Photo by Steve Fritz Holding hands with a changed machine? The new change machine in the basement of Strong Hall has the features of always giving the correct change and having a very warm hand. The hand that startled students belongs to Thomas Breitenstein, St. Louis freshman, who is manning the change machine for his environmental design class. Receiving change is Patricia Rothe, Omaha graduate student. Students charge George with misusing campus pass Peter George is being charged by three law students for giving his campus pass and University parking permit to another first year law student. The charges are the "Abuse of University privilege and violation of Article 23, Section C, Sub-section 2, of the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Conduct," and will be brought before the new Judiciary which was formed March 15. Those filing the charges are: John Hampton, Lawrence second year law student, and third year law student David Kierst, Overland Park, and Ronald Newman, Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Kierst said he first noticed that a first year law student was parking on campus who was apparently in good physical condition and Kierst decided to look into the reason the student had the permits. At first Kierst said he was going to bring charges against the law student for illegally having the passes to park on campus, but after obtaining a policeman to ticket the vehicle and after checking the records, he discovered the passes had been issued to Peter George. Kierst said George had obtained a pass for a 1967 Ford and later one for a 1967 Fiat which George drives on campus everyday. Kierst said the pass for the Ford was given to the first year law student. Mar.18 1970 2 KANSAN "He used his committee work to obtain the permits and then fraudulently misused them," Kierst said. KU lost first draftee The first man drafted during the first peacetime conscription in the history of the United States was a KU graduate student. Elmo D. Hardy was drafted Oct. 29, 1940, when his draft registration number, 158, was the first drawn from a historic goldfish bowl by Henry L. Stimson, former secretary of war. The Alliance will reveal no specific information concerning its charges of salary skimming by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences until they have seen the authorities involved, said Bill Ebert, presidential candidate of that party. The Alliance charged in a position paper released Monday that graduate teaching assistants had not received salary increases appropriated for them by the state legislature because "these monies were skimmed off the top, most particularly by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and placed in a pool that has been used to augment some professorial salaries." Ebert said the source of the information contained in the position paper was a member of the administration who wishes to have his name withheld at this time. Ebert said the Alliance, regardless of the outcome of the election, planned to "confront" the principles involved in the salary skimming, but that there was no reason to release the specifics at this time. Ebert reveals little about charge San Francisco's cable cars are the oldest transportation system still in operation in the United States. "We will follow up when we have a plan of action to submit. I am absolutely certain that the accusations in the position paper are true. The facts were confirmed by a member of the administration before the position paper was printed." Ebert said. The presidential candidate said the skimming charges were easier to understand in percentage terms than in specific figures. He repeated the allegations of skimming contained in his party's position paper, saying graduate teaching assistants had never seen money appropriated for their salaries. Ebert refused to set a timetable for further action on the skimming charges by the Alliance leadership. THE CONCORD SHOP - Stretcher frames, - ready-made and parts - Artist's Canvasses - Artist's Canvasses 54" - 72" - 90" - Deliveries to Strong Hall, Tues. morning and Thurs. afternoon - Balsa Wood Bankmark Services McConnell Lumber 844 E. 13th VI 3-3877 Don't stay home this summer-travel and study creatively with A!A! SIX EXCITING WEEKS ABROAD All yours—at one, low, all- inclusive tuition cost. ROUND TRIP JET ❶ ALL LODGING ❷ ALL MEALS (EXCEPT BEVERAGES) ❸ ALL TRANSPORTATION WHILE ABROAD ❹ INSURANCE TWELVE VACATION SEMINARS SUCH EXTRAS AS: SMALL GROUPS TWO TO THREE STUDENTS TO A ROOM COLLEGE CREDITED IN CAMPUSES IN CATEGIES ON SITE CURSIONS SEMINARS COURSE SYLLABUS Classical Europe History of Life in Central Europ Argonaut - The Golden Age Russia - Past and Present History of Life in Central Europe **O Argonaut - The Golden Age** **O Orient - A Summer in Japan** Grant, A. Summer in Japan French Language and Civilization Seminar ◦ Seminar Language and Civilization Semina ◦ Spanish Language and Civilization Semina ◦ Italian Art and the Masters ◦ A Living Approach to Music ◦ English Drama and Literature College credit, too! Qualified students may receive college credit for AIA Vacation Seminars from Westminster College. American International Academy is the only fully accredited program of its kind. You will be an exciting fun-filled vacation—and get college credit, too! JOIN US IN EUROPE FOR SUMMER 1970 SEND FOR YOUR FREE CATALOGUE - * EDUCATORS * * Expense Paid Positions Available G R O U P A D V I S O R S Write AIA Today AIA AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY MIDWEST REGIONAL OFFICE P.O. Box 1636 DEPT-C IRVING, TEXAS 75065 University of Kansas Theatre presents The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Jay Allen Adopted from the novel by Muriel Spark MARCH 13,14,18,19,20 For Tickets Call UN 4-3982 Current registration card admits to $1.40 seat University Theatre --- Murphy Hall