====PAGE-LEVEL METADATA==== University Daily Kansan Page 0076_1 from reel: L 748 (1970-02-03 to 1970-07-28) https://digital.lib.ku.edu/ku-udk/77852 Title: More Cheap Thrills Summary: Columnist Joe Naas critiques societal attitudes toward inflatable dolls and gender roles, questioning why men might prefer dolls over real relationships. Category: opinion Subjects: social commentary; consumer culture; gender roles Named Entities: Naas, Joe [columnist] Confidence: 0.9 Title: Hearing Voices— Summary: Readers respond to editorials about anti-war demonstrations and education funding, with one challenging anti-war protesters to address population control as a root cause of war. Category: opinion Subjects: anti-war movement; population control; social activism Named Entities: Fisher, Robert E. [sophomore]; Ridenour, Philip [law student]; Ridenour, Patricia [law student] Confidence: 0.85 Title: Where It's At Summary: Joe Naas humorously explores imaginary locations like Pepperland and Nirvana, referencing Jimi Hendrix's song 'Purple Haze' in a satirical piece about finding meaning in abstract concepts. Category: opinion Subjects: humor; satire; popular culture Named Entities: Naas, Joe [columnist]; Hendrix, Jimi [musician] Confidence: 0.9 Title: Waste? Summary: Brief news item about British garbage men winning a contest to collect and dispose of refuse in other countries. Category: informational content Subjects: environmental issues; waste management; recycling Confidence: 0.8 Title: It's Superbotch Summary: Editorial cartoon depicting the F-111 aircraft with caption criticizing its design flaws and cost overruns, highlighting military spending concerns. Category: editorial cartoon Subjects: military spending; defense technology; government waste Confidence: 0.9 Title: [classifieds] Category: classifieds Confidence: 0.9 Title: [advertisements] Category: advertisements Confidence: 0.9 Note: Descriptive metadata for this item has been generated in part using AI (artificial intelligence) technologies and may be incomplete, misleading, or inaccurate. Please contact the Kenneth Spencer Research Library with specific questions or concerns.