The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 15, 1981-Page 5 'RACIAL PR EJUDICE' LED TO JAPANESE-AMERICAN PRISONS WWII camps called an outrage WASHINGTON (AP)-Former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas testified yesterday that racial prejudice, not national security, led to the mass in- ternment of people of Japanese descent in World War II. He called the episode a tragic error, an outrage, an unconscionable and irrational deed. "I think it is clear-perhaps it was always clear-that the mass evacuation order was never justified," Fortas told an official inquiry into events that happened nearly 40 years ago. "I CANNOT ESCAPE the conclusion that racial prejudice was a basic ingredient," he said: "Even the trauma of war does not excuse irrational and needless assaults upon human beings and senseless violations of our fundamental constitutional prin- ciples." Fortas, an undersecretary in the Interior Depar- tment from 1942 to 1946 when 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry were interned, said the camps were humanely administered but "this fact does not and should not absolve our nation or relieve the national conscience." ned. Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who lost his right The 9-member commission on Wartime Relocation arm fighting in Italy as part of the famed, 442nd and Internment of Civilians was created by Congress Regimental Combat Team, admonished the com- and signed into law by President Carter. It will hold mission to: another hearing in Washington tomorrow then move on to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, three sites "I think it is clear-perhaps it was in Alaska, and finally to Chicago. IT IS TO review the facts and circumstances of the always clear-that the mass internment, which was ordered by President evacuation order was never Franklin Roosevelt, and to determine what if any utfe , redress is owed the people affected and their descen- justified. "dants. -A be Fortas, Inouye's colleague from Hawaii, Sen. Spark Mat- Former Supreme Court Justice sunaga, called the holding of Japanese-Americans "in what can only be described as American-style concentration camps" one of the darkest pages in "MAKE YOUR report one that will awaken this American history. experience enough to haunt the conscience of this Among those supporting the internment, he said, nation-haunt it so we will never forget that we are was the late Earl Warren, then a prosecuting attor- capable of such an act." ney and later governor of California and Chief Justice Hawaii's large Japanese population was not inter- of the United States. Oral Roberts 'U'in dispute with ABA TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Oral Roberts University and the American Bar Association, each claiming the U.S. Constitution in its corner, are headed for federal court in a fight over ac- creditation of ORU's new law school. The ABA contends the university - which attracts most of its students from the charismatic Christian constituency of television evangelist Oral Roberts, the school's founder - practices religious discrimination. ORU COUNTERS that the ABA has no right to wield a "spiritual ther- mometer" in judging the quality of a law school. The law school's! first class of 47 students is scheduled to graduate next May. But without at least provisional approval from the ABA, the graduates cannot practice law in this country. A hearing is scheduled for today in U.S. District Court in Chicago, where the ABA is heddquartered, on ORU's lawsuit challenging the right of the 0 It's almost that time ... The Staff at the would like to wish you a great BREAK! ABA to withhold accreditation on religious grounds. AT ISSUE is the Tulsa school's "Code of Honor." Upon admission all students pledge, in part, "to seek the will of God for my life and to exemplify Christlike behavior." The ABA's "Standard 211" prohibits accreditation of any school that discriminates on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, or sex. The university was informed six weeks ago, in a letter signed by ABA legal education consultant James White, that the Accreditation Commit- tee had denied the school's application. White said ORU requirements "impose an admission qualification that is in- tended to prevent the admission of ap- plicants on the ground of religion." THE ACCREDITATION Committee met this past weekend to reconsider the ORU application before preparing a final recommendation to the ABA's House of Delegates, which makes the actual decision in August. INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave of liberty 761-0700 T HE A DUE NT UR E C O N T I N U E S CHRISTOPHER - REEVE.< (NO MATINEE OR COUPON PRICES) DAILY- 12:05, 2:25, 4:15, 7:15, 9:35