. THE KENT STATE PETITION See Editorial Page Y L 131k a t BRRR High-43 Low-30 Mostly cloudy and cold, chance of snow flurries Vol. LXXXII, No. 48 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 4, 1971 Ten Cents Busin: Anatomy of a conflict y By ARTHUR LERNER took steps to eliminate racial im- Pontiac school system was illegal- As the new school year ap- plan for further integration of the Pontiac, the entire Detroit balance in one school five years ly segregated. Keith ordered cross- proached, NAG carried out a mas- city's 320 schools and to assess Metropolitan area, teachers, par- ago. town busing within Pontiac, ive campaign against the court- its present integration plan. ents, school boards and every poli- Roth's final ruling, still forth- prompting a housewife, Irene Mc- ordered busing-including picket- He also gave the State Board tician in the state are caught up coming, will, however, have direct Cabe to found the National Ac- ing, petitions, and boycotting of of Education 120 days to design a in Michigan's most controversial bearing on over 85 school districts tion Group (NAG) to protest the the schools. proposal for integration that issue in years - busing to achieve in the Detroit area. His prelimi- "forced" busing. The controversy drew national would include Detroit and at least racial balance in the state's nary ruling suggested he may or- At issue in the case was whe- headlines when 10 empty Pontiac some of its suburbs. schools; der inter-city busing between De- ther a community is guilty of dis- school buses were dynamited Au- Roth will issue a final deci- Busing conflicts in Pontiac and troit and its suburbs to provide crimination and must therefore gust 30, and five Klansmen were sion only after he receives anda! Kalamazoo that have seen picket- equal educational opportunities undertake intra-city busing when subsequently indicted. hears testimony on both of theseA" ing, petition drives and the dy- to the city's young peoples. school officials fail to adjust At that time in Detroit, Roth plans and those of other interest- namiting of school buses have Yesterday, Gov. William Milli- school district lines and build new was considering a suit filed by ed parties. been overshadowed by a federal ken announced he will appeal schools in all-black or all-white the Detroit chapter of the Na- Some additional busing of De- district judge's unprecedented rul- Roth's ruling and immediately neighborhoods, k n o w i n g the tional Association for the Ad- troit's 65 per cent black student ing that de jure segregation ex- drew criticism from civil rights schools will be largely'segregated. vancement of Colored People body may begin in February, and ists in Detroit's school system. leaders, who charged he was Keith's ruling was upheld by (NAACP). He ruled September 27 definitely by next September, au- Though Judge Stephen Roth's knuckling under to "racist" pres- a the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of that the Detroit school system was thorities predict. However, any decision has far-reaching implica- sure. Appeals in May, while the Su- operating in violation of the con- cross - district, inter - city busing bons for efforts to integrate the The ruling and ensuing uproar preme Court last week declined to stitutional equal protection guar- could not begin until September nation's school systems, the de- have followed an ongoing battle review the case, permitting the antees of the 14th Amendment. 1973, they say. cision alone will probably have over U.S. District Judge Damon busing which began in September On October 4, he ordered the Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has little effect on Ann Arbor, which Keith's 1970 decision that the to continue. Detroit school board to draft a See BUSING, Page 7 Marchers protest busingi Ten Pages -Courtesy of the Pontiac Press in Pontiac Governor to Canadians appeal school bias ruling By ALAN LENHOFF and CARLA RAPOPORT Special to The Daily LANSING - In a long-anticipated move, Gov. William Milliken announced on state-wide television last night he will appeal the decision of a federal district court which found some Detroit area school districts guilty of racial segregation. The decision, by U.S. District Court Judge Stephen Roth, found the districts guilty of "de jure" (by law) segregation, and ordered the State Board of Education to submit a deseg- protest blast U.S.EH By JONATHAN MILLER Special To The Daily WINDSOR, Ont. - Demon- strations across Canada yes- terday protested the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission's planned five-megaton nuclear test, scheduled to be detonated on Amchitka Island in the Pa- cific Ocean Saturday after- noon. Ibom regation plan-which most observers - h ci~ feel of would include the ,t+ dnts between 1 busingvi ou s uL..1 Detroit and the suburbs. Taking his first stand on the --" 0 0 controversial busing issue, Milli- ken said that while some busing may be desirable, "this important case" deserves "full and complete transflerws judicial review." In addition, Milliken said he is launching a petition drive to place ~snur SL"1 (V on the ballot a proposal which r swould end the funding of local school districts through property By GERI SPRUNG taxes--a system he has long called The transfer of 40 women pris- "inequitable." - oners to the Detroit House of Cor- "I believe the action I am tak- rection (DeHoCo) from the Wayne ing in planning, the appeal is County Jail has caused a turmoil sound and judicious as well as - *as DeHoCo matrons have gone on timely and appropriate," Milliken strike, prisoners have been placed said. It was chair-raising day on campus yest inovercrowded conditions and "My action is consistent with my I a arriig transfers from Wayne County have past record as an advocate of winter. been denied several privileges. human rights and with my sup- - --- As the matrons walked out yes- port of decentralization of the De- NIGHT T BU SER VICE: terday in protest of the transfer troit school district to assure more ; U which they contended created a local control over education. langerous.working situation in the "Local control by local people already overcrowded jail, the oper- is essential - whether in cities. ation of the jail was left to sup- suburbs or rural areas," the gov- ervisory personnel. ernor added. Almost all matrons scheduled to Milliken, named as a defendant work since Tuesday night have in the suit which brought the Roth gone on strike and Superintendent decision, can thus legally appeal William Bannan expects the rest; the ruling. tf the matrons will join them. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley and Bannan has suspended without John Porter, state superintendent pay the 25 matrons who have re- of public education, were named fused to work "until they are as co-defendants in the suit, but By MARY KRAMER ning last willing to come back and do their have indicated they will not ap- The city's Dial-a-Ride bus ser- nedy, an job." peal. vice appears destined to satisfy plan whi The inmates of one of the jail's Milliken's appeal, however, can- the need for a nighttime bus ser- executive eight women's cottages have been not be filed until Roth issues a vice in the immediate campus ing and istributed throughout the other final order on the case. So far, area. Tuesday. even to make room for the trans- Roth has only ruled on the seg- University executive officers have Bus ser fers, so that cottages which nor- regation issue, and has called for approved a proposal to institute three-fold mally house 40 to 50 prisoners now the formation of desegregation and subsidize the service in an security have as many at 61. plans which could be incorporated area defined by Vice President for The matrons contend this makes into his final order. Student Services Robert Knauss. pace are more work for them and their When it is filed, the appeal will Knauss hopes to have the ser- proved in work is now more dangerous. 1 go to the Sixth Circuit Court of Knas by tonay th sr ing and g Sources say the inmates are also Appeals in Cincinnati and could vice operating by Monday in an uncomfortable in their new quar- conceivably reach the U. S. Su- area which will include University security g ters because of the overcrowding. preme Court, as Roth's decision Judith Bannan claims all inmates have may include the nation's first Dial-a-Ride expands through ganizer, v beds, though some of these have court order to bus students across the city. See story, Page 10. plan, but been placed in the halls. Other district lines. sources indicate, however, that the After last night's speech, Milli- Terrace apartments, M i c h i g a n beds are mattresses placed on the ken told The Daily that a major Union, Oxford Housing, and the *loor. reason for seeking an appeal was sorority houses along Hill Street. In addition, sources report that to "defuse the busing issue" and "The current commitment is to the DeHoCo inmates were trans- to move public focus to the pe- run the service until the end of See DEHOCO, Page 10 See MILLIKEN, Page 10 s s n u ____ - .-----~ -~ ___ ~ -thesemester and evaluate its level in in the wind erday, as winds whipped As students, union members and environmentalists demonstrated at American missions and blocked in- ternational bridges from Canada to the United States, a previously secret report was r e 1 e a s e d in Washington warning that the x'i j blast, code-named Cannikin, could trigger earthquakes and tidal waves by its impact on faults in the earth's crust. "T h e underground explosion could serve as the first domino in a row of dominoes leading to a major earthquake," said the re- port, prepared by Russell Train, -Daily-David Margolick chairman qf President Nixon's Council on Environmental Quality. Meanwhile, a three-judge fed- up to usher in the first cold of eral appeals court in Washington refused for the second time to ' - - halt the nuclear test, turning back environmentalist opponents of the test. Lawyers for those seeking the injunction argued that even gov- ernment experts believe the ex- plosion, equivalent to a detona- tion of five million tons of TNT, could trigger earthquakes and tidal waves, kill wildlife and release radioactive waste into the air. Although environmental groups ie a su re say they are studying the possi- bility of an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, an Associated it may lack sufficient publicity to Press report from Washington in- gain student support. dicated the chances for a success- "Thn ,ful appeal were remote. -Associated Press CANADIAN DEMONSTRATORS block the Blue Water International Bridge connecting Port Huron and Sarnia, Ont., yesterday to protest a scheduled U.S. H-bomb test. A NSWER CRITICS: Grads revise charter for new federation d Dial t Friday, Knauss, Ken- d Ellsworth drafted the ch was presented to the officers-President Flem- a regulaton against handouts in the University Terrace the six vice presidents-apartments," she said. "People in Oxford can have them slipped rvice is one aspect of a under their door but the U Ter- d strategy to improve area race people will have to be in- for the University Ter- formed some other way." a. Knauss has also ap- Besides official University ser- stallation of better light- vices, the newly-formed Women's an increase in University Crisis Center is organizing groups guard patrolsof two to four women to patrol S patrls, the area. In addition, the WCC has Frandzel, a petition or- lists of women who have volun- was pleased with the bus teered to walk at night with other expressed concern that women. The planned explosion, which will have a force 250 times greater than the atomic weapon used at Hiroshima, has caused a storm of protest in Alaska and across Can- ada. Government spokesmen, includ- ing Premier Pierre Trudeau, have criticized the American govern-I ment, and c h u r c h and labor groups, environmentalists and stu- dent organizations have all joined in decrying the test. See CANADIANS, Page 7 By GLORIA JANE SMITH Representatives f r o m s i x graduate and professional school student governments met last night to revise the charter of the Graduate Federation (GF), proposed successor to the Graduate Assembly (GA), which received criticism when origin- ally presented for ratification last month. The revised charter attempts to answer claims of "undergrad- uate pollution" and "inpropor- tionate representation" made by John Koza, Grad, in a suit brought before the Central Stu- dent Judiciary (CSJ) early last week. In contrast to the previously proposed document, the charter which will now be presented to the individual governments for approval will stipulate that: -the federation shall consist of "delegates", not "representa- tives"; -no government which has a majority of undergraduates in its constituency will be ad- mitted to the federation, and -major policy decisions will be decided by a two-step pro- cess of voting which will enable delegates to cast votes in pro- portion to the number of stu- dents in their respective schools. Claiming he was denied the previously promised opportunity to attend the meeting, Koza ex- claimed late last night that "constitutions should nothbe written in closed meetings." FIRST TIME AROUND student vote yields mixed results Five students picked for LSA policy unit of use," said Knauss. "It will then be determined if student support merits a continuation of the pro- gram." According to University secre- tary Richard Kennedy, the service will cost students approximately 25 cents a ride-considerably less than the 60 cent fee charged city j residents. The University will provide a trial subsidy to cover theigad). Transportation Service Mana- ger John Ellsworth and Harlan Mulder, a University financial of- ficial, are currently working out details with city officials. A -_ By CHRIS PARKS LSA Student Government last night named five of the ten stu- dent members of the yet to be established Student - Faculty Policy committee. The other five members, at versial report by an ad-hoc stu- dent-faculty committee proposed its establishment. Student power advocates, how- ever, complained at the time that the plan approved by the faculty falls far short of the body proposed in the original report. By GENE ROBINSON Thousands of newly enfranchised voters went to the polls for the first time Tuesday, influencing local elections in a few large student areas, but wielding little power in the big cities. While students scored no resounding victories like the one in Berkeley, Calif., last spring, when three radical city councilmen were elected, some student-supported candidates and students them- selves were elected in towns with large student populations. In Newcomerstown. Ohio. Ron Hooker. 19. a Student candidates suffered a setback in Kala- mazoo, Mich., however, as three students running in a 19-way race for seven city council seats placed 14th, 18th, and 19th. They did, however, elect the first black mayor in the city's history. The main effect of the youth vote was naturally felt in college towns. In Bloomington, Ind., Francis McCloskey, a recent Indiana University law school graduate, defeated a two-term incumbent Repub- lican mayor by nearly 3,000 votes. McCloskey, a Democrat, ran especially well in student precincts. However, figures may be mis- Y-.......*