalition government likely to emerge from a negotiated set of agreements, but it is whether the Communist side will pursue a military course or a political one. Khmer Rouge troops talk with Thai leader The Khmer Rouge troops talked to a Thailand provincial governor and Red Cross officials before returning to their side of the border on the Gulf of Siam. One of the Khmer Rouge soldiers told an Associated Press reporter they had come in peace. Most of Cambodia's diplomats abroad are apparently out of a job. An announcement by the Khmer Rouge information agency said only those who were "appointed and accredited to friendly countries" by the chief of state, Prince Norodom Shikouan, Prime Minister Pern Nouth and Deputy Premier Kheu Samphan now represent Cambodia. This would exclude Cambodian diplomats around the world who have an appointment in the regime but who were appointed by the former government of President Lon Lol. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) —Heavily armed troops of the Communist-led Khmer Rouge made a brief and peaceful incursion into Thailand on Sunday morning while the new Cambodian regime in Phnom Penh took over the country and propaganda statements, but little news. The news blackout at the Cambodian capital continued, with Phnom Penh radio playing music and propaganda. Americans still in Slaan included about 50 assigned to the U.S. Embassy, contract employees, businessmen, journalists, nurses and employees of voluntary agencies. Earlier reports from refugees crossing the border farther north had told of executions and of the Khmer Rouge's evacuation towns in Northwest Cambodia. Hutipong Chaiyaasitho, the governor of Thailand's Trat province, where many Cambodians sought refuge after Phnom Penh fell in the face of rising rebel attacks. Afterward, he told newsmen that the refugees had come to Thailand because they were frightened but that the Camerounese resisted and seen after that there was peace between it and Riime Rouge and the Thai border guards. Military spokesmen said one dozen C141 cargo jets were ferrying evacuates directly from Saigon to Andersen Air Base in Guam. More than 20,000 Vietnamese refugees were housed in a tent city on Guam. An additional 6,000 were expected to arrive daily, with flights coming in at intervals as short as 30 minutes. Robert J. McCloskey, assistant secretary of state for congressional relations, said in an interview Sunday that as of Saturday about 30,000 Vietnamese had been evacuated from their homeland. The total number of refugees who will enter the United States is "something on the order of 130,000," he said. Large numbers of Vietnamese continued to seek ways out of the country despite a government warning of strict penalties for those who refused to comply. Alarmed over the large number of military and civilian officials who have already left. Some of the Americans who remained behind were trying to arrange the evacuation of Vietnamese relatives and friends. McCloskey said that if all the Vietnamese who had been associated with the United States in some way during the past 15 years were evacuated, the total would exceed one million, which probably couldn't be absorbed. Most voluntary agencies have back cut back the Saigon staffs to very few Westerners. Two of the seven licensed adoption agencies say that they would close in the next few days. money was also valuable, citing a tertiary oil recovery project and the Automated Resources Evaluation System (ARES) as examples of good projects. He said ARES was an effort to catalog and store in a computer all the state's resources, which would make Kansas the largest in a comprehensive resource data system. Lawrence, Ks. 812 Mass. Dykes said faculty research was good for the University, the state and society, because it would help solve the problems of the future. PRIMARILY LEATHER --on an The chancellor said most faculty members were concerned with retaining the University's ability to make its own policy and provide training for the chancellor said he would help them achieve. Dykes said career advising would receive added emphasis next year. He said students needed to see what jobs might be open in the industry and to pursue to prepare for a certain career. He said the costs of graduate and professional programs were much greater than those of general liberal arts courses. The current funding system doesn't adequately take these differences into account, he said. Thank You Students! Dykes said he was pleased with community and alumni support for the program. Dykes he favored a new system of funding state universities that would better recognize the needs of different university programs. FM Stereo/AEE 1 B Truck IN DASH With stereo indicator and AF PC on FM with lighted channel indicators use high resolution and adjustable shafts for custom installation. Block panel mounting plates included. Size: 2" x W: 2" x H: Al Hack, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, presented a silver Jayhawk to Dykes, which Hack said was a gift. Chamber to "very distinguished guests." FRYE BOOTS FM Stereo/AM/8 Trock AXT-338 "The incoming student is immediately confronted with some important decisions on what to study and do for a lifetime, and job information is very skimpy," he said. The legislature has given additional money for career advising, he said. He said that community support was essential for the success of KU's programs, and that alumn support allowed the university to gain among other state-supported universities. "Now Dick Wintermute (executive director of the University of Karas Alumni Association) and I will have another pau in front of Rong Hall," Dykes said. We hope to continue to serve you with fine food and friendly service He said Mrs. Helen Spencer's recent gift an executive example of that private support she offered. for making our Cartoon Glasses the Best Promotion We've Ever Had! ALL AMERICAN $ \frac{1}{4} $ POUNDER (one per customer please) henrys 25° OFF With This Coupon Come and Visit Us . . . "Cancellor Ray Nichols and others before me have worked several years cultivating this type of private support," he said, "and they deserve the credit, not me." 6th and Missouri 843-2139 Regular NET, $116.95 He said the gift would "make possible one of the finest art museums on any campus." ... In a question and answer session, Dykes said he didn't see much chance of the KU faculty's forming a collective bargaining unit unless the level of financial and public support for the University dropped drastically. STEREO & ELECTRONICS CENTER 928 MASS 843-8500 Double jeans prewashed and prefaced for soft fit. Let's of halter tops tool. Come and get it. Zip Zip Zap! CAROUSEL HAS IT! String bikini by Allon, by the way—it's crochet! We have it, so come and get it. String's TheThing i In Our Knitshirt Tradition Another in our great collection of biking shirts. Long sleeves with knitted cuffs and Gant's exclusive bicycle collar. In four bright colors, the multi-stripe shown and a racing stripe. by Gant, for Mister Guy 1400 920 Massachusetts