Tuesday, October 13, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, October 13, 1970 THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Page Seven IHA ELECTIONS IHA elections will be held THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15 in meal lines (at Seeley Apts. Lounge in Oxford; at mailboxes in Fletch- er;) to elect president, vice-president, 3 board of governor members, and, 19 council- men and to vote on new I HA constitution. - -U I INFORMATION MEETING Michigan-llinois Year Abroad in Barcelona-1971 All interested are welcome TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13-Michigan Room 7:30 P.M.-Michigan League WATCH REPAIR ONE- WEEK SPECIAL Your Watch Cleaned, Oied and Ajusted $8.95 with ad Auto. cal., etc. slightly higher ts. hovev~te~.f,7 {~ a .;i . "."}Rr} :t :'yrv:4'r. .y .:.r;::2,-'". it-% it:.: ::+y~. "ii fW{ f r {~~ ,t, t t OyS comwfg f r4 # A 1 BREAKDOWN IN ENFORCEMENT Panel hits rights failure WASHINGTON (P) - The Civil Rights Commission report- ed yesterday a major b r e a k- d o w n in government enforce- ment of civil rights laws, and laid part of the blame on a failure of leadership from the presidential level on down. There has been "a failure of leadership, a failure of the bureaucracy, and a failure of the American people," said the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, commission chairman and pres- ident of Notre Dame University, at a news conference. The government's failure to practice what its laws preach has "seriously undermined - . - the credibility of t he govern- ment's total civil rights effort," he said, adding: "Those who look to the law as an impartial arbiter of right and wrong and find that some laws are implemented while others are not, despair of the fairness of the system." "Unless we get serious about this, the.country is . . . on a collision course with everything the opposite of what the Con- stitution stands for," he -said. "Agencies must be told t h a t this is a first priority in the government." In a 1,115-page study it call- ed the most important it has is- sued, the commission said mi- nority groups still get second class treatment from the federal government on a variety of lev- els. despite existing laws that cover almost e v e r y aspect of discrimination. "The great promise of the civ- il rights laws, executive orders, and judicial decisions of the 1950's and 1960's has not been realized,",it said. Part of the trouble, the com- mission said, was low priority for civil rights, and a govern- ment-wide failure to give civil rights enforcement- programs enough money, staff and mus- cle to get their jobs done. It said the chief civil rights en- forcement officer in every fed- eral department should be up- graded to the same level as of- ficials in charge of programs, and should get enough resourc- es to do his job. -Associated Press THE CHAIRMAN of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, discusses the commission's report at a Washington news conference yesterday. Seated beside him is Frankie Freeman of St. Louis, Mo., another member of the group. I collision course with everything El Campus Jewelers 719 N. UNIVERSITY Next to Hill Auditorium t I Students and Employees Have No Control in This University E LE ( * Marcia Wisch. U-M employee ELECT. Tom u-M grad student Socialist Workers Party Candidates for the Board.of Regents OUR DEMANDS:- *Open admissions, free tuition * Acceptance of all BAM demands . 24-hour child-care centers " Birth control and abortion clinics " An end to ROTC and war research on campus Socialist Campaign Committe Meeting Tonight Tues., Oct. 13-7:30 P.M.-1518 S.A.B. It listed as the "most serious flaw . . . a failure to provide overall coordination and direc- tion to the entire federal civil rights enforcement effort." ing t h e nation toward racial justice. "The commission is convinced that his example of courageous moral leadership can inspire the necessary will and determi- nation, not only of the federal officials who serve under his direction, but of the American people as well." 'T h e commission examined about 40 government agencies, departments and programs and called for a number of specific remedies, including a kind of, civil service Philadelphia Plan, with deadlines to meet specific minority hiring goals, to "ach- ieve equitable minority group representation at all wage and grade levels within each depart- ment and agency." The report, a document the size of the Manhattan telephone book, said the government rlac- ed too much emphasis on volun- tary compliance, failed to make use of available sanctions such as shutting off government funds, and was unduly passive, waiting for complaints to come in before investigating, In many areas, it said, offi- cials don't collect enough rac- ial and ethnic data to have a good picture of what is actually happening. Congress should give both the Department of Housing and Ur- ban Development and the Equal Employment Opportunity Com- mission the power to issue cease and desist orders, it said, and agencies should "place specific limits on time 'permitted f o r voluntary compliance." "I am confident that a good deal of what we- a r e recom- mending will be done," les- burgh said. ".. we're getting as much response today as we've gotten from any other adminis- tration." He credited former President Johnson with "m o r e moral leadership than any president we've had" in the civil 'rights area. There was no immediate re- action to the report from Nixon. But sources close to the admin- istration called the report "very comrprehensive and quite coen- structive,"and said it would get careful study. I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. C£ .... ,....... '- i'n' ".rir":r r.v 9J J ay, As remedies, the commission asked President Nixon to° set up a special civil rights subcommit- tee of the White House Council on Domestic Affairs to spot civ- il rights problems and move to eliminate them. In addition, the commission suggested setting up a civil rights division in the new Of- fice of Management and Budget to keep tabs on whether money was being spent on programs that didn't comply with existing civil rights laws. "In the final analysis," said the commission, "achievement of civil rights goals depends on the quality of leadership exer- cised by the President in mov- Big George 's Is More Than An1 App liance Store!. isten To This.. . Play Your Favorite Symphonies, Rock, Jazz, Blues on this0... I BILLIARD CLINIC POCKET and 3-CUSHION WED., OCT. 14 7:30 P.M. 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Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information,, phone 764-9270. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 Day Calendar Computer & Communication Sciences ColIoq.: S. Hubbell, "Recent Theories of Community Ecology", Rm. 2009 LSA Bldg.., 4 p.m. Thomas M. Cooley Lecture: New Priorities in Criminal Jutsice - Ber- nard Botein, "Diversion of Certain Cases and Offenders from the Criminal justice System": 100 Hutchins Hall, -4:15 p.m. Physics Seminar: K. wilson, Cornell, "Scale Variance and Anomalous Dimen- sions." P & A Colloq. Rm., 4:15 p.m.. Ann Arbor Film Cooperative:. "Cool Hand Luke, "Aud. A. Angell Hall, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Professional Theatre Program: "In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer," Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p~m. Executive Committee of LS&A Stu- dent Government/ winl meet at, 1017 Angell Hall, 9 p.m. General Notices October 16 4:00 p.m., last dtate for the Fall Term when Registrar's Office will allow refund for a 50 per cent with- drawal. Exception: Appropriate adjust- ments will be made for those schools which begin other. than Sept. 3,' 1970, Registration for Speed Reading and Study Skills, Oct. 16, from 8:00 to 12:00 -1:00 to 4:00 at 'Reading Improvement Service, 1610 washtenaw. One hour a week for six weeks for $5.00. College of Engineering Interdepart- mental Seminar in Fluid Mechanics: R. Debler, "The Effects of Gravity and Surface Tension Gradients on Cellular Convection in Fluid Layers with Para- bolic Temperature Profiles", Oct. 14, Rm. 311 w. Engin., 4 p.m. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Zero Population Growth will host Dr. Spencer Havelick, U-M professor, and Michael Prochaska of the Ann Ar. bor City Planning Commission at a meeting on October 20. They will dis- cuss Urban Planning and Population Growth. The ZPG meeting will be Tuesday, October 20, 7:30 p.m. at Canterbury House, 330 Maynard. * *, * * Citizens United for the Vote at 18 aeed interested students willingto work in Ann Arbor between now and November 3. Please call Paul Cullis, 764-8720, or Kevin Flanagan, 764-9698. * * * *, UM Folk Dance Club, every Friday evening, 8-11, Barbour Gym, Teaching 8-9, open to all. ENACT, State - federal political !111 Electro-Voice. EY-7B Speakers Size-10" h, 19" w and 8%2" d. Wal- nut style finish on all four sides with solid walnut trim. KLH MODEL 27 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER: All KLH's expertise has gone into this 100 watt receiver featuring vernier tuning. It's the only one they make and its performance matches that of far more expensive equipment. 1!!( SONY STR-6040 Reg. $479.95 THECO PLETESY MPE-2020 95 2EV-7B's 4 \ ./ 9 6eoigezs OIME 5 ppliance KLH RC-1 RECORD CHANGER: KLH designed and Garrard built. Features 4 speeds, light- weight low mass tone arm, Pickering magnetic cartridge with diamond stylus. In a handsome walnut wood base. 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