- ;, A T I. 4 I g Robert Williams on revolution .. . Six No reasons to* make U Towers 1 on your lst "Hi, my name is Susie. My daddy makes metal in Chicago, and he wanted me to live in a safe place. When he learned that every apartment door in University Towers has its own lock; he was sold!" Continued from Page 22 cause they're not allowed-the only thing the soldiers can do is say "Don't do that." And the people say, "Well, you're part of us. You can't stop us from doing this. Either you'll have to join in with us or get out of the way." The same thing about the police. You would see very few policemen and most of the time the police were assigned some security post in the government and they wouldn't even have any weapons. Noth- ing but a uniform, or a whistle. Sometimes the students would come through the streets beating drums, in long lines, and assemblies. Sometimes there'd be so many the street would be jammed. There would be drums, cymbals; the whole house would vibrate. Some- times this would go on for two or three days. Students packed for as far as you could see. Long lines; it would never stop, night and day. A lot of times they blocked the streets, the traffic. Sometimes they stopped the trains and wanted to know if there were any reactionary officials on the train. And the students decided when the train could go . back; sometimes it would be two or three days. When I was traveling across the country on train, the train would be crowded with students because they didn't have to pay the fare and they would just get on the train and ride to one side of the country and then back across the other side. They had the red uniform, so any train they, wanted to get on, they'd just get one and say they were going to the province to investigate, to see what's happen- ing over there. but it wasn't a permanent type of thing. They changed a lot of regulations, and often later found out that the system they had adopted wouldn't work. In fact, sometimes they even had to go back and get some of those people they had knocked down, bring them back and rein- state them. The Chinese people are enthusiastic about their country. This wasn't in any publication or propaganda, but I knew workers who lived in a compound, who, sometimes if they discovered they had a surplus of money, would turn it back into the factory. So the factory could use it for expansion. And they worked on projects. If they started a project to install a water line, why, .they could get allkinds of volunteers. They didn't even need to bring equipment, people did that. They don't have locks on their houses, and this type of thing-they respect each other, their rights. You can leave your wallet on a bed in a hotel with the door open and come back in two weeks and it will still be there. And a woman can go out from a factory if it's hot in the night- time and lie down on a bench and sleep all night and nobody would dare bother her. * * * The Chinese support American white radi- cals; however, their concept of revolutionary morality is different than most radicals or hip- pies would have. They're opposed to marijuana, and free sex, and what they call degenerate mu- sic--Western music, jazz-and extremity of dress. B they support radicals in the struggle-and - think eventually they will find themselves and understand that you must combine morality with struggle and revolution. The Chinese also are good. They just thi bad, that it's an impe think this is why all the world, and why th nam. The Chinese th will institute a social with other people in I * The main lessor States can learn fror cept of the transform; would be very valuable to realize that you've to what they call the got to do away with ego and you must be'v sacrifice. That is who is all about. Mao hin ones who said that the not succeed, that it But he said the Chine because to change so an abundant society- the people, with the ir Mao says it will be completely eliminate he's thinking of hinis mediate welfare. Befo ing at all about what self, before a man wi lective point of view- ing is beneficial to tI two or three generatio Susie Leopold "University Towers provides me with an environment conducive to the de- velopment of my social awareness. For example, I first met my fiance in a stairwell after a U. Towers cider and donut mixer." Mary Ann Seydel The students had power, and theyl down a lot of the officials. The result of they paralyzed some of the offices for knocked this was a while, Barbara Steiner "When I came from Pakista Towers. I really like the plac agement has been very help cient. It is a place to enjoy l well as the States. I wouldn' "My roommate and I used to live in a Rheingold p i a, n o box on the south bank of the Huron River. We find University Towers a big improvement." n, I f o u n d an apartment in the University} e, for I never had any trouble here. The man- ful, moreover their service is quick and effi-h iving with people from different countries asz t like to change it for any other place." Rehana Khan "I'm staying at U. Towers next year mainly because of the convenience it offers. First it's located close to campus. Secondly, washers and dryers are readily available in the building. There are a I s o advantages s u c h as a swimming pool in the summer, pool tables, and a reasonable 8 - m o n t h lease." Continued from Page 6 merely said, "If you touch that gun I'll blow your goddamn brains out." During the 1961 race war, consequently, au- thorities were more careful. "They knew we were well armed, and that if they came into our community they would be slaughtered," says Williams. "They cordoned off the community." Before the neighborhoods had been cor- doned off, however, a white couple d r i v i n g through the area was surrounded by a mob of- angry blacks. "They wanted to kill them," says Williams. "They brought the couple to my house, and the woman pleaded withme to let them go, and promised they would never come back." The couple followed Willliams into his house. Soon afterward Williams and his family left town, headed for New York, where they planned to stay a few weeks until things cooled off. On the radio, Williams heard the Monroe police had charged him with "kidnapping" the white couple -which was surprising, considering the couple had walked peacefully from William's house two hours after they entered it-and so Williams fled to Canada. When Williams read six weeks later in the newspapers that the Justice De- partment had asked Canadian police to arrest and extradite him, he fled to Cuba. Castro ac- cepted him as a political refugee, gave him an apartment, food, and a radio setup to broadcast a Radio Free Dixie program to his brothers in the American south. Williams stayed four years in Cuba (he had been there before, and even flew a Cuban flag over his Monroe home until police tore it down), sending 40,000 copies of The Crusader all over the world, and writing a book, Negroes W i t h Guns, one of the first manifestos on American 1 lack revolution. B u t friction on racial issues poiled his relationship with Cuban officials who, a ccording to Williams, discounted the role of racial discrimination in America, and discrimi- nated against Cuba's own blacks. Williams and his family moved in 1966 to Communist China, where the Chinese acclaimed- him as a hero of the black revolution. "I had an apartment and two cooks, and two women to clean up, and I had a chauffeur and a car and an interpreter," Williams says. "The people thought it should be done. The Chinese people said, 'Be- cause you're a black man from the United States and we know you've suffered, we would like for you to have these things.' A lot of things I tried to turn down, but they refused., As representative of the world's black revo- lutionaries, Williams apparently exerted s o m e influence on Mao's public stance toward the black struggle in America. Largely as a result of Williams' pressure, the Chinese leader declared "resolute support" for the black power move- ment. Chinese officials featured Williams in pa- rades, at rallies. "I had the status that was pret- ty much on the level of some diplomats," he says. "I would always be on the platform with the Chinese leaders and leaders from other coun- tries." Williams passed the two years he spent in China publishing The Crusader In Exile, and roaming the countryside, talking with peasants and workers- j ust as China was lurching through the hardest days of the Cultural Revolution. Williams left China in 1969 (Chou-en Lai told him, "You'll always have a home here") flew to Tanzania, and proclaimed to the world his pres- idency of the Republic of New Africa. As Wil- liams explains it now, the RNA was a loose coali- tion of American black nationalist groups who decided to meet in Detroit in 1968 and elected him president. Williams says he didn't even know about it until it was all over. The idea for a, New Africa focused on five states in the American south, which Williams and nationalist groups Chou en Lai told Williams. "You'll always have a home in China." hoped to seize or coax from the government as an independent black nation. Williams claims he still has hopes for a separate nation, but he has cut any formal ties with the New Republic. By the end of his stay in Tanzania, Williams had decided to emerge from exile and return to the United States. But the government, which had wanted so anxiously to prosecute h im in 1961, had lost its enthusiam and tried deperately to keep him out of the country. Williams broke into international news again last September, when he arranged for a one way ticket from Dar es Salaam, Tanzania to the United States, via Cairo, Rome and London. When he landed in London, TWA flatly refused to honor his ticket for the remainder of the flight - courtesy of the FBI, which had warned the airlines Williams was "dangerous." London police promptly arrested Williams as an Iundesir- Return from exile able alien and planne to unload him on N: wanted to go to Detr fast in jail, declaring dead body." That set British and Americ began preparing civil and black nationalis front of TWA's New publicity had become ficials found themsec suit, London authorit chartered a Boeing 7 and flew Williams, h' guards to Detroit Me Sept. 13, FBI agents: tive warrant from Nc released on $10,000 bi circuit court to block That is his stat American court to g Williams apparently Just two weeks ago, great secrecy to Was fore the Senate inte which would like Wil els (the Customs Buy collection, which it troit Free Press hint sored by the CIA; bu more likely is giving change for a Congr whole "kidnapping" In the meantime to piece together a r radical groups, andd all like him (EldridE "wrote that he would liams with less rabb was someone who wc try. I think Cleaver adds). And it will take stand the political co the nation during h in which the non-vi has erupted into fig American public onc liams advocating sel prised to see black n bullets. The American 1 1970 seems to have re ert Williams left it ir 1961. John Little "The eight month lease-I don't have to go through the hassle of summer sublet.": Youil find out why U Towers has BETTER RENTAL PLANS has BETTER SERVICES and is truly A BETTER PLACE TO LIVE Brian Regoff 536 S. Forest' 9-4:30 daily 761-2680 Pab Tw'H AL AAIESnaAri 2 90snaArl1,17 Pabe Two THE DAILY MAGAZINE Sunday, April 12, 1970 9 Sunday, April 12, 1970 THE DAILY MAGAZINE