Art moved from Spooner Officials and student volunteers were seen removing various art objects Tuesday afternoon from Spooner Art Museum. Bret Waller, director of the museum, said the pieces were being moved as a "precautionary measure." Waller said 50 to 75 art objects were moved to an undisclosed storage area. Students help at fire station While hundreds of students were carring water hoses into and art objects and furniture out of the Kansas Union in Monday night's fire, two other volunteers are rendering their services in a different but just as important way. Ron Olin, Lawrence sophomore and Bill Brubaker, Lawrence High School senior, voluntarily stayed at fire station no. 1, 745 Vermont Street, where they answered phone calls, filled oxygen packs and prepared fresh gloves for the firemen. They were under the direction of Brubaker's father, Clark Brubaker, who was a fireman for 22 years. Brubaker said he had been authorized by Lawrence's fire chief to take out the only truck left in the station if another emergency had arisen. His son and Olin, Brubaker said, were interested in learning to aid firemen on a regular volunteer basis. They already have the proper coats and boots and will soon begin training in how to fight fires, he said. Brubaker said there used to be an auxiliary for the purpose of aiding the fire department in emergencies. Attempts are beng made, he said, to form a similar group again. Art moved from Spooner Officials at the Spooner Art Museum were busily evacuating pieces of art Tuesday afternoon as a "precautionary step," said Bret Waller, director of the museum. "We're just trying to ease the concentration of valuables for insurance purposes," Waller said. Approximately 50 to 75 articles were moved by van to an undisclosed area by volunteer student helpers. "All the people helping are student guards or employees, who came in, although they were not scheduled to work. They have helped in the spirit similar to that displayed by the students helping with the fire." Waller said. Waller stressed that there was no indication that the museum was or would be threatened. "It is just a precaution," he said. The "precautionary step" was prompted as a result of Monday night's fire at the Kansas Union, along with repeated firebombings of Lawrence High School and incidents of arson reported in the last two weeks. Gun sales normal Many local stores have returned their firearm stock to the factories within the last ten days. Five stores sent the guns back, and they have not reported any increase in inquiries about guns. One store manager said he hasn't sold any guns because he raised the price to discourage sales. Several stores did report some increase in sales and that was of ammunition. selling guns to insure that his store wouldn't be the target of burglaries. Lawrence police said there have not been any gun registrations this week. One store owner said he wasn't The first coin authorized by the United States Congress was the 1787 Fugio cent, says the National Geographic. Beginning and the End of World War III Are Coming The Beginning: "Year of the Pig" and The end: "The War Game" See These Two Academy Award Films APRIL 29 - MAY 1 Astronauts disclose thoughts during flight Space Center, Houston (UPI) —Apollo 13 astronauts told the nation Tuesday night there were moments on their ill-fated moon flight when they feared they were doomed to die in space. Jama A. Lovell, Fred W. Haise and John L. Swigert described publicly for the first time in a televised news conference how they survived America's worst spaceflight emergency. Their spacecraft was shattered by an explosion eight days ago near the moon. The astronauts, with help from ground crews, surmounted critical oxygen, power and water problems in a 321,000-mile four-day return trip to earth. "When I looked out the window and saw venting, my concern was increasing all the time," Lovell said. "We were indeed in serious trouble. . . . I went from wonder-ing about the moon landing to wondering if we could get back home again." In the question-and-answer period in the telecast later, however, Lovell said he would be willing to go back to the moon if NASA officials "feel this crew should go back." Lovell said he didn't feel cheated that he had not landed on the moon on what he had planned to be his fourth and last space mission. In his opening remarks, Lovell said he "never regretted" his decision to have Swigert substitute for Thomas K. Mattingly, who was scrubbed two days before the mission when he was exposed to German measles. The measles episode led NASA's medical officials Tuesday to expand the number of diseases against which spacemen are immunized before future flights. The substitution of Swigert for Mattingly came the day before launch—a time when the crew usually takes things easy. Swigert was the man who wrote the rules about what to do when things go wrong in a moonship, and Lovell said his presence aboard Apollo 13 was a boon. Pollution-free car research to be UAW bargaining topic ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) —The 1.8 million-member United Auto Workers (UAW) served notice Tuesday it will make development of a pollution free car a bargaining issue in this year's contract talks. Union wage and fringe benefit demands expected to be the costliest in history also were drawn up. Delegates to the UAW convention, acting on the eve of Earth Day, adopted a resolution making the union the first to make pollution control a bargaining issue 6 KANSAN Apr. 22 1970 and then later almost unanimously approved a set of money goals submitted by UAW President Walter Reuther and other union leaders. Reuther said the union would strike if necessary to get "equity" for workers through "substantial" wage gains, $500 monthly pensions after 30 years of service, quarterly cost-of-living raises, year-end bonuses based on company profits and a dental care plan. The resolution passed earlier called for an enactment of "an environmental bill of rights" and said autos were responsible for 60 per cent of the air pollution. World Campus Afloat is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond. Again in the 1970-71 academic year, the accredited World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and its associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. Chapman College currently is accepting applications for both the fall and spring semesters. Preliminary applications also may be made for all future semesters. Fall semesters depart New York aboard the s.s. Ryndam for port stops in the Mediterranean and Latin America, ending in Los Angeles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles, stopping in Asia and Africa and ending at New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and mail the coupon below. You'll be able to talk to a World Campus Alfloat representative and former students: - Saturday, May 2, 2 p.m. - Plaza Inn - 45th & Main, Kansas City, Missouri Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach sketches ruins of once-buried city during World Campus Alloat visit to Pompeii. s. s. Ryndam is of Netherlands registry. WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Director of Student Selection Services Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666 Please send your catalog arid any other facts I need to know. SCHOOL INFORMATION Miss Mrs. Last Name First Initial Name of School Campus Address Street City State Zip Campus Phone ( ) Area Code HOME INFORMATION Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale Home Address Street City State Zip Home Phone (___) Area Code Until ___ into should be sent to campus ☐ home ☐ approx. date I am interested in □ Fall Spring □ 19___ □ I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD CAMPUS AFLOFT WCA 4/13 O