.x J~ Fair Housing Ordinance Quest Enters New Stage By PHILIP SUTIN The quest of a fair housing ordinance is entering a new and decisive stage. The Ann Arbor City Council will meet with the Human Relations Board next Tuesday and on the following Monday the council may hold its first full-dress consideration of measure at its monthly working session. The question of housing discrimination has been a major issue in Ann Arbor politics in recent years. In April, 1960, HRC- council committee draft ordinance was presented to council and tabled. Eley Revises Motion Eighteen months later Democratic Councilman Lynn W. Eley introduced a revised version of the ordinance to council. On July 2, on the advise of the Human Relations Commission, this ordinance was also scrapped. "The commission has given careful consideration to this ordinance and because of procedural aspects therein does not recommend its adoption," HRC Chairman Paul Wagner told the council in a letter.0 However, the letter reiterated the HRC's stand favoring the need for such legislation. The HRC has been studying the problem for a number of years and on several occasions has publically stated its approval of a fair housing ordinance. An April 12, 1962 report of the HRC's housing committee asserts that housing discrimination does exist in Ann Arbor. Case Histories Cited "According to case histories accumulated by the Human Relations Commission, the University, the HOME Committee of the Life and Work Department of the Ann Arbor-Washtenaw Council of Churches, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, many Negroes have been forced to seek help in their search for housing from other than normal channels," the report stated. Two population study reports, one issued in 1961, the other this year, indicated that Ann Arbor's approximately 4100 non- whites are cramped into areas in the north-central part of town. Foreign students, the report added, are concentrated in an area bounded by Packard, E. William and Thompson Streets. "If the non-white population in Ann Arbor were evenly distributed throughout the residential area of Ann Arbor, there would be no more than two non-white families per square block. However, it is readily apparent . .. that there is a very heavy concentration in the center of the city and to a lesser degree in two contiguous north side areas," the report on "Population Distribution of Racial Minorities in Ann Arbor, 1950-1960," stated. Two Tracts Listed Census Tract Seven and Eight bounded by Seventh St. on the west, Summit St., the Ann Arbor Railroad tracks and the Huron River on the north, Glen St. on the east and Huron St. on the south have over 35 per cent Negro residents. Two continguous census tracks contain 10 to 20 per cent Negro residents. The rest of Ann Arbor has no more than two per cent Negro occupancy, the report said. According. to the 1962 report, tract seven has the densest Negro population. Thirty-eight and seven tenths of the area's population is Negro. The area has "more dilapedated and less sound housing than any other tract of the city," the report stated. The HRC's housing committee report claims that the cause of housing discrimination is economic. "The reason often expressed for discrimination is economic in nature. People fear the presence of a Negro-owned home wil produce a decrease in the value of other homes in adjacent areas," it said. Discount Economic Effects The report discounted this effect, citing studies in Kala- mazoo, Laurenti and other cities. Concluding its report, the HRC committee said, "At this point then the Commission and ultimately the City Council must determine whether to: See FAIR, Page 3 I NEW-MODEL OSA See Page 2 Y Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom I43aitii FAIR, COOL High--80 Low--58 Moderate weather today with little chance of rain VOL.LXXII, No. 13-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1962 SEVEN CENTS FOUR PAGES Board Approves Student Fee For Season Football Tickets House Approves Foreign Aid; Vote Backs Kennedy Proposal The University Board in Con- trol of Intercollegiate Athletics has ruled that students will have to pay a $1 handling charge for their season football tickets be- ginning this fall. In the past students have re- .. ceived football tickets for all home games free, as a privilege extended to those paying tuition for a full school program. Prof. H. O. "Fritz" Crisler, Uni- versity athletic director, explained that the new charge is designed to defer the cost of printing and handling the tickets. Only for "Full Students" This fee will apply to tickets of full program students only. Part time students and the husbands and wives of students will con- tinue to pay the $15 fee that they have in the past for season tickets. In the past the entire cost of tickets for full-time students was covered by the general University budget, Prof. Marcus Plant, of the law school, a member of the ath- letic board, explained. PROF. 'FRITZ' CRISLER ... a little charge NEED MONEY: May Resolve Long-Lasting Protocol Tiff WASHINGTON (W)-A new pro- posal for settling the protocol feud holding up the government's money bills in Congress was work- ed out by House and Senate lead- ers yesterday. There were some signs it will be accepted today. The deadlock developed three months ago when the House and Senate Appropriations Committees became involved in a dispute over procedure. Vice-President Lyndon B. John- son, who presides over the Senate, reportedly demanded a solution at a meeting this morning 'with members of the Senate group. To Meet Today Members of the House and Sen- ate committees will meet today to consider the compromise. It re- portedly has the advance approval of leaders in both branches of Congress. Chairman Carl Hayden (D-Ariz) of the Senate committee denied that he or the Senate had agreed to any compromise. Details of the proposal were not made public. It reportedly would be in effect only for this session of Congress. Subcommittees of the two appropriations committees would work on getting a perma- rient agreement for the new ses- sion next January. Compromise Conference One Senator said the compro- mise would permit a House mem- ber to preside at about half of the conference meetings where dif- ferences between the Senate and House on government spending are worked out. Heretofore, a Senator has presided. The agreement also would not give the Senate original jurisdic- tion over any of the annual money bills, he said. Senators had agreed earlier to yield half the chairmanships if the Commit tee Passes Tax Credit Plan WASHINGTON (M--Chances for passage at this session of a new tax bill remained alive yesterday as the Senate Finance Commit- tee completed approval of a tax- credit plan to encourage industrial modernization. This left as the only major question for committee action the proposal for increased taxation of United States profits earned abroad. Chairman Harry F. Byrd (D-Va) has announced that if the com- mittee does not complete its re- shaping of the tax bill by next Tuesday, he will lay it aside to take up the House-passed Trade Expansion Bill. Not Before Adjournment Such a move probably would' mean passage of a tax measure could not be completed before Congress adjourns in early fall. The House has passed a tax bill but it already has been dras- tically altered by the Senate Fi- nance Committee so that even after Senate passage considerable time probably would be required to reconcile the two bills. Another complicating factor in the clouded tax legislation out- look is the still-undecided ques- tion of whether President John F.' Kennedy will ask for a general tax cut this year. Kennedy Leans Administration legislative lieu- tenants have indicated Kennedy is leaning more strongly toward such a recommendation. If he makes it, a whole new area of time-consum- ing controversy will be opened. The Senate committee reaffirm- ed yesterday its 10-7 vote of Wed- nesday to retain a seven per cent tax credit proposal aimed at en- couraging industry to modernize its production and equipment. The finally adopted version differs in detail from that in the House bill but basically is what the Presi- dent asked. It would save industry an estimated $1.1 billion in taxes. The committee has eliminated the administration request-which the House approved-to set up the machinery to withhold 20 per cent of dividend and interest pay- ments, much as withholdings now are made from wages and salaries. Stahlin Sued For (>uitemnt The athletic department is fi- nancially independent from the University budget and receives a small amount from student fees toward the cost of student football tickets. The remaining income for the entire athletic department pro- gram comes from gate receipts; the vast majority coming from the sale of football tickets. Everything Rises Prof. Crisler notes that all of the athletic costs are increasing. This new charge is one means of covering some of the miscel- laneous expenses. A season ticket for any non- student would cost $5 per game. Thus the students are getting the entire home schedule for a $1 charge. This fall there will be five home games. In some years there have been as many as seven home con- tests. Pay-As-You-Go The athletic department must also pay each visiting team $.50 for each ticket sold, including stu- dent tickets whether or not they are used. Some "Big Ten" schools, in order to cut down this cost, require their students to pick up separate tickets before each game, and then pay the visiting team according to the number of tickets used by this method. Other schools also ration their student tickets, not allowing every student to see the entire home schedule. This is done because more income is made from tickets sold publicly than from those ap- portioned to students. The fact that the University has a 101,001 seat stadium has not made this practice necessary in order to meet the athletic budget here. Creates New Doctors' Group REGINA (P)--A royal commis- sion will be appointed to insure that doctors practicing during Saskatchewan Province's physi- cians' strike are not harassed or persecuted, Premier W o o d r o w Lloyd said yesterday. Lloyd said in a statement read by Deputy Premier J. J. Brockel- bank there has been an accumu- lation of evidence that the Sas- katchewan College of Physicians and Surgeons is seeking to exercise its policing powers under the med- ical professions act as "an offen- sive weapon against doctors who are not supporting the College's walkout." "The government is disturbed at the allegations that have been re- portedly made concerning physi- cians who have recently taken up practice in Saskatchewan," Lloyd said. ABRAHAM A. RIBICOFF ... hopeful resignation Quits To Run For Senate HARTFORD UP) - Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Abraham A. Ribicoff announced last night his resignation from the Cabinet and his candidacy for the Democratic nomination to the United States Senate from Con- necticut. He expressed hope the people of his home state will elect him to the Senate and let him remain there for the remainder of his public career, putting that ambi- tion above a possible seat on the United States Supreme Court. The formal announcement by Ribicoff had long been expected, but it had two unusual aspects. One was that a Cabinet member announced his resignation rather than having the President do so. Also, it was the first time that a Cabinet member used a television speech-a taped speech in this in- stance-as the vehicle for an- nouncing his resignation. "An hour ago I sent to Presi- dent John F. Kennedy my resig- nation as secretary of health, edu- cation, and welfare. I took this action so that I might announce my candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the United States Senate," Ribicoff said in his pre- pared speech. In Washington, Andrew T. Hatcher, the assistant White House press secretary, said there will be "no undue delay in announcing a successor." However, it was understood the White House might make no offi- cial announcement concerning the resignation until release this after-' noon of Ribicoff's letter and Ken- nedy's reply. Ribicoff had long made it clear he itnended to resign at about the time of the Connecticut Democrat- ic state convention so he could seek the Senate nomination. RETURNS TO ORAN: Ben Bella Asks A igerian Discipline ORAN WP)-Deputy Premier Ah- med Ben Bella returned trium- phantly to this West Algerian metropolis yesterday and declar- ed he wants to "wipe the slate clean"- of quarrels among nation- alist leaders. "We demand that the minorityI give way to the majority," BenE Bella told a mass meeting. "We want to bar the path of all those who wish to bring about an un- democratic regime." Ben Bella made it clear he wants single-party rule within the Na- tional Council of the Algerian Revolution. The council includes many of the Algerian officers who are bitterly opposed to the mod- erate regime of Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khedda. 'One Strong Organization' "The future must be protected by one strong, popular organiza- tion," Ben Bella said. "We must have a single, disci- plined party to achieve the aims of our revolution, not several par- ties. We will not permit a return to the sterile game of the old party system." "The army of national libera- tion provides a guarantee for the objectives of the revolution and its strength will discourage counter- revolution," he asserted. Socialist State Before Ben Bella spoke to the cheering Oran throng, Premier Ben Khedda, his political rival, appealed for unity in a speech be- fore a Moslem rally 60 miles out- side Algiers. "We must build a modern, so- cialist state; we will do so-thanks to the unity, discipline and obed- ience of the Algerian people," Ben Khedda said. In his Oran speech, Ben Bella stated: "We say 'yes' to unity, but only a unity that leaves the way openi to the goals of the revolution." Ben Bella's talk was his first major address since his return to Algeria after France proclaimed the North African nation inde- pendent. Ben Bella's aides dropped hints that talks in Rabat, Morocco, be-E tween the rival Algerian factions had failed to produce agreement.- These aides said Ben Bella may1 delay his trip to Algiers to meet the rest of the provisional govern- ment headed by Ben Khedda.- The army must be the rulingt party's instrument of power and, its protection against counter-E revolution, he said.I -AP Wirephoto TRIUMPHANT RETURN-Ahmed Ben Bella (center), dissident deputy premier of the Algerian nationalist regime, was greeted by a large crowd of friends and followers when he returned to Oran yesterday. Shortly after his arrival, Ben Bella delivered a speech calling for a single ruling party protected from counterrevolu- tion by a strong army. WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: Negroes Pass Voter Test; Senate Passes Drug Bill Loosen Rules On Assistance To Red States Conference Group To Consider Limit On Bond Purchase WASHINGTON UP)-The House passed yesterday a $4.7-billion foreign aid authorization bill giv- ing President John F. Kennedy a freer hand in helping Communist- dominated countries than the measure voted by the Senate. It will be up to a Senate-House conference to work out also what to do about a House-voted ban on any loans or grants to the United Nations until other members pay their share of peacemalsing o er- ations in the Congo and the Mid- dle East. The Senate version con- tains no such provision. The differences in the money totals voted for the fiscal year that started July 1 also will have to be reconciled in the conference. But there is little difference in the money ceilings provided in the two versions, $4,668,500,000 by the House and only $6.5 million less by the Senate. The administration originally requested $4,878,500,000. Restricted to Food The Senate wrote in language that would restrict aid to such countries as Yugoslavia and Po- land to surplus food. The House beat down similar proposals and went on to approve discretionary authority similar to that given to Kennedy's predecessors. Kennedy could provide the aid under broad guidelines, including a presidential finding that the aid would advance United States se- curity, that the aided country is not dominated by international Communism and that the help would promote the independence of the assisted state. The bipartisan effort to give the President a freer hand was by a standing vote of 277 to 4. This came after a similar vote of 201 to 44 defeated an amendment, by Rep. Thomas Feighan (D-Ohio) that would have permitted aid only if a country overthrew its Com- munist government. Drops Amendment Plan House leaders decided to drop plans to try and overturn Wed- nesday's 124-112 vote which wrote in the United Nations loan amend- ment. Instead they decided to re- ly on the Senate-House confer- ence to eliminate it. The Senate already has author- ized, in a separate measure, ap- propriations for a $100 million loan to the United Nations. The House Foreign Affairs Committee is ex- pected to approve a similar sep- arate authorization later this month. Another variation between the two versionsuthat the conference must work out relates to advance authority to finance the Alliance for Progress in Latin America. Total $600 Million Both versions approve $600 mil- lion for the current year. The Senate accepted the President's request for advanced authority for $800 million in each of the three years following. The House cut $200 million from each of the three years ahead, for a total re- duction of $600 million. By The Associated Press MONROE, La. - Twenty-eight Negroes from East Carroll Parish in Northeast Louisiana passed a voter qualification test held by a Feleral judge yesterday in the first proceeding of its kind under the 1960 Civil Rights Act. WASHINGTON - The Senate Judiciary Committee approved by a 15-0 vote yesterday a modified version of the Kefauver bill to tighten Federal controls over the prescription drug industry. * * * BRASILIA, Brazil - The Cham-' ber of Deputies was summoned in- to special session last night to vote on the cabinet nominations and government program of Prime Minister Francisco Brochado da Rocha. He had threatened to re- sign if he failed to organize a cabinet. Brazil's government crisis is re- ported to be the behind-the- scenes reason for the postpone- ment, announced earlier, of the Brazilian visit President John F. Kennedy planned for the end of July. WELLINGTON, New Zealand- Two Soviet dpilomats were expell- ed from New Zealand yesterday on charges of spying. Prime Minister Keith J. Holyoake told Parliament the government had "irrefutable proof" the two Russians triel to obtain secret defense information by offers of gifts and money. MOSCOW -- British, American, Canadian and Scandinavian dele- gates to the World Peace Con- gress plan a "ban-the-bomb" march in Moscow today despite a Soviet refusal to permit it. NEW YORK-The stockrmarket steadied and showed renewed strength late yesterday. At 2 p.m. the Dow-Jones average of 30 in- dustrials was up 3.10, while the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index also resumed its advance. WASHINGTON-Lengthy ques- tioning of Thurgood Marshall about NAACP activities brought, protests yesterday from several senators at a hearing on his nomi- nation to be a Federal circuit 'TWO WARRING CAMPS': Burg Examines Soviet Literary Trends By EARL POLE "Present day conflicts in Soviet' literature resemble the Cold War, on a smaller 'Interliterary front'," David Burg of Harvard University, said yesterday, in his lecture on "Current Soviet Literary Politics," one of an interdepartmental lec- ture series on the USSR. The term "Literary Politics" re- The conflict between these two schools of thought resembles the cold war only superfically, in that the liberals derive some of their ideals from the Western world. The conservatives, reaffirm the Eastern principle of restrictive dictator- ship. The real basis for the split is the "internal contradictions pres- point contained opposition to the trend in recent Soviet literature towards too much social criticism and individualism. The conserva- tives blamed such literary patterns on the "bourgeois" influences of the West. Consequently, the con- servatives are for lessening of the cultural exchange program. Seek More Independence room