The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 27, 1980-Page 5 ;s ' : . :: ". . . . .:" : . ". ". ; v. ; ". ... ... ." : WASHINGTON (UPI) - Blacks lost their jobs at twice ' the rate whites did in America's harsh mid-1970s recession B la c k s and - unlike whites - did not recover over the next few years, a new National Urban League report concludes. "- "Unemployment remained a serious barrier to economic S l ~, J till u esecurity for the black community" during the decade, the report says, and the average annual number of unemployed blacks doubled - from 750,000 in 1970 to 1.4 million by 1978. ' THE REPORT on "The State of Black America," released ' last week by National Urban League President Vernon Jor- don, notes some improvements but paints a gloomy picture ' in general of black economic and housing conditions. "Blacks lost their jobs at almost double the rate ex- perienced by whites between the third quarter of 1974 and the second quarter of 1975" - during the worst recession in 40 r t Years, the report says. re c ssio ' After experiencing a high rate of job layoffs, blacks were Chicago confronts Now P w celled baclk to work at a slower rate than whites, it says. THUS, WHILE unemployment among whites dropped by about 1.7 million between 1975 and 1978, "black unem- ployment remained virtually unchanged," according to the report. It says joblessness among black teen-agers climbed heavily during the period, and black women who had been divorced or separated became "the most deprived group in our society." The number of white families below the poverty level declined by two per cent between 1969 and 1978, while the number of poor black families rose by 19 per cent, the report Says. Blacks had a median family income of $10,880 in 1978, representing an actual six per cent gain above the 1977 level when adjusted for inflation, according to the report. By com- parison, whites had only a two per cent real income gain in 2978. hut their median income was $18,370. desegrega From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Justice Depar- tment lawyers, preparing to slap Chicago with the biggest school desegregation suit in history, are not ruling out seeking court-ordered busing of students to and from the suburbs, sources said yesterday. One department source familiar with the bitter Chicago controversy said it is unlikely the initial suit - expected to be approved soon by Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti - will propose a metropolitan-area busing solution. BUT THE source said, "We're not foreclosing aninter-district remedy." The source said a city-suburban solution will be difficult to achieve because of complexities in researching and proving, under strict Supreme tion suit Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY Lookin'good Willis Wright surveys the Saturday afternoon State St. scene attended by jazz trom his mobile music box. Displaying the utmost in collegiate winter fashions, Wright shows that warmth need not be bulky or unattractive. SWEARS OFF POT: Mc artney returns home * LONDON (UPI) - Blaming his deportation from Japan on his "American attitude" toward drugs, Paul McCartney flew home yesterday after 10 days in a Tokyo jail for possession of about a half-pound of marijuana, which he said he bought in :.New York. .McCartney, his wife Linda and their four children landed unannounced at Lydd airport in Kent and immediately drove off into "quiet seclusion," a *spokesman for the former Beatle said "IT HAS BEEN a terrible shock," the 37-year-old musician said on the flight from Tokyo to Amsterdam, where he changed planes. "I flew into Japan from America, and I still had the American attitude that marijuana isn't that bad. I know it sounds daft but that's the truth - that's why I stupidly brought the stuff with me." McCartney was held at Narita airport on January 16, after he arrived for an 11-concert sellout tour of Japan with his band Wings, which was canceled after his arrest. CUSTOMS OFFICERS said he was carrying nearly half a pound of Jin th rspg Have you ever attended a concert, play, or film only to awaken the following morning to read a review that seemed to be written by someone who went to a different show of the same name? If you've ever said "I could do that!" after disagreeing with an arts page review, it's time to put your typewriter wher your mouth is., The Michigan Daily is looking for new staff writers. The only prerequisites are a specific interest in writing and a general interest in the arts (use your own definition). Beside the usual popular music-theater-film criticism, we have an urgent need for writers interested in classical music, the visual arts, and arts-oriented features. The bottom line here is creativity; if you have some insight or a new approach to offer, the arts page could be your outlet, The meeting for prospective arts staff writers is TODAY Sunday, Jan. 27 up- stairs and to the right at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard (right behind the LSA Building) at 3:00 p.m. Please bring a typed, triple- spaced sample of your writing (only a couple of pages in length), preferably representative of the kind of events or subjects you would like to cover. If you can't make it to the meeting, stop in any weekday afternoon and ask for the arts editors. marijuana in his suitcase. McCartney said he bought the marijuana in New York. "'Shortly before I left, President Car- ter had been asked what his attitude was about cannabis and I think he replied that it ought to be decriminalized and made a misdemeanor. That affected me, too. So I just put a bag of the stuff in my suitcase without thinking. "I REALLY didn't realize that it was a totally different culture in Japan and that Japan's drug laws are very strict. I didn't even think Customs would bother to open my suitcase," McCartney said. McCartney said his worst moment was on rthe first night of his arrest, during a visit by the British vice-consul. "I thought fantastic, good old consul is going to get me out and I would be on the first plane. He just sat down and said, 'Well, it could be eight years in prison, you know'." MCCARTNEY, WHO was known in the cell block as "prisoner number 22," described his prison stay as "like something out of the film 'Bridge Over the River Kwai.' "For eight days I didn't see any daylight at all," he said. "We were awakened at six a.m. and then had to sit cross-legged on the floor for roll-call ..,.they shouted out " 22" and I had to shout back"hi." Reunited with his family in Tokyo, McCartney swore he "will never smoke pot again," and flew back to England - wearing a homemade ring fashioned from a paper clip on his wedding finger. Court standards, that predominantly white suburbs helped cause racial im- balance in mostly black inner city schools. . Without such proof, the high court has ruled suburbs cannot be included in court-ordered busing plans. FOR THOSE reasons, sources said the initial suit probably will be limited to seeking school busing within the city. But once it is filed, federal in- vestigators hope to compile evidence that some predominantly white suburbs on the fringe of the city have con- tributed to racial segregation among the city's 500,000 school children. If the evidence is strong enough, the source said, the suit could be expanded to make Chicago a new test case for at- tempting to force city-suburban busing in a big city. Civiletti held out faint hope at a news conference Friday that the case still can be resolved out of court, indicating he may hold up approving a suit to see if new leaders of the Chicago school board will consider a voluntary solution. BUT SOURCES said prospects of such a settlement are slim. Meanwhile, Chicago Mayor Jane Byrne, angry with the rebellious Chicago Teachers Union, yesterday sought a way to avert a union threat to keep teachers away from classes tomorrow. Byrne talked by telephone with of- ficials involved with developing a plan to ease the schools' financial problems, and union spokesman Charles Burdeen said arrangements were made for- a meeting yesterday among union leaders and the mayor. But Byrne said she expects no such session. A proposal to pull the nation's third- largest public school system out of its financial problems came apart Friday night when the union's House of Delegates voted 700-1 not to work until teachers are paid all the money owed them. The teachers also were upset that the Board of Education did not approve about $51 million in budget cuts by a union-imposed deadline of 4:30 p.m. Friday. YOUNG PEOPLE'S THEATER Now hiring directors and teachers IMMEDIATE OPENINGS- also summer Call 996-3888 This project funded by Michigan Council for the Arts. E IVIERSITY 1USICAL 8OCIETY present t AQWO9 on una " sleep in late " have a leisurely brunch " forget about the library (at leasttill 2) " and relax with J1E AtCbt Man atlg Jack Gold's 1968 THE BOFORS GUN Starring NICOL WILLIAMSON, JOHN THAN and DAVID WARNER in 1954 Ger- many, a British Army unit runs into trouble when a violent, unstable Irish sergeant picks on a weakly national service corporal. "Keen, fascinating, often crude. Notable for the excellent acting provided by its unattractively recognizable army characters." Monday: Hitchcock's PSYCHO (with Anthony Perkins in a duel role and Janet Leigh cough in between) Tues: Valentino in BLOOD AND SAND & Rane Claire's ENTR'ACTE (free at 7:00 & 9:05) iINHEM A GUTLD TNIHAT OLD ARCH. AUD. CI EM G IL 7:00 9:05 $1 .50 Roger WagnerChorale Tuesday, Jan. 29,8:30, Hill Auditorium 5th Avenue at liberty St. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth forum Theater ; TIM DON f The high esteem for the Chorale was possibly best f N