Page 2-Tuesday, May 8, 1979-The Michigan Daily Editor blasts court restraint (Continued from Page 1 engien is cooled not by water, but by air. The article is at that level of sophistication,"Day said. "There's not a single mathematical equation," he added. Day admitted there were some sket- ches which accompanied the article, but these were "crude, hand-drawn diagrams." Day, whose audience consisted primarily of students in Prof. John Stevens' Journalism 202 class, also said the First Amendment stands in "real danger" of being eroded fur- ther because the case has not been universally supported in the press. OPPOSITION FROM editors of papers such as The Washington Post, and The Los Angeles Times hve hurt The Progressive's case, Day said. "Much of the liberal press is op- Doctor calls for ethics in professions By ADRIENNE LYONS Doctors and lawyers are not well- trained to deal with ethical problems such as their emotions and those of their clients, says a Univesity psychiatry and law professor. According to Dr. Andrew Watson, there is a need to hold the image of caring about the consumer among professionals. "By definition, professionals regulate themselves," he said. "There isn't peer pressure being applied (to be ethical)," he said, adding more of such pressure exist in Britain. Watson said when peer pressure doesn't exist, other forces from outside the professional field, such as malprac- tice suits and governmental interferen- ce take over. To counteract this lack of ethics, Watson said, more courses are being developed to help students. "In conjun- ction with Legal Aid, we have seminars to discuss lawyer/client conflicts" such as when a lawyer is asked to deal with a subject he knows little about. Watson said each law student does a See M.D., Page7 posing us on the grounds that it's not the time to be going to court with a First Amendment case," he said. These newspapers contend the case might damage continued gover- nment adherence to First Amen- dment rights, he added. "Liberties mean nothing unless you exercise them," Day said. He also condemned the press for defacto restraint, a form of self- restraint or self-censorship. "It doesn't matter whether or not there's an official court order, or an inner gyroscope that's telling editors and reporters to stay away from this," he said. "It's the same thing." "THE PROGRESSIVE believes it's a matter of survival of this coun- try that American people cross the threshold and ask questions about what's going on. Now is the time tok cross the threshold, not in some other decade," he said. The magazine has been fighting a court battle since March 9, 1979, over whether it would be allowed to print the story about the hydrogen bomb. Day said the intent of the ar- ticle was to show how easy it is to piece together information to build the bomb, and to take issue with government secrecy. On March 23, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Warren of Milwaukee, issued an injunction preventing The Progressive from publishing the story. Also, neither its editors nor the article's author are allowed to discuss anything contained within the story. The Progressive is appealing the case, and the appeal will be argued in the Seventh District Court of Ap- peals in June with a decision to be handed down sometime this sum- mer, Day said. LAST WEEK, the board of direc- tors of the American Society of Newspaper Editors voted unanimously to join in The Progressive's appeal of the case. "I'm one of three individuals in the United States who are expressly forbidden from uttering or com- municating information which I have discovered purely on my own initiative," Day said. "It's not as though I looked into a secret gover- nment file." "I'm in the position of having part of my brain being frozen under pain of severe penalty for contempt of court for mere expression of an idea," he added. "I have got to abide by a rule with which I am certainly State, 'U' set to bargain (Continued from Page 1) "I THINK the assumption is the ap- plication (the plans) will be modified," Ziel said, but he reassured University officials the plans would not be sent back to the regional health planning agency. Regional health planners - objecting to the size and cost of the replacement project - earlier recommended the MDPH disapprove the University's plans. Changes in the plans at this stage are expected to delay the planning process 30 to 60 days, but Interim University President Allan Smith said yesterday such a delay would be insignificant. AT THE MEETING in Lansing, Ziel told the University delegation of four - Smith, University Vice-President for State Relations Richard Kennedy, University Hospital Director Jeptha Dalston, and Hospital Planning Direc- tor Douglas Sarbach - that the Univer- sity should define how much space it plans for hospital use and how much for educational use. Smith said after the meeting if hospital planners cut classrooms and offices from the hospital plan it would reduce the cost of the project by a "sizeable amount." MDPH officials asked the University to consider cutting 50 or 60 beds from the proposed hospital, and plan for fewer private rooms. The University was also asked to specify whether it would use the old main building after the replacement hospital is completed in 1986. Smith replied, "My guess is that it will be a demolition job." ZIEL'S PRONOUNCEMENTS yesterday, which follows approval by Governor Milliken and MDPH director Begin's invitt 'blackmail' b infundamental disagreement." DAY ALSO explained that the problem is a conflict between two concepts. One involves the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, which gives the Atomic Energy Commission the authority to classify any information that concerns the design or manufacture of nuclear weapons, or other strategic material. The other deals with the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of the press. Day described the Progressive as a "profoundly anti-war magazine, which mistrusts big government and big business." MORLAND SAID he and his editors became very concerned with the secrecy surrounding nuclear weapons and set out to prove that it would be easy to find out how to build a bomb, and that "what they (government officials) claimed was such a deep secret was really no secret at all." Day called the government's claim that other countries would be able to build the bomb sooner as a result of The Progressive article an "absurdity." on hospital Maurice Reizen, effectively resolves the issue of special consideration for the project, which had previously divided University and regional plan- ners. The CHPC-SEM staff also objected to the method of financing the hospital, saying that patients would be paying twice for health care provided at the hospital - once through payment of their taxes, and once through regular hospital fees. The University argues that because the hospital is a center of research, education, and specialized care, it is a state resource and the plans should be given special consideration in the regional planning process. ation called y Lebanese State Department officials said U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis met with Israeli government officials in Jerusalem to ask that the raids be en- ded. The officials, who asked not to be named, did not say whether Lewis carried the message before or after Ghali asked the.United States to inter- vene. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 5-S Tuesday, May 8, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ngs durg the Unversity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer ses- sion publishedTuesday through Satur- day ornigs.Subscription rates: in AnnArbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postge apid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, M148109. earn $100 amonth for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. donate plasma You may save a life! It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular. $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. this ad worth $5 extra New donors only. Phone for appointment. ANN ARBOR PLASMA CORPORATION 662-7744 (Continued from Page 1) Shimon Peres, leader of Israel's op- position Labor Party, called Begin's of- fer a "farce." "What is the meaning of this?" he asked. "As if Sarkis would decide to come without the consent of Damascus." IT IS UNLIKELY that hardline Syria, which maintains 22,000 troops in Lebanon, would allow Sarkis to meet Begin. The Syrian forces were sent to end Lebanon's 1975-76 civil war, where right-wing Christians battled leftist Moslems and Palestinian guerrillas. The Damascus government is one of the leaders of Arab rejection of the Egyp- tian-Israeli peace treaty. In Cairo yesterday, Egyptian Foreign Minister Butros Ghali called for the United States to "firmly intervene" to stop the Is'aeli raids, which he said were exposing the whole Middle.East to grave dangers." The Middle East News Agency said Ghali passed the request through U.S. Ambassador-HermannEilts.