?a§e Ten THE MIC-4IGAN DAILY Page Teri THE MICHIGAN DA1X14' Court of appeals state to buy 150 LANSING (UPI) - The state of Michigan has been ordered to submit a plan for the 'speedy acquisition" of 150 school buses to be used in the Detroit school integration pro- gram. The order issued yesterday by the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati may have improved chances that the busing program will be started this fall. THE ATTORNEY GENER- AL'S office must submit the pur- chasing plan to the court next Tuesday. For the time being, however, the question of who will pick up, the. $2.4 million tab for the buses remains unanswered. Although . the state h a d initially been ordered to pay for the buses D e p u t y Attorney General Stanley Steinborn said it may now be possible to work out an arrangement under which the Detroit School District could borrow the mon- ey from the state. THE APPEALS COURT order handed down yesterday did not specify where the money would come from. Attorney General Frank Kelley said the court order stipulated simply "that the pro- cedure be consistent with state and local fiscal procedures while not financially disrupting orders buses the Detroit school system." U. S. District Judge Robert DeMascia of Detroit had order- ed the state, which is a defen- dant in the desegregation case, to pay for the buses. The ap- peals court stayed that order May 27. KELLEY HAS CONTENDED that the state should not be re- quired to buy the buses because it has not committed any acts of segregation and that it could not make such a purchase with- out legislative approval. The Detroit School Board has claimed it cannot afford to buy the buses. DeMascio has been holding hearings on various plans for integrating the Detroit schools. The U. S. Supreme Court sent the case back to district court after rejecting a plan that would have involved cross-dis- tricting busing with the sub- urbs. MORNING PAPER IS WORTH MORE THAN 5c, (Our Subscribers Think So, Too) THEY ASK US TO DELIVER TO THEIR DOOR EACH DAY... * Latest National and Local News from AP and UPI Wires * Comprehensive Campus News Coverage * Important City Developments " Critical Analysis of Local and National Issues * Entertainment News and Reviews * A Weekly Calendar of Community Events * Latest Sports Stories and Scores _ 0 Feature Stories from Near and Abroad * Creative Photo Journalism * A Challenging Crossword Puzzle The Most Interesting Classified Pages Outside The Berkeley News * And More-Five Mornings a Week! IT'S ALL IN THE Latest Deadline In The State: CALL 764-0558 FOR DELIVERY Floor show Former dance student Betty Ford returned yesterday to her ballet alma mater, the Martha Graham School in New York, to chat with the veteran choreographer (right). A performer rehearsing for an upcoming school concert is reflected in the studio mirror behind them. Unit votes to restore citizenship of Lee W A S H I N G T O N (UPI) -A House judiciary subcom- mittee voted 3-1 today to re- store the citizenship of Confed- erate Gen. Robert E. Lee. The bill was sent to the full Judiciary Committee after the lone dissenter, Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (D-N.Y.) lost an at- tempt to attach a general am- nesty for all those who renoun- ced citizenship to protest the Vietnam War. ON OCT. 2, 1865, six months after lie surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia, Lee swore an oath of allegiance to the United States before a notary George will talk to you. He can be a friend. Union Bowling public and mailed the oath to Washington. The oath was required of Confederate offic- ers before their citizenshilp would be restored. L~ee died five years laier without ever getting his citizen- ship back, although the rest of his relatives who fought for the South had received theirs. Pres- ident Andrew Johnson apparent- ly never received the doci- mett. The Senate passed the citize- ship restoration bill on April 1 Only approval by two-thirds o the House stands in the way at Lee's posthumous citizenship dassif~ed Theatre Company of Inn Arbor, Inc. PRESENTS BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND AA MAQNNAS an original production celebrating the forward and positive movement of women fri., June 13 Schorling Aud. n e (in the School of Ed. Sat, June14 elda on Est u.) DONATION $2.00 . CWTAIN AT 6:00 P.M.