uvv v . .. .. .... .... _ _ ... .. r:. ..::. . t. ..... r. ... ........., rM. . .... .. . ........,. .., ...... ..:... .... .........<... ... r. +. +. .:...t. .... :: ", ', ti: Y1 . f'Ly,.r .r ,w ..iFb:A .i 3...ly ...... .... ....... ........ .... .-, ...:; ... .:> .,,.... .. .... .. .... " ,......, .yam p +, ... ...., r........, f, ... .. ............:.... n........ .. ..+.v E..... nu. . ... ... \ ,.v ...................v ., ... ..., .,. . f'fE. ...v J. .. ,.. .n .. ....ru.....+.....v...vvv.fMVVA,.vAf. f........a rd.. ....a r... . r. rn. .v>.Y .l+h n4f ...... , ..,, u, + . ..: vY. .{ti\, .. .. 4... .wr. Cw":?'r:,nv'iA"r\ ..?.:C,':5:' ':."'+;.,..n..fMv^::a\Q";\ , +x 'K"* c .'c' a n .' :>a$a. ., yyy yrr q}y yy 1fF...r .................'. ' n....l.e. ........ ..... ..... .....{... vt.... .... ...\ ....\ ........... ..................Y......\h ... fin r. .. .. .. WTYC'gM.T:.n.. .. i . The Local Poor: By RAYMOND HOLTON had housed two ury apartments. A young mother runs next door whenever she must feed her' family, fix up ti baby. The water in her old house has been turned off. higher return." A Negro couple with six children live in a" basement. They The need fo could afford to pay $120 a month for housing, but high rents ing a public issl and discrimination close doors in their faces. Democrat, speak Another family with three children is evicted from a con- The city H: demned house. It is forced to reside temporarily at St. Joseph's mittee contactin Hospital. to convince it o Another woman refuses to pay rent until the landlord re- programs. pairs the plumbing and leaky roof. She and her children are The City C evicted. various federal a Seek Help These cases have sought help in Ann Arbor from groups like H. "C. Curry the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) or from Home Oppor- the First Ward, tunities Made Equal (HOME). Such groups try to find housing low-cost housing for low-income people. Part of the Mrs. Robin Barlow, HOME chairman, says the volunteer or- this year can be ganization gets about two calls a week similar to the examples professor and ag above. "Low-cost housing is disappearing from the market in One report, Ann Arbor," she says. "They're tearing down old homes which department for t Where Can They Live? families and replacing them with high-rent lux- Also, the landlord will force out a low-income he old house, and rent it to students for a much or low-cost housing in Ann Arbor is now becom- ue. Both candidates for mayor, Republican and k of low-cost housing needs in their campaign. uman Relations Commission has a special com- ng the business community in Ann Arbor trying of the need for investment in low-cost housing ouncil has a special committee looking at the aid programs for low-cost housing. Council Candidate Y, Democratic candidate for City Council from. is basing most of his campaign on the need for . He calls it a "human need." reason why low-cost housing is in the spotlight e traced to two studies released by a University graduate student last December. authored by Prof. Robin Barlow of the economics the Conference on Religion and Race, gave an es- timate of the number of "poor" families in Ann Arbor. The esti- mate of 1800 "poor" families was based on subsistence living costs, not on a particular income level such as $3000 per year. Barlow recommended that this 1800 figure be taken as a "rough guide" for "community action to alleviate poverty." His report recognized that although there is a "need" for low-cost housing here, the "demand" for such housing may not be as large. "There remains the problem of translating the estimate of the extent of poverty into an estimate of the effective demand for low-cost housing units," Barlow wrote. However, he added, It seems clear that if low-cost. housing units were made available at rents, say, $15 per month below those charged on accommodations of comparable quality in the poorer sections of the city, then several hundred such units would eventually be demanded. "A program," Barloy concluded, "aimed at providing 100 to 200 new units each year until the demand was satisfied would be both prudent and humane." Another report prepared for the HRC by Thomas H. Moore, Grad, dealt directly with the low-cost rental housing need in See 'U', Page 2 I -Daily-Jim Lines LOW-INCOME FAMILIES are forced to live in homes like this one in the north central area of Ann Arbor. Sometimes more than one family live in such houses. Two recent studies show that there is a need for low-cost housing in Ann Arbor. No action, however, has been taken toward a low-cost housing program by the city. ................_.._.......... ....... ._.. ... .._.. . . . . .: V. - ... . . . .. :.... ..... .. .... ....... ............«.:w.... ,..... . . . .,.. . . . .......f. .......Y \. 37. :Ri:::. te-,': :,h's . THE VOTING ACT: A GOOD FIRST STEP See Editorial Page cjI Sir i~aui a t CLOUDY AND WINDY High--40 Low-32 Snow and colder Thursday Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 142 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, 17 MARCH 1965 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES DORM STAFF: Haun Confirms Change By LEONARD PRATT and MERLE WESTON Eugene Haun, director of Uni- versity residence halls, confirmed yesterday that his office is re- questing achange in the residence hall staff organization for next year. The proposed alignment will lower a few staff salaries in the process of raising most. Dormitories SRequire, $45 Deposit By MARY LOU BUTCHER Contributing Editor Y.. Beginning next fall, dormitory residents will be required to maintain a housing deposit of $45 in lieu of the present $50 enroll- ment deposit. Students within the residence halls were informed of the decision last Friday and re- quested to deposit the sum, re- fundable upon the .students' leav- ing the dormitory system, between April 15-Aug. 30. According to Eugene Haun, di- rector of residence halls, the ac- tion constitutes a return to the policy in effect prior to 1962, at which time the University estab- lished the continuing enrollment deposit which all students were required to maintain throughout their period of attendance. The Office of the Registrar re- cently announced a change of regulations so that although new students will be required to pay the $50 enrollment deposit upon admission, the amount will be ap- plied to student fees for their first term upon completion of registra- tion. Failure to enroll will result in loss of the deposit. Following the close of fall registration. the University will apply the enroll- ment deposits of all students to tuition and other student fees. Charges' Haun said -the residence halls office has been able to rely upon the continuing enrollment deposit as well as it had on the previous- ly-existing housing deposit for assessing charges for breach of contract, property damage and nissing property. However, with the r e c e n t CORRECTION A report appearing in yester- day's paper inaccurately quoted Inter-Quadrangle Council Pres- ident John Eadie, '65, as saying there "definitely" will be a residence hall rate hike next fall. Eadie was reiterating an earlier statement ,in which he predicted t h e r e "probably" would be such a raise. Present staff structures in men's dorms are quite different from those in women's, Haun explained, because of the fact that they were organized some years ago when the University had both a dean of men and a dean of women. The dormitories were then supervised by each individual office, and th 'ir staff structures were accordingly different. This lack of similarity led to budgetary confusion and to staff- ers performing similar jobs for generally the same salary. Haun then appointed a series of two committees to study the structures and to recommend a single unified staff system, for the dorms. Three 'Lines' These committees have recom- mended a staff organized along three "lines" or staff levels. Haun said his office has fillowed the recommendations of the commit- tee in requesting staff positions and salaries for next gear. The peakiposition in both men's and women's halls next year ill be the "resident director." This position there will be the resident advisor. The recommc-ided salary will be a $675 deduction from the room and board fee; this recom- mendation is still subject to bud- getary approval. Replacement This will replace the men's staff counselor who received $520, ap- proximately 60 per cent of room and board in a double room. In the women's halls, the positions of graduate and undergraduate coun- selor will be combined. The under- graduate counselor was previously paid at the same rate as a staff counselor while the graduate counselor received total room and. board, generally for a single, as well as a salary of $25 per month. Women now serving as graduatex counselor will the;, be the only Facuity Of Legi Senate, Votes' Criticism of Strike Move Weak Motion Passes Despite Opinion Split By CAL SKINNER, JR. Special To The Daily LANSING-A wave of negative isltrs Conidemnations Will Strike Regardless < State Senate Vote Urges I ---- &- 1--;- "a', I'lli: 1111flOr ! ones to receive a pay uu rnae on the new plan. Now receiving an reaction to the proposed teacher effective salary of $1,100 per year, strike at the University culminat- they will be recommended for a ed yesterday in the overwhelming passage of a watered-down state salary of only $675 as a resident Senate resolution expressing dis- advisor next year. position will take the place of what is now the men's residentW advisor and the women's resident director. Cn sure Eadie The assistant resident director uensur. Saie will be the intermediate layer in the hierarchy. This will replace East Quadrangle Council d the men's assistant resident ad- cided last night, after heated di visor and continue the women's cussion, not to censure Inte position of that title. Quadrangle CouncilPreside approval of "a minority group (the participating p r o f e s s o r s) speaking for an entire public entity."' Not a singlepublic official in state government supported the projected work stoppage. Opinion in Lansing varies from advocation of legislative condemnation to a more moderate viewpoint. Repro-; senting the most extreme position is Sen. Terry Troutt (D-Wayne County), who initiated Senate action. He favors strong disci- plinary action for the professors'l "un-American attitude." le- is- r- :it -Daily-Kamalakar Rao At this point the systems diverge slightly. The men's structure maintains the associate advisor (housemother) in addition to the assistant director, while the larger women's houses will have an add- ed associate resident director to aid the assistant director as need- ed. The third level, that closest to the students, is where the greatest changes are taking place. The new John Eadie, '65, for his state- ment that IQC would continue to represent the residents of men's residence halls even if some, STUDENTS BE Over 100 junior and senior high schools a 48-hour hunger strike protesting the h Johnson's R Evokes Of tic By CLARENCE FANTO Many University professors had high praise yesterday for Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson's Mon- day night address on voting rights to a joint session of Congress. Prof. Robert C. Angell, direc- tor of the Center for Research on Conflict Resolution, called John- son's speech "very good, but its impact will be up to Congress.' Angell viewed the speech as force- ful and hoped it would persuade congressmen to approve the vot- ing rights measure. Prof. Robert D. Vinter, asso- ciate dean of the School of Socia - Work, said "it was a magnificent speech, butnI'm sorry Johnson found it necessary to wait a week." He predicted the address would have a profound impact bu' that it's "cooling-off" effect on civil rights demonstrators woulk be only temporary. "The dem- onstrators will find it necessar3- to keep the heat on until Con- gress acts," Vinter said. Mixed Reaction Elsewhere, reaction was mixed Southern opposition exploded ir the Senate. Sen. Allen J. Ellender (TL.T a + 1h,'" a +tn mto fihiter 7 i 7 i houses withdrew from IQC. On the other side is Sen. Gil- according to Kathy Murphy, an Ann Ar Several members attending the bert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) who The group sang songs to the accompani EQC meeting, which was held in said, "I would certainly support on the guitar. the lounge of Greene House, felt their right to disagree, but I think ------- - they---- that their individual houses might they are wrong in trying to estab- hant tohdraw frodua QChussmight lish a precedent of not working. MONTGOMERY PROTESTS: want to withdraw from IQC ,and I think a resolution is unneces- some expressed the opinion thatasary. This is the University's in- ________''Students IQC should be disbanded. ternal business." ----- ----l-b-s-n~~~-" - After Sen. Troutt's statem ent 1S eC reatenedmn action Monday night, special To The Daily was u !Gov. George Romney led off yes- MONTGOMERY-Two Univer- ports. s terday's activities at his press sity students sustained minor in- on pag o mconference.He demanded disci- juries yesterday in the sit-in here disclos 'linary action be taken against which was broken up by mounted sity st the factuly members threatening possemen. cidentE nying Negroes the right to regis- tocancel classes. "It's about the ing ar: ter as voters. But he said that worst type of example professors The students reported injured charge if senators knew the condition could give to students," he said. are Francie Liptol, '68, whose leg that t ifw the itwas bruised, and Edward Geffner, The st in some of these areas, they might Representing more of a majom -,Grad, whose back was also bruis- Test be more sympathetic. itv vie .~point in the Legislatur'ei ed.. case t: If Congress passes a law out- was eo. Marvin Esch (R-Ann d. paid a lining the qualifications of vot- Arbc "I think this is within the (In Ann Arbor, Geffner's wife ers, he said, "overnight we are discre on of the University. We confirmed the injury but said her The going to have governments of have Er ough else to do without husband had suffered 'nothing duced counties and cities in the hands interferring." The lower House serious." He had been admitted moreI intrf rrig."Thelowr Huseand released from an unspecified of incompetents." He said the passed no resolution. them South was making progress in Charles Orlebeke the governor spital Montgomery, she said. in the trying to educate Negroes and if educational assistant, echoed his (There were repeated local in- given time. Negroes would "be- boss' disapproval of the strike, quiries and reports of students in- SE come competent by means of edu- but added, "there are plenty of jured in the Montgomery demon- Hoi cation." stration. However, The Daily, i Ho h touch w JGIN HUNGER STRIKE students gathered at the Friends Center last night to begin ederal government's actions in Viet Nam and in the South, bor High School senior, one of the initiators of the project. ment of Russell Boulding, a senior at Ann Arbor High School, Incur Slight Injuries Punishment Gamson Says Strike To Be Cancelled Only If U.S. Policy Shuts By ROBERT MOORE Despite widespread condemna- Lion of its methods, the Univer- sity faculty group planning to cancel classes in protest of gov- ernment policy in Viet Nam will stick firmly to the principles it adopted in an organizational meeting Monday night. Asked whether the group would change its plans now that the state Senate has advised punish- ment for striking faculty mern- bers, Prof. William Gamson of the sociology department, g r o u I spokesman, reaffirmed Monday's stand. "The only thing upon which our decision to cancel classes will depend on is United States policy in Viet Nam." Later, Prof. Gamson said, "We respect the governor's feelings and the state Legislature's, but in the end we have to answer to our own consciences and meet our responsibilities to students, university, and country." Number to 35 The number of teachers com- mitted to the walkout was up to 35, Prof. Gamson told The Daily yesterday afternoon. In a revised statement of their philosophy, the group declared: "If our government is to be re- strained from pursuing its pres- ent hazardous course, a signifi- cant portion of public opinion must be mobilized against its pol- icies. ' Complexity "In view of the complexity of the problem and the difficulty in getting reliable information about Viet Nam, our role as intellectuals is particularly crucial. We mus' voice our protest in a way that will at once communicate the gravity of the situation, encour- age others to take action, and bring about a constructive discus- sion of alternative policies for the government to follow. The conference will concentrate. on "finding viable solutions to the predicament in Viet Nam." Speak- ers will represent as many per- spectives as possible within the drive to get American forces out Df Viet Nam; the government and pro-involvement side will not be specifically presented, however, because it has already been given ample representation, the group decided. - On Friday, March 18, the fac- ulty members will hold a bucket drive to get funds to pay speak- ers' expenses and rental facili- ties. They are studying the pos- sibilities of borrowing an Ann Ar- bor church or renting a Univer- nable to confirm these re- Earlier statements, found ge three of this edition, had ed no injuries to Univer- udents. There were two in- s confirmed of students be- rested on unlawful driving es. Those arrested claimer~ he charges were fabricated tudents are reported in each o have pleaded guilty and fine.) Produce Demonstrations demonstration which pro- the injuries took place at than 600 persons, many o1 students, staged a sit-dowr street. ee Related Story, Page 3 semen, wearing cowboy-style nd wielding clubs flailed the ial demonstrators sending than 10 to the hospital. e Associated Press describ- incident this way: inging clubs, canes anm the horsemen first routed ller group of demonstrator: yJames Forman of Atlanta ive secretary of the Student olent Coordinating Commit- dogs and the horses-and that'% President Lyndon B. Johnson." Following Forman, Rev. Martin Luther King defined segregation as slavery "covered up" by the niceties of complexity. "Alabama uses the most bru- tal methods of battle we have ever seen," King continued. "To- day's actiop violated all moral and ethical codes of decency in using billy clubs and whips on fellow human beings." IFC Reviews Party Violation Interfraternity Council heard its first judicial case of the se- mester last night. Alpha Tau Omega was fined $300, being convicted of having an unregistered p a r t y Saturday, March 13; it was also confirmed that there was liquor present and that there was no legitimate chaperone. The $300 fine included a $150 suspended fine carried over from the fall of 1963 and invoked upon the recent infraction. Kelly Rea, executive vice-pres- ident, read the rationale of the Council saying that "recognizing the extenuating circumstances - those being that the social chair- man of the fraternity of Alpha See OFFICERS, Page 3 See FACULTY, Page 3 touch with sources in Alabama Irad bi-rac moret changes, it became necessary to3 reestablish the housing deposit for# the "formal protection of the' equity of the residents."I He said that the deposit wil serve as a "guarantee against in- convenience" in crowded dormi- tory conditions, by insuring that each student will accept his place ff Tn 4 jrd v! 'Magic Flute' Opens Tonigt By KAY HOLMES of Prof. Calvin Quayle of the many minuets which are still speech department, a newly de- popular today. Behind the closed doors of the veloped method of projected Nine Weeks Lydia Mendelssohn Theatr'e, a scenery will be featured. This While his life ended at the age furor of last minute activity is multiscreen rear projection sys- of 35, only nine weeks after "TheI going on in preparation for the tern, which uses three sets of Magic Flute" was first presented, opening of "The Magic Flute" by matched projectors, will be used he left a spectacular musical her- Mozart this evening, to transmit many of the scenic itage that includes many quartets,? Running through March 21, this elements onto translucent fiber- masses and over a half-dozen out- operatic fantasy is being present- glass screens. standing operas that have become ed by the University Players of The nera itself is a fine ex- important works of the modern (Th ed the (Sw ropes, a sma led by execut Nonvi tee. (The sheriff was swinging F cane by the top end. (In one case, a Japanese col- lege student backed against a brick wall of a house. A posseman clubbed him and the youth fell