Foreign Students Meet Housing Discrimination, Social I aroblems (Editor's Note: The following. is an interpretive article on discrimination against University foreign students and the extent to which they integrate with the University community.) By DONNA HANSON Discrimination in Ann Arbor housing presents a defiinte problem for many of the. Asiatic foreign students who attend the University. Though these students seem most affected by discrimination in housing, they also encounter problems of social integration with Americans. In discussing the social situation, however, some foreign students indicated they would rather stick with their own national groups. No reports were given by International students of discrimination In restaurants, clothing stores or barber shops in Ann Arbor. Couldn't Find 'Decent' Housing Though the housing problem affected even American students during last fall's housing shortage, it was more difficult for foreign students, especially dark-skinned Asiatics, to find "decent" living quarters in Ann Arbor. One Indian student said he called a landlady about an advertised room. "She told me I could have the room. When I took her the deposit, she said she changed her mind and wasn't going to rent thel process of locating rooms and apartments for these students. But room after all," he commented. she further explained the office has a standard list of landladies In another instance, an Iraqui student phoned in answer to an: which she uses year after year. These landladies she knows will accept advertisement and was told he could have the apartment for $100 foreign students. a month. When he arrived with his family and luggage, the landlady Since most of the international students here are graduate immediately raised the rent to $150. students, there is only a small percentage who live in the residence Must Resort To Slum Area - halls. According to Karl Streiff, Asst. Dean of Men, there are about There have been repeated cases of Indian, Gold Coast and Ethiopian students unable to get apartments near campus, and must finally resort to living in slum areas near the edge of town. A Gold Coast student reported trying to get an apartment near campus without success. "I previously lived near the railroad station, but it wasn't a good location," he said. This student now lives in the dormitory system. Although the International Center provides housing placement service under the direction of Katherine Mead, the Center is unable to place all the foreign students who come to the University. Many of them must attempt to get housing facilities on their own. Uses Student List for Houses Mrs. Mead said she has encountered little discrimination in the 90 foreign students who live in the dorms. This does not include those who come here for an eight week period to study in the University's English Language Institute. In most cases, the foreign students are given roommates who are also non-American, Streiff explained. The policy of his office is to pair students who have similar likes, backgrounds and interests. Dorm Appliation Forms On application forms which new students fill out for resident hall rooms is the question, "Are you interested in a roommate of a nationality, or race other than your own?" "About 89 per cent of the students answer that question with 'no'," Streiff said. Generally, there are more foreign students who want American students for roommates, he commented, but there aren't enough Americans who indicate they want to room with them. Since few foreign students have the same interests, backgrounds or likes as the American students, they are then given foreign student roommates. One Indian noted he felt there was a, "conscious effort" in the quads to "place you with someone they think will suit you. As far as Asiatic students go, they will put an Asiatic with an Asiatic." Dorms Provide Good Contact .The dorms provides us good contact with other students, though," he added. Regarding social integration wtih American students, most for. eigners admit they stick pretty well with their own close-knit groups. Few will attribute this cohesiveness, however, to any social discrimi- nation shown to them by University students. There is some evidence that discrimination is displayed toward foreign students in reference to housing in Ann Arbor and in social contacts with students on campus. Their reluctance to admit any discrimination may be attributed to racial pride. A Pakistani said any discrimination that might be shown Asiatic students is primarily color discrimination. "It is probably an out- growth of the American discrimination against Negroes," he said. E growth of the American discrimination against Negroes," he said. SIGMA KAPPA REGULATION See Page 4 ZI rP t i~aut :4aii4 l Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVI, No. 65 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBEt 7,1956 UGHT RAIN, COOLER SIX PAGES Aid Report Passes Big Ten Officials Round Robin Schedule Defeated; Grid Season To Begin Week Earlier By JAMES ELSMAN "Equalization" plan for subsidizing Big Ten athletes jumped its first hurdle yesterday in Chicago, University Athletic Director H. 0. Crisler reported. fIn a discussion between faculty representatives and athletic dir- ectors from all 10 schools, Crisler revealed, "The study committee report on financial aid to Conference athletes was approved with some dissent, but the general principles of it were accepted." This report contained recommendations of "equalization" legis- lation. To Vote Today Today faculty representatives Soviets Urge UN Council Seat Czechs UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UP-_ z A new East-West clash erupted yesterday when the Soviet Union demanded the election of Czecho- slovakia to the Security Council over the Philippines, backed by the United States and Britain. The Russian demand was made by Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vassily V. Kuznetsov at a news. conference. He reinforced it with a threat to veto, unless Czecho- slovika, wins, any proposal to amend the United States Charter and put more members on the 11- nation Security Council. The 79-nation General Assembly will ballot today to fill the va- cancy created when Yugoslavia resigned from the seat she won last year after a lottery broke a prolonged deadlock with the Phil- ippines. Both sides spoke hopefully of victory. Other diplomats said, how- ever, it appeared a new deadlock1 might be developing, with the big powers of East and West throw- ing the full weight of their pres- tige into the struggle. Kuznetsov assailed the lottery arrangement used after 35 ballots produced no result. He said it was illegal and a violation of the UN Charter. He said the Soviet Union did not agree to it and had so stated at the time. { Yugoslavia resigned its seat, ef- fective Dec. 31, under the agree- ment. Kuznetsov told the reporters that-the seat was assigned to East- ern Europe by a gentleman's agree- ment among the Big Powers inc London in 1946 and that Czecho- slovakia should be elected. z a Sigma Chi Gets 0 Judic Censure t Sigma Chi fraternity was cen- e cured yesterday by Joint Judiciary g Council for its participation in the v Oct. 29 "Arms for Arabs" demon- i stration, according to Mike Mc- Nerney, '57L, chairman of Joint $ Judic. Group responsibility was deter- rained on the basis of numbers n participatinghthe lack of effort by members to prevent the incident For complete text of~~~~t letter, see .page six (University's Prof. Marcus Plant Hof the Law School) will vote final- ly to accept or reject "equaliza- tion" legislation which was em- bodied in the study committee re- port. Crisler said there was a possi- bility of ammendments and dele- tions being made by the 10 faculty representatives. Crisler refused to release a vot- ing rundown of yesterday's report approval. Also on yesterday's docket, the Big Ten officials approved begin- ning the football season a week earlier in the fall. A motion for a "round robin" football schedule was defeated. This suggested every Conference school play every other one every season. The University voted no. 'Cooling Off' If the plan passes the faculty representatives today it will be shuttled back to each school for a 60-day "cooling off" period. Crisler disclosed he would take the final plan before the University's Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics for an okay. Then if any one school rejects the plan a majority of the Big Ten faculty representatives can give it final approval at their spring meeting. "Eq u a 1i z a t i o n" is a scheme whereby the Big Ten colleges will pay athletes above board the dif- ference between the athlete's fi- nancial means and the costs of at- tending a particular Big Ten I school. See BIG TEN, Page 3 City Council s Studies New Improvements A proosed multi-million dollar'' capital improvement program for Ann Arbor was discussed by citi- zens and City Council last night at a public hearing, Possbile programs presented would cost approximately $10,000,- DO0 on a three-year basis and in he neighborhood of $12,500,000 in asix-year plan. Mostquestionshconcerned the xpenditures which would require eneral obligation bond issue which would have to be author- zed by voters. Such type of im- provements would probably total 3,393,500. Councilmen explained a major ortion of the capital improve- ment program, as high as seven illion dollars, can be financed rom revenue sources other than he general obligation bonds, A proposed new city hall which would cost slightly under two Parliament Backs Eden On Invasion Vote of Confidence Given by Split Party LONDON (Ri) - Prime Minister Anthony Eden won a vote of con- fidence last night for the abortive British-French invasionof Egypt. The vote was 312-260. Fifteen rebellious Conservatives in the House of Commons refused to vote support of the Eden gov- ernment. Before the motion of confidence was put, the Conservatives acted solidly together in defeating a La- bor Party motion to censure Eden's government for its Suez policies The vote defeating that motion was 327-260. Rested in Jamaica Eden has been in Jamaica since Nov. 24 for three weeks of rest because of what the government called severe overstrain. It was announced yesterday he is re- turning Dec. 14 to take over the reins of government. But his political future has been in doubt for days, and the Con- servative abstentions in Commons last night lent weight to sug- gestions that he may not be able to remain long as leader of the party and head of the government, The abstaining Conservatives are members of the so-called group of "Suez rebels" who fought bit- terly against the government's de- cision to bow to the United States and the United Nations and with- draw troops from Egypt without delay. Forces Should Remain The Suez rebels argued that the forces should remain until future operation of the Suez Canal is as- sured. Labor voted against the govern- ment on the ground that the inva- sion itself was a disastrous mis- take which weakened the British- American alliance, undermined the United Nations, jeopardized ties with British Commonwealth countries, and brought on a grave economic crisis threatening the nation's well-being. Eden's chief deputy, R. A. But-' ler, told the House the reins of government will be handed back to Eden when his plane touches down in Britain. But regardless of the tally in the vote of confidence, the conserva- tive party remained divided with one wing critical of, the decision to invade, another opposed to the withdrawal and many members confused and uncertain. f i t t x s i t c l: n t: p t: ,p s t' G. I I it h v c: 2 it TO USE 'AIR-SEA PLAN Eisenhower Opens Door For 15,000 Refugees AUGUSTA, Ga. A)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower signaled yesterday for a gigantic air-sea plan to bring 15,000 Hungarian ref u- gees to America. That quota to be transported "with the utmost possible speed" by the United States Air Force and the Navy is in addition to 6,500 others whose travel already has been arranged by an Intergovernmental Committee on European Migration. The massive operation by the United States services-pictured by the White House as the biggest of such type in peacetime history -will get under way in a few days. U.S. Airlift Plan The government airlift plan calls for bringing about 10,000 ref- ugees from Soviet terrorism in Air Force and Navy planes. And U~ ~~the c r t services have been authorized S.S Sco rs to supplement their own aircraft with commercial planes to speed R ed A tiott up that part of the program. R ed A c ion For the sea-lift of about 5000 refugees, the Navy is providing three ships, each with room for In Fgary more than 2,000 passengers. In Washington, informed offi- WASHINGTON (RP)-In a sharp- cials estimated the cost mightrun ly worded protest to Russia, the money to come rodollarswih t2e United States yesterday de- million dollar White House fund. nounced what it called "unwar- The President last Saturday au- ranted" use of Red army tanks thorized admittance of a total of and guns against "helpless civ- 21,500 Hungarian refugees to- this ilians" in Hungary. country-more than fourtimes the Deputy Undersecretary of State number planned originally. Robert Murphy took 10 minutesT to deliver the protest verbally to To Begi Soon Sergei Striganov 'of the Soviet The White House said yesterday Embassy. Twice Murphy told Stri- the government airlift of about ganov to pass the word to Moscow 10,000 refugees will begin within immediately the next few days at the rate of .mday 200 a day, Specifically, Murphy objected The three ships, each of 10,000 to Soviet tanks patrolling outside tons, will sail for Ne York from the U.S. legation in revolt-torn Budapest - nBremerhaven, Germany, subject Budapet n even to the point of to approval of the West German parking on the sidewalk - whileo government. The first of these Hungarians peacefully demon- will arrive at Bremerhaven about strated. Dec. 18 and will sail between then Murphy said that was only one and Dec. 21. incident. He said the United States, like the great majority of the United Nations, is deeply con- e cerned over Soviet m ilitary sup- p e s n o t e u g i n b l lion of the ungarian rebel- ticket Drive Striganov, a small bespectacled man with straight dark hair, sat Galens will launch their two- through Murphy's protestation day 30th annual "bucket drive" without a word. Then he inquired early today. whether Murphy was aware of Members of the group of 28 the Soviet position in the UN. medical school juniors and seniors Yes, fully aware, Murphy re- will stand on corners throughout plied, and he repeated that he the city, with the exception of wvanted the Soviet government no- the general campus area. tified immediately of the Ameri- Galens were excluded by Stu- Gan protest. dent Government Council from State Department press officer this area, whose precise boundaries Lincoln White told newsmen about are to be determined today, the meeting between the red- The recent annual budget has haired Murphy and Striganov, So- approximated $7000. Funds are viet embassy counselor who is in used for the Galens workshop, a :harge while Ambassador Georgi Christmas party and other activi- Zarubin is attending UN sessions ties for children who are patients n New York City. in the University Hospital. Decision Next FOR STUDENTS: U' Sends Counseling Week* Local Wants New Session To Be Called Dean Bacon Suggests Further Discussion Questionnaitres Today By RICHARD TAUB Counseling questionnaires for students will be sent out today to every tenth student at the University, according to David Baad, As- sistant to the Dean of Men. Compiled by Counseling Study Committee, the questionaire is divided into four sections: vocational plans and decisions, decisions regarding college courses and concentration, assistance in meeting financial problems, and personal problems and decisions. It covers every area of University counseling. This includes aca- demic residence halls financial assistance counseling, the Mental Hygiene Unit at Health Service, student counselling service at Rack- ham, and special phychological$ SGC Board in Review' To Weigh Sigma Kappa s - services. Every Tenth Student Every tenth student in the dir- ectory was chosen to receive the questionnaire, by recommendation of Survey Research Center, to in- sure a proper cross section. Another questionnaire was sent to all faculty members connected with these services. Counseling study committee was established last spring to meet the problems of a growing University. Students as well as faculty mem- bers have complained for a long time about the inadequacy of pres- ent counseling services. SGC requested Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis to appoint a study committee in' this area. Each University counsel- ing service sent a representative to the organizational meeting of this group. A central committee was formed comprising students, faculty, and administration, which has been hard at work since that time. Ignorance About Services The group discovered that there was great ignorance about Ouch services. Students were unaware that many existed, and members of one counseling unit were often ignorant of what others were do- ing. Because of this, wasteful over- lapping has resulted. Results of the student question- naire are most important, Baad said. "Only by asking students can we determine the adequacy of our present counseling system." He expressed the hope that all who receive the questionnaire will return it promptly. Advice for the preparation of the questionnaire was provided by Prof. Lowell E. Kelly, Director of the Bureau of Psychological re- Pearl Harbor Silent Today Only half a dozen or so vessels are now in giant Pearl Harbor, where fifteen years ago 94 ships awoke to a surprise Sunday morn- ing visit from attacking Japanese planes. Included in the targets of Jap- anese dive bombers were seven American battleships moored with- in the one-mile stretch known as "Battleship Row." Four ships were sunk there while those still float- ing received heavy damage. Of the 2,335 American casual- ties, some 11 hundred died when an armor-piercing shell exploded the forward magazine of the bat- tleship Arizona. Hundreds of others were trapped in the bottom compartments of the Oklahoma as it suffered hits and rolled over. But never again will Pearl Har- bor present such a juicy target, says the Navy Pacific commander, Adm. Felix B. Stump. "There have been many changes in warfare in the 15 years since the attack." IFC Aid Fund Considered Executive Committee of Inter- fraternity Council resolved last' night to establish an IFC scholar- ship fund, The motion now has to be ap- proved by. Fraternity Presidents' Assembly at their next meeting early in February to take effect. Awards will be made annually of five 100 dollar grants to be ap- plied to the recipients tuition. Criteria are: contribution to the fraternity and/or the fraternity system, scholarship, character, in- tegrity and need. According to the plan, alumni fund of the University Develop- ment Council will handle all con- tributions of money from frater- nity alumni, after an initial offer of 100 dollars by IFC. It was reported by Tim Leedy, TROnm.-gM nt t at. hiu - ~ By TAMMY MORRISON Student Government Council's Board in Review will meet early next week to consider Wednes- day's Sigma Kappa action. It is the second time in a week the Board has been summoned. Dean of Women Deborah Ba- con yesterday "set in motion the machinery" for calling the Board at the request of local Sigma Kap- pa President Barbara Busch, '57Ed. Under the SGC plan, only a Re- view Board member may ask for a meeting. A definite meeting time has not yet been set. Voted Violation Miss Busch's request came as a result of Council action Wednes- day night. At that time, SGC found National Sigma Kappa in violation of University Regula- tions against discrimination by a vote of 12-5. According to SGC President Bill Adams, '57BAd, further ac- tion ,such as withdrawal or sus- pension of recognition, will "very likely" be discussed at next week's Council meeting. Summoning the Board in Re- view constitutes a temporary stay of action. The Board has the pow- er to review Council actions after determining whether the actions go beyond SGC's jurisdiction or are in conflict with regental or administrative policies. Gave Careful Consideration Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis said yester- day, "I think the students handled the thing exceedingly well. They gave careful consideration to the evidence and I would certainly agree with their decision." "In my personal opinion," Dean Bacon said, "the level of partici- pation by the Council as a whole and as individuals appears to have fully justified the confidence the University has 'placed in its un- dergraduates." She continued, "I have parti- cular admiration for those girls who had to face the same inner struggle as Robert E. Lee--torn between their love of Virginia and their love of America." Board in Review Members Prof. Lionel H. Laing of the poli- tical science department, chair- man, Prof. Leo A. Schmidt of the business administration school, vice-chairman, Dean Earl V. Moore of the music school, Dean Bacon, Dean of Men Walter B. 1? 0 Al*c-" -1$n SMALL ATTENDANCE: Food Forum Creates Little Interest 1 1 Students and administrators alike last night stayed away from , a forum on the Quadrangle foodn problem. A group of less than three dozen e e students heard IHC President R enom ination Robert Warrick, '57E, Daily Editor Richard Snyder, '57, and South Alfred Connable, '25BAd, Re- Q u a d r a n g le President John gent of the University and a Kal- amazoo businessman, recently an- Mayne, '58, give their opinions nounced his candidacy for renom- and answer questions about Resi- ination to the Board of Regents. dence Hall food. Regent Connable, active in the T-- .Republican party for many years. sm -