Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 22, 197 1 Results of NUC conferenceuncertainf IContined from. Page ' student demands and student- oriented programs. Often, they argue, unions demonstrate conservative ten- dencies which are irreconcilable to NUC goals. Courts to hear p, (Continued from page 1) Gesell indicated that the chief government argument against publication was the danger of embarrassment in delicate dip- lomatic relationships. But, he said, the first Amendment leaves no guarantee to diplomats against such difficulty. The -judge said the govern- ment failed to prove that publi- cation of the documents pre- pared in 1967 would endanger United States military defenses or that it had resulted in any drastic diplomatic crisis. Earlier in yesterday's hear- ings Deputy Asst. Secretary of Defense Dennis Doolin had testified that information about current operational war plans is contained in the top-secret documents. Doolin had testified before Secret studies (Continued from Page 5) In June, Gen. William West- moreland, U.S. commander in South Vietnam, called for 200,- 000 troops to hold off defeat long enough to permit an American buildup. "Swiftly and in an atnos- phere of crisis, sthe Pentagon study says, Johnson gave his approval, and ordered the addi- tional troops to South Vietnam in mid-July. The study adds that Johnson also ordered this decision concealed. By the end of 1965 U.S. forc- es in South iVetnarn totaled 184.314. Eventually the number was to go over 500,000. The Labor Caucus. on the other hand, calls for support of unions, feeling they are the only really strong power base for radical change. They argue in favor of sup- porting strikes over purely eco- apers' cases the court went into closed ses- sion that movements contain information about operational plans and troop movements but was not allowed to elaborate in open court. Doolin's testimony gave the first public contention by the government that current war plans are involved in the papers. The report in question is a 47- volume study, "United Status Vietnam Relations 1945-1967,' and the newest papers in it are at least four years old. The eialth9CM and Thood bankGs. Thine~conR1dCs nomic goals, in hopes of event- ually influencing the union to- wards taking a broader, more radical position. Which of the two factions controls the organization follow- ing the convention is still un- clear. Equally unclear, however, is what effect, if any. gaining con- trol will have on the national program of NUC. As one delegate at the con- vention put it, each local chapter of the organization does "pretty much as it wants anyway". It is this factionalization, which damages attempts at na- tional policy making. Proposals passed were, for the most part, general policy guide- lines such as support of anti- war activities, proclamations of solidarity with the gay libera- tion movement, and various constitutional amendments. Even the Labor Caucus pro- posal, which passed, was heavily amended, leaving its implemei- tation to the discretion of local chapters. None of these proposals had the force of a binding and spe- cific policy. They are general guidelines, with implementation left until another time. As a result, in the future, NUC may well have to rely more upon the initiative of its local chapters than on any extensive national policy co-ordination. -4 4 Catch tlie sparkle of the morning suw, hold the magic of first love. Diamond rings of artistic excellence and highest quality. Jaeobsons 3. ARM MICHIGAN FILM SOCIETY & ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER present Lee Marvin, Claudia Cardinale, Burt Lancaster Robert Ryan, Woody Strode in RICHARD BROOKS' the Professionals IN COLOR "THE PROFESSIONALS is a most apt title for this excellent film: every- thing about it--the performances by a large and accomplished cost, Richard Brooks' direction, the superb color cinematography - is sound and polished and quite impressive."-N.Y. Times *4 STARTS WEDNESDAY ! Tighten your seat belt. You never had a trip ike this before. I{ SONG O KA~hAWNE ROSS 1111 CAS(DYA O1h SUNAflIENDS~. LATTiETNIECOLCMO~T 7:5 MA0A 9:0pm. IU cA starrAq ManyA.VA w- BARRY NEWMAN ~VANISHING POINT.,,. ,DEAN JAGGER CLEAVON LTTLE asuw sol -ALSO- NNERF4AABMAMS! INCILUDING BEST SONG tots, CENTURY-Fx PRESENTS MNE~lA RtDERT REDOM HIM MUM TWESUNSwAE W M*O LAST TIME TONiT E COOL COMIFORT O FIPTH FOr'uM "IiCKERISH QUARTET" FFI "mmwTtuT 7:1 5 0 9:00 p.m.IFNAI~t"100 TUES., JUNE 22 (TONIGHT) 1st Presbyterian Church 1432 Washtenaw Avenue near South University 8 P.M. ONLY $1 contribution" SAT., JUNE 26 1st Baptist Church 502 E. Huron near State Street 7:30 and 9:30 P.M. 761-7849 free coffee . BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD! ICC Co-ops are student-owned and student-run. There are no hired cooks, janitors, or dishwashers-we do all the work ourselves. We run democratically-one member, one vote and admit members on a first come, first serve basis. Co-ops are cheap, too. Only $21 week for room and board, $12 week for room only, $13/week for board only (all utilities, woshing machine, telephone included). We have 12 houses on Central Campus-all coed-and all are different. SEE FOR YOURSELF! Come to the ICC-Central Campus Office-Room 3-N Michigan Union (668-6872) for information. WE STILL HAVE MANY SINGLES AVAI LABLE FOR THE SUMMER TERM $