IKE WARNS US OF 'BIG SPENDERS' See Page 2 Y Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom 4Ia ityi HUMID Hligh--73 Low--46 Sticky today, Chance of showers. vi VOL. LXXII, No. 6-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. JULY 3.1962 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGS i i rJUK6 rtlkxr a 3 Algerian Civil War Looms As Moslem Leaders Split City Council Rejects Plan For , Housing Ordinance By The Associated Press ALGIERS - Algeria was threat- ened with fratricidal civil war last' night as rebel units of the victor- ious nationalist army turned against theirs moderate civilian leaders. Regular Algerian troops seized key positions for defense against any armed uprising by the rebels. French officials said about 4500 armed fighters supporting disident Deputy Premier Ahmed Ben Bella, a foe of continued ties with France, have massed south of Algiers. Heavily armed troops under or- ders of the nationalist government of Ben Youssef Ben Khedda took over official buildings in Algiers, prepared to react quickly to a dissident attack. Military Support The move by Premier Ben Khed- da's forces apparently had the support of the French military command. France hopes that Al- geria, which overwhelmingly (99.6 per cent) voted Sunday to end 132 years of French rule, will CIVIL STRIFE-Youssef Ben Khedda (left) is faced with the threat of a civil war as he prepares to take over governmental machinery in Algeria. United'Arab Republic President Gamal Ab- dul Nasser (right) urged Moslems in Algeria to cease their internal fighting. WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: toview Disarmament; NAACP SetsPicketing WASHINGTON-The Western powers taking part in the 17-na- tion Geneva disarmament conference plan a general review of their disarmament proposals before the conference resumes July 16. United States officials said preliminary talks among United States, British, Italian and Canadian disarmament experts will probably get under way in Washington late this week. * * * * ATLANTA-The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People voted resoundingly yesterday to picket segregated ho- tels here as its convention gained maintain strong ties with France. Some quarters also fear Ben Bella's call for a socialist state in view of the huge French invest- ments in Algeria. Ben Khedda has arranged with Paris for the French government to proclaim Algeria's independence tomorrow, officially ending more than seven years of bloody struggle against France for self determina- tion in the Moslem land. To Confer Today Ben Khedda is to arrive in Al- giers during the day from Tunnis where his rebel government in exile directed the Algerian revolt against the French. Observers said they hope Ben Khedda's authority and prestige may swing wavering elements of the 60,000-man na- tionalist army to his side and thus prevent bloodshed and turmoil. From Tunis, Ben Khedda called for national unity and indirectly denounced Ben Bella and his fol- lowers for their defiance of gov- ernment policies. Ben Khedda said the Algerian people will never "listen to demagogues and will never give obedietnce to adven- turers." The grave developments came as thousands of Moslems paraded chanting and cheering through Algeria's cities and towns, cele- brating their new independence. Nasser Steps In Meanwhile, in Cairo, President Gamal Abdul Nasser of the United Arab Republic called on Tunisia and Morocco to join him in trying to avert Moslem conflict in Al- geria. He said he had received mes- sages from Ben Khedda and Ben Bella and had sent replies. Ben Bella had opposed Khedda's order dismissing the Algerian nationalist army chief of staff, a supporter of Ben Bella. Ben Bella then fled from Tunis to Tripoli. One well-informed source said in Algiers high French naval of- ficers met early yesterday to dis- cuss possible emergency evacua- tion of French troops and civilians in case of an outbreak of civil war. French President Charles de Gaulle had planned to make the proclamation by tomorrow. The sudden army revolt raised a possi- bility that the proclamation might be delayed, thus making French military action against the Ben Bella forces at least theoretically possible. From 50,000 to 60,000 French troops are believed stationed with- in a 50-mile radius of Algiers. They have been confined to bar- racks since Sunday, except for oc- casional patrols. In other developments, a State De'partment official said the Unit- ed States will soon "recognize Al- geria as an independent nation," while Britain is also expected to grant official recognition, al- though not in the immediate fu- ture. NEA Leader Fears Unions DENVER ()-The executive secretary of the National Educa- tion Association said' yesterday that organized labor is spending heavily to unionize public school teachers, a move which he said could destroy the 812,000-member association. Carr said the education organ- ization's board of directors has given highest priority to strength- ening membership and services in the nation's big cities. It is in the metropolitan areas that the labor unions have made their largest gains in the teaching ranks. CECIL O. CREAL . joins the vigilantes Ann Arbor May Join Tax Group Ann Arbor tentitively added it- self to the critics of Detroit's in- come tax last night as the City Council approved Mayor Cecil 0. Creal's plans to investigate aiding the Vigilance Tax Committee of suburban Detroit mayors. Creal said that a number of local residents who worked in Detroit had complained about the tax and had asked for city hall help in the matter. "I would ask that my office, and the office of the city attorney, check with' the suburban organiza- tion to find out if there is any, help that we can give in its legal protest and especially if it has to go to the Supreme Court for de- cision," Creal said. Group Thwarted The Vigilance Tax Committee's legal efforts to invalidate the tax hit a snag yesterday when Wayne County Circuit Judge Neal E. Fitz- gerald upheld the tax as con- stitutional. Fitzgerald called the tax, which went into effect Sunday, "an ex- cise. I find no invalidity or un- constitutionality in the act." He also upheld the right of Detroit to tax non-residents work- ing in the city, a sore point with most of the tax's critics. No Study Democratic Councilman Lynn Eley called Creal's decision pre- mature, saying that the Council had not studied the impact of the tax on Ann Arbor residents or the effects of its action on other Com- munities. He called the city income tax regressive and said that a g tate income tax would better the state and its cities. But, he said "as long as their is mal-apportionment of the State Senate, cities will con- tinue to suffer discriminatory practices in taxation and fiscal matters. Meanwhile, Detroit's mayor Jer- ome P. Cavanagh expressed satis- faction with the Circuit Court de- cision, validating the city income tax. Confident Cavanagh eI am gratified that the city's arguments in favor of the income tax ordinance prevailed in Circuit Court. I had the utmost confidence that the validity of our arguments would be sustained on the basis of law," Detroit's mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh declared. Berkley mayor George W. Kuhn, head of the suburban Vigilance Tax Committee, which brought suit against the Detroit tax, said his committee of suburban m, ;ors will meet Saturday in Pleasant Ridge to determine whether yes- terday's decision will be appealed to the state Supreme Court. GENEVA (IP)-Red China yesterday accused the United States of worsening the entire Southeast Asia situation by sending troops to Thailand and by increasing "armed intervention" in South Viet Nam and the Formosa Strait. Chinese delegate Chang Han Fu, backed by the North Vietnamese delegate, made the charges at the opening of a new session of the 14-nation Laos conference. W. Averell Harriman, United States As- sistant Secretary of State for Fart Eastern Affairs, protested that the Ace conference rules had been broken by raising an issue not involving Laos. Out of Order From Reds Turning to North Vietnamese. delegate Hoang Nguyen, Harriman VIENTIANE (IP-The new Lao- said the question was out of order "just as it would be for me to tian coalition government yester- raise the question of foreign mili- day gave tentative approval to aI tary personnel who are well known $600,000 aid offer from the Soviet to be present in North Viet Nam Union and decided to recognize, as wel a,, Certain oth.r ni hbor- I ing countries." Red Chinese units have been reported stationed in North Viet' Nam. The North Vietnamese repre- sentative insisted the success of the conference was "seriously threatened by the presence of United States troops in Thailand." No Pretext The Chinese delegate said the original American motive for send- ing the troops into Thailand was an "utterly groundless pretext" and said their presence "poses a threat not only to Laos but to all. its neighboring countries." Thai Ambassador Derek Jayan- an said the presence of United States and SEATO troops was purely defensive. "My country seeks no advantage from the situation in Laos . . . it only seeks to protect itself," Jay-. anan said. Delegate Work After the flareup, the delegates unanimously agreed to leave the main part of the negotiations on Laos to the conference co- chairmen, Britain and the Soviet Union. No date was set for a new conference session. But the general feeling clearly was that a failure, or even a great delay of the conference was un- likely now that the three feuding Laotian factions are united in a single government of national unity. five more Communist countries. The acting premier, pro-Com- munist Prince Souphanouvang, also indicated that American pris- oners held by his -Pathet Lao forces would be released a few days after the 14-nation Geneva' conference agrees on a Laotian treaty, United States embassy sources reported. The Geneva conference, barring complications, is expected to have a treaty by mid-July. Souphanouvang, addressing a meeting of government department' heads, said the coalition regime will accept "unconditional aid" from all countries. The United States announced following forma- tion of the coalition regime that it was resuming its monthly $3 million aid payments. The decision to recognize Red China, Poland, Czechoslovakia, North Viet Nam and East Germany raised the prospect of a break in relations with three anti-Red re- gimes: West Germany, Nationalist China and South Viet Nam. Claims Band Enters Cuba MIAMI (P)-An Anti-Castro or- ganization leader said last night "20 specially trained guerrilla ex- perts penetrated Cuba's coastal defenses to land in the province of Matanzas." Frank Fiorini, an American re- portedly heads the international anti-Communist brigade, said an all-Cuban exile group made a landing from a 40-foot boat on, the northern coast of the province, east of Havana, "to support and extend anti-Castro uprisings in that area." Matanzas has become a trouble spot for the Fidel Castro regime, which sent troops recently to Car- denas to cope with anti-govern- ment demonstrators. PRINCE SOUPHANOVONG ... deals with Russia DISTRICTING: Nielson Veto IOverridden By The Associated Press MADISON-An embittered Re- publican majority in the Wisconsin Senate overrode last night Demo- cratic Gov. Gaylord Nelson's veto of a GOP-sponsored plan to re- apportion the state's legislative and congressional districts. .The plan was worked out in a special session called after a panel of three federal judges ruled it would assume supervision of the redistricting unless the lawmakers got on with the job. The issue was taken into the courts by Atty. Gen. John Rey- nolds, leading Democratic candi- date for governor, when the law- makers failed to act during their regular session last year. The state's constitution requires re- districting after each decameral federal census. The Senate overrode Nelson's veto on a straight party line vote of 19-8. However, the proposal to override the veto must be approved in the Assembly by a two-thirds vote before the plan could become law. In the similar situation in Mich- igan, the state Supreme Court is continuing to study the suit by AFL-CIO state president August Scholle to force a reapportion- ment, although the court took no definite action yesterday. LAOS CONFERENCE:. China, U.S. Trade Charges Committee ToPrepare New 'Draft' HRC Recommends Careful Analysis Of 'Fair Practices' By PHILIP SUTIN The Ann Arbor City Council last night accepted the recommenda- tion of its Human Relations Com- mission and junked a non-dis- crimination housing ordinance proposed by Democratic Council- man Lynn Eley, but took steps to draft its own ordinance. The Council decided to meet with the commission next week, then consider an ordinance at its monthly session July 23. By a 6-4 vote, the Council re- jected a proposal of Councilwom- an Eunice Burns to set up a com- mittee of three Council members, two Human Relations Commission members, the city attorney and Mayor Cecil O. Creal to prepare a rough draft of a fair housing ordi- nance by July 23. Debate Timing Mrs. Burns noted the importance of the measure and said it ought to be worked out before the work- ing session. Creal, however, declared "I think it is proper to have the meet- ing first." "The commission has given careful consideration to this ordi- nance and because of objections to certain procedural aspects therein does not recommend its (Eley's) adoption by Council," HRC Chairman Paul Wagner said in a letter to the Council. Action Needed "However, the commission be- lieves that the Council should take the steps deemed necessary for the adoption of a fair housing ordi- nance to eliminate discrimination in housing in Ann Arbor," the let- ter continued. It said that since the HRC was charged with studying the Eey proposal, it could not recommend a specific ordinance, but it would be willing to work with the Coun- cil in devising one. The Eley ordinance, referred for study to the HRC last Nov. 13, barred discrimination in the rent- ing and selling of multiple hous- ing developments of four or more units, single family units in oub- licly financed housing or by finan- cial institutions. Go to HRC An aggrieved party would com- plain to the HRC which wuld in- vestigate the complaint, attempt a conciliatory settlement, hold pub- lic hearing on it and issue if neces- sary a cease and desist order. Tf this werenotheeded,the HRC, under the Eley proposal, would take its case to the City Council for appropriate action. Rooms rented in private homes and religiously sponsored housing would be exempted from the Eley proposal provisions. In 1960, a joint committee of the commission and the Council worked out a draft for a fair hous- ing ordinance. It was less elabor- ate than the Eley proposal and did not refer to Council as a final course of action. Hear Charges On 'U' Project For Housing The Ann Arbor City Council last night heard two letters complain- ing about the undesirability of the Oxford Rd. women's housing proj- ect now under construction, and was told that the city can do noth- ing about it. Mrs. D. Hall said that the 42G- inhabitant project would create dangerous traffic problems around nearby Angell Elementary School. She also wrote that the project would spoil the neighborhood by driving its current residents away and making it prey of rooming Warns Russia To Aid China If Attacked By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Soviet Premier Ni- kita S. Khrushchev ignored his ideological differences with Red China yesterday and pledged the Soviet Union will fight anyone who attacks that vast country. Referring to the tension be- tween Chiang Kai-Shek's Formo- sa and mainland China, Khrush- chev said: "Now we declare once again: He who dares to attack the Chinese People's Republic will meet a crushing rebuff from the great Chinese people, the peoples of the Soviet Union, the entire Socialist camp." No Doubts "And let no one," he added, "have any doubts on this score." However, Secretary of State Dean Rusk said "it shouldn't sur- prise anyone" that Khrushchev has committed Russia to backing Communist China in case of at- tack. "If the Sino-Soviet security pact means anything, it would seem to mean that," Rusk said in response to reporters questions about Khrushchev's statement on the re- newed military maneuvering in the Formosa Strait. Optimistic on Europe Commenting after a lengthy meeting with the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rusk saw no insoluble problems to prevent the "writing of a new chapter" by the Atlantic community. Rusk said his discussion with Western leaders in the last two weeks left him "convinced that NATO and the commitments to the alliance are solid and strong." Wishes To Cut y 'CjartP TFnitg. impetus with a call for full citizen- ship. REGINA - Emergency medical centers, many staffed by physi- cians on a voluntary and no-fee basis, operated throughout Sas- katchewan last night amid a doc- tors' strike against this province's two-day-old compulsory medical insurance plan. TOKYO-Final returns yester- day gave Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda's Liberal-Democratic party a decisive victory in Sunday's upper house election. LONDON-Fugitive spy Robert Soblen gained strength against his will with every passing hour yes- terday following an unsuccessful suicide attempt, but remained too weak to travel immediately. WASHINGTON - The Senate passed and sent to President John F. Kennedy late yesterday a com- promise sugar act extension bill increasing the share of the Ameri- can market allotted United States growers. * * * NEW YORK-The stock market closed yesterday with its third con- secutive decisive advance. Stand- ard & Poor's 500-stock index was up .99 to 55.74. IST To Assist in Analysis OfArms Treaty Violations The Institute of Science and Technology will take part in a study to analyze "The types of violations and their consequences" in an arms control system, Norman Thoburn of the IST said last night. Most of the work, however, will be done by the Ann Arbor-located Bendix Systems Division, as it received a $95,000 contract from 4,the United States Arms Control land Disarmament Agency re- Tcently. rThe IST will probably start in W. AVERELL HARRIMAN ... explains the rules I r 'MASS MEDIOCRITY': Graf Cites Methods in Exceptional' Education By DENISE WACKER one of the most effective means of strengthening United States educa- There is a mounting fear that mass education, necessitated not tion, Graf said. only by an increasingly large population, but also by the need for "Honors programs were usually established for departments, and sknlyedyorkerinesinglyspcalizfiep ldsntilsuythnsacrificing generally were dependent upon high grade-point averages. However, skilled workers in highy specialized fields, will result in srthere has been growing awareness that boredom takes its toll in many quality education for "mass mediocrity." cases; often college means a quest for grades rather than a quest for is is especial true o arge p excellence. This has also marked honors programs. selective processes are more restricted than in private schools and col- leges."But, today at the University, there is a marked emphasis on However, the assumption that such "mass mediocrity" will occur excellence, not on grades," Prof. Graf asserted. ipa .. n .-.-.nA[ for . *iv "Pxoentinal" Problems of Selection next week on the new project, Thoburn said, as four men will attempt-with much of the work in mathematics-to analyze the military responses of treaty viola- tions Bendix Aspect Bendix will study the relation- ships between the type of defense the United States needs underj any disarmament agreement, as' well as view the possible viola-! tions in an overall political, mili-1 tary and economic context. Sample agreements which might is raise, since already provisions are Deng mae 10-LitCAVoUIa student not only in college, but for those still in high school or at lower levels, Honors Council Director Otto Graf said yesterday. He declared that the theory of honors courses raises several major problems. Among these perhaps the most difficult to resolve is selec- F