t T ity of districts integrated : ..:.. ,0 MD. 16.51 . . 3,7% GIAN DAILY' Rivers Add Extra Water To Great Lakes-runk "For BOZAK Speakers it's AUDIO SUPPLY" The diversion of water into the Chicago Ship Canal from' the Great Lakes is more than com- pensated for by increased diversion into Lake Superior, from- rivers formerly flowing into Hudson Bay, according to Ivan W. Brunk, supervising meteorologist at the Chicago Weather Bureau. In a paper presented at the Uni- versity recently, Brunk said that the: water diVerted into the canal totaled 1,500 cubic feet per second plus the same amount for domestic plumbing.w "This diversion is more than compensated for at present by some 5,000 cubic feet per second which flows into Lake Superior," he said, addressing some 150 peo- ple attending the second national Conference on Applied Meterology: Engineering.s In discussing piecipitatioA and the levels of Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, Brunk said the pre- cipitation of one calendar year is of relatively greater importance than other years in its effect, and a correlation extends back at least to the third year. He said that water which fell two or three years prior to a given time still can influence the lake' levels because the water takes that long to travel underground into the Great Lakes. AUDIO SUPPLY 214 South State (across from NOrmandy 2-7767 Laboratories-- State Theatre) ,. _ A %-go- }}.. VERYDAY AND EVENING -- GENUINE OLD TOWN CANOES s Nw J:.4 s Z O TEJ CANOE LIVERY. Ui O H HURON RIVER AT THE FOOT OF LONG SHORE DRIVE 'Telephone NO,847411 k itegration Proceeds Slowly in South .. I By The Associated Press . F'our years after the historic preme Court decision against blic school segregation, South- p n school bells for the' most part g 11 ring with a double tone, call-t g whites and Negroes to separate, hools. North Carolinr and Arkan as, with a somewhat larger population! percentage of Negroes than either' EPlorida or Virginia, have had scat- tered instances of integration but have joined their Southern sisters n adopting legislation to offset or slow down the process. Show Scattered Integrat.ion There has been some progress' ward integration in the border, ates, but not as much' as in revious years, and none at all in se Deep South states where legis- tures have been stiffening their pposition to the integration deci- on.' As the accompanying map shows, o Southern. state where Negroes omprise 'more than 30 per cent fthe population has integrated a. angle public school, nor has Vir- oula, with 22.1 per cent Negro 3pulation, nor Florida, with 21.8 l1 According to the Southern Edu- cation Reporting Service, a non- profit organization. which charts integration progress, the 11 South- ern states showing the greatest resistance to the desegregation de- cision have enacted a total of 196 state laws 'in the 'past four years to prevent or controlintegration. These laws take .a variety of forms: Abolish schools, school dis- tricts or even. whole state systems that integrate; provide state funds for- parents who Wish to, avoid sending thenr children to inte- grated'" schools; deny funds to school districts that integrate;, close schools where fed ral 'troops are used to enforce integration;. repeal .compulsory attendance laws; !empower superintendents to assign :pupils to. specific schools; sell or lease school' facilities to private operators" in' event of court-ordered. itegration. The four most common -types. of legislation adopted by these states are charted at the bottom of the map. Only Louisiana and Virginia have adopted all 'four. Integration Slowing Down. As schools open this year, q77 of the approximately 3,000 school, districts in :the- states shown on the map will have 'begun or ac, complished integration. This com- pares with a total of 38 last year and 208' two years ago. Except for a few districts in Arkansas, Ten- nessee and North Carolina, virtu- ally all integration progress since 1M56 has taken place in the border states; where resistance was less strong from the start. According to the Southern Edu- catiouiReporting Service, less than' 400,000 of the nearly three million Negroes enrolled in. Southern pub- lic schools will be in integrated situations. Some 150 court cases dealing with .school segregation have been filed, since the 1954 high court decnsion, and in addition to Little1 Rock, major tests are looming in New .Orleans; Dallas; Houston; Miami; Knoxville, Tenn.; Nor- 'folk, Va.; Atlanta, and Raleigh, N. C. Books and Supplies I + MEDICINE + DNITY Our store is specially equipped to fill your every + NURSING. + PUBLI HEALTH. need and a well informed staff including MEDICAL and DENTAL students wilt serve you. Yearly integration Progress in South's 3,009 School Districts 1957 1958- Legal Steps to Avoid Integration ABOLISH SCHOOLS s s GRAN.T OR Hill;j : PRIVATE DUCATION .. m ; P OVERBECK BOOKSTORE The Medical Book Center Phone NO 3-44346..... 1216 South University I DENY FUNDS TO INTEGRATED SCHOOLS I iii S IL t Z3333 I--I: 2.:::' 1Ii~: .1 .... ::I: .sO. ji.. ___________________ I i ~.~Jiii~~iN. - & Umm~ I - _ _ . . . r 11 " I 11 II r rr 1 r i l If 1 1 r I I Y rY I w. ,. .. I There's a Nationally-nown Independent Record Dealer with You jn mind! l I ;, in Ann Arbor Dance Classes Excisively Reserved For University Students M 4 I Years of musically intelligent service hr an have SPCAOFE t ," t tmosphere of congenial informality, for 100 People resulted in an envied position armong record dealers. A COMPREJENSIVE RECORD STOCK -=}- I TABLE MODEL d CONSOLE RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS RECORD CABINETS AND OTHER ACCESSORIES. TV SETS by RCA VICTOR 5 PRIVATE HOURS 5 CLASS HOURS , 5 PARTY HOURS TOTAL! 15,HOURS REGISTER NOW! Deadline Saturday, Sept. 27th Studio Open 10 A.M.-1 P.M. All Arthur Murray Students Are UNIVERSITY OF MIC IGAN jIUSIC May we invite you to visit us at either of our two convenient locations. .sw. invited to Attend Parties I, f11 I i