die Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN , ... UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinons Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Troth Will Prevail" APPORTIONMENT APPEAL: Senators Awati Supreme Court Ruling t By DAVID MARCUS Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: RONALD WILTON Meredith's Vi tory: A Chip in the Wall THE ENROLLMENT of James Meredith in the University of Mississippi has cracked the segregation barrier in Mississippi. Unfortunate- ly, this feat was accomplished with bloodshed and the loss of two lives. Yet the admission of the first Negro to the previously all-white Mississippi institution has broken a psychologi- cal block which slowly but surely will lead to the betterment of race relations in the state. The first breach in the wall of segregation will have a long range psychological effect. No longer will leading state institutions be all white, but now one of them-the University of Mississippi, one of the few things the state can be proud of-is integrated. It will be harder to maintain token integration in state institu- tions. For the Negroes, Meredith's success proves that integration can be accomplished and that federal power is behind their efforts. Although there is still a great deal to fear, Negro inte- grationists will be more courageous in their voter registration drive. However, Meredith's hold on the University of Mississippi is tenuous. His life is in constant danger as the violence of the last two days in- dicates. Any day some unknown assailant, pas- sionately committed to segregation, could blow Meredith to bits with a shotgun or a rifle shot could kill him while he sleeps. The National Guard, federal troops and marshals cannot re- main forever, but as long as Meredith attends the University of Mississippi, his life is inse- cure. IF MEREDITH survives, he faces sev- eral challenges. He could be expelled by a student judiciary on some trumped up charge of ''conduct unbecoming a student" or less like- ly, he could be flunked out by his instructors. Thus Meredith will have to live a careful life while a student at the University of Mississippi. His life in Mississippi will also be a lonely one in view of the student violence and the fed- eral force needed to put it down. Social and political pressures will prevent white students from bridging the bigotry gap to befriend this lone Negro student. It is unfortunate that integration has to be accomplished with violence and shame for the United States in the eyes of the world, but it is in the pattern of Mississippi race relations. Every attempt at integration has been met with violence, terror and intimidation. Last year's incidents during the McComb, Mis's. voter reg- istration drive are . average reactions to at- tempts of ending segregation. Former Daily Editor Thomas Hayden, himself beaten at Mc- Comb, points out that killings, beatings and other forms of intimidation are the regular fate of integrationists in Mississippi. New Re O IT WAS NOT surprising that mass violence ensued, despite Gov. Ross Barnett's pleas for public order. However, its source was unusual. Former Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker who com- manded the troops at Little Rock, enraged a mob of students, local residents and outsiders whom he exhorted to defend segregation at Ox- ford. His demented attempts have proved futile and costly. Walker is now in a federal mental hospital in Missouri facing charges of impeding marshals, inciting to riot, and conspiring to oppose by force the execution of federal law. The last charge alone carries a 20-year jail sentence and $20,000 fine. Thus the checkered career of Walker draws to a close. Throughout the entire crisis, President John F. Kennedy and his administration have acted shrewdly and effectively. When it was clear that Mississippi authorities were not going to bow to federal troops, the attorney general's of- fice, step-by-step, sought successfully to strip the legal bands of authority down to their source. By first attacking university administrators and then the college board, the administration avoided making a martyr out of Barnett who had sworn he would go to jail rather than per- mit integration at Mississippi. When the col- lege board capitulated under court threats and the governor and lieutenant governor barred Meredith, the Justice Department took them into court and successfully had them convicted of contempt, but gave them time to reverse themselves or face heavy penalties. Then, Kennedy performed the master stroke -he nationalized the Mississippi National Guard, stripping Barnett of a major portion of his physical power. Barnett backtracked, conceding temporary defeat. At this point, Ken- nedy's timing went awry. Had he'given his firm, but conciliatory speech at the originally sched- uled time of 6:30 p.m. Sunday, he might have averted the riots. Perhaps in hopes of reach- ing a settlement with Barnett, Kennedy post- poned his talk until 9 pm. when the riots were already underway. THUS KENNEDY'S EFFORTS to avoid a bloody, bitter and embarrassing showdown with the state government and the local mob failed. The troops had to -be moved in to quell the violence. The United States had another black eye before the world. Meredith's victory begins a new era in the struggle against Mississippi segregation. The white wall has been cracked. It is only a slight chip. But it is enough of an opening to drive a wedge in and shatter the wall. PHIIP SUTIN sources HIDDEN behind the innocuous title of "Scholle vs Hare" is a court case that is giving rural state legislators nightmares. The case, now before the United States Supreme Court, concerns reapportionment of the state Sen- ate. The Supreme Court is being asked to hear an appeal on a de- cision rendered by the Michigan Supreme Court that the present Senate apportionment, established by a Constitutional'amendment in 1952, is in violation of the 14th amendment and denies equal pro- tection of the law to residents of the more populous areas of the state. « « « AUGUST SCHOLLE, president of the state AFL-CIO who initiat- ed the proceedings, has asked that the Senate reapportion along pop- ulation lines. The legal questions involved are immense andscomplex. It is only within the last year that the Su- preme Court has seen fit to inter- vene at all in apportionment cases. The precedents and the proper f o r m u 1 a s for reapportionment within a state have not yet been firmly established. And the case of a state Senate - where area as well as population are supposed to be standards for districting - has complicated the question all the more. s * * MICHIGAN'S problem began more than ten years ago. Rather than face the difficult process \of reapportionment after the 1950 census, the Senate chose to sub- mit a constitutional amendment to a vote of the people. This amendment, instead of reappor- tioning, simply added two districts to the Senate. It also froze the boundaries of the Senate into the state constitution. Naturally, this brought cries of foul play from the big cities. According to the 1950 census, there were gross differences in senatorial districts which ranged in size from 61,000 to 396,000. To complicate matters further, since 1948 there has been a Demo- cratic governor and a Republican legislature. The Senate in particu- lar hap been the source of irrita- tion because conservative, rural Republicans have dominated that body. * * * THUS, CRITICS have asserted, the Senate has been the burial ground of many of the most im- portant and necessary pieces of legislation needed by the state. Only last year, fiscal reform failed in the Senate. Detroit voters feel that the Legislature is not sensi- tive to their needs. Those who come from perdominately non- industrial areas have failed to see that the needs of industrial areas have to be considered. The Sen- ators are wrapped up in a ridicu- lously ultra-conservative economy minded viewpoint, bringing in- Jury to the state. But obviously, this is no ra- t i o n a 1 e for reapportionment though it is a stimulus to seek it. One does not seek such a radical approach to changing a democrat- ically constituted body unless there is real question of whether it is democratically constituted. The next hope for more equit- able reapportionment came with the state's constitutional conven- tion. But Con-Con, whose dele- gates were elected on the basis of the present gerrymandered Sen- ate and House districts, still re- tained a combination area-popu- lation formula in determining Senate representation. Although the new constitution definitely gives more representation ot the heavily populated urban and sub- urban Detroit area, it still does not satisfy the more vociferous critics of the Senate. * * * BUT TWO years ago, Scholle initiated a suit against the state claiming that he was being de- prived of equal protection of the law since he lived in a district (Oakland County) which was not fairly represented in relation to other areas. At the time, legisla- tors did not take Scholle too seri- ously. For one thing, they felt that the courts would take a tradition- "It's Your Move, I Believe" -,- x. s~ a F' ---R atorial districts. As a matter of fact, while the old Michigan con- stitution includes by amendment the districts of the Senate, it does not include any standard by which apportionment is to be con- ducted. Therefore, the question of S e n a t e apportionment is not whether the Senate should mimic its big brother in Washington; in- stead it should be how can the Senate serve a useful function by having members whose perspec- tives and constituencies are broader than the average repre- sentatives. And this can be done on a near population basis. Another important aspect of reapportionment is the new Con- stitution. If passed, it would put a new Senate apportionment into effect that is certainly a step for- ward although it is far from fully adequate. The difficulty here is that the new districting would not go into effect until 1970 and not unless the document is passed in the April election. And, after all,. there is no reason for.Michi- gan voters to settle for anything less than complete satisfaction on apportionment. * * * EVEN IF Republican guberna- torial candidate George Romney's plan for a referendum that would put the Con-Con formula into ef- fect immediately were accepted, this would not solve the problem. There would still be a five to on ratio between the largest and the smallest districts. Besides, in a referendum the voter is faced with a take it or leave it proposition. There are no alternatives if the proposition fails. And it would mean the aban- donment of legislative responsibil- ity. Indeed, the Legislature has all too often abandoned its respon- sibility in these matters. Certainly the people have a right to vote on certain questions, including ap- portionment. But the matter is complex and ought not to be re- duced to a single alternative for which even the Legislature is afraid to be blamed. This is what happened in 1952. This is what is happening now in the Congres- sional election because the Legis- lators refused to work toward an honest solution of Michigan's nineteenth Congressman. If the Legislature fails to reach an equitable solution to court- ordered apportionment, there will be mdre than ample justification for a Senate at large. The apportionment ought not to be considered as a power grab by the big cities. Urban voters can equally reply that the present situation has been used to gerry- mander power into the hands of rural areas. Both points are in- valid. The real question is exactly how far does equal protection of the laws extend? al legal view of the case, that ap- portionment was a "political thicket" which it is the duty of the courts not to enter. Indeed, the, Michigan Supreme Court refused to rule on Scholle's suit at the time. But then the United States Su- preme Court reversed itself. In the suit of a group of Memphis resi- dents asking that the Tennessee legislature be forced to reappor- tion, the court ruled that these citizens were being deprived of the equal protection of the law and that the court certainly would involve itself in questions of ap- portionment. Then a torrent of such cases came before the court. The court overruled the Georgia county unit system that for so long had placed control of the Democratic primary in the hands of rural Georgia counties. Wiscon- sin also had its legislative appor- tionment overruled in federal court. In all, at least 18 states faced court action over apportion- ment, including Michigan. IN THE CASE of Michigan, the court ordered the Michigan Su- preme Court to rule in Scholle's case. By a strict party-line vote, the Michigan court last summer ordered the Senate to reapportion with no district being more than twice as large as any other, or- dered the cancellation of the Aug- ust primary for the state Senate and allowed the Legislature until the beginning of September to re- apportion the state or face an election at large. Clearly the Michigan Court's ruling was ridiculous. A month is hardly adequate time for an issue so important and a task so difficult. An election ofthe Sen- ate at large would also be silly. It would create a Senate at least as unrepresentative as the present one. And the delay of the Sena- torial primary would cost the state both unwarranted confusion and money. In response to the Michigan court's decision, the Legislature rushed madly into session, some of its members screaming for the impeachment of the supreme court justices, and attempted to gerry- mander the state into Senatorial districts that would both satisfy the court and maintain rural GOP control. * * * GOV. JOHN B. Swainson called for reapportionment strictly on the basis of population and even appointed a special commission to work on the problem. There was of course an appeal. Because the Supreme Court was not in session at the time, all that could be done was to ask Justice Potter Stewart to issue an order delaying the implementation ,of the decision until Oct. 1, when the full court would meet again. This Justice Stewart did. The Legislators calmed down, went into recess - which if the United States court rules against the present scheme will allow them to reconvene without being called by the governor - and re- turned to the business of getting re-elected. THUS THE issue of reappor- tionment is in limbo until & the court gives a final decision some- time this or next month. It is dif- ficult to predict what that deci- sion will be since the legal ques- tions are extremely complex. But there will be several questions fac- ing the court. One of the first of these is that Michigan voters, in approving it in the 1952 referendum, have themselves accepted the present system of Senate apportionment. This of course is obviously true. In the Tennessee case, which serves as one of the few legal precedents, the major question was the Legislature's failure to ap- portion as directed and it attacked the apportionment of both houses of the Legislature. The difficulty of reconciling the necessity of court action and the approval of the people is the least difficult. The referendum was ten years ago. Population has shifted and the difference in the size of the districts has become even more gross than the original ratio of 61,000 to 396,000. One cannot ac- cept the judgment of ten years ago as a final decision in a situa- tion like apportionment where a constant state of flux exists. Also, it is questionable whether even the people themselves have the right to give up their'constitution- al rights. The second point, that the com- plaint is only against one house of the Legislature, raises an ex- tremely difficult question: should one house of the Legislature take area into account as a factor in" its representation? And, if not, why have an upper house at all? THE ASSUMPTION here is that state government is patterned aft- er the federal model. But this, is not so. The state of Michigan is not as diverse as the United States. The Michigan Court's for- mula of no district being more than twice as large as any other' certainly allows enough leeway so that no Senator has a constituen- cy so spread out that he cannot possibly serve the electorate. It more than allows for diversity of interest to be represented. It is in fact overly generous and a for- mula of 80 per cent population to 20 per cent area would still be generous. Senators could still be useful by the fact that any one district would be large and he would have to take into account a broader picture than any rep- resentative. As for area, even the most die- hard outstate politician has ad- mitted that area cannot be the only standard for setting up Sen- AT THE STATE 'Two Weeks':) Too Long A COLLEGE or university is judged and rated throughout the country on its academic excellence. In the past, the University has been given an excellent rating. But in order to maintain its record of excellence something must be done in order to obtain sufficient funds for the University to support its programs. The questions which students ought to ask them- selves and attempt to solve are not when wom- en must come into the dormitory or which sor- orities file statements, but where to get and how to spend money. Begin with the question where does money come from? One third of the University's money comes from the state. Other money tomes from grants, gifts and the interest which accumu- lates from liquid assets of the University. In addition there are student fees and money from various bond issues which are passed, usually for specific building projects. But this does not tell the entire story. The athletic department acquires monies from reve- nue from football games and other sports and the Michigan Union and the Michigan League have hotel and snack bar business. These or- ganizations show profits, additional money within the University structure but not turned over to the University to use as general funds. Now look at how the money is spent. Uni- versity funds go for capital outlay, faculty sal- aries, non-academic staff salaries and the wide term overhead. Overhead includes plant man- agement, heat, light, water and general upkeep. THE NEXT POINT is obvious, the University needs more money. But the question of how to get it and why is important. In the first place, the University is an excellent university due primarily to its faculty. But in the last few years such men as Prof. Leo Goldberg, former- ly of the astronomy department, have left the University for lack of sufficient facilities, in- sufficient salary or both. It is true that the faculty recently got a raise due to the increase in tuition but this is not enough nor is this the way it should be done. Why raise tuition and force some students to leave the University in order to pay a professor who in the process just lost a student?. Why be forced continually to do this? In- deed, if this is the way that the University is going to pay for its faculty, before long tuition will be so high that it will be impossible for many brilliant potential students to come here. example, where tuition is only $500 for out-of- state students and free for in-staters as com- pared to the $960 and $310 for the 'University. IN ANSWER to these problems, administrators and students cite the small appropriations from the Legislature and the understandable concern for the taxpayer in Michigan. But now consider the profits spoken of in the beginning, those of the Union, the League, the athletic department and other similar organizations. The athletic department puts its own profits into other athletic events. And profitable en- terprises like football support non-paying sports. But there is still enough left over, or has been in previous years, to build a press box for some thousands of dollars and a new ath- letic building. We can argue for these expenditures on the grounds that in order to have good teams one must have good recruiting and in having good recruiting one must impress the incoming stu- dent. Again, this is true and there is no black and white on this issue, but why couldn't the athletic department contribute a portion of its profits to the general fund-sponsor a profes- sor each year so to speak since it could pay for one professor's salary and certainly not go broke or be forced to curtail athletic events. The same thing can be said for the League and the Union. If these organizations make a profit, fine. But why don't they pledge a per- centage to the University of whatever profit they make? THESE GROUPS are part of the University. Students pay tuition and those groups which are using ,University facilities in the simple sense that the University supplies the students to them ought to pay to keep the University as it is now, not let it fall from its position of emi- nence just because it does not have sufficient funds. In a certain sense these inhuman or- ganizations have a human's moral obligation to "pay their own way" and help keep the Uni- versity as it is. It seems that with the increasing financial mess in Lansing, there must be other ways found to alleviate the University's position. It cannot wait for the state to get on its feet financially and get legislators who are willing to appropriate more money; it cannot wait for more alumni to realize that without money the IT TOOK "Two Weeks in Anoth- er Town" for Kirk Douglas to learn what he should have known all along, and what everyone in the audience must have known after ten minutes - the past is past and the hell with it. Douglas, a has-been movie Adonis, is pulled out of the looney house by a has-been director (Ed- ward G. Robinson) to help with some technical problems, in shoot- ing a film in Rome. Douglas meets his old love, and immediately his cheek twitches and his arm shakes. Then he looks at his new love, and his cheek stops twitching and his arm stops shaking. * * * DOUGLAS has trouble convinc- ing the new Adonis, George Ham- ilton, his lines are important: Im- mediately his cheek twitches and his arm shakes. But, he receives' a call from his new love and his cheek stops twitching and his arm stops shaking. The director and cast would have us believe Kirk had a rough time during his years of stardom. He did. He felt lonely. Besides, he caught Edward G. Robinson in bed with his chick. So after an unoriginal auto crash, andseveral years of twitch- and shaking, he's on the recovery road. Robinson conveniently has a heart attack and Douglas finishes the picture. THE THEME is the attainment of maturity despite the pitfalls of fame and fickle women. Kirk couldn't tell if he was the man-on- the-screen or the face-in-the- mirror. And that gave him a feel- ing of insecurity from which he ran. (He says it himself.) When he stops running, he dis- covers new strength, new life, and the advisability of finding new friends. But the movieviewer can tell he'll forgive most of the old ones. The directing is-bad. Instead of breaking up static. scenes with his camera, Director Vincente Min- nelli has the actors making theat- rical gestures and movements. This is all right on the stage, when the audience is 50 or 100 feet away, but not when the camera is only a few feet aawy. The acting, as a consequence, is also bad. The only real relief is Edward G. Robinson, who salvages a few scenes. -Tom Brien FEIFFER M4OM Mu{ A~K ME - c"oWHA- t'o qOU WAZJT 7o Be W9J60 ) ou 6ROoA) UP, J0cq l(« t AQPI SZAV A ' . 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