The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 24, 1982-Page 3 ¢ f + Photo by DAVID GAL Stood up Swim team member Neil Bond looks dejected after Illinois failed to show up for the swim meet in Matt Mann Pool yesterday. Bugs to get more use !; WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation's top federal drug enforcer says court-approved wiretaps probably will be used more often in drug in- vestigations now that the FBI is working closely with the Drug En- forcement Administration. Acting Drug Enforcement Ad- ministrator Francis Mullen said that in' the past the agency wanted to use court- approved electronic bugs in its in- vestigations but often could not because it was "just a manpower killer." NOW, WITH the FBI given authority to investigate drug cases, Mullen said, there could be an increase in the use of wiretaps against drug traffickers. "I believe it wil.occur," Mullen told United Press International in an ex- clusive interview. This week, Attorney General William French Smith authorized a greater role for the FBI in fighting drug trafficking. The move was in line with the ad- ministration's goal of cracking down on narcotics. "THOSE WHO are profiting, we are. going to make it prohibitively expensive for them, personally and financially," Mullen said. Smith said a reorganization involving the Drug Enforcement Administration will allow the FBI to supplement the drug agency's resources. In the past, the FBI has had the chief responsibility for enforcing other federal criminal laws, but did not have jurisdiction over drug violations. President Reagan nominated Mullen last week to become the permanent administrator of the drug agency. A ranking career FBI official, he has been its acting head for the past six months. Mullen said that since July, the FBI and the drug agency have been conduc- ting 125 joint investigations, many using wiretaps. Although there was not a significant increase in the number of electronic bugs, he said, "they have played significant role in our current in- vestigations." I _ HAPPENINGS- SUNDAY HIGHLIGHT The Graduate Women's Network is having a potluck brunch and discussion, "Women as Teachers" from noon - 2 p.m. today. Speakers are Esta Grossman, Washtenaw Community College, and Kate Clark of the English department. The discussion is at the Guild House, 802 Monroe Street. FILMS CFT-Citizen Kane, 4,7 & 9:15 p.m., Michigan Theater. AAFC-Shop on Main Street, 7 p.m., MLB 4. Free. Cinema Guild-A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch Hall. Cinema II-La Strada, 7 p.m.; Orpheus, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. United Jewish Appeal-The Odessa File, 8 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose Room. Free. MEETINGS GEO-Organizing Committee meeting, 4 p.m., 3rd floor, Room A, Michigan League. All TAs and SAs welcome.t Campus Labor Support Group-Open meeting, 2 p.m., Conf. Room 5, Michigan Union. LSA Course Evaluations Committee-Mass meeting, 7 p.m., 3909 Michigan Union. PERFORMANCES Canterbury Loft-Hopscotch, 3 & 8 p.m., 332 S. State Street. School of Music-Piano Recital, Peteris Zarins, 2 p.m., Recital Hall; Clarinet Recital, Barbara Rentschler, 2 p.m., Stearns; Faculty Piano Recital, Louis Nagel, 4 p.m., Rackham; Voice Recital, Linda Cressman, 4 p.m., Recital Hall; Horn Students Recital, 8 p.m., Stearns. MISCELLANEOUS Hillel-Deli Dinner, 6 p.m.; Israeli Dancing, 7-10 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. Ann Arbor Committee for a New Jewish Agenda-Prof. Sidney Bernard & sociologist Martha Olienick will discuss results of the Washtenaw County Jewish Community.-Needs Assessment Study, 7:30p.m., B'nai Brith Hillel, 1429 Hill Street. . Panhel-Sorority Winter Rush & Intro. Open House, 1-3 p.m., Pendleton Room, Michigan Union. Computing Center-Card-Box Cleanup, 8 a.m.-noon, NUBS & CNTR. Museum of Art-Sunday tour, Frankie Simonds, 2 p.m. The Exhibit Museum-"Winter's Gems," 2,3 & 4 p.m., 1109 Geddes Ave. Dixboro United Methodist Church- "Fun in Marriage Workshop," 7 p.m., 5221 Church Road. MONDAY HIGHLIGHT' ACLU cites setbacks From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union says President Reagan's administrators and collaborating conservatives in Congress created a "state of siege" on the Constitution's Bill of Rights in 1981. Last year "was a bad year for civil liberties," the ACLU said in a harshly worded newsletter appraising-the first 12 months under the new Republican administration and the increased con- servatism in Congress. It added, "1982 could be worse." IN CONTRAST to conservative leaders whose "report card" on Reagan last week bemoaned "lost op- portunities" to turn the country to the right, the ACLU catalogued rightward gains it believes threaten civil liberties. One conservative leader believed Reagan deserved a "C" or "C- minus" for his first year's efforts. If the ACLU found anything deserving a favorable grade, it did not mention it. But the ACLU gave Congress as much, or more, attention than it gave the administration in appraising what it called a "relentless" attack on the Bill of Rights throughout the first Reagan year. "IN THE CONGRESS, leaders of the radical right needed no encouragement from their friends in the Reagan ad- ministration to launch their own far- reaching assault on liberty," the report said. "Subcommittees in the Senate Judiciary Committee became cauldrons of repressive legislation," it said. Much of the ACLU's concern stem- med from the administration's interest in national security. The White House has told the CIA it can spy on Americans, open mail and infiltrate radical groups in this country, the ACLU said. "The conservative-dominated Congress, on the whole, is willing to en- dorse -the new emphasis on internal security and, in some cases, even goes beyond administration initiatives," the ACLU said. THE ACLU referred to bills that would limit CIA involvement in the Freedom of Information Act, punish those who identify secret agents or publish classified information and other legislation. But a broader movement in Congress centers on the conservative "social" causes of abortion, school prayer, and busing, the ACLU said. The ACLU's chief concern was a series of moves to limit federal court authority in these issues. The ACLU charges were denounced as unfair by Phil Kent, an aide to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Strom Thurmond, (R-S.C.). Tom DeCair, chief spokesman for the Justice Department, said he had not seen the newsletter and withheld com- ment. The White House press office also declined comment. John Shattuck, legislative director of the Washington ACLU office, said in the newsletter "in Washington, a mean- spirited Congress is dominated by a presidential administration, whose hostility to individual rights is relen- tless." TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN February 13, 1982 Win Your Way To The Swedish Vasaloppet 50 km and 25 km Races SPONSORED BY BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD OF MICHIGAN In the Interest of Community Health Check Your Local Sports Shop for Applications and information or Contact: North American Vasa Race P.O. Box 581 Traverse CityMich. 49684 Phone (616) 946-4272 UAW will return to bargaining table WASHINGTON (UPI- United Auto Workers representatives agreed yesterday toreturn to the bargaining table an4 give General Motors and Ford Motor Co. a "final chance" to win contract concessions needed to make the hard-hit U.S. auto industry more competitive. Union leaders said the Ford Council voted by an overwhelming margin to authorize the resumption of the stalled negotiations, which the union broke off Wednesday, but the vote by the GM Council was suprisingly narrow. THE UNION said it will return to talks with GM Tuesday and with Ford Friday on changes in the current three- year contract designed to ease the financial troubles of the automakers and save union jobs. The union set a midnight Thursday deadline for agreement with GM and said the GM Council, composed of 330 local labor leaders and contract bargainers, will meet again next Satur- day in Detroit to consider a tentative settlement if one is reached. Talks with Ford will be open-ended. "This is their final chance," Fraser told a news conference. "If we can't make it this time; we might as well give up. In a break from three decades of three-year agreements, Fraser said the union will ask for a one-year contract beginning when the current pact ex- pires in September and running to Sep- tember 1983. The union president said he had not wanted to cut off negotiations with the automaker last Wednesday but acted because the two sides . were too far apart on economic issues such as cuts in pension, medical and other benefits as well as on questions of job security. Fraser said, howevet, the company has "backed off substantially" from its original demands for a $5-an-hour wage cut in return for $1,000 cuts in the prices of some new models. The Center for Continuing Education of Women is sponsoring an informal brown-bag lunch Monday from noon-1:30 p.m. for women who have recently returned to school or are thinking about re-entry. The center is located on the second floor of the Huron Valley National Bank building, N. University and S. Thayer streets. FILMS Cinema Guild-The Policeman, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall. Free. United Jewish Appeal-The Odessa File, 8 p.m., UGLI -Multipurpose Room..Free. SPEAKERS Near Eastern and North African Studies-John Kolars, "Twenty Years of Change in a Turkish Village," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Applied Mechanics-Richard Schapery, "Time-Dependent Deformation & Failure Behavior of Composite Materials," 4:05 p.m., 246 W. Engin. Residential College-Frederick Cooper, "Poverty & Social Change in East :African History," 4 p.m., 126 E. Quad. Chemistry - Phillip Garrou, "Dehydrogenation of Alcohols & Hydrogenation of Aldehydes Using Homogenous Ruthenium Catalysts," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. MEETINGS Christian Science Organization - Meeting, 7:15 p.m., 3909 Michigan Union. United Students for Christ-Meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan Union. Hillel-Organizational meeting for a Hebrew speaking club, 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. SACUA-Meeting, 1:15 p.m., 4025 FlemingAd. Building. Indoor Light Gardening Society-"Miniature Roses Under Lights," 7:30 p.m., Botannical Gardens, 1800 N. Dixboro Road. Rape laws provoke public outcry in Britain LONDON (AP) - Violent crimes such as rape are statistically rare in Britain, where most bobbies still patrol the streets unarmed. For every rape investigated in this country, three are reported in New York City. Yet for the past three weeks, the news media, the courts, and Parliament have riveted the public's attention on what Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher called the "violent, detestable and odious crime" of rape. The government's solicitor-general for . Scotland, Nicholas Fairbairn, resigned Thursday at Thatcher's request. He told reporters why charges were dropped against three Glasgow teenagers arrested in a rape case before he explained the matter to Parliament. THE VICTIM of the rape, a 30-year- old woman, was slashed with a razor and required 168 stitches. The case is at the center of the uproar because police reportedly had a con- fession, an eyewitness, and technical evidence, but the prosecution dropped the charges because the victim was thought to be suicidal and unfit to testify. RECENTLY, lenient judges have L...-« ..L ..:..: ..i.... l.. « I.-..... in North London the number of calls from women reporting sexual assaults has doubled. Only a fourth of the callers say they will tell police. THE PUBLIC outcry began with a rape trial at Ipswich Crown Court on Jan. 4 when Judge Bertrand Richards freed a confessed rapist after fining him $3,800. Richards ruled the 17-year- old victim showed "contributory negligence" by hitchhiking. "It was a bit of luck for me," said John William Allen, 33. Within days Lord Lane, the Lord Chief Justice, issued guidelines to judges saying convicted rapists should be jailed "other than in wholly extraor- dinary circumstances," which he did not define. ANN RBOR 150 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES ^* 'A 'of ' berty 761-9700 win. 1- PERFORMANCES Musical Society-Oakland Ballet Company, 8 p.m., Power Center. School of Music-Double Bass Recital, John Kennedy, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Clarinet Recital, Ellen Hamric, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. )MISCELLANEOUS Tau Beta Pi-Free tutoring (in lower-level math & science courses), walk- WED 0 SAT * SUN TIL 6:00 PM (except "REDS") Richard Dreyfuss "The miracle of the movie is that it sends us home bordering on elation!" -Cosmopolitan Warren Beatty * Diane Keaton "R S sy Milo :._________________________,. - * W - W - I