E Page 2, -The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 11, 1987 Black law prof. stood for justice IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports tiy HAMPTON DELLINGER Wade McCree Jr., a University law professor since 1981 who died recently of a heart attack, is remem- bered by colleagues and students as a man of diverse and exceptional tal- ents, a Black man proud of his race vho excelled as a litigator, arbitra- tor, and educator. The former Solicitor General un- der President Jimmy Carter and for- mer federal judge, McCree was p aised at a law school memorial rvice last Thursday as possessing a nmind "deep, retentive, and profound." Donald Gould, a former law clerk, said McCree "lived the life of the nind." Throughout his life, McCree fo- c ised his mind on the law. After graduating from Harvard Law School i 1944, he served as a captain in a racially segregated infantry division which saw action in Italy. Follow- ,g the war he started practicing as a attorney in Detroit until he was appointed in 1954 to the Wayne unty Circuit bench. He became the first Black to sit as a judge on a Michigan court of record. McCree spent the next 23 years of his life settling conflicts from the bench; first in district court, then as a judge on 'the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals which exercised authority over a five-state area. "As a trial judge McCree had few peers," said Michigan law professor David Chambers. His success as a judge can be traced to his "passionate commitment to doing justice," said a former law clerk, Howard Boignon. "He believed the law must be stable, but it cannot stand still," Boignon added. In 1977, McCree put down his gavel and turned in his robe to accept what one Michigan law professor characterized as "every lawyer's dream job"- Solicitor General of the United States. The Solicitor General's function is to represent the executive branch before the Supreme Court. McCree said at the time the posi- tion offered "the opportunity to ar- gue the most important cases of the time before the highest court in the nation." One of the cases McCree argued as Solicitor General involved Allan Bakke in 1977. Bakke, a white Californian, contended that his ap- plication to the medical school at the University of California at Davis had been rejected in favor of less-quali- fied minority applicants. He claimed to be a victim of reverse discrimina- tion, a casualty of special admis- sions programs that set minimum quotas for minority enrollment. At the time, McCree argued that race should be a factor used in admitting candidates to medical school. But Michigan law professor Ted St. Antoine said recently that the judge was troubled by Blacks' need for special preference. "It was a burden for Wade to fi- nally concede in the Bakke case that minorities needed special assistance. He felt he needed no such preference. MCCree ...committed to justice See FORMER, Page 10 t a { S M 44 tl J000'" START YOUR EXECUTIVE TRAINING NOW Why wait until you graduate from college to start a management training program? If you have at least two years remaining in school, consider Air Force ROTC. You'll develop your managerial and leadership abilities while in Air Force ROTC. We'll prepare you for a challenging future as an Air Force officer, and give you $100 tax free each academic month to help you with college expenses. When you graduate, you'll have a responsible person with outstanding opportunities. It all depends on you. There's excellent pay and benefits, too. Talk to your local Air Force ROTC representative today. Why wait? We can open the door NOW to start a fast-paced career. For more information call Capt Mike Phillips at 747-4093. 7 l f U.S. kids trail in scinces From the Associated Press NEW YORK - U.S. elementary and high school students, especially girls, know less about science than their counterparts did in 1970 and trail both English and Japanese pupils in physics, chemistry and biology, according to an international study. English students topped even the Japanese in the first study in 17 years to compare how students in 24 nations perform in science. The first phase of the study by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement(IEA) took place in 1983. A second phase of testing was conducted in the United States in 1986 and involved more than 20,000 5th, 9th, and 12th graders in over 1,000 schools. UAW, automakers continue to discuss union demands DEARBORN - Bargainers for Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers continued yesterday to discuss the union's demand for a contract guaranteeing a set number of jobs in talks that face a midnight Monday deadline. "We have had discussions on job security and we have floated out some ideas we have," said Stanley Surma, Ford's chief negotiator. Bargainers are also discussing Ford's demand for a contract that gives Ford more flexibility in assigning and organizing workers, Surma said. But he added that bargainers are not "trading one for the other." Surma said talks also have included economic issues, but declined to be more specific. Meanwhile, General Motors Corp. Chairman Roger Smith said that no automaker could accept such a demand. "We have to make sure the contract that we sign is one we can live up to, not one that would bring false hopes," he said later. US to seek more Contra aid WASHINGTON - Secretary of State George Schultz, arguing that the alternative is a "communist victory" in Nicaragua, said yesterday the administration will ask Congress for $270 million in aid to the Contra rebels for an 18-month period. Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Shultz said additional aid to the Contras is the best insurance that Nicaragua will comply with the terms of the Central American peace agreement it signed last month in Guatemala. The announcement drew immediate criticism from a number of congressional Democrats and is certain to produce another round of heated debate on Capitol Hill over the administration's Central America policy. State plans to fight illiteracy LANSING - A million Michigan adults are illiterate or lack job skills and won't be able to find a job in the workplace of the future unless the state moves quickly to help them, a top Blanchard administration official warned yesterday. To combat the problem and prepare those workers for tomorrow's high-tech jobs, state government leaders will develop a plan to stamp out illiteracy, said Gary Bachula, director of the governor's Cabinet Council on Human Investment. A group of eight to 10 top administration officials will meet over the next six weeks to draw up a "comprehensive literacy action plan for the state of Michigan," Bachula said. Bear cubs to get a new home MISSOULA, Mont. - Wildlife officials say they hope to plant zoo- born grizzly bear cubs with hibernating black bears this winter in an experiment that may help restore the dwindling grizzly population in Montana's Cabinet Mountains. "It's never been tried before," said Chris Servheen, grizzly bear recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Missoula. "We don't know if it will work." The cubs are expected to come from two grizzlies now in the Detroit Zoo that were captured after they became too enamored of human settlements. They have shown signs of mating, and the sow may be pregnant, Servheen said. If the female produces cubs, he said, they could be put in a den with a hibernating female black bear in the Cabinet Mountains, in the far nortwest corner of Montana, to see if the black bear will raise them as her own. EXTRAS 'Ooh, Pope!' they squeal Imagine the Pontiff reclining on a yacht. Three gorgeous but scantily clad woman surround him, cooing and caressing. The Pope raises a can of beer and grins. You won't see this. Neither will you see any more "Pope McKenzie" T-shirts. A judge in San Antonio, Texas has halted sales of the shirts after Anheuser-Busch Inc..filed a law suit saying the shirts infringe on the trademark used to promote Budweiser Light beer. The "Pope McKenzie - The Original Vatican Animal" shirts are a takeoff on the "Spuds MacKenzie" bull terrier used by Annheuser- Busch. The T-shirts have been sold since April as souvenirs of Pope John Paul II's visit to Texas this Sunday. The restraining order was issued Tuesday and a hearing was set for four days after the visit. Attorneys Peter Shurr and Michael Lynch, who filed the suit for the St. Louis-based brewery, claimed the "Pope McKenzie" image would cause confusion among the public if associated with the Budweiser product. Judge Paul Rivera, who signed the order, also ordered the defendants to deliver to Anheuser-Busch all products bearing the spinoff character. If you see news happen,.call 76-DAILY. 0, bsritChtgan BatIVg Vol. XCVIII - No. 2 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$13in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. AIR IORCL RO-- - LEADERSHIP EXCELLENCE STARTS HERE i IT'S OUTRAGEOUS! (IT'S ALSO SUNDAY) 4 f t J. 1' )cv ;.':/ f. -. I I .4,,- f ,~ . ,'4, pI Y- .~ 4 44',:4 U-M's all campus yearbook mass meeting this Sunday, 1 p.m., at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St. People r4 'N Editor in Chief................ROB EARLE Managing Editor ............AMY MINDELL News Editor ..............PHILIP I. LEVY City Editor ..........................MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor........ ......MARTIN FRANK University Editor .............KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Vicki Bauer, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Jim Bray, Hampton Dellinger, Stephen Gregory, Edward Kleine, Steve Knopper, Carrie Loranger, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigman, Andrew Mills, Eugene Pak, Lisa Pollak, Melissa Ramsdell, Martha Sevetson, Steve Tuch, David Webster, Rose Mary Wumnmel. Opinion Page Editors.............PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK Assoc. Opinion Page Editor ...CALE SOL'11HWORTH OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzamnmil Ahmned, Rosemary Chinnock, Tim Huet, Josh Levin, Neal Mohan, Jeff Rutherford, Steve Semenuk, Mark Williams. 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