Z COMFORTABLE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 83rd Year, No.21 The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, September 26, 1972 1973 Model Cars Excite Local Dealers See story page 5 Vern Miller Talks Politics with Fellow Democrats . . . local senator nirvana Firgil Voulf confers with attorney general . . . Vern Vows More Drug Arrests By BOB LITCHFIELD Kansan Staff Writer Kansas Atty. Gen. Vern Miller reiterated Monday night his position on drug use, gambling and called on all Kansans to exercise their right to vote to determine what would be the law of the state and who would be the elected officials. Miller, who is seeking a second term on the Democratic ticket, spoke at a fundraising dinner for Douglas County Democratic candidates. Approximately 150 persons paid $24,638 for the concurrent official speak at the Douglas County D-4 H-Fairgrounds. "Law will be enforced in Kansas," Miller said. "If you don't like or agree with the law, the channels are open for change." MILLER Said he be believed that there should be no hypocrisy in law enforcement, and there should not doubt the consequences of breaking the law. Drug trafficking and drug abuse had received major emphasis, Miller said, and these areas would continue to be of major concern in the future. Miller was joined at the speaker's table by Virgil Foulst, Democratic candidate for sheffli, Jarvis Brink, Douglas County Democratic chairman; and Delbert Richardson, Miller's Douglas County campaign chairman. He told of a new technique being utilized by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation to detect methane. When KBI agents purchased drugs on the street, it was often hard to identify the drugs. The agency used As a result, the KBI now is sending its agents into the community several hours before the raid is to begin. Agents locate unidentified pushers and arrange a meeting, either inviting them to a party or leading them to a unsold sale. unknown when raids began often were able to avoid arrest. Miller said. The pushers are actually led to waiting kBI investigators where they are arrested [15]. MORE THAN a dozen arrests have been made in this fashion, Miller said, and the evidence is strong. Reminded that during his 1970 campaign he had promised "to jump into Lawrence with both feet," Miller said that the times had changed and that he knows of no place in Kansas where drugs are sold openly, as they were in Lawrence at that time. "We know that drugs are being sold in Kansas and substantial arrests will continue to be made," Miller said. "We are presently working on a number of cases, I can't say in which communities, but there will be more arrests." Miller pointed proudly to his record of 570 arrests for drug sales, 35 of these involving heroin, and said his office had yet to lose a heroin case in court. All heroin suppliers arrested have ended up in jail, he said. MILLER LASHED out at permissiveness and the declining moral fiber of Americans, and linked them to a rapidly growing respect for authority in this country. In 96 of every 100 burglaries in this country the thefts get off scot-free, Miller said, and he laid the blame on "a businessman who went to the breakdown of the machinery of justice. Nixon Urges Quick Reform On World Money System WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon, in a surprise announcement, said Monday that the United States was ready to lay reform proposals on the table, and he called for an immediate start on his plan to make world's monetary system and trade rules. "The time has come for action across the entire front of international economic pressure." In 2014 innovation International Monetary Fund and the World Bank at the opening of their Nixon blunted foreign criticism that the United States had dragged its foot on the treason clause in the Constitution. Secretary of the Treasury George Shultz would present "a number of proposals" at a luncheon later that year. A spokesman for the U.S. delegation said Shultz would not offer a complete or comprehensive plan but would offer a more flexible approach to go beyond mere statements of prudence. The proposals represent "the best thinking of my economic advisers," Nixon said. "I comment them to you for careful consideration." In his unusual appearance before the governing boards of the global financial agencies, Nixon emphasized that the monetary talks be accompanied by the attempt to eliminate trade barriers and that they should power to adjust the value of the dollar, as other countries change the exchange of their currencies. "In turn, we shall look to our friends for evidence of similar rejection of isolationism in economic and political affairs," Nixon said in a sentence clearly addressed to the European Common Market, which has been creating common standards for fighting a bloc of trade preferences with other countries of Europe and Africa. "We shall press for a more equitable and open world of trade," Nixon pledged. "We shall meet competition rather than run away from it. Nixon gave no clue to what method Shultz would propose for giving the United States a means of adjusting the dollar's value since all non-Communist currencies are now in circulation, and a standard it is not possible for the United States to move as other countries do to correct a payments imbalance by a currency devaluation. American officials may grow up or permitting small and possibly more free-shall exchange rates. The President also had a sentence to placate the AFL-CIO and others who have accused U.S. multinational corporations of closing production lines at home and setting up plants abroad. The U.S. companies argue they must set up foreign subsidiaries because they cannot penetrate foreign markets with exports. *We shall be a simultianational training agency be a simultianational training agency. "The fear of crime that Americans now live with is the most damaging aspect of the crime increase," he said. "It 'colors their attitudes towards civil liberties and acts as a backdoor to community involvement and understanding." Miller quoted the Pennsylvania Chief Justice who wrote that Americans must "stop worshipping man and return to the worship of God," and urged a change in the policy of codling criminals by the courts. U.S. Calls for Talks On World Terrorism UNITED NATIONS (AP)—The United States has called on the United Nations to convene a global conference by early next month, clamping down on international terrorism. While Secretary of State William P. Rogers was submitting a U.S. proposed treaty to the 132-nation General Assembly on Monday, President Nixon also unintentionally urgency by establishing a special Council Committee to Combat Terrorism. Nixon, in Washington, named Rogers to head the Cabinet group. It will coordinate American antiterrorist efforts domestically and abroad Rogers told the U.N. assembly that criminal violence against innocent persons is tearing "the very fabric of international order." U. S. Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett Jr. begin work on a treaty immediately. U. S. DIPLOMATS said the main effect of the treaty would be to bring about extradition of alleged offenders to the country where their crime was committee or staff prosecution by the country which holds them. The treaty conference plan was part of an eight-point resolution Rogers asked the U.N. to adopt as "decisive action to suppress these demented acts of terrorism." They also could be extradited to the country against whom the crime was Initial reaction to the secretary's half-hour presentation, in his annual policy speech at the General Assembly opening debate, was limited. Britain's foreign secretary, Sir Alec Douglas-Houston, said "The subject has to be dealt with" but he deferred further pending study of the U.S. proposals. Andrei A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union Chalmers Will Direct Chicago Art Institute E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., former chancellor, has been named director of the Art Institute of Chicago. He was elected by the institute's board of trustees. Chalmer will assume the duties of the position Oct. 1, the institute said. He succeeds Charles C. Cunningham, who resigned Aug. 31 to become chief curator at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Willamstown, Mass. Chalmers will be the chief administrator for the institute's art museum, the institute's School of Art, the Goodman and the Goodman Theatre School of Drama. "I'm delighted that the art institute has chosen to use the superb administrative abilities of Larry Chalmers," Acting Canceller Raymond Nichols said. Chalmers could not be reached Monday. He was in Chicago for the trustees' meeting, then returned late Monday to his parents' home in Womissim. Pa. "This is a top position with a very prestigious institution. I understand that they are probably the top institution of art in the country." Nichols said Chalmers probably would resign his position as professor of mathematics at the University. Nichols said the institute had contacted Chalmers before he resigned as chancellor Aug. 19. The position, Nichols said, in his office was all-important and administration and fundraising. Jess Stewart, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, said Monday that he had been an assistant judge in the county. "I'm delighted to hear he got it," Stewart said. "He asked to use my name as a reference, so I was in touch with the trustees." Chalmers was to receive $10,000 for the six months. Stewart said at the meeting that he would receive the amount even if he received another position during the six months. Chalmer's the appointment and six mon- tain leave of absence at their Sept. 16 retirement. said he would have to study the U.S. offering "thoroughly." THE TERRORISM QUESTION—the highlight of general debate so far—is contentious because various Arab, African and Asian governments think it is aimed against liberation and anticolonial causes they support. Much international terrorism is politically motivated, and there is disagreement over how to define deeds as different from ordinary crimes. committed by foreigners in a country which is not their political target. Rogers sounded the law-and-order theme in addressing the diplomats. He recalled the Munich massacre of the Olympians by Arab extremists and other terrorists. "In five years 27 diplomats from 11 countries have been kidnapped and three assassinated. In New York, Arab and American have been threatened," Rogers said. Faculty Parking Rules Relatively Easy Here By DON JEFFERSON Kansan Staff Writer The University of Kansas has one of the most lenient enforcement programs in the Big Eight for faculty and staff parking violators. Although the faculty and staff are billed for parking tickets, the University has $25,000 in back fines attributable to them, according to John Thomas, director of KU. A second charge is an amount he said, is owed by faculty and staff still emplaced at the University. Thomas said that fines against an automobile had to be "excessive" before the car would be towed. The only other means available to his office of enforcement against faculty and staff is the denial of a parking permit, he said. "The faculty and staff on campus generally do pay their bills, however," he Theresa cited a lack of manpower and a large number of excessive violators, students in need of the cause a major problem, and said they were there year after about 1500 atomosucces on the tow list, the department was able to tow only an average of four or five cars a "I think the traffic regulations as they are now do have the teeth if I had the brakes." ENFORCEMENT of regulations at other Big Eight schools is tighter, however. At the University of Colorado, a violator with three unpaid tickets is automatically tucked, according to Mary Christman at the CU Police Department Parking fines are taken out of the faculty and staff paychecks each month at the University of Missouri, a campus police spokesman said. At Iowa State University, faculty and staff have parking fines automatically deducted from their July paychecks, said Dr. William Maiman at the ISU Police and Traffic Control. When told that KU invoked no such sanction against faculty and staff, Toy commented, "The faculty and staff are no better than the students are." Sgt. Frank Toy of Kansas State University Traffic and Security said that at K-State faculty and staff paychecks will withhold until parking fines were paid The University of Oklahoma, the University of Nebraska and Oklahoma State University also have stricter towing regulations than KU. Students at all big Eight schools who have unpaid parking fines are unable to enroll, receive grades, obtain a transcript, or be graduated. Keith Nitcher, vice cchancellor for business affairs, said Monday night that he could see no way in which the University can improve its academic programs or reduce faculty or staff paychecks. "We have no authority to make deductions other than those provided by law, he said. "And I think we'd have an illegal problem in withholding checks." StudEx to Name Searcher Today By BOB SIMISON Kansan Staff Writer The Lawrence campus member of the Chancellor Search Committee has been selected, but the name will not be announced until later today. The Student Executive Committee (StudEx) made its choice from 25 applicants after 6½ hours of interviews and a half-hour of deliberation Monday. John House, StudEx chairman, said he would announce the committee's decision after he contacted the Kansas Board of Regents today. The reegents commissioned a Search Committee of 12 members at its meeting Sept. 16. Of the four students, two will be the student president and vice president, Dave Dillon and Katy Allen, one will be the assistant masas and one from the Kansas City campus. House said he expected that the Kansas City student would be selected soon by a ballroom dance team. The seven StudEx officers, after entering their marathon schedule a half hour at 4:30 p.m., interviewed applicants for about 15 minutes each and finished by 10:30 p.m. The decision was made by 11 p.m. APPLICANTS were asked to outline the qualities they thought a good chancellor would need and the directions they thought the University should take. Several students said they would look for qualities they liked in E. Laures Chalmers Jr., chancellor for three years until August. "I liked Larry's openness with students," Kenneth E. Harton, Iola senior, said. "This is important to the University's image in the state. If the kids are on his side, then the people will think he can't be all bad." Others stressed organizational ability, sensitivity to the needs of students and faculty and progressive ideas about education. "He has to be an organizer since the University is a corporation that involves 20,000 people," Mary Ward, Leawood special student, said. "He has to be able to listen, but listen with discretion because there are so many groups ask for him. "And he must have an ability to look into the future. The University tends to take care of right now and kind of stumbles from problem to problem. Tanaka's remark came at a glittering Tanaka, Chou See Pact Ending Past Differences PEKING (AP) - Prime Minister Kaukel Tanaka expressed Japan's regret and repentance Monday for past aggression against China and joined Premier Chou En-lai in predicting total agreement in the talks to normalize long-strained relations. Tanaka used the words "profound self-examination" to express Japan's feeling about half a century of Japanese military strategy, which left China broken and exhausted. banquet in the. Great Hall of the People at the end of the first day of his six-day state visit, expected to establish diplomatic relations between Peking and Tokyo and sever Japan's 22-year-old diplomatic links with the nationalist Chinese on Taiwan. The 74-year-old Chou touched briefly on Japanese militarism in his toast but said, "the past not forgotten is a guide for the future" and added that "the Chinese war effort has been the bread for very few militariists and the broad masses of the Japanese people." Several students said they would like to see the University adopt more stringent degree requirements to upgrade the educational product. "HE HAS to be a politician, too. The University is not three inches above Kane$_{58}$, it's right there on the ground like the rest of the state." "I would like to get the students more engaged," she said. "The students grow, really, up." Jon Viets, Lawrence junior, said the University should become more of a junior-senior graduate student institution. He also suggested a limit on growth. Looking ahead means anticipating "The school has got to start to look ahead more," Ward said. "I 'm interested primarily in educational areas, but I would hate to see research neglected." problems more than planning aggressively, she said. The committee also asked the applicants whether they would consider recommending a woman or a member of a racial minority group to the Board of Regents for final selection. Most said they would, and on the candidate's qualifications. "WETHOUGHT it would tell something about the person," Ken Reeves, Shawnee sophomore and member of the committee, said. "It was more to see if they were open-minded than to say that's what we wanted." Another standard question was whether the applicant thought he could represent the company in a contest. "No one student is going to represent himself at the school." Thompson, Iod, Hood, Tex, junior, "Maybe we could make it a larger sub- committee of student-at-large to assist the students." StudEx hypothetically suggested open bearings. "We've really interviewed some fine people," Reeves said halfway through the interview session. "It's a shame we can't appoint more students." DEADLINE for applications by faculty members for the Campus Advisory Committee is 5 p.m. today in 223 Strong Hall. Rick Von Ende, executive secretary, said 45 faculty members had handed in forms by 5 p.m. Monday. A decision on the three Lawrence constituency made Thursday by the Fearn Council. The Executive Committee of the KU Alumni Association also still is looking for its two other alumni representatives. Dick Wintermote declined comment Monday night as to how many persons the committee had contacted. The committee met last Saturday and no decisions were made. William Hagman, Pittsburg, president of the KU Alumni Association, and Jordan L. Haines, Wichita, vice president, will serve along with the two other alumni.