Tuesday, June 15, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Joyce Reibert vs. the system: 'Just trying to feed my kids.' By MIKE NORTON Soft afternoon sunlight p o u r s into Joyce Reibert's living room, thick as syrup. And the sound of children is everywhere. There are children in the basement, children laughing in the kitchen, children drifting in and out of the living room with looks of curiousity on their faces. Every once in a while, an old dog gets up to bark at them. She has put bedspreads over the furniture to make the place look a little nicer, and a small forest of potted plants surrounds the corner chair where she sits and talks. The room is small, but meticulously clean. JOYCE REIBERT has four sons living with her, for whom she receives Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) payments; and a foster child named Joey, for wham she gets no money at all. To feed this family she has been allowed $236 worth of food stamps per month. For the time being, she must pay $106 to get them. Bu under new guidelines proposed by the Ford Administration she will have to begin paying $147 for those same stamps, so Joyce Reibert has joined poor families all over the country in a lawsuit to stop the new regula- tions. Their action has had some initial success; a court-ordered injunction was issued against the government two weeks ago, forbidding imple- mentation of the guidelines. The injunction is scheduled to expire today, however, and no one knows what will happen next. "FOOD STAMPS at least allow a person to know her family's being fed," says Joyce, leaning forward in her chair. "These new regulations are going to force a lot of people to do desperate things-and, as usual, it's the children who are going to suffer." There will be other victims, too, she warns. "Many people-senior citizens especially-are simply not going to want to go on living. I know an old lady; I took her shopping when she first got her food stamps-she was so ex- cited. Just to be buying oranges. And she'll be getting cut out of the program when these regulations go into effect, and I know what she'll be eating when that happens; she'll be eating when what she used to eat. Cornflakes and milk. And day-old bread. No fruit. What kind of thing is that to do to a person?" Joyce suffers from Addison's disease, osteo- porosis of the spine, and several other illness- es; she is scheduled for surgery later this month. Yet she has just finished her Master's program in gerontology at the University and is looking for a job. See REIBERT, Page 5 The Reibert family Supreme Court refuses to review Boston busing case . WASHINGTON (P) - Court- ordered busing to racially inte- grate the Boston school system survived a challenge in the Su- preme Court yesterday. The court announced it will not review a controversial order of U.S. District Judge Arthur Garrity under which 21,001 pu- pils are bused between neighbor- hoods. "THE DECISION is against is and there's nothing we can do about it," said Thayer Fremont- Smith, attorney for the Boston Home and School Adminisra- tion, which had sought the high court review. "The people of Boston will have to learn to live with the decision and make the schools as good as possible." "This decision marks the end of challenges to desegregation in the city of Boston," said ThomasbAtkins, president of the Boston branch of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People (NAACP). "We hope it also marks the beginning of a will- ingness on the part of the peo- ple who brought the challenges to work together." IN 1974, U.S. District Court Judge Garrity ruled on a suit by black parents that the schools had been segregated by actions of public officials. That decision, upheld earlier by the Supreme Court, was fol- lowed by detailed orders to de- segregate the city's 162 schools. The plans required busing 17,000 students in 1974-75 and 21,000 in 1975-76. Public school enroll- ment in Boston this year was about 86,500. The Supreme Court's decision yesterday upheld Garrity's plans and rejected alternatives. BUT SOME anti-busing lead- ers were defiant and others ex- pressed fears the school busing fight would continue in the streets. "The finality of the Supreme Court decision spells doom for the city of Boston, said James Kelly, head of the South Bosto- Information Center, an anti- busing group. "Fear, apprehension and ha- tred will continue as long as there is forced busing in this city," Kelly said. "Violence and racial confrontations are unavoidable." SCHOOL C'omnmitteewotan El- vira Palladino, elected last year on an antibusing platform, call- ed the decision "a miscarrige See COURT, Page 9 Cerical pres. race close; run-off slated By GEORGE LOBSENZ A run-off has been declared following the June , 9 and t1. University clericals' UAW local 2001 elections as all but te crucial presidential race has been decided. 'The unofficial results of the presidential election reads ai follows: Unity Caucus candidate Debbie Moorehead received 401 votes; Clericals for a Democratic Union (CDU) candidate Carolyn Weeks received 360 votes; independent James Evans garnered 61 votes. No candidate received a majority of the votes cast, thereby necessitating the run-off. The Moorehead-Weeks run-off will be held June 15, 16 and 17, wih polling locations and procedures remaining the same. In other important races, the unofficial results were as follows: . CSU's Marianne Jensen defeated Unity candidate Judy Dumoff by the narrowest margin in any race, 413 to .387, to win the First Vice-President position. See RUN-OFF, Page 10 Prfine FOLK GUITARIST John Prine soothed the ears of his fans at The Ark this weekend with some mellow tunes. The concert was an all day affair that included folk stars Jack Elliott and Leon Redhone. Go home! While every other town in the country will be celebrating the bicentennial next month, the Rocky Mountain resort of Telluride will be shut tight. A chamber of commerce spokesperson said people will be discouraged from coming to town because that was the only way to keep out "unruly drunk and unmanageable hoardes." The spokesperson added "Even a substantial economic sacrifice would be preferable to another migra- tion of rowdy, carefless, and drunken crowds. The town of Telluride will col- lectively say no to another debacle." Ups and downs- set a worlds record. Two employees of the Grand Strand Amusement Park in South Carolina, Jim Bruse and Wayne Harrisot, now hold the record for con- tinuous rides on a roller coaster. They set a new record at noon yesterday of 72 hours, surpassing the old mark of 58 hours. The two were allowed five min- ute breaks every hour. During the day they had the company of the park cus= tomers, but at night they made each minute-and-a-half circuit alone. . . . all occur at the same time today. At 7:30 you can see the new document- ary film "Rape Culture" at East Quad rm. 124 . . , and there is a GEO mem- bership meeting in the Rackham amphi- theater. Weather or not Don't expect any change in the wea- ther. Once again it will be hot and hu- mid with a high near 90 and a 40 per cent chance of rain. Winds will be south- southwest at 10-20 mph. Some people will go to any length to Happenings...