Thursday, July 10, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Thursday, July 10, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Mental health legislation restricting patient release awaits Milliken's approval (Continued from Page 3) procedures controlling the re- lease of mental patients. Steven Schwartz, an assist- ant defender for the State Apr- pellate Defender's office in De- troit, and the attorney who ar- gued the McQuillan case last year before the state supreme court, thinks the bills are nei- ther constitutional nor socially productive. S C H W A R T Z feels the new "guilty but mentally ill plea" will do little more than give juries the illusion that they are acting in a humane, pro- gressive manner, when in fact the bill is nothing but an avoid- ance of the real problems fac- ing the care of the mentally ill. In a report he wrote for the House, analysing the two bills, Schwartz noted that the ex- pansion of involuntary commit- ment criteria "cannot withstand scrutiny under either recent constitutional cases . . . or u n d e r Fourteenth Amend- ment 'void for vagueness' tests." Schwartz described the mea- sure as "fatally defective bec- ause it requires no finding of dangerousness to self or others in order to deprive an individ- ual of his or her freedom." HE concluded that the mea- sure was "inconsistent with both this state's goal encourag- ing voluntary mental health treatment and expansion of community facilities as with the similar national trend, fed- CHARING CROSS BOOKSTORE 316S. STATE Tues.-Fri., 11-9 Sot., 10-6 I C USED, FINE, K LSCHOLARLY BOOKS erally and locally." Rep. Paul Rosenbaum (D- Battle Creek), Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and co-sponsor of the bills, yes- terday called the libertarian argument "all wet" and the Mc- Quillan decision "a travesty in terms of the present situation in this state." He claims that the bills have sufficient consti- tutional safeguards, and will eliminate abuse of the NGRI plea. "It (opposition to the bill) is totally nonsensical in the face of the horrendous crimes that have been committed in this state." STATE Senator Gilbert Burs- ley (R-Ann Arbor), who voted for both bills admitted that their constitutionally is "a very genuine question" but felt that in balancing the public safety with the civil liberties of those in state institutions, the bills were in the public interest. Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor(, one of only ten House members who opposed the bills, said in a statement issued by his office yesterday that the laws amount to "support for making eccentric behavior a crime." "The courts have held that mentally ill people have the same constitutional rights as the rest of us, including the right not to be deprived of liberty or property without due process of law," said Bullard. DR. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 Weather Traveler:' By KURT HARJU Electronic jazz has been per- fectly respectable ever since M i i e s Davis' groundbreaking work in the field, but it's re- mained largely up to a newer generation raised on and by him (as sidemen in his ever-chang- ing backup groun) to make it popularly accepted. Such fa- mous artists as John Mclaugh- lin, Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock began with Davis and then went on to head their own top-drawing acts. But the off-shoot that has had the most effect and impact on the direction of this complex music is Weather Report which was founded by keyboardist Jo- sef Zawinul and saxophonist Wayne Shorter. WITH THE release of their fifth album Tale Spinnin' (Col. 33417), they've proven that elec- tronics can provide limitless ways of improving and enhanc- ing regular jazz structures - especially (and surprisingly) in melody and harmony - by pro- ducing six new pieces that ex- pand upon even the group's ori- ginal scope and previous work. As they define it now, their music is an effort (and a unique- ly successful one) to achieve "the musical point" - where the rhythm, the melody and the harmony co-exist and come to- gether in "exquisite moments." Tale Spinnin' is such a testa- ment to faith - a setting that deliberately evokes the music of other cultures to show how uni- versal the belief in it is. IT'S AN exotic mixture of dynamic Afro-Latin rhythms played electronically against a backdrop of traditionally Amer- ican jazz. Two features stand out in the group's process of realizing this vision - the strength of Zawin- ul's compositions and the beauty of Shorters' saxophone that emerges as the chief solo in- Report's 'Mysterious Exotic summer jazz strument on this LP. "Between the Thighs" and "Bedia" are probably the best cuts set in the spirit of the work's objec- tives - they swing in a manner that reveals a story or suggests a place. As Zawinul proposes, "Out music is a reflection of the state where you arrive as a hu- man being." That reflection is essentially joyful - a colorful festival of sounds complete with fireworks on the record jacket and an ar- ray of tasteful photographs on the cover. While the group re- mains as tight as they were on their last outing Mysterious Traveler, they gain by return- ing a bit to the richly-melodic rhythms that highlighted Sweet- nighter. And like that earlier album, this is cool summer jazz -easy to take and easier to like once you let it get under your skin. M&M PRODUCTIONS Presents the Ydhttatick4 THIS MORNING PAPER IS WORTH MORE THAN 5c (Our SubsCribers Think So, Too) THEY ASK US TO DELIVER TO THEIR DOOR EACH DAY .,.. * Latest National and Local News from AP and UPI Wires " Comprehensive Campus News Coverage " Important City Developments " Critical Analysis of Local and National Issues * Entertainment News and Reviews " A Weekly Calendar of Community Events * Latest Sports Stories and Scores * Feature Stories from Near and Abroad * Creative Photo Journalism " A Challenging Crossword Puzzle " The Most Interesting Classified Pages Outside The Berkeley News * And More-Five Mornings a Week! IT'S ALL IN THE Latest Deadline In The State CALL 764-0558 FOR DELIVERY by Harvey Schmidt & Tam Jones ' jjAT THE CAMPUS INN July 9-12 & 16-19 July 9, 10, 12-12:30 Luncheon-$7.00 July 9-12, 16-19-7:00 Dinner-$10.00 July 11, 16, 19-11:00 cocktails & Snacks-$3.50 Directed by JUDY MANOS Musical Direction by MARDY K. MtDDCRS Reservations: The Campus inn Box Office: Julv7-11, 14-18$. . . 10-6 p.m. phone: 769-2200, 65-8221