Page 10-Wednesday, June 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily Nation awaits decision on WASHINGTON (AP) - The wait con- tinues - for Allen Bakke and for the nation. The Supreme Court pi .; shop, a basement hidden from the marble halls where noisy tourists and nosy reporters roam, is working overtime. As July approaches, Government Printing Office employees are spending long days and weekend shifts in getting out the court's only tangible product - the written word. SOME 45 DECISIONS are to be han- ded down before the justices close out the current Supreme Court term. Among them is the "big one"-the Bakke case. Each day as the justices take the bench, a crowd gathers one floor below where copies of the decisions are distributed. The crowd has grown with each passing week. out the door if one of the released decisions happens to say "University of California Regents v. Allan Bakke." Editors sit near telephones waiting to hear the word, often having to suffer through minutes of delay while the court ceremoniously greets new mem- bers of its bar. Outside each day, television network term often has spilled into July. AND OFTEN, too, decisions that generate interest have not come untl those beyond schedule days. Allan Bakke, now a 38-year-old civil engineer from Sunnyvale, Calif., sued the University of California in 1974 after twice being rejected as an applicant to the university's medical school. Bakke school to admit less academically qualified applicants - a form of "reverse discrimination." THE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court eventually agreed with Bakke. He would be a medical school student today if the nation's highest court had not agreed to study his charges. The Supreme Court's decision could produce its most important statement on race relations since it outlawed segregation 24 years ago. Thousands of affirmative action programs in education, business and government - begun over the past 15 years as a means of helping minorities overcome the effects of past racial bias - could hang in the balance. The justices will return to the bench Wednesday and again Thursday. Perhaps the Bakke decision will be among those handed down then. Perhaps not "While the calm of the courtroom offers no clue that one of the court's most impor- tant statements on race relations may be on that particular day's agenda, the ner- vous chatter in room No. 30 reflects the mounting tension." While the calm of the courtroom of- c a s b i t yr h i sP a y fer n cuetha oe f he out' m s cews are poised to break into the day's He charged that a special-admissions Pep s the boys in the print shop rs c tato o teourts most broadcasting with "This just in from policy used by the medical school to have already set the type, but perhaps important statements on race relations the Supreme Court." give minority students preferential the justices still are trying to hone to a da the nervous chatter in room No. 30 The current court term is scheduled treatment discriminated against him fine point a product that will be studied to end next Monday, but it is a schedule because he is white. by millions. reects the mounting ensidy to bolt easily forsaken. In recent years, the Bakke said the program allowed the The wait continues. talks Monday that he tried to prevent Cuba's alleged involvement in the "But. . . there could be a misinter- the invasion. Carter has charged that Zairian invasion but implied that other pretation. I believe the evidence on s s the Cuban leader knew of plans for the topics could also be discussed. which the administration is relying is invasion and did nothing to stop it. White House spokesman Rex circumstantial and hearsay so one "He (Castro) said it was a lie Granum said the administration had no must decide whether to believe it or C t 'manufactured in the office of Zbigniew immediate comment on Castro's not." Brzezinski and he said President Carter remarks. Administration officials, including has been confused and deceived on this The two congressmen said they don't Secretary of Defense Harold Brown and matter," Beilenson said. know who is telling the truth about Central Intelligence Agency Director "He said U.S. policy was based on a Cuba's alleged role in the attack but Stansfield Turner, have said they have 1"7lie," Beilenson added. "He said it was a said they are not convinced by U.S. evidence of 35 cases of Cuban in- a b o u t Z aire complete lie, an absolute lie and an im- evidence presented in secret briefings volvement. portant lie." supporting the conclusion that Cubans Brown and Turner said the evidence WASHINGTON (AP) - Fidel Castro were involved. is that Cuban forces in Angola trained says U.S. claims of Cuban involvement SOLARZ ALSO reported that Castro, and equipped the Katangan rebel in- in the invasion of Zaire are lies and that in response to -a question, said he "IT IS FAIR to say that the evidence vaders, not that Cuban troops par- President Carter "has been confused "would be willing to meet with the we have been shown is not compelling ticipated in the invasion itself. and deceived" by his aides, two President, but didn't think realistically and certainly not conclusive," Beilen- congressmen report. that the President would want to meet son said. BUT THE congressmen quoted Reps. Stephen Solarz, (D-N.Y.) and with him." "I don't believe either of us believes Castro as saying he had ordered Cuban Anthony. Beilenson (D-Calif.), said Solarz said Castro made his commen- the President is purposely deceiving troops in Angola not even to associate Castro told them during nine hours of ts in connection with differences over the American people," Solarz said. with the Katangan rebels. "He emphasized very strongly there was no Cuban-Soviet effort to coor- dinate with the Katangese," Solarz GET INTO THE SWIM OFTIN ShadrmrfteKaagnivso Solarz quoted Castro as saying he heard rumors of the Katangan invasion TH IS SUMMER plans and urged Angolan President Agostinbo Neto in February to tell the Katangans in his country not to invade. "Instructions had been com- municated to the Katangese," Solarz said, although he said he had no details on those instructions. Senate sources have said Castro told Lyle Lane, the top U.S. diplomat in Havana, he had tried to stop the in- vasion and Lane relayed his remarks to the State Department ina cable. The state of Arizona takes its KEEP INFORMED name from the Spanish version of KEEPINFO MEDthe Pima Indian word for "little " spring place" or Aztec arizuma, -w/ Summer Subscription to teDoily- srn ic"orAtca m an tneDwhich means "silver bearing." Summer Subscription Prices: ------ ...----------- --s $6.50 Spring/Summer Term (111) Only 2 ____________________________ I $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor M jrS ot (Please Print) Last Name First Middle initial $ $.0 Sprilo A nAbrMaiorSports I No_______ Pb N.$3.50 Spring (Ilila) at Michigan I.D. No. Phone _ _ _ -or- & we have them both Summer (Il1b) Term&- $4.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor Billiards Number Street Nome Apt. No, *Out of Town Subscribers & Bowling City State Zt Must Pre-p-ay! I Lo f S SringD ..Summr-Q7.1 .._.,$ah 1 atV NP r