Friday, August 13, 1971 page gegen Friday, August 13, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven news briefs By The Associated Presa I Wallace asks Nixon's aid against busing as it faces new problems SYRIA BROKE RELATIONS with its Arab neighbor Jordan yesterday after charging King Hussein's Bedonin army had at- tacked Its territory. Syria's official Radio Damascus claimed that Jordanian tanks and armored cars opened fire on the town of Der's, just across the border from Jordan, but that the attack was driven hack with the loss of four Jordanian tanks and no Syrian casualties. Much of the trouble between the two countries has involved Palestinian guerrillas, whose anti-Israeli efforts Syria has supported, while Jordan has used force in keep them under control. There have heen frequent reports of Jordanian counterfire into Syria following hit-and-run attacks into Jordan hy guerrillas oper- ating from Syria. A FEDERAL COURT ORDEK to integrate Pontiac's public schools with a massive busing plan was signed Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Damon Keith. Under the plan, shout one-third of the school system's 23,000 stu- dents will be bused to schools outside their neighborhoods when school opens next month, costing some $719,000 to put into effect, according to school officials. The school board has announced that it will appeal the ruling, which was in response in a suit filed by the National Association for Sthe Advancement of Colored People. NORTH VIETNAMESE forces opened a series of attacks along the demilitarized zone between North and South Vietnam yesterday, only six days after the last majior U.S. ground unit pulled out of the region, A Saigon command spokesman termed the fighting in that re- Sgion the "heaviest since the end of June," but said that it was too early to say whether the attacks marked the beginning of a new North Vietnamese offensive. THE ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH said yesterday that several high-ranking executives of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. sold ITT stork shortly before the government imposed an antitrust settlement on the company that sharply lowered the value of the stock. The company denied as "baseless and without foundation" the newspaper's report that the executives "were able to avoid per- sonal losses of about $50,500 by selling their holdings to buyers who were unaware that the Department of Justice was about to force ITT to get rid of $1 billion in assets." Regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York exchange forbid corporate executives from buying or selling stock on the basis of information not known generally by the public. POLITICAL LIQUIDATIONS and forced labor camps in the People's Republic of China have taken the lives of more than 30 million people, a study published yesterday by the Senate Internal SSecurity subcommittee claims. Rid chard Walker, sdirector oftheroiInstitutea for International covering 50 years of the Chinese Communist movement, credited the Chinese Communist leaders with having achieved remarkable progress in some areas, but said the cost has been "too high for the conscience of the world to absolve its perpetratois. SFEMALE STUDIES We want to set up a seminar to investigate pro- Sposals, etc., but need women. If interested, call Claire, 662-4431 Ext. 332, MONTGOMERY, Ala. (A') -- Challenging the Nixon admin- istration to back up the Presi- dent's stand against school bus- ing, Gov. George Wallace or- dered the transfer yesterday of a white pupil who has been as- signed to a predominantly black school 22 miles from her home. Wallace's action came one day after he sent a telegram to President Nixon calling on him in back up his antibusing statements by asking the federal courts to change their recent rulings and make busing unlaw- ful when used tn achieve inte- gration. The governor promised also to "take some action," in pre- vent a predominantly bla ck school at Hobson City from be- ing Integrated with a predom- inantly white school at Oxford destroy the Bobson City school. The governor said the plan will destroy Hobson City's school band and its football team. Re said black officials in that community and w h i e school authorities at Oxford Re sad the wil .have further announcements, perhaps Friday, involving other schools. He hinted strongly he will d i r e c local school boards at that time to reopen "one or two" schools already closed by federal court decree to speed integration. gWallac said sevral eeks of the more than 140 all-black schools ordered closed by t h e courts, but he has not discloscd the marx brothers in MONKEY BUSIN ESS auditorium a angell hai AUGUST 14 ann arbor film cooperative how many or where they are. At a hurriedly summoned news conference, the governor made public a letter to the Jeffer- son County - Birmingham - School Board and Snpt. J. Re- via Ball ordering the reassign- ment of a high school pupil, Pamela Davis, in a school near- er her home-. Wednesday, the President's press secretary, Ronald Ziegler, said Nixon already had instruct- ed federal authorities in seek integration without busing wherever possible. Ziegler said those who disregard the Presi- dent's policies may 10 5 e their jobs. Meanwhile, Nixon's announce- ment last week that he want- ed none of the $1.5 billion in proposed emergency desegrega- tion funds for the coming school yea edn be spet on busingr has lem for some Southern s c h o 01l' district facing court orders to bus large numbers of pupils this fall. Some of the school districts say that, despite the cutoff, they will ask the Department of Health, Education and Welfare for emergency school desegre- gation funds to buy the neces- sary buses. And BEW says there is a pos- sibility that some of the most hard-pressed districts will b a able tn get a small amount of money for busing under a fund- tug arrangement unaffected by Nixon's order. Others have decided to pay for the buses themselves an d seek emergency desegregation fuds for other programs which they might otherwise under- write with booal dollars. Still others are reluctantly considering an increase In school taxes in pay for the bus- Some say they have no Idea where they'll get the money. HI-Fl STUDIO ANNUA L SUMMER SA LE Offering REAL price reductions that will not be repeated in 1971-START- ING NOW Some of our lines * Jensent 0 Acoustic Research * Garrard * Kenwood * KLH 0 DUAL * Scott* * Sherwod * ony Tel. 668-742 Unbelievable Sacrifices-Up to 40 % off Backed up by our Factory Authorized Service 121 W. WASHINGTON-Downtown-i blk. W. of Main Read and Use DailyClassifieds The Pawnbroker ST ARRING ROD STEIGER FRIDAY -SATURDAY Aug. 13-14 -9:00 P.M. 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