6 Wednesday, June 27.1973 University Daily Kansan FBI Needs Good Man to Burnish Its Public Image From Page One Hover, who was in his lifetime beyond reproach of Presidents, has been posthumously muddied by President Nixon and the revelations of the "Dean papers." The President's statement of May 22 strongly suggested that Hover had become a cranky misandrew who cut himself and others from the federal intelligence establishment. This picture of Hoover was reinforced by the recently published top-secret memoranda of former White House internal security adviser Tom Charles Huston. The Huston papers portrayed in unflattering terms the former director's successful obstruction to the controversial '1970 invasion plan' discussed by the President on May 22. It was largely because of Hoover's alleged bureaucratic isolationism that the President said he had to set the 1970 plan in place, and when he began a plan for opening up the FBIs' zealously-guarded internal security turf to other intelligence units that caused President Obama to shelve it. THE BUREAU has remained silent in the face of its present adversities. It is bereft of the protection of Hoover, the complete defender of the nation and its third leadership transition in 13 months; The burea is anxiously awaiting confirmation of its new director/designate. Clarence Acting FB1 Director William D. Ruckeski, the bureau's departing temporary trustee, insists that when Kelley comes aboard the malase in the bureau will "When Kelley is confirmed, we may be in a position to do some talking," said one old man. The old boy network of Hover loyalists both in the bureau and among its alumni has been severely stung by the recent attacks and is thirsting for a chance at rebellation. "THE CHARGE THAT we cut off liaison with all other intelligence agencies is just not true," said one high ranking FBI official. In 1970, when the troubles began in earnest for the bureau, the public relationship between Hoover and Nixon seemed to be a triumph. In contrast, with publication of the Huston documents, has it been revealed that a grim struggle was already underway within the Nixon administration over reorganizing and exerting control over the public surveillance to the point of illegal entry. The deeds and rhetoric of such groups as the Black Panthers, Westboromers, Students Against Fascism, and others. boda fermente on the campuses were raising a high state of alarm in the White House. HOOVER HIMSELF went to capital hill with shrill demonstrations of black activists and student demonstrators and their organizations. At one point, he proclaimed himself a "militant" in security threat to the nation. But the underlying truth was that it was a new ball game for the bureau, one for which the traditional informational tactics did not seem as no working. The response at high levels of the Justice Department and in the White House was to point an accusating finger at the FBI for failure to keep abreast of the agitated domestic It was in this climate that Nixon set in motion the 1970 plan, which was allegedly abandoned in the face of Hoover's objective to eliminate President—establishment of an interagency intelligence evaluation committee and creation of the President's own special investigation unit (the plumbers)—to oversee the administration that was once Hoover's exclusive preserve. "THE WHITE HOUSE was getting people with no experience. My God, that man could be anything." bureau—a super klutz," groused one of Hoover's most senior aides. "They were amateurs who were bound to get into trouble. And they did." The ragged relations between the bureau and the administration surfaced in the Hoover's summary dismissal in October 1971, of William C. Sullivan, the number 3 man in the bureau and once Hoover's most valued deputy. LILLIANH HAD insisted, publicly and privately, on tough surveillance of New Lattia and Black Panther activities, as well as the potential of violent extremism. Hoover for pre-occupying himself with such nearly defunct groups as the Communist party, USA, by then a virtual geriatric sociology graduate. Sullivan was a minority voice in the bureau. But he was paid serious heed in the Justice Department where he had the ear of then Attorney General John Mitchell and Assistant Attorney General Robert Marratt, a criminal adviser on national security affairs. One measure of Sullivan's prior loyalty to the Administration was his removal of controversy national security wiretap records, ordered by the White House, from the FBI to Madison in office in the Justice. the former Hoover aide let it be known that he feared the wiretap material would be used by Hoover to embarrass the White House. HOOVER, IN ONE of his most celebrated "sudden death" reprisals for disloyalty, ordered the locks changed overnight in Sullivan's office and his name removed from the civilian warden was appointed to a high Justice Department post, chief of narcotics intelligence. Even after Hoover died the bureau was not wholly passive in its defense. The nomination of Gray and his conduct of the Watergate investigation touched off a form of guerrilla warfare against the Administration from within the ranks of the FBI. One highly placed FBI executive acknowledged that FBI agents may have been instrumental in getting the initial Watergate revelations into public print. Reporters who covered the case acknowledge the role of the agents in opening up the initially leaked information in the cover-up facade some administration officials were trying to erect. “IT WASN’T A matter of getting rancorous leaks dumped in our lap,” said one Watergate reportorial specialist. “You’d be asking, ‘What are you going to say or what about that? They respond, Yes, that’s right.’ I can think of one guy in the bureau without whom we wouldn't have gotten away.” Prof Returns from U.S.S.R. Visit By MICHAEL HOSTETLER Kansan Staff Writer After visiting Russian scientists in their laboratories for two weeks, Richard K. Moore is convinced that American scientists should learn to write and speak Russian because there is much to be learned from Soviet scientists. Moore, director of the University of Kansas Remote Sensing Laboratory and professor of electrical engineering, has just returned from West Germany and the Soviet Union, where he gave lectures and attended meetings. Moore presented a paper in Konstanz, West Germany, at a meeting of the Committee on Space Research of the International Council for Scientific Union's Symposium on "Approaches to Earth Science Through the Use of Space Techniques." HE THEN traveled to Moscow as a guest of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. While in Moscow, Moore gave lectures at the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics and the Institute of Oceanology. He also traveled to Leninrad and Thilasi. Moore said he found the language barrier frustrating. He brought many books back with him, but he can't read any of them; these they are all written in Russian, he said. "in some ways they are ahead of us in scientific research and in other ways they are behind us." MOORE NOTICED THAT almost all Russian scientists could write and speak English, but he was disturbed by the use of useful information that was not translated. He said their test equipment looked somewhat out of date when compared to laboratory equipment. "BUT SOMETIMES I CULD see what was going on in the laboratories and my colleagues," she said. Moore said the Soviet Union was still not very open to tourists. There is a large map in the American Embassy that shows where visitors may travel freely. Outside of a certain area in Moscow, tourists are only allowed on certain main roads. Everything that Moore saw and did was tightly controlled by his Russian hosts. When flying from one city to another in France, he sat on a seat on the airplane without a window. MOORE WAS ALSO frustrated by the language available in Russia, only English newspapers available are propaganda neither or not to believe what the rest of us Moore was in the Soviet Union while the Skylab astronauts were in space. He said AMERICAN LEAGUE New York W. L. P. Ct. G.B. Baltimore W. L. P. Ct. G.B. Alamakee 34 34 521 3 Boston 34 34 500 5 Boston 34 34 500 5 Cleveland 33 37 521 6 Dearborn 16 16 161 1 baseball standings WEST California 38 32 542 14 Chicago 36 31 537 1 Dallas 36 31 537 1 Kansas City 40 35 532 1 Minnesota 30 35 532 1 Texas 21 32 531 1 New York 10, Cleveland 2 Derrick 4, Boston 1 Baltimore 4, Milewite 5 California 4, Milwaukee 5 California 4, Kansas City 5 California 4, Kansas City 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles Houston San Francisco Cincinnati Atlanta San Diego 48 26 3449 42 22 3536 42 21 3536 38 34 3528 38 42 4251 23 23 2330 W. L. Pt. G.B. Chicago 12 31 50 Montreal 12 32 50 St. Louis 13 38 50 Philadelphia 14 38 498 (7)% Pittsburgh 13 38 498 (7) New York 11 37 458 (7) Richard K. Moore Results Chicago 5, New York 1, Los Angeles 3, Miami 10, Philadelphia 1, St. Louis 8, Philadelphia 4, 2nd 11 innings Los Angeles 7, San Diego 0 Los Angeles 6, San Diego 0 that Pravada had daily reports on the progress of Skylab, and host were not present. (for an up-to-date list) MOORE BEGAN HIS tour of the Soviet Union in Moscow. After lecturing to the Radio Engineering and Oceanology Institutes, he gave an informal talk to faculty members of Lumumba University in Moscow. Moore told the Russian scientists about his work at the Remote Sensing Laboratory and told the faculty members about the American educational system. Every where he went, Moore said he showed pictures of KU. After leaving Moscow, Moore went to Leningrad, where he spoke to the Arctic and Anarctic Institute. He also visited the University of Leningrad. MOORE THEN FLEW to Tbilisi in the southwestern part of the U.S.R. While R. Moore worked at U.S.R. More said Tbilisi was a large city with a population of around a million people, and it is one of the world's most populous cities. Institute of Geophysics, and he presented a lecture at the University of Tbilisi. MOORE SAID MOST Russians lived in apartments and few had cars so they were homeless. "In Leningrad it never gets completely dark at this time of year and there are hundreds of people walking on the streets at all hours of the night," he said. Before he traveled to the U.S.S.R., Moore spent nine days in West Germany. After he presented his paper at Konstanz, he went to Munich and visited the University of Munich where a remote sensing laboratory is being established. The National Academy of Sciences provided Moore with a car and driver and Moore said that they didn't have to worry about traffic iams. While visiting Moscow, Moore stayed in a hotel run by the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. He shared a suite with a Hawaiian astronomer who was participating in an exchange program. Moore said he could speak and read Russian very well and was very helpful. He said he met about eight Americanides during his stay in Russia. "There aren't many cars," Moore said, but the drive people like maniacs. ALTOUGH LENINGRAD HAS many beautiful palaces, Moore found Russian cities very dull and drab. He saw many people in grass was very tall every where be went. "Evidently the five year plan didn't come up with lawn mowers," Moore said. "I saw lots of people cutting the grass, but they were all using scytches." "Russians are the biggest gift givers in the world," Moore said. "It's impossible to stop them." Moore received records, bottles of wine, and Russian perfume along with many other gifts from his hosts. He reciprocated them, but didn't sell them. Jahewkaw pawerweights, hens and key rings. During his stay in the Soviet Union, Moore was accompanied by Dr. A. Shukko of the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics as well as Moore's personal host interviewer. Modern Tennis Club Is Planned for City The two men responsible for building the club are John Sample of Lawrence, and Kirkland Gates of Kansas City, Mo. It will be named the Lawrence Racket Club and will be located off 23rd Street, west of the Alvamar Hills Golf Course. A new type of tennis club will be built in Lawrence, if the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission and the Douglas County Commission approve the conditional use permit, which is scheduled for consideration at a meeting today. They plan to open the first phase of the club by October 1, according to Sample. The first phase will consist of four indoor tennis courts, a clubroom and a bar. Construction on the second phase will begin as soon as phase one is completed. It will include four outdoor tennis courts, a pro shop, locker rooms, swimming pool, area seating, sauna, whirlpool, baby facilities and picnic and barbecue areas. Sample said that they had researched over 100 clubs in the last 1½ years, trying to figure out who was the most successful. The tension structure to be used is a new concept, innovated by Horace Berger and Dave Geiger, New York consultant engineers. Berger and Geiger designed the U.S. pavilions for the 1970 World's Fair in Osaka, Japan. That formula includes a structure made of teflon-coated fiberglass stretched over a steel shell in a cement foundation. The walls will have removable sides for ventilation. Moore received his invitation to Germany and the Soviet Union as the result of a paper he presented at an international Union of Radio Science meeting in Warsaw, Poland, last year. He is presently planning to travel to Nottingham, England, late next month to lecture at the meeting of the European Space Research Organization. Moore also visited the University of Zurich in Switzerland. Indian Tribal Lore Included in Poems KU graduate William Stafford has written a new collection of poems entitled *Nostalgia Maye*, Maye's memoir, Novels for poetry in 1883 his volume, "Traveling Through the Dark." Stafford has worked as a laborer in sugar beet fields, at an oil refinery, in construction work, and teaching high school. He was a consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress. Stafford is now a professor of English at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Ore. The new collection of poetry includes a group of poems centered on American history. The poems are A proposal to finance a law school for Wichita State University instead of building a new School of Law faculty at KU will be discussed in the Board of Regents meeting Thursday. Wichita to Plead For School of Law Jess Stewart, Kansas Board of Regents chairman, has given Patrick Kelly, Wichita Bar Association member, 15 minutes to documents in favor of a WSU school of law. Kelly will be representing the Wichita Chamber of Commerce in their campaign to buy laptops. A total of $40,000 for the planning of a new KU law facility has already been appropriated by the 1973 Kansas legislature. Stewart has said that he regards the application of the law to Regents, who will determine Thursday whether to proceed with the planning. Stewart is not expected to act in favor of Kelly's presentation Thursday. He said that he would make a request for a new program in law before such a program could be considered. League Leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ELEGANT LEAGUE BATTING - 125 at bats - Bomberg, NY. NY: 40, W108, Hunting, Del. 142 RUNS~MARKEY, KC, S1, J. Rackson, Oak, S1 RUNS~BATTED IN~MARKEY, KC, 70, J. Rackson RUNS~BATTED IN~MARKEY, KC, 70, J. Rackson Oak 61 Murray, NY 83; R. Jackson, Oak 83 Hartley, CA 91; C. Williams, Detroit 14 DOUBLEBS = D. Allen, Chi. 20, A. Rodrique, Det. 16. TRIPLES = Bumbly, Bali. 7, Carew. 1, Miner. **TRIUMELE** - Bunnyry, Bal. 7, Carow, Min. 7, Bunnyry, K.C., Kirach, KC. 18,爪 Ben. 10, D. Chien, Chi. 16. **STOLEN BASES** - North, Oak 21, Alomar, Cal. 18 **PITCHING** (4 Designs) - Besson, Bail. 9, 12, Bn. 8, 19 RUNS BATTED IN- Bean, CBN, 51; Starger, Pah, 51 BONDS, BFN, 54; Fountes, FS, 92 STARGER, FFN, 54 NITES-Bonds, SF, 94. Fuentes, SF, 92. DOUBLES-Cardenal, Chi, 19. Staub, NY, 18. Americans Shine in Wimbledon Tennis **TRIPLLES - Nettger, H. 9, Squam隋, Pgh. 7** **HOME RUNS - Stargell, Pgh. 2, H. Aaron, 19** **KENNEDY'S** **STOLEN BASES** - Morgan, Cin. 31); Cedro, Him. 27; **PITCHING (4 Decisions)** - Park, N.Y. 51; 83.23 - ROBERT TOWN, N.Y. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (125 at bats) MCLA. LA. 352; Insper, Phi. 348 **STRIKEOUTS** - Seaver, NY. 105; Carlton, Phi. 105; Sutton, LA. 105 Acting FBI Director Ruckelshaus accented that "some of our agents were getting nervous about the pace of the Watergate investigation and probably talked to the press. It's against bureau regulations but not against the law." WIMBLEDON, England (AP)—Billie Jean King started defense of her Wimbledon tennis championship Tuesday with an easy victory in the first-round of action at the All-England Club. Former White House Domestic Counselor John Ehrlichman charged in recent congressional testimony that the bureau was "hemorrhaging" with leaks under Gray. The House Committee rejected that Time magazine had a freely running leak at the top of Gray's staff." The 29-year-old star from Long Beach, Calif., eased her way past Lacuna Bassi of Riyadh, 6-2. It was such a one-sided affair, a crowd of 15,000 highly raised a cheer. hopes Chris Ewert and Rosemary Casala, were in action and all we without much IN THE DAYS immediately after the Watergate arrests, former White House Counsel Dean was on the phone to hospital with representative Leak leaks. Dean has been pictured in Watergate testimony as a key presidential operative for insulating the White House Evert, 18, from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., won over Fliconia Bonelli of Uruguaia 6-3, 6-3. Casalas of San Francisco, be Brenda Kirk of South Africa 6-0, 6-1. Virginia Wade, Britain's No. 1, woman player, defeated 16-years-old Australian Dustin Johnson in the third round. During ladies' day at Wimbledon, five of the top-seeded women, including American “When Gray first arrived we all wanted him to succeed,” said a recently retired senior official with more than a quarter of a century in the bureau. “Then we became aware of those speaking trips, the frequent absences from Washington. That’s when he went to two days, “Two-Day Gray”. What ever you say about Hoover, he never missed a day of school.” Margaret Court of Australia, who is going for the grand slam and could be King's main challenger, has been Over 24,000 people watched the women's first-round action at the All-England Club, which still showed no sign of financial loss due to the walkout of more than 70 men Evonne Goolagong of Australia, the No. 3 seed, beat Bentley Slove of the Netherlands, 6-2. First-round American women winners included Judy Heldman of New York, Tory Ann Fretz of Los Angeles, Valerie Ziegentess of San Diego, Mirta Redondo of National City, Calif., and Pam Teeguarden of Los Angeles. Now Gray is under investigation by the FBI to determine what role he played in the Waco bombings. One of the major ironies of Watergate's impact on the FBI was the apparent invention of Hoover's reputation as an observive witness. He was a good observer, the door down and asked questions later. SOME OF HOOVER'S long-standing liberal critics have acclaimed him for stopping the 1970 intelligence plan with its burial, mail-opening, bugging and wiretapping. However, as one of the chief lieutenants of the departed director emphasized in an interview, Hover had not become a sudden convert to civil libertarianism. "For Mr. Hoover, jurisdiction was paramount. He felt this plan was whittling away at the essence of the FBI and its responsibilities. He didn't object to clandestine entries. We opened mail but we never talked with him. We knew when he when we felt it was a case of compelling national security. Hoover's law was that you didn't get caught and bring embarrassment on the bureau," said the veteran Hoover loyalist. The FBI documents burglarized from a bureau office at Media, Pa., in March 1971 showed that late into 1970 the FBI was wiretapping Black Panther activities and trying laboriously to infiltrate the ghetto with thousands of informants. THE INTENSITY OF FBI surveillance against back organizations with the slightest political overtones suggests that at least one part of the 1970 White House plan may have continued in effect through the year. It is also a matter of widespread agreement, in and outside the bureau, that Asher broodred increasingly on his place because he became more fastidious about legal procedure. "I was very confident of Hoover in the wretap area," says former Attorney General Ramsey Hahn. "He knew we'd prosecute him, but we didn't. Hoover was protecting the bureau." Council Plans . . . Yet even these concerns may have been outdistended by events. The colleges and ghettoes have quieted down. So have the styles of political protest EVEN HOOVER'S staunchest loyalties concede that the bureau was not keeping step with the violent activism in the 1980s, and he swept to its peak in the 1986-1970 period. These are facts with which Kelley will have to reckon as he ponders the other revelations of the most traumatic years in the bureau's history, just passed. In a related consumer development, the American Automobile Association said 54 per cent of the 3,417 service stations it surveys weekly had rationed sales or cut back operating hours because of the fuel shortage. Bag jobs, illegal burglaries, were out. So was mail mailing. Phones were tapped only on written authorization of the attorney in order to have electronic bugs, concealed microphones. MEANWHILE, IN WASHINGTON D.C., Robert Robel, chairman of the Governor's Office, and the Nixon administration Resources, said late Tuesday he was encouraged that the Nixon administration would soon initiate a mandatory fuel allocation system with agriculture need or Robel, professor of biology at Kansas State University, spent Tuesday conferring with a Presidential consultant and with officials of the Agriculture Department, Office of Emergency Preparedness, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Center, and Gas. He informed them of the seriousness of the fuel shortage in Kansas. "It seems like things are moving," Robel reported to the office of Kansas Gov. Robert Docking late in the day. "I'm encouraged and are trying to do something, finally." All-Campus DANCE FRIDAY Kansas Union 80c PITCHERS TONIGHT 8 to Midnight THE BALL PARK Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Good Food 100 FREE COPY OF DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE WITH PURCHASE OF SHAKE! 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