Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY I hursday; December !, 19, Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAiLY I hursclay, L)ecember 1, 19 Govt. may appeal court ruling axing segregated school funds BENEFIT CONCERT for the School of Music Scholarship Fund Beethoven's Ninth Symphony WASHINGTON (P) - The NixonI administration probably will appeal a federal judge's ruling that could lead to a new wave of orders cut- ting off funds to still-segregated schools and colleges. Government attorneys say the administration is likely to chal- lenge Dist. Court Judge John Pratt's ruling that the Department of Health, Education and Welfare :.: (HEW) must cut off federal funds if necessary to enforce desegrega- tion in 17 Southern and border states. The decision on an appeal de- pends on how forcefully Pratt im- plements the ruling, attorneys said. In the Nov. 16 order in the Dis- r: ' x trict of Columbia court, Pratt gave 4 afederal and civil-rights lawyers un- til mid-December to draw up an implementing order for his signa- AP Photo ture. "If they come up with an unac- ceptable proposal and the judge ds him as buys it, then we'll appeal," said a lawyer working closely on the case - with HEW and the Justice Depart- ment. The proposal prepared by civil- rights attorneys, and submitted to the Justice Department Tuesday contains specific timetables and deadlines for enforcement, s a i d Elliott Lichtman, a lawyer work- ,.,.. the WTA Afln T ---I T1 V.C four-month deadline to submit plans only seven, and Justice has flied to desegregate their higher-educa- suit against only three of eight tion system. cases referred to it. Nothing was heard from five c Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahcma, The Michigan Daily, edited and man- North Carolina and Florida. aged by students at the University of Unacceptable plans were receiv- Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Secondk ed from the other five - Arkan- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,,i sas, Pennsylvania. Georgia, Mary- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- land and Virginia - and HEW nev- day through Sunday morning Univer- er responded. sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail -HEW identified 113 s c h o o 1 (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail districts which had reneged on de- (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday segregation plans in the 1970-71 through Saturday morning. Subscrip- school year and at least 74 stlil j tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus are out of compliance. But the area); $6.50 local mall (in Mich. or govrnen ha tke dinsta-Ohio; $7.50 non-local mail (other gver nm et hastaken dmini states and foreign), tive enforcement action against Friday, Dec. 8 Hill Wit3rium 8 P.M1. Passing the Buck? Governor William Milliken passes on his gavel to Virginia Gov. Linwood Holton who succee chairman of the Republican Governors' Association. ANTI-HIJACKING CODE: U.S., Cuba draft proposals UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC CHOIR Conductors: THEO ALCANTARA, MAYNARD KLEIN SOLOISTS: ELIZABETH MOSHER, soprano ROSEMARY RUSSELL, mezzo soprano JOHN McCOLLUM, tenor LESLIE GUINN, baritone $2.00 GENERAL ADMISSIQ.N Tickets available at School of Music Information Office and Hill Auditorium Box Office. INFORMATION 764-6118 Bill was a regular guy, a real sport. He were a bow tit when be played tennis with his DREADED PLAGUE SINCE MOSES LEFT EGYPT." Washington Post WEED FROM THE DE VIL'S GARDEN! Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. in his first film ~~~~~~~~~of thesewl efrsoigpris n h eee ett i u un tkn Leaping Fish" as Coke Ahyday, an addicted detective, hot on the trail of the dope smuggles FaSIrbanTks . Myseer e short ondope smok ng ,nEgyt m the 1980 Thur-7:15, 9:00 Ac fri-7:15, 9:00, 10:45 sat-2:00, 3 45 5:30, 7:15, 9 :00, 10:45. SUNDAY EVENING ONLY P'UFTH P? L' eUWORLD PREMIERE John Sinclair 76 ..9700_Freedom Rally Film "10 for 2" WASHINGTON ,) - The United will be presented by Masnata this ment publicly enthusiastic, some ing withlthe NAC egal Defense States has accepted a major por- weekend, incorporates the provis- officials look for a signing of an Fund which initiated the suit. tion of a Cuban plan to deal with ions laid out by the Cubans on in- agreement early next year. To do less, he said in an inter- hijacking, including an indirect cluding ships as well as aircraft ,T-view, would "gut" the import of the American pledge to keep a n t i- and preventing raids and other Mpjudge's decision. Castro refugees from harassing the acts of harassment. ytarpJohnwVoleord erenew ro- Pratt ruled that HEW has no* island. The Cuban draft, however, did members and passengers from hi- discretion remaining to stall en- Secretary of State William Rog- not include a clause for extradition, jackers. forcement, including fund cutoffs, ers incorporated this idea into a a provision subsequently written at racially segregated public col- draft proposal he sent to Cuba into the U.S. proposal. The regulations, which will go leges and universities in 10 states, Tuesday by way of Silvio Masnata. Aoe S. into effect within 60 days, require and elementary and secondary uedY y yo voMsaa American sources say they are that airports station armed police- schools and state-operated voca- While the State Department de- inclined to think Havana left out clined to publicly discuss the sub- 'the extradition language to al>w men at passenger checkpoints tional and special-education facili- stance of the negotiations, offic- the United States some margin iwhen persons are boarding planes. ties in 17 Southern and border stace f te ngoiatons ofic th UntedStaessom magininAll passengers will have to be states. ials privately provided the out- presenting its own plan, not be- screened electronicalyab e to re tPratt made these findings of fact: lines ftse Cboarding and all carry-on luggage -Between January 1969 and Feb- sides. vision.. will be inspected prior to takeoff. ruary 1970 HEW gave 10 states a, State Department sources s a i d With administration officials in- st k ruary 197 _ HEW ave1__tats a the original antihijacking plan of- formed that Castro personally or- fered a week and a half ago by dered an accommodation, the State TODAY at the CAMPUS THEATRE the Fidel Castro government ,Department expects full acceptance through the Swiss was brief and of the demand for the provision for Now you can se"The Graduate" clear, no more than two pages of extradition as well as prosecutionafor double-spaced copy. of hijackers. again or for the first The American response, which With the Swiss and State Depart- JOSEPH E. LEVINE SSG D lamrXSMIKE NICHOLS LADYLPNG 3RDASMASHAWRENCE TURMAN ACADEMY SHIT WEEKS AWARD I- WINNER HT E !t E AA THE BLUES' DY*,.THEES A RED HOT SINGS PLUSGRADUATE SMASH!" THE PLUS Gene Shalit, NBC-TV BLUES ,.,.4 TODAY irmed in PANAvSi$O -In CO C A JPA1JA116 I:S.TODAY WED. IS BARGAIN DAY! DALN 231 south state Adults 75c-1-5 P.M. Wed.! 7:00 BOX OFFICE OPEN 12:45 P.M. GRADUATE STA TE SHOW TIMES AT at 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:45 P.M. 9 P.M. Theatre Phone 642-6264 a P"wru n elnaispcue. WHO IS THE M ECHANIC? ade byaduNI...with adulg...for ..iht: One Day Only TUESDAY December 12 Modern Languages Building Friends of Newsreel this Friday and Saturday night the irreducible Friends of Newsreel will continue its program of fine films Frank Zappa 200 MOTELS Ringo Starr The Mothers of Invention --PLUS- Eric Clapton CREAM Ginger Baker Jock Bruce in their last performance together in the Royal Albert Hall in London-historic. a dollar-fifty double-feature TONIGHT- don't miss the latest episode in the SGC follies, in which treasurer David Schaper attempts to impose a poice state on Michigan film groups Room 3X Michigan Union FREE 7:30 FREE paid political advertisement i Subscribe to The Daily TO, IGHT 0 LY A Eddie Harris Sings The Blues Long an innovator, Eddie Harris takes his saxophone yet another step beyond here. In addition to his extraordinary work on electric sax, Eddie now sings through it, and the effect is haunting. This album is a watershed for Eddie Harris, raising him to new heights as a performer and musical creator. Mountain In The Clouds/Miroslav Vitous This album is a significant precursor to the music of Weather Report. A virtuoso of the bass, Miroslav con- structs and develops the music around his instru- ment with a group of fine and proficient musicians who create adventurous and beautiful music. The Giants of Jazz Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie This is one of the all time greatest jazz groups ever assembled. Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie, Al McKib- bon, Thelonious Monk, Sonny Stitt and Kai Wind- ing. This two record set was recorded live at the Victoria Theater in London. The performances are electric, the solos superb. Wild Flower Hubert Laws Hubert Laws, on a variety of flutes and piccolo, backed by a 23 piece string orchestra, displays complete virtuousity on all his instruments. Carefully crafted string arrange- ments by John Murtaugh from a perfect setting for Laws' exceptional technique. The Legendary Pro- file/The Modern Jazz Quartet A new album by the Modern Jazz Quartet is al- ways an event, and this new album, named for the lead song written by Milt Jackson, is undoubtedly one of their finest. It con- tains a wide variety of material, ranging from Jackson's original title song to two new tunes by John Lewis. Their perform- ances demonstrate again why they have remained MARLON BRANDO' "BURN A i. M .Yrw. wIwa,__s_ w.k - Ot 901 w: - n- II ;l