The Supreme Court Ruling on Segregation See Page 4 Ci 4c Latest Deadline in the State 471 tiiy IO PARTLY CLOUDY, COOL VOL. LXIV, No. 151 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1954 SIX PAGES Court Says School Segregation Unconstitutional 11 U' Faculty Hails 'Only Choice Open 17 Dixie States, Capital Affected By HARRY STRAUSS Unanimously ruling that segre gation in public schools is uncon stitutional, the Supreme Court de lared yesterday that "separate bu equal" facilities are "inherentl: unequal" Read by Chief Justice Earl War ren, the 12-page decision cited th 14th Amendment in connectioi with the 17 states to be affected b: the new ruling, and the Fift: Amendment in connection with ra cial segregation in the publi schools of the District of Columbia METHODS to end the practic will be discussed by the court i the fall. States having laws requiring segregation are: Alabama, Ar- kansas, Delaware, Florida, Geor- gia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mary- land, .Mississippi, .Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Tex- as, Virginia, and West Virginia. J. The decision was reached, Chief Justice Warren wrote, when the following question was presented: "Does segregation of childrer } in public schools solely on the ba- sis of race, even though the phys- ical facilities and other 'tangible factors may be equal, deprive the children of the minority group of equal education opportunities? We believe that it does." * * * FACULTY members contacted 1 e all said that this was the only ;ourse for the Court to take and lauded the ruling, " Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law School said "The decision is a great advance and' adds much to the real content of basic American values. "In our rejoicing, we should re- member how great a task it will be for the federal judiciary, un- aided by Congress, to execute this decision. Congress will con- tinue to be paralyzed by the South- ern filibuster in the Senate. Our federal judges will at least have the moral backing of a vast majority of Americans and our friends, abroad," he concluded. } Prof. Everett Brown of the polit- ical science department noted that the states will have some difficul- ty. getting around the ruling for "in the long run, all the states will have to conform, but it will take working out." President of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Robert Evans, 56L said that "the decision is the all important ini- tial step in what will now be a great struggle for actual equali- ty of opportunity in the area of public education." He added that the coming aca- demic and social interaction of students with similar objectives "will afford the best possible cli- mate for the elimination of the misconceptions that are the basis of most racial intolerance." * * * POLITICAL leaders in the South all opposed the decision, some more violently than others. Governors Herman Talmadge of Georgia and James Byrnes of South Carolina, both of whom have in the past said that they would turn their state's educa- tion system over to private in- terests if segregation were ruled against by the Supreme Court, attacked the decision. Gov. Talmadge said the Court has reduced the Constitution "to a mere scrap of paper" with its ruling. Gov. Byrnes said that the sep- arate but equal doctrine had been held many times and "was not vio- lative of the Constitution. I am shocked to learn that the court has reversed itself." He added that he urges "all of our people,. white and colored, to exercise restraint and preserve or- der." F .:a * * * * M eC * A rmy-McCarthy~U Hearing Hlted Ike Order Forbids Witnesses To Tell White House Role in Feud WASHINGTON-(')-The McCarthy-Army hearings bumped into a Presidential order yesterday and the result was that they came to an unexpected, dramatic halt-for a week at least, maybe forever. Bloci Taking a personal hand, President Eisenhower issued a directive forbidding Army witnesses to testify about the role of White House Block 'M sigi and other high officials in the televised controversy between Sen. fall begins tomo Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and civilian Pentagon chiefs. end on Friday. * * * j Old members, McCARTHY CRIED "Iron Curtain!" Democrats raised a protest seniors should s of "whitewash." And in the end the Senate Investigations Subcom- row, any ot] Senate Stops 1otion ly Source )Herying Clar n-up for next rrow and will juniors and ign up tomor- hers interested ti Friday. be at Barbour .m. to 3 p.m. I O, mittee voted to recess the public on inursuayans Sign-up will b Gym from 12 p. Police Catch 62 in Arb Beer Raids A series of raids conducted last Saturday night by the Ann Arbor Police caught 62 people drinking beer illegally in the Arboretum. According to local police officers, 58 were University students and 48 were under 21. Although none were placed under arrest, they had to give their names to the officers and the beer and other intoxicants were confiscated. * * * CHARGES OF illegal possession of intoxicating beverages can be brought against the minors while adults may be charged with drink- ing in a public park and furnishing intoxicants to minors, police em- phasized, adding that the names of students will be turned over to University authorities as a matter of procedure. Walter B. Rea, Acting Dean of Students, said he had not yet received the names of the stu. dents involved. "We cannot ver- ify the reports until the names are turned over to us," he noted. Commenting on what 'action would be taken by the University, Dean Rea said, "Our attitudes will be guided largely by what charges are brought against the students by the Police." Panhel May Aid Foreign Students A suggestion was made for sor- orities to sponsor foreign under- graduate women next year, at yesterday's Panhellenic Associa- tion meeting. Barbara Backlar, '56, a mem- ber of the Student Legislature, proposed the idea before Panhel delegates, who will return it to their houses for further discus- sion. Variations of the plan might enable sororities to take foreign women in for an entire year, pay- ing all or most of their expenses, or to provide meals for them at intervals. No decision will be made until next fall. inquiry until next Monday to see if Eisenhower would withdraw or modify his secrecy clampdown. Acting Chairman Karl Mundt (R-S.D.) declared there is noth- ing about the recess which "even remotely implies a discontinua- tion of these hearings" for good. The Democrats, however, said it looked to them as if the hear- ings may well have blown sky high - unless the President should change his mind. The chances of Eisenhower do-} ing this appeared pretty slim. The President said in yester- day's secrecy order, issued to Sec- retary of Defense Charles . Wil- son, that his stand was taken "to maintain the proper separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches of the govern- ment in accordance with my re- sponsibilitiesand duties under the Constitution." AND HE SAID, too, in language that left little if any room for back-tracking: "This separation is vital to preclude the exercise of arbi- trary power by any branch of the government." And so ended-for the time be- ing, a least-18 days of unprece- dented, nationally televised hear- ings that brought day, after day of testimony from Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens and Army Counselor John G. Adams- but only brief, incidental trips to the witness stand by their main antagonists, McCarthy and his chief counsel, Roy M. Cohn. Specifically, Eisenhower's order, forbade Adams--who was still on the witness stand when the break- up came-to give any further de-s tails of a Jan. 21 meeting of White House and other top level officials which led to the Army's head-on collision with McCarthy. At the Jan. 21 meeting, in ad- dition to Army lawyer Adams, were Sherman Adams, assistant to President Eisenhower; Atty. Gen. Brownell; Dep. Atty. Gen. Wil- liam P. Rogers; Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief U. S. delegate to the United Nations and a part- time White House aide; and Ger- ald Morgan of the White House staff. Hatcher Declares 'Integrity Impugned Faculty Member Seeks Explanation Of Committee's Knowledge on Talks By JIM DYGERT Confusion was introduced into the University Faculty Senate meeting yesterday along with a motion to investigate the means by which the subcommittee of the House Un-American Activities Com- mittee obtained information regarding what a faculty witness had told administrative officers of the University. The motion, made by Prof. Raymond L. Wilder of the mathe- matics department, was immediately followed by a statement from the chairman of the meeting, University President Harlan H. Hatcher, to the effect that the motion was improper. ** * each day. Membership fee is 25 cents. Cityr Council Okays Plan For Budget Ann Arbor's City Council last night voted unanimously in favor of a planned $2,104,835 budget for next year, with most of the money to be appropriated from taxes. At the opening of the meeting, Mayor William E. Brown, Jr. on behalf of the Council and the city, awarded a certificate and key as a token of thanks to traffic super- visor Gene D. Maybee. "We owe our deepest thanks for your out- standing work in making Ann Ar- bor as good as it is in traffic safety," said Mayor Brown, ad- dressing Maybee. * * * "IT IS because of your accom- plishments that Ann Arbor hasn't had a pedestrian death in the last six or eight years," he said. It was also brought out last night that some possessors of University parking permits had the wrong idea about the use of these permits. When the permits were issued, it was understood that all park- ing permits did not apply to mu- nicipal facilities or metered areas but only to University parking lots. Some permit-holders evident- ly believed that the permits were good for parking meters and city parking lots. Assistant Vice-president Herbert G. Watkins, who was in charge of the issuing of these permits, said that all permits stated definitely that they were to be used only in University parking lots. Daily Bills Credits will be withheld from students who have not paid their Daily subscription bills. Tomorrow will be the last day on which these bills may be paid. STICKER CAMPAIGN-The first sticker of the NAACP campaign against discrimination in Ann Arbor stores goes up as two membersj of the organization look on. Stickers will be displayed on doors, windows, or in a prominent position inside the store. SIX-MONTH STUDY: House Examines Major Education Foundations By DEBRA DURCHSLAG .. SCharged with freeing education "from the natural safeguards in- herent in the American tradition," major educational foundations are currently being examined by the SeilHouse Committee toTn THANKS TO JOE: Table Carving Begins at Union vestigate Tax-Exempt Founda- Publications Board Lists Appointments The Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications yesterday ap- proved the following appoint- ments: On the editorial staff: Night Editors, Dave Baad, '56; Joel Ber- ger, '55; Jim Dygert, '56; Wally Eberhard, '56; Murry Frymer, '56; Jane Howard, '56; Arlene Liss, '56. ASSISTANT Night Editors: Deb- ra Durchslag, '56; Rona Fried- man, '56; David Kaplan, '56; Shir- ley Klein, '56; Phyllis Lipsky, '55; Freddi Loewenberg, '56; Harry Strauss, '55; Louise Tyor, '56. Women's Night Editors: Sue Garfield, '56 and Mary Helltha- ler, '56. Sports Night Editors: Al Eis- enberg, '56; Jack Horwitz, '56; Don Undman, '56; Corky Smith, ,56. On the Business Staff: Ken Rogat, '56, Circulation Manager; Barbara Peril, '57, Assistant Cir- culation Manager; Dorothy Gold- man, '56, Classified Advertising Manager; Pete Solar, '57, Assistant Classified Advertising Manager; Sue Blau, '56, Display Accounts Manager; Marty Weisbad, '56, As- sistant Display Accounts Manag- er; Lois Binetsky, '56, Layout Man- ager; Pat Lamberis, '57, Assistant Layout Manager. Dick Alstrom, '56, Local Adver- tising Manager; Jerry Pusch, '57, Assistant Local Advertising Man- ager; Sandy Wasserstein, '57, As- sistant Local Advertising Manag- er; Gail Cohen, '56, National Ad- vertising Manager; Anita Siges- mund, '56, Promotions Manager; Stew Evans, '56, Assistant Promo- .4. - . .. -,. :., ;. . fr tions. Based on a six month study, the report indicated that the numer- ous foundations, which include Ford, Rockefeller, and Carnegie, are "used to finance ideas and practices incompatible with the fundamental concepts of our Con- stitution." PROF. ANGUS Campbell, direc- tor of the University's Survey Re- search Center, commented that such conclusions can be drawn only if one starts from a highly nationalistic point of view. Both Campbell and Prof. Dor- win Cartwright, director of the Research Center for Group Dy- namics, praised the work of the foundations. "The three major foundations, Ford, Rockefeller and Carnegie, have made a ma- jor contribution to the advance of science and the betterment of social conditions," said Cart- wright. This is the second House com- mittee set up to investigate the Foundations. The previous inves- tigation under the late Rep. Ed- ward E. Cox (D-Ga.) concluded in recommending that there be more foundations and that further tax advantages be granted to persons who contributed to them. Rep. B. Carroll Reece (R-Tenn.), chairman of the present commit- tee, contends that the earlier com- mittee on which he was the rank- ing minority member did an in- complete job as it functioned dur- ing the illness of, and after the death of Cox. THE MOTION was tabled byt French Set Indochina Evacuation HANOI, Indochina - (P) - The French High Command made a new six-point proposal yesterday for r evacuating Diei Bien Phu's wounded, including an offer to evacuate seriously wounded rebel soldiers. The new plan, broadcast to the rebels over the French radio, came as the French air force prepared to hurl all available American-; supplied planes in mighty strikes at Vietminh troops moving to-, ward the Red River Delta. * * * THE FRENCH proposal called for: Repair of Dien Bien Phu's airfield to permit the use of larger planes in airlifting the wounded, removal of the wound- ed at the highest possible rate, cessation of air strikes of the 70-mile highway between Dien Bien Phu and Son La to per- mit the rebels to remove their own casualties, removal of Viet- minh-imposed barriers on evac- uation of wounded Vietnamese, and French medical aid and air ' transport to French hospitals for gravely wounded rebels. Squadrons of land and carrier- based warplanes were to take off at midnight to blast rebel troops and their supply convoys mov- ing eastward and, northweastward along all key roads Soviet Arms Aid Charged by U.S. WASHINGTON - (R) - The State Department charged yester- day that "an important shipment of arms" has been sent to left wing Guatemala from "Soviet con- trolled territory." 4 "The Department of State con- siders that this is a development of gravity," an announcement said. the Senate after several minutes of 4 confusion. Tabling a motion has the effect of killing it. President Hatcher, in indicat- ing the motion improper, said that it impugned the integrity of the-administration and would establish another committee in an already complex arrange. ment. There was no discussion on the motion. During the confusion, which re- sulted from what was interpreted by some as a call by President Hatcher for a vote of confidence and by others as a vote on wheth- er the motion was improper, no one knew exactly what was being voted upon, according to informed sources who were present at the meeting. The tabling motion was passed by a voice vote which the chair- man, President Hatcher, ruled in favor of the tabling. The ruling was not disputed. Introduction of this motion ended the previous confusion. * * * THE ORIGINAL motion revolv- ed around the testimony of Prof. Mark Nickerson of the pharmacol- ogy department before the Clardy committee. In particular, it concerned a question asked Rep. Kit Clardy (R-Mich.), chairman of the sub- committee, by committee counsel Frank Tavenner. Part of this was as follows: ". .-. but ac- cording to the information in the possession of the Committee is that the witness advised the University officials that he had been a member of the Commun- ist Party but claimed he had severed all connections with the Communist Party." Prof. Nickerson revealed in his testimony that he had conferred with Dr. Maurice H. Seevers, chairman of the pharmacology de- partment, Albert C. Furstenberg, dean of the medical school, and President Hatcher. Prof. Wilder's motion was in- tended to start investigation of the way in which the committee learned of these conferences. ONE MEMBER of the faculty said that a "great segment of the faculty was disturbed over this as- pect of the hearings." Another. commented that faculty people felt that the breaking of confidence re- flects on the good name of the University. The procedure by which the mo- tion was tabled irritated several faculty members. One called it "steamrolling tactics." THREE members of the faculty claimed that the president intends to let the whole affair die out over the summer. Director of Univer- sity Relations Arthur L. Brandon, commenting on this statement, said, "I can see no justification for it at all." Earlier in the meeting, Presi- dent Hatcher told the Senate faf rn rfn >" 60 .as In line with Michigan tradition, the Union has invited the Class of '54 to add their names or ini- tials to the countless others on the annually carved tables in the Union taproom. The tradition dates back to the turn of the century when Joe Par- ker, the owiner of the famous beer parlor mentioned in "I Wanna Go Back to Michigan," began the practice by setting aside a table each year, on which seniors might leave a lasting impression of their days at Michigan. Many of the table tops are at- tached to the walls, displaying names of illustrious graduates. These table tops range from ones on which members of the famous point-a-minute football teams have carved their names, to the 14, +ahlh rof Aryvv,, - Inn-. IFC, Panhel To Aid City (Community Chest Drive By DAVE BAAD The Interfraternity Council an- nounced yesterday that it, in co- operation with Panhellenic, is assuming orgamzation of one- fifth of next fall's city communi- ty chest drive. The IFC-Panhel part of the campaign, which will cover 2200 homes in Ann Arbor. marks the Coats, IFC fraternity services chairman said that he hopes that not only with the fraternity-soror- ity contribution strengthen the town drive but that it will set a precedent for further cooperation on the part of student groups with community projects. The IFC also announced yester- cn nrnr.acc. +.rnrnrri *c. ,a- - 4.+ - . -