p~age three t x~j Ra PEACHY High-75 Low-52 Partly sunny. warmer Fridoy, June 2, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-0552 Nixon asks OK from Con gress on arms treaty SOUTH VIE UNAMESE airborne troops move out on a new operation into the foothills north of Hue yesterday, trying to capture a regiment of anti-Saigon troops. The move involves about 1.000 South Vietnamese troops, backed by armored tanks and massive U.S. air support. S. Viets seek communist regi ment nor 1th of Hue WASHINGTON Uft- President Nixon addressed a spar sel attended joint session of Congress last night to urge approval of a r m s limitations agree- ments lie has signed with Soviet leaders. Speoaking before a nation- wide television and radio audi- ence in iithe House chamber, Nixon said. "I have not come here this evening to make new announcements in a dramatic s=tting. This summit has al- ready made its news." The President outlined the various agreements reached during his summit meeting in Mo-cow earlier in the week, but said the most important of the accords "is the treaty and relat- ed ixecutiv eagreementwhich wiii limit, foi the firt time, both offensive and defensive strategic nuclear weapons in the arsenals of the United Stales aiid the USSR." By actual count, only 40 of the 100 senators and fewer than 200 of the 433 House members were present when the Presideit. entered the House chamber. The diplomatic corps had the largest representation, about 100. The galleries, however, were packed, and many of those with admission tickets sat on the steps. Security seemed tighter than usual, with hundreds of uni- formed police and plainclothes officers swarming outside and inside the Capitol. Nixon said these agreements provide a foundation for a new relationship between two pow- erful nations with a recent his- tory of antagonism. "As a preliminary, therefore." the President went on, "to re- questing your concurrance in some of the agreements we reached and your approval of funds to carry out others, and also as a keynote for the unity in which this government and this nation must go forward from here, t am reiidering this inimediate report to the Con- gress on the results of the Mos- cow summit." Nixon spoke less than half an See NIXON, Page 7 Pres~idtent Nixon SAIGON (/P)-South Vietnamese paratroopers m o v i n g behind tanks and American air power assaulted the green foothills north of Hue yesterday, trying to capture or destroy a threat- ening communist regiment. Two airborne task forces re- peatedly sought cover from anti- Saigon artillery but did not stop tbeir advance. Each was fighting company-sized units by late af- ternoon, Associated Press corres- pondent Holger Jensen reported. The operation included an armored cavalry regiment and a blocking force of Marines, per- haps 2,W10 men in all. It swept. west of Highway 1 and south of the My Chanh River, 25 miles above Hue. More than 30 U.S. B52 bombers had pummeled the area with heavy explosives beforehand. U.S. Air Force fighter-bombers shct down two MIG21 intercep- tors Wednesday over North Viet- nam t0 to 40 miles south of China, the U.S. Command an- nounced. It was the closest dog- fight to the Chinese border in at least four years. Other aircraft blasted the Hanoi-Haiphong area. Spokesmen said one Air Force F4 Phantom crashed in Thailand on its way back to base yesterday, but both crewmen ejected and were res- cued. The crash raised to 67 the number of U.S. planes lost to all causes in Indochina since the drive into the South began March 30. Forty-five helicopters also have been lost. In Saigon. the U.S. Command announced the i a r g e s t single troop cutback from South Viet- nam since the offensive but none of the reductions were from com- bat units. The command said 37 U.S. Army units would be withdrawn, ci uing strength by 2,460 men and bringing it toward the level of 49,000 that President Nixon ordered reached by July 1. Officiai U.S. figures as of last v-gri listed 64.800 Americans in South Vietnam, not counting more than 80,000 others support- ing the war effort from air and naval operations o u t s i d e the See S. VIETS, Page 7 'U' aske for Indian CounselIn By JAN BENEDETTI A petition drive has been launched by the American In- dians Unlimited, a local organ- ization, requesting an Indian recruiter, counselor and Indian studies at the University. According to Victoria Barner, an organizer of the drive. the signed petitions will be pre- sented to the Regents at their June meeting. The drive will continue dur- ing thesummer. According to Barner, "we will go to every Re- gents' meeting," until the re- quests are answered. Barner estimates that over 2,000 signatures from both stu- dents and persons in the com- munity have been collected siiice spring registration. "We don't have the number of people needed for a big or- ganized push. But we can show, by the number of signatures. that students want Indian stu- dies and a recruiter," says Bar- ner. There were 20 Indian stu- dents at the University last term. District judge strikes down wire-tap law PHILADELPHIA (P) - The 1968 federal law allowing wire- tapping was ruled unconstitu- tional yesterday by a U.S. Dis- trict Court judge, Judge Joseph Lord Jr. said the law was "unconstitutional on its face" because it violated the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees citizens privacy against illegal searches and intrusions. "The privacy 'of every citizen is in jeopardy if we become a nation which sanctions the in- discriminate use of secret elec- tronic searches by the govern- ment," the judge said in his rulinig. In Washington, a Justice De- partment spokesman said there would be no comment on the ruling until the Criminal Divi- sion obtained a copy and studied it. T Michig' Daily, edOe 0 a- age0 by studOtts a the titrsity of Miigan. News phone: 764-562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor Mich igan 48104. Pubr iiied daily Ts sit year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Sturday morning. Sosceip- tion rates: $5.58 by carrier (campos area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich.. or Ohto); $7.50 non-tocal mail (other states and foreign). He added, however, that more than a dozen U.S. district courts and the U.S. Court of Appeals in Denver have taken the view that the law is constitutional. The judge approved a motion by seven gambling case de- fendants who asked him to sup- press evidence that had been gathered by electronic surveil- lance. A wiretap had been placed on the phone of Matthew Whitaker, who has been described by police as the gambling czar of Schuyl- kill County in eastern Pennsyl- vania. The tap was authorized by the late District Court Judge John Lord Sr., then chief judge, under Title 3 of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. The 1968 law requires that the U.S. attorney general first determine that a wiretap is needed in a case and personally authorize agents to request a warrant from a judge. Several Appeals Court deci- sions here have noted that this provision was inserted into the law to put the responsibility for wiretaps into the hands of an official whose appointment is subject to approval by the Sen- ate, RECORDED CLASSiLS Duig tunes lift By NANCY ROSENBAUM If you happened to wander through the diag last Saturday evening you may have been mildly astonished to hear the melodic strings from Stravin- sky's "Rite of Spring" resound- ing in the moonlight. Surprised passers-by dallied in the diag last weekend taking in the sounds of some of the world's greatest classical composers in- cluding Bach, Beethoven and Mozart. Lastweek's presentation was the first of a series of classical music recordings which are be- ing broadcast on the diag by two local music enthusiasts, Doug Sutherland and Ron Urbach. The major thrust of the pre- sentations is classical music with some jazz as well. Selections will represent mu- sic from several time periods and will include various types of instruments. Baroque lute music, romantic concertos, renaissance, modern and contemporary pieces will be aired as well as Japanese, Bai- nese, and Indian compositions. "Music should be a dialogue-- something that everyone can re- late to," says Urbach. Urbach said that he's open to and welcoming all suggestions for the presentations. "People can bring their own records and we'll play them," he says. Urbach says lie is urging local musicians and dancers who are interested iii giving live per- formances to contact him. "We have a 20 input mixer with mikes that can handle any- thing up to a midi-orchestra,"X he says. "We'd like to get some waltzes and polkas going in the evening SP iri ts and some itight-timme ballet and interpretive dancimg to accom- pany the musical presentations," Urbach adds. The music will tentatively be broadcast every Saturday froim noon to midnight. Urbach says the musical pre- sentations received a positive re- sponse from most of the people in the area. "We only had two complaimts and they were from people who said they couldn't do their work because the music was too beau- tiful." "We're concerned because we don't want to violate the space of others," he says. Urbach says that he is hoping to organize an all-day presenta- tion in the Arb. "We've got to be careful, though, the Arb has its owe special kind of music 24 hours a day."