Ti.. Errn kNr.,eimker 4 19Q7IL~.y "4J~IL.I ~ - THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 nursauy, 1NUVeFnucr -r, r - - -- Page 5 'images Canadians 0 .0 . SI CR sc cli DE th bo ba te pe B M he N st 0 at T m pi n de no i w he w eq ar th m to t ti t t ci ti CE ci a kI }Cr' rotest H-blast (Continued from page 1) Yesterday afternoon, 5,000 high hool and university students osed the Ambassador Bridge to etroit for four hours, blocking e two - mile s p a n with their dies and fashioning makeshift arricades out of construction ma- rials. In Sarnia, another 3,000 young eople massed at the Bluewater r i d g e leading to Port Huron, 'ich., blocking traffic for five- I ours and burning an effigy of ixon. There were pickets and demon- rators at the U.S. embassy in ttawa and at American consul- tes in Vancouver, Winnipeg and oronto. Last night, demonstr a torss ounted a silent vigil at the indsor - Detroit tunnel. Earlier, ickets slowed traffic at the tun- el. A demonstration was also held n Anchorage, Alaska. At the demonstration here, stu- ents singing "Oh Canada," the ational a n t h e m, marched to ithin 50 feet of the U.S. customs ouses where they were confronted ith a large contingent of riot- quipped Detroit police. Officials of the U.S. Immigration nd Naturalization Service warned e demonstrators they would "be iet with force," if they attempted o cross the border without going hrough customs and immigra- ion inspection. The protestors then pulled back o the Canadian side of the bridge, There they continued to block affic until the early evening. Canadian officials made no at- empt to stop the students from rossing the bridge, nor did they ry to collect the customary 10 ent pedestrian toll for using the ridge. Cannikin is scheduled to explode mile underground at 5 p.m. EST Saturday, the Atomic Energy Com- iission announced in Washington esterday. The bomb is described by the AEC as "the most intricate and complicated configuration ever un- dertaken in the weapons program .. different from any other nuc- ear weapon ever produced." The weapon, designed as the warhead of the Spartan antibal- istic missile system, is supposed to work by destroying incoming rocket warheads in a blast of X- rays. Critics charge however that the warhead is being designed and tested for a weapons system that will not work. The Aleutians, where the test is to take place, are volcanic in na- ture and are located in what geol- ogists describe as one of the most unstable subsurface structures in the world. Earthquakes of considerable mag- nitude are frequent there. Security Guards Supervisors BURNS INTERNATIONAL SECURITY SERVICES, INC., the world's leading private security agency, is seeking full and part- time security guards for employment in the Ann Arbor and sur- rounding areas. All applicants must be 21 years of age or older, and must be able to pass a strict background investigation which will include pre-employment and criminal record checks. Those applicants selected for employment will receive training and in- struction in physical and personal safety techniques, first aid, fire fighting and prevention, parking and traffic control, interior and exterior security techniques, pass and badge procedures and other special training applicable to the'assignment, as well as extensive on-the-job training. Applicants selected will receive premium wages and fringe bene- fits. Those having a particularly impressive security background will be given special consideration for supervisory positions. Applcants seeking full and part-time employment with excellent working conditions, and freedom from worry of seasonal layoffs, must apply at: 208 E. Washington Suite 201 Phone 662-4554 Ann Arbor, Michigan between the hours of 9 A.M. to 4 P.M., starting Tuesday, October 26, 1971 An Equal Opportunity Employer BURNS INTERNATIONAL SECURITY SERVICES, INC. ieven :r b N eF, r I f _. MOCCASINS by Bant Carleton B using. (Continued from page 1) flatly stated "there will be no cross-district busing in Michigan," noting that a Nixon-appointed Supreme Court would not uphold it in court. Roth's ruling that segregated neighborhood housing patterns could constitute de jure, rather, than de facto, segregation is a! first. Previous court rulings had treated neighborhood housing pat- terns as accidental. Federal judges therefore, were barred from' pro- scribing legal remedies through court orders. However, Roth found that De- troit's neighborhood housing pat- terns were not accidental, but a result of official "actions and in- actions" by "federal, state, and local (governments), private or- ganizations, loaning institutions, real estate associations, and bro- kerage firms." The judge placed key criticism on the Federal Housing Adminis- tration and the Veterans Adminis- tration for policies promoting dis- criminatory "harmonious neigh- borhoods" - racially and eco- nomically homegeneous. Parents in surban Detroit corn- -munities immediately organized into anti-busing groups - some allied with NAG-and petition drives began seeking the recall of Democratic Sen. Philip Hart, who announced his support of court- ordered busing. A ,rumor that a busing plan was to start immediately resulted In 30,000 Macomb County children staying home from school one day last month. And an October 25 school boycott, called by NAG. had little impact state-wide. but caused high absenteeism in Pon- tiac and some Detroit area com- munities. Roth's decision also drew im- mediate response from the State Legislature. Though virtually no leq-islators countered Roth's finding of illegal segregation in Detroit's schools, the Legislature joined the anti- busing furor. though its actions will have little effect on the out- come of''the Detroit case. Both houses quickly passed mo- tions urging the state Board of Education to seek an appeal, which the board has declined tc do. The legislature also rushec through motions seeking a consti- tutional amendment to outlaw court-ordered busing for integra- M Anatomy of -Daily-Jim Judkis con troversy a -- 11 . I - - --.- - 44 The amendment, which has "neighborhood school tradition" in to the one Judge Keith ordered Kelley said the state was "eco-d been introduced in the U.S. Sen- j Detroit. for Pontiac, it could affect two nomically segregating its school,. ate in a similar form by Michi- However, Rep. Diggs regards Ann Arbor elementary schools; children" and that the present sys- 1 gan's Republican Sen. Robert that same "traditional system" as Northside with 40 per cent black tem was "unfair, unequal and in- Griffin, would prevent the assign- an integral factor in the promo- enrollment and Mack, with 53 equitable." ment of any child to a school on tion of "racism in Detroit per cent ti Milliken and Kelley, with the I the basis of "race, color, religion, schools." The Ann Arbor Board of 'Edu- support of most education authori- t or national origin." Gribbs has recently come under cation emptied Jones Elementary ties in the state, hope to replace r In 1967, Griffin insisted that attack from Secretary of State School a few years ago and trans- the local property tax system withi federal desegregation funds could Richard Austin, another Demo- ferred its predominately black a statewide income tax funding be used for busing programs that crattwhom he defeated in his student population into other city base and a corporate value tax. had been "formally and freely" mayoral campaign, for "ineptly" schools. Both believe financial inequities made by the "affected state or lo- handling Detroit's social prob- As a possible partial solution to constitute a greater and more im- t cal educational agency." lems. the problems plaguing the state's mediate barrier to uniform, high Also in 1967, Griffin opposed But besides Conyers, Diggs, and educational system. Milliken and quality education than imbalances Southern legislation that would State Sen. Coleman Young (D- Kelley jointly announced in Oc- in the racial composition of have allowed Southern communi- Detroit), a Democratic national tober that they were seeking a school enrollments. ties to use "voluntary" integra- committeeman, black opinion is ruling by the state Supreme Court Education authorities around the tion plans. He declared that vol- split on the desirability of busing. that the state's system of financ- state hope that the Detroit school untarism was an opportunity for Rep. James Del Rio (D-De- ing education through local pro-s Southern school districts to do troit), an outspoken black legis- perty taxes and state subsidies problems and the state's can be 1 ;nothing. lator, said in debate in Lansing was unconstitutional, attacked through a combination that "Detroit blacks don't want The present system allows weal- of some form of busing and paci- posing prohibition of all busing busing anw more than whites do, thier communities and heavily in- fication of suburban Detroiters, where the individual child has no and would support the proposed dustrialized areas to maintain choice, even if the plan has been anti-busing amendment, if "white higher educational standards and and t r fsnd base designed by the "affected state or legislators would enact legislation better facilities than poorer dis-|for education as proposed by Mil- local educational agency." He ;giving blackrneighborhoods con-:tricts. liken and Kelley. agrees' with President Nixon that j ro f hirow chos n greeserl desegregation futds!equal dollars for each child's edu- ' no~~~~~~~~ fdrldsgeainfnscation" should be used for busing pro- ank Ditto, a leader of a black grams.y rop ~ BOOK wLE The anti-busing votes of many y rsays "busing will Democrats in the legislature ran cause too much rift and be a tre- ' countrato a tholgistadtaen a mendous waste of resources, just SPECIAL: Thurs., Fri., Sat. (Nov. 4-6 only) counter to a policy stand taken a toda ihtepyia set few weeks earlier by party leaders o a e s ctsOver 1000 Books at $1.00 and the state central committee.,of racism and discrimination." ve 100B ks t$.0 an the state central committee. The NAACP has already spent ,Making room. OLD & NEW Books A conference of Democratic mo- $100,000 on the case and may guls, including Kelley, considered initiate similar proceedings in OPEN 9-6 THURS. & SAT. 9-9 FRIDAY an aspirant to Griffin's Senate Philadelphia. seat, produced a resolution sup- And if either the State Board of BORDERS BOOK SHOP porting busing when necessary as Education, or a judge in a simi- 518 E. Wiliam St. an imperfect and temporary me- lar suit, ever orders an integration chanism" and stating that 'the plan including Ann Arbor, similar ________. ~k '"education of a child cannot wait - until every neighborhood provides a quality education." I. f") -i.... -o Single and double sole construction. Ring boot-Ties Slip-ens Priced from $15.00 CAMPUS 619 E. Liberty PAUL NEWMAN in: WINNING STOCKWELL HALL NOV. 4, 5, 6-9:00 P.M. 75c 2 LOCATION! DOWNTOWN 217 S. Main St.' pp. I 7 I 5 f i 4' Many state political figures out- side the Legislature have remained uncommitted on the issue of cross- district busing, noting their re- servations and also that court or- ders must be obeyed. Michigan Congressmen John Conyers and Charles Diggs, the: NAACP, the Urban League, and the Detroit Coordinating Council' on Human Relations, a coalition of 69 area agencies, have all an-i nounced their support of cross- district, inter-city busing. Typical of the stance taken' by state politicians is that of De- troit's Mayor Roman Gribbs. Gribbs has announced his support of equality of educational, job and' housing opportunities, and has lauded, along with busing foes, the . 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SEE OUR4 BAITS-November 8, Monday, 7:00 P.M.- Thieme Lounge BURSLEY-November 8, Monday, 7:00 P.M. -Resident Advisors-West Dining Room BURSLEY-November 8, Monday, 8:30 P.M. -Resident Directors-West Dining Room COUZENS-November 9, Tuesday, 7:00 P.M. --Assembly Room MOSHER-JORDAN -November 9, Tuesday, 8:00 P.M.-Mosher Lounge STOCKWELL -November 9, Tuesday, 9:00 BARBOUR-November 10, Wednesday, 6:30 P.M.-Newberry Dining Room OXFORD - November 10, Wednesday, 7:00 P.M.-Seeley Study Room WEST QUAD-November 10, Wednesday, 7:30 P.M.-Dining Room No. 1 SOUTH QUAD - November 10, Wednesday, 8:30 P.M.-East Lounge MARKLEY - November 11, Thursday, 7:00 P.M.-Dining Room No. 3 es r'rn. . to C.:... OI'f.A flA I I I. vua