🌤️ 🌤️ 🌤️ CLOUDY THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 83rd Year. No.131 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Kansas Relays Section 3 Friday, April 20, 1973 Kansas Staff Photo by PHIC BRANDTETT Chancellor Raymond Nichols Reflects on 43 Years at KU He says in interview (see page 6) he wants to be remembered as aide to chancellors Nichols Looks to Future By ERIC MEYER Kansan Staff Writer Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Thursday that the University of Kansas was the first to establish a new university. he read to excellence: Nichols, his farewell state of the university speech to the University Senate, sad 1973 had been a good year for the University. Nichols pointed to the fiscal 1974 budget enacted by the legislature as a confirmation of better future support for the University. The report represented a significant improvement in funding. "In some areas," he said, "results have been satisfactory. In others, our achievements have not measured up to our expectations overall. I believe we have a credit balance." After Nichols' speech, the Senate presented a plaque to him in appreciation of his efforts. "Student life and involvement have changed significantly from three years ago, when "Demonstration and negative activism are gone, I hope. Motivation is directed principally to personal educational progress and individual development." Nichols said that this did not mean students had become apathetic but that they were still learning. One of the challenges for KU during 1973 was the readjustment to lower enrollment, he said. Enrollment underran expectations by about 600 last fall and forced a cutback of 25.5 teaching and 7.8 classified positions, Nichols said. He went on to say that ex-lower enrollments had been included "not without some pain" in next year's budget. Nichols this challenge was met by the legislature, which granted supplemental appropriations to cover nearly 75 per cent of tuition that resulted from lower tuition collections. "The United States will remove, permanently deactivate or destroy all the mines in the territorial waters, ports, and coasts of North Vietnam as soon as this agreement goes into effect." U. S. officials acknowledged these were violations, but they charged that the North Vietnam allies started the trouble by choosing the actions of the settlement they would observe. By suspending the mine-sweeping operations, the United States is no longer complying with Article 2 of the Paris agreement, which states: The chancellor said the University also had to readjust to the prospective reduction plan. That provision pledges that "the United States will contribute to healing the wounds of war and to postwar reconstruction of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam." Government officials would not say whether the American actions, or even the alleged continuous violations by Hanoi, violated the agreement was in imminent leopardy. Peace Accord Broken; Delegate Called Home "The two actions Thursday are similar to the bombing of Lace this week," one source said. "They are efforts to convince the Community that we have given up on the agreement." WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States has stopped observing two key provisions of the Vietnam cease-fire agreement, saying it would require to live up to all parts of the settlement. In separate announcements Thursday, the Pentagon and the State Department said that mine-clearing operations by the U.S. Navy in North Vietnamese waters had been halted and that the chief American delegate to a joint U.S.-North Vietnamese economic commission, Maurice Williams, had been called home from Paris. By pulling Williams out of the Paris talks on an American economic aid program, the United States halted its effort at carrying out 21 of the Jan. 27 ceasefire agreement. "All of us," Nichols said, "can adjust to State Department spokesman Charles Bray said that whether the agreement could be saved "is entirely a function of the actions of the other side."1 North Vietnam reacted angrily to the halt of the mine sweep. It was Haoni that the mine disclosed the suspension had begun and Pentagon confirmed this later in the day. This official expressed the hope that Hanoi would realize it had tested President Nixon's will to its limit and that it would begin full observance. reduced financing if given aample warning. But we had no fair notice. There remains the cold, hard fact that the decision (to cut the company) was based on and secret on the part of the President." If Hanoi and its allies in the rest of Indochina continue violations, the United States will intervene. Nichols urged Congress to spread the reduction of federal support over a period of Nichols said the lack of enrollment growth, coupled with federal cutbacks, had required the University to re-evaluate its position on faculty tenure. "If we continue our present patterns of awarding tenure," he said, "we will soon find ourselves 'tenured in' and, consequently, 'tenured out.' We need departments, with little chance to move in See NICHOLS Page 3 Kleindienst Sidesteps Watergate Inquiry WASHINGTON (AP)--Atty. Richard Klanderdle昂曼诞示. Thursday he had withdrawn from the Watergate integra because it involved friends and associates. His announcement followed reports that President Nixon's campaign deputy, Jeb Mugler, had accused John Mitchell and Sen. Robert D. McCain of planning the Democratic party bugging. Peter Wolf, a Washington attorney, filed in court papers saying that an unidentified man took eight cardboard boxes of documents, and buried them at Watergate bugging, from the White House complex before the Federal Bureau of Investigation had a chance to examine the evidence. The charge that Mitchell and Dean help with the Watergate planning was attributed to Magruder, formerly the No.2 man in the Nixon campaign organization. Dean, the President's official lawyer, did not directly respond but told newsmen he would not become a scapegoat in the case. The apparent apprehension surprised the White House. The allegations were published in Thursday's Washington Post. Mitchell carllen Kleindiern, who replaced Mitchell as attorney general when Mitchell became Nixon's 1972 campaign director, said he had gone over to Atty. Atten. Henry Peterton. "It would be entirely inappropriate for me to exercise control over the sensitive matters being developed by the Department of Justice," the attorney general said. Sources close to the Senate's Watergate investigation said the Justice Department planned to seek grand jury indictments of Nixon administration officials and employees. Indictments against four of the eight are likely to be handed down next week by a federal grand jury, sources said. They said that the Justice Department planned to ask for perury charges against Magruder and one of the Watergate conspirators. The Washington Post reported that Magruder told federal investigators he would have been approved and helped plan the investigation. Democratic headquarters and later arranged to buy the silence of the seven convicted Watergate conspirators. Kleindienst he withdrew from the investigation the following day. Dean's statement said that he had refrained from previous comment on charges of his involvement in the political campaign and that he would continue to do so hereafter. "Some may hope or think that I will become a scapegoat in the Watergate case," he said. "Anyone who believes this does not know me, know the true facts, nor understand our system of justice. I believe that the case will be fully and justly handled by the grand jury and the Ervin select committee." Wolf said in papers filed in federal court Thursday he represented a former employee of the reelection committee who picked Michael Anderson for his role in Building, adjacent to the White House, the day after the break-in at the Watergate office building. He said the cartons included materials from the office of E. Howard Hunt, one of the seven convicted Watergate conspirators who had worked as a consultant at the White House. Hunt's desk and safe were opened in the early hours of April to a section with the break-in. The contents were held for a week by Dean before Dean turned them over to the FBL. Wolf said his client "had been asked to pick up the cartons at the Executive Office Building; that a pass would be waiting for him at the guard entrance, that no questions would be asked when the cartons were removed from the building and none were." The lawyer asked for a court order that he not be required to reveal the name of his client to the federal grand jury in watering Watereg and other political espionage. Senate Sends Budget Back for Revisions By ALAN McCOY Kansan Staff Writer After nearly five hours of debate the Student Senate voted to send the proposed budget back to the Finance and Auditing committee for re-evaluation and consideration. The Senate also passed a bill that would give the Student Executive Committee the power to allocate more than 60 per cent of the contingency balance of the 1973 budget to groups, organizations or corporations designated by the Student Senate. THE SENATE will allocate the money to these groups in order of priority until the 60 per cent level is reached or until the Senate feels an appropriate level has been reached. Most of the controversy over the budget has centered on funding the campus The Senate passed a bill Wednesday that would combine those regulations into one. bulk allocation. The Senate then found out that the financial could not go into effect until fiscal 1972. That bill, Bill NO. 10, was tabled Wednesday night after two roll call votes. THE SUBSTITUTE proposal called for the allocation of 75 cents a student to be given to each school council each semester for distribution to activities related to that school. In addition, there would be incentives to approved organizations by line items. The main proponents of the substitute班 were Tuck Duncan, Wilmette, Ill., senior; Kathy Allen, Topeka junior; Leroy Meycock, topical student; and Evan Olson, Salina intro. The meeting adjourned about 11:30 p.m., soon after some of the student senators had spoken. A hearing date for the Finance and Audit Committee's budget proposal was not held. Dykes' Style Progressive, Inspiring Editor's Note: Chancellor Arch R. Dykes of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, soon to become chancellor of the University of Michigan, is the executive of the Kansan to accompany him on a speaking junt Wednesday. Dykes arrived here Thursday with his family for a visit. By BOB SIMISON Kansan Staff Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Archie Dykes had a catch in his throat all day Wednesday. You couldn't tell it by listening to him, but that was the problem he coughed that was the problem. Dykes had every right to have a catch in his throat that day. After all, he was making his first visit in two years to his alma mater, Tennessee State University in Johnson City. And nearly everyone he saw told him how sorry they had been last week to learn that Dykes had agreed to leave the chancellorship of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville to assume a similar position at the University of Kansas. That little catch, which made Dykes reach several times for a glass of water on the speaker's rostrum at East Tennessee State, was the only evidence of any strain produced by Dykes' tremendous output of energy. That catch in Dykes' throat, however, was not brought on by nostalgia. He's not that kind of man. Associates of Dykes who he works 16 or 18 hours a day, starting at 7 a.m. After the trip to Johnson City Wednesday, Dykes returned home and began some paperwork left undone in his absence. The more likely explanation is Dykes' own. He had carried an exceptionally heavy speaking load recently, he said, and his voice had been able to do nothing for the aliment. The only reason Dykes was able to escape his duties to come to KU for the weekend, he said, was that UK dismisses classes for Good Friday. Etk soon, so student leaders at See DYKES Page 7 Chancellor Search Cost $14,000 BvGARYISAACSON JOHN PELICKSON Kansan Staff Writer Following the first meeting the committee issued a call for nominations. According to Rick von Ende, acting executive secretary and secretary for the committee, news media, the campus mail and the Alumni Association were used for the nomination call. The advisory committee had its initial meeting Oct. 15, 1972, to get acquainted and to elect a chairman. The committee, which was composed of four students, four faculty members and four alumni, elected Jacob Klienberg, professor of chemistry, chairman. The selection of Archie Dykes last Thursday as the 13th chancellor of the University of Kansas was the end result of a six-month, $14,000 search conducted by the Campus Advisory Committee and the Kansas Board of Recents. KU was left without a chancellor when E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. resigned in August 1972 following a divorce. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary for the University under five chancellors, was appointed acting chancellor by the Regents. The Regens removed the word "acting" from Nichols' title in December 1972. "We also actively sought nominations from organizations such as the Ford and Rockefeller foundations and the Association of Land Grant Colleges." Von Erda said. The committee received approximately 150 nominations. As the flow of nominations increased, Von Ende said, he started organizing data on each nominee from material that was sent in with the committee's biographical sources such as Who'S Who. Four subcommittees were formed to handle the processing of the nominees. The subcommittees were composed of one alumni member and one faculty member, and one alumna member. During the November and December This credential screening process continued until Jan. 15 when the committee met and reduced the number of nominees to 30. Von Ende said before this meeting that many of the nominees were women and minority group members. committee meetings, Von Ende said that the subcommittees met separately at each meeting to decide which nominees were to be recommended for further consideration. Each subcommittee's recommendations were either approved or, in cases of negative recommendations, overridden by the full committee, Von Ende said. Von Ende said that he the called 30 remaining nominees after the Jan. 15 meeting to set up appointments for interviews in Washington, Dallas, San Francisco and Chicago. He said that these choices were chosen for their regional location. A traveling subcommittee composed of kleimer associates associate SCHANE LUNG PAPER Kansas Photo by ROB SIMISO Chancellor Archie Dykes Works Late at Tennessee After speaking trip, Dykes catches on paper work at the office.