Pauge Ten THE SUNMMER DAILY Vllednesday, August 8, 1973 Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, August 8, 1973 Cambodian civilians hit by U.S. bombing. Profs assign own texts, collect profits (Oonttnued from Page3) IN VIETNAM and Cambodia the Commonists have been known to more among civilians to avoid American air and artillery at- tacks. Some villages known to contain civilians have been at- tacked by government forces be- cause they also contained enemy forces. The Monday morning B52 bomb- ing of Neak Luong ravaged a town Americans call "friendly," a town inhabited by soldiers and people loyal to the government of Marshal Lon Nol. How could American planes accidently bomb a friendly town? EACH DAY the United States sends up to 250 war planes over Cambodia, as many as 50 of them B52s. Their bombs rattle the windows of Phnom Penh. The danger of the mistaken bombing of friendly areas h a s heightened enorrnomsly as the insurgent noose tightens around the capital and other government enclaves in the countryside. Neak Luong was one such en- clave, an important Mekong Riv- er town and naval base. Com- munist forces were pushing clos- er to the town and threatening the river convoys that pass on their way to Phnom Penh with suprklies. THE AMERICAN bombing there Mondav, officials said, was aim- ed at "sanitizing" the river bank south of the town. The U.S. Em- bassy approved each U.S. B52 strike in advance. But as the Cosnsrmunists get closer, there is a temptation to bring the B52 strikes closer and the "accept- able risk" of hiting friendly lines gets finer. Nearly 90 per cent of the Cam- bodian countryside is reckoned to be in Communist hands and about half the nation's three and a half million people are under Communist control. The Communist side treats its own wounded, so there is no way of determining the civilian cas- ualty count from the wide-rang- ing B52s that spill their bomb loads over insurgent-controlled territory. Newsmen sometimes tune in to the chatter between American planes high in the sky. "It's a pre-emptive bomb run. Take out those 15 to 20 struc- tures along the road," said a for- ward air controller to a pilot in one conversation heard Mon- day. "BOMB IT so they won't be back tonight to cut the road again," the controller said. The pilot's reply was inaudible. The conversations between the American air controllers a n d bomber pilots are neatly surgical as the aid strikes are supposed to be. But in reality, the Amer- ican bombers are dependent on what they hear from Cambodiin forward observers with the troops on the ground. THERE IS a tendency for the Cambodian army to regard all people behind insurgent lines is Communists. A newsman recent- ly sat in on a radio conversation between an American air con- troller in a small plane above and a Cambodian forward observer with the troops on the ground. "I see five people 800 mete-s north," the American radioed. "Are they enemy?" The Cambodian replied, "yes," then turned to the newsman and shrugged. V.P. Smith - l 'U ay e forced to disclose salary list (Continued from Page 1) The state Court of Appeals dismissed the action without is- suing an opinion, but further appeal has been clouded by the Regents. The Regents ruled that SGC could not use its funds to sue the University. SGC, legal advocate Thomas Bentley had been hand- ling the case against the board. THE DAILY, however, is not bound by such a requirement and may initiate further legal action, if the University refuses to disclose salaries in light of Kelley's statement. In his opinion, Kelley also cited a state law declaring official records of any state agency "public property belonging to the people." Kelley, however, qualified the decision stating "it some linited instsances the public interest may require that the names and com- pensations of a public officer or public employe be held in con- fidence." The Daily originally sought publication of full salary lists, including the names, positions, sex, race, and length of service of all staff members, a year ago in July. The Regents voted down (Continued from Page 51 students. PHYSICS department Chair- man Daniel Sinclair says the de- partment has felt no need for a policy to regulate professors as- signing their own books. "I know of professors here who've written -books and never assign them," Sinclair claims. "I know of pro- fessors who always assign them. McCormick's an example, he wrote the book for that course." Two solutions to the conflict of interest problem have been adop- ted by professors at the Univer- sity of Minnesota. There, com- munication disorders Prof. Jo- seph Chaiklin decided several years ago to donate royalties on student book sales to the Ameri- can Speech and Hearing Foun- dation. "t just wanted to remove any ambiguity about the fact that I was assigning the book and mak- ing money from it," Chaiklin ex- plains. "I do think it would be a useful practice probably for the teaching profession in general, to make it clear that's not a way they're fattening themselves, be- cause right now none of us are getting very fat." CHAIKLIN stresses, however, "The fact that I do this doesn't mean that I think professors who don't are unethical." Another Minnesota faculty member, political science Prof. Roger Benjamin, left the decision as to what to do with the royal- ties on his book up to his stu- dents. Some kept the 40 cents themselves and others donated it to a library fund. A proposal that they might follow Chaiklin or Benjamin's ex- ample, however, got unfavorable responses from all the faculty members interviewed. Most con- curred with McCormick, who says, "It's all right if anybody wants to do it. But I think we contribute enough to charity as it is." PERHAPS THE most striking ramification of the text assign- ment question is a law in tllinois, Mississippi, and South Dakota. A professor at Northern Illinois University is presently being pro- secuted under this statute, which makes acceptance of royalties from book sales at the school where a teacher is employed pun- ishable by a year in prison, a fine of $1,000, or both. The Illinois statute has never been used before. The University of Minnesota re- quires professors assigning their books to get an okay from their department chairpersons. How- ever, the policy is unknown to some department heads and us- ually serves as a rubber stamp in the other cases. VICE PRESIDENT for Aca- demic Affairs Allan Smith says the University has never felt there was a need to regulate fac- ulty members assigning their own texts. "We've never considered it a problem," Smith explains. "It has sort of been assumed that the teacher had the responsibil- ity for choosing the text." Smith says he would avoid making a general University policy in this case because schools and departments might require different rules. "It's a kind of case where if the faculty of a given school wanted to make a particular rule we wouldn't be too bothered," he explains. Any policy "gets a little tough if you take away the professor's perog- ative to assign the materials of his choice." Not all University faculty mem- bers receive roalties from their books. Some sell the books at cost in order to provide the materials needed for a course. Others sell so few books that they have not yet reached the number of sales specified in the publishing con- tract after which royalties are to be paid. The contract will pro- vide a liberal royalty arrange- ment only if the publisher expects the book to achieve significant sales. TORTOLA, British Virgin Is- lands, (UPI) - The most recent Trade Report for the British Virgin Islands showed a consid- erable rise in exports and re-ex- ports, mainly to the U. S. Virgin Islands, including "a large con- signment of sand." AS YOU LIKE IT From A A C.T Aug.22-25 Mendelssohn Theatre Tickets at the Music Shop Nixon lawyers file briefs (Continued front Page 3) Texas, tries to deal directly with committee have an opportunity two arguments Cox is expected to ascertain and study the re- to make in support of his sub- action of White House attorneeys poena. to the motion of the special WRIGHT'S ARGUMENT comes prU ATsecYtCor.s-eSr down to the proposition that BUT MAJORITY Coisnsel Sain whether the courts agree or not D a s h afterwards cominented, with a president's claim of execu- "We're ready to file now" and tive privilege, there's nothing no later than tomorrow. they can do about it. President Nixon's case for re- "The President is answerable fusing to produce tapes of his to the nation but not to the Watergate - related conversations courts," his brief says. hinges on the historic reluctance The Nixon brief acknowledges of the courts to disturb the deli- that "there are few authoritative cate balance among the three judicial decisions" defining the bran hes of government. limits of executive privilege. The legal brief that the Presi- IT THEN ATTEMPTS to en- dent's lawyers filed yesterday sure that this case will deal with argues that if one co-equal the narrowest application of the branch of government yielded its doctrine of executive privilege- independence to another, the bal- the personal conversations of the ance written into the Constitution President. would be destroyed. THE IMPLICIT argument ad- vanced is that for the President to comply with subpoenas from Watergate special prosecutor Cox or the Senate Watergate commit- tee would be to surrender presi- dential independence to the judi- cial and legislative branches. Two historic cases cited in the STOP BY FOR S President's brief were the refusal in 1807 of Chief Justice John Marshall to f o r c e President A motinss- esi prn Thomas Jefferson to obey a sub- 341 S MAIN poena and the Supreme Court's rejection in 1867 of the state of Mississippi's petition for an order enjoining Pres ident Andrew _ Johnson from enforcing the Re- construction Acts. The President's brief, primar- ily the work of Charles Alan veryone Wright, professor of constitu- tional law at the University of RELIABLE ABORTON SERVICE Clinic in Mich.--1to 24 week Pregnancies terminated. by li- censed obstetrician ovnecologist. Quick services will be arranged. Low rates. 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