r - PANHELLENIC'S ANNUAL PLANT SALE to benefit UM's Children's Psychiatric Hospital "4 4 4 4 494 4 40 4 4 44.A SST WASHINGTON (AP yesterday that the C may land at John F. K whenever the two airli. are ready to enter the It Spokesmen for Briti said they would make sial faster-than-speed tomorrow. Both airlines said th trans-Atlantic service with New York by Nov landings in New )-The Supreme Court said "WE'RE ON OUR way," a British Airways oncorde supersonic jetliner spokesman said. "It has been an- enormous and ennedy International Airport costly battle, but we have won." In Paris, French nes offering Concorde service Transportation Secretary Marcel Cavaille said the ucrative New York market. Suprerme Court ruling was "in line with justice and sh Airways and Air France good ''ne. a test flight of the controver- goo sense." paestliJhfhecotrovePriIn a brief sentence, the nation's highest court airplane to JFK from Paris handed a crushing defeat to New York and New ey hoped to begin commercial Jersey officials who successfully had fought for linking London and Paris nearly two years to keep the Concorde out of New linkin LYork. 22. The justices merely turned down a request by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates JFK, to temporarily postpone the start of Concorde operations at the airport pending a formal appeal to the court by the port authority. Page 2-Tuesday, October 18, 1977-The Michigan Daily SUPREME COURT REFUSES TO HEAR APPEAL York OK'd IN EFFECT, that left intact a ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Sept. 29 that Con- corde operations could begin immediately. The authority said yesterday that it still intends to appeal, but even if the court agrees to review the case, its processing could take months-and the Concorde already will be flying into and out of the city. In another matter yesterday, the court indicated that it might not reach the landmark decision many legal scholars believed it would in the much- publicized "reverse discrimination" case of Allan Bakke. THE COURT asked attorneys for both sides in the case that challenges the constitutionality of affir- mative action programs that give racial minoirites special preference to submit additional legal briefs. F Will . UNION BALLROOM October 18-20 10 A.M.-8 P.M. Local Suppliers: Norton's IRestock! Great Prices! -ma- -ALA A ALA- LL - - - I'C- WE CAN INCREASE YOUR LSAT SCORE Call or Write: University LSAT Preparation Service Inc. 2200 Fuller Rd., Suite 912B Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105 313-995-4014 Carterasks panel to help push for ratification of new canal pact -I- b'y t' ANNOUNCING the OPENING of: Round Haus Cafe WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter, rallying allies yesterday in his fight for ratification of the Panama Canal treaty, told a neWv committee laden with veterans from past diplomatic battles that the American people don't know the facts about the pact. "This is one of the most important and most difficult and perhaps most controversial international steps our country has taken," Carter 'told members of the Committee of Ameri- cans for the Canal Treaties, who met with him at the White House. , "I KNOW YOU are convinced what we do this year and next year about the treaty will have-far-reaching im- pact not only on ourselves as we re- late to Panama but to the entire Western Hemisphere, indeed per- haps to the world. "It's crucial to me that the Ameri- can people understand the facts about the treaty, which so far have not been successfully promulgated," the President said. He thanked the committee for its bipartisan effort to mount what it calls "a national program of education" about the need to ratify the pact. The committee is headed by Aver- ell Harriman, former ambassador to Moscow and a one-time ambassador at large who.has served past admin- istrations on missions around the world. It includes business and labor leaders, former military officers and senior officials and several past ad- ministrations. . THEY WILL become part of Carter's fight to win ratification of the canal treaty in the Senate, where it is opposed by conservatives. The treaty committee banded to- gether specifically to support the pact, which actually consists of two agreements, yielding control of the canal to the Panamanians by the year 2000 and guaranteeing the United States the permanent right to defend the neutrality of the water- way Members of the panel include such veterans of diplomacy as George Ball, former undersecretary of state; John Sherman Cooper, former ambassador to India and Nepal; Henry Cabot Lodge, former ambas- sador to Vietnam and Germany John McCloy, former assistant secre- tary of War; retired Army Gen. Matthew Ridgway, and Anna Rosen- berg Hoffman, former assistant sec- retary of defense. 618 Church St., Ann Arbor - A T T A AAT %7iD ( ,T , nTTA""W 0 Tf T ITD 995-5095 GALL AHEtAD POP QUICK .N I -K.-U F " s K. . f -~ Y t ^ * A * . - &A in Judge sheds robes for foot tour of disputed state nature reserve ATLANTA, Mich. (AP) - Shucking judge tromped past swamps, streams TO ENABLE HIM to see severalc his robes for a flannel shirt and jeans, a and wooden ridges in a remote Miehi- the widely scattered wells and propos w ll citrm R nr nl n tn h of >ed The way YOU want it is the way we do it. U-M Stylists at the UNION OPEN,8:30 a.m. gan forest yesterday to help him de- cide whether to allow gas and oil com- panies to drill more wells in the forest. Judge Thomas Brown, who sits in Ingham County Circuit Court in Mason, just outside Lansing, trgveled 20 miles to the northernmost area of the state's Lower Peninsula for a first-hand look at the 96,000-acre Pigeon River County State Forest. Trailing him on his walk were about 20 attorneys, reporters and agents for the state Department of Natural Re- sources (DNR), which is 6eing sued by environmentalists who want to block permits already issued that would allow expanded drilling. we sies, trown roe part o1 L e way in a four-wheel drive vehicle owned by the DNR. The rugged terrain, crossed only by two gravel roads and a series of trails. has a variety of wildlife - including the only wild elk herd east of the Missis- sippi. Sports enthusiasts use it for fish- ing, hunting, hiking, camping, nature observation, berry picking and cross- country skiing. Brown, 45, himself an outdoorsman who has hunted in Pigeon River, began his tour from a courthouse on the edge of the forest. He had left it to attorneys for the environmentalists, the state and the oil companies to determine what parts of the forest he saw. i * r .'A * "4 "'A ty I .4 4 r WA (A-r A R 4 ' V rA "- 1 w' "4 < A. r, itA+ -A w4 4',. f SENIORS and GRADUATESTUDENTS This is your last week to be included in the 1978 MICHIGANENSIAN YEARBOOK. Portraits are still being taken in the Student Publica- tions Bldg., 420 Maynard (next to S.A.B.), first floor. Call 764-0561 weekdays from 9 am-9 pm for an appointment. All of your fellow classmates have had their por- trait taken, don't you be left out! A career in law- without law school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assittant is able to do work tradi- tionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills-the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 2,000 graduates in law firms, banks, and corporqtions in over 80 cities. If you area senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like to meet you. Contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17