VIETNAMESE POLITICS FROM KY TO THIEU See editorial page ( lP A&~ Stitrujau &1113Jii PARTLY CLOUDY High-82 Low-57 Chance of showers late tonight Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGE 'U' Towers Initiates Straight 8-Month Rent Policy Novel Lease First To Hit Ann Arbor *k Manager Remodels Building To Prepare For Fall Occupancy By JENNY STILLER University Towers is initiating an eight-month lease with no premium payments this fall. The new rental policy, the only one of its kind in Ann Arbor, is the result of a change in owner- ship of the apartment building. Usually, student renters must sign a 12-month lease or pay 10 ' months rent for the privilege of signing an eight-month contract. The policy is one of many changes being made by the new management, which is also giving the building a face-lifting to be completed and ready for occu- pancy in late August, according to University Towers' new man- ager, Robert Ward. Changes will include improved sound-proofing, re-carpeting and re-painting of halls, completely new furniture in the rooms, and improved lighting in the lobby. In addition, the lobby is being re- modeled and study and reading rooms are being constructed. Ownership of the 240-unit building changed July 1 when Northwestern Mutu5A Life Insur- ance Co. bought out its co-owner, Towne Realty. The building will be managed by Student Inns, Inc., a subsidiary of O'Meara, Chand- ler and Benson of Houston, Tex- as. Student Inns and its sister-or- ganization, University Inns, man- age ten student apartment build- ings in seven states. "Our theme is 'excellence in educational liv- ing," Ward explained, "and we really believe in it." The eight-month lease is in line with the management's policy that students should not be re- quired to pay for apartment fac- ilities during the time they can- not use them, according to Ward. "There will be no subleasing or subletting in 'U' Towers," Ward said. "Instead, we will take the responsibility of renting in the summer. We offer only four- month and eight-month contracts, and none for the entire year. Returning residents, who pre- viously paid ten-month prices for eight-month leases, as well as those who had twelve month con- tracts, will also be included in the new policy. Ward said no con- tracts have been signed yet for the fall since policy has been to i mail them out during the sum- mer. Although the building has filled only about 50 per cent of its capa- city to date, Ward predicts "that by the fifteenth of August we will be sold out." The effect of the eight-month lease policy on the student rental situation in Ann Arbor remains uncertain. The rental agent for Huron Towers, while admitting that the "U" Towers policy will be "nice for the students," said that "it has nothing to do with us. It will make no difference in our rentals." Ron West, manager of Packard Avenue Apartments, said that his buildings "were the first to offer an eight-month lease." He added that residents there pay ten months rent for the privilege. NEWS WIRE j y The Associated Press DRAFT CALLS of 25,000 men for September were issued by the Pentagon yesterday, the second highest monthly manpower order this year. The September call was a 4,000 man drop from August. All the September inductees will gq into the Army. "This request," the Pentagon said, "supports previously plan- ned and announced force levels and will assure a timely flow of replacements for men completing their terms of service.' ATTY. GEN. FRANK KELLEY said yesterday he believes the courts will uphold Michigan's new income tax bill and will rule that it is not subject to a popular referendum. Kelley's prediction was in a letter to Sen. George Kuhn (R-Birmingham) who earlier yesterday introduced a resolution calling on the Senate to seek Kelley's opinion on the constitutionality of the bill. The Legislature tried to make the tax bill referendum- exempt by including a $3 million appropriation to the state budget bureau which would make it not subject to a referendum petition drive. Kelley further said the tax bill is constitutional in exemp- ting a flat $1,200 per-dependent from taxable income and in taxing income of persons and corporations at different rates (2.6 and 5.6 per cent respectively). VIETNAM SUMMER PROJECT in Ann Arbor will hold a mass meeting at the Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw on Mon- day at 7:00 p.m. Door-to-door leafletting in the Burns Park area will follow the general orientation session. THE UNIVERSITY MEN'S GLEE CLUB will return to Ann Arbor on Monday, a day earlier than scheduled due to the can- cellation of a stop-over at New York City. A telegram received from the Glee Club, presently in Wales competing for the cham- pionship for male choirs today, said they will return to Detroit Metro Airport on American Airlines flight 153, Monday at 11:38 p.m. The club completed a tour of Scandinavia and is now com- { peting in the International Musical Eisteddfod, where it is the only United States singing group ever to have won the world's championship twice. * * * * DEAN WILLIAM HABER of the literary college and profes- sor of economics yesterday praised the newly revamped Michigan tax structure. "Michigan is to be congratulated at having fin- ally, after years of pointless controversy, established a basis that can, genuinely be called tax reform." The tax reform package provides for levies of 2.6 per cent on personal income tax, 5.6 per cent on corporations and 7 per cent on financial institutions. * * * * NEW YORK'S CONSTITUTIONAL convention has agreed to place the question of lowering the voting age to 18 years of age on the calendar of pending propositions starting next Tues- day. The proposal was sent to the convention floor by a Demo- crat-controlled committee without recommendation after Re- publicans attempted unsuccessfully to keep the age at 21. The convention president, Anthony Travia (D-Brooklyn), said he thought the measure would pass, and be placed before the state's voters on the constitutional referndum. Kentucky and Georgia currently are the only states permitting voting at age 18; Alaska permits residents to vote at 19, Hawaii at 20. * * * * * * * * * House Rejects Increases In Education Budget Bill PassesRomney'A js ~ Apro priations House, Senate Look for Compromise Around $60 Million for 'U' Budget BY WALLACE IMMEN Special To The Daily LANSING-The State House of Representatives sat un- moved yesterday by appeals from its own members for a $12.5 million addition to its version of the higher education ap- propriations bill. Every suggestion of education budget in- creases was scrapped. The representatives then approved Gov. George Romney's original budget figures and sent the pack- age to a joint House-Senate subcommittee which will work out a compromise version next week. The only affirmative vote of the session came on a move to give $750,000 for studies of a computer network linking the University, Wayne State University and Michigan State Uni- versity. A 42 - amendment- .udget increase bill, Sponsor- ed by Reps. Jack Faxon (D- Faxon Plea Detroit) and Daniel S. Coop-' ly city of Jerusalem, now er (D-Oak Park) failed by a Fail elcome back King Hussein resounding 63-30 roll call. Fails To G et Moves to increase state library ap- ---.propriations and community col- A *J lege support also failed by similar H ou Se A id votes. There had been some hope that Cries of anguish were audible the threat of tuition hikes due to during the debate and after every low allocations could be used as a vote from administrators in the lever to add $500,000 to the $5.2 House gallery. million state competitive scholar- ship programs. The amendment, Most House members turned - offered by Reps. George F. Mont- away during debate and many at= Ci V 15 e gomery, Faxon and Cooper was tempts were made to cut Rep. Jack dumped in a 53-42 vote. Faxon (D-Detroit) short in his Robben Fleming, University The Senate, in the meantime, plea. Faxon claimed that the Uni- dent-elect. caucused on a House-approved versity's residential college shoul e first of a series of explor- three-cent-a-pack cigarette tax University has made commItment sessions into the role of increase.F DEMAND' JERUSALEM RI Jordanians in Amman demonstrated yesterday for the return of the hol occupied by Israeli forces. The Jordanians had gathered in Amman to w from a two-week tour of Western capitals. THREE DAY EVENT: Erhard Address To C Sesquicentennial Coni 3 I' I' 3' Ludwig Erhard, former chancel- lor of West Germany, will make a special visit to the University next Friday, July 14, to deliver the convocation address to close a three - day Sesquicentennial Conference at Rackham on "The University and the Body Politic." Erhard, who is reportedly fluent in English, will speak in Ger- man; the speech will be trans- lated. It will concern the relation- ship of the university to the gov- ernment. The conference begins Wednes- day and is the third of five ma- jor conferences for the sesqui- centennial y e a r observances. Other important speakers will in- clude John Gardner, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and Presid The i ation CENSURES FLORIDA SYSTEM: NEA Resolution Backs Desegregation; gNew Grade Level Below First Foreseen the university will be held Wed- nesday afternoon and will probe cultural developments and their relation to the modern university, featuring Norman Cousins, editor of the Saturday Review of Liter- ature, and Roger Stevens, chair- man of the National Council of Arts. Thursday morning, in the lec- ture hall, research will be the topic with A. Geoffrey Norman, University vice president for re- search, Leer A. DuBridge, Presi- 4ent of California Institue of Technology, and James . Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis- tration. The role of the government in higher education will be taken up on Thursday morning in the am- pitheatre, featuring Charles Ode- gaard, president of the University of Wisconsin, Elivis Stahr, pres- ident of Indiana University, and Leonard Woodcock, vice presi- dent of the United Auto Workers Union. Thursday afternoon James Pol- lock, Murfin professor of Polit- ical Science and Malcom Moos, president-elect of the University of Minnesota, will study the op- portunities and dangers of out- side pressures on universities. Gardner will make his address Thursday evening at a banquet. However, the measure, which would bringin about $29 million a year, was not brought to a Senate vote and is not expected to be taken up when they re- convene today. Though there were indications that some of the mon- ey could be used to raise educa- tion allocations, the Senate is not4 expected to act on the cigarette tax until the fall. , The House request for the Uni- versity stands at $62.2 million, which will have to be balanced against a Senate proposal of $58.6 million. The Faxon - Cooper amendment would have given the University $64.7 million, which would still be $10 million less than; the University had requested in the spring. MSU rand Wayne State would have received larger increases than the University, $3 million apiece to bring them to $62.2 million and $36.8 million, respec- tively. Their present House figures are $59.4 million and $33.8 mil- lion. The joint subcommittee will have as long as it needs to come to an agreement on the amounts be- cause last year's state budget has been extended for an indefinite amount of time. Indications are that a final figure will not be ready for the Regents' special meeting on the University budget next Tuesday. eor more faculty, students and facilities and will require at least 4112 per cent increases. Faxon also said that failure of the increase would make a tuition hike of between $200 and $300 a necessity this year. "The 3 per cent, more we are giving higher education is the smallest increase on this year's budget," he noted, "and no state agency should be expected to survive on that little." He was refuted by Rep. Arnell Engstrom (D-Traverse C it y), chairman of the Appropriations committee, who said he is sure that Romney's request is "neither less nor more than the state's schools deserve."' Arnell said that Rep. James Smith (R-Saginaw), will be ap- pointed to head an interim com- mittee on the influence of outside grants on professors because "grants may have gotten out of hand." Faxon claimed that to "shackle the universities with such a small increase over their last budgets would place them years behind comparable schools in other states, both in quality and tuition costs. This increase doesn't represent generosity but our minimal edu- cational requirements," he said. The House figure is $4 million more than the $58.1 the University received last year. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. 41P)-The National Education Association yesterday backed school desegra- tion in one of its strongest-worded statements to date on the subject and installed its new president. Public schools of the future will add another year of school below the first grade, Braulio Alonsd, Tampa, Fla., high school principal, told a news conference prior to his installation last night at the clos- ing session of the NEA's 105th convention. An increased demand for teach- ers will result largely from extend- ing the number of years for man- datory schooling, Alonso said. Alonso, 49, succeeds Dr. Irvamae Applegate, dean of women at St. Cloud, Minn., College, to a one year term as head of the one mil- lion member organization of Government To Push For End To North's Racial School Bias teachers and school administra- tors. Alonso said the biggest factors in the expected need for more teachers will be "the rapid exten- sion downward' to include two years below the first grade level," and the growth of public education at the junior college level. Most public schools now offer a year of kindergarten before the first grade level. Although a greatly increased number of schoolteachers will be necessary in the future, there will be no difficulty in finding them "when teaching becomes a finan- cially rewarding profession," Alon- so added. Backs Desegregation Earlier yesterday, NEA conven- ion delegates passed a resolution backing desegregation in public schools. "Education must seek to elim- inate prejudice and bigotry from the public mind," the resolution said. In its session Thursday, the NEA called for more steps to integrate schools racially. The statement was the group's strongest state- ment to date on the subject. The NEA took official action against Florida Thursday when sanctions voted earlier by the Mr nM mamh r Fleidn duatnaa to notify business and industry of conditions in Florida. The state association says the situation can be remedied only by greatly in- creased appropriations for educa- tion. Should Receive Funds The desegregation resolution ap- proved yesterday said schools edu- cating children in formerly segre- gated systems, those serving chil- dren of migrant workers and those where the family language is other than English should receive suf- ficient funds, material and staff "to carry out programs leading to quality education." The resolution also said edu- cational materials should portray the nation's cultural diversity and the achievements of minority groups. All state and local af- filiates were urged "to focus the professional judgment of their members upon this imperative." Among several resolutions pass- ed Thursday night by delegates to the NEA's 105th annual conven- tion was one dealing with "urban educational problems." It stated: "Among the many grievous problems now plaguing American cities, none is greater or more difficult to solve than the de facto segregation which is pres- ently increasing in nearly all of +he maior ciies. WASHINGTON () - A federal civil rights official said yesterday the government is planning for the first time a major move against racial discrimination in schools of the North. Since passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, federal officals have had their hands full dealing with illegal dual school systems for whites and Negroes in the South. But Peter Libassi, civil rights enforcement director for the De- partment of Health, Education ....~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ _. s=.t . ~ .1".n r'n Tn idea that when the government sets a policy, there's going to be immediate change." And he cautioned that the new effort should not be interpreted as action against the de facto segregation as such. In the North, de facto segregation usually refers to separation of the races in schools because of where people live. Libassi said, however, the most recent federal court decisions have found that certain practices as- white schools and Negro teachers to Negro schools. -Other practices which result in any inequality of educational opportunity between predominant- ly white and predominantly Negro schools. He said these include in- equalities in facilities, teachers and services. In addition to the federal court decisions, Libassi believes that the House of Representatives recently made known its intent that "a greater effort is to be made by the Aare,, - 9f c - - ac a e Ford Foundation Gives Grant To Upgrade Negro Colleges The F o r d Foundation an- nounced Thursday a $1.1 million program designed as a first step in aiding 52 Southern Negro col- leges to upgrade the quality of their academic programs. The initial grant is envisioned as a small "seed money" alloca- tion that should eventually lead such as the Universities of Mis- sissippi and Alabama will find themselves partners with neigh- boring Negro colleges in the up- grading effort. The foundation will also stress advanced study of the teaching staffs of these colleges in in ef- fort to break the academic isola- such quality-rated schools as Fisk, Hampton, Tuskegee and Dillard. "The effort is problem-center- ed," said F. Champion Ward, a Ford Foundation vice president, "emphasizing specific a c t i o n where conditions are favorable on such matters as faculty develop- ment, curriculum improvement,