Rage Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ti t -i-, .,. .ri g1'7a I u auy juruI I I D 1'f I ~- D I Schools to test i WASHINGTON 'P) - The Nixon administra- tion wants to look for traces of drugs in the urine of high-school and grade-school students. The first such drug-screening program, ten- tatively scheduled to start Feb. 1 in a Harlem school with grades five through eight, won't force any student to submit to testing. But Nixon's top drug-abuse officials say they will supply federal "money for a compulsory pro- gram if some locality wants one. A spokesman for Dr. Jerome Jaffe, head of Nixon's Special Action Office on Drug Abuse Prevention, said he consider civilian drug screen- ing programs a last resort, but adds "When kids are dying, it may be time for last resorts." Jaffee has called for public discussion of ci- vilian drug screening like the Army's mandatory urine testing of Vietnam GIs before they return home. The Harlem project, which seeks $70,000 fromn the Office of Economic Opportunity, is the first to be tried. It was planned by the locally elected school board in Harlem, and according to board chair-, irine for drugs man Calvin Alston, no child will be tested unless permission is obtained from the parents and the child himself. If testing turns up signs of drug use, school officials will inform the parents and tell them where to find treatment. The child's name won't be given to police, health officials or anyone out- side the school, Alston said. If the parents agree to testing but the child refuses, the student will be put in a "peer-group discussion" to explain his refusal to his fellow students, Alston said. If he still refuses "we let him alone" he added. Alston said the test school, Frederick Doug- lass Intermediate School, has 1,700 pupils, and that parents of 1,000 already have agreed to test- ing. He said he believes the school itself is rela- tively free of drug addicts. Alston said the pro- gram is inetnded to find and treat pupils who are experimenting with drugs before they can be- come addicted. BELFAST HIT: Blasts renew fears of IRA offensive I Wter Cami M~atthau Burnett BELFAST (Reuters) - Fears of a new Irish Republican Army (IRA) bombing offensive in Nor- thern Ireland arose yesterday when two more blasts s h o o k Belfast within seconds of each other. A third explosion in the c i t y center was thought to be the work of guerrillas. But the army said later it blew up an unat- tended car because of fears the vehicle contained a bomb. The explosions followed t h e planting of five other bombs in the city last week and the week- end deaths of three policemen by booby-trap devices in the interior of the province. Catholic and Protestant lead- ers immediately condemned the killings and Northern Ireland se- curity chiefs met yesterday to discuss the fresh wave of vio- lence threatening to undermine the British government's peace- making policies. Tension returned to the streets i ii of Belfast following the 1 a t e s t blasts. Police closed off the main shopping street, Royal avenue, for two hours after receiving a telephone warning that a bomb was planted in a large depart- ment store. But the call proved a hoax. The Provisional IRA claimed responsibility for the deaths of two of the policemen in London- derry. Two other policemen were seriously injured when a booby- trap bomb blew up their car. The bombings and police kill- ings are seen here as a strong indication that supporters of a new all-our military campaign were gaining the upper hand within the provisional wing. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area>; $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mall (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign)i. "A COMEDY THAT ~> W IL L A KE Y OU LAUGH & CRY, IT COULD BE THE BIG HIT OF THE NEW SEASON."ss -Detroit Free Press 5th HIT WEEK ! PG "AN INTELLIGENT COMEDY WITH SOME OF THE CLEVEREST LINES IN YEARS ... THE SURPRISE COMEDY HIT OF THE YEAR." -A.A. News E DIAL 662-6264 OPEN 12:45 Shows ot 1,3 5, 7, 9 P.M. FOREST. FIRES BURN MORE THAN TREES 2 I 11 _r.~ ....x..-_ _ .. ... _. ___ ...__----__-_ ____ _ SOURCE PROTECTION: Reporter's shield laws up for Senate study soon * the Lion. In Wvinter 8:00 P.M. JANUARY 17-20, 1973 MENDELSSOHN THEATRE TICKETS $2.00,$3.00 MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE Opens 10 A.M., Jan. 15 PRESENTED BY: ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE 4 WASHINGTON (IP) - A Senate subcommittee plans to begin hearings Feb. 20 on various mea- sures to protect reporters from being compelled to disclose con- fidential news sources and infor- rnation.: Seo}. $am Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), in announcing the plans yesterday referred to the legislation as "a, means of protecting the people's right to be informed." Ervin is chairman of the Sen- ate Judiciary subcommittee on constitutional rights. In the House, Rep. Robert Kastenmeier (D-Wis.) chairman of a Judiciary subcom- n'ittee; has announced that his group also plans hearings early this year on bills on newsmen's privilege. Last June the Supreme Court held that the first amendment guarantee of a free press did not give a reporter the right to refuse to. testify.. before a grand jury about information given to him in __ Ct asfd Q ° TUES.: CLEOPATRA Hollywood's Last Super-Star Spectacle with LIZ TAYLOR & RICHARD BURTON confidence. Sponsors of various Senate mea- sures on the matter say that if newsmen are forced to reveal their sources under threat of being jailed, news sources will tend to dry up. "Whatever short-term benefits may flow from government's re- liance upon newsmen for evidence in governmental proceedings, the long-term threat to the public's right to be informed about the con- troversial as well as the routine it too great a risk to take in a free society," Ervin said in a statement. Ervin, who was among those who introduced a qualified protection bill last year, does not plan to of- fer a measure of his own now. In- stead, he intends to await the tak- ing of testimony by his subcom- mittee. 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