4.' 4' .. . 9 9y a . a ^r 4 a Communication Brown Bag erie The Howard R. Marsh Center for the Study of Journalistic Performance, an endowed center within the Department of Communication, again will sponsor a series of Wednesday brown bag seminars. All are open to the public. Each will be 12:10 to 1 p.m. in 2040F LSA Building. Sept. 2 oDelivering Birth Control information to Teen- agers," Rocco De Pietro, Director of Teen Family Planning Communication Project Sept. 26 interviewing: What the Journalist Can learn from All the Research," Professor Charles Connell, Depart- ment of Communication and Institute for Social Research Oct. '10 "B irth of a Nation and Rise of the Klan," Pro- fessor Frank Beaver, Department of Communication Oct.24 "Serving the Lotino Community," Chris Segura, Assistant City Editor of New Orleans Times-Picayune and NEH Fellow Nov. 7 "A Frenchman looks at the U.S. Press," Robert Escarpit, Le Monde correspondent and Howard R. Marsh Visiting Professor Nov. 21 "Can Journalistic Ethics Be Taught?" Professor Dean Baker, Department of Communication s 'N Page 2-Tuesday, September 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily 300 SCHOOLS CLOSE Detroit teachers reject contract From UPIand AP Detroit teachers went on strike yesterday for the first time in six years, giving 213,000 public school students an extended summer vacation and forcing district officials to cancel classes star- ting today. Picket lines went up at 7 a.m. at the district's 303 school buildings, one hour before classes were scheduled to begin. The strike involved about 10,000 teachers and 1,600 non-teaching per- sonnel. SCHOOL officials said about 400 teachers - four per cent of the district total - showed up for work. Some HAIRSTYLISTS For Men, Women and Children at Liberty off State--66-9329 EtU. at South U.-66-0354 Arborland-971 -9975 Maple Vlage-761-2733 12,000 students, or about six per cent of the district's enrollment, reported to class, spokespersons said. Education officials, who opened schools yesterday despite the strike, issued a statement late in the day saying that as of today, students "are excused from class" until further notice. A spokeswoman for the teachers union, which was scheduled to return to the bargaining table with district of- ficials yesterday evening, said the move to call off classes came as no sur- prise. "WHO WAS THERE to teach?" she said. "Administrators can ad- ministrate, custodians can clean and 1 engineers can warm the schools, but there's really no purpose if there's no one there to teach." Elsewhere in Michigan, nearly 8,200 teachers in 23 other districts were on strike yesterday. Those walkouts kept some 158,000 students out of the classrooms. Those districts were: Flint, Lansing, Saginaw, Benton Harbor, Albion, Mon- tague, Northville, Ferndale, Chippewa Valley, Marshall, Owosso, Bloomingdale, Brandywine, White Pigeon, Lawrence, Wyoming, Godfrey- Lee, Jenison, Holland,'" West Ottawa, Coopersville, Waverly and Washtenaw Community College. IN SAGINAW, where 900 teachers have been on stroke for two weeks, teacher union bargainers with cots and blankets began a sit-in at school ad- ministra tive offices yesterday and vowed to stay there until a contract set- tlement is reached. Saginaw Superintendent Foster Gib- bs, meanwhile, warned that the school board may seek a court injunction to force the teachers back to work. The Saginaw strike has idled 19,000 studen- ts. Most Detroit parents apparently ignored school officials' request to send their children to school despite the strike, the first in Michigan's largest school district since 1973. DETROIT Federation of Teachers e artment o , OFVPNLOSPHY OF PHLSPY FOR TOMORROW ROCK C IDA IGHT RT (DFT) President Mary Ellen Riordan, who had predicted "100 per cent cooperation" by the union's more than' 12,000 members, said "very few"' students and teachers showed up- yesterday morning. Riordan would not predict how. long: the walkout might last. "It is our intention to resolve this matter as rapidly as we possibly can," she said. "Nobody wins in a school strike that goes on and on." THE 1973 STRIKE lasted 45 days. In 1967, Detroit teachers staged a 13-day: walkout. DFT members voted by a narrow margin last week to reject a tentative' contract agreement that would have provided them with an average 25 per: cent pay wage over three years. Also, yesterday, 650 Oklahoma City teachers ended their three-week walkout. In all, disputes involving 40,000 teachers in 12 states were i. terrupting the education of 800,000 students. There were rumblings that about 26,000 teachers would stage sickouts at various schools in Los Angeles, wher classes begin today, and 3,600 other were threatening to walk out in San Francisco, where school starts tomorrow. Cleveland: integratesx despite * resistance CLEVELAND (AP) - After years of delays and vows of resistance, Ohio' largest city began court-ordered desegregation of schools yesterday by busing 3,100 pupils to classes. Officials reported minor demonstrations, som confusion, and attendance slightly below normal. However, William Tomko, principal of John Marshall High in a white neigh borhood, said yesterday's experience "wasn't any kind of test" because not all students were scheduled to be i class. MEANWHILE, in Columbus, th second-largest district in Ohioa mor extensive busing plan entered its third day yesterday with no problems and q full complement of students in class. In Dayton, where busing foi desegregation is in its fourth year, no mishaps have occurred. In Cleveland, opening days were staggered for the various grade level, with all students scheduled to be in class by Thursday. Superintendent -Peter Carlin said a check of 16 of the 33 desegregated schools showed 5,210 of the projected' 6,815 students were at their places yesterday morning. THAT WAS A 76 per cent turnout at those schools. On a normal first day, an 85 per cent attendance would be expe- ted, he said. In Cleveland, there were mixups on bus assignments and confusion over the staggered starting schedule and one an- ti-busing group urged parents to keep their children home. The group, Citizens Opposed to Rearranging Kids, managed to attraet about 100 people, 60 of them children, to an all-day,stay-out-of-school picnic, but police said there were no major i- cidents. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No. 5 Tuesday, September 11, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 42 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2'semesters) ; $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POS- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. t It gets down to what you want to do and what you have to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics lesson and you can do it-handle all the work college demands and still have time to enjoy college life. You can dramatically increase your reading speed today and that's just the start. Think of the time, the freedom you'd have to do the things you want to do. For twenty years the ones who get ahead have used Reading Dynamics. 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