Wednesday, October 16, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednsday Ocober16,1974THE ICHGAN AIL Soviet spy loses to court WASHINGTON (iP) - Convict- ed spy-Igor Ivanov yesterday lost his bid for Supreme Court review of his conviction for turning American military sec- rets over to the Russians. Ivanov had contended that the conviction should be overturn- ed on grounds that the govern- ment used illegal wiretapvevi- dence against him. THE JUSTICE Department had filed a brief with the Su- preme Court saying it supported a lower court decision uphold- ing the wiretaps but urging that the Supreme Court review the case. The Supreme Court, with Jus- tices William Douglas, William Brennan Jr. and Potter Stew- art dissenting, declined to re- view a ruling by the U. S. Cir- cuit Court in Philadelphia that the wiretaps were legal. Attorney Edward Bennett Williams, representing Ivanov, told the Supreme Court that the case raised the constitutional issue of "whether warrantless electronic surveillance is per- missible in the foreign affairs field." IN 1972, the court struck down the use of warrantless wiretaps to gather intelligence for do- mestic security purposes. I In the same decision, how- ever, the court said it was withholding judgment on "the view that warrantless surveil- lance, though impermissible in domestic security cases, may be constitutional where foreign powers are involved." Ivanov was convicted 10 years ago of attempting to communi- cate to the Soviet government information concerning the Strategic Air Command. HIS CASE has been to the Supreme Court once before. In 1969, the court sent it back to a lower federal court for a determination of whether there had been illegal wiretaps. The Justice Department dis- closed the taps in the course of the first appeal, but argued that disclosure of the detailsto the defense was not required. IN ITS reply to the second appeal, the department said it supported the appeals court de- cision upholding the wiretaps, but believed the matter was worthy and a final decision by the Supreme Court. Ivanov and John Butenko, an American engineer with access to Air Force plans for a Stra- tegic Air Command electronic system, were arrested at a rail- road station in Englewood, N.J., after FBI agents saw Butenko hand a briefcase to Ivanov. Butenko received a 30-year sentence. Three Soviet citizens employed at the United Na- tions were ordered home. Iva- nov, a chauffeur for the Soviet trading agency Amtorg when arrested, is under a 20-year; prison sentence. Shortly after his conviction in 1969, Ivanov was permitted to return to the Soviet Union* after his government promised to send him back to the United States if a court ordered it. Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b au t the drama, dance, 'film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. UPHOLDS FORD VETO House continues Turkish aid h WASHINGTON (A) - The ride Ford's veto of the aid cut-! House yesterday narrowly up- off. held President Ford's veto of a But the opponents agreed withj bill that would have cut off predictions of leaders, including military aid to Turkey. Senate Republican Leader Hugh The 223-135 vote, 16 short of Scott, that the Senate will sus- thettwo-thirds majority requi ,tain Ford's veto whether the w' ed to override a veto, killed the I House overrides or not. cutoff measure and left Con- A presidential veto can be gress the task of drafting new overturned only by a two-thirds legislation to provide interim vote of both House and Senate. ""financing for federal agencies t hhave not yet been voted CONGRESS has postponed its their appropriations for the campaign recess for a week to year. act because the Turkey aid cut- THE VOTE was 223 to 135 to off is in an emergency stop-gap - { over-ride, 17 short of the two- funding resolution for agencies thirds necessary. whose legal spending authority H o u s e Appropriations expired Sept. 3. Chairman George Mahon (D- Denouncing "reckless acts,"} Tex.) said the committee would Ford said in his veto message meet later in the day to re- Monday that Congress' resolu- draft a new emergency funding tion to cut off aid to Turkey is resolution for a number of fed- "entirely destructive" to U. S. eral agencies. The resolution efforts to bring about Cyprus died with the veto because the peace negotiations. Turkey aid cutoff was attached The President also said the to it. aid cutoff might imperil U. S. The House vote was Congress' relations with Turkey "and first on overriding any of Ford's weaken us in the crucial east- vetoes and the House began re- ern Mediterranean. "It direct- AP Photo cording it on the electronic vot- ly jeopardizes the NATO alli- enChed ing counters on each end of the ance he added. chamber almost immediately looks to the outside. Born 25 years after Ford's veto message was BOTH THE House and Sen-' bides his time in San Diego's zoo. read. There was no debate. ate originally voted overwhelm-' OPPONENTS of the Turkish ingly, four to one, to cut off the aid said optimistically Monday U. S. aid after Turkey's inva- that spot checks indicated they sion of Cyprus to force nego- r might be able to muster a two- tiations on Turkey's withdrawal thirds House vote today to over- from the island. But Ford contended that rath- er than encourage negotiations the Turkey aid cutoff would les- sen U. S. influence in getting Turkey to negotiate and "could mean the indefinite postpone- ment of meaningful negotia- tions." In a clear reference to con- gressmen's sensitivity to Greek-! American lobby efforts for the Turkey aid cutoff, Ford said lack of negotiations will not help Greece or the Greek Cy- priots. who formerly dominated Cyprus. ''Reckless acts that prevent progress toward a Cyprus set- tlement harm Greece, for it is the Greek government and the Greek Cypriots who have the most to gain from a compro- mise settlement," Ford said. -4 classroom instruction in electronic music the music s tudio LAST CLASS FOR TERM BEGINS THIS THURSDAY NIGHT 555 e. william 994.5404 mumm.~ R Albert, a 400 lb. gorilla, ago in the Congo, he now Doctors BECAUSE YOU'VE ACHIEVED The experiences that have "carved" your real, achievements are the personal ones. Wear a class ring and remember. Order on Ring Day and save 5%. Thursday & Friday, Oct. 17 & 18-11-4 ULBICH' GIVE BLOOD TO KEEPA GOOD THING GOING. with memory drug WASHINGTON iP) - Doctors are experimenting with a memo- ry erasing drug that can rid a surgical patient of unpleasant re- collections about the operating room. nyCalled lorazepam, the drug still is experimental and available only for medical research. WHEN administered intravenously before surgery, a patient can remain awake in the operating room under a local anesthetic and not remember the experience. "Anesthesiologists frequently are faced with a situation where they prefer to have patients awake while anesthetized with a re- gional block technique. However, the patient desires to have no recall of the operating room or even leaving the hospital room," said Dr. David Heisterkamp of the University of Colorado medi- cal center in Denver. Heisterkamp and Dr. Peter Cohen, also of the University of Colorado, reported yesterday on their research during a meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.j THE DOCTORS said the drug is under consideration by the- Food and Drug Administration. If it eventually becomes more! widely available, Heisterkamp and Cohen said it might find other applications in medicine where blocking recall of the trauma connected with medical treatment would benefit a patient. The drug has been available abroad under the trade name Atiban for several years, the doctors said. It has been used largely as a sedative. The Colorado doctors have studied nearly 100 patients. Their report yesterday was about results with the first 69. PATIENTS WERE given the drug 45 minutes before surgery. Thirty minutes later they were shown a double size picture of a dollar bill and asked to describe it. Then they underwent surgery in which they remained awake under a local anesthetic. During surgery the patients were asked if they recalled the dollar bill and again 24 hours later. A group of control patients not given lorazepam also werej shown the dollar bill and asked to recall it. Those administered the drug at 5 miligram doses had no recall at all. Most of those receiving 3 miligram doses also had no recall. Control patients had perfect recall, the doctors said. U. ofM. SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM in NEW YORK Offering programs in Business, Adver- tising, P u b Ii c Relations, Publishing, Broadcasting, and other fields. 3 MASS ME ET ING TH U RSDAY, OCT. 17 7:00 p.m.-Aud. B-Angell Hall open to juniors & seniors oriented towards liberal arts backgrounds TICKETS GO ON SALE TODAY $10 per donation to buy gas. Detroit Biologicals 432 W. MICH. AVE. YPSILANTI, MICH. Phone 487-9400 Mon., Tues., Thurs. 9.to 5 p. m.J .. ... DIMENSIONS OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE LECTURE AND DISCUSSION SERIES WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16, 3-5 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A ZEN-THE CONFLUENCE OF TAOISM & BUDDHISM by T. JAMES KODERA, Instructor in Religion & East Asian Studies, Oberlin College NEXT WEEK: Oct. 23, 3-5 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A OCCULT METAPHYSICS IN THE WESTERN TRADITION by Professor GARY KESSLER, philosophver of Religion California State College at Bakersfield Sponsored by Office of Ethics and Religion, 3rd floor, Michigan Union, 764-7442 - JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY UNTIL 5:30 P.M. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 36 Wednesday, October 16, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d ai11y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 iocal mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- vURhL S W+L vT R A co4 V ! \kOS Yeil + K' ACAL -Pd. Pol. Adv. BROWSE The Best Selection of PAPERBACK BOOKS IN TOWN! ON FOLLETT'S MEZZANINE State St. End of Diaq Reserved Seats $6.00, 5.50, 5.00, 4.00-at U. of M. Union 11-5:30 daily (763-4553) All Hudson's and Huckleberry Party, Store, washtenaw, Ypsilanti SORRY, NO PERSONAL CHECKS I this is ELECT RAE WEAVER on WOMEN'S RIGHTS .Men perceive women and women perceive themselves. These attitudes and percepions are not subject to legislation. What is subject to legislation, is the availability of oppor- tunity. Women must have the same opportunity in all areas as men-education, private industry, government.-LIFE '' '"4 +'fi ° , 53rd Dist. Paid Political Ad. Doug. Crary/Treas. Rep. St. Rep. :: S«' ,,y."" 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