wcdnccdc, cctcber 13, 1078 pc;;5 More qyestlosis raises . health tips: sprains ' A JW" Dy Larry Luiz Three assassination authorities disciisrd new questions Monday night concerning the ki!IL!s of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King. Donald Freed, Mark Lane and Jeff Cohen spoke in connection with the Union Program Council's symposium, Power and. Conspiracy in America: Who's in Control? Their presentation focused on shortcomings of the Varren Commission, which investigated JFK's assassination and questions that they said have not been answered. Freed, playwright" and author of the novel Executive Action, accused the federal government of secrecy concerning information about the Varren report. "That murder reached into every household in the land," he said. "For 12 years we have been deceived concerning the true facts about the assassination, but we can fiit the secrecy of the state because we have the right to know. ' Lane, an attorney and author, said he had been researching JFK's assassination "almost since the day it happened," and outlined some faults in the Ysrren report. The problems involved with the report, he said, are their methods of inquiry, their failure to question key witnesses , and their rejection of the possibility of a conspiracy. The main problem with the Varren report is what he called "the magic bullet theory." According to Lane, the Warren Cbrnnmsion concluded that three shots were fired by one gunman and one of. those shots killed Kennedy. Lane said the discrepancy arises because the report also said Kennedy was struck three times. Texas Gov. John ConnaEy once, and one' stray bullet was found, all from that lone gunman. Although Lane said he did not have a theory on who killed Kennedy, he said there was enough evidence to prove a conspiracy to kiO Kennedy. ' Lane said he recently received some new information, which convinced him a conspiracy was involved in the Kennedy killing. He held up a letter which he said contained testimony from a former Dallas policeman who said Jack Ruby was on the payroll of the Dallas Police Dept. two weeks before Kennedy was killed. Ruby shot Kennedy's accused killer, Lee Harvey Oswald. The reason this and other information concerning the Kennedy assassination has not been made public is A Wkite's ... la . 1 1 c ii entire sslcstiaa '44 Wm -J " ten 3:30 to 5:20. 12th&P m-f 10-10 -.1.10-6 books for young snd old. mm because the government has suppressed it, the public lacks the power to get the information, and' the national media accepted the Warren Commission's report as the final word," Lane said. To remedy that and renew the investigation, Lane started a group a year ago called the Citizens Committee of Inquiry, which now has more than 100 chapters in more than half the states. The main goal of the group, he said, is to urge the U.S. Congress to pass a resolution calling for a congressional inquiry into the King, Robert Kennedy and John Kennedy assassinations. The group is calling for a congressional investigation instead of doing it themselves', he said, because citizens, do not have the power, to subpoena witnesses or obtain government information. , In intramural season injuries such as sprains and strains frequently occur. A sprain is a stretching, overstretching or tearing of the ligaments that hold bones together at a joint. A strain refers to the stretching, over-stretching or tearing of ligaments or muscles. Symptoms of sprains and strains include: -Tenderness around the injury -Pain Swelling Disability . ' . , -Possible black and blue discoloration. " . Treatment of sprains and strains depends on the sever ity of the injury. 1121 sprains and strains may be taken care of without assistance, but moderate' ones wO heal faster with therapy. Severe sprains and strains need medi cal attention. Treatment includes: Apply ice at 20-min ute intervals for the first two or three days after the injury. Use an Ace or elastic wrap to reduce swelling. -Elevate the injury to reduce swelling and relieve discomfort. East Campus students given chance to decide new Union's programming East Campus students have a chance to decide what direction programming will take in the new Nebraska East Union. Suggestion boxes have been placed in C. Y. Thompson Library, Durr-Fedde residence halls and the Nebraska East Unk. oy the East Union Programming Task Force, according to junior Craig Hertel, a member of the task face, - Hertel said the task force was set up last spring to find what East Campus students want done with their student ' fees. .: ; -. . In the past, East Campus students have felt slighted, he said, because they didn't have the building space for speakers, films and meetings. "We have the facilities and we have the student, fees," Hertel said. "Now we have our chance. We just don't know what the students want." Student fees are paying for the $43 million building and its programs. T iift IfftH flSk WfctfBfeilJfcflflfejjWs-.'fc'flfc jWfc &"itfr R4i BfeBa.dR&.iefc .Bk RnfcBJa'-tt .8fc1"S"fe"8t C .. ... I ft mwympHwF GofclfatPfS o o o o Q O o Q & O O 1 & O & O o o O o o o f ii t i o o o i . OJrJDESILnESV AGILE CALCIILATOHS, CB HADSG3 STEHEOS k COmPOUEUTS PLEASE CHECK COX ITEf1 CSDIERED ACS 2Jt9 FC3 BASUS AK3 SSSTStS f I KEWLCTtJ I MCUID Write for our prices. SR-S3 ... .. rc-ia STi-Sft sa-siA . .. sa-ssA ... Tl-SS ... WAS S2SS. tm $tsa in S139 sua SALE smts S2l.tS S M.9S SSI.fS S.fS S -S St39.fS Absv pricn toclwi AC AytarCfsargar. Canvieg C. Md Ml tm ymr lactery warrMty. (CD CADII REG. SALE CRAIG 4181 SfSt t3LtS CRAIG 4tC2 tm S1MJS craig 4103 ....... tm sm.n CRAIG 4184 S2S9 S13.S JOiOSOH IZ!A ... JW sst.is n MIDLAND 80 S13S S t9.S MIOLAMO (23 tm S114.fS RIIOLAKDta ..... SSS S129.fS n sharp m . .... IM S M.fS n sharp tsa sin swt.ts (Add 34 for Crtdit Cart) Ordcnl r4 T-i TtriTTr" 7!MI"i r"? SALE SX-li.".J ........ STCJ Sw4 sx-:j $n S4 s-t 3 mn ssu SX-7.3 It7 -? tSJS S213 sx-s:s d sin SX-O SJ St49 lir n r.ihi iii pen rATM ri IT- PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED H UNLT nun FAST I 4MtatM CREDIT CARDS 221S3 V.' sound bnar. HZ SALE il-J 1.1 sri s::i t J u:j ju'J :? s::j . s;j5 ira K ) srj $:i- o 531 sa eqeoi"jaqee:ouse SC7 W. KSAVER AYE STATE COLLEGE. PA. 101 kf-it-pt jj:iM?--ar -Qjgr 'W''W Bt w "f V -W 4P O o t & O o o o o o o o o o o o o o a O u t o CI & ft o o o f t o o o o f o t i (i () t ) o n o o o o t) c o o c i C) o l o o o One question students can help decide, Hertel said, is what should be done with a room behind the North Forty Recreation Area on the first floor. The recreation area includes a bowling alley, billiards and table tennis tables, and pinball machines. - The room is being considered as an arts and crafts center or a darkroom, he said, but the task force would like more ideas. The task force includes student and faculty representa tives from the Colleges of Home Economics, Dentistry, Agriculture and Law. Student representatives from the Graduate Student Association and the Union Advisory Board also are on the force. Hertel said the task force will list the program ideas in a survey and send them to East Campus clubs and class rooms for evaluation. The completed surveys then will be compiled by the task force and recommendations made to the Nebraska Union Advisory Board for approval! m - u w 1 Judgment and Public Service ,,ir. " ' f - - ... IT MM! r r itwiik rm l f I Kk r mm y. Caii'i j-3 On pna -" o"wni4 and paid lor h klcCoUi-r tar Sca Ceiwtfcn