Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 21, 1971, edition 1 / Page 4
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Th& Daily Tef Heel Wednesday, April 2T. 1971 T T I If n ! i (rA nYn (TT)ilTlTrir i j G 1L i V 1 petition WASHINGTON To shouts of "right on, brother from antiwar protestors in combat fatigues, Sens. Mark O. Hatfield, R-Ore., and George S. McGovern, D-S.D., urged! Tuesday .that. Congress, end U.S. involvement in Indochina by Dec, 31 as unconstitutional and morally wrong. - More than 1 00 members of Vietnam Veterans Against The War, in the capital for a week of demonstrations, crowded into the hearing room of the Senate Foreign - Relations Committee, . which began study of eight bills all proposing to end the war. . - , China to send pliayers to U.S. . D ETRO IT-Communist China has accepted an invitation to send a group of table tennis players to the United States; Graham- Steenhoven, president of the U.S. Table Tennis Association, announced.Tuesday. Steenhoven,- who led a 15-member U.S. table tennis contingent on a tour of Red China last week, said details of the trip were not yet firm. But he said the visit would take place perhaps in, the next 12 months. "I am pleased and honored" to announce that the Table Tennis Assocation of the Peoples Republic of Red China, through its acting President Mr. Song Chung, has graciously accepted the invitation of the U.S. Table Tennis Vets DUKE UNIVERSITY HOOF 'N HORN CLUB -' - ' ' ' " Presents - The Southern Premiere Of The Broadway Musical Comedy Book By Arthur Laurents ' . Music & Lyrics By Stephen Sandheim Page Auditorium 8:30 P.M. Duke West Campus - , Tickets: $2.75 $2.50 $2.25 .Call Page Aud. Box Office 684-4059 . .-- '.-- " Or Write B6x KM Duke-Station 0urham, 27706. ; r r, .. (Please Make Checks Payable To Hoof 'N Horn Clubn . - l Enclose Stamped. Self-Addressed Envelope Luxurious-- . '" strolling. n;;:Pffl!Q: : 2: 00-3: 40-5: 20-7: 05-9: 00 With Rock Hudson on Oalo:lumEr Q i t JL E Id flLH i 1 i A 3D Hi i II I'x-i i ii r Congress The protestors, some of whom wore campaign ribbons on their chests, gave McGovern a standing ovation of cheers, whistles and shouts, and they hissed and booed Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-NJ., when he questioned McGovern critically. - , "I submit that America will be a greater, more self-confident and more respected nation if . . .'we' exercise our 'constitutional responsibilities to terminate support for a war that we know . is wrong, McGovern testified. - A-----yyv.-'-'-----'.- mews Association to visit the United States," Steenhoven told a news conference. - ' He said State Department officials in 'Tokyo had assured .him before his contingent went to Communist China that the U.S. government would expedite visas for the Chinese group. Israel seeking U.S. assurances Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said Tuesday Israel was asking the United States for guarantees that Russian and Egyptian troops would not cross the Suez Canal if Israel makes a partial withdrawal in an effort to defuse, the newest Mideast crisis. The new crisis blew up when Egypt, Syria and Libya " formed an Arab Federation to consolidate their strength i97?TO LW-4:30-7:3(397 BREADED VEAL CUTLET - ; Two Vegetables & B read 97$ Back of the Olroig? I 1 Busing upheld to achieve integration WASHINGTON The Supreme Court issued four major decisions Monday upholding busing to achieve school integration and establishing up-to-date new guidelines for the courts to follow. The decision were unanimous. All were written by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. The key opinion came in a North Carolina case where the state had challenged a federal district judge's order that busing be increased in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg area to bring about racially balanced schools. Burger said transfers were an integral part of many desegregation plans and "to be effective such a transfer arrangement must grant the transferring student free transportation."" The court upheld zone pairings and a certain amount of deliberately imposed "racial balance" if needed to eliminate '"all vestiges of state-imposed" se ion. b riefs against Israel and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat announced there would be no more negotiations with Israel, no abandoning of one inch of Arab territory, and no relinquishing of bargaining on thei Palestine question. It began growing last week when the United States disclosed that the Soviet Union had begun supplying Egypt with . new MIG23 planes said to be able to outperform the American F4 Phantom. . Israeli military sources said Soviet technicians have begun building a naval ., base at.Mersa Matruh, 170 miles west of ; Alexandria, Egypt. The New York Times reported the United States is in the process of.; delivering 12 more F4s to Israel and is i considering Tel Aviv's requests for more. - L " ' " WToemnm, w.. ....fin rf , m "TT :-th Vtj) rH- the 0 I t': S3 :IiV - 2 ? SATURDAY APRIL 24 IN WALLACE WADE STADIUM i - TICKETS $6.00 Advanced Sale. These May Be Purchased At The Student Union Information Desk At UNC And On The Main Quad At Duke. $7.00 At The Gate; An ID Card Must Be Presented With The Purchase Of One Pair Of Tickets. - - (One ID Per Couple) t 1. 1 97f Zoom r- : . -J Of : ' " ' '- El !B !3 030 1 fill - "School authorises have wide discretion in formulating school policy, Burger wrote, "and, as a matter of educational policy school authorities may well conclude that some kind of racial balance in the schools is desirable quite apart from any constitutional requirements. "However," Burger said, "if a state-imposed limitation on a school authority's discretion operates to inhibit or obstruct the operation of a unitary school system or impede the disestablishing of a dual school system, it must fall. "State policy must give way when it operates to hinder vindication of federal constitutional guarantees, Burger ruled. " "That . requirement, against the background of segregation, would render illusory the promise of the original school 1954 desegregation decision." In the North Carolina opinion, the court upheld in its entirety the district Polluter sought VIRGINIA BEACH, Va.-The Coast Guard said Tuesday it was investigating . the source of a "heavy, black oil" spill in the Atlantic Ocean that possibly could be swept ashore at this coastal resort by evening tides. A spokesman at the 5th Coast Guard District Headquarters in nearby Portsmouth said samples of the spill, v-which measured one mile long by a , ;half-mile wide, would be compared with 'samples from merchant marine vessels in a the area to determine its source. THE COMMITTEE OF DUKE 1 1 ) JL" o FEATURING Only $4.0fA Day,$.04 AMfle (BUT YOU MUST CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. plirham 544-371 1 Dir No. court's orders requiring the busLn of 23, COO core children thin had teen transported the previous year. Ke had been reversed on busing younger pu piles by the 4 th U.S. Crcuit Court of Appeals. The opinion noted: "An objection to transportation of students may fcave validity ' when the time or distance of travel is so great as to risk either the health of the child or significantly impinge on the educational process." District courts, it added, "must weigh the soundness of any transportation plan" in light of today's guidelines. Mills asks minimum wase hike WASHINGTON-Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, opened a drive by House Democrats Tuesday to raise the hourly minimum W2ge from $1.60 to $2 for nine million workers as early as 1972. Mills got the jump on Speaker Carl Albert by introducing legislation for the higher minimum effective Feb. 1, 1972-a year earlier than previously proposed by House Democratic leaders. The legislation went to the House Labor Committee which opened hearings on a higher federal wage floor under the chairmanship of subcommittee Chairman John E. Dent, D-Pa., who also has House approves RALEIGH The House Tuesday amended and then gave its overwhelming approval to a Senate bill that would make North Carolina the "first southern state with a . binding presidential preference primary election. If the Senate concurs in the amendment, North Carolina will become the 18th state with a presidential popularity contest. UNIVERSITY PRESENTS ITS lliLs jzas Liza TDOOK COWCEK GESATEFlit" : D2AD THE O Rent AT-Bird $8.00 A Day, $.08 A Mile BRING THIS AD) 01 1885 Chapel Hill 942-31431 4 Besides the cases involving Qurlotte-MecUnburg and the North Carolina tusir. law, the court decided two cases from Georgia and Alabama. The Georgia Supreme Court struck down on June 15 a plan by the Clarke County, Ga., board of education for cross-busing of white and black children. Burger, reversuig the state supreme court, held that the school board "as port of its affirmative duty to disestablish the dual school system, properly took into account the race of its elementary school children in drawing attendance lines." proposed a 1973 date for a $2.00 wage. MiUs gave two reasons for proposing an earlier date. He said it would give a boost to the economy by creating more spending power and cut back on the proposed federal costs of assisting low income working families under the welfare reform bill now being written in "Mills' committee. . House Democratic leaders rapport a bill to raise the $1.60 wage to SI. SO in January and to $2.00 in 1973 for non agricultural workers. For farmworkers, the minimum would go from $1.30 to $1.50 on Aug. 1, 1971, and to $1.60 on Jan. 1972 under their plan. primary bill The bill would allow the names of at least four presidential hopefuls to be included in the May 2, 1972, primary election ballot to determine their popularity among Tar Heels. The winning candidate would receive the majority of votes from state delegates attending the national convention. The delegates would be bound to the first ballot only, then could vote as they pleased. 1LU Luncheon Special 11:33AJ.1.-2:29P:M. BEEFPARMAGIANA with Spaghetti $.97 ipr mm mm r- n f " I I'- - I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 21, 1971, edition 1
4
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