School pa desegregai By GREGG KRUPA Late last night, the Ann Arbor Board of Education was to consider a policy proposal intended to serve as "a begin- ning point from which we may consider and discuss desegregating the Ann Ar- bor Public Schools."r The proposal, offered by trustee Kathleen Dannemiller, states that "It is the declared policy of the Ann Arbor Board of Education that in all programs in our district every effort shall be made to prevent and elimi- nate segregation, provide quality edu- cation, and assure equal educational opportunities for all of our students." ROBERT MOSELEY, Assistant Superintendent for Public Relations said that although he did not want to second-guess the trustees, he would "strongly suggest that the Board will either table or defeat the motion." Moseley said that the trustees want to wait until a socio-economic impact stu-, dy of the school system is completed in October before they commit them- selves to desegregating the schools. , The city has three schools that are labeled "racially impacted." The state Board of Education says that a school is racially impacted if it has more than 50 per cent minority enrollment. THE ANN ARBOR schools con- sidered racially impacted include: Nor- thside Elementary, with a 50.2 per cent black enrollment, Mack Elementary with a 51.1 per cent black enrollment, and Bryant Elementary with a black enrollment of 46.7 per cent and a total minority enrollment of 52.7 per cent. Trustee Dannemiller has urged a "reasonable racial balance," with black enrollment not exceeding 25 per cent in any school. In addition to these schools, several city schools are almost completely white. These include Lakewood Ele- mentary with a 94.2 per cent white enrollment, Freeman Elementary with a 98.4 per cent white enrollment, Allen Elementary with a white enrollment of 91.8 per cent, and Eberwhite Elementary with a white enrollment of 91.9 per cent. nel views tion policy THE BOARD began to look at desegregation of Ann Arbor schools last summer when it appeared the state Board of Education would pass guidelines forcing local districts to eliminate "racially i m p a c t e d schools." Then in June, State Attorney General Frank Kelly ruled local districts cannot be forced to comply with racial balance guidelines. As- sistant Attorney General Gerald Young explained the reasoning be- hind the riling. "The state board cannot force local boards to comply with racial balance guidelines, simply because the state board is not so empowered under state law," said Young. YOUNG said the Attorney Gener- al's office only enters a desegrega- tion question when someone files :a complaint claiming the local board is "intentionally separating people by race." Several individuals have appeared before the board in the past, asking the trustees to alleviate the racial impaction at several Ann Arbor schools. Walter Hill, director of the Ann Arbor Community Center, urged the Board to set a desegregation policy very soon. Hill pointed to the poor performance on academic tests of students who attend racially impact- ed schools. Robert Green, a social scientist from Michigan State University, appeared before the Board in Janu- ary and argued that black students cannot learn as well in all-black schools. Trustee Dannerniller has suggest- ed a number of alternatives to achieve the goal, once it becomes the policy of the board to . eradicate segregation. These, alternatives in- clude redrawing the school boun- daries to achieve a racial balance, developing recommendations to achieve racial balance, and setting up a blue. ribbon committee to make recommendations. Successful delivery earns frosh fame (Continued from Page 1) his route. Friday evenings he collect- ed from his customers - the most agonizing period for a paperboy, he said. "It (collecting) took up the most time," he said. However, the chore also had its fringe benefits Mayben reports that he had earned about $400 in tips at Christmas. MAVBEN, a pre-medical student and recipient of a four year Air Force scholarship from ROTC, said the route had its lighter moments. "The people were great," recalled the lanky freshperson. "It was really interesting working at the apart- ments. It's all senior citizens and you learn a lot from them - about their habits and the way they think. One man would constantly be telling me about his adventures, all the women he had married and the money he had. Very gong-ho stories." Tuesday night, the Detroit News honored Mayben at a dinner at the Detroit Plaza Hotel. He won his News award by virtue of his delivery achievement and academic record in high school. The honor put him in contention for the national award, a prize he had never dreamt could be his. "When I won, I couldn't believe it - I couldn't even talk," said May- ben. "Every paper in the country sends in a representative, and I didn't figure I had a chance." Although Mayben abandoned his route for college, he believes he left it in good hands: His younger brother, Burton, will now try to uphold the Mayben family tradition of paperboy excellence. LAST CALL for MIXED BOWLING LEAGUES SIGN UP NOW BOWLING 50C per game OPEN 10 a.m. Mon.-Fri. 1 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 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