THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE US. Labor Oficial Calls for 'True Black Power' By ANN MUNSTER A U.S. Labor Department offi- cial has called for "true Black Power' as an antidote to riots. Black Power, said Arthur M. Ross, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, could be "a method to integrate the Negro into the tumult of American pol- itics."r It could, he said, combat the impatient and deparate gestures and fantasies expressed by riots and apocalyptic movements." Ross was one of the speakers in the two-day conference on "Breaking the Poverty Cycle," August 25-26, sponsored by the social work school. Ross said that "probably any kind of ethnic organization in- cludes a certain amount of zeno- phobia." But the attainment of "true black power" will counter- act the appeals of "irresponsible demagogues." And it would diminish hatred of whites because "a group with so- cial power will be on the side of authority because it will have a share in authority," he said. As examples of "true Black Power" Ross suggested: -"Local and state political blocks within the democratic and Republican parties. A separate political party for Negroes would be self defeating for the same reasons which have worked against a separate labor party in the U.S. These blocks would include elected Negro officials . . . (and) a corps of Negro lobbyists." -"Mass membership organ- izations working for the poor Ne- groes in the same way as the Ur- ban League and National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People have served middle class Negroes. "They would include Negro labor caucuses analogous to the Association of Catholic Trade Unionists and the Jewish Labor Committee. They would include organizations of welfare recipients, Negro business organizations, con- sumer cooperatives, urban renewal organizations. Negro attorneys would have a central role." Ross asserted that "true Black Power" might be developed in vari- ous ways. One would be the cre- ation of leadership roles for intel- ligent and aggressive young peo- ple. "Aggressive young men are fac- tors in any protest movement," he said. "This would bring stability to the emotionally overwrought young Negroes who have no one to trust, nothing to believe in, no program, and no ideology." Another feature would be the assurance that social and econ- omic gains are a matter of right and justice, rather than bene- volence and welfare, he said. Ross pointed out that "indi- vidualism is not a strong tradition among the ghetto masses" and that because Negroes lack suffi- cient financial resources and fam- ily solidarity he was "not sug- gesting that Negroes go it alone or turn their backs on white so- ciety. "All of the resources of the white community will be required," he asserted. Ross explained the "unparallel- ed severity" of 1967's racial ten- sion on the basis that most Ne- groes were not affected by recent civil rights legislation. He pointed out that "the middle class Negroes dominated the movement," and that "Negroes in a position to pro- fit from new opportunities did gain considerably. "The Negroes who gained the most had motivation, self con- fidence and were able to hold their families together-they were 'mid- del class'-though many were poor by white standards," Ross added. Ross contended that whites who granted the concessions of recent years "had little or nothing to lose. They did not feel endanger- ed by the presence of, perhaps one, Negro physician on the block. "Their own jobs were not jeopardized by the elimination of discrimination in employment," he said. "The 1 o w e r socio-economic groups were not fooled for a min- ute. They continued to fear each other and knew that one day they would confront one another di- rectly," he added. Ross asserted that the warfare between the lower income whites and Negroes "is being fought over real and vital stakes. The fact is that if Negroes were permitted to compete freely and share equally in a fixed supply of the good things in life, in many cases there would not be enough to go around. "Warfare between the young ghetto Negroes and police is a revealing aspect of the more gen- eral struggle. White policemen are generally recruited from the lower socio-economic ranks." Attempts to enforce the law are met with cries of police "brutality" and false rumors that arrested in- dividuals have been beaten to death. "At the same time. a great deal of police brutality is in fact going on," Ross charged. "We have not succeeded in eliminating the ancient evils," he continued, "but desires and hopes have been aroused, through TV commercials, the war on poverty, and the rhetoric of the civil rights movement." He described the recent riots as "the familiar revolution of rising expectations. "It is clear that there will have to be a vast reordering of prior- ities in the U.S.," Ross contended. "There Will be required an un- precedented amount of social as- sistance. The second stage of the war on poverty will have to be immensely larger than the first." Ross hinted that this vast re- ordering of priorities should also include relatively less spending for the Vietnam War. He expressed skepticism that permanent gains can come from such proposals as "reverse income taxes" to assist minimum incomes for the poor, or from massive public works pro- jects. Ross contended that all move- ments to aid minority groups are characterized by a certain amount of "pathos, troubled conscience, and sweet charity." And that "eventually the sympathy dries up" and the "charity becomes more costly than beneficial." He said that all minority groups pass from the state of wardship to the state of maturity and that "we are fast reaching it in the career of the Negro community." "Although the government can- not cure the weaknesses of the Negro family, it can cease and desist from cultivating them," he concluded. 1i Detroit Councilman Blames Rioting on Indifference Of White Establishment of Poor Negroes' Problems WELCOME STUDENTS AND FACULTY LET US SUPPLY YOUR HOME ENTERTAINMENT "The indifference and indecen-; cy with which we have dealt with the people of the ghetto is in large part responsible for the senseless rioting and looting" dur- ing the recent Detroit riot, Detroit City Councilman Mel Ravitz told an audience at Rackham Lecture Hall. Ravitz, a sociologist at Wayne State University, concentrated on urban housing in a paper prepar- ed for the conference "Breaking the Poverty Circle," sponsored by the social work school. "The plain fact is that all of us share major complicity with these absurd and self defeating Crippled Get D riving Aid Often blamed for the killing or maiming of 1.5 million persons yearly, the automobile will soon begin to play an important role in patient rehabilitation at the University Medical Center. A driver training program is being introduced for paraplegics, amputees and other handicapped patients by the Michigan Division of V o c a t i o n a l Rehabilitation (DVR). They will be trained on a spe- cially equipped car featuring an array of levers and switches which permit safe operation by patients whose arm and hand movements are severely limited. "Today's patients are terribly dependent upon their own auto- mobiles," explained Joe Fisher, head of the DVR office in Ann Arbor. "Paralysis and other handicap- ping conditions cause severe psy- chological and vocational stresses on the patient and his family. "But by training handicapped people to drive their own cars again, we help them make a big stride toward regaining their in- dependence and their role in so- ciety." The University of Michigan's Highway Safety Research Insti- tute has announced plans to pub- lish a new journal to serve as a medium of exchange of research information. It will be published by Pergam- mon Press of New York and Lon- don, with two University of Mich- igan scientists serving as editors in chief. They are Drs: Verne Rob- erts and F. Gaynor Evans. acts of destruction and death," Ravitz said. "People who get shifted and shunted around long enough as a result of urban renewal will one day lose their pent-up animosity and hatred in wild ways against the symbols of the system that contains them. "The cause of our urban riots is the fact that we have maintain- ed a dual society, while pretend- ing either that the other Ameri- ca didn't exist or that we had given its members enough to keep them quiet if not content," he stated. "From the beginning urban re- newal has been essentially a neg- ative approach to the problems of the slums," he continued. "In their concern for the larger task the proponents of urban renewal haven't seen the people and their interests. This is a blindness which they share with the builders of freeways." Bulldoze Ravitz contends that "despite the bulldozing operations of the last two decades, we have not yet met our basic housing needs." Detroit alone has 8000 fewer housing units now than in 1960, Ravitz said. He feels much of the city's new housing is beyond the financial reach of the people displaced by urban renewal. "Actually, we merely move these families around from one slum to another in a vicious game of musi- cal houses." Ravitz said there was nothing "unusually sinister about the way" urban renewal officials act. "It follows the general path of ig- norance and neglect which has al- ways characterized our treatment of the voiceless." Renewal Devaluates According to Ravitz the im- minence of urban renewal con- tributes to the devaluation of property. "The result of this is blight, even if the area is not fully blighted in the beginning." Ravitz conceded, to the amuse- ment of his audience, that "this was not an inevitable accompani- ment of urban renewal, but only happens most of the time." Ravitz said it is "understand- able the program is viewed with legitimate hostility by a great number of citizens. Very little effort has been expended to in- vite appropriate agency interven- tion to assist in the so.. tion of individual or family p.roblems." Civilian Casualties "The civilian casualties in the war to save the cities are often neither aware of nor involved in the decisions that affect their lives," he added. Ravitz suggested that "displace- ment should be viewed as an op- portunity to encounter persons not, otherwise reached." He suggested the program be "prepared with necessary back-up agencies and staff to provide health, welfare, anti-poverty, education, economic, employment advice and aid." Ravitz said the first step to- 1hbenefits-such as the economic ward improving housing must be a survey of existing housing to de- termine what must be demolished, what can be rehabilitated, and what must be built. Although not opposing scatter- ed-site public housing units, the councilman urged a comprehensive rent subsidy program as "more dignified and even easier and cheaper to operate" than public housing. "Urban renewal is not without revolution in inner cities and the reinvigoration of the tax base," he said, but insists that "federal and state funds must be avail- able. "We may preach persuasively about the poor of our society, and we may mount all manner of so- called anti-poverty efforts, but unless the poor and many of the not-quite-so-poor are somehow as- sisted to dwell in suitable hous- ings, all else will be a mockery." Select From Our: * Comprehensive stock of L.P. Stereo-45 RPM Records " Portable and Console Phonos, Radios, and Radio-Phonos PHOTOGRAPHERS TO WORK FOR THE DAILY " RCA Victor Portable and Console TV Sets " Uof M Records and Song Book MUSIC SHOP NO 2-0675 417 East Liberty I MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB MASS MEETING TRYOUTS Thursday, Aug. 31 k's 7:30 P.M. Rm. 3G, Michigan Union A meeting for all interested. Bring your portfolio. EVERYBODY WELCOME ! Monday-7:30 P.M. 420 Maynard STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 2nd floor WANTS TO COME TO A MEETING Thurs., Aug. 31-4:15 P.M. 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