NSA disclosure creates dilemmas WASHINGTON - (UPI) - A U.S. exchange student was pulled out of Poland on State Department advice when it appeared he might be endangered by the impending disclosure of CIA ties to the National Student Association. Richard Sterns, NSA vice-president, said today his organization turned to the State Department for help when fears arose that Polish officials might act against the student in the mistaken belief he was an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency. Sterns said Pulvers, on leave from the University of California at Los Angeles, was the only American exchange student with NSA affiliations that was studying in a Communist country. The student, Roger Pulvers, 22, of Culver City, Calif., reportedly left the University of Krakow for London in recent days and is safely out of Poland. The disclosure of the CIA-NSA connection meantime rocked official Washington and even raised the possibility of a breakup in the student group, the nation's largest intercollegiate organization with its 300 campus affiliates. NSA's governing body was meeting here today to study the situation preparatory to offering a more detailed explanation of the secret CIA subsidies to its thousands of members. The question of whether the group should disband and reorganize or maintain its integrity was expected to claim top attention, along with the serious question of how the CIA tie might affect hundreds of foreign students who have studied here under NSA auspices. Chinese say split-up near The tough-talking Chinese foreign minister denounced the Soviet Union at a dinner party as reports circulated in Hong Kong that one Red Chinese general has been holding secret talks with Russia on possible Soviet aid to forces opposing Mao Tse-tung. HONG KONG —(UPI) — Chinese Communist Foreign Minister Chen Yi said today Russia's "bloody suppressions" against Chinese students and diplomats in Moscow had brought diplomatic relations between the two countries "almost to a breakup." Chen said the Soviet Union is acting as the vanguard of all anti-China action, one of the most serious anti-Russian charges to stem from the 'cultural revolution' that has China in the throes of a titanic power struggle. SHOP THURSDAY NITE TILL 8:30 FINAL CLEANUP of women's apparel AT RIDICULOUS PRICES All below $ \frac{1}{2} $ price! DRESSES Reg. $13.00 to $16.00 . . . Now $5.00 Reg. $18.00 to $20.00 . . . Now $8.00 Reg. $23.00 to $40.00 . . . Now $10.00 DRESSES—BALCONY SPORTSWEAR Reg. $6.00 to $7.00 . . . . Now $1.99 Reg. $8.00 to $9.00 . . . . Now $2.99 Reg. $10.00 to $12.00 . . . . Now $3.99 Reg. $13.00 . . . . . . . Now $4.99 Reg. $14.00 to $20.00 . . . . Now $5.99 SPORTSWEAR—MAIN FLOOR All Sales Final—No Returns—No Exchanges Ruling has U.S.at war in Vietnam SAIGON — (UPI)—The United States "is in a time of war," the American mission in Vietnam ruled for the first time today. It said it was rewriting rules and regulations and newsmen under military jurisdiction. Vietnamese citizens would not be included. American consul Robert A. Lewis said the new directives were being assembled following agreement on their scope between Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, and U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Asked if the Vietnamese government had given the Americans written approval to assume jurisdiction over civilians, Lewis said: "There is no conflict." "There is no conflict." He admitted there was "nothing in writing" from the Vietnamese government. Daily Kansan Wednesday, February 15, 1967 3 JACKSON, Miss. —(UPI) Byron Beckwith, the accused ambush slayer of Negro leader Medgar Evers, announced his Alleged Evers slayer seeks office candidacy for lieutenant governor of Mississippi Tuesday with the hope of cornering a "white bloc" vote. The Experimental Theatre announces that Charles Chilton's "OH,WHAT A LOVELY WAR" Is Sold Out for all performances. Folding chair tickets (SRO) will be available 1 hr.20 min.before curtain time. Thank you for your enthusiasm! Where does an engineer intern? Before you decide on the job that's to start you on your professional career, it's good to ask a few point blank questions . . . like: - Will this job let me rub shoulders with engineers doing things that haven't been done before, in all phases of engineering? - Will I be working for an engineering oriented management whose only standard is excellence? - Will I have access to experts in fields other than my own to help me solve problems and stimulate professional growth? - Are engineering careers with this company stable . . . or do they depend upon proposals and market fluctuations? - Will I be working with the widest range of professional competence and technological facilities in the U. S.? Why not ask these questions about Bendix Kansas City when Mr. R. E. Cox visit the Kansas University campus February 22, 23 Or you may write Mr. Cox at: Box 303-Mo., Kansas City, Mo. 64131 PRIME CONTRACTOR FOR THE AEC Bendix Kansas City, prime contractor of the Atomic Energy Commission and equal opportunity employer, produces and procures electrical and mechanical non-nuclear components and assemblies for bombs, missile warheads and experimental weapon devices. BENDIX KANSAS CITY / Excellence the world depends on