THE MICHIGAN DAILY ESDAY RULING TEST: CORE Plans Southern 'Freedom Test' By IRIS BROWN . I James Farmer, national direc- tor of the Congress on Racial Equality, Sunday night described CORE's plan to test the Supreme Court's recent bus station deseg- regation decision. CORE's current major project is a "Freedom Ride" through the Deep South to test Supreme Court rulings against segregation in in- terstate transportation and at bus terminals, he said at the Guild House. Integrated groups riding from Washington, D.C. to New Orleans will refuse to be segregated on the buses, at lunch counters or in rest rooms. "We want to point up the lack of enforcement of the Supreme Court rulings and to encourage people who are opposed to segre- gation to repudiate it. Segregation Lictense? Members of Tau Kappa Epsi- lon have found that police have no respect for fire trucks-at least not for their fire truck. The fraternity, proud owner of a fire truck--1926 vintage, retired by the Grand Rapids Fire Department-found itself the recipient of a traffic ticket. It seems some of the broth- ers, out for a spin with their dates, ran afoul of Patrolman Jan Soumala, who inquired as to the whereabouts of their li- cense plates. The riders told him they had applied for historical plates, but as yet they had not re- ceived them. Soumala -was unimpressed, however, and he ticketed the "firemen" for driving without a license and restricted their "firefighting" to the grounds of the fraternity house. Dickinson Dies In California Prof. Edwin M. Dickinson, for- mer member. of the Law School faculty, died Saturday in St. Helena, Calif. He was appointed professor of law at the University in 1919, ser- ving thus until 1933 when he re- signed to become professor of international law at the Univer- sity of California. He was appointed dean of the California jurisprudence school in 1935, and he held that position until 1948, when he became pro- fessor of law at the University of Pennsylvania. He retired from the faculty of California's Hastings College in 1958. Grobstein To Talk On Bio-Sciences The Institute of Science and Technology will present Dr. Clif- ford Grobstein of the Stanford University biological sciences de- partment, speaking on "Micro- Environmental Influences in Cel- lular Differentiation" at 4 p.m. today in the Natural Science Aud. ' I cannot last long if people refuse to abide by it," Farmer explained. While progress is being made in the South, he believes that the northern problem is growing more acute. He cited as causes the mi- gration of rural southern Negroes into northern urban areas. The limited Negro areas are character- ized by congestion, poor accom- modations and high rents. The slogan of a Chicago real- tor, "Rent to Negroes and double your profits," is possible because owners break up large apartments, lower upkeep rates and raising rents when Negroes move into a community. Farmer gave several examples of how groups have worked to com- bat this key problem of housing. In the Hyde: lark-Kenwood area of Chicago, for example, people formed a group which welcomed Negroes into the area, saw that zoning ordinances were enforced and were able to form a fairly stable integrated community. Other Tactics Other tactics to fight discrimi- nation are to have a white person purchase a home for a Negro in a segregated area or to conduct test cases in which a Negro and a white each try to rent the same apartment. On the question of civil dis- obedience which sometimes occurs in CORE action, Farmer said, "I Party .Leaders Tio Debate Politics The University chapter of the Michigan Citizenship Clearing House will sponsor a discussion and debate between Neil Staebler, Democratic National Committee- man for Michigan, and William Boughton, representing the Re- publican State; Central Committee, at,7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3N of the Michigan Union. The topic matter will cover pressure groups ,within the major party organiza- t ions. think laws ought to be obeyed unless a person cannot obey con- scientiously. When a law is evil, one has the right and responsibil- ity to violate it. When we prac- tice civil disobedience we accept the consequences." He distinguished between civil disobedience of an individual who may break , bad law on moral grounds and that of a state, which as a political sub-division should not disobey Federal law. No ERght ,For example, he said that a parent in New Orleans has the right to keep his child out of school, but that the state has no right, to pass law's which defy the Supreme Court. He explained the principle of non-violent action which is based primarily on the refusal to hate SUPER and the refusal to compromise with principle in accepting injus- tice. "Non - violence assumes that some spark of sameness and con- science may be appealed to in all persons through sensitive meth- ods," he said. He also explained the Negro na- tionalist movement expressed in such groups as the Black Mus- lims, which has recently acceler- ated as a result of the violence of southern segregationists and the emerging of the African na- tions, These groups call for a black self-sufficient state and a rival black economy. "Their appeal to Negro supremacy touches some- thing basic to the hearts of many Negroes. But integration is the best way to defeat them," he said. B FOR ). 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