12 Wednesday, June 22, 1977 University Daily Kansan 'Rampage of killings'in Uganda after Amin assassination attempt NAIROIB, Kenya (UPI)-Ugandan troops loyal to President Idai Amin have gone on a rampage of killings after an assassination attempt against Amin in which the mercurial dictator was wounded, the Kenya news agency said yesterday. The agency said Amin was wounded during an ambush attack last weekend and quoted sources close to Amin as saying he was shot in the face by a police explainer his mysterious disappearance. In Luxembourg, British Foreign Secretary David Owen said Amin was alive and well but Owen would not elaborate or give the source of his information. Uganda radio mentioned Amin last night for the first time in three days, saying he had received the Uganda delegation to an OAU meeting. The broadcast did not explain why the report of the Saturday meeting had delayed until Tuesday night. DIAPLOMAT NOTED, however, Amin must personally approve all radio Uganda announcements and the 10 p.m. broadcast announcements. The last charge taken charge after several days absence. A statement issued at a Common Market meeting in Luxembourg said any European Union member state may participate. human rights in Uganda. Asked after the meeting if the statement was made on the assumption Amin was still alive, Owen replied, "Amin is alive and well." The Kenyan news agency report said, "Hundreds of Ugandans, including military and civilian personnel have defected to Kenya, running away from certain death during the war in eastern Uganda (the) assassination attempt on President Idi Amim late last week." The agency quoted diplomatic sources in Kampala as saying a massacre was cer- tainly part of the crisis. Thousands of Christians and Acholi and Langi tribesmen were reported murdered earlier this year after Amin allegedly uncovered another plot to topple him. Amin implicated the Anglican archbishop of Uganda, Janari Lawm, and the three were later killed in what Amin called a traffic accident but church officials said it was a hoax. In Kampala, the Uganda cabinet held a regular session but made no mention of it. THE KENYA AGENCY said there was a mass movement of troops within Uganda, particularly the capital of Kampala. Roadblocks remained in place in the capital and armored personnel carriers were on station at Entebte airport. Amin dropped out of sight Saturday, for the second time within two weeks, at the time news reports began to circulate his injuries were been ambushed and badly damaged. Diplomatic sources said it appeared Amin either was again playing a giant hoax on the world or indeed been wounded in a bombing by US forces, and was now hospitalized for recovery. Entebte statehouse officials insisted Amin had been missing since Friday and a dragnet to find him had been extended to foreign countries. An Enteble statehouse official contacted by telephone said: "We are still trying to find our president. Since Friday we don't know where he is. We have no other inquiries." The same official said later, "We have nothing new to report. We are still looking. If he had been in Kampala or Entebbe, we would have been more open about overseas for him in friendly countries." House approves one-year delay of saccharin ban WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House voted yesterday to block for at least one year the food and Drug Administration's (FDA) proposed ban on saccharin. The amendment was sponsored by Reps, Harold Volkmer, D-Mo., and Jamie Whiten, D-Miss. The provision was attached to a measure carrying $21.7 billion to the fund the Agriculture Department and related funds for the new fiscal year starting Oct. 1. The House then approved the overall bill, 380-35, and sent it to the Senate. Rejecting arguments the move was unwise because of new evidence linking the artificial sweetener with cancer, the House approved by standing vote an amendment to hold the FDA from using federal money for the ban through Sept. 30, 1978. Meanwhile, the Calorie Control Council, which represents diet soft drink bottlers, said yesterday that at least eight studies contradicted the latest report and reported a definite link between saccharin use and bladder cancer in humans. Warrant needed to open luggage WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Supreme Court ruled 7 to 2 yesterday that law enforcement officers must get a search warrant before opening luggage seized during an arrest. Chief Justice Warren Burger, speaking for the majority in a Boston case, said once narcotic agents had seized a double-locked footlocker, it was "unreasonable to undertake the additional and greater intrusion of a search without a warrant." "No less than one who locks the doors of his home against intruders, one who safeguards his personal possessions in this manner is due the protection of the Fourth Amendment warrant clause," Burger wrote. charged such rulings "make criminal law a trap for the unwary police and detract from the important activities of detecting crime activity and protecting the public safety." Blackmun said the court should stop making hairline distinctions that are literally impossible for officers to apply in the field and adopt instead "a clear-cut rule permitting property seized in conjunction with the arrest" to place to be searched without a warrant." Amtrak officials in San Diego who watched Gregory Machado and Bradle Learoyd conduct a 360-degree spin on a train May 8, 1973, told federal narcotics agents it was using talcum powder, often called "stink powder," to kill them. When the train reached Boston, a police Chilean hijacker surrenders MENIDUZA, Argentine (AP) — A jobless Chihuahua bought a toy gun with the last of his money and seized a jet with 78 persons aboard yesterday, the police said to this Argentine border city, then abandoned plans to fly to Algeria and surrendered, official reports said. Radio stations in Santiago, Chile, said the plot of the Lan-Chile plane convinced the hijacker to surrender. No passengers were harmed. The official Argentine news agency Telam and Chilean radio reports identified the ijackers as Carlos Tamayo, who had worked in the Chilean Ministry of Public The Lan-Chile flight with 71 passengers and seven crew members took off yesterday morning from Antofagasta in northern Chile and was flown to Tucumán via Capt. Diogenes Arrendono, radioed Puduhuel International Airport in Santiago and said the plane was hijacked. dog detected marijuana inside the footlocker. After Joseph A. Chadwick joined Machado and Leary and they placed the footlocker in the trunk of a waiting car, agents arrested all three and seized the footlocker. Without obtaining a search warrant, they waited 80 minutes later and found marquetry inside. Publicized at the University of Kansas daily August through May and April, the campus is open except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kam 69414 Subscriptions by mail are required from the university and $1 a semester or $2 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, and $1 a semester. Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom--664-4810 Business Office--664-4358 THE THREE SUSPECTS were indicted, but a U.S. District Court and the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that evidence obtained in the court improperly and could not be used at trial. Managing Editor KR Gunn Dominic Knox Donald Riebe Assoc. Campus Editor Jace Pipeer Makeup Editor Dan Furke Makeup Editor Linda Straw Copy Chiefs Lynn Kirkman Lynn Kirkman Burger agreed that luggage did not fall under either of two exemptions from requirements that police get warrants—a search of an automobile which may be covered by a gun, or having an arrest to make sure police are not endangered by hidden weapons. Editor Julie Williams The government argued that luggage should fall under the auto exception because, like a car, it can be moved. But Burger said that once agents had seized the footlocker, there was no danger it would be lost before a warrant was obtained. If police suspected it contained exposures, rather than more contraband, that would be good news. And more On Campus Laundry facilities Air-conditioned Utilities paid Swimming pool Variety shop Jayhawker Tower Apartments Now renting for summer and fall Business Manager Larry Kellev 1603 W. 15th St. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A Pacemaker award winner Sat 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Sun 12:00-4:00 p.m. News Advisee Publisher Business Advisee Rick Musker David Dary Mel Adams Office hours: Mon-Thurs 8:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Mon-Thurs 8:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Ast. Manager R. V. Brinkerhoff Advertising Manager Patricia Thornton Classified Manager Karen Dumyon Karen Krosek Ann Seymour Photographer Office hours: Friday 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 150 STYLES Athletic Shoes - Lettered T-Shirts CHICAGO (UPI)—A federal judge Monday damassed a $47.7 million suit against seven policemen who participated in a 1969 raid on a West Side apartment in which Black Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were killed. - Tennis Clothing - Rubber Cleated Baseball Shoes - Speedo Swimwear - Shorts - Socks - Warm Ups senior U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Sam Perry dismissed complaints against the final defendants in the civil suit when the jury in the 18-month trial诉判 it was denounced after 35 hours of deliberation. The jury the plaintiffs had not proved their case. Panther attorneys say case to be appealed Panther attorneys immediately said that they would appeal the case and one attorney charged that Perry was part of the coverup in the slavings. 919 Massachusetts Ph.841-2995 Lawrence Master Charge BankAmericard not sault was filed in 1970 on behalf of the survivors of a Dec. 4, 1989, police raid on a Black Panther apartment party and the families of Hampton and Clark. At issue was whether the police officers on trial deliberately shot and killed Hampton, Illinois Panther chairman, and Clark, his deputy. Four others were injured in a predawn raid in search of illegal weapons at the apartment. In his decision, Perry, 80, said the law requires a sustain a version of proof in every claim. Amin alive NAIROBI, Kenya, (AP)—An American reporter in Uganda says Idi Amil is alive and on a belated honeymoon, but the Kenyan news agency says gunning up Uganda because Amil's police are on an assault rampage after an assassination attempt. Defense attorneys maintained Perry death sentence to the jury's deadlocked decision and declared an order. Jeffrey H. Haas, 34, one of the Panther attorneys, said he was "absolutely stunned" by the decision to kill the suspect in the murders of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark," he charged TONIGHT: VOLLEYBALL IN-TRAMURALS will begin with games at 7:15 and 7:45 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium, DEXTER D. EURE, management executive with the Boston Globe, will deliver a free public address to keynote the event, which will be held at KU. He will speak at St. Luke's U.K. Church, Ninth and New York streets. A Transcendental Meditation program, "ENLIGHTMENT AND SUPERNORMAL ABILITIES," will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the P.O. Box 2296. In the Room I, "Nothing Secret," will be at 7:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Admission is $15. TOMORROW: The KU SAILING CLUB will have a meeting at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union. A stage band jazz concert will be held in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall. BUY ONE BURRITO, GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON! --on special selected group of smaller sizes 7-11 The burrite is a soft flour tortilla covered with a thin layer of cheese. It comes in a box and is sold on Roland. One offer per customer. Offer ends June 26, 1977. 2340 Iowa SALE 50% Off Sale starts Wednesday, June 22 and ends Saturday, June 25 Holiday Plaza 25th and Iowa No refunds 841-JANE