ly-Saturday, July 26, 1980-Page 13 Reagan, Bush say campaign talks are friendly LOS ANGELES (AP) - George Bush, meeting with Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan, said yesterday he has no interest in trying to "redefine the Constitution" in developing the proper role for a vice president. Reagan compared the still evolving Reagan-Bush relationship "to president and executive vice president" in private business. BUSH SAID, "I'll have a lot to do" if Reagan has confidence in him. Reagan quickly offered, "He'll have a lot to do." Reagan predicted that President Car- ter would conduct a campaign of per- sonal attacks against him. "I expect the worst. I won't be surprised if there are personal attacks," he said. At a joint news conference following two days of campaign strategy sessions, Reagan and Bush both said the meetings were harmonious and that they expected to work together comfor- tably., REAGAN ALSO said he had no regrets about the negotiations last week to entire former President Gerald Ford to be his vice-presidential running mate. But Reagan sidestepped questions as to why a planned step-by- step summary of those negotiations will not be released by his campaign, saying he did not know whether there were any papers remaining from those discussions. "That's behind us," he said of the negotiations with Ford. "'I think there were great distortions and rumors that ran rampant for a while. From the very, first he (Ford) was uncomfortable with the idea." On another topic, Reagan said he would have no additional comment on President Carter's brother Billy's dealings with the Libyan government until a special congressional in- vestigation is completed. "You can't confine the relatives of elected officials not to have careers of their own," Reagan said. Reagan and Bush spoke only in general terms about what kind of strategy for the fall campaign may have been developed in their meetings. Supporting Anderson Actor Ed Asner from the television series, "Lou Grant," grips Independent presidential candidate John Anderson during a rally for Anderson in Los Angeles, Thursday. W i Waling quot as down; world-wdebanisgh BRIGHTON, England (AP) - The nations of the International Whaling Commission were negotiating lower annual catch quotas for some species yesterday, and many believe that all commercial whaling may be banned worldwide within five years, the U.S. representative to the commission reported. Earlier yesterday, a half-dozen "save-the-whale" activists staged a dramatic demonstration in black hoods and bloodstained white robes outside the IWC meeting site to protest the 24- nation commission's failure to approve a three-year prohibition on sperm whale hunting. THE PROTESTERS chained them- selves briefly to a sidewalk barrier out- side the conference hotel. Pinned to tlfeir robes were the flags of the six nations whose negative votes Thursday prevented approval of the sperm whale ban - Canada, Chile, Iceland, Japan, South Korea and the Soviet Union. Conservationists say the world's sperm whale population is threatened, but major whaling nations maintain there is no evidence of this. U.S. Whaling Commissioner Richard Frank, emerging from the quota negotiations of the IWC's technical committee yesterday, said it was "moving towards smaller quotas for the next year." BUT HE ADMITTED that in several instances the negotiators still were deadlocked after five days of tough bargaining. "There will be smaller quotas in minke and sperm whale hunting and in some of the other species, and the United States delegation is moving a proposal to ban the hunting of killer whales by factory ships, that is, pelagic (deep-sea) hunting of killer whales in the Southern Hemisphere." Conservationists accuse the Soviet Union of catching 850 killer whales by factory ship in the Southern Hemisphere this year, when the quotas supposedly allow only 24 killer whale landings. Frank said there was a general feeling that it was possible to phase down whale hunting so that, "while it still remains economically viable to continue whaling, it becomes less wor- thy for expansion, and not worthy of whaling at all ina few years' time." Carter allies tied to Anderson smear plot (Continued from Page l ) but federal statutes prohibiting use of pointees "are using their time to pass the civil service or federal office out election propaganda, I think the political purposes. American people ought to know about buildings for it," Anderson said. "Frankly, I'm a little surprised NEUMAN SAID the material ap- they're not more sophisticated about peared to be the same as a document how they get information out," Coyle prepared for state party leaders who said. came to Washington early last month At a news conference in San Diego, for a strategy session and pep talk from Anderson said the distribution of the the president. materials is evidence that Carter's He said it was intended as an "inter- campaign strategists were taking his nal document, not prepared for public own candidacy seriously. release," but conceded it should have He said the documents provide a carried the disclaimer statement that "very distorted picture of a voting appears on most campaign literature to record of almost 20 years in the House comply with federal law. He ,of Representatives." acknowledged "that did not occur" If Carter administration political ap- with the anti-Anderson paper. 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