THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. 85-No.128 Thursday, April 17, 1975 The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas By Staff Photographer GEORGE MILLENER III Numbers game student, senator Katy Hanson, Overland Park junior, and Jan Corbett, Hutchinson junior, seemed to register their opinions to the debate. "We don't really understand it," budget. Approval of the budget, which is intended to finance studen organizations, came after less than two and one-half years. Senate votes money for budget requests By JIM BATES and GREG HACK Kansan Staff Reporters --short all the groups bad their bidders calls Bulletin The Student Senate approved its new budget in record time Wednesday night, meeting for only two and one-half hours. PHNOM PENH (AP)—Phnom Penh surrendered to the Koung Rouge insurgents today and welcomed the Communists-led rebels, along with banners on every building in the city. Sad-faced Premier Long Bore drove from his villa to the government headquarters to make a broadcast. Meanwhile, Khieu Samphan, the deputy premier of Shanxou's government in exile, was reported to have broadcast a warning about the vanquished government and all politics in the country immediately for their safety. People stood on the sidewalks and waved to the incoming rebels who for three years had battled the military leaders and who had overthrown Prince Norsun Sibanok. Boret and his associates on Wednesday offered a cease-fire and transfer of power, but Prince Sihanouk turned them down and called on them to surrender. --short all the groups bad their bidders calls The Executive Committee of the Graduate Student Council (GSC) allocated 4,340.57 to 22 graduate student organizations Wednesday, thus following the recommendation of its Budgeting Committee. GSC OKs money for 22 groups The amount allocated was less than half of the organization's requests, which totaled $10,500. According to Statiano, Budgeting committee chairman, the remaining funds will be spent on the 2014 re- vision. The Student Senate gave the GSC $8,210, from which the Executive Committee set aside $5,600 for allocation to graduate groups, the money allocated Wednesday represents about three-fourths of the $5,600. The Executive Committee is holding $3,610 for office supplies and newsletter publication. Of that, $509 will be allocated by Jan 1, 1976, and an emergency fund will be obtained. Staiano told the Executive Committee that the Budgeting Committee had debarred on requests according to their projects and not their specific line items, an accounting procedure used by the Student Senate. The budget process has been greatly accelerated since the introduction of the committee structure, according to Charles Fairchild, Nunemaker College Senator. "The breakdown into the committee is becoming more efficient each year," he said. "Two years ago it took three to five days to approve a budget, last year it took a day and a half, and this year it took two and one-half hours." According to Staino, 24 per cent of the allocation will fund newsletters for the media. In addition to approving the committee's recommendations, the Senate passed an amendment allocating $8,500, which had been funded by the Senate Committee from the Senate's program fund, among a number of organizations. Rolfs, who introduced the amendment, said the allocations had been worked out in conjunction with the Student Services Council. He said the committee had given high priority to journals publishing student articles. "No group was out to spite another," he said. "All the homework and research had already been done." he said. The Kansas Journal of Sociology, a publication of articles written by sociology graduate students and faculty, received the American Association for Applied Psychology funded were a joint language papers "This was the smoothest budget procedure since the inception of the Senate code." Josserand, Johnson junior and three-term senator, said. Edd Rolfs, student body president, said he didn't think the Senate had rushed through it. ORGANIZATION Request Allocation Association for Computer Machines 824.00 1228.00 Association for Computing Sciences in Hibernation 903.83 1410.00 Counting Students Association of Students 1063.83 1410.00 Graduate Association of Students 438.80 90.00 Graduate Association of Students 260.00 169.00 Graduate Association of Students 279.50 169.00 Graduate Business Council 853.00 366.00 Graduate Journal Research Society 341.50 169.00 International Colloquium 1232.73 345.38 International Education Educational Psychology and In Social Language 118.50 64.00 International Development Graduate 411.72 278.50 Linguistic Graduate Student Association 869.00 175.00 Kansas University Sociology 1450.00 680.00 Math Gradient Students Association 10.00 100.00 School Psychological Studies 10.00 16.40 School Psychological Studies 114.60 54.00 Speech Communication and Human Communication roots praised the Council's ability to assure the lack of funds and to make the post of its leader. Relations Graduate Student Organization 370.00 267.50 publication project by linguistic and anthropology students, and a journal for research Sect in state inquiry elicits no local ills Sell said that in the past, the church had given financial assistance to some of its missionaries. Sell said the church didn't require financial support from its members except an initial $10 fee. He said the church sometimes had to get rid of the personal possessions that people brought when they moved into one of the church houses. The only allocation for personal services was made to the Graduate Chemistry Society, Edith Hetherington, a Budgeting Committee member, said the group was soliciting a permanent endowment to fund research in the areas sponsored by Phi Luhana Lupiao, chemistry honorey society, has drawn world-famous chemists. The church, which was founded in 1964 in Seoul, Korea, by the Rev Sun Myung Moon, is part of the Unification Movement and is based on fundamental Christian principles and the belief that the Rev Moon has a mission to complete the work of Jesus Christ. The church demands total commitment from its members. "It's commendable that these groups could get together and work out their differences." Wichita Police Chief Flyd B. Hannon, Rep. Garner E. Shriver, Topena Major Bill McCormick, State Rep. Theo Cribs and former President Richard Nixon have all Kathy Dugan, graduate school senator also praised the groups' cooperation. She said she was pleased with the way the Student Services Council had agreed to share the $8,500 with other organizations such as KUOK and the KU Soccer Club. was forced to join the organization and that members were free to leave at any time. Dugan also presented a petition signed by 2,700 students supporting the Council's request for more money. She noted that only 2,354 students voted. Senate election. Linda Powell, College Seedship. All the groups receiving funds from the program fund were satisfied except the Consumer Protection Association (CPA), Dugan said. ORGANIZATION Request Allocation Student Bar Association $3571 $340 Kansas Defender Project 1040 $95 Kansas Air Defense and Social Workers 1326 $103 Kokusai Law School 1520 $348 Association of Black Social Workers 2400 70 Association of African American Civil Engineers 382 17 American Society of Civil Engineers 260 188 American Institute of Aeronautics 306 $345 Architecture and Urban Design 317 $358 Black Teets 3005 $708 Historical Council 3005 $708 School Education Student Union 248 $126 Alpha Rho Gamma 1178 $126 Graduate Student Council 9209 $160 National Research Council 14919 $401 Women's Intermediate Sports 74343 47819 RU Club University 845 $180 RU Club University 845 $180 Intramural Teams 32024 $3,2124 Consumer Protection Association 10866 7145 Commission on the Status of Women 3750 1431 Campaign on the Status of Women 3750 1431 Campaign on the Status of Women 3750 1431 MEC HA 4146 722 Volunteer Chair House 410 $397 Military Marts 310 $397 Women's Condition 30284 492 Orientation Fellowship 4585 1000 University of Iowa 1706 1126 KUOH 17403 1658 Program for Community Assistance 0 Association for Minority 1100 $100 UK Uclif Club 300 $300 UK Hang Glider Club 1500 $100 Cottonwood Students' Brigade 777 1000 Custom House 1420 $100 Microscience Club 620 $100 Community Health Services Committee 280 $300 University Series 30006 $2037 University Series 30006 $2037 Kansas Forensics 9003 $313.9 Kansas Forensics 9003 $313.9 Baltic Arts Alliance 6360 $1000 International Club 788 $1000 International Club 788 $1000 Student Service (Minus $5,000) 48752 48754 Student Service (Minus $5,000) 48752 48754 Parents have complained to the attorney general's office that their sons and daughters had been brainwashed into joining The Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity Church or Married men to turn over possessions to the organization at large. Although the Unification Church, a worldwide Christian fundamentalist organization, is being investigated by the Kansas attorney general's office, no complaints of "brainwashing" by the group have been filed in Lawrence. Stephen Sell, state director of the Unification Movement, said last week that No complaints asking for the banning of the Unification Church from the University of Kansas have been filed, according to a report in Ballour, vice chancellor for student affairs. The church has chapters in Lawrence, Emporia and Manhattan. Kansas State University officials have received complaints from K-State students asking that the group be banned from campus. the complaints against the church were a result of a lack of understanding on the part of parents as to what the Unification Movement actually did. He said that no one The victim told police she had been grabbed by two men in the 700 block of Massachusetts and dragged to an apartment near the Pub tavern. She was stripped and attacked in the apartment, she told police. Rape reported See SECT page 5 Thomas King, 28, 1308 New Jersey, is being held on a charge of rape. Police are searching for a second man, described as about five feet 11 in height, weighing about 200 pounds and having a dark complexion. One man remains in Douglas County Jail in lieu of $5,000 bond and another is being sought in connection with a rape reported to Lawrence police early Wednesday morning. take an additional $25 from the program fund and allocate it to the CPA. The money is needed to pay the salary of the CPA's director, she said. See SENATE page 3 Experts compare Chinese worlds By GARTH GNF Kansan Staff Reporter Chinese communism is a good system that started on the wrong foot, according to Lord and Lady Michael Lindsay, world-known China experts. Wednesday night in the Kansas Union the couple presented a slide show and discussed their relationship. "The Chinese Communists at this time (1938-45) were noticeably different from the Communists I had known in England and elsewhere," Lindsay said. "The ones I had known in England were very doctinaire; we couldn't really argue with them." Lindsey said that Mao and his comrades were willing to argue a point, but that this changed in 1949 when Mao Tsetung would be allowed to administer doctrine would be followed in China. Lindsay and his wife, Hl Siahou-il, spent four years in China during WW II helping the Chinese Communists with the anti-Japanese underground. He had taught at Yenching University until Pearl Harbor, after which he escaped into the hills around Yenan. There he helped train the Chinese in radio technology and helped to put the New China News Agency on the air to the United States. Lindsey and his wife have traveled through mainland China and Taiwan to attend conferences. sideder today two of the foremost experts on China. During the war, Mao, Chou En-liu, Teh and Teh Plao were asked as heroes by the people because they instituted a law and efficient system for taxation, they said. "If they could have continued with this system after the war, they would still probably have the support of the people," Lindsay said. Posts filled by Kansan Dennis Ellsworth, Osawatime senior, was selected editor of the fall Kansan by the Kansan Board Wednesday. Cynthia Long, Salina junior, was selected as business manager for the fall. Ward Harkavy, Lawrence graduate student, will be editor and Jim Merrill, Lawrence graduate manager of the summer Kansan. Instead, Soviet policies of collectivism and a strong indoctrination and control system were instituted. Unfortunately, the Soviet system wasn't suited for China, he "The Soviet system was based upon class warfare," he said. "China didn't really have the classes necessary to make it work so the whole idea was artificial." Communism worked because the people approved of Mao Tse-tung and his early policies. Mao was against civil war and in support of a coalition government, Lindsay said. But the differences between Mao and Chiang Kai-shek couldn't be worked out and Chiang Kai-shek was forced to leave the mainland. "Today, the Chinese live in an atmosphere where they never know what will happen," she said. In 1968, Mao relaxed the controls and allowed the Chinese people to criticize as they wished. This was an attempt to reinforce Mao's ideas of criticism grew too quickly, Lindsay said. The Cultural Revolution grew out of hand, and strict controls had to be re-introduced; the most dangerous crime in China is to say that Mao is not perfect, he said. This is somewhat incongruous, Lindsay said, but it is little more than a figurehead today. Computerized early enrollment nears final adoption By YAEL ABOUHALKAH Kansan Staff Reporter By the fall of 1976, the long waits and seemingly never ending lines at Allen Field House during the 1984 Super Bowl were a spectacle. However, he said implementation of the system could be delayed until the University knew what kind of computer would be installed on the Lawrence campus. Computerized early enrollment at the University of Kansas is moving into the final stages of adoption, Jerry Magnuson, associate director of the KU computation center, said Wednesday. Magnuson was a member of the Student Records Information System Committee (SRIS), an ad hoc committee that recently studied the early history of Polytechnic Institute (VPI) at Blacksburg, Va. He said the kind of computer might not be known until October. consulted with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to approve a final response to the recommendations. The committee made several recommendations which were reviewed by Richard Vone, Ende, and James Bentley. Members of that committee generally agreed Wednesday that the Med Center would get computerized early enrollment first; that the purchasing of a computer for the Lawrence campus would be done in there; and that the whole system could be in operation on both campuses by the fall of 1976. A letter from Von Ende to Walter Gehbach, SRIS chairman and registrar at the KU Medical Center, said that the VPI system was an excellent one and the acquisition process should begin immediately. The VPI system was explained by its developers in the summer 1974 issue of the Journal of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. An advisory committee was then established to oversee the acquisition and implementation process. The system, the Journal said, can process 16,000 students with 92,000 class requests in about 65 minutes. Such a system for the University, which has about 20,000 students on both campuses, would be very efficient. This is because the number of students "I'm real enthusiastic about it," he said. "I think we need to take a giant step forward. The system won't satisfy our every need but it's a sure thing because the status quo doesn't satisfy our present needs." Gebhach said the computerized system also would make class changes easier and faster. He said the VP system, or a variation of it, would be used first at the Mel Center because its compatibility "And if it works here, with all the varied programs of semester, half semester and what-all courses, it's sure to work in Lawrence," Gehbach said with a laugh. Paul Wolfe, director of the KU computation center, said the role of the advisory committee would be to further inspect the VPI system, determine what needed to be changed before implemmentation, and determine what problems must be overcome before acquisition for both campuses was accomplished. Magnuson said the committee would be looking at P1 system in detail to see how it would fit kNs. "It'll be as soon as possible," he said. "It depends on the people involved and what problems they run with." He said he couldn't pin down an exact time when the computer system would be in operation. He also said that the fall of 1976 was a good target date for completion. In the letter they sent to Geghabh. Von Ende and Dykes also recommended that a report generator- Von Ende he agreed that a projection of full installation by the fall of 1976 was possible. Robert Sheridan, committee member and director of computer services at the Med Center, said the VPI system was adequate for KU's projected needs. He said that the VPI system first would be installed at the Med Center, but that several technical changes would have to be made to allow the installation. query system be acquired simultaneously with the total VPI system. Such a system, Von Ende said, would allow almost instantaneous gathering of information for in studies done by the University; response to requests for statistical information by agencies such as the Health, Education and Welfare department and use in planning classes for the coming years. The VPI system, as explained in the issue of the Journal, would work like this: Enrollment for the next term begins five weeks into the current term. Using a prepared timetable of courses, a student fills out an optical scanning form with his name. ID number, major and class. The forms have room for 11 requests for courses. They are collected at the registrar's office and read into the computer through an optical scanner. The computer analyzes the data on the forms to prevent incorrect enrollment requests. A report is then sent to the student, listing the requested enrollment for all courses. See COMPUTER page 8