The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 2, 1983-Page 5 Supreme Court asked to bend on evidence rule After youe... President Reagan escorts England's Queen Elizabeth II1 Barbara, California. AP Photo to a waiting limousine yesterday after their meeting in Santa WASHINGTON (AP) - An honest 'mistake by police should not prevent juries from considering unlawfully seized evidence, the Reagan ad- ministration told the Supreme Court yesterday. Rex Lee, the administration's highest-ranking courtroom lawyer, urged the court to soften, with a "good faith" exception, its 69-year-old rule barring all such evidence. BUT CHICAGO lawyer James Reilley warned that any bending of the so-called exclusionary rule will be in- terpreted by law enforcement authorities as a signal "not to take the Fourth Amendment as seriously." The Constitution's Fourth Amen- dment bans unreasonable police sear- ches and seizures. The Supreme Court created the ex- clusionary rule in a 1914 decision to deter unlawful police conduct, and in 1961 gave the rule constitutional dimen- sion by applying it to state criminal cases. UNDER IT, evidence obtained in a search or after an arrest later found to be unlawful cannot be used against a criminal defendant. The rule meansrthat convictions based, even in part, on such legally tainted evidence must be overturned. The rule has come under heavy at- tack by many law enforcement officials and political conservatives - including President Reagan - who contend it works to penalize society for what often are "honest" mistakes by police of- ficers. SEVERAL BILLS pending in Congress would sharply limit the rule in federal cases, but the constitutionality of such legislation is an open question. "The rule now applies to exclude evidence no matter what the error, large or small," Assistant Illinois At- torney General Paul Biebel told the justices yesterday. "If there's a reasonable basis" for illegal police conduct, Biebel said, "the exclusionary rule should not apply." THE JUSTICES are using the case of Lance and Susan Gates, suspects in a Bloomingdale, Ill., drug investigation, to restudy the rule. The Illinois Supreme Court ruled that 350 pounds of marijuana seized by police officers from the trunk of the Gates' car could not be used as eviden- ce against them. Police received an anonymous letter in 1978 alleging that the couple was shipping illegal drugs from Florida and that there was $100,000 worth of drugs in the basement of their home. ACTING ON the tip, police officers followed Gates as he drove back from Florida. Having obtained a warrant from a magistrate, they searched his car when he reached Bloomingdale. The evidence was suppressed before trial on grounds that police had no "probable cause" to believe that the anonymous informant's tip was reliab- le. In essence, the state court said the magistrate was wrong when he gave a search warrant to the officers. IF THE NATION's highest court disagrees with the Illinois court and finds there was "probable cause" to suspect the Gates were involved in crime, it will not have to reach the ex- clusionary-rule issue. But the fact the justices ordered yesterday's second round of oral arguments specifically on the "good faith" exception may mean the court already has decided the evidence was seized without probable cause. That leaves at issue whether the evidence,, nevertheless, may be shown to the jury. "This is simply not the kind of case to which the exclusionary rule was in- tended to apply, or in which it achieves deterrence benefits," Lee argued. CALLING IT a "close question"" whether the exclusionary rule should exist at all, Lee contended, This case- presents a much easier question ... It is difficult to see any adequate future deterrence of police misconduct from suppressing the evidence in this case." Urging the court to reject Lee's arguments, Reilley asked rhetorically "what good is the warrant process it- self" if good-faith exceptions to the probable-cause requirement are allowed. The Gates' lawyer suggested that law enforcement authorities "are com- plaining because the rule works too well" in deterring sloppy police work. The court is expected to announce its decision by July. I House approves you WASHINGTON (AP) - The House, I resurrecting a New Deal idea of a half- century ago, approved an American Conservatiion Corps program yester- day to provide as many as 100,000 park and forest jobs for youths. The bill, approved 301-87, calls for $60 million this year and $300 million for each of the next five years in a program fashioned after the Civilian Conser- vation Corps that Congress approved early in Franklin Roosevelt's first term as president. ADDITIONAL legislation is needed to provide the money itself for the program, which is opposed by President Reagan. Although relatively small in size and very limited in scope, the measure is the first one the Democrat-controlled House has aproved this year to combat the recession. A $4.6 billion bill to provide public works jobs and humanitarian assistance is expected on the floor tomorrow and party leaders have promised additional legislation in the future. "This is real. It is not make-work," Rep. John Seiberling (D-Ohio) said in leading the argument for the American Conservation Corps. Seiberling said of- ficials of the Forest Service and Park Service are pleading for laborers to upgrade facilities, while unem- hjob bill ployment is very high among young people and black youths in particular. REP. DOUGLAS Bereuter (R-Neb.) also said young people who sign up for the corps would do the "back-breaking, unglorious tasks" of preserving federal parklands. But other Republicans protested vigorously. A similar bill passed the House last year, although it died in the Senate. And administration officials chose not to fight the measure on the floor, leaving Republicans worried about unemployment free to vote without pressure. Want to Earn 8 Credits This Summer? How about... The University of Michigan Summer Session In Israel at Kibbutz Kfar Hamaccabi June 5 - August 11, 1983 Work, Study and Have Fun on a Kibbutz AND... Get 5 U of M credits for Hebrew Language 3 U of M credits for Social Science Seminar on Kibbutz Life For info.and applications contact: Center for Western Eruopean Studies, 5208 Angell Hall 764-4311 Court hears Freedom Rider's testimony KALAMAZOO(UPI)-The racial op- pression of the early 1960s was dramatized in federal court yesterday by a man who detailed how an angry mob firebombed a "Freedom Rider" bus and beat occupants as they fled the blaze. Henry Thomas said he and a group of fellow activists testing federal court rulings barring segregation in bus stations were attacked. and beaten just outside Anniston, Ala., by 150 to 200 people wielding clubs and baseball bats. "There was no doubt in my mind that they were going to kill us," Thomas testified, recalling, the events that oc- curred after the bus on which he was riding was immobilized by a flat tire and was firebombed by the crowd. Angry segregationists held the bus door closed as smoke billowed through the bus and then clubbed the Freedom Riders with baseball bats as they for- ced their way out of the vehicle and into the mob, he said. Thomas' testimony was heard during the second day of a bench trial before U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen on the $1 million lawsuit filed against the federal government and the FBI by Freedom Rider Walter Bergman of Grand Rapids. Bergman, 83, maintains the gover- nment was aware of planned attacks on the commercial buses on which the ac- tivists were riding throughout the South in their demonstrations. Bergman claims the injuries he received during a May 14, 1961 beating on a bus in Anniston, Ala., led to a serious complication during routine surgery shortly thereafter and sub- sequently left him confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. Thomas, now the owner of Mc- Donald's restaurant in East Point, Ga., said the crowd dispersed when the gas tank of the crippled bus exploded. Ambulances arriving at the scene would take only injured white people to the hospital, he said, leaving the bat- tered and bloodied black demonstrators to wait for two vehicles operated by a black-owned funeral home. A crowd again gathered around the hospital and officials there informed the beaten demonstrators they would have to seek treatment elsewhere, although Thomas said "to go out there again in that mob would have been suicide." Israeli official criticizes U.N. (Continued from Page 1) coalition that fought the Nazis in World War II. Blum assailed the United Naitons for its comdemnation of the Camp David talks and the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty. "It is obvious that the flames of hatred, fanned by the Soviet Union, are an attempt to divert their troubles in Afghanistan and in other parts of the world." But, Blum said, Israel should be in the United Nations. "Membership in the U.N. should be -considered an at- tribute of modern statehood. It signifies that that particular state belongs to the international com- munity." ASSI STANT ED ITO R Downtown Detroit reference book publisher is seeking editorial candidates to do research and writing for our books. Required is a Bachelor's Degree in English with training and interest in contemporary literature. Also required are proofreading skills, and typing skills of 35 wpm. Salary starts at $800/mo. with periodic increases and a comprehensive benefit program. Please send resume, transcripts (if available) along with literary nonreturnable college paper(not poetry or short story) to: Publisher P.O. Box 2629 Dept. 2 Detroit, MI 48231 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Blum also credited the United States with a "good change" toward Israel in the U.N. He said U.S. Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick is responsible for this improvement. Graduation Portraits from Experienced Professional Photographers Discounts for Quantity CALL KLINGER'S STUDIO 662-2359. GRADUATE ASSISTANTS WANTED in EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY ENGLISH DEPARTMENTS - Get good teaching experience while working toward an M.A. - $1575 per semester plus 8 hours free tuition per semester. - For more information call Donald Lawniczak or Judith Johnson 487-0135 or 487-4220. - Deadline April 1, 1983 FOR APPLICATION FORMS WRITE: Director of Graduate Studies English Department Eastern Michigan University Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197 Affirmative Action Equal Opportunity Employer Read and Use Dail/y Class if ieds IMMEDIATE CONTRI BUTION In the age of information technology, a company -whose sales of $1.7 billion annually and whose products and components extend from data acqui- sition and information processing through data communication to voice, video and graphic com- munication - is making immediate contribution a reality for their new graduates. ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS March 15th Electrical, Mechanical, Chemical and Computer Sciences Engineering, Physics, Technical Sales (EE, ME, CS) and Computer Science Majors Make arrangements at the Placement Office. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V liances We feature all appliances - from refrigerators to video cassette recorders and transformers by most manufacturers including GE Kelvinator, Westinghouse, Sony, Sansui, etc. WE KNOW THE CORRECT TELEVISION AND VIDEO STANDARDS IN YOUR COUNTRY. PAL - SECAM - NTSC. Our 23 years' experience makes us experts in voltage, cycles, and all of the details of overseas shipments. And our prices are much below overseas prices. m 'vwhere n the w'ord! Hou a rivife4 to CAMPUS MEET THE PRESS A weekly public interview-of a n er person on caompus b a. sm)J1 panel, Fonllse4 by "dienc ques-aions- MARCH 3, 1983 President Harold Shapiro THURSDAYS, 4 P.M. i