2 University Daily Kansan Fridav. October 21, 1977 West German targets bombed by radicals ROME (UPI)—Thousands of students screaming slogans of revenge for the prison deaths of three West German terrorists in gun battle with police in Rome yesterday. Radicals throughout France and Italy stepped up their campaign against German targets and vowed 100,000 bombings to destroy German business. At least seven persons, including four officers, were wounded in clashes around Rome University, police said. They said they had been charged with charges of possessing weapons and firebombs. the students were barred from marching on the West German embassy and retreated into the campus throwing Molotov cocktails at riot police and shouting slogans accusing "German Nazis" for the "cold-blooded murder of our comrades." POLICE ALSO reported minor bombings against the German Academy in Rome and German companies and showrooms in Rome, Florence, Bologna, Genoa and the beach resort of Gstaa, raising to at least 20 attackers and attacks reported on German targets in Italy. In the southwestern French city of Toulouse, explosions ripped through two West German automobile warehouses and destroyed several cars and a huge building of a compaq that supplies paper to West German firms, police said. A blast also badly damaged another warehouse in Versailles just outside Paris. An anonymous telephone caller said the Andreas Baader Group of the Armed Faction Movement for Popular Autonomy set it off. ANOTHER CALLER told the French news agency that German guerrillas plan to "execute all the hangmen and their corrupt medico-legal accomplices" responsible for the deaths of the jailed West German terrorists. "One hundred thousand attacks by explosives will destroy the structure of the German capitalist economy in Europe," he said. Leftists in France and Italy said they were retaliating for the 'cold-blooded killing' of Andreas Baader and two other West German terrorist leaders in their jail cells. Germany says the three committed an attack on a refugee mission to force their release from prison. IN GREECE, police fought a gun battle early yesterday with a gang of guerrillas driving a stolen car loaded with dynamite, and near a West German factory outside Athens. Two officers and one attacker -identified as a 34-year-old anarchist -were wounded. The Bonn government says the three terrorists committed suicide in despair over the crushing of a hijacking by West German troops who shot to death three guerrillas and rescued 86 hostages in Mogadishu, Somalia. But terrorist organizations claim Baader and his two comrades were murdered. On Wednesday, they directed French police to the body of kidnapped West German industrialist Hanns-Martin Schleyer and his son, Jürgen. The police commanded raid and the death prisones. WASHINGTON (AP)—A former South Korean intelligence agent told congressman yesterday he spent about $1 million supplied to him against a $1 million influence to buy congressional a influence. U.S. aides linked to South Korean affair Testifying under the guard of U.S. marshals, the witness told the House ethics committee that he knew Washington rice dealer Tongsum Park had links to a high official of the Congress and an assistant to then-President Gerald R. Ford. KIM SANG KUEN, who defected to the United States after a career as a Korean Central Intelligence Agency spy and as first secretary of the South Korean embassy in Washington, described an elaborate scheme to spread money around Capitol Hill. He said the plan, directed from Seoul, was cloaked in tight security. Although he repeatedly said that the principal aim of the project was to buy influence in Congress, he did not say how successful it was. THE NEETHER volunteered nor was asked the names of American officials who might burn them. Kim did not identify Ford's assistant who had reported links to Park. But there was a White House inquiry in 1975 into a trip to the Dominican Republic involving Park and the family of Nancy Hew, who was Betty Ford's personal assistent. Howe's husband James, committed suicide during the inquiry. PARK, WHO has been indicted by a bureaual grand jury in connection with the construction of the Flood Control Unit. Police hunt for Schleyer's killers ★★★ BONN, West Germany (AP)—Police in Germany and France launched a massive hunt yesterday for 10 women and six men sought in the kidnap-slaying of German industrialist Hanns-Martin Schleyer. Protests by sympathizers of German terrorists exploded across Europe for the second day. French police, reinforced by 500 antiterrorist specialists, combed the Alsace region of eastern France near the border town of Moulhouse where the body of 62-year-old officer was found Wednesday in the trunk of a medieval sedan. He had been shot in the head. Guitar virtuoso to give recital, play with group One of the world's top classical guitarists will give two performances at KU next rue guitarist, Sila Godoy, will give a recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout and perform a live concert as music artist in concert with the University Orchestra at 3:30 p.m. Oct. 30, in the University Theatre. Both performances will be held on Hall, and there is no admission charge. Gotokoy also will perform at 2 p.m. Sunday. Off-The-Wall Hall, 737 New Hampshire St. GERMAN POLICE also went into the predominantly German-speaking region to distribute handbills with pictures and descriptions of the suspects. The German government offered a $24,000 reward for information of each suspect. In Muhleh, opposite the Rhine river from Germany, medical experts performed an autopsy on Schleier's body. He was kidnapped in Cologue Sept. 5 by members of the Army Faction. A West German terrorists group headed by the late Andre Baer. Doctors sought answers to several questions, including whether Schiefer was murdered before or after Baader and two of his followers were found dead in their maximum security cells near Stuttgart, Germany. Tuesday morning. Extreme leftist groups across Europe, denouncing official claims that Baader, 34, Jan-Carl Raspe, 32, and Gudrun Ensslin, 37, committed suicide, set off a wave of bombings aimed at the West German government and commercial facilities in Europe. to return to the United States, U.S. and South Korean代表broke off four days of talks in Seoul yesterday without addressing American submissions to question Park. The proceedings of the House ethics committee were supposed to have been televised, but each witness had the privilege of choosing whether to testify before cameras. Kim asked that his testimony not be televised. Korean operatives when American first became interested in Park's activities. he said Hancho Kim told him on April 20, 1975, that he feared reporters would discover Park's connection with the high congressional official and the White House The House committee has decided not to make public the identity of U.S. officials referred to in the testimony except for those to have获致*korean offers of cash.* The committee has decided to leave that part of the investigation for later hearings.