Tuesday, September 17, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAM' Page Three i THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page ThreeMIIIMINNIINI II I Anti-busing clashes continue in BostonI HAGUE NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE Terrori BOSTON (A') - Eighty-seven black children walked quietly off school buses into South Bos- ton High School yesterday, but antibusing demonstrators in the white, Irish neighborhoods around the school skirmished with police. Officials in the mayor's of- fice reported 15 arrests all for disorderly conduct. Throughout the morning, offi- cers cordoned off the a r e a around the school and broke up groups as they congregated. Some of the marchers carried signs and an effigy of a black person. AT ONE POINT, a crowd of about 150 white teen-agers threw rocks and .bottles at motorcycle policemen who dispersed them about two blocks from the high school. Police Commissioner Robert IRA kills judges in Belfast BELFAST (P) - Irish Repub- lican Army terrorists assassi- nated two Northern Ireland judges in their homes today and a business executive was re- ported killed by a bomb at his factory. The two judges shot to death in Belfast were Roger "Rory" Conaghan and Martin McBirney, one Roman Catholic and one Protestant accused by the Irish Republican Army of collaborat- ing with the British. The provis- ional IRA wing claimed it or- dered the killings. Politicians and legal figures condemned the slayings, a n d courts all over the province were adjourned to honor tne two slain judges. IN POMEROY, County Ty- rone, west of here, informed 'sources said a booby trap bomb went off when businessman Michael McCourt entered his office and he was killed. The three deaths raised to 1,063 the official death toll in five years of violence in the province. Police officers said Conaghan, 54, a judge since 1965, was shot by a lone gunman when he an- swered a knock at his front door at breakfast time. dHE WAS shot through the heart and died almost instant- ly," one source said. McBirney, 56, was shot by 'a gunman who burst into the kit- chen of his home in nearby Belmont Road as he was cook- ing breakfast, police said. McBirney was a leading pro- secutor before he was appoint- ed a magistrate in 1969. He was a former chairman of the pro- vince's Labor party and made an unsuccessful race for the British Parliament 10 years ago. "BOTH MEN were warned time and again that they were part of the British war ma- chine and as such were liable to suffer the consequences," said an IRA statement on the two judges. The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association, a Catholic- dominated group, declared: "Such killings never advance any political cause one iota, but can only have the effect of opening up yet again the flood- gates to sectarian murder and bestiality." diGrazia ordered bars and liq- nor stores in South Boston clos- ed until 4 p.m. "We want to, minimize the number of out-' side factors involved in the existing emotions," a spokes- man for the mayor's office said. When school began yesterday, the third under a court-ordered desegregation plan, School De- partment officials said about 110 of the 380 blacks assigned to South Boston High showed up1 for classes, but later they re- duced the figure to 87. On Friday, 25 attended. OF THE 1,031 whites assign- ed there, the School Depart- ment said 55 went to school to- day. Elsewhere in the city, s -haols opened this morning without any reported incidents. Police said "substantially more than the 400 police assign- ed to South Boston Friday" would be put on the streets yes- teday in the neighborhood, which has put up most of the resistance so far to having black children attend previously all- white schools. Antibusing leaders vowed to continue their boycott, but city and state officials said they ex- pected progress in the integra- tion program. ABOUT A THIRD of public school students were absentj when classes opened last Thurs- day and Friday under the fed- eral order to integrate through 1 THE HAGUE, Netherlands (YP) -Japanese terrorists freed two women h o s t a g e s from the French Embassy yesterday, but officials said "difficult decis- ions" lie ahead in negotiations for the nine remaining captives, all men. A police spokesperson said the release of the two 22-year-old women was the result of nego- tiations between the three ter- rorists and the Dutch Justice Ministry. & Dutch Premier Joop den Uyl said "a matter of special con- cern" was that the three ter- rorists and the hostages, includ- ing Ambassador Jacques Sen- ard, were getting tired and ed- gy as the siege neared the end ~ ~ of its fourth day. s "THERE ARE so many un- certain factors in this that I cannot tell you concretely," he said in a television interview. "I have a feeling that in the next 24 hours a series of very difficult decisions will have to; be taken by us." The gunmen freed the women hostages earlier yesterday after Iholding them and the others since Friday to gain the release of Yutaka Furuya, a colleague in Japan's Red Army, the group responsible for the massacre of 26 persons at Tel Aviv airport in May, 1972. Shortly before the women were released, a move describ- ed as a break-through in the negotiations, a Boeing 707 land- ed at Amsterdam airport. A snokesperson for the D u t c h irline Transavia said one of its crews volunteered to f 1 y Furuya and the gunmen )ut of AP Photo the country if a deal is reach- ed on the remaining hostages. boyfriend FURUYA WAS arrested out- e mother sidegParis seven weeks ago on te1 charges of plotting to kidnap who are leading Japanese in Europe to gain the release of jailed Jap- sts release two anese revolutionaries. AUTHORITIES QUOTED the The French government flew women as saying the gunmen him to Amsterdam airport Fri- didn't mistreat any of the nost- day evening, but refused to ags. They said the terrorists meet any other demands, in- asked for food and cigarettes, ceding ay $1millionransom, and were given cartons of to- mato soup, cheese sandwiches The women freed were Bern- and soft drinks. adine Geerling, the embassy telephone operator, and Joyce Fleur, the ambassador's secre- tary, both 22. They were tak- en away in ambulances and re- ported in "favorable condition considering the circumstances." The nine men seized w i t h the women were the ambassa- dor, two embassy staffers, an embassy chauffeur, a visiting French businessman, his chauf- feur and three unidentified per- sons. r<' busing. School buses were ston- ed and police lined bus routes to protect black children com- ing into one section of t h e city. Despite the troubles, s c h a o officials said teaching was go-T mng on in all schools. Attend-' ance was normal in some areas and there were no problems o reported in the classrooms. m A rally against busing drew hundreds of cars on Sunday in South Boston, the middle class, mostly Irish Catholic area wherer the boycott was most effective. Police said Sundy they would' not allow a South Boston "moth- ers march" planned yesterday, because of potential for vio- lence. Mis 've been a beautiful baby 'he new Miss United Kingdom, Helen Morgan, poses for photographers with her Chris Clode. British newspapers disclosed that Morgan, although unmarried, is th f a 15-month-old son. She gets to keep her title since the rules exclude women married, but there are no clauses banning motherhood. The Editorial Staff of I ° THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PAPERS IN WOMEN'S STUDIES Invites You to an QOPEN MEETING0 Wednesday, Sept. 18 at 4:00 p.m. in 1058 LS&A We are looking for new Editorial Board Members Refreshments No experience necessary MODIFY YOUR UNDESIRABLE BEHAVIORS IF YOU WANT TO- 1) Lose Weight 2) Stop Cigarette Smoking 3) Increase Study Skills 4) Stop Biting Finger Nails 5) Exercise More Frequently 6) Meet More People 7) Complete Your Dissertation 8) Change Other Minor Maladaptive Behaviors Students in Psychology 414 (Advanced Labo- ratory in Behavior Modification) in Coopero- tion with the Institute of Behavior Change, will work with you in changing your undesir- able behaviorsw. FOR REGISTRATION INFORMATION CALL: 663-0195 555 S. FOREST, SUITE 43 Dr. James V. McConnell-Director of Research Dr. Chauncey Smith-Director of Clinical Services Subscribe to The Daily NOW IN STOCK TEXAS INSTRUMENT CALCULATORS Old World Wisdom MAYOR WHITE last week or- dered that persons gatheredt near schools in groupsoftmre than three be arrested. Twenty- one persons were arrested, two: policemen were injured and 11 black children were hurt, none' seriously, in bus stonings. One bus carrying white students was hi't with stones thrown by black youths. Thomas Atkins of the Nation- al Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People (NAA- CP) urged on Sunday that par- ents send t h e i r children to school. Last week he suggested black parents worried a b o u t safety keep children home, but! he said planning now seems , more adequate to the task of enforcing the court-ordered ce- segregation." THE BUSING plan was order- ed in June by a federal judge! who ruled the Boston School Committee "intentionally segre- gated schools at all levels." He ordered cross busing of 18,200 of the school system's 94,000 pu- pils and assigned 27,000 others to new schools. State Commissioner of Edu- cation Gregory Anrig said Sun- day he felt the school opening had gone well. He acknowledged some difficulties but said: "It is going to be different and the pride of this city is going to prevail"' TI-SR-10 TI-SR-11 TI-SR-2500 TI-SR-2550 BUY AT FOLLETT'S STATE STRRET END OF THE DIAG Special instructions in buid ing, farming, craftmaking, cooking and hospitality from the people of Greece Turkey and Switzerland who have ived on and with their land for generations. Hundreds of photos, diagrams and ius- trations. "A remarkable book -Rolling Stone HANDMADE Vanishing Cultures of Europe and the Near East by DREW and LOUISE LANGSNER Size 81" x 11". Cloth $8, paper $4: now at yourbookstore, or send check or money order to HARMONY BOOKS, a division of Crown Publishers, Inc. 419 Park Ave South. New York. N. Y 10016 w Michigan Union Billiard FREE INSTRUCTIONS POCKET BILLIARDS TONIGHT 7-9 p.m. REDUCED RATES FOR COUPLES TODAY 11 a.m.-12 mid. OPEN 11 a.m. Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sun. g . * - ri f .t a. / '" Ih.;F: Jacobson's open Thursday and Friday evenings until 9:00 P.M. Saturday until 5:30 P.M. STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN :!":::":::"":::J' :i i':r :''':1::"':t:'" :":f::::J:Tf"J.f.'t::::":"":":":''":"t:.::" :::"":". :::": : Home Cooking Breakfast All Day 3 eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$1.05 Ham or Bacon or Sausage with 3 eggs, Hash Browns, Toast and jelly-$1.50 3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$1,90 Is Our Specialty Specials This Week Beef Stroqanoff Chinese Pepper Steak Home-made Beef Stew Goulash Eau Rolls Home-made Soups (Beef, Barlev, Clam Chowder, etc.) Chili, Veqetable Tempura (served after 2 p.m.) Fried Rice with Sausaqes and Veqietables Spaqhetti in Wine Sauce Beef Curry Rice Tuesday, September 17 Day Calendar WUOM Lecture: presentation dis- cussing economic issues facing Ger- ald Ford, 91.7 FM, 10 am. Engineering: E. Sickafus, Ford Motor, "Auger Characterization of Surfaces - A Basis for Metallurgi- cal Investigation," 3201 E. Eng., 11 am. Career Planning & Placement Meeting: Conf. Rm. 4, 5 League, 1,2,3,4 pm. Engineering: college standing committee, Dean's Ofc., 3 pm. Naval Arch., Marine Eng.: E. Karl- son, U.S. Maritime Admin., "The Effect of Oil Pollution & Hazard- ous Materials Considerations on In- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 11 Tuesday, September 17, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). - f land Barge Transportation," 311 W. Engin., 3.:10 pm.I Aero space: A. 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