Page 2-Friday, November 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily Giant T.V. Screen for Sporting Events Breakfast Served Anytime Free Hash Browns Wth Any Eggs or Omelettes Beer, Cocktails, and Extensive Wine List. BACCHUS' GARDENS 338 S. State Street For fast pick-up orders call: 663-4636 REJECTS PROPOSED TEMPORAR Y BAN See Airthe Monday Night Football Games ALSO PITCHER NIGHT $1 Off on Pitcher Beer Bar Special Frosted 10 0. Mug House backs 'A WASHINGTON (AP) - In a vote both sides suggested was mainly symbolic, the House rejected yesterday a proposed temporary ban on construc- tion of new nuclear power plants. By a 254-135 margin, the House tur- ned back an amendment by Rep. Ed- ward Markey (D-Mass.), that would have held up nuclear plant construction permits by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission at least until next April 1. IT WAS THE first showdown in the House on the nuclear moratorium issue since the Three Mile Island accident last March 28, although the House did reject, by a 235-147 vote on June 18, a proposal to ban new nuclear plants in states without emergency evacuation plans. Sponsois of the Markey amendment said it was inspired by the accident at the nuclear generating plant near Harrisburg, Pa. Markey called rejec- tion of his amendment "congressional failure to recognize clear evidence that our program is flawed." The action came as the House worked on a $427-million bill authorizing . plant b Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) programs for the 1980 fiscal year that began Oct. 1. Both sponsors and critics of the proposed moratorium agreed that it would have little practical effect. For one thing,,the NRC has a self- imposed moratorium on' licensing, which officials have said will last at least until next spring. And while that NRC moratorium has actually held up the opening of four nuclear plants on which construction has been com- pleted, the Markey proposal was aimed uilding at plants not scheduled to be finished for years. Yesterday's House vote was the first' in either chamber since the presidential commission that investigated the ac- cident issued its final report earlier this month. That report, by the commission headed by Dartmouth College President John Kemeny, accused: the NRC of being in disarray and recom- mended its overhaul - but stopped short of formally recommending a moratorium on new nuclear plants. It's MOONLIGHT MADNESS at Friday, Nov. 30 -6 p.m. to 12 a.m. 6 HOURS ONLY Camera Shop, Inc. KODACOLOR 11 Color Print Film V.P.D. Photo Albums 20 Exposure 110 or 126...........1.53 30'/ f 24 Exposure 35mm. . .. ..........1.68 (LIMIT-1 rolls per customer) (All other photo albums and ref ills will be reduced) Voightlander Vitoret 110 High Quality Pocket CameraC Reg. 34.95 Now 24.88 GIFT WRAP AND BOWS R___.__34.95_ _ __ __ __ _WILL BE SOLD AT Kodak Instamatic X-15F Outfit INCREDIBLY LOW PRICES. Perfect camera for a beginner There's still time to plaCe your Reg. 16.95 Now 13.88 order for photo-greeting cards All Marshand Gadget Bagsby Eastman Kodak or Guardian Photo. 30% Off MOST ORDERS ACCEPTED THROUGH DEC. 5th 15% Off on any Beseler Darkroom Equipment with the purchase of an enlarger listed below: Beseler 23C11 or Beseler 67C, 10 pm. to 12 a.m. 2 HOURS ONLY MINOLTA r4t~~0 , XD CAMERAS with your choice of 45 mm f/2, 50 mm f/1.7, or50mmf/1.4 MD Rokkorx Lens To the best of our Knowledge the Lowest Price ever offered TWO HOURS ONLY! (Sorry we cannot advertise this unbelievable price) _ On this particular item we will not be able to accept WE WILL BE OFFERING BARGAIN PRICES American Express or Diners ON EVERYTH ING IN OUR STORE. Club cards. Don't miss this spectacular sale! 6 HOURS ONLY! COVERS y W 1115 S. University Camera Shop, Inc. Since 1939-Ann Arbor's Friendly Camera Shop 665-6101 Religion affects Iranian crisis (Continued from Page 1) than Nixon committed. . . The Ehrlichmanns and John Deans have been tried and some of them executed. Now, should the Ayatollah pardon their Nixon?" Mazrui asked. "Well, they have decided they don't want to do it that way." That basic religious difference on the question of justice comes from dissimilarities between Jesus and Mohammed, Mazrui said. "Jesus died an underdog (and) was spared from having to administer a political com- munity" in his lifetime, Mazrui said. He added that Mohammed, too, believed in forgiveness until he was put in charge of running a nation-state, and given the responsibility of enforcing the law. MAZRUI DESCRIBED Iran under the shah as an Islamic nation that was on a path of being co-opted into a westernized nation, something like modern-day Turkey. He said Khomeini's Islamic revolt this year arrested that process of westernization, and was only continuing a revolution that had been stalled for 25 years by the C.I.A., when the U.S. reinstated the shah in the 1950s. For a whole generation, virtually 25 years, the U.S. got a reprieve from the revolution by letting Theodore Roosevelt's grandson go into the streets and organize a counter revolution against (Dr. Mohammed) Mossadegh, a political opponent of the shah. This is no left-wing accusation - just read Monday's New York Times, it's all there," Mazrui noted. Now, with the 49 hostages still captive in the American Embassy in Telran and the Carter administration moving for a United Nations resolution of'the conflict in tomorrow night's schediked Security Council debate, the Ayatoll'ah has effectively ruled out any interven- tion by the international body. Mazrui said yesterday Iran would only logically reject any interpretation of international law, since "inter- national law is a child of Western thinking. There was no contribution;to international law from alternative civilization, especially not from Islamic civilization." Mazrui said he himself has "mixed feelings" on the embassy takeover, un- derstanding the position of the militant students while not necessarily con- doning their tactics. Desegregation case- (Continued from Page 1) Topeka schools are in compliance with constitutional standards for racial in- tegration, he intends to close the case "so that questions such as we have just resolved are not presented to another judge 24 years from now." The last action relating to Topeka schools was in 1961, when a lower court panel concluded Topeka was making a "good-faith effort" toward desegregation. THE TOPEKA school district has an enrollment of 16,875. School board 'Iii0 enrollment figures as of Sept. 17 show that 3,993, or 23.66 per cent, are minorities. Three elementary schools on Topeka's east side, where most of the city's blacks live, have minority enrollments of 74.3, 62.2, and 62.1 per cent, the figures show. One junior high on the east side has 71.4 per cent minority students. The only high school in east Topeka has minority enrollment of 36.8 per cent. On Topeka's west and south sides, there are elementary schools with as little as three per cent minority enrollment, a junior high with only four per cent, and a high school of 4.8 per cent. JAMES GRAY, school superinten- dent, said yesterday that the district has made good progress at improving racial balance with a long range plan under which schools are being closed. "I am confident that they will find Daily Official Bulletin FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30,1979 Daily Calendar: WUOM: options, "Federal Grand Jury," 10:00 a.m. Guild House: Soup and Sandwich luncheon, Bar- bara Fuller, "U.S. Policy and the Crisis in Indo- China," 802 Monroe, noon. Center for S.&SEA Studies: Marion Dresner, "Gaming and Resource Decision Making," 2032 Dana, noon. Center for Research on Economic Development: Alberto Garcia, "Le Futur des Micro-Ordinateurs das le Pays du Tiers-Mode," CRED Conf., 3rd fl, Old Arch, 12:10 p.m. Resource Policy & Mangt. Prog.: Jerry Lax, "Legal Issues in Resource Policy and Management," 2024 Dana, 3 p.m. Philosophy: Derek Parfit, Oxford, "Obligations to Future Generations," Amphitheatre, Rackham, 4 p.m. Statistics: Wen-Chen Chen, Carnegie-Mellon-U., "Some Limit Theorems for Size Distributions," 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: N. Morrison, U-Toledo, "Mass Loss in A-Type Supergiants," 807 Dennison, 4 p.m. Computing- Center: 20th Year Celebration Program & Reception, Paton Accounting Center, Hale Aud., BA Bldg., 7:30 p.m. Museum of Art: Theodore Reff, Columbia-U., "The Reaction Against Impressionism in the 1880's," Angell, Aud. A., 8p.m. -eopened that we are in compliance," said Duane Pomeroy, president of the school board. "But, if we are not, then I am sure the board and the administrationt will want to do whatever is necessary to come in- to compliance." The American Civil Liberties Union is providing $10,000 financial backing for the litigation, said Judy Davis, director of the ACLU's Kansas chapter. The parents' group estimates the full cost of the lawsuit could exceed $12,000, and it is seeking donations. The Brown case began in 1951, when 20 black Topeka elementary students brought legal action through their parents alleging that white elementary students were allowed to attend schools in the districts in which they lived, while black students were' forced out- side their districts to separate all-black schools. DETROIT GRAND RAPIDS 313-477-2181 616-949-9681 CLASSES BEGIN DEC 10 CPA REVIEW. Judge Rodgers ... reactivated case THE MICHIGAN DAILY (344-900) Volume LXXXX, No.70 Friday, November 30, 1979 is edited-and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 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. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. Good News! ANNOUNCING EXTENDED Night Hours Service until 10:45 PM Monday - Friday Starts Dec. 9 Ann Arbor Transportation