Page Eight FIRES BURN MORE THAN TREES THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 28, 1972 DEADLY EXPERIMENT: Doctor in syphilis study: 'Victims were not told' m "mmm's I ws briefs by The Associated Pres TUSKEGEE. Ala. (P) - A local doctor who took part in the early years of a federal sy- philis study says he does not recall that the black participants were ever told they were sub- jects of an experiment or what the study involved. "The people who came in were not told what was being done," Dr. J. W. Williams said in an interview Wednesday. "We told them we wanted to test them. They were not told,, so far as I know, what they were being treated for or what they were not being treated for. "We didn't tell them we were looking for syphilis," he said. "I don't think they would have known what that was". The experiment, called the Tuskegee Study, began in 1932. It was run by the U.S. P u b li c Health Service (P.H.S.) and in- volved 600 Black men from this TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 area, 200 with no signs of syphil- is and 400 who had the disease, according to the federal agency. At least seven men died as a direct result of syphilis and that figure could be higher, according to P.H.S. officials. They voiced concern about the morality of the study, particularly about its continuation after penicillin was discovered as a pure for syphil- is. Dr. John Heller, the former PHS doctor, was asked if he had made any effort to obtain peni- cillin for the syphilitics when it became gradually available In in 1940s. "No," he said, "and it never occurred to us to ask because the demand was so great for oth- er people who needed it msu c h more than they did - the armed forces and people in civilian life" with other serious diseases. "Also," Dr. Heller added, "we were not responsible for getting it to them so weamadeno effort to get it. This wasa community responsibility in Tuskegee . . . It was not our ball of wax." MCAT-DAT-GRE LSAT-ATGSB * Preparation fortests required for admission to graduate and pro- fessonal schools " Six and twelve sesion groups " Small groups " VOluminous material for home study. prepared by experts in each field " Lesson schedule can be tailored to meet individual needs Summer Sessions Special Compact Courses Weekends-lritersessions STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER DETROIT BRANCH 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd., Suite 113 Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 354-0085 Success Through Education Since 1938 Branches in principal cities in U.S. The Tutoring School with the Nationwide Reputatian I U ~ - Have some time on your hands. Truck on down to' the Daily and join the Busi- ness Staff See FRAN at 420 Maynard M-F 10-12, M-W-F 2-4, or Call 764-0560 THE SENATE gave the Pentagon approval yesterday to speed-up development of the Trident submarine despite crities' fears that accelerated development could result in another ex- pensive cost overrun. By a 47 to 39 vote', the Senate also defeated an amendment to cut $508 million from the $20.5 billion military hardware budget to pay for quick construction of four cruiser-sized submarines. The $13.5 billion Trident. program calls for construction of 10 boats, with each vessel designed to carry 24 multiple-warhead missiles with a range of 4,000 miles. SOVIET MILITARY pilots are reported leaving Egypt in what U.S. sources say is shaping up as a "pretty large" Rus- sian exodus. Sources indicated a belief that the pullout would go beyond some 5,000 to 6,000 Soviet advisers to include some of the estimated 10,000 to 12,000 Russian pilots, antiaircraft missile men, technicians and specialists serving in Egypt. THE U.S. BOARD OF PAROLE granted parole yesterday to publisher Ralph Ginsberg, presently serving a three-year term in an Allenwood, Pa. prison. - Ginsberg, the former editor and publisher of Eros magazine, was convicted in June of 1963 of sending pornographic materials through the mails. He will be paroled on Oct. 11. PRESIDENT NIXON declared the United States has not and will not bomb civilian targets in North Vietnam and accused U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim and "many well-inten- tioned and naive people" of seizing upon "enemy-inspired propa- ganda" to charge that U.S. warplanes have hit dikes and dams. Lashing out at critics yesterday as he delivered perhaps the most spirited defense to date of his Vietnam policies, Nixon told a news conference that chances for a negotiated settlement are better than ever before. But he said a congressional end-the-war resolution could prolong the fighting. SEN. ALLEN ELLENDER (D-La.), dean of the Senate and one of the last of the Huey Long-era politicians from Louisiana, died of a heart attack in Bethesda Naval Hospital yesterday. He was 81, Ellender, Senate president pro tempore and chairperson of its Appropriations committee, was stricken as he returned to Wash- ington from his home state where he was campaigning for his seventh term. THE MICHIGAN SUPREME COURT ruled yesterday that children may sue their parents over injuries caused by parental neglect. The ruling overturned a state legal precedent dating to 1926, that in turn was based on an earlier 1891 Mississippi ruling against family suits in the interest of "peace of society and family." 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