Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 School Board suit SINCE 1954, areas throughout the country have been attempting to improve racial balance in public schools. But last May, the Ann Arbor School Board adopted a proposal concerning the Clinton School which effectively takes a step backward from this goal. The School Board made a decision that appears on the surface to be convenient, not racist. The present Clinton School is overcrowded, and a new school is badly needed. Interstate 94 divides the school district in half. Why not let those living north of the expressway attend the old Clinton School, located in that area, and build a new school south of the expressway for those families living in that area? Convenient? Very. But another look at the district reveals that the area north of the expressway is an af- fluent white subdivision, while the southern area is 40 per cent black and largely consists of FHA financed houses for low and moderate income families. DIVIDING THE district in this fashion creates two little ghettos. The present Clinton School is 20 per cent black. Under the new plan, the old school would become 14 per cent black while the new school would be 33 per cent black. Some Clinton School parents don't think the school board's plan is such a fine idea. They're afraid that the plan will leave their children with a poor educational system, and in the words of one mother: "Our children are going to be behind before they begin if we let this happen." So, four parents are suing the school board, declaring that the present plan for student assignment to schools is unacceptable. They want to implement another plan that will insure that children of different social and economic backgrounds will go to school together. THE MATTER is now before the courts. Hopefully the discrimination of the plan will be realized and the school board will be forced to reconsider its plan, and move forward n the area of racial equality, not backward. -MERYL GORDON Cheap murders end ONCE AGAIN, the Senate has demonstrated its un- wavering ability to pass meaningless legislation. This time they've come up with one of the saddest excuses for a handgun bill ever contrived. Basically what the bill would do is prohibit the sale of small, snub-nosed revolvers. It says nothing about the small, snub-nosed guns already in people's possession or the sales of larger varieties of handguns. The larger guns were made exempt by the bill be- cause the gun lobbyists have convinced the Senators that these are sporting guns and not the variety commonly used by criminals. Under this brilliant piece of legislation, killers will be forced to buy the higher-priced, larger-caliber hand- guns, or steal one of the smaller sorts from somebody who already has one. The murderers who aren't fortu- nate enough to steal a small gun, will have to save up money until they can afford one of-the bigger varieties. THE ULTIMATE attempt of any gun legislation should be to reduce and hopefully eliminate deaths and in- juries at the hands of gun-toting individuals. Forcing would-be murderers and thieves to graduate to larger caliber guns can, by no stretch of the imagination, be considered a step in that direction. -LORIN LABARDEE Summer Saff EDITORIAL. STAFF Dan Biddle, Jan Benedetti, Meryl Gordon, Jim Kentch, Lorin Labardee, Alan Lenhoff (co-editor ), Diane Levick, Maynard, Chris Parks, Carla Rapoport (co-editor) Marilyn Riley, Gloria Smith, Paul Travis, Ralph Vartabedian. SPORTS STAFF Bob Andrews. Dan Borus, Elliot Legow. BUSINESS STAFF Andy Golding, Business Mgr.; Sherry Kastle, Circulation Mgr.; Karen Laakko, Classified Mgr.; Fran Scherger, Display Mgr.; Diane Carnevale, Supplement Mgr.; Elliott Legow, Deborah Whit-, ing, Carol Wieck, Assistants. PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Denny Gainer, Rolfe Tessem, Gary Villani, Jim Wallace. Speaking of Skeeltons in Closets .. . ALAN LENHOFF ...::.. The war isn't ower until all1 the *The war is over, the war is over," says the President. "It's official," says the U.S. command. "Our 7-year combat involvement in Vietnam has ended." 'EHESE VERY WELL could have been the words used by Pentagon and White House to describe yesterday's announce- ment that the Third Battalion, 21st Infantry division was be- ing phased out of its combat role in Vietnam. This division, one of the first American combat units to be sent to Vietnam, is now being heralded as being the last of the American ground troops in Vietnam. But that claim deserves a closer look. k iing When the Administration s that the U.S. combat role Vietnam is over, the key w is "combat." There are still c 45,000 American infantry tro left in South Vietnam. TI men have conveniently been classified as "advisers, logis experts, air crewmen and to nicians." In addition to these tro there are over 125,000 Ameri Air Force, Marine and Navyr sonnel engaged in waging massive air war. But theser do not figure into the Preside count of American troops Vietnam because they are ba in Thailand, Guam and Seventh Fleet aircraft carr off the coast of North Vietna is ended Today's Staff ... News: Dan Biddle, Gloria Jane Smith, Paul Travis Editorial Page: Alan Lenhoff Photo technician: Jim Wallace tays THE MANNER IN which both in the President and the media 'ord have displayed this "end" of over American involvement in Viet- ops nam has been both laughable hese and distressing. ret The Associated Press chose to ties portray the announcement from ch- a "human interest" angle. Cor- respondent George Esper rather ops, arbitrarily selected a young can private from Chester, California, per- and crowned him "The Last the American Combat Infantryman men Wounded in Vietnam." ant's nin The lucky private, James Me- ased Vicar, is scheduled to return to on the states today, where un- doubtedly the locals will herald iers him as a hero. This is all very m. touching, but the war is not over yet. The more than 209 air missions against the North by American planes yesterday are more than ample proof of that. But Pentagon public relations experts are not quite as sharp as' their counterparts on Madi- son Avenue. In fact, their use of the Third Battalion as a symbol of the end of the war was quite a poor choice. The Third Battalion was one of the most controversial of the American fighting units in Viet- nam. It arrived in Vietnam in 1966, aiid eventually became part of the infamous Americal Division-the unit which made a bloodbath out of My Lai. And if that were not enough, the battalion's Alpha Company shocked Americans in August, 1969, when they became the first of a long series of Ameri- can units to refuse orders to go into combat. This unit also provided Time Magazine with the basis for its eyebrow- raising story on "fragging"-a slang term for throwing a frag- mentation bomb or hand gre- nade into the bed of a sleeping officer. SO IN SOME WAYS, Ameri- can ground involvement in Viet- nam "ends" in much the same manner as it began, and as it grew over the past seven years. It is simply another discordant n note in a somber song. We 111st stay 11 Vietnamn to prevent a (COm.Irt bloodbath." -The Administratio