Friday, September 20, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Frdy Spebe}0 17 HEMC.GNDIL- aehe -U Boston school scene of continued racial turmoil BOSTON (AP) - Black-white fighting broke out at one high school, several persons were in- jured when buses were stoned and city officials ushered out- side agitators out of the state as Boston struggled with its sixth day of busing to integrate schools. A neo-Nazi contingent from Virginia was ushered out of the state and a Ku KMux Klan or- ganizer from Louisiana ran into Sopposition from the city on his plans to stage a Klan rally. TWO STONING incidents were reported after school in sep- arate sections of the city, and three students were reported hurt. A shot reportedly was fired at another school, but there were no injuries in that incident. Fist fights between blacks and whites also broke out yesterday afternoon in Mattapan Square, about a mile from Hyde Park High School. At the Hyde Park High School, shoving began when there were not enough seats in the cafe- teria, a mayor's office spokes- = person said. "THERE was extensive dis- ruption," the spokesperson said. "The disturbance centered on the lunch room. There was food and tray throwing." The high school is in a white Imiddle class neighborhood on the southern edge of Boston, and is several miles from South Boston where most of the dis- ruption has occurred since bus- ing began under a federal court order.} Blacks and whites fought each other along the school corri- dors. A 17-year-old white stu- dent was treated at a hospital for minor injuries. THE fighting spread into the school yard as buses were called in early to pick up the black students. Police moved in to quell the disturbance. There 'were no arrests. In one bus stoning incident, a black student required facial stitches after bus windows were smashed by white youths in Hyde Park the mayor's office said. In another, a 16-year-oldj white student was slightly in- jured when the bus he was riding in was stoned by blacks in the Dorchester section. A group of neo-Nazis was ushered out of the state yester- day after it was involved in a confrontation in South Boston. Seven ,members of the Na- tional Socialist White People's party based in Arlington, Va., rode about the city in a van, the mayor's office said. The men, dressed in Nazi- like uniforms decorated with swastikas were ordered by Police Commissioner Robert di- Grazia to leave "for their own protection," after they got into an argument with a small group of white youths. They left the city under state police escort. A spokesman for the party said they had gone to Boston in response to appeals from anti- busing forces. A Ku Klux Klan leader said yesterday that his followers were recruiting membersain Boston. David Duke, 24, grand dragon of the Knights of Klu Klux Klan in Louisiana, said at an airport news conference that out-of-state Klansmen are "be- ing received with tremendousj enthusiasm . . . like saviors." DICK GRIFFEY presents: THE 1974 STEVE WONDER FALL TOUR STEVIE WONDER WITH Wonderlove PLUS The Commodores FRI., SEPT. 27-830 P.M. at OLYMPIA STADIUM TICKETS: $7.50, 6.00 Tickets At-Olympia, Grinnell's & Hudson s MC ... Honored at Olympia 5920 Grand River OLYMPIA STADIUM (313) 895-7000 Detroit 48202 I I AP Photo Getting ready for "war" Kootenai Indian tribal member Rex Trice enters the Kootenai Tribal office in Bouners Fer- ry, Idaho, carrying one of the signs the tribe is preparing for its "war" with the United States. Tribal members say they will close the boundaries of land they claim in northern Idaho and western Montana unless Federal officials begin work on a treaty with the tribe by midnight last night. They plan to charge the 10-cent .toll on all cars passing through their territory, tribal members say. 1 Hunger: Old enemy still plagues India SIULI BARI VILLAGE, India HUNGER, the centuries old (P) - Adary Mal hunched low to enemy of India, also has at- prepare the main course for her tacked thousands of similar vil- family's only meal of the day. lages in West Bengal, Gujarat, It was a wad of weeds. Orissa, Bihar Rajasthan and BESIDE her squatted one of Maharashtra states. her six children rummaging Despite official expectations through a handful of snails that hunger can be beaten, hunted in the fields to give the Prime Minister Indira Gandhi family protein. is reported to be sounding out "I am eating these things the United States, Russia and every day," said Dukhu Mal, Western Europe for emergency gesturing at his wife's weeds. food aid to contain the crisis. "What else can I eat? I have President Ford told the United no choice. Look at my skin. Nations on Wednesday that Look at my bones." Washington w o u l d cooperate His stomach puckered around with a proposed worldwide sys- the navel and his voice was a tem of stockpiling food for weak whine, as he told how emergencies, and that the Unit- hunger has taken over this vil- ed States would increase food lage of 150 families about 170 'aid to needy nations to relieve miles northwest of Calcutta. hunger in the world. RALPH HERBERT Director, U of M Opera Productions PAUL BOYLAN Director of Interlochen in "SONGS BY BRAHMS AND SCHUBERT" RACKHAM LECTURE HALL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 8:00 P.M. ADMISSION FREE SARAH HERSHEY, Pianist NANCY WARING, Flutist in a JOINT RECITAL SATURDAY, SEPT. 22 AT 3:00 P.M. at the UNION GALLERY 1st FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION L U 104 WASHERS & DRYERS NO WAITING! :""Y' :12;; i .f.,,, , n. ., f .. :: ... 1. :?f %ir :: : i i:: i'r i .iii?' + ;F :f,.},.y: ii w:;.; rJ'r,'.f;i.: .:. :. r: }:}:ti{: . OPEN 24 HOURS ATTENDANT ALWAYS ON DUTY MR. STADIUM COIN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 1958 S. INDUSTRIAL South of E. Stadium Blvd. 668.7928 .® __ I I I s t 'l 3 j t Included are selections from: REISENSTEIN HEIDEN PISTON SCHUBERT CHOPIN BRAHMS NO ADMISSION CHARGE *V people wh can: Beta E E R Theta U N E S Pi E 0 P L a film E 604 S. STATE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 BAND STARTS AT 9:00 Natural Sicence Aud. Ann Arbor Sat., Sept. 21 7 P.M.; 9:30 P.M. $1.50 Sponsored By: Siddha Yoga Dham For The Festival Of Life e I UNIVERSITY THEATRE PROGRAMS announces 4 DISTINGUISHED PRODUCTIONS in the POWER CENTER for the Performing Arts itli .e OCTOBER 9-12 it ----DECEMBER 4-7 d4xnond -iOstand's I 11 11111 1111 11 III I 111 111 11 M Ift E J= +IH 111 /U, 11111 .:x.* " .. .- .. .... ...* o':: -,,'*: . S '... as.. .... ::t.....sE ..t . t. <" \ .... . ki... t. ., ., ......tt:. [' y.,i ::;>:,l:;{ .: i ....