age Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 22, 1974 Pcige Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR WOMEN IN RETAILING sponsored by Boston battles over busing A-% -- A WIL IM / 14 7--r'M' E 1 CAREER The first in a series of informal lunch hour discussions with employers. Meet with representatives from J.C. Penney, Montgomery Ward & Co., & Rikes. ALL WOMEN welcome freshperson-seniors, grad students, faculty & staff. Feel free.to bring your lunch. Wednesday, Oct. 23-12 Noon Held in Conference Rms. 4 & 5, Michigan League (Continued from Page 1) I atonomou s and fiercely proud. If you ask Bostonians where they're from, they're likely toI name their neighborhood.- South Boston, known as "Southie," is close-knit and pre- dominantly Irish. They say that some Southies are born and diet without ever going downtown. decades ago, and few have been trimmed in mid-October. Ihe. restored. Original shamrock em- streets are tree-lined and the blems still adorn the signs over orange maple leaves are a the storefronts. vivid contrast to the stark Southies are angry with the streets of Soithie. In !Hvde Boston Globe for its editorial Park, there are still a few ger- backing of the busing plan. Cur- anins resisting the frost. rently, people in South Boston and Hyde Park are try-og to BUT WHILE the two areas organize a boycott of the Globe. seem different, they are alike "They're going to go out of enough when school lets -ut. business if they're not careful," 'It's a strange sight to gee predicts Steve Fitzgerald, a Ilgons of jack-booted, billy-club thin youth who lives in Southi toting, riot police direcing Boston and was assigned to at- school dismissal. Each mornmg tend Roxbury High this fall. police search the pockets and purses of entering students for STEVE HASN'T been to school anything that could be consid-! once. He's typical: only about ered a weapon.I four per cent of the white stu- "They tried to take away my dents have been attending class- nail file," says Alica Silverio inj es at Roxbury High. a huffy tone. "So I didn't go to Planning t Placement 764-7460 I' this is ELECT RAE WEAVER on WOMEN'S RIGHTS Men perceive women and women perceive themselves. These attitudes and percepions are not subject to legislation. What is subject to legislation, is the availability of oppor- tunity. Women must have the same opportunity in all areas as men-education, private industry, government.-LIFE SOUTHIE'S residents feel be- trayed and besieged. They don't trust politicians or reporters, and they fear that the blacks who are being bused to South Boston High will take over their school. In addition, they're very much on the defensive about where they live after getting what they consider consistently poor treatment in the press. "First they (the black popu- lation) want to take over our schools, and then they'll want to take over our neighborhood," claims Jim Shepens, a Southie teenager. Stephens graduated last year from South Boston High. "Southie is a nice town, with nice people, and everyone is against 'us. They make it sound like Southie is everything. Southie's not everything." His mother, expressing the same view, is angry at the court for ordering neighborhood children to be bused to pre- dominantly black Roxbury. "OUR KIDS have gone to school down the street ever since I can remember, and now they want to bus 'em to Rox- bury?" she says. "I don't want my kids to go there; it's dan- gerous. All those colored people. I'm not prejudiced or anything, but I've lived with colored, I know, I know." A walk down Broadway Av- enue, the main drag in Southie, reveals the essential character of the area. Bars like the Rab- bit Inn are popular hangouts for following the Red Sox and Cel- tics, and tossing down brews. | he expects n ew 'e .epc s'in d ic tm e n t s WASHINGTON (P) - Special Mitchell testified at the hear- Watergate Prosecutor Leon ings of the nomination of Rich- Jaworski indicated yesterday he ard Kleindienst to be attorney expects more charges will be general. As a result of their brought in cases still under in- testiiony at those hearings, vestigation by his office. charges were brought against In an interview, Jaworski de- h,)th Kleindienst and former clined to discuss specific areas California Lt. Gov. Ed Rein- where new charges might be ecke. expected. Hedidsay that in- Kleindienst pleaded guilty to vestigations of illegal campaign a misdemeanor charge of fail- contributions and the ITT anti-' ing to testify fully. Reinecke trust case are "not vet com- was convicted of one count of pleted." perjury. JAWORSKI was asked if he THE CH'RGES against both would pursue an investigation' men were based on their testi- against an individual who al- ; mony about ITT, which was the ready had been convicted in an- ! main issue raised at the con- 53rd Dist. Paid Political Ad. Doug. Crory/Treas. Rep. St. Rep. But it's doubtful Steve Fitz- gerald is missing much. "It doesn't do any good to go to school anyway," shrugs Leigh Silverio, a junior at Hyde Park High. "Nobody learns anything. The teachers aren't teaching any- thing. They're just trying to keep order." And according to her sister Alica, "the teachers are scared shitless," and many are contemplating quittiag. WHEN A CAR cruised through Hyde Park Friday morning, a middle-aged man leaned out the window and inquired "need extra guns?" Alica Silverio, who was standing nearby, then yell- ed back, "Yeah, I need one.1 Give me a gun., Hyde Park itself is very dif-' ferent in appearance from South Boston, although the two com- munities share similar views on the busing issue. Of the two, Hyde Park is more prosperous. It doesn't have the grimy run- down look of Southie. It's more a residential area, for solidly middle class fami-I lies. The two- and three-story homes have small but neatly school." The first to leave South Bos- ton schools are the white stu- dents. Police direct them quick- ly and qiuetly along the streets. A few groups hang around, smoking, talking, and passing from hand to hand a copy of an underground newspaper called White Power, with two inch headlines that read "Black Ter- ror Spreads." A swastika rests between the words White and Power. THE DOUBLE doors open again, and this time black stu- dents stream out to the waiting buses. They board quickly, pro- tected by a human wall of po- lice, and the buses roll away. Soon the remaining anlo:kers drift away. "It's not the blacks, it's the trouble they cause," says Leigh Silverio. "They don't wart to come here either. If they were a part of the community, it'd be different."' Her friend, Judy Griffin, a senior wearing heavy make-up, adds, "I'm totally against this. It used to be like it was cur other Watergate case. "The fact that he is con- victed in one Watergate case does not mean he is not going to be charged in another," the prosecutor replied. Jaworski refused to discuss a specific possibility, the case of former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, one of five defendants in the Watergate cover-up trial. IT IS understood that one of the matters under investigation by the prosecutor's ITT task force is Mitchell's testimony about the merger before the Senate Judiciary Committee. I firmation hearings. Mitchell testified at those hearings that he never dis- cussed the ITT case with then- President Nixon, a statement later contradicted by the White House. He also testified he was unaware of an ITT pledge to help underwrite the cost of the 1972 Republican National Con- vention at the time antitrust suits against the conglomerate were settled. That contention was contradicted by material made public by the House Judiciary Committee as part of its impeachment evidence. ® Jensen High Fidelity 1'2 PRICE LE Buy One Speaker at Regular P ri c e and the Second Speaker Is Yours for V2 Price} Model 1 Frequency Range: Power Rating: Minimum Amplifier Power: Impedance: Crossover: Dispersion: Dimensions: Connections8 Shipping Weight: Mounting: 40-18,000 Hz 30 watts 10 watts 8 ohms 6,000 Hz (mechanical) 14"xl0"x8%" Screw terminals 14 lbs. Horizontal or upright Reg. $44 '/2 PRICE NOW $2200 Model.2 Frequency Range: 38-20,000 Hz Power Rating: 35 watts Minimum Amplifier Power: 10 watts Impedance: 8 ohms Crossover: 1,200 Hz Dispersion: 1500 System Resonance: 70 Hz Dimensions: 18%"x11"x83%" Connections: Push type binding posts Shipping Weight: 22 lbs. Mounting: Horizontal or upright Reg. $69 Most of the stores were built I tended lawns, still clipped and school. We used to be aale to p> oeoeon tm octoc:o\o.-4 wor-kers for, sci. majors with BS, 2 yr. grad S^ t. o a vhst . A ro.to become Urologic Physician's se is s'ni~io c u ° T Asst. at U. of Cin. Medical Ctr. 3CA 2.1- I % T write for info: Prof. Arthur T. Evans, M.D., U. of Cin. Med Ctr, 234 -Pd. Poi. Adv. Goodman St. Cin., Oh 45229. Psychology Concentrates INTERESTED IN PSYCHOLOGY JUNIOR HONORS PROGRAM? Applications may be picked up from: DR. PEPSDORF 3439 MASON HALL Must be returned by October 31 I. .1 '/2 PRICE Now $3450° Model 3 Frequency Range: Power Rating: Minimum Amplifier Power: Impedance: Crossover: Dispersion: System Resonance: Dimensions: Connections: Shipping Weight: Moudting: Model 4 Frequency Range: Power Rating: Minimur Amplifier Power: Impedance: Crossover . Dispersion: Syster'nResonance: Dimensions: Connections: Shipping Weight: Mounting: Model 5 Frequency Range: Power Rating: Minimum Amplifier Power: Impedance: Crossover:' Dispersion : System Resonance: Dimensions: Connections: Shipping Weight: Mounting: Model 6 Frequency Range: Power Rating: Minimum Amplifier Power: Impedance: Crossover: Dispersion: System Resonance: Dimensions: Base : Connections: Shipping Weight: Mounting: 36-20,000 Hz 40 watts 10 watts 8 ohms 800 Hz 150° 65 Hz 22%2"x121¢"x10%" Push type binding post 31 lbs. Horizontal or upright Reg. $99 I 36-30,000 Hz 50 watts 10 watts 8 ohms 500/4,000 Hz 170v 50 H~z 24"x13"x12" Push type binding posts 46 lbs. Horizontal .or upright M/2 PRICE NOW $4950 Reg. $129 M2 PRICE NOW $6450 Reg. $199 1/2 PRICE NOW $99 50 ALL YOU CAN EAT Mounds of Spaghetti, Coleslaw, and Garlic Bread Every Wednesday-4:30-1 0 P.M. Huron Hotel & Lounge 124 Pearl 483-1771 Ypsi. 32-30,000 Hz 60 watts 10 watts 8 ohms 500/4,000 Hz 170H 45 Hz 26"x16"x13" Push type binding posts 52 lbs. Horizontal or upright THE ROLLNG STONES IT'S ONLY ROCK'N ROLL tiii~o~roTuU!l4 6D#S apes on sa etoo?. I RAVEL MICH. UNION 763-21 NEW ORLEANS CAJUN VACATION JAN. 1-6, 1975 $208.00 triple $223.00 double INCLUDES: * Round Trip Air Transportation from Detroit on Delta Airlines * Accommodations at the Le Richelieu Hotel in New Orleans I 27-30,000 Hz 75 watts 10 watts 8 ohms 300/1,000/4,000 Hz 170" 40 Hz 27"x20%/"x15" 14"xl7"x212", Push type binding posts 75 lbs. Upright console Reg. $249 !/2 PRICE Now $12450 f I® U ®®- - , - -M - - - MM M ®® I