6-Tuesday, October 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily I Boston TV cancels 'racially violent' show U""r I I L" THE UNIVERSA oe S EF iCice AnnounCes The 1979-80 Season Subscriptions e c~eON SA LE NOW a PTP Ticket Office- S The Michigan League 0 Mon.-Fri. 10-1 and 2-5 pm at PowerVenter Phone: 764-0450 i'ustasDance Conceri Featuring; Britten's "CEREMONY OF CAROLS" Stravinsky's "RENARD". )ecember 7-9 Fr& Sat at 8xn-Sm. at 3pm Featured: MEMBERS OF THE ANN ARBOR CANTATA SINGERS Choreographed by ELIZABETH WEIL BERGMANN lanuary 26 at 3pm& 8pm BOSTON (AP) - Clergymen, public officials and a professional football team all announced plans yesterday to try to calm the explosive racial climate that prompted a Boston blackout of a prime-time network television show. WBZ-TV, at the urging of both black and white community leaders, decided against showing the two-part NBC drama "Freedom Road," last night and tonight, starring former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali. CARDINAL Humberto Medeiros, joined by other religious leaders, told a news conference of plans for a "covenant" of racial harmony that would be launched at an ecumenical convocation Nov. 19 on Boston Com- mon. After the service, Medeiros said, every Bostonian would be urged to sign the "covenant of justice, equity and harmony.' The involvement of Medeiros, spiritual leader of the Boston Catholic Archdiocese, is considered significant, since approximately 75 per cent of the city's population of 640,000 are Catholics. Included in the covenant is a call for the rejection of "any and all special in- terest groups and leaderships that ser- ve only to deepen our divisions and en- trench us, angered, into separate cam- Ps . management of the New England Patriots and officials of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority in the attempt to defuse the city's tense atmosphere. The Patriots asked their National Football League players to volunteer to meet with students in the city's racially tense schools. The transportation authority said that, effective yesterday through Dec. 31, it would add buses to school transit routes and increase security to prevent skirmishes between black and white students. A STATEMENT from WBZ said the Boston station's decision to cancel the program, set in the Reconstruction South, was based on "unusually graphic incidents of racial violence depicted, particularly violence against children." "The- film contained inflammatory language and there were racial stereotypes in it," said program direc- tor Dick Kurlander of WBZ-TV, an NBC affiliate owned by the Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. In New York, an NBC spokesman said WBZ was the only affiliate to can- cel the film. NBC had no further com- ment. $ { r 4 ,. i _. a i ':. ' 1 A ' 0 .. t r 1 i ~ ., 4 'y® } i s . _. _ l . i KRIS KRISTOFTERSON and Muhammad Ali, shown in their roles as, respectively, a sharecropper and a former slave in the NBC made-for-TV movie "Freedom load," won't be seen in Boston when the program airs tonight. WBZ-TV, iBC's Boston affiliate, cancelled the movie because it said, "The film migit heighten racial tensions in Boston." @rff's THE CLERGYMEN joined the _. ,. Carmina Burana DANCE SOLOISTS: Christine Dakin (courtesy of Martha Graham Dance Co.), Gay Delanghe, Willie Feuer, Susan Matheke and Gus Solomons Jr. CHOREOGRAPHER: Elizabeth Weil Bermann-CONDUCTOR: Thomas Hilbish March 13-16. Thu,FrL&Sat.at 8pm~Sun at 3pm - U S - Wayne workers to,*1w laid off TEAC HERS DETROIT (UPI)-Layoff notices were on the way yesterday to more than 4,800 employees of the near penniless Wayne County. The layoffs are effective Nov. 12, but the county hopes to immediately call back about half the workers to maintain vital services. A sizeable sum will have to be found somewhere, however, to allow those recalls. ORIGINALLY, OFFICIALS of the nation's third largest county had hoped to pay employees called back to work with promissory notes. A circuit court judge vetoed that plan last Friday. County officials were hopeful of state aid, although Gov. William G. Milliken has vowed not to bail out the county unless steps are taken to reform its muddled, overlapping governmental structure. A relief package totaling nearly $11 million is pending in the legislature. SPEAKING FOR MILLIKEN, who was returning from a 10-day visit to China, Lt. Gov. James H. Brickley said he believes the governor will approve the aid if a charter commission is for- med to reorganize county government and a legal conflict is resolvel to per- mit a county executive form I gover- nment.. "Obviously, if the legislatures able to pass those two bills . .. it will often our, problems considerably,"said County Commission Chairman Ricard Manning. "There will still be some layoffs. tur plan is to use those dollars ... for essti- tial services." THE COUNTY, WHICH has failed tc balance its books for four years, faces a $19.3 million deficit this year. The county already twice has failed to meet its payroll. About 3,100 em- 'ployees who were not paid two weeks ago got their checks last Friday, while another 2,600 went payless. Ironically, while there is not enough money to pay current county workers, retirees have nothing to fear from the county's financial crisis. Alfred Bricker, executive secretary of the county retirement system, said there is about $325 million imi the pen- sionefund. "There is enough here to pay the retirees forever," he said. f . ' .. W .t r l Y 1 { HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS ADVISED TO APPLY EAILY Aid programs inance educatior Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why she teaches deaf education in Thailand...ask another volunteer why he works as a teacher trainer in Kenya. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, travel, learn a new language arid experience another culture. Ask them: By the Associated Press For thousands of high school seniors, the start of the school year means the start of the search for acceptance by a college or university. -For many families, it also means the start of the search for help to pay the bills. The cost of a four-year education at a private college or university already is more than $22,000, according to figures compiled by the College Board, and tuition and fees are expected to keep going up. MILLIONS OF DOLLARS of public and private money are available to help students and their families, but it is im- portant to plan ahead to get your share. Ask colleges about financial aid when you ask for application forms. Make a note of deadlines and mark them on a calendar. Do not wait until you areac- cepted at a school to investigate scholarships and other aid programs; it may be too late by then. The next step is finding out whether f PLACEMENT CENTER OCT. 30 - NOV. 1 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. PEACE ENERGY We can't aford to waste it. F 2 F R E 1. m2 1m ---.1 -m- --- 1 -1 1 2FEE2. COKES 1 1 With Purchaseof Any 1 1 - 1 Item or More Pizza1 1 (WITH THIS AD)1 1 OPEN SUN-THURS 11am-1am; FRI & SAT 11am-2am 1 1 Now Delivering to the N. Campus Area . 1 " 1 1BE LL'S GR EEK PIZZA 995-0232 I 700 Packard at State Street1 ALL DINNERS INCLUDE CHOICE OF VEGETABLE, HOT BREAD,GAND A TRIP TO THE SALAD BAR. TWO LOW PRICES, ELEVEN GREAT ENTREES. INCLUDING TROUT, STUFFED SCH ROD, BAY SCALLOPS AND A 9 OZ. SIRLOIN STEAK. Johnny Come Early-]Mlmma you qualify for help. Eligibility is usually linked to family financial status, but you should not make the mistake of thinking that income alone makes the difference. Financial status depends on a lot of things: the number of youngsters in school, for example; assets, like a house; or special expen- ses. MOST SCHOOL AND scholarship agencies rely on one of several stan- dardized forms to decide eligibility. These forms are published and analyzed by testing services; you and your family fill in the form and mail it to the testing service which, in turn, sends it to colleges you select. The details of the forms vary, but they generally are designed to deter- mine how much a family can reasonably be expected to contribute to a student's education. Colleges com- pare this amount to individual costs to see whether a student needs help. You may be eligible for aid at one school and ineligible at another. Among the most commonly used forms are the Financial Aid Form-FAF-issued by the College Scholarship Service of the College En- trance Examination Board and the Family Financial Statement - FFS - from the Student Need Analysis Service of the American College Testing Program. THEY ARE generally available from high school counselors; students should pick them up late in the fall and, should complete them as soon as possible after Jan. 1. There is a processing charge, plus a separate fee for each school to which you want the form sent. The federal government has five basiqaid programs, several of which have een expanded recently. They are: asic Educational Opportunity Grants Supplemental Educational Op- portuniy Grants, National Direct' StudentLoans, College Work-Study, and Guaarteed Student Loans. All but',' the Guarneed Student loans are tied, " to financal need; starting this year, guaranteed bans are available regar dless of incone. The broadst program is the one providing bas? grants. The amount of the grants varts from year to year; for the current a'ademic year, grants range from $50+, ,$1,600 depending on eligibility. FINANCIAL NIED is determined' according to a co plicated formula,' but, as a general tile, students from families with incoms of up to $26,006' can qualify for basicgrants: You have= to re-apply for a basicgrant each year. ,All students who areligible for basic'-' grants receive them The money is, generally paid by theschool. You will not be given the moneyintil you are ac-:',< tually enrolled; the sool may issue you a check for the granor may simply credit the amount to youiaccount. Guaranteed loans ar" granted by banks, credit unions, ad other par-' ticipating financial insttutions. You'", pay no interest at all duing the four- years you are in college aid for a brief'- period after you graduate. Vhen you do' begin to pay interest, it Aill be at a' relatively low rate. Undergraduates may borow up to. $2,500 a year up to a maimum of $7,500. It is up to you to find ai institution ' willing to lend you the moneyunder the'," guaranteed loan program; nit all len-7 ders are willing. - - but incons*stent 4: 4 ::V{ (Continued from Page5) ween scenes to clean up and rearrange props in preparation for Doris' and George's next visit. She even provided some saucy humor as she steals an illicit sip of Doris and George's leftover champagne. It is a small bit, but one- which adds in extra spark-something sorely needed by this production. Stanley Kramer's 1903 I - I