UDK News Roundup (Continued from page 1) Israel won't retreat TEL AVIV - Mrs. Golda Meir, likely to become Israel's next premier soon, said yesterday Israel will not retreat from occupied Arab territories before a peace settlement and is under no American or other pressure to do so. She also rejected suggestions for merging the economies of the occupied territories with the main Israel economies. Mrs. Meir, selected last week by the ruling Labor Party's Central Committee as its choice for premier, told a meeting of party youth workers "I know of nobody in Israel who is ready to budge from our present frontier lines before peace comes." Kremlin achieves aim BERLIN - Allied officials said yesterday the men in the Kremlin achieved their aim in last week's squeeze on West Berlin's lifelines—to demonstrate they can still sever its links to the West at will. They said the Communist campaign of threats and harassment of traffic in reprisal for the West German presidential election here apparently was designed as a warning. Four bodies found in sea TRURO, Mass. — Rangers cordoned off a square mile of the Cape Cod National Seashore yesterday to keep the curious away from the area where the dismembered bodies of four women were found. Police planned to search the sandy soil of the scrub pine forest for more bodies today. Rangers reported would be "searchers" appeared yesterday on horseback, on foot and in cars to tour the area. One man brought his own shovel and began digging before rangers escorted him out of the area. Reds hit Vietnam towns SAIGON - The Communists pushed into the third week of their nationwide offensive today with 30 barrages into towns and military camps. They battled the allies on three fronts outside Saigon. In the capital, President Nguyen Van Thieu warned that if the shellings of cities continue, "they will be punished." "Vietnam and the allies cannot forgive the Communists' savage action any longer," he said. New offensive to warn PARIS — A North Vietnamese delegate to the Paris peace talks said yesterday the new Communist offensive in South Vietnam was launched to convince President Nixon of the hopelessness of a battlefield victory over the Viet Cong. "The Americans must realize once and for all that there can be no peace until they reach the irrevocable decision that they cannot win-even if they remain in Vietnam for another 20 years," said one North Vietnamese official. Mor. 10 1969 KANSAN 9 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Poetry Hour Peter Casagrande reading Roethke 4:30 March 11 Music Room Washburn U. to sponsor week for blacks Black Culture Week sponsored by the Black Organization of Student Societies, at Washburn University, Topeka, will begin March 17. Keynote speaker, Lerone Bennett Jr., executive editor of Ebony magazine, will speak at 7:30 p.m. March 18 in Washburn Fine Arts Auditorium. Charles Tharp, Washburn Union director, said tickets for Bennett's speech are sold out. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Each day one facet of black culture will be empha*ized, Tharp said. March 17 will emphasize black organizations; March 18, black music; March 19, the black woman; March 20, the black man; and March 21, black art. SPRING BREAK RESERVATIONS Make Your: Airline Reservations (No charge for this service) Hotel/Resort Accommodations Special Tour Arrangements All Through MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Faster absorbency. Longer protection. That's the extra security you get with new Meds, the only tampon with this double-protection design: an outer layer of larger fibers that absorb instantly, with an inner layer of tiny fibers that store more, longer. Comes in the first gentle, flexible plastic applicator. MEDS AND MODES ARE TRADEMARKS OF PERSONAL PRODUCTS COMPANY