'Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 31, 1973 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY erz a~nu x..a .::n . . .: c?. a .. ..,...r.,. r. .. tn ...... o...- - ...... .. -Mz.:...: c.:- ,'f f?::; . .:.:;,ic'yz..': .,_. Test case heard ondiscrimination WASHINGTON (A) - The Chain- ber of Commerce told the Supreme Court yesterday that employers are not required by the federal civil rights law to hire blacks who participate in racial demonstra- tions near their plants. The business group gave its views in a friend-of-court brief in! a test case in St. Louis to be heard by the justices in March. McDonnell-Douglas Corp. is ap-j pealing a decision made last June by the U. S. Circuit Court in St. Louis that the company violated the 1964 Civil Rights Act by refus- ing to rehire Percy Green, a black mechanic. In October, 1964, Green and oth- er members of ACTION and other civil , rights groups stalled their cars on five main access roads toj the McDonnell-Douglas plant dur- ing the morning rush hour. The "stall-in" was staged to dra- matize racial discrimination com-1 plaints against the company. In a split decision, the. circuitI court ruled that McDonnell-Douglas had to rehire Green if the mili- tant civil rights activist was qualified for the job. The chamber's lawyers said they agreed that the 1964 law and 1971 amendments barred employ- ers from hiring practices that sys- tematically preferred white work- ers over blacks. But, the chamber added, Mc- Donnell - Douglas' "isolated act" of disqualifying one worker does not amount to discrimination against his racial group and there- fore is not illegal under the law. Besides, the chamber said, "apart from the absence of any serious racial barrier, the conduct here at issue was also clearly jus- tified by legitimate business con- siderations." The brief cited rulings by the court in labor cases beginning in 1939 that employers are not re- quired to "finance activities" that "undermine industrial plant disci- pline and loyalty." Children of war These' diminuitiveCambodians were fighting with their older countrymen recently tion' northwest of Phnom Penh. AP Photo on an opera- MID-EAST FOCUS Nixon, Heath confer DOMINO'S ANN STREET SHOP STILL HAS THE BEST PIZZA ON CAMPUS AND THE Free Fast Hot Delivery You Expect (Our Delivery Is Even Faster This Term) By AP, UPI, and Reuters LONDON-Prime Minister Ed- ward Heath flew to Washington Monday 'night for two days of talks with President Nixon on world trading problems, mone- tary reform and defense mat- ters. It will be the first Anglo- American summit meeting; since Britain joined the European Common Market. A major theme is expected to be the way in which British membership will affect relations between the United States and the enlarged nine-nation com- munity.1 The two leaders are also ex- pected to discuss the peace ar- rangements for the Vietnam set- tlement Although Nixon would like Britain to contribute 'to the reconstruction of V i e t n a m, Heath supposedly feels only a small amount of aid can be pro- vided. Also high on agenda is discus- Sion of the Middle East situation. Informed British sources say Heath is expected to press for a new peace approach, concen- trating on parallel efforts by the United States and European gov- ernments to stimulate rapproche- ment between Israel and the Arabs. Heath has been portrayed as thinking that the Nixon admin- istration for some time has been frozen into immobility because of the Jewish vote factor in the presidential election. Economically, the' talks are seen as a preliminary to this year's international negotiations on the world monetary system expected to take place under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Parallel to the Nixon-Heath talks will be separate discussions between the British Foreign Sec- retary, Sir Alec Douglas-Home and Secretary of State William Rogers. Ph'foto by MenlkelISetzV etokowyu before you become the three of you0 Get to know what you both really like. What you both really want out of life. Get to enjoy your freedom together until you both decide you want to let go of a little bit of it. But make it your choice.. Research statistics show that more than half of all the pregnancies each year are accidental. Too many of them, to couples who thought they knew all about, family planning methods. Get to know how the two of you don't have to become the three of you. Or the four of you. Or... Planned Parenthood Children by choice. Not chance. For further information, write Planned Parenthood, Box 431, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. Planned Parenthood is a national, non-profit organization dedicated to providing information and effective means of family planning to all who want and need it. advertising contributed for the public good 04 WOD tl A wealth of Information in ONE VOLUME! 76-111U 7 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN BIG GEORGE MAKES THE COMPETITION OTHERS TRY TO MEET! WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 DAY CALENDAR Psychiatry Lecture: M. Chethik, "Bet- sy: Treatment of a Preschooler via the Mother," CPH Aud., 10:15 am. Student Laboratory Theatre: "A. Night of Pity," & "The Love Course," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 4 pm. Statistics Seminar: F. Andrews, "Multivarlate Nominal Scale Analysis -MNA," 229 Angell Hall, 4 pm. Army Officer Education: M. G. Sam- mett, "Army R & D for the 70's," Aud. 4, MLB, 4 pm. Psych. 171 Film Series: "Factory," UGLI Multipurpose Rm., 4 pm. Computing Ctr. Lecture: E. Frone- zak, "The FORTRAN IV Programming Language-2," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 pm. Grad Coffee Hour: E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 pm. Mpsic School: Bryan and Keys Duo, K. Bryan, flute; K. Keys, piano, H. L. 'Cooper, bassoon, Rackham Aud., 8 pm. University Players:- Pinero's "The Magistrate," Lydia Mendelssohn, 8 pm. Successor to the New York Times Encyclopedic Almanac A complete reference for every home, school and office. Nearly 1,000 pages jam-packed with vital statistics on sports, politics, sci- ence, history and many, many other areas, It's a giant book bargain for only $1.50 plus 25 cents for postage and handling through this news- paper. You can't afford to be with- out it so order your copy today. Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard s E R V 1 C E T E BIG GEORGE'S PREINVENoYj Panasonic AKAI Reel-Sounding CassetteCassette Tape Deck Cassette P Portable Remarkably engi- neered with R AKAI's exclusive Cp49t.95ADRS (Automatic Dis-> tortion Reduction Sys. 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