Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. uth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: HENRY GRIX p In Memoriam The tragic and pointless murder of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King has dealt the people of this nation and people of all nations a heavy blow. We have lost a great man, a man of wisdom,. and integrity, of love and vision, of conscience and honor. A man so dedicated to one of the great prin- ciples of our time that Arthur Waskow could write: ". . 'non-violence,' as exemplified in the racial crisis of the 1960's by the work of Martin- Luther King, came to mean specifically the Gandhian politics of love, the confrontation of conscience, and conversion through example and dignity.'' A man who understood only too clearly the price of human dignity. In one of his last fund- raising letters King wrote, "We are taking action after sober reflection. We have learned from bit- er experience that our government does not cor- rect a race problem until it is confronted directly and dramatically." , A time will come for recriminations and analysis, politics and sociology, cause and effect, a time to speculate what people and organizations will do now and later. But that time is not now. A great man has been killed. We can only hope that people will see in his death what they apparently could not see in his life. -THE SENIOR EDITORS The By DAVE WEIR and ALISON SYMRO OUTSIDE THE Clayborn ple in downtown M last Saturday, 20-year-old Barnes, a black activist sai always been non-violent. "I don't believe in viole a method of getting thing But if you try everything e it still comes . . . then y let it come." Violence had come to M two days earlier when a p march led by Rev. Martin King, Jr., erupted into b and looting, leaving at lea dead, 62 injured and 200 j Thursday night, less th week later, King was de was killed on Main Street, his first Memphis demon and site of his proposed next Monday. It is ironic that King ww dered at the very timeI planning for Monday's mar the only reason he returned hate-filled city was to pro non-violence was still a va of achieving rights. Many in Memphis shared faith in non-violence and t of integration. Many als their faith shaken, like K last week's riot. It was, in one aspect, t racial outburst of 1968, pr another long, hot summ come. It was also the first tim a protest march led by Ki spontaneously disintegrate violence. And finally it was one few black outbursts in a So city, despite widespread which has erupted into v in Northern cities for years. FOR MANY OF Memphis citizens there was little about the cause of the ri "It's you damn outsider King, who stir up the ni said a service station att iolent I outside the city limits. "They nev- SKI er wanted any trouble until King ni Tern- came here." n em - cAn observer of last Saturday's [Willie peaceful march on behalf of strik- id, "ve ing black sanitation workers agreed, "That King's a damned Communist . . . he deserves to be ence as shot." s done. One teenage white girl explain- else and ed, "King's nothing but a big nig- ou just ger conning a lot of small niggers into tryin' for somethinng they [emphis can't get." eaceful King had affected others in a Luther different way. To the aged gar- burning bage collectors he represented ast one the hope and dignity they had ne- ailed. ver known. For many students an one and marchers he stood for the ad. He peaceful defiance they needed to site of rally around. For a black populace stration split into militant and fearful march factions he offered unity. But now, with the man most is mur- black Americans consider their he was spokesmain slain, the doctrine of 'ch. For non-violence has suffered a mor- i to the tal blow. ve that lid way IN MANY WAYS, last week's marches down Main Street in King's Memphis foreshadowed the end he goal of the non-violent era in the o, had South and in the national civil ing, by rights movement. The marches themselves re- he first flected the situation as it unfold- esaging ed. Helicopters droned overhead ner to as national, guard' trucks lum- bered through the streets, break- e that ing into the traditional summer ng had scene of buzzing mosquitoes, d into short-sleeve shirts and flower- print dresses. of the Most incongruous of all, how- uthern ever, were the marchers them- unrest selves. Repudiating centuries of violence oppressive existence, they poured several from their ramshackle homes in the Beale-Hernando ghetto and carried signs down affluent Main ' white Street. They marched straight doubt ahead, ignoring the hate stares iot. and blank expressions of stand- rs, like ersby. iggers," One very small'old man car- endant tied a sign "I am black, I am )eatth of Non- Violence Dr. King Leaves Memphis for the Last Time Looters Plunder Memphis Store 1 beautiful." He was trying to roll back a lifetime, with all the glit- tering stores of Main Street as a witness to his courage. Most important, perhaps, were the blank'faces which witnessed the march. Many whites could not comprehend the signs, most of which read "I AM a man."' Caught in the same system that has relegated blacks to an infer- for status for 400 years, these whites seemed to reflect tradi- tional Southern uneasiness over Negro activism: 'Why do they march? Our Negroes are happy, we take good care of them. They're much better off here than in the cold Northern cities.' Some, however, could seeathe black marchers were not happy -that the dissatisfaction which had broken into riot two days before was the same as that in Detroit and Watts. Some saw through the Southern myth; a few perhaps foresaw its destruction. IN MEMPHIS another myth was shattered-that of the ef- fectiveness of non-violent pro- test. The tumultuous events of the past week in the Tennessee city seemed to recapitulate in a short span the history of the civil rights struggle. As with the dawning of black awareness in the non-violent lunch counter sit-ins and passen-. ger bus protests of the late 1950's, last week's Memphis marches started as a quiet, orderly dem- onstration. The protest was over Mayor Henry Loeb's refusal to provide a dues checkoff for the city's striking sanitation work- ers. The swelling size of the march and the influx of white students and'ministers paralleled the ear- ly-1960 activities of the "Free- dom Rides" and the voter-regis- tration drive. The agitation by some youthful marchers which preceded the out- break of violence in Memphis re- I i t u a t z. ' ' r l E z r ected the growing militancy with- in the ranks of the black move- ment. The turbulence set the stage for riot in Memphis, as it had earlier throughout the entire na- tion. For Memphis, the time was late Thursday afternoon, March 28. For the nation, it might' have been any hot summer day in 1965, 1966 or 1967.. . The riots exploded spontane- ously-neither planned nor pro- voked. But the atmosphere was right . THE SHOT which killed Mar- tin Luther King closed a phase in the civil rights movement. All in- dications now point toward the aband hment of non- violence as an effective-means of protest. King's death leaves black Amer- icans witho ut a truly national leader. It lea'es them with an en- larged feeling of bitterness and alienation from white society. The direction of the Negro struggle for equality will almost certainly be toward greater mili- tancy, more violence and less tol- erance. Four hundred. years of racism and oppression have come 'to a head. To a dwindling minority of blacks, King's murder destroyed thel hope his active life had given them. Older Southern blacks, es- pecially, see it as confirmation of their fear that the system can- not be changed; the white man cannot be budged. But an ever-increasing propor- tion of the black masses will see Dr. King's murder as a mandate for self-assertion. Minor out- breaks of violence immediately after the assassination were a likely prelude to the longest, hot-' test summer in America's history. * -Mike Fisher Palestine ieration MovementNowUi By IMAD KHADDURI Daily Guest Writer " THEMOST SERIOUS com- mando operations (March 17, 1968) was the mining of a road in the southern \Negev nearthe Israeli Red Sea port of Elatht. An Israeli bus carrying many (56) students ran over the mine and several occupants, including one child, were killed and many (24) wounded" (N.Y. Times, March 8, 1968). "Israeli forces attacked Arab guerrillabases in Jordanian ter- ritory on the east bank of the Jordan river early today. Kol Is- rael, the government radio, in- dicated Israeli troops had cross- ed the river and invaded Jordan. It said the Israeli forces would withdraw from the east bank when the operation was completed" (Daily March 21, 1968). r psUPI reported that 15,000 troops had been used (in the in- vasion). An Israeli spokesman said that "at least 150 saboteurs" were killed and there were substantial Jordanian Army losses. Israeli casualties were 21 killed and 70 wounded. The casualty figures emphasized the high cost of the punitive raid even for the over- whemingly superior Israeli milit- ary forces.. "The Israeli spokesman said that terrorist bases and houses had been demolished and that Jor- danian artillery and other in- stallations had been destroyed.. . Premier Levi EshkoV1 addressed a eral agreement (among Arab cir- cles) that the Israeli raid has ended all hopes for a political settlement of the Middle Eastern impass.r "An editorial in the authorita- tive Egyptian newspaper Al-Ah-' ram said;" The Israeli aggression buried all possibilities of a polit- ical settlement" . . . Premier Levi Eshkol called the attack a succes- ful warning action. Military lead- ers said they have achieved all ob- jectives. Newpapers said the ac- tion was unfortunate but neces- sary. Some Israelis questioned whether it was worth 'the cost, and if so, whether the objective could have been gained in any other way. Many of the more skeptical conceded that they were not sure ofany feasible alternatives. ..Although 150 Arabs iden- tified by the attacking Israelis as terrorists were killed in yester- day'sclash and dozens of others taken prisoners, the raid was ex- pected by most Israelis to have only a short-term practical ef- fect. The demolition of terrorist bases presumably w i11 prompt Al-Fattah leaders to redirect them or move elsewhere, while the nature of the attack is likely to add to, the incentive for new re- cruits to replace those killed or captured, some Israelis feel. Israeli leaders reject the view that raids such as yesterday's might kill Dr. Gunnar Jarring's peace mission, The unofficial view is that if the U.N. envoy's mission fails it will ider ,Wa camps, blowing up Israeli am- munition depots and so forth. Let those Americans who sup- ort Israel fincancially and those who are thinking of, or encourag- ing others to go to Israel this summer or to settle there, take heed of what happened in Alger- ia, what is happening in Vietnam and what is taking place in Pales- tine. No matter how sensibly they try to justify their presence and defend their repressive actions, Gen. Mathieu (Algierian French commander), Gen. Westmoreland, Gen. Dayan and their coutries are bound to fail in their missions. When a people, such as the Al- gerians, the Vietnamese and the Palestinians become determined to rid themselves completely from a foreign occupier and to gain their independence, no force in the world can stop them. They might be destroyed, but they will not be conquererd. THE PALESTIAN Arab Revo- lution is now a reality. The Is- raelis' oppressive "anti-terrorist" measures against the Arabs from now on will only'give more im- petus to the growth of the revolu- tionary struggle of the Palestine National Liberation Movement. We, the Arab students, recognize the fact that our corrupt govern- ments and relatively stagnant so- cieties do not have the necessary strength to defeat Israel in a ....,...DANIEL OK RENT --~~ A Parable 1 For',,Ou'r Times ABOUT THREE WEEKS AGO, I was, in Detroit for a wedding. In the process of getting "acceptable" for the ceremony, I stopped in a shoeshine parlor at suburban Northland Shopping Center to put my feet in order. As I sat up in the cracked-leather chair, my brother, who was with me, read a headline from a newspaper he was reading: "King To Lead Poor People's March." Immediately, before I even had a chance to shrug my shoulders (because, I guess, I am a victim of the current vogue that calls for a certain non-chalance' toward "old guard" civil rights leaders), the 60-year-old black man shining my shoes blurted, "What's he up to now?" Why, must be someone sharing the disregard for Dr. King, I thought. I had too often heard the charges that the King style of peaceful opposition was definitely passe, and that the black com- munity scorned his antiquated leadership. "That man's moving too fast," the bootblack said. Curious, indeed. In a time when the headlines go to Rap Brown, to Stokely Carmichael, to !thei younger, more eager, more active. At a moment when the black man's plight has never been so clearly marked, whenthe concern of white America ,has pointed out.across the Pacific, and not in toward our own 'cities, own ,own people.- This was the darkie speaking, not the black man. This was the- Detroit of 1943, not 1967. This was the man who had been drummed, by our heritage, into sickening modesty and feet-shuffling. "I think we people-the colored folk, you know-have done awfully well in 100 years, an' I can't understand this hating. I don't hate you, man." My first recollection of Martin Luther King was when Mrs. Rosa Parks, the first Montgomery black woman who wouldn't move to the back of the bus, came to Detroit, and all the newspapers spoke of how inspiring Dr. King had been to her. "I mean, I got me a nice house, and my kids are all learning a trade and I got a good job. Why should I want to burn your house down?" I also remember Martin Luther King when he addressed the thousands around the reflecting pool in Washington five summers ago. I was spending that part of the summer with a friend of mine who had some very intolerant parents. His mother wouldn't let us watch "the rotten nigger." "These young kids just don't know what they're doing. I can't even talk to my own son about it; I leave the room when I hear him and his friends scream so much." And I remember Martin Luther King in Selma, the summer when Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, a white woman who lived not more than three miles from me, was killed while doing civil rights 'work in rural Alabama. Mrs. Liuzzo wasn't a black face-without-a-face; her family and mine ,had common friends, she was a reality, she was from my own world. "You see, boys, there ain't no difference between people. I mean, you and me-we're the same. And let me tell you something: these demonstrations-they're just trying to show how maybe we're different. Right?" Dr. King had, indeed, been the subject of quite a bit of scorn re- cently. When Carmichael introduced the Black Power slogan a few years ago, Dr. King was uneasy in adapting it to his own platform. But he had no choice. He felt it necessary to remain on top of the move- ment, as much as would any man truly dedicated to a cause. "I tell you what: if you was me, would you throw rocks, Man, I want a house in the country; I'm retiring next year. All I want is peace," ,. . h ncvl-ntd-hlp thing hrnd-?Martin.Luther King'was Israeli soldiers near Jordan border in June war. had herded the villagers into the center of the town, told them not to resist. Later the main street of the village was blown up by the departing Israelis. The pat- tern was repeated elsewhere." (N. Y. Times, March 22, 1968). " Israeli ambassador to the UN, Yosef Tokoah, said that what the Israeli forces had uncovef'ed at Karameh, a village on the east bank of the Jordan river, had proved beyond a doubt that it "had ceased to be a civilian settle- terday's attacks across the Jor- dan river was to wipe out Pales- tine guerrilla commandoes and their bases, it failed. "KARAMEH CAMP was swarm- ing today with men carrying So- viet-made machine guns and grenades and voicing pride over the fight they put up yesterday ... The commando chief at Kar- ameth claimed responsibility for the recent injuries suffered by Maj. Gen. Moshe Dayan, the Is- I