i lITl l .r.r DAILY Found Guilty, Sen:nced, Fined T . tong-pending case of H. r Davis, former Univer- t h e m a t i c s instructor, a climax this summer ivis was found guilty on is of contempt of Con- al District Court Judge W. Kent, who had conducted two-day trial without jury id Rapids last November, ced the verdict June 26. ugust 5 Judge Kent sen- Davis to pay a $250 fine 've six months in prison. Appeal Filed wing the decision on June is announced his intention mal the conviction and in gust he filed his brief with' ited States Court of Ap- i Cincinnati. ng the appeal, Judge Kent a defense motion to sus- e sentence for thirty days ed Davis on personal bond. who invoked the First nent in refusing to testify Kit Clardy's House Un- n Activities subcommittee 4, continued his stand out a Federal Grand Jury ent and the Iovember naintained that a com- )f Congress which sets out cize political ideals is vio- the First Amendment, guarantees freedom of and freedom of assembly. ner Asks if ormity Charles W. Joiner of the oo1 recently urged the ere- fa national committee to ,d develop uniform, rules nee for federal courts. ing at the annual confer- federal judges of the Third Circuit in Atlantic City, iner said such a committee e formed by the Supreme a committee has been cre- the Sixth Judicial District, ncludes Michigan, he said, s met with favorabl. re- from many of the nation's I experts. Joiner asserted that genu- ership on a national scale field of evidence is badly today. can -come only from the courts," he added. esent, Prof. Joiner said, deral trial judge and at- must know four sets of rules. "It is not 'for this Court to de- termine that such investigations are or are not helpful to the Con- gress in the enactment o6f legisla- tion. Such determination is en-, tirely within the power of Con- gress itself." Judge Kent explained that his Court examined the Supreme Court decision in the Watkins case "and is satisfied that noth- ing in that opinion can be con- strued in such a manner as to change the conclusion that the Court has reached in this case." The history of the Davis case began in the spring of 1954 when three University faculty members and two graduate students were su~bpoenaed to appear before the House Un-American Activities subcommittee in Lansing May 10. 'Operation Mind' Among the faculty members called to appear, Davis was be- lieved to have "ordered, received, and paid for" a document called "Operation Mind." The Govern- ment contended that "Operation Mind" opposed the work of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Subcommittee chairman Clardy stated he had information that there were Communist cells at the University. "You can assume I have been politically active," Davis re- marked after receiving the sub- poena. When he appeared before the committee. Davis refused to describe his political background, invoking the First Amendment when Clardy warned that only the Fifth Amendment Would be con- sidered valid. Davis Fired Davis was suspended by the University following the hearing. Arthur L. Brandon, then Director of University Relations, explained that the suspension was "on the basis of refusing to co-operate with the committee. "The University's policy is one of co-operation." In the summer of 1956 Davis was indicted by a :Federal Grand Jury in Grand Rapids after re- fusing to answer questions about his alleged membership in the communist party. Following the Indictment, a Special Advisory Committee of the Faculty Senate recommended Da- vis's dismissal from the Univer- sity. Since then, Davis has been an instructor in mathematics at Columbia University. VI" THE ADVENT' OF A NE SORE H. UHANDLER DAVIS ...appealing his case 'In a statement to The Daily in June, Davis cited the Watkins and Sweezy cases in which he claimed the Supreme Court af- firmed that legislative hearings of this character could damage the free speech of the people. "The Supreme Court, in spite of its encouraging recognition in re- cent decisions that Congressional anti-subversive investigations may restrict free speech, has not yet ruled these investigations as a whole are unconstitutional," Da- vis asserted. ' "It is my hope that such a rul- ing in the future in my case or some other case may end these investigations. With that in mind, I am appealing my conviction." 'Test Case' Davis called his trial a,"test case,," and considered- the six months jail sentence handed down by Judge Kent "stiff." In an eight-page statement ex- plaining his verdict, Judge Kent described the Court's stand, on Davis's invoking the First Amen d- ment and citing the Watkins case. "This Court is completely satis- fied that the questions were not for the purpose of determining the political beliefs of the wit- ness -but were for the purpose of determining th6 extent, if any, of the practices of Communistic thinkers and thinking in the edu- catiorial institutions of this coun- try." In another part of the state- ment Judge Kent writes, "The committee must necessarily ob- tain information from one wit- ness relating to 'the activities of other persons, exactly as is done in every investigative organiza- tion for the purpose of developing a complete picture of the situ'a- tion. I i The Music Center Record Club BUY OF THE WEEK CLASSICAL: Brohms Symphony No. 1 Boston Symphony Orchestra Munch Conducts Wagner POPULAR: Music of George Gershwin - Frank Chacksfield Cole Porter - Lou Levy and his orchestra 209 Ueach The )KuAi cGentep 300 SOUTH THAYER for your shopping pleasure in ladies' casual wear and accessories. 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