/. Supreme Court says police can- make drivers lea WASHINGTON (AP) - Motorists stopped for routine traffic violations may be ordered by police to get out of their cars, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. Three dissenting justices said the decision 'leaves police discretion utterly without limits." In deciding a Philadelphia case, the high court's six-member major- ity ruled that such orders are justified by concerns for police safety - concerns it called "legitimate and weighty." "ESTABLISHING A face-to-face confrontation diminishes the possi- bility, otherwise substantial, that the driver can make unobserved move- ments," the court said in an unsigned opinion. "This, in turn, reduces the likelihood that the officer will be the victim of an assault." Justice John Paul Stevens, in a strongly worded dissent in which Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan; joined, said such police actions threaten the constitu- tional rights of motorists to be protected a g a i n s t unreasonable searches. "To eliminate any . requirement that an officer be able to explain the reasons for his actions signals an abandonment of effective judicial supervision . . . and leaves police discretion utterly without limits," Stevens said. IN OTHER matters yesterday, the court: " Agreed to settle a dispute over water rights between the federal gov- ernment and California, a controver- sy with significant impact for 16 other western states. At issue is whether states legally may impose water-use conditions on federal water-management projects. Refused to review an attempt by x the Hunt family of Texas to collect at least $375 million from the world's seven largest oil producers for the 1973 nationalization of Hunt oil holdings in Libya. * Agreed to decide whether the estate of the late Clay Shaw may sue former New Orleans District Attor- ney Jim Garrison for allegedly vio- lating Shaw's civil rights by prose- ve their cuting him on charges that he conspired to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. " Let stand a lower court's ruling that makes it easier for individuals to sue government agencies for alleged The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 6, 1977-Page 5 EL JAYS GIFTS Going Out of Business Sale! 50o OFF ALL GIFT ITEMS! Everything goes, even the fixtures, showcases, jewelry cases, gla~s shelving, and brackets. Gift shop located at Ann Arbor Inn, corner of South 4th and Huron 7.30 a. m. -10p.m. Weekdays and Sat., 9-S Sun. CALL 663-7155 cars, civil rights violations in employment. The court's action was a defeat for the Tennessee Valley Authority, which is being sued for alleged racial bias at its Muscle Shoals, Ala., opera- tions. a .s 12 Hour I0 l SACUA discusses counseln By CAROLYN MORGAN Student counseling services were under fire in July 1976 when an extensive survey revealed many stu- dents were unaware of existing services. As. a result, efforts to improve counseling are overshiadow- ing recommendations for construc- tion of student housing. Both these questions - as well as inquiries into the allocation of funds from the University Development Office's Annual Giving Fund, - were discussed at yesterday's meeting of the Senate Advisory. Committee on University Affairs (SACUA). JANICE LINDBERG, SACUA liai- son with the Student Relations Com- mittee, reported that two of the items generated for the committee's agen- da next year were additional counsel- ing services and student housing. "They seemed to be backing off the housing area and putting more effort into counseling," she said.' James Robertson, chairman of the Student Relations Committee, said' his organization became interested in counseling improvements as a result-of an extensive survey issued to undergraduates and graduates concerning the quality of student counseling services. ALTHOUGH THE Student Rela- g, housing tions Committee is concentrating on counseling, it hasn't abandoned the housing question. "We simply need to know more about housing and what shifts are planned," Robertson said. "We. are' trying to be sufficiently knowledgeable so as to be advisable (to Vice-President Henry Johnson)." After SACUA was asked to nomin- ate a faculty member to serve on the Annual Giving Committee, the mem- bers agreed to hear the Annual Giving Program manager. "What's worrisome to us," SACUA Chairman Charles Lehmann said, "is how the money is spent. We'd like to make sure that it is not spent in frivolous or non-academic areas." DAVID PARKES, manager of the Annual Giving Program, said yester- day in a telephone interview that "most of the contributions go for en- richment in the schools and to fund new programs which would not be fundable, through state appropria- tion." Distribution of funds, if not desig- nated by the particular school, is made by an executive officer, a chief budget officer or a financial officer. Solicitation is made through the individual schools, Parkes said. "There is no pressure on the faculty to give," he added., '4 4 A .,.,..a...... Language may hurt foreign defendants Continued from Page 1) f There's no U to lose. F Fn. "THEY (THE DEFENSE attorneys), didn't think that this was something that could be used in terms of an ap- peal," Naylor says. ."If this problem had been brought up during the trial it may have been some help. Any grounds for an appeal has to come from the trial." Naylor insists, however, that her study is not an attempt to help overturn Narciso and Perez's controversial con- viction. "We are doing this research on general principle," she said.e"This is not specifically intended to help them (the VA nurses). This is an attempt to study the problem of the non-native speaker of English in matters of law." Naylor says that the VA case is only one example, albeit a classic one, of how testifying in a none-native tongue has the potential for being detrimental to criminal defendants. She hopes to ex- pand her study to "cases involving other minorities." Naylor presented a preliminary report of her study in a brown-bag lec- ture last Friday at Lane Hall. She hopes to receive a grant soon so that she may continue her work. Sale Wednesday Only. 9:30a.m. to 9. p.m. THESE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY "12 HOUR SALE" BARGAINS .I Fridlay December 9, 1977 Michigan Union Ballroom Big Band, Entertainers. Cash Bar, Dancing. 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