ASC defeats gun bill (Continued from page 1) advantage in order to take the job," said Lawton. Both Hanson and Goering questioned the need for firearms under certain situations, recognizing the need for what Lawton called a "critical advantage" for police in other situations. "I really don't see any use for a pistol by a policeman in a traffic control booth or directing traffic. It offends me when I'm at a basketball game and I see a cop with a gun watching the crowd, and I just don't think the university is a place for that kind of thing. It reminds me of a police state," Goering said. Hanson pointed out the changing condition of the campus, both in politics and social makeup. "Everybody knows this place is becoming more politically active, and there are a great deal more black students on campus. Both of these changes naturally bring with them problems, and I don't trust guns in that kind of atmosphere. I think we need preventive solutions that are more cooling in nature," said Hanson. The ASC discussed the issue for more than an hour, then defeated the resolution 14 to 7. Rick von Ende, Abilene, Tex., graduate student and ASC chairman, said he agreed with Goering's proposal, but said he had reservations. War games drills prove nuclear defense abilities VILSECK, Germany (UPI) U.S. military forces practicing the defense of Western Europe were bunched dangerously close in some areas but otherwise proved their ability to defend against nuclear attack, a war games commander said yesterday. "We did not in all cases have the total dispersion I would have liked to see," said Lt. Gen. Donald V. Bennett, commander of the U.S. Army's 7th Corps, in the war games just concluded in the Czechoslovak frontier. "Nevertheless, I was very pleased. They (the defensive force) demonstrated they have the total capacity to handle this problem." A total of 20,000 U.S. troops, most of them airlifted from the United States, participated in the week-long games on maneuver grounds near Vilseck in southern Germany, 25 miles from the border of Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia. Annual seminar slated The third annual Mid-Winter Pharmacy Extension Seminar is scheduled Feb. 9 at the Holiday Inn in Kansas City. The seminar, sponsored by KU, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association and the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy. Feb. 5 1969 KANSAN 17 The climax of the games was Monday when the aggressor force, representing an invading army from Eastern Europe, used simulated nuclear weapons in an attack. The defenders retaliated with a simulated nuclear counter-attack and armored assault that punctured the aggressor's lines. Umpires evaluated the strategy of individual commanders and the overall effectiveness of both sides. The maneuver was carried out by troops of the 24th Infantry Division, which has one brigade permanently stationed in Germany and two in Ft. Riley, Kansas. An earlier part of the maneuver involved testing the speed and efficiency with which the Kansas-based troops could be airlifted to Germany. Science grant to extend study The National Science Foundation has granted Anita White, professor of anthropology, $26,700 to finance a return trip to southern France to complete work on a three-year archeological project. Mrs. White will leave for France this summer to continue excavation of a civilization that flourished between 18,000 and 16,000 B.C. "I agree with Joe, and I'd like to see the campus try it, but if I had to go down to the railroad tracks after a guy with a gun, and I didn't have a gun, there would be no way anyone could get me down there," von Ende said. Other ASC business included the passage of a $250 bonus for John Hill. Official Bulletin Peace Corps Week. KU's annual Peace Corps week is Feb. 10-14. A visiting team from the Corps will be on campus to interview students, administer the examination, show films, lecture to classes and organized humanitarian information to interested parties. They will have an office in the Kansas Union. TODAY Foreign Students, Read the January and February International Campus newsletters for specific information as well. Do not have a copy; visit 228 St George Hall Lecture, 4:30 p.m. Consul General of India, K.F. Bajpal, Major Issues in India's Foreign Relations. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Carillon Recital, 7 p.m. Albert Gerken. Classical Film, 7 & 9 p.m. "The Caretaker." Dyche Audition. Caretaker." Dyche Auditorium. Inaugural Recital Series. James Moeser, organist. Swarthout Recital Hall. University Theatre. 8:20 p.m. "The Odd Couple." TOMORROW Poetry Hour W. W. S. Merwin his poetry Forum Room, Kansas Union University Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "The Odd Couple." SUA Special Film. 7 & 9. "Old Fashioned Way." Dyche Auditorium. Humanities Lecture. 8 p.m. "The Preamble of the Modern Civil Rights Movement." Dr. Donald R. McCoy, History Dept. Swarthout Retrial Hall. Grain inspector is key witness as second Addington trial begins WICHTIA (UPI) - Testimony by a state grain inspector was scheduled today in the second trial of former GOP gubernatorial aspirant William H. Addington on charges growing out of a grain shortage at one of the elevators he formerly operated. Nixon addresses labor employes WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon, in another apparent indication that he plans to dismantle the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), said yesterday he wanted to give the Labor Department prime responsibility for federal manpower training programs. "The primary responsibility for manpower belongs here," Nixon said during a visit to the department, where he addressed 175 senior employees. "We have some reorganization plans under consideration and we're going to give the department more responsibilities." "Nothing is more important than manpower as we try to diffuse the crisis in our cities," the President said. The President's cabinet-level Urban Affairs Council already has begun a study of what to do with the agency, created during the Johnson administration. Nixon is believed to be leaning toward its complete dismemberment. There are strong indications the administration wants to transfer antipoverty efforts now under the OEO's control to long established government departments. February 5-8; Curtain time: 8:20 p.m. (Matinee, 2:30) THE MURPHY HALL MAIN STAGE University Theatre Box Office Hours: 10-12 a.m.; 1-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; Sat., Feb. 8: 10-12 a.m. Tickets: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 With KU ID: $1.20, 60c, Free S. J. Reda, who headed the team that discovered an alleged shortage of 419,000 bushels of grain at the Addington elevator in Hutchinson late in 1965 was expected to be the initial witness. A jury of eight men and four women were sworn in Monday. In his opening statement, Sedgwick County attorney Keith Sanborn said the defendant "had knowingly and wilfully issued five false warehouse receipts for grain deliveries and had made statements in the receipts he knew were false." Addington's attorney, Shelly Graybill of Elkart, asked Judge James Noone to declare a mistrial, on grounds that the prosecutor had made immaterial remarks designed to prejudice the jury against his client. No one denied the motion. Addington's new trial was on 10 counts of making false entries in corporation books. A jury, which convicted on one count last May, was unable to agree on the other 10. Addington is free on bond pending the outcome of an appeal to the state Supreme Court. He was sentenced, following the first trial, to one to seven years imprisonment. 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