Page 6-Wednesday, February 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily Wops need w * 1 LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan The ruling extended a Court of Appeals ruled yesterday'police by the Michigan Suprem "informants and undercover agents forced police to obtain a 0must obtain a search warrant before they "bug" a suspect1 Oecretly recording a conversation with sound transmitting devi suspected felon. mant and transmitting The court reversed the Washtenaw sation to a third party. -County Circuit Court conviction of Bob- The appeals court said jby Hall on heroin delivery charges apply to secret tape rec 'because a tape recording made by a as concealed sound mo %police informant of an alleged heroin ment. rtransaction was admitted as evidence "One does not need tog in the trial, in the history of this cou STATE COURT RULES irrant for secret taping 0 a 1975 decision ne Court which warrant when by planting a ce on an infor- g the conver- that rule must ordings as well nitoring equip- go back too far ntry to find in- stances where an innocent or innocuous statement when made, takes on grave and sinister overtones 10 or 20 years later when the social climate has changed, the appeals court said. "The fact that a recording of a con- versation could be permanently stored and then produced long after the par- ticipants or their monitors forgot about the conversation makes participant recording just as intrusive of privacy as participant monitoring, and subject to the same restrictions on its use." In a dissenting opinion, Appeals Judge Robert Danhof said he believes tape recording a conversation is less objectionable than bugging or monitoring. The recording can be limited to crucial exchanges and can be edited, while monitoring is a veritable catch- all, he said. But the two-judge majority denied that the search warrant requirement would deprive police of a useful in- vestigative tool. "How different life in this state would be if everyone had to expect that their every conversation, their every careless phrase or ill-advised statement could be captured and preserved for all time," the, majority opinion said. "Such a lifestyle is not what is expec- ted nor desired by the members in a free society," she said. 'How different life in this state would be if everyone had to expect that their every eon- versation ... could be cap- tured and preserved for all time. -Majority opinion in bugging case. FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S 1961 SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER Truffaut found the plot for this movie in a dime novel and transformed it with half-thriller, half-parody and a lot of people's favorite movie. A cafe pianist tries to hide a secret past and a couple of madcap criminal brothers with little success. Starring the French gangster of Brooklyn, Charles Aznavour. Short: MIGHTY MOUSE IN MYSTERIOUS PACKAGE. 13 lbs. coke confiscated in N. Y. THURS: FROM 1 FRI: SLAUGH b CINEMA GUILD RUSSIA WITH LOVE HTER HOUSE FIVE TONIGHT AT .7:00 & 9:0 OLE ARCH. AUD. $1.50 NEW YORK (Reuter) - Cocaine valued at three million dollars was seized at Kennedy Airport after being secreted in several pieces of luggage on a flight from Venezuela, the Queens District Attorney's office said yester- day. It was one of the largest shipments of cocaine ever seized in the U.S. New York City detectives seized six kilos (13.2 pounds) of cocaine and arrested five New Yorkers - two of whom were aboard the Pan American flight - on smuggling charges last Sunday afternoon. TWO DETECTIVES who had gone to Caracas to follow the suspects were also aboard the flight, according to Queens District Attorney John Santuc- ci. Santucci said investigations showed the cocaine was intended for' distribution throughout the nor- theastern United States. The two suspects who were aboard the Pan Am plane were identified as Maria Vitale, 29, a legal secretary for a Brooklyn law firm, and Neil Rullo, 32, also of Brooklyn. Mor. Santucci said the cocaine wa found hidden in the linings of two pieces of luggage they had in their possession. Authorities stumbled upon what San- tucci described as a "Venezuelan con- nection" during an investigation into several unsolved gangland-type slayings, one of which involved a retired New York City fireman. All five suspects have been indicted on drug smuggling charges. y. r.' ,A GA V The U.of M.'s Office of Major Events Presents m FIRRYCHPN I - Engineering teacher suspended for hypnotizing college students THURSDAY, FEB. 8 AT 8 PM. HILL AUD.,ANN ARBOR Reserved seats are $7.50, $6.50 and $5.50 BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) - A junior college engineering professor has been suspended and could be fired today because he hypnotizes students to im- prove their grades. Manatee Junior College officials claim the practice is inappropriate for anyone other than a qualified doctor or; psychologist. PROFESSOR Arlie Lincks insists it's beneficial. The flap began back in 1972 in -this quiet Gulf Coast city. Since then Lincks has twice been cited for insubordination for practicing hypnosis on campus. Two months ago he was suspended. And the board of trustees meets today to decide whether to fire him. LIncks said he has long been a prac- ticing devotee of hypnotism and said it has worked wonders with students with below-average grades. ONCE HYPNOTIZED, he said, "They retain what they study and it alleviates fear of the professor, of the subject matter, of exams." One believer is Ellen Richelieu, now a second grade teacher at Oneco Elemen- tary School near here. "I was on academic suspension at the college," she said. "Professor Lincks got to the source of the problem through hypnosis and helped me to relax before the tests. I could close my eyes and remember everything I had studied. Before then, everything went blank." { MISS RICHELIEU said Lincks hyp- notized her in his campus office. Much of the conflict seems to be over whether Lincks actually was ordered not to practice hypnosis on campus. Lincks, who has a iaster's degree in education, was teaching ,a human relations course in,1972 when he first put to work the hypnosis he had picked up over the years. He claims he was qualified through a number of courses in psychology. I Dr. Wilson Wetzler, school president, said Lincks was accused of insubor- dination and put on probation in 1973. By 1974, Wetzler said, Lincks was again practicing hypnosis on campus. He was accused this time of gross insubor- dination. By the end of the year, he ap- parently was obeying orders and his contract was restored. S. Moore recaptured ALDERSON, W. Va. (AP) - Sarah Jane Moore, who attempted to kill then- President Gerald Ford, was returned to prison yesterday after only hours of freedom, saying her capture represen- ted a double failure. Moore, who admitted she tried to kill Ford in 1975 during a presidential trip to San Francisco, scaled a 12-foot fence surrounding the Federal Reformatory -for Women late Monday. She and another inmate were apprehended by police about 30 miles away as they tried to hitchhike. "I did not escape to be caught," Moore said in an interview in Davis Hall, which houses. the high-security detention unit. She also said her cap- ture . will be used by prison ad- ministrators as an excuse to make life harder for inmates. ' She has com- plained loudly about conditions at the prison. GET Art exhibt cancelled MAPI VItLAGE SHOPPING NTER 769-1300 (Continued trom eage 1) a r e.a "arr e^ti Tickets on sale now at Michigan Union Box Office Mon.-Fri., 11:30 to 5:30 (763-2071). Tickets also at Huckleberry Party Store in Ypsilanti and Falsetta Market in Ann Arbor. Sorry, we cannot accept personal checks. Smoking and beverages strictly prohibited in Hill. ADMISSION Adut-$4.00 Chld-$2.00 'PG] Unted Artists SHOWTIMES MON.-FRI. 6:30-9:00 SAT. & SUN. 1:45 6:30 3:45 9:00 Tickets on Sale 15 Minutes Prior to Showtime quotation. It can't possibly be con- strued as a political statement," he said. OTHER UNIVERSITY officials agreed with Waller. "We regret that no change in the events scheduled as part of the Russian Arts Festival is possible," said, Harold Shapiro, University vice president for academic affairs and representative to the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, which is circulating the exhibition. "We did not intend to be provocative to the Soviet government, or to offend it. We are-extremely disap- pointed that we are unable to share this fine exhibition with the University community," he added. Deming Brown, professor of Slavic languages and literatures and director of the Center for Russian and Eastern European Studies - which is coor- dinating the Russian Arts Festival - had stronger words for the Soviets. "JOSEF BRODSKY is a splendid Russian poet and a member of the University of Michigan faculty staff," Brown said. "Solzhenitsyn is a great Russian writer. I believe they are the two finest representatives of Russian literature who are writing today. It is completely appropriate that their names be associated with our Russian Arts Festival," he said. 'Members of AKTSIA, a student organization whose goal is to promote human rights in the Soviet Union, backed the University in the controver- sy. "AKTSIA supports the University's decision to hold the poetry reading by Josef Brodsky as originally planned," said AKTSIA (the Russian word for ac- tion) spokesman Allan Alter. In a prepared statement,"Alter said, "Although we too are disappointed that the art exhibit will not be seen here, we are pleased that the University has -chosen not to become an extension of Soviet oppression." Brodsky himself was pleased by the University decision to keep him in the program. "If it's only a matter of me not giving a reading, then it wouldn't be so important," he said. "But it's not me, it's a matter of principle. You shouldn't let someone from the outside dictate to you." SH MON.-FRI. 7:00-9:45 Tickets on Sole 30 Prior to Show YOU'L L BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY SUPERMAN MARLON BRANDO GENE HACKMAN RELEASED BY WARNER BROS. 0 PG OWTIMES . SAT. & SUN. 1:30 7:00 Minutes 4:15 9:45 time -1( 1. 5 so wt Moore I m . + s Thousands crowd streets for Khomeini WEDNESDA Y IS ' MONDAY IS "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED FOR PRICE OF ONE ADULTS FRI.,SAT.,SUN. EVE. & HOLIDAYS $3.50 MON.-THURS. EVE. $3.0 ALL MATINEES $2.50 CHILD TO 14 $1.50 IN I smamp. CAMPUS STARTING FRI., FEB. 9th LORD OF THE RINGS" MWAM ...+ -1 (Continued from Page 1) Radio Iran said three people were- killed and 30 wounded in fighting bet- ween royalists and republicans in the southeastern city of Zahedan, near the Pakistan border. Yazdi gave a different version, however.. He said enigmatically th'at two senior Iranian officers were responsible for the three deaths during shooting by attackers disguised as tribesmen. "WE'RE AT A very critical and sen- sitive stage," said Yazdi. "It is not as rosy' as one might expect. There are still remnants of the old regime of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi still operating and seeking to cause violen- ce." In Washington, meanwhile, the. U.S. yesterday urged Bakhtiar and his op- ponents to create a climate in which Iranians can decide their political* future. I The Ann Arbor Film Coepertive presents at AUD A Wednesday, February 7 RASHOMON (Akira Kurosawa, 1950) 7 & 10:20-AUD A A bandit (TOSHIRO MIFUNE), a samurai, and his wife each tell of a rape and killing in which they were involved. A woodcutter who witnessed the same events recounts a fourth version. The discrepancies in the stories indicate the mysterious quality of truth. "RASHOMON is one of the greatest film experiences-,a film one will see again because there are pleasures-as well as pain-in looking into an abyss."-Pauline Kael. Academy Award, Best Foreign Film, Grand Prix, Venice Film Festival. In Japanese, with subtitles. I . J m\ I