Wednesday, June 313, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I Wednesday, June 30, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Blacks BOSTON (A) - The Boston School Committee, stripped of much of its power by a federal court desegregation order, is now fighting for its life before another judge of that court. Black voters in Boston claim they have been excluded from "meaningful participation" in the election of school commit- tee members because the city's white majority has more votes. THEY ARE challenging t he at-large election of the school committee, contending that the bitter black vs. white atmos- phere in the city makes it im- possible for a black to be elect- ed in a city wide contest. No black candidate has ever been elected to the committee since it went to at-large elec- tions in 1906. Blacks make up nearly 20 per cent of the city's population of some 641,000 but black students make up about 42 per cent of the public school system. The nine black voters w h o brought the class action suit against the committee - which took 10 weeks of hearings in U.S. District Court - want the court to declare the at-large election system unconstitution- al. The acion would not be un- precedented. Federal c o u r t s have already struck down at- large elections in a number of southern cities and most re- cently in Cairo, Ill. Charges to he filed against Carswell TALLAHIASSEE, .Fla. (A - State Atty. Harry Morrison says he needs about three days to file a formal battery c h a r g e against one-time U.S. Supreme Court nominee G. Harrold Cars- well in an incident involving a vice squad officer. "I've just got some things I want to look into about it," Morrison said Monday. He had said earlier that he would file the charge "as soon as I can get to it." Morrison would not say what he plans to investigate before he files the formal charge. lHe said he would not file it before Thursday. Carwell's lawyer, Murray Wadsworth, said the f o r m e 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals judge would remain in Tallahassee Memorial Hospital about a week for treatment and evaluation. Carswell, 56, checked into the hospital for what officials there called a nervous condition. He was admitted shortly after his arrest last Thursday. Morrison said he could prove battery, a misdemeanor punish- able by up to one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. The prosecutor has quoted Carswell as denying any wrong- doing. Carwell was arrested in a wooded area north of Tallahas- see. le had driven to the area with vice oficer George Greene after they met at a shopping mall men's room, according to authorities. Three vice squad officers had staked out the men's room after merchants complained of homo- sexual activities there, Morri- son said. seek voice in Boston schools THE LEGAL question hinges nit on whether at-large elec- tions are inherently discrimin- atory, but whether in Boston, a city torn by racial tensions over forced busing, a b I a c k could never be elected. "Heightened racial tension in general has so infected Boston politics that black candidates or their supporters lived in fear of physical attacks in w h i t e areas as they faced the task of running city wide," lawyers for the black voters said in their brief. Robert Dinsmore, a lawyer representing two Boston C i t y Council members who entered the case, countered that there's more to winning an election than race. "Politics is like poetry; it's difficult to come up with a win- ning combination," said Dins- more, who recently announced his own bid for the U.S. Sen- ate on an antibusing platform. AT-LARGE elections became. popular at the turn of the cen- tury as a "reform" measure. Ironically they also were used to dilute the voting power of the growing number of Irish immigrants in those days when "no Irish need apply" still ap- peared in employment ads. Now four of the committee's five members are of Irish de- scent. Not only can't a black get elected to the committee, the plaintiffs contend, but in the past 13 years no one who re- presents black interests could get elected. "We are faced here with an all-white body which has sys- tematically violated the consti- tutional and statutory rights of the black community," s a i d lawyers for the black voters. ROGER RICE of Harvard's Center for Law and Education, whose attorneys represent the black voters as they do the black parents in the better- known school desegregation case, said it makes little dif- ference that some current com- mittee members are perceived as "moderates." "Sure Kathleen Sullivan i s different than John Kerrigan but that doesn't cut a lot in terms of this case," Rice said. "The point is whether g o o d black candidates were preclud- ed from running for office dur- ing that same period." Kerrigan, a former commit- tee member, now sits on t h e City Council. For the plaintiffs, Harvard University government P r of - G-ry Orren testified that racial polarization in the city "swell- ed" between 1961 and 1963 and continued to grow during each election that followed. "IF YOU look at tte statis- tics, there's no question there's polarization," Dinsmore said. "It was always present. B u t having polarization in and of itself does not say something is illegal." An expert witness for the de- fense, University of Massachu- setts economist Sidney Sufrin, agreed in part. "Anyone who would argue that busing or the school situa- tion hasn't caused some pol- arization would be a fool," he said. "But to ascribe voting largely to color - that's just not true." Orren also disputed the pop- ular notion that blacks lose be- cause they do not register or vote in sufficient numbers to elect candidates. HAD BLACKS participated at the same rate as whites in a 1974 referendum to abolish at-large committee elections, and had that entire black vote been cast for abolition, the pro- posal still would have lost, Or- ren told the court. In similar cases the U.S. Su- preme Court has zeroed in on the issue of vote dilution, w h e- ther a minority is underrepre- sented because its votes a re scattered by at-large elections. In a case cited by the plaiti- tiffs, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago upheld black plaintiffs who challenged the at-large election of t h e Cairo, Ill., City Council. Al- though Cairo had a 1970 popu- lation of only 6,227, the appeals court found that its elections were subject to unconstitution- al vote dilution. A finding against the Boston School Committee could lead to a similar challenge of the city council, also elected at large. In this century only one black candidate has been elected to the council, in 1949 when elec- tion was by districts. HE WAS illegally prevented from taking his seat, and in the two years it took him to win vindication in the courts, t h e council switched to at-large elections. And despite the overwhelming rejection in the 1974 referen- dum of the proposal to abolish the Boston School Committee in favor of elected community districts, efforts are still under way to do way with the com- mittee or change its election system. Citv C ou'cilor lawrence Di- ('art -)noting that nine of t h e city's 22 w-rds hove not been represented on the school com- mittee since before 1952, is pro- possing a nine-member commit- tee with five members elected from districts and four elected att large. A similar proposal is before the state legislature. In addition to the largely black sections such as Rox- bury, the Italian North End and the largely Irish section of Charlestown have not been re- presented on the committee for at least 2 years, DiCara said. Meanwhile, the court took the case brought by the blacks un- der advisement June 14 and asked both sides to present le- gal briefs by July 5. OPEN 1 P.M. on 4th of July Weekend M -PIN BOWLING WIN A FREE GAME! MICHIGAN UNION Billiards, Bowling and Pinball /\ Wf'e hac- eteave -cluC0ago so fast we could only grat twosuzc dishe . here fh are BIG/A DISH A BIG-A BIG-A DISH Se ves I Starved/ S ves IlIl Starved Sergies I Hungry erVes IV Hungry Serves 1II 1ibblers Serves V Nibblers heese nly $2.25 /!Cheese Only $3.50 heese & One Other \$2.75 Ch es & One Of er $4.2 ny More Things $. each Any r7 Things $25 each S USAG IONS PEPPEtONI MUSH OOMS f /} / GROUND BE' G(EN PEPPERS BACON20LkVRo A Pwe2a2e M-,>es-- 28W0 Jackson Road