,It F- ,michigan DAILY Ann Arbor, Michigan , Ten Cents Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 21-S Thursday, June 1, 1978 Sixteen Pages plus Supplement I . nn w . r Supreme Court says police can search newspaper By R. J. SMITH With Wire Reports Newspapers are not exempt from police searches authorized by a warrant, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. The decision may bear greatly on a newspaper's power to protect its infor- mation and confidential sources from public disclosure. THE DECISION - which was denounced by newspapers throughout the nation - says police may obtain in- formation from a newspaper office without a subpoena. The ruling says; spot searches can be conducted unan- nounced with a search warrant. If police could conduct a search only with a subpoena, newspapers would be permitted to contest the order to give up information. With a warrant, however, there is no warning before the search. The case stems from a police search of the offices of the Stanford Daily in Palo Alto, California in April 1971. POLICE SEARCHED the offices of the student paper with a warrant to find pictures of a sit-in which occurred several days earlier and which resulted in injuries to nine police officers. Editors of the Stanford Daily charge when the officers entered their offices, their findings included information not covered by the warrant. "In the process, they saw notes and names of confidential sources," said Randy Keith, the paper's associate editor. "It's so easy to get other infor- mation that you weren't looking for when you go ransacking through an of- fice." THE STANFORD case was the first incident of a forced police search without a subpoena, Keith said. Since the incident, similar seizures have oc- curred in California, Rhode Island and Montana. Daily Photo by riET snuRLN A CONSTRUCTION WORKER breaks up a huge slab of concrete from the side- walk on Church St. Workers began tearing up the street yesterday during the initial stages of a repavement project. Repnairs on Church St. underway-at last By DAN OBERDORFER the operation. Motorists who drive the bumpy stretch Only one block of the two-block strip of Church St. between y ill and S. was closed to traffic yesterday. The UniChritychou.det ind herandeS. area between Willard St. and S. Univer- University should find the ride sity will be repaired first, in time for remarkably smooth come September. the art fair at the end of July, city con- Until then, however, they'll find the teatfi tteedo uy iycn road closed to motor vehicles while t struction inspector Dick Hartman said. costrudctoe toils to mehiCwhurch Church St. will not be the only road in construction crew toils to make Church the campus area repaved this summer. St. the first of several campus area Fthe ra ret r thif umer thoroughfares to be resurfaced this Fletcher Street in front of University summer. Health Service will be redone by Sep- THE REPAVING project should be tember, but construction will not begin far enough along by August 21 to allow for several weeks. Piehl said. traffic to resume, but it will not be PIEHL ADDED that S ate St. bet- completed until September 1, according ween N. University and Maidson St.; to city engineer Frank Piehl, who heads See REPAIRS, Page 2 records The 5-3 decision overturned a lower court ruling and a decision made in the U.S. District Court of Appeals which defended a newspaper's ability to refuse disclosure of information without a court-ordered subpoena. In a statement written for the Supreme Court majority, Justice Byron White said, "The critical element in a reasonable search is not that the owner of the property is suspected of crime, but that there is reasonable cause to believe that the specific 'things' to be searched for or seized are located on the property which entry is sought." THE EARLIER decision by the Court of Appeals ruled that if a newspaper was not suspected of criminal in- volvement, it could not be searched See MEDIA, Page 2 U.S-Soviet tensions stall SA NEW YORK (AP) - Five hours of in- tensive negotiations with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko failed to clear major obstacles to a new strategic weapons control treaty, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said last night. The talks, overshadowed by a bitter dispute over recent fighting in Africa and a corresponding decline in U.S.- Soviet relations, will be resumed at a date to be announced. But prospects for early completion of a treaty imposing ceilings on long-range bombers and in- tercontinental ballistic missiles until 1985 appeared dim. BOTH VANCE and Gromyko acknowledged that difficult relations between the two countries were the primary cause of the impasse. "Relationships between our two countries are in a state of tension," Vance told reporters ina crowded lobby at the U.S. mission to the United Nations. "No question about that." Vance, asked if any one issue could be checked off as basically settled at the meeting, replied: "NO. ALL I can say is that we examined in depth the two principal remaining issues, which are very tough issues, and we've still got more work to do." Gromyko, speaking first, said there was no point in denying that "the See U.S.,Page 11 NATO hikes weapons spending WASHINGTON (AP) - NATO leaders ended two days of "Let there be no misunderstanding. The United States is summit talks yesterday by agreeing to increase military prepared to use all the forces necessary for the defense of the spending by as much as $100 billion over the next decade to NATO area." The word "all" was underlined in tts text of the counter Soviet military power in Europe. President's statement. In agreeing to the proposal to raise their planned military UNDER THE program approved by NATO leaders yester- spending by at least $40 billion to as much as $100 billion day, allied governments committed themselves to increasing through the 1980s, the NATO Leaders accepted President Car- production of tanks, anti-tank weapons and missiles and ter's plea for more military might in Europe. upgrading the U.S. capability to speed entire U.S. armored - divisions across the Atlantic in event of a crisis. CARTER, in a closing statement to the allied leaders, In addition, the program foresees improvements in NATO's promised that the United States would view any attack on maritime capabilities, including commissioning of more war- Europe as an attack against the United States and that ships, production of better air defense systems, and develop- retaliation would include the use of nuclear weapons against ment of more effective tactical nuclear weapon forces in the Soviets. Europe. Saying the Soviets and their Warsaw Pact partners "are now A senior U.S. defense official, speaking privately, said able to attack withiJarge armored forces more rapidly than we roughly half of the extra cost of the new NATO program will be previouslybelieved," Carter added that "an attack on Europe funded by the United States. He said that as a beginning at will have the full consequences of an attack on the United least eight allied countries, including Canada, have agreed to States. See NATO, Page 10