Doge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 3, ~ 97Z BOYCOTT CONTINUES: Dispute rages over NYC school From Wire Service Reports NEW YORK-For the first time in five days, 32 black and Puerto Rican children entered JuniorE High School 211 in Brooklyn's Canarsie section without encoun- tering the boo's and jeers of white demonstrators. However, white parents con- tinued their near-total boycott of all the Canarsie schools yesterday, Airs tandai WASHINGTON OP) - The U.S. Court of Appeals here yesterday affirmed a lower court decision forbidding any significant air pol- lution in regions where the air is still pure. The action left the U.S. En- vironmental Protection Agency (EPA) under orders to attach this. non-degradation requirement to all state plans for meeting na- tional air quality standards. There was no immediate word whether EPA would appeal to the Supreme Court. The brief ruling by the Ap- peals Court, issued without fur- ther explanation, upheld the ma- jor victory won earlier by t h e in a dispute over the admission of the school, which is presently 70 the 32 students to the school. per .cent white and 30 per cent The dispute arose in September, black and Puerto Rican. when students from a housing Local residents have voiced fears project in nearby Brownsville, that once the school enrollment were admitted by the city's School tips racially, whites would move Chancellor, Harvey Scribner, to out of the area, property values the junior high school. would fall, and a cycle of decline The Canarsie parents feared would result. that the admission of the students The 32 students had not attended would tip the racial balance of any school at all this fall, until rd affirmed Sierra Club and three other en- vironment groups who had sued EPA administrator William Ruck- elshaus.. Last May 30, District Judge John Pratt ruled that Ruckels- haus was required by the 1970 Clean Air Amendments and by EPA's own rules, to include a non-degradation requirement in the state plans. Justice Department lawyers re- presenting EPA appealed Pratt's decision. They argued in both the Dis- trict and Appeals courts that a no-pollution rule would block eco- nomic development in all remain- ing clear-air regions. last Friday when they were greeted outside 211 by a crowd ofI more than 1,000 -white protesters.I More than 200 city policemen1 in riot gear prevented serious out- breaks of violence Tuesday, when demonstratorsehurled eggs, and in some instances . rocks, at each other. The community wide boycott by white parents has kept more than 9,000 pupils out of classes and had forced the closing of six area schools on Monday. Until yesterday teachers at Junior High School 211 had been bused to the school from a nearby police station., A previous attempt to enroll the' 32 students resulted in a three day take-over of the school by white parents. A possible solution to the present boycott, according to Board of I GHT! Education officials, is to assurej the Canarsie parents that the racial balance of the school would not tip. In return they would be ex- pected to end their organized op- position of the enrollment of the 32 Browsville pupils. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10mby carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad "DID YOU KNOW that county government could provide re- cyclinq facilities for the people of Washtenow County?" KATHY FOJTIK Dem. Commissioner Pd. Pol. Adv. 3020 Washtenaw Dial 434-1782 NIGHTLY AT 7:30 In new screen splendor... The most magnificent picture ever! OA'1D OSE[7NICK{M0 o aeioF eAuca trTMrrc trs ; iL r 5 Ip In Concert at Univ. of Toledo Field House STEPH EN STILLS and MVANASSAS. Sat. Night, Nov. 4th 10 P.M. Tickets Available at the Door "MANY FANTASTIC DELIGHTS. SEX IS A VERY FUNNY MOVIE." --Glatzner, Michigan Doily "MAD GENIUS RAMPANT" New York Magazine -PLUS- Alice's Restaurant - 7:20 Woody Allen -9:10 Continuous from 1 p.m. Sat. and Sun. DIAL 668-6416 1214 SOUTH UNIVERSITY Y w I r r t l DON'T MISS! SAT. and SUN. 4 ." I TONIGHT & TOMORROW REEFER MADN ESS Bizzaro 1936 Fright Flick, dramatizing the effects of the killerweed: sexual depravity, insanity, or suicide. -PLUS- FIRESIGN THEATRE- PAID ADVERTISEMENT Reefer Madness King Kong Duplex Showing Tonight & Tomorrow In a unique innovation in campus film showing, Friends of Newsreel will show a bizarre 1936 anti-marijuana film, "Reefer Madness," with a short film by the Fireside Theater, side-by- side with a separate showing of the horror-humor classic "King Kong" to- night and tomorrow in Auditoriums 3 & 4 of the Modern Languages Build- ing. Proceedings will be further en- livened by a live stage skit with "Kong," billed as "a personal appear- ance by King Kong and his Gorrillas." According to Glen Alivord, a spokes- man for the student community or- ganization, the unique duplex film showing was occasioned by the non- delivery of the film "Dracula," which was to have been double-billed with "King Kong" at $1.50 last Tuesday w 4 S