Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 27, 1973 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 27, 1973 SUPREME COURT DECISIONS: Abortion, busing rulings made Ellsberg and Russo acquitted on 1 count in two maj or court !i flC 1 C~ (Continued from Page 1) other school districts in Roth's order. Meanwhile, the entire lawsuit has been reconsidered by the circuit court, which is expected to hand down an opinion later. After the four districts brought their argument to the Supreme Court, the 6th Circuit ruled on Dec. 8 that they must have their day in court in connection with the bus- ing of some 40,000 students. But the districts contend that they should not be encompassed in a plan until a finding is made that they have been engaged in uncon- stittuional segregation. Meantime, the Circuit Court held more arguments on Feb. 8 and now has a second deciison under advisement. The school districts MISUS ;Continued from Page 1) indictment against Russo, the judge said, resulted from the gov- asked the Supreme Court to delay ernment's interpretation of the action on their appeal until every- word "disposed." Byrne had ques- one finds out what the appealstioned attorneys at length as to what was meant by "disposed of" court finally does. in relation to eventual use of the - -papers and whether Russo was BERGAMO, Italy (IP-A postman aware of such planned disposal when he helped copy the papers. was arrested for dumping his mail Apparently, Byrne felt he was not into the River Serio instead of de- aware of any plans to dispose of the LeRocque, director of the privately funded Center for Defense Informa- tion in Washington, D.C., and Sam- ual Adams, a Central Intelligence Agency analyst. Information supplied by Adams challenging the validity of the tes- timony of one government witness was a point of dispute between government and defense attorneys last week. .wr l .W.V. Wfl.V ).4%t /....W . .vj.4...,.:.Vf.Wt Wftn~t flMtS- livering -it, police reported. Stink rises over giant sewer (Continued from Page 1) to tertiary treatment capacity. Ann Arbor officials favored this plan. However, in September of 1971, the.WRC decided to approve plan II. And then the fight be- gan. ' Ann Arbor forces, led by May-' or Robert Harris and city admin- istrator Guy Larcom, began a year-long battle to reverse the WRC decision. They sought and Indians ask for return of skeletons (Continued from Page 1) "We speak as .an Indian com- munity," said Boyd and "burial is a sensitive issue to my people. Everything else has been taken from our people," he continued, "and at this point we can't even rest in peace." "Our people r e c o g n i z e that science is necessary to some ex- tent," Boyd explained, "but exca- vations of Indian remains should be returned to a religious environ- ment and not sit on the University shelves for 20 years." He added that the bones have been "researched to their fullest extent."I Smith responded that "we should not believe that there is a limited span of time in which materials cease to be of value." He also said that he would go ahead and make the report to the Regents, but that it wouldn't be as effective as it could have been had the Indians "not staged such a publicity stunt." After the meeting with Smith, the Indians proceeded across cam- pus to the University's Exhibit Museum and for two hours chant- ed various songs to the soft rumble of an inter-tribal drum. Attempting to persuade the more militant Indians to leave the mu- seum after having been there for nearly two hours, John Shano, medicine man of the Chippewa Tribe, said, "We have our own way of doing things and others don't. understand." After approximately two hours, the Indians dispersed, with some members threatening to return "at a later date with a larger group (of Indians) and more pub- licity." Study in Guadalajara, Mexico Fully accredited, 20-year UNI- VERSITY OF ARIZONA Guada- lajara Summer School offers July 2-August 11, anthropol- ogy, art, education, folklore, geography, history, government, language and literature. Tui- tion $165; board and room $211. Write: International Pro- grams, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721. received a WRC rehearing on the matter. WRC stuck to its original decision. Harris tried to persuade the Southeastern Michigan Coun- cil of Governments (SEMCOG) to oppose the Super Sewer plan, or at least withhold endorsement of the plan. SEMCOG endorsed it. Failing to reverse the WRC de- cision, Harris enlisted the aid of Congressman Marvin Esch, and carried his cause to the Environ- mental Protection Agency, ask- ing it to conduct- an environ- mental imp-act study of the pro- posed interceptor system. Although the EPA has ultimate authority over construction of all waste treatment plants,*it had previously -abided by the recom- mendations of the WRC. In this case, however, due to protracted opposition from Harris, and ris- ing objections of environmental groups, it agreed last June to conduct its own environmental study of the project, and make re ^ornmendations. The EPA study, ho we v er, which was released late last week, recommends plan II. Har- ris said he will review the EPA study and file a reply within 30 days. Proponents of the Super Sewer make two principal claims: -The regional system wouldj have an overall lower cost; and, -The regional system would' make the Huron River below Ann Arbor cleaner, and safe for swimming or "total body con- tact" in sanitation parlance. Ann Arbor officials debunk both of these claims. Harris re- plied that the overall cost of plan II is not cheaper than plan MB because "the consultant's re- port doesn't take into account all of the costs of plan II." A major unaccounted for cos of plan II is that of augmentin the flow of the river during dr seasons. "If we take water out of tl Huron, and don't put anythin back in, the river will dry up i drought seasons," Harris ex plained. The solution is either to buil more dams on the river or fo Ann Arbor to buy all its wate from Detroit. Either solutioni extremely expensive, andisa expense which Ann Arbor offi cials say should be included i thQ cost of plan II. Both plan II and plan IB ca for a secondary treatment plan at the mouth of the Huron o -Lake Erie, and this fact raise the ire of many enviroi mentalists. Spapers. DAILY OFFICIAL "It was a real victory," said BULLETIN Russo later. "Considering what we had expected, it was a very good ?a?.r? '?. . N day." He said he had expected TEDY ERAY2 dismissal of the count against Ellsberg, but not the count against DAY CALENDAR him. Music School: Trumpet student re- cital, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. st "By the time we get through Statistics Seminar: T. Cacoullos, U g with the defense, there will be of Athens, Greece, "Best Estimation y nothing left for the jury to con- Under Truncation," 4014 Nat. Sci. Bldg., Creative Arts Festival: "All Things 1e The judge held in abeyance his That Are, Are Lights," discussion- ruling on the request to drop two screening with underground filmmaker g more counts of the indictment, Stan Brakhage, Aud. 3, MLB, 3 pm. in Future worlds Lecture Series: J. B. which mentioned transmittal of the Rhine, dir., Fdn. for Res. on the Na- x- papers to unindicted coconspirator ture of Man, Duke U., "Psychic Phe- Vu Van Thai, a former South Viet- nomena and its Implications for 'the FS 71 d ar r is n n s it namese ambassador. Future," Hill Aud., 3 pm. LSA Coffee Hour: Ctr. for Afro- The government has failed so American & African Studies, 1100 S. far in its efforts to introduce into Univ., 3 pm. evidence the fingerprints of Thai, Near East Langs. & Lits-Ctr. for Near East & N. African Studies-Hist. of Art: but said it would present new foun- L. D. Levine, RoyalOntario Museum, dation for such an admission when "Mesopotamia and the Rise of a Mid- court opens Tuesday. The judge dIe," 1528 CC Little, 4 pm. Botany Seminar: A. Bennet, Brook- says he will rule then on those haven Nat'l Lab, "Structural & Meta- two counts. bolic Investigations of C- Phycoery- The defense case is set to start thrin, A Photo-Inducible Blue-Green with an opening statement to the Algal Chromoprotein," 1139 Nat. Sci. withan penng tateentto he Bldg., 4 pm. jury by Russo's chief attorney, History 104 Film Series: Satyjit Ray's Leonard Weinglass. The defenseJ "Davy," 1528 CC Little, 7:30 pm, team said its first twohwitnesses CEWEnglish-women's Advocate Of- fice: Anais Nin, author, will lecture & will be retired Rear Adm. Gene read from her works, Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 pm. Music School: U varsity Band, John D. Larkin, conductor, Hill Aud., 8 pm. Music School: D. Francis, violin doc- D ^t"- A kA C torai, SM Recital Hall, 8 pm. SC 'ION WHO MAY VOTE? All students (graduate students and undergraduates) may vote. WHO MAY RUN? Any regularly enrolled student on the Ann Arbor cam- pus of the U. of M. This includes graduate and undergraduate stu- dents from all schools and colleges. HOW DOES ONE BECOME A CANDIDATE? Candidates must file a state- ment of candidacy and a $5.00 returnable filing fee by March 1, (Thursday). Candidates must also submit a platform and 2 wallet- size photographs by March 2 at 3:00. CAMPAIGNING is governed by the Election Code. PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATES can obtain further information and copies of the Statement of Candidacy, Election Code, and the SGC Constitution at the SGC Offices, 3X Michigan Union, or call 763-3241. ELECTION SCHEDULE: March 1 (Thursday . . 5:00 p.m. Deadline for filing Statements of Candidacy. March 1 (Thursday . . 7:30 p.m. 'Candidates Meeting March 1 (Thursday) . . 9:00 p.m. Campaign Begins March 2 (Friday . . 3:00 p.m. Photograph's and Platforms due. ELECTION: MARCH 27, 28, and 29 I 10l72 TD A~I~l 1 II 1KRY r.EL. rOG %3 KRM Travel on one of our charters to any of the following destina- tions. Each flight includes complimentary meals, cocktails, and round-trip jet service. EUROPE: Over five flights to choose from, such-as: Pro Rata Carrier Cost Admin Fee Date 5/9-7/2 Route Det/Ams-Lon/Det HAI RCUJTS that don't look like HAI RCUTS Dascola Barbers 615 E. Liberty 611 E. University ONA $170 + $20 CARRBIEAN: Several flights are planned during your spring vacation and for the Goombay Festival in early June. As an example: 3/2-3/9 Det/Free/Det ONA $159 + 10% per seat prise is pro rata share of the total carrier cost, subject to increase 'or decrease depending upon total number of participants as per CAB regulations. Open only to faculty, staff, students and their immediate families. OR GO TO NASSAU FOR ONLY $30 MORE SPAIN: Flights are operated every Monday. Visit Madrid, Granada, and the Costa Del Sol. Programs include two meals a day, sightseeing, plus much more. $359 (IT-72-164) HAWAII: Flights every Friday and Saturday. Visit Honolulu, Maui, and Hilo. Programs include two meals a day, sightseeing, tour guides, plus much more. $229, IT-72-101) CONTACT: STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL 957 Washtenaw, Ypsilanti, Mich.-313-487-5900 p I 1 Shop at FOLLETTS for TEXTBOOKS and SUPPLIES State Street at North U. lh I NEW WORLD MEDIA presents * PLEASE STAND BY* starring DAVID PEEL as Freemont Zapata "The Robin flood of Guerrilla Television" MUSIC BY: DAVID PEEL and THE LOWER EAST SIDE JOHN LENNON and YOKO ONO TEENAGE LUST 1984 and others "In the very near future a band of radical freaks will take over control of a communications satellite and begin to broadcast messages to a captive world T.V. audience." TUES. (Feb. 27) & THURS. (March 1) MODERN LANGUAGES BLDG. 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