Shultz needs funds to run State Senator Reynolds Shultz of Lawrence will enter the race for the Republican nomination for governor this year if necessary campaign funds are pledged to him by April 15. "I've set an April 15 deadline," he said. "If I have the funds by then I'll announce I'm a candidate." Shultz has stated financing will be the deciding factor in his decision to enter the race. He estimated a "genuine, big-league campaign costs about $250,000 and the primary alone will cost nearly $100,000." "I've had some commitments made to me, but not enough," he said. Attorney General Kent Frizzell and Raymond J. Vanskiver, both of Wichita, and Rick Harmon, 1968 GOP nominee, have already announced for this year's nomination. student disorders, particularly at the University of Kansas. Shultz, 49, has gained attention through a tough stand against A farmer-businessman, he was re-elected to a four-year term in the Kansas Senate in 1968, his district including Douglas and Jefferson counties. He would not have to leave the Senate to seek election to the governor's office. In 1964 he first won election to the State Senate after he and incumbent Don Hults tied in the GOP primary voting and Shultz won in a drawing from a hat. Shultz is director of Farmland Industries. He and his wife, Donna, live in Lawrence and have two daughters and a son. He owns and operates 1,350 acres of land in Douglas and Jefferson counties, raising hogs, cattle, corn, wheat, soybeans and milo. He has held key posts in the State Senate, including chairman of the federal, state and local affairs committee. The senator is a Marine Corps veteran of World War II. Chalmers says innovations in education to mark'70s Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr, predicted in a speech last week that the seventies will be a decade of educational innovation forged by a new alliance between academic administrators and students. Chalmers related the same theme to the University of Kansas medical students in another speech last week. He predicted increased student participation "in the determination of objectives within areas of knowledge and within entire degree programs; in at least the social sciences and related professional schools, "there will be a complete blurring of the boundaries between the academic arena and the larger society; and "there will be a steady elimination of arbitrary blocks of time and arbitrary blocks of evaluation." Chalmers cited three changes he foresees for the seventies, and believes will be the most "dramatic and the most significant." Chalmers told the medical students "for the University, the marriage between the schools meant a more broadly based educational program, and greatly expanded research opportunities. Chalmers said, "I am firmly and irrevocably committed to one University." Chalmers said many issues have been raised in the last few years that have brought about the question of the relationship of the two institutions. The competition for limited financial resources "raises questions on both campuses, about whether each might fare better after a divorce," he said. Chalmers said he felt persons on both campuses did not share his sentiment concerning the oneness of the University His office could not personally handle the detailed interactions that should characterize the optimum relationship between the campuses, Chalmers said. The interaction must depend on students, in student government, between faculty members in faculty government, and between administrations for cooperation and coordination, he added. Speaking of student participation in the establishment of course objectives and procedures for obtaining these objectives, Chalmers said, "The faculty 12 KANSAN Mar. 31 1970 member must be able to persuade the student he has better materials to suggest. The faculty member must articulate course objectives, and explain why they are better than student-suggested alternatives." Chalmers said class periods and credit hour concepts must be removed. He suggested in their place should go statements of course objectives and careful measures of learning. Chalmers predicted students and faculty would work together as an alliance to accomplish these changes. "They (the faculty) would gladly make significant changes in their behavior if only the opportunity and the incentive to change were provided." Chalmers told the medical students that the students in government will be the trend for the seventies, Chalmers said extremist advocates disclaim a preference for co-optation involvement, stating they defend it solely on the grounds that the other forms will not work, "that is those who have the power will not yield to anything less than a greater power." Chalmers said some students have begun to talk of organizing into unions and approaching their problems with a collective bargaining stance, pitting the administrator and the faculty member as adversaries. "Strikes and collective bargaining are incompatible with the learning process," he said. Cash won't sing song for Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI)—Country singer Johnny Cash has told the White House he does not want to sing the controversial "Welfare Cadillac" at a social on April 17. Welfare and civil rights leaders protested the performance of the ballad which pokes fun at people on welfare and depicts a shiftless father who relies on "fool" taxpayers to buy a new Cadillac. Nixon had requested the song after hearing it on tape of country music at the White House. Huntsville was the first English- speaking community in Alabama. Mon. — Fri. 11:30 a.m. — 2 p.m. Complete Banquet & Meeting Room Facilities Luncheon Buffet $1.45 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — A U.S. attorney said Monday a federal grand jury studying a large oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico could turn into a massive investigation of all offshore oil drilling. Holiday Inn Gary Porteous, Innkeeper The grand jury convenes today to study charges by Interior Secretary Walter Hickel that Chevron Oil Co. violated offshore drilling regulations in at least 347 instances. 23rd & Iowa The slick which formed March 10 at the site of a Chevron oil platform in the gulf has grown into the largest oil pollution in history. U. S. Attorney Gerald Gallinghouse said the grand jury investigation could last at least three weeks. Oil slick sparks inquiry Rita Skaggs, Asst. Innkeeper "We will begin the hearing with witnesses of the United States government—the Interior Department and the U.S. Geological Survey," he said. Two of 'Seven bail out sixteen Bennie Davis, one of the "Sevenen," stood at the east entrance of the jail and shook hands with each freed prisoner as he emerged. "Then we will begin to call personnel and officials of the Chevron Oil Co—at least 20 witnesses over the next two to three weeks. CHICAGO (UPI)—Two members of the "Chicago Seven" returned to Cook County Jail Monday and bailed out 16 of their old jail mates. "These guys (the riot conspiracy trial defendants) said they would come back and get us but I didn't believe it," Sanders Nicholson, 40, said as he walked to freedom. "They did, and now I'm out. They're two beautiful people." "If the investigation broadens as we anticipate, we can expect to hear testimony from in excess of 100 witnesses." Davis charged that Warden Winston E. Moore ordered him out of the prison's record room with a threat to plant "a foot in your pants." Moore retorted that Davis is "a damn liar." Gallinghouse said Chevron has agreed to provide all records of an oil platform fire which started Feb. 10 and resulted in the massive slick. THERE ARE A DOZEN GREAT SHOE NAMES, BUT IN SANDALS CAN YOU THINK OF MORE THAN ONE? Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street reg. $5.99 Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over Troubled Water KIEF'S Records & Stereo Malls Shopping Ctr. $3.99