Wednesday, September 1 0, 1975|THE|MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three All over the nation' classrooms empty; teachers on strike The nation's largest school Midwest: In northern Ohio's system began shutting down I Erie-Huron-Ottawa vocational yesterday as 65,000 teachers in| district, 66 teachers continued a financially strapped New York strike that began Sept. 3 over a City went on strike, new contract. Nearly 1,000 stu- Initial reports indicated that dents are out of class. the walkout by the United Fed-i In Michigan, 385 teachers in eration of Teachers was gener.. the St. Clair Shores, Mich. dis-I ally effective in disrupting trict ended a strike Monday and I classes for the 1.1 million pu- the fall term was to open yes- pils who started the fall term terday, a week late. Settlement Monday. details were not released. ANDY WARHOL is coming to Ann Arbor to pay obeisance to and personally mneet his ansadfiends SE PTEMBE R 15 CAL L FOR DETA I LS-663- 1812 r Mounted patrols and police ~ this school year. Boston ~ vi0leflC( B 0 5 T 0 N (iP) - Anti-busing mothers chanted prayers and pushed baby carriages in the Charlestown area yesterday as the second day of school under court-ordered desegregation end- ed peacefully. School attendance was up throughout the city as police kept up a highly visible show of force, and there was no serious trouble at the schools by the time the buses came to take the children home. Some rock and bottle throw-! ing was reported near the high school in Charlestown during the afternoon, however. Police reported about a half dozen ar- rests throughout the day. POLICE said officers patrol.. ling racially tense sections! would be issued flak jackets to protect them from darts being I fired at night from slingshots and air guns. In Charlestown, a tough Irish neighborhood where schools hiv b~~ vitu al-ht about 150 of the city's 950 Wcorkingdconditions, nottpa, Teahrs no arn fro ETwithout significant progress. Supt.-elect Joseph P. Hannon said the sole issue remaining in th week-l strike by 27,000 x~e 88 8 :.:.. 8 ::s 8 88 ...: ::15.IN Pennsylvania, te a ch er wakuts continued in 23 school guard Boston's Charlestown High School without incident y esterday, the second day of bsing oheri ts wth teachersin tan- were locked out. Disputes in- volved 7,015 teachers and 145,-I atnd Charlestown busing Inohr ra, hr strikes: Northeast: In addition to New York City, about 36,000 pupils OR O OR S COj were afecte bytrkesinNew second da state's school districts were op- scrawled on the sidewalk in in Boston to supervise federal!i ed there. He said a "disagree- erating without contracts for front of the building, an histori- agents involved in implement- ment" of a racial nature had teachers. cal landmark which suffered ing the desegregatibn program. taken place between two female~ Far West: About 1,200 teach- damages estimated at $25,000 to students - one black and one ers remained off the job in $75,000. REPORTERS were not al- white - but no disciplinary ac- Berkeley and San Jose, Calif. lowed inside school buildings,I tion was taken and no injuries Tra fasrk nteSca BUSING school children to en- but Charlestown High School resulted. mento area ended when 2,100: force a desegregation order be- Headmaster Frank Power said Police officials said some cent salarygrincrease. or e gan last year in some neighbor- all was qluiet in classrooms; 1,800 police officers would re- ----- -_ hoods, notably South Boston. where "students are learning main on the streets tomorrow. This year busing has been in- and teachers are teaching.'' A total of 87 arrests were re- SEE creased and new areas added, South Boston High School: ported Monday and Monday D including Charlestown. Headmaster Williamn Reid said: night, mostly for disorderly con- J im e p Final figures were not avail- no major incidents were report-~ duct..e e able from. school officials, but --*--------------*--- POCKET BILLIARD early reports indicated that -CHAMPION over-all attendance yesterday was up considerably from Mon-W d Set2 from eight high schools and fixve r 4 p.m. 8pm- elementary schools showed an a over-all attendance rate of 62.2 h a t tern g Union Ballroom per cent. At South Boston High School, F RE E where 216 of 785 enrolled white pupils showed up for classes on - --- opening day, 306 whites report- ed yesterday. Of 432 blacks en- $ (8 rolled, 78 attended classes Mon-4 8V l ek_________ day and 147 reported yesterday. TAE KWON DO DEMONSTATION BA RBOU R GYM on Campus T RAINING SCH EDULE- TUESDAY & THURSDAY: BARBOUR GYM-6-8 P.M. WEDNESDAY & FRIDAY: ANGELL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL-6-8 P.M. (corner of South University and Oxford) The ultimate in self-defense, physical fitness, and mental discipline For MEN and WOMEN sponsored by the U-M International Tae Kwon Do Federation INFORMATION: 665-5555 I,- *1 about 300 mothers and teen-age IN CHARLESTOWN, 263 of girls marched through the 595 enrolled white pupils and 85 streets to protest busing. of 221 enrolled blacks reported When they neared Charles- to the high school yesterday. On town High School, a wall Of PO-' Monday, 66 blacks and 235 lice officers blocked their path.. whites attended classes. The women sat in the street and The streets of South Boston recited the Lord's Prayer until were nearly empty during~ police finally allowed them to school hours yesterday, except march on sidewalks about a for police and U.S. marshals block from the school. who were positioned along bus routes and near South Boston POLICE buses and vans :High School. sealed off the street in front of "It has gone very well, both: the aging granite building, and Monday and today," Asst. U.S. tactical patrolmen walked with Atty. Gen. Stanley Pottinger the marchers. said Tuesday afternoon. He is Fire officials said yesterday:---------- --~ that the birthplace of President ____________ John Kennedy was apparently fire-bombed Monday night. Anti -I b us in g slogans had been Cr~ S llf GAN A.? lYAt V NOW ONIL Y4 OreX 60 M MEMOREX Recodng Tae Reproduction so true it can shatter giass U TWEb A1E~ ' 549 E. 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