THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY JUNE 13,1973 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS Black Leader Seeks Rejection Of Chief Kelley as FBI Head KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A black leader here says he will to testify against the appointment of Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley of Kansas City as director of the FBI when the Senate Judiciary Committee holds a hearing on the death of Christopher P. Scott, Circuit Court clerk and head of Fire Freedom Inc., a political organization of blacks, said Kelley was responsible for the deaths 6 blacks in the April 1986 riots here after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Watkins said, "... If innocent whites instead of innocent blacks had been killed, he would never have gotten the appointment." He said he was opposed not only to Kelley's appointment, but also to a law enforcement officer, he said he was insensitive to the needs of minorities and the poor. Six Killed in Belfast Bombing Early-Warning Satellite Fired BELFAST—Six persons were killed and 33 injured in a bomb explosion in the sleep village of Coleraine, Northern Ireland, in the worst single act of terrorism in a year. Fires swept shops after the bombing by a group of people on the donderry. Violence in this region has been rising recently, but the mainly Protestant population of Coleraine has seen little of it. After the explosion, townspeople were walking around in a state of shock and greatly hampering the rescue operations. Among those injured children riding home from school when the bomb blast took place. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.—The Air Force has launched a superspy satellite expected to give split-sec notice of missile firings from Russia. No advance notice of the launch, which was heard 30 miles away, was given. Several minutes after the Titan 3C rocket—the most powerful in the Air Force space inventory—was launched, a single-sentence statement was issued to confirm the launching. Sadat Hails Libvan Oil Move CAIRO-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has greeted Libya's nationalization of an American oil company by calling it "a great contribution to our struggle." He said it marked the beginning of a battle against American interests in the whole Arab region," and said he would try to make it unable to protect its interests in the Arab region if it continued "defying the Arabs by supporting Israel without any calculation." Kansas Gas Shortage Likely? WASHINGTON—The Office of Emergency Preparedness has tagged Kansas as one of the four states most vulnerable to gasoline shortage, "possibly next month." The Automobile Association-of-America, in its weekly fuel survey, has found that, of 99 stations in Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri, 58 per cent were operating normally, 39 per cent were limiting hours, and 9 per cent were running out of gas for the second day of the holiday distribution program being conducted by division of the Interior Department, oil company executives expressed the hope that government control would be only temporary and urged greater incentives to develop oil supplies. Leavenworth Police Probed LEAVENWORTH-An investigation of the Leavenworth police department has been started by KBI agents after members of the predominantly black community in northeast Leavenwort charged several officers with harassment and "police-state tactics." The probe concerns incidents of violence, that followed the arrest of a black. The incidents left three policemen injured. Two of the policemen have already resigned and a third has been placed on indefinite suspension. 38 Injured in Ink Plant Blast PHILADELPHIA—At least 38 persons were injured when an explosion and fire raged through a South Philadelphia ink plant. Properties Commissioner William Costello said two of the injured were men in possession. He said 37 of the injured were firemen and one was a policeman. The fire, of undetermined origin, sent billowing fire and thick, blows into more than 200 feet into the air. The flames could be seen several miles away. It's Going to Be a Coverup It's going to be cloudy today, and though the temperature may be as high as in the 80s, sunshine will give the weather disappointing. The weather has been much worse in other parts of the country. Tornadoes have hit Indiana and Texas, floods have hit Oklahoma, hurricanes have squalls have moved through the middle Mississippi Valley. There is a possibility of thundershowers in the afternoon and night temperatures will be in the 60s. Manufacturers Fail to Employ Transient, Part-Time Labor Industry Little Aid to Students Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED Their Hearts Are in It Girls' Staters look skyward during flag raising ceremonies Tuesday. Their session of government in action ends Saturday. Stans Denies Guilt BY HARRY F. ROSENTHAL WASHINGTON-Maurice H. Stans disclaimed all knowledge of the Watergate affair and other political espionage which was his job to raise the manager, old age's expense. He also said he was told that former White House counsel John W. Dean III authorized the raising of money for payment to Watergate defendants and their lawyers and that he gave $75,000 for that purpose, not knowing the reason. "I was not very familiar at all with the operation of the campaign committee." President Nixon's chief fund-raiser told him that he was "only familiar with their objectives." Stans said the lawyer, Herbert W. Kalmbach, told him "I am asking for it on high authority," and would take only cash, not money. He said he was not told then on whose authority. "What went through your mind as to who this person might be?" asked Joseph. Senate leader. STANS, frustured in efforts to defer his testimony, said he gave $7,000 cash to Nixon's personal lawyer 12 days after the Watergate break-in after being told: "I need all the cash I can get. This is for a farewell." He said he would take care of the patient. You will have to trust me." Stans said he learned from Kalmbach only six weeks ago that "the request to raise the money came from John Dean." Dean was fired, April 20, as counsel. STANS said Kalmabach told him, "he asked Dean whether it was a legal trans-act. So he went to the police." "Being unwilling to proceed on that basis" (he Kalmbach) went to Mr. Ehrlichman Nixon on TV? WASHINGTON (AP)—It is rumored that President Nixon may go on nationwide television tonight to disclose new moves to curb inflation. The White House declined last night to confirm the rumors but reports from New York indicate that the stock market had moved ahead in light trading as a result. John D. Ehrlichman resigned April 30 as Nixon's chief domestic adviser. Mr. Ehrlichman told him it was a legal transaction." KALMBACH has told the General Accounting Office that the $75,000 was part of $210,000 he raised specifically for the Watergate defendants. Stans said that when Kalmbach approached him, he told the attorney he had no cash, but “I did have two parcels totaling $75,000 that were outside the committee and I gave that to him.” Stans testified "there may have been some unintended technical violations" of campaign finance laws, but that his lawyer said he had been limited to what he read in the press. STANS had sought to defer his Senate appearance on the ground that he is under federal indictment in New York in another case. But the committee brushed that plea aside. Stans gave the committee a lengthy rundown on two controversial contributions totaling $114,000 that found their way into the bank account of Bernard L. Barker, one of the seven defendants convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wirewrapping in the 2007 film *Onleaks*. In his version, the sequence was legal because the money was contributed prior to April 7, 1972, when a new law requiring disclosure of contributions went into effect, HE SAID the money could only have gotten into Barker's account "through the bands of G. Lordd Lippold," who was legal counsel for Nixon's arm of Nikon's rejection committees. Liddy is one of the convicted Watergate conspirators. See STANS, Back Page By CATHY O'BRIEN Kansan Staff Writer The growth of industry in Lawrence may be of great advantage to the city, but it does not as much for the students at the University. Darwin Eads, director of student employment, said that when a new business came into town, his office sent them a letter and card stating the need for jobs and the times that certain students would be available to work. The businesses are not enabled, Eads said, in part-time or transient people. They need labor that will stay. The University is considered a reason for industry settling in Lawrence by many. But, as Eads said, "We, KU, support Lawrence cultureally as well as financially. The least they could do is provide some jobs at decent wages." Two major manufacturing concerns that have located in Lawrence within the past three years are Gustin-Bacon, a part of the Certain-teed Products and Kuiu Radio. Gustin-Bacon, manufacturer of railroad and trucking components, came to Lawrence because of labor supply and access to transportation. The plant itself covers about 10 acres and employs 200 persons. The reason for employing few students, according to Fairax, is that there are no part-time shifts and the company needs a steady work force. This is necessary because the company and customers who hire it must provide a device that transient labor can not provide. THE UNIVERSITY is considered a big factor in the labor supply of Lawrence, according to William Salome, vice president of the Chamber of Commerce. But Tom Farfair, operations manager for University, that only four students were employed. Gustin-Bacon, Fairfax said, does hope in the future to set up part-time shifts. This can not hppen, however, until the company is more settled. KING RADIO currently employs approximately 180 persons. It hopes to employ a larger number of staff members. Unlike Gustin-Bacon, King Radio does not "knowingly" employ KU students, according to Bonnie Mills, personnel assistant. They have no summer or part-time people and no part-time shifts except in the technical department. Because there are two shifts in the technical department, Mills said, there may be a few KU students working there. But as a rule there are none. See INDUSTRY, Back Page Federal Syphilis Study Condemned By JEAN HELLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON-A government-appointed committee investigating a controversial federal syphilis experiment reported Tuesday it found the study unjustifiable. The panel proposed sweeping reforms in the policing of research on climate change. FRIDAY IS the deadline for undergraduate students to enroll in a course under the credit-no credit grade option. Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences may obtain option cards and others. Our other members may obtain cards from their deans. ALBERT GERKEN, University Carillonneur, will present a carillon recital at 8 tonight at the World War II Memorial Campanile. A MUSIC teachers' seminar sponsored by the department of music education and music therapy and the National Piano Foundation continues today. The seminar will end Thursday. Robert Pace, head of piano instruction at Columbia University's Music Department, is leading the seminar. It is open to both school and private music teachers in the area. THE SWIMMING pool will be open for recreational swimming for summer session students, faculty and staff members from 7 to 9 tonight at Robinson Gymnasium. The pool will be open for faculty swim from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. "Society can no longer afford to leave the balancing of individual rights against scientific progress to the scientific community alone," the Tuskegee Syllabus Study Ad Hoc Advisory Panel said in its final 47th edition of a statement of Health, Education and Welfare. The nine-member, biracial citizens panel spent eight months probing the 40-year Tuskegee Study, a syphilis experiment run by the U.S. Public Health Service in predominantly poor, rural Macon County, Ala. DURING THE experiment, which was begun in 1932 and ended last year after disclosure of the study's existence, more than 430 black men were denied treatment for their syphilis so doctors could study the disease. At least 28 and possibly more than 200 patients had been a direct result of untreated syphilis. Countless others may have been crippled. —There is no evidence that a protocol—the plans and justifications for an experiment—ever was written for the Tusknee Study. Among the committee's findings and recommendations: —There is no evidence that any type offormed consent was obtained from participants. THE STUDY was sloppily conducted, too tainty taming what little information the experts had. —The study was ethically unjustified in 1932, and the long-term study defined in 1936 was scientifically unsound because the blind risks promised only manager results. —Penicillin therapy should have been available to the participants no later than research projects and such a policy should be formulated. -There is no policy for compensation of research subjects harmed in clinical NO UNIFORM HEW policy for the protection of research subjects exists and no uniform federal policies exist for protection of subjects in government-sponsored research apart from HEW. —Congress should establish a permanent body with the authority to regulate at least all federally supported research and, ideally, the body's authority should extend to all research whether federally sponsored or not. Two Women Put Themselves Squarely Behind the President OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—Two Oklahoma City women say they are tired of hearing people knock President Nixon because of the Watergate scandal. In reaction, they have formed The Friends of the President Club. Emma La Fawer and Alta Waggoner, who are sisters, are inviting the whole country to join her at the festival. "I'd like for people to get out of their old Nixon Now More than Ever" buttons and turn the knob down. She suggested that Nixon supporters could help by putting out their last year's campaign ad. She suggested a good slogan would be "Stick With Dick." La Faver worked in the local Nixon headquarters during the 1972 presidential campaign. Waggoner is a registered Democrat, but she voted for Nixon. She said, "You should go along and support your president, whoever be is." "If we don't stop them over there, we may have to fight them in Oklahoma City some day." She said she thought it was important that President Nixon receive strong support now because of a bill in Congress that would give the president's power to fight the war in Cambodia. "I