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Wuimd Cutoffs
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WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
government has delayed
cutting off federal funds to 39
Southern school districts
because of a controversial
Appeals Court desegregation
ruling, it
HEW
Finch's
was learned Monday.
Secretary Robert S.
order returning the
cases to federal hearing
examiners could result in
minimum delays of a month
and possibly substantial
postponement in processing
them, UPI was told.
Finch, in an order issued
last week, returned the cases to
the examiners, who originally
found the districts in violation
of the 1964 Civil Rights Act,
so they could take "further
action consistent with the
holdings of the decision" in a
Taylor County, Fla., case.
In that case, the 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals in New
Orleans ruled Aug. 5 that the
Health, Education and Welfare
Department must make
separate findings of
discrimination for each of the
2 3 different federal aid
programs a district might
receive.
Aoms Limit atio
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NEW YORK (UPI)- Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei A..
Gromyko is ready to announce
Russian agreement to begin
negotiations with the United
States on limiting strategic
arms, diplomatic sources
reported Monday.
They said the official Soviet
reply to U.S. proposals for
such talks probably would be
delivered to Secretary of State
William P. Rogers at an
informal dinner at the Waldorf
Towers last night.
Diplomatic sources
indicated that the Kremlin
favors holding the talks in
Helsinki, Finland, in
mid-October. Soviet newsmen
at the United Nations have
been spreading similar reports.
But qualified Soviet diplomats
would not confirm them prior
to the Rogers-Gromyko dinner.
U.S. diplomats were
expected to welcome a positive
Soviet response. Rogers
informed Soviet Ambassador
Anatolv F. Dobrynin in June
AUy. hreues
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The attorney general's
office is now recruiting student
staff members for the 1969-70
school year, according to Bob
Mosteller, attorney general.
Interviews for interested
students will be held Monday
through
Friday of next week,
in
Suite B. room 256 of tne
Student Union, between 2:00
and 5:00 p.m.
Work with the attorney
general's staff, Mosteller said,
involves both investigation and
defense counseling.
"As an investigator, the
staff member talks to all
concerned parties in a case,
attempting to determine
the
-ents
V 'JOB-
Is Hardly A Photogenic
Southern Schools
Up to now, HEW has cut off
all of a district's federal funds
on a finding of discrimination
in any one of the programs.
That was the way the
examiners had decided the 39
cases, involving nine Southern
states.
In a television interview
Sunday, Finch said. "Our
present disposition is to
appeal" and that he would not
cut off any more school
districts until the Supreme
Court ruled on the Taylor
County decision.
The Supreme Court, which
convenes Oct. 6 and holds its
first business session Oct. 13,
could act quickly on an appeal
if it felt speed was necessary
and the government, through
the Justice Department, had
appealed and urged prompt
consideration.
A Justice Department
spokesman' said, as of
midafternoon Monday, Finch
had not asked it to prepare an
appeal. The government has 90
days from the ruling to appeal.
Schools in Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Mississippi,
North and South Carolina,
that the United States was
ready to go ahead with the
negotiations after a thorough
U.S. review that began after
President Nixon took office.
The United States, for its
part, may want to haggle with
the Soviet Union over the site
for the talks. Washington
favors negotiating in either
Vienna, Austria, or Geneva,
Switzerland.
Additionally, the two
super-powers will have to agree
on various procedural matters,
and the formal agenda for
talks. It was speculated that
these issues could be raised in a
preliminary way between
Rogers and Gromyko.
To assist the U.S. secretary
of state, Gerard C. Smith,
director of the U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmament
Agency, was attending the
dinner. Smith has been named
by President Nixon to head the
U.S. delegation to the
projected talks.
Begin?
tuff
In ves ligu tors
involved. He presents his
findings to the appropriate
court at a hearing," Mosteller
explained.
"The job of defense
counsel," he added, "involves
informing the accused student
of his ' rights, ' protecting those
rights and helping the student
prepare for his hearing."
Mosteller emphasized the
need for students with judicial
ability, with commitment and
with sensitivity to work on his
staff.
"Without this type of
student, there is little chance
that any structural change in
the judiciary will succeed," he
said.
s . ,
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Photo by Mike McGowan
Spot From The
Tennessee, Texas and Virginia
were among the 39 cutoff cases
being delayed.
A HEW civil rights official
said he doubted the
reconsideration would result in
reversal of the earlier findings
of discrimination. But he
pointed out that some of the
districts might face losing less
money than they would have
under the original decision.
This would occur if a school
district was found to be
discriminating in some aid
programs, but not doing so in
others.
In all 39 cases, Finch or
HEW's civil rights reviewing
authority were considering
recommendations that the
school districts be cited for
non-compliance with the 1964
Act, the first step in cutting off
federal money. ; ; j
Film Group
Concerned
Over Site
David Sider, program
chairman for the UNC Film
Society, indicated concern
Monday over what some of the
society's members consider an
inadequate site for this year's
films.
The trouble stems from the
group's inability to obtain the
Great Hall of the Carolina
Union to show their films.
According to Sider, the flat
rate for reserving the Great
Hall is $20 a night.
The film society could not
afford that rate, said Sider,
especially since the Union
reserves the right to revoke a
reservation in the event
anything more important turns
up on a given night.
For these reasons the Film
Society reserved the Public
Health Auditorium instead of
the Great Hall. Sider said he
feared the Film Society might
lose monej' because of the
Health Auditorium's remote
location and small size.
Carolina Union Director
Howard Henry admitted there
had been some difficulty in
working out the cost of
reservations when members of
the Film Society talked with
him but denied that the Union
charges a flat rate. A strict
policy has yet to be formed on
reservation prices, he said.
Delayed
JOIN THE GENERAL SHERMAN'S
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MEXICO CITY (UPI)
Firemen used axes Monday to
retrieve bodies trapped in the
wreckage of a Mexican Airlines
jetliner that crashed into a
swampy lakebed Sunday night
on a flight from Chicago with
118 persons aboard.
Airline officials estimated at
least 25 persons dead and said
as many as three more bodies
were still in the wreckage.
Passengers of the ill-fated
transport included 60
American members of a travel
club.
It was the worst air disaster
in the history of the Mexico
Londonderry
arricades
Com in r Down
Londonderry, Northern
Ireland (UPI) Residents of
Londonderry's Roman
Catholic Bogside district began
dismantling barricades Monday
and replacing them with white
lines across the streets.
Troops stood by as eight
barricades were removed and
members of the Derry Citizens'
Defense Association painted
the white lines. There were no
incidents.
Monday morning police
issued three summonses were
in connection with alleged
action by Miss Devlin when she
took part in the Catholic
battles with police in the
Bogside area. No further details
of the summonses were
announced.
A police spokesman said
they had been unable to serve
the summonses because Miss
Devlin is reportedly traveling in
Europe.
Armed troops guarded the
city courthouse where a
three-man tribunal began
hearings Monday into the
causes of the riots in Northern
Ireland during July and August
in which nine persons were
killed and hundreds injured.
Justice Leslie Scarman, a
British high court judge,
ppened the inquiry with a
pledge that the tribunal will
disregard "political beliefs or
passions" and try to identify
the "responsibility."
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City airport. The dead and
injured were taken to five
different hospitals in the
capital making an accurate
check of casualties difficult.
Many Injured
One hospital alone, the
American-British institution,
said it had 53 injured there.
The district attorney's office
said at-least 80 persons aboard
the aircraft were injured.
The airliner, a Boeing 707,
pancaked into the lakebed 150
69 Bluebook
By HENRY HINKLE
DTH Staff Writer
The distribution of the Carolina Bluebook last week climaxed
three months of frantic efforts by an undermanned and
overworked staff.
The theme of the Bluebook,
type at Carolina, is "involvement."
According to Bluebook staff member William R. Brieger, the
"C.B." is more than just a directory of new undergraduates.
"The staffs intention was not to radicalize the new students,
but only to make them aware of their environment," he said.
The proposal to publish the Bluebook was not put to the
Publications Board until last month of spring semester by Doug
Morgan and Gregg Dearth, the 1969 Yackety-Yack editor.
Two weeks before the end of the semester, Morgan and Dearth
were given the final sanction for publication by Student
Government with the stipulation
publishing costs.
The stipulation left the Bluebook staf? without funds to mail
requests forms to new students.
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imm?
yards short of the runway and
split into three pieces.
Visibility at the time of the
crash was four miles with a
rainv cloud ceiling at 1.000
feet
The control tower at the
airport said the plane had
asked for and been given
permission to land.
''Everything was normal as
far as we were concerned," said
an official. A passenger said the
plane "hit some moderate
turbulence" as it was landing.
O
the first such publication of its
tht the book be able to meet
However the General
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SUPERSC0PE
He said the pilot had asked the
passengers to fasten their
seatbelts and then gunned the
engines. The jetliners nose
thrust upward but the tail
banged into the ground and
broke off, he said.
Begin Investigation
The Mexican Civil
Aeronautics Bureau began an
immediate investigation of the
crash. "All we know is that
there was no Tire," one official
said.
Passengers and crew aboard
vercame Obstacles
contributed enough money to
remaining costs were paid by subsfjribing students.
From the time the original letters were sent to incoming
freshmen and transfer students, Rochelle Stephens and Nancy
Lipton of the secretarial staff were burdened with the names and
pictures of 2,000 students, all of which had to be alphabetized
and laid out before the August
In discussing the prospects
said he hopes the publication
Student Government
Said Brieger, "Hopefully in
sen-ice done for all new students
Carolina's flag football
league will hold games this
Saturday at 1 p.m. and on all
following Saturday's that the
Tar Heels don't play at home.
Interested students should be
at the intramural fields then.
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scrambled through openings in
the fuselage and then made
their way through hip-deep
water to escape the possibility
of an explosion. But the plane
never caught fire.
U.S. officials said 60 of the
passengers were members of
Club Internationale, a vacation
savings club. They said 23 were
from Chicago and the balance
from various cities in the
midwest. Of these, five were
known dead and four missing.
meet initial expenditures.
The
deadline.
of next year's Bluebook. Briefer
will receive more support from
the future the Bluebook will be a
by Student Government."
All prospective baseball
candidates, freshman and
varsity, will meet Tuesday
night, at 7:30 in 304 Woollen.
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