WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS STUDENT NIGHT AT THE AMAD INN 2800 JACKSON ROAD' ENTERTAINMENT BEGINS AT 8 P.M.1 - PRESENTING - "THE GUILD" and FOLKSINGER JOE DICK WINGFIELD page three Z t rP Sii 13an 41, 43 atly 0~554 NEWS PRONE: 764-05 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-C Sunday, February 15, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I the U. S. bombers fly supportive 2 Miles West of U of M Campus COCKTAILS AND GOOD FOOD 1-94 at Exit 172 9 No Cover Charge "rrr" news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service PRESIDENT NIXON ANNOUNCED the United States is ban- ning military production and use of toxins, including snake venom, food poisons and tetanus. An administration spokesman said, "I think we are demon- strating by this that we are serious about controlling the arms race; that we are prepared to take risks for peace and that we are willing to forego some seemingly unilateral benefits." Nixon's statement reserved the right to retaliate inkind if an- other nation used toxins first against the United States. AFL-CIO PRESIDENT GEORGE MEANY has blamed Presi- dent Nixon's anti-inflation policies for the layoffs of thousands of construction workers and for hurting efforts to hire more blacks. At the same time, C. J. Haggerty, president of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department, criticized Nixon's cutbacks in federal construction. He said unemployment among construction workers has risen to 8 per cent while the national over-all unemployment rate is 3.9 per cent. THE 10TH U.S. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS in Denver, Colo., will be asked to decide tomorrow if a federal judge, barred by federal law from ordering busing of student to achieve racial balance in schools, can legally change school boundaries so that busing results. The case involves a ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Luther Bohanon in Oklahoma City's public school integration dispute. "This is going to be a pilot case," commented Leslie Conner, attorney for the Oklahoma City Board of Education. S* * U.S. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION James E. Allen said yesterday President Nixon will ask Congress to create two special organizations to help states solve education problems. One, a Commission of School Finance, would help states with financial problems in education. It would report directly to the President. The other, a National Institute for Education, would do research in learning. It would be located in the Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare. missions for Laotian l v SAIGON (M - U.S. fighter-bombers are flying combat support for government forces in Laos who so far are stand- ing up under north Vietnamese attacks around the Plain of Jars, informed sources said yesterday. The weight of U.S. air blows apparently is being felt. Sev- en North Vietnamese prisoners interviewed in Vientiane, the capital of Laos, said their greatest fear was bombing attacks. Five of the prisoners were captured in the plain area. The United States has never admitted its planes are fly- ing combat support for the Laotian ground forces. President Nixon and others have spoken only of U.S. air raids on the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos, the main North Vietnamese infiltration route to South Vietnam. The sources said scores of U.S." troops i w r NOW HEAR THIS- A LIMITED NUMBER OF ENSIANS HAVE BEEN ORDERED. GET YOURS BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE ------------------- MICHIGANENSIAN ] The University of Michigan ] JustYearbook ] SJustreturn this card with $7.00 I (check or money order payable to] te MICH IGANENSIAN) to the' udent Publications Buildigg, 420 ] Maynard, A receipt will be sent] ] within 3 weeks after your order is ] received. I Name Ann Arbor Address_ -----.-.--.-.------.-.-J -Associated Press Aiken raps Tonkin Resolution Sen. George D. Aiken; (R-Vt), tells conferees at a foreign policy symposium in Montpelier yesterday that the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was misinterpreted, and that he would vote for its repeal today. 'U' CIVIL LIBERTIES BOARD Policy formed on student files fighter-bombers fly t h e combat amissionsfrom a half-dozen bases in Thailand. They implied that some planes m a y be using Da Nang in northern South Vietnam and U.S. 7th Fleet carriers in the Gulf of Tonkin. They added that this did not detract from the 300 to 400 sorties a day being flown against the Ho Chi Minh trail by U.S. fighter- bombers and B-52 Stratofortress- es. American sources in Vientiane and Saigon expressed belief the North Vietnamese have begun their offensive to capture the strategic Plain of Jars, 50 miles long and 20 miles wide about 100 miles northeast of Laos. But this was discounted in Vien- tiahe by Information Minister Tiao Sisoumang Sisaleumsak, who introduced the North Vietnamese prisoners at a news conference. He said the North Vietnamese were repulsed in two attacks on the plain Thursday and Friday and lost 80 killed. Explaining why he did not be- lieve the offensive had yet mater- ialized, he said both attacks last- ed only a few hours and the en- emy did not try to pursue the ac- tions., Most believe that w h e n the showdown comes, the Laotiani government troops will not try to1 hold t h e plain, which controls roads leading from North Vietnam into Laos. It is generally agreed the Lao-, tian forces will be outnumbered and that it is better to fight a de- laying action, although a source in Saigon said he believed t h e y could hold the plain if they want-s ed to pay the price. As he explained it, the plain is "just not worth the casualties." Referring to U.S. plane support,1 he added: "We are going to make it difficult for the enemy. We are not just going to walk away from it." Most of the U.S. bombing raidsc have been concentrated around the junction of Routes 7 and 71,t the main North Vietnamese in-t filtration routes. "These are strong points on thet hills that overlook the roads,"t another source explained. "They are the controlling elements for getting on to the plain by road.1 The North Vietnamese have cap- tured most of them, but they still do not have unrestricted access." "TWO OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" "Besides being one of the truely funny sophisticated comedies, it starred one of the best looking chicks ever."-Neal Gabler .A VMY FUNNY,. IMENSYAPPELING MOVIE VincentCanby.N.1.Times -Neal Gabler, Mich. Daily "A 'beautiful' movie. One of the finest and most immediate adap- tations of Shakespeare I have ever seen."-Neal Gabler { DAZZLING" -LIFE PARAMOUNT PICTURES prcn" The ZEFFIRELLI ProdiMEion of 1-1ULIET (Continued from Page 1) -That students have access to their files in so far as that access does not violate the rights of others; -That information contained in the records be available to sources outside the University only with the written authoriza- tion of the student; and, -That the student be notified immediately when disclosure of his record is forced by subpoena. Several of the items includ- ed in the policy appear to be quite innovative and potentially controversial, such as the one regarding student access to files., In practical application, how- ever, such points are for the most part modified statements of existing policies, rather than drastic renovations, according to medical Prof. Gerald Abrams, chairman of the Civil Liberties Board. In the student access item, the inclusion of the phrase 'in- sofar as that access does not vio- late the rights of others," pro- tects evaluations submitted with the understanding that the in- formation is being kept in strict confidence. Present policy, as emphastically stated in the Counselor's Handbook, is "In no case may the student have access to his file." The proposed policy will al'ow mlmi1e, I ITH POrUM "COLUMBUS"-Sun. and Mon. 7:15 only "ROMEO"-Sun. 2:15, 4:45, 9:00 Mon. 9:00 only a student to review those pieces of information in his file, the contents of which he is fully aware. This would include, re- commendations solicited by him for purposes such as appoint- ments or awards, as well as any written observations regarding him which have been inserted in the file with the understanding that they may be viewed by the student. The board members feel this distinction between confidential and non-confidential subject matter must be maintained. As a member of both the Junior/Senior Counseling staff and the Civil Liberties Board, Prof. Moore explains the com- plexity of the problem in this area: "The idea of restricted in- formation is anti-thetical to the .very ideas of a university. I for one would prefer maximum availability of information - but then the type of information retained would necessarily be very limited." "Certain information must be made available to those individ- uals in need -of making judg- ments," says Moore. For this reason, he says, con- tinued restriction of confidential evaluations is carefully observed in the board's recommendations. "There is . no intention to 4> harbor vicious or secretive com- ments," Moore says. "But some information if seen by a student might be considered revealing," Moore says, "where- as, as a counselor, I would con- sider it perfectly innocent and extremely helpful to know." How can information be screened so that only pertinent, "helpful" data are retained? "It can only be done," ack- nowledges Moore, "across years of experience and hundreds of students. I do what I do as a counsellor keeping in m i n d what was important to me when I was a student." That communications are in constant review is indicated by both Moore and Assistant Dean George' Anderson of the LSA Freshman/Sophomore Counsel- ing Offices. Moore recalls an instance when he saw something in one file which he considered harm- ful and irrelevant to the func- tion of counseling. He notified the dean of the office who eval- uated the communication' and had it removed from the file. In another case, Anderson was visited by a faculty mem- ber who spoke viciously of a stu- dent and requested that a cer- tain action be taken against him. "I looked up the student's re- cord," Anderson relates, "stu- died the counselors' comments and saw that this faculty mem- ber's comments were entirely in- consistent with previous evalua- tions." "No action was taken against the student, and no mention of the instructor's visit was re- corded." According to Assistant LSA Dean Baker, one of the chair- men of the Administrative Board, faculty members a n d teaching fellows are permitted to see records only in the pre- sence of a member of the Ad- ministrative Board. No under- graduate students are hired for clerical work in the counsel- ing offices. Since such precautions are al- ready taken in the handling of student records, it might seem that formal statement of proced- ures is unnecessary. Not so, says Abrams. "A uni- form policy statement is need- ed not as a corrective of abusive practices within record keeping offices, for on the whole there have not been abuses," he said. "The primary motives behind the policy is to warn people, in whatever office they may be, that there are very strong re- strictions on what can be shar- ed." Anderson favors keeping high school evaluations saying, "There are some who feel in- formation sent by the student's high school should be exclud- ed from the files, but this in- formation is evaluated just as conscientiously as more recent evaluations." The report recommends that no records pertaining to court action, race, political or reli- gious association or convictions be kept. The only exception to this proposal, as stated in the policy, would be information needed to comply with Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare regulations on race statistics. In regard to court action data, no record is kept in counseling offices, according to Dean An- derson, not even in matters of student judicial hearings. d t Michigan seizure law inval From Wire Service Reports LANSING - The State Court of Appeals ruled Friday that a section of the Michigan Constitu- tion applying to search and seizure is not valid because it conflicts with an amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Appeals Court reversed the conviction of a Detroit man, George Cooper Andrews, 42, charged with carrying a concealed weapon. It said Andrews was picked up last year as a suspect in an area where a murder had been com- mitted. He was carrying an un- licensed revolver in his pocket. The actual murderers were caught later, but Andrews was or- dered to stand trial for carrying a concealed weapon. Attorneys for Andrews moved to suppress the evidence as being the product of Onreasonable search and seizure. The trial court held the evi- dence admissable under a section of Article One of the Michigan Constitution, which says: "The protection of this section shall not apply to bar from evi- dence in any criminal proceedings any narcotic, drug, firearm, bomb, explosive or any other dangerous weapon seized by a peace officer outside . . . any dwelling house in the state." In its ruling the Appeals Court said this provision is in conflict with the U.S. Constitution, which bars any evidence seized without due cause from trial proceedings. Chief Judge T. John Lesinski of the Court of Appeals, in writing the opinion, said previous opin-. ions have "set Michigan apart as the one state in the union refusing to protect the right of criminal defendants subjected to unreason- able search and seizures in this limited area. "A review of the record in this case convinces us that passive ac- ceptance of the (state) constitu- tional provision is no longer per- missible." Wednesday "I AM CURIOUS (YELLOW)" The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mai. . Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. The case was sent back to Re- corder's Court Judge Donald Leon- ard for a new trial. Arresting officers testified that Andrew "fit the description" of one of the murderers in that area, so they searched him and found an unlicensed revolver in his pocket. IIm -rTATE NOW SHOWING! SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00-5:00- 7:00-9:05 P.M. "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" -REX REED THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY PRESENTS ANORMANJWISONFILM 4~ LA, I 1111 I vI-. . . I II *WW #B Va V -a 81%81 No %o~wa PIUITZER PRIZE~*::~..