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Show V .f A ' ' r V V , The Salt Lake Tribune. Sunday, March By Elizabeth Bowman Congressional Quarterly W 4SHINGTON After decades of mostly benign neglect, the federal government is doing some exploratory surgery on the rights of a little known patient the human m medical guinea pig research A Senate subcommittee has begun hearings and the Department of Health. Educatm and Welfare is considering overhaul of its year-olon human guidelines experimentation. This new interest was triggered partly m response to the revelation last July that the Public Health Service had failed to treat 430 men injected with syphilis in one of its experiments. Buts new medical advances, in thefields of prisoners, children or mentally members of Congress and an executive task force think federal standards governing their prticipation should be tightened up. The task force is headed the by genetics, brain surgery for behavior control and drug therapy among among others, heighten the stakes in ethical decisions affecting human life and behavior. d - i;: 23 A 11, 1973 Officials Begin Hearings on Rights of 'Human Guinea: Pigs a v-- , C human Almost every new procedure or drug most be test on a se lected group b humans before it can be safely used for the general patient population But because many subjects are Would these physicians care more about the test population if it w as composed of U S. he asked congressmen? W ould they be more caring if the human subject were their next door neighbor National research-oriente- d Institutes of Health ent approach His legislation would make the current guidelines applying to HEW grants for all federal statutory research He would also set up special funds for mecical school courses on clinical research ethics stan- experimentation dards to set guideline.--, for research using federal funds. ill. some Sen Hubert H Humphrey. , has introduced a bill to set up a national board on R-- February. Testimony revealed that humans may participate ethicallv in questionable research during the routine practice of medicine. The subcommittee was told study m which 41.000 patients m a major health plan were made to submit to a pam tolerance test without their consent during regular checkups. of one The Senate health subcommittee held the first half of its investigative hearings on human experimentation in late K. Sen Jacob Jauts, Y.. has proposed a differ j , Ralph Nader Invades Press torps . iXXixon Dupes? Nader Gets Reply on :Press Jobs ' j jv Bv Robert F. Buckhornv Umted Press International ;jj? WASHINGTON - A g of Washington national reporters produced a mixed reaction to Ralph Naders ; diarge that White House cor- jrLspondents act as a mimeo- jggraph machine" for President .S'iixon and should do more investigative reporting. In an interview. Nader had that newsmen assigned to White House should be ."Hit a ted to prevent the White 'House from favoring some interviews and leaks and freezing out" reporters who ijfile unflattering stories. '5- - He also urged the media to . send investigative reporting -t- eams into the White House and the Office of Management ;t,3nd Budget, its key economic We knew Super Saturday would cause such excitement and such crowds that we decided to hold it over for 6 more hours and make Sunday Super too . . . There are hundreds of outstanding Furniture Bargains left and we will still take orders at these Sale Prices on anything that can be even if we sold out yesterday . . . Dont Miss It!! ;;he ;',ith w arm. Inited tasked ijto Press onr re-order- ed Internatmal 25 top Washington and bureau chiefs comment on Naders state-intent- Of these, 10 earlybird expressed viewpoints. 2 replied that they j(Sd not wish to comment, and R. Larrabee. chief jJvif news bureau, and president of the National Press Club, said Rotation of White House newsmen is highly desirable it is better for the report ';p-- f ers, better for the public and ;t'bptter for the White House, whether the occupant thinks ao or not. Loa x not SPECIALS Ql'FtV i SAVE MO X I foam I 4T I I . ..J 187 Du, in $ versatile Hereulon Sofa and a Bed. T' ,i Aa , PI ' S N vw 111 IrtopKvLxKviiMiKHnkv Ml.l"l'lik i m ir top lit l'lt - I I K", I""- mill I ' "f ''"i1 - " K' ,l 'i Hi, ii, i " I- " tiiiil w .l;,; i- n- tm ,) Kroehler Reeliner S "" ,i,t,. ' SATURDAY 10 to 10 vli U W Germond, chief of jJack -- ie Washington Rureau of the Gannett News Service, said the problem was not a lack of & 'I I Yet! Seen Anything Home With lablesOf ,UW Haven't aOiion Your as investigative reporting Nader claimed "but the low quality of interpretive reporting" in the White House. MM v n Rich Glass And Chrome! iCtteitr Raises Questions Germond attacked Naders suggestion to rotate White House reporters, claiming it "raises questions about what he knows about the newspaper business " IS VUR1 & Wl $ ridi $ The Bedroom Dreams Are Made Of save$39 in,;;' "Simply changing bodies isnt the answer; the answer is putting better reporters on a first-ratthe assignment reporter isnt going to act like sheep' no matter he has been on the assignment. and some reporters HI MiHOARP ,k .IikIIK- - SUIIC 166 fCm X 9 imitNUKHi n end.- - ImpnHr1 Mexico In the carton All ,1 47 Ynuii A . a i w irclu use xi'in- t superP Pknd il, lt'e". Me fronl ami "inoUd - 1kK sxkxr.d m a Siunnim I ( onlemporars lull il e ' Bassett ' mond said David Kraslow, assistant managing editor of the Washagreed reington porters should not be allowed to acquire "a proprietary interest" in the White House. 3 .,97 ill NO Hill'- - Oil I 'I I,,. Nwi.. ( lam (111 Flood the Place Sun II I"" l.iiliui'd "The way for a major news to cover the oigamzatwn White House and its auxiliary offices is to flood the place with reporters pursuing specific stories," Kraslow said This approach "makes it infinitely more difficult for any administration to color the kind of reporting it gets from a news 'III- - I'SMI-- in hiMiimuK. Dinette! 9 Pc. Douglas King Sied pE'i-l'' lli'-- l - 86 'il'" Ill ,.l ... ' ,u u s ' - - " "X.' ,1 --oSSSJ-F) mm- - -- Star-New- ' 0,1 s - .'I arp going to cave in to their sources even if they're on the beat only two weeks, Ger- Silc H"l' Hi xU' how-lon- I U O er. organization According to Nader, the White House manipulates reporters who stay on the beat, turning them into "presidential valets" used to distribute propaganda Several of the icporters surveyed were in agreement that part of the role of the While House reporter was to report what Ihc while house says and to follow the official with stories which give the "why and how of the event. -- mfi.-r- , ''' vsjsvs SooOra A Osrcrin WhsnVm YOUU i U kn 5iximDew..iKJustoretoi kil s ij um Nolv ik, HWE-i- s96 Liv ing Heres Your Colonial Sav ings Now! Lev it Room unii " mil , "'1 d . I ..,.i- urtlM.v, iiniixc;ciiiK 'ii $9 ( quilled top rugiHd for Nader's call for more .investigative reporting, Larra-Jjif- e said the W'hite House is gjmt a territory easily roamed like the Capitol, nor are potential sources as accessi-jie- . III'-'- sF'!q Sofa till tin" - I'"'1 ,4 Pvr; its!" . 37 iHcd Sy-n- tii..rl- - . V .iglasSpace-Save- r Vvings Today! I" ct g Szj PM KKoeHuy IV, I ruliii. I1 e 1 KOM.V Wall Unit Gives That Decorator Look Fast- - Enjov Nights Oflranquihiy On hotel CUSTOM Bedding. 4tJV. X partial agreement with Nader ''to charges that he was naive. Gnffm-Larrabe- 6 A did notTespond. Range of Comments y The comments ranged from ,p; Donald the if SUM r' lut.iki rv"" lto.il- Save On A Kroehler Mill-Ill- - Now! Rocker-Reclin- KU iU-- HI Ml 11 - ta'"'; VI I" ,11 l,l.. Kroehler Swisel Ua,r Vinyl in Cure-fre- e rwtho )tn Mvl ,t It MlH ,, P" I ' k!a,1 I Hill' 73 SiHiiih Oak Fd)l .in,nH $Q'7 R laid. "Hu tf At mv.i -- Mil . i .Uv 87 - " - K "" ik i ml Old Spain By ,, - v. . . 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