THE University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Monday, September 21, 1981 Vol. 92, No. 21 USPS 650-640 Miller ends his public career By STEVE ROBRAHN Staff Reporter The "Super Sheriff" has hung up his guns. He was, perhaps, the most famous Kansas Lawman since Wyatt Earp, but former Kansas Attorney General Vern Miller has opted for the relative calm of private legal practice. "I don't like to admit that I've 'mellowed' Miller said recently, "but there's really no question." MILLER'S LAW enforcement career, which was anything but mellow, spanned three decades and ended in January when he stepped down from his Sedwick County district attorney post. Between 1949 and 1975, Miller rose from a Wichita motorcycle cop to national prominence as a drug-busting state attorney general who sprung from car trunks to make arrests. Instead of train robbers and horse thieves sought by gun-slinging lawmen of frontier days, Miller's targets were protesters, doe smokers and drug pushers. his unorthodox and sometimes shocking style earned him the title of 'super sheriff,' but Miller never came up for it. He fulfilled his promise to "land in the middle of the drug-ridden hippie commune at Lawrence with both feet" when he was Kansas attorney general from 1791 to 1795. MILLER SAID he couldn't recall exactly how many raids he made in Lawrence during those years, which some people remember as a time of resentment and paranoia. He faced down a mob of anti-war protesters at the University of Kansas once during the early 70s and ordered arrests after demonstrators refused to clear the street. "Protesters had already burned the (Kansas) Union," Miller said, "when I got a call at home in Topeka that demonstrators had a street blocked." When he arrived, Miller said he told a beckling crowd to step off the street or be arrested. Lawrence and KU police wanted to know they had the backing of the state's chief law enforcer. If it meant fighting, we were ready to fight." Miller recalled. "If we hadn't acted, that boiling disturbance would have grown and more buildings could have been set on fire." POLICE STARTED making arrests when Miller gave the word. Although Miller's presence was felt strongly in Lawrence, elsewhere in Kansas he raided taverns and fraternal clubs for bingo and dancing, and hosted a copied liquor by the drink on airplanes and trans. The badge, the guns and a lawman's close brushes with death all are behind him now. Miller, $2, said he has given it all up for the sake of his family. 'There were so many times when I should Monday Morning have got it, but I didn't,'" he said in the style of an acting gunfighter. People have threatened to get even with Miller if they ever get a chance, he said, but most are stunned. "I'm sure there are people who intensely try to help me aid, and I don't have anyone who learns Gerald." Miller's yellow ranch-style home lies on 10 acres southeast of Wichita. He has a small red barn and corral behind the house for his children's pet donkey and horse. FOR INSURANCE, Miller keeps three Doberman pinschers as family pets, but he said they were also well-trained attack dogs. In the evenings, Miller can sometimes be seen riding a dirt bike with his 8-year-old son on a track beside a long gravel driveway leading to the home. "Private practice has been good," he said as he swept his arm proudly to call attention to a need for a more aggressive approach. Water skiing with his family and working out with a punching bag in the garage keeps him in shape. He said he liked country music and thought "I guess it's because I've seen so much better in real life," he said. "A movie or TV show has to be made that makes you feel more alive." television shows such as "Starsky and Hutch" were stupid. HIS WIFE, Paula, to whom he was married in 1975, said she hoped people who have threatened her husband would cool off and change their minds. More than six years have passed since Miller made his last raid in Lawrence, and although most of the people he arrested were "punks," he said, college campuses seem to have changed. "It appears to me that there's a different attitude and a different approach to scholastic opportunities on campuses now," he said. "When I was attorney general it was a period of new drug involvement and perhaps some resentment and turmoil about the Vietnam War." Miller and large bands of officers converged on college towns during the early morning hours Sometimes Miles' anti-drug posse would line the highway for more than a mile as it rolled into town. "I knew the general paranoia of the times," said Tim Miller, a KU student during the early 70s. "I'm sure there was a lot of toilet flushing (of drugs) going on then." RUMORS WOULD sometimes spread through Lawrence that Vern Miller would be coming that night but often the reports were false, said Miller, who is in relation to the attorney. "Your odds weren't really too bad," he said. "He would only come after 10 or 20 people when there must have been 10,000 (pot) smokers in town." Another former student, who asked not to be identified, said his life was disrupted after being arrested for possession of a small amount of marijuana during Miller's first raid in 1971. "He had his own idea of how to stop the hippie rest," the former student said. "It was crazy and I was not very happy with it." "It got so bad that I used to sit in bed at night fantasizing about blowing off caps." the drug Fald's off Akkesia college campuses probably cost Miller the 1974 governor's election. See MILLER page 10 Carlin discusses issues at party picnic Staff Reporter By JOE REBEIN One or two people pulled Carlin aside, to bend hand on personal issues, or to get his opinion on paper. Gov. Carlin's handsake was firm as he moved the new aquanimals into the searing cut old ones. The crowd, made up of prominent Douglas County Democrats, was a friendly one, but it was also anxious to see Carl re-establish the party's influence in the face of mounting Republican opposition. **CARLIN WAS the featured speaker at the 1981 Democratics Fall Premie on the Viland flower market.** "We share much in common," Carlin said. He stood in front of a portable podium at an old store on the corner where he worked. BEYOND THE podium was the old brick school house where his wife karen attended second through eight grades. The horse stalls and refreshment stands in the fairground were "We both believe in higher education and the high priority it has in Douglas County and the region," she said. Carlin said President Reagan was going to be challenged on his new budget proposals. "It will be a challenge to him in a political sense," he said. "It would have been better if he were born." session when a great euphoria existed about the victory in Congress. Now there has been time to see some response from his cuts especially Wall Street's reaction. "There is a difference between projected action and reality. "A negative response from the public will complicate things for the president's new proposals." Carlin said Kansas was not in the same position as other states were because of the "Kansas is fortunate because we can manage despite the cuts. We aren't in the position that a lot of other states are cut, squabbling for money." Carlin also focused on the severance tax, a tax he lobbed heavily for last year. "The severance tax is not a philosophic issue." In this 1970 photo, Vern Miller and Johnnie Darr, current Sedgwick County sheriff, examine drug paraphernalia seized during a drug raid. Miller has continued his fight against drugs and alcohol during the 70s. Board of Regents approve Med Center tuition increase By LISA MASSOTH Staff Reporter Poor students with medical school aspirations, think twice. The Kansas Board of Regents approved a 22 event incentive fundation for the school of Medical Education. And just as one area of the Med Center is being reached, has fallen victim to President Reagan's attacks. THE REGENTS also discussed possible cutting of federally funded grants and other programs at both the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses. This double blow comes at the heels of many problems the Med Center has been experiencing. Its billing system has been dubbed antique and inadequate, it is having problems paying its utility bills and employee problems plagued the Med Center last spring. The 22 percent tuition hire is to help cover a projected $534,000 shortfall at the Med Center in the fiscal year 1982, and applies only to students in the School of Medicine. TUTITION for in-state students will increase from $3,000 to $3,660 a year for students in a four-year curriculum. Out-of-state students will now pay $7,320, instead of $6,000. However, Richard Von Ende, executive secretary of the University, said Friday that 75 percent of the students in the School of Medicine received state-funded, full-ride scholarships, and about another 13 percent receive Department of Defense or some other scholarship. In addition, many of the students receive a $500-a-month living stipend, with the stipulation that they will practice medicine in a critically underserved area of Kansas. "About 90 percent of the students are on some kind of full ride," Von Ende said. TE scholarships have been adjusted See REGENTS page 5 Class pre-enrollment may be possible for 1983 Staff Reporter By SHARON APPELBAUM Staff Reporter University officials are hesitantly predicting that KU students will pre-encall in the fall of 1982. If Chancellor Gene A. Budig has his way, students will sign up for classes next November An early enrollment committee will meet for the first time this week to begin compiling a report. ROBERT COBB, executive vice chancellor, agreed that the 1982 date was possible, but added yesterday, "to make a conclusion on a lot of ifs is very problematic." The committee, which Cobb appointed last week, must determine whether the University should have early enrollment, and if so, the type of system, costs, and a time line. to know what we're doing and how we're doing it," said Richard Mann, director of institutional research and the convener of the six-member committee. He added that no matter the committee decided, the Allen Field House enrollment system would have to change soon. He said that in the next few years the machines used to process enrollment cards would be obsolete and vendors would stop supplying them. But Mann predicted that the committee would pass by the question of keeping fall enrollment and go on to consider the best method for early enrolment. AS AN ALTERNATIVE, the University could use mark search entries similar to answer sheets "In three to five years we'll have to get out of it," he said. "Before we can state a specific date, we have committee must examine changed costs and improved technology. The committee's principal task is to update an early enrollment study from 1979. Cobb said the The committee must also decide between the two systems presented in the report. Under that method, a student brings an adviser-approved schedule to an operator at a computer terminal. The operator works with the student to type out a schedule on the computer. The 1979 committee, of which Mann was a member, favored a computer terminal system that could be used for the exchange of data. MANN SAID the computer could signal which sections were closed, so the student could switch The University of Kansas now uses this system for incoming freshmen who pre-enroll in the "At the end, he just walks to the end of the line and gets his schedule printed out." Mann said. The other system under consideration requires all students to bring in a schedule at the same time, along with two or three alternative classes. The schedules are fed into a computer that comes up with a schedule as close as possible to the desired output. BOTH SYSTEMS give certain students higher priority in getting classes, as the letter schedule is made up of them. Mann said the computer for the batch system would be programmed to allow certain students into certain classes first. For example, business maiors would fill Business 240 classes first. Both systems would require more advising, Mann said. Enrollment would last at least four weeks, allowing more time for students to visit their advisers. Both systems would accept only those schedules inscribed with an adviser's signature. IN 94-12 the actual cost was $60,000 per semester, but Minn predicted the actual cost would be lower. For example, the cost of paying operators was estimated at $37,750, based on one operation every 6.3 minutes. But Mann said the enrollment rate at Iowa was one enrollment every three minutes, so the cost of operators' salaries could be cut in half. Cost would also change if terminals were bought instead of leased. The 1979 report said purchased terminals would be cost-effective if they lasted three years. The 1979 report suggested setting up a computer terminal room where students could prepare for their examinations. But Cobb asked the new committee to look into borrowing the terminals the University already owns. The batch system would not require the 15-20 terminals, but Mann said the University would have to invest in a new system. MARK MADONALD SKRIMA Darin Corkin, Topeka, put finishing touches on his father's 1857 Chevrolet Nomad on the classic car show held yesterday at the Mall's Shopping Center, 32d St. Collectors bring four-wheeled history to Sunday classic Chevy exhibition Bv PAM ALLOWAY Staff Reporter Oh for the days of duck tail haircuts and bobby socks, "Teen Angel!" on the radio and a '57 Chevy. More than 250 people saw relics of those good old days as they admired an assorted collection of '56, '57 and '57 classic Chevys cars and trucks yesterday at the Malls Shopping Center. THE SHOW was sponsored by the Kaw Valley Classic Club of Lawrence. A pair of brown fuzzy dice hung from the rearview mirror of a shiny, black 57 BelAir station wagon that was one of 21 classics featured at the show. "The real definition of a classic is a car that was very popular when it was new," said Orval Engling, Lawrence resident and one of the founders of Chevy. "The popularity of these Chevys has followed it clear up to today. Now people are thinking, 'Why didn't I keep that old car?' Engling entered a restored '55 Chevy with a trailer in the show. N nine trophies were awarded according to the year and classification of the car. The cars were divided into modified, restored or original classes. Trucks were in a separate category. The local show provided a chance for competition locally and enabled people to see how their cars ranked with others, said David Bunker, president of the club. THOSE CARS classified as originals have all their original parts and are "few and far between," said Walt Spencer, a member of the Lawrence club for 2% years. He said restored cars were in their original condition except for necessary repairs. Cars are placed in the modified division if they have had a broken wheel or other damage that way been customized by their owners, he said. ts came from all over the area, but a SEE CARS page 5 Weather The National Weather Service in Topeka forecasts temperatures in the upper 80s today and partly cloudy skies with a chance of rain this evening. The weather will be in the upper 80s. Winds today and tonight will be out of the south at 5 to 15 mph. Tomorrow's temperatures will be in the upper 80s again, with a low in the 50s.