Page Twt, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 29, 1968 .ae,..H..CIA.DIYTesaOcoe 2,16 The capital of the state of grace? Your head! By RALPH J. GLEASON Liberation News Service BERKELEY - So what's next? Even McCarthy, even Clean Gene, really didn't deal with what we all saw happen in Chicago. And Jerry Rubin car- rying a plastic gun to HUAC is lust as silly as appearing there in taRevolutionry War Army uniform he didn't even know who Paul Revere and the Raid- ers were) ., Humphrey spoke in San Francisco and I saw a picture of Steve Weissman being arrest- ed. Weissman was one of the leaders of the FSM at Berkeley, a brilliant tatician and a mar- velous speaker. But what can be more symbolic of all the depth of the frustration than to be arrested protesting a Humphrey rally?' Such dedica- tion deserves a better incident, if not a better cause. Is there a death wish in America? Is it true, as it seems to be true the deeper you go into it, that there is, some- where inside the human organ- ism, a desire to self-destruction that cannot be altered? Is it really true that it must all be done wrong, in basic evil, by people who insist on never knowing what really happened and base hard actions on hal- lucinations. As the Vietnam War has been based? Has all of history been like this? Must it always be thus? Must we be asked to storm the, beaches in a frontal assault everi though more people get killed that way? We did in World War II. Must we always make the decisions that it is better to have more tanks that are less safe and win with abundance than to redesign the tank for safety? We made that decision in World War II, and it'a documented in the U.S. Armny Official History, Depart- ment of Ordnance. There were never any riots on. the Berkeley campus, yet even Paul Goodman acquiesced in the concept that there were (as well as calling Deans and Regents by their first names, andi FSM leaders by their 'last andsaying "you people" to the students). Millions now believe that the cops were . provoked beyond reason in Chicago, that professional agitators took over Berkeley streets, and blah and blah and bah What makes Wallace so at- tractive to labor unions (to la- bor unions! shades of Woodie Guthrie), as well as to middle class 0itizens everywhere? He stands for specific things and he makes them feel the issues can be dealt with. He speaks to the mythology in their blood, handed down from their par- ents..anid re-enforced by TV, and :the flicks. The Great Scriptwriter Inthe Skycan control the action. So the cops are not just knocking in the heads of blacks and Latins and mInorities now, they are clubbing their own children. What is nqt? How can it be stopped?nIs there, really, anything to do? Jimi Hendrix plays the "Star Spangled Banner" as the in- troduction to "Purple Haze." He does not do it as Jose Feli- ciano sang it at the World Se- ries. He does it screwing the guitar and it is, I submit, a revolutionary act surely as im- portant as getting arrested at a Humbert Humbert rally. Make no mistake, The Sys- tem runs like a computer and ran like, one before the comu- ter as 'invented. It will auto- matically co-opt whatever it ca. Big' Brother & the Hold- * U-K 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 BetweenNYpsilanti and Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING ing Co. and Janis Joplin play for money now. When they played a "benefit" for The Ma- trix, 4 tiny club where they worked in the early days, they asked for and got 1% of the club. And they got their 60% when they played at the Carou- sel, even though it was operat- ed by the last stand of the hip- pies. The System will buy ev- erything it can. It always has. And it doesn't have to kill the rest, either. It isolates rather than destroys. My out-of-con- trol paranoia, Goddess of the Sixties, keeps hinting that LBJ will declare a national state of emergency prior to election day, using some obscure law that Abe Fortas is busy look- ing up, with help from the oth- er Supreme Court Justices-all but Douglas-right this minute. And he will suspend the con- stitutions declare the election is ;off and stay in office and Hubert and Dick will join ranks. I don't know. It could hap- pen. What is any wilder about that than about the rest of it which we know HAS happened. And what is truth and what is history anyway? And who knows? The hippies presented no program for the New Life, they say. And when asked for his program for social justice, Joe MacDonald of Country Joe & the Fish said "Free music in the park." Deal with that! Do not dis- miss it saying the billyclub is the answer to poetry. No, it is not. When I hear the word cul- ture I reach for my gun. Oh yeah? Politics has failed. My God, if we need more proof of that than any hour of the evening news on TV, we are blind. No, the hippies and The Beatles and the Pop musi- cians present no Program for Improvement of the Society. What they do is to present a program for improvement of the human race beginning with the changing of the heads of the young people of the world. You can't change the society until you reach a state of grace and, as poet Jerry Greenberg asked, "What is the capitol of the state of grape?" You say the killing in Viet Nam is murder? I agree. Who is guilty when the demonstra- tor gets killed? As he will, as he will. The political radicals have the right enemids, they have courage and, some o them, even have a program for Im- provement of the Society which makes a kind of sense. But they all have the old approach. You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs. True, man, true. But you better figure out how to make a revo- lution without killing people or it won't work. We've had all that. We really have. Nothing I have read by SDS and the rest is as relevant as Allen Ginsberg's poems. None of it says as much to me as Bob Dylan and none of it inspires like the simple act of the Beatles singing "Hey Jude" on TV. Religion may very well have been the opiate of the people and we may not need religion again in this world. But we need hard politics less. Auto- mation, technology, communi- cation and the rest have made a world in which neither Rich- ard Daley, Lyndon Johnson nor Chairman Mao has the real answer. It's all very well to talk about dying on your feet being better than living on your knees. Just don't ask me to do it. I'd rather be red than dead and I would also rather be PRESENTS ANNUAL HALLO'WEEN DEDICATED TO TAKING TH E KIDS AND CANDY OUT OF HALLOWEEN Wednesday, October 30 DEAD O1F NIGHT, Starring MICHAEL REDGRAVE Thursday and Friday, October 31, Nov. 1, rp FORBIDDEN PLANET "The best of the inter-stellar science fiction productions of the 50's."-Pauline Koel Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 2, 3 WOMA&N OfF TEHE ,DUNES The cosmos reduced to man, woman and sand. "h . . w... r ."4..tn.vr".":.. .... . . . ...w....r..,.............. .grJ::...... ....J."::-;; .:i v-a.r{a": Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 NNENENN#lmasam20NMNENEMENE#EN225EM#U alive than inside. The Beatles aren't just more popular than Jesus, they are -also more po- tent than SDS. What do you think Dylan is doing up there in Woodstock? Counting his money? You don't resign from being an artist. Not until you're dead. No He and The Beatles started something which is beyond politics, past the programs of the planners and out there in McLuhanland changing the heads of the world. Out of it will come the pro- grams. Out of it will come the plans when the time is right. Duerrenmatt's "The Visit" presented by THE AN N ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE OCT 30, 31 NOV. 1, 2 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Harold Pinter's THE Trueblood Theatre Box Office Hours Oct. 30-Nqv. 2 Oct. 28-29 12:30-5 P.M. All performances -8 P.M. Oct. 30-Nov. 2 12:30-8 P.M. $1.75-$2.25 Fri., Sat. TICKETS:; $1.25-$1.75 Wed., Thurs., , w a i i I { '" CARNIVAL Block-Ticket Di 7:00 P.M. MichiganI Tuesday, October 29 Michi UN ION-LEAGUe low L" N Anew politician I UPROARIOUS! BAWDY AND HILARIOUS! True Magazine I rowin Room, 2nd floor gan League 1 "A Gorgeous Piece Of Film- Makingr -SA"DAY ""fiW' .. -- '-4 JEWS and CHRISTIANS in ROMAN -EGYPT, "BEST ACTRESS" , (for'Vignia Woolf") RSENTS BIUIRD DUHIDN Lecture by PROFESSEUR KILPATRICK Chair of New Testament Studies-Queen's College, Oxford 4:15 P.M. TUESDAY" OCTOBER 29th N TOW IE 1 A ROYAL FILMS PRUTION FI uEL lp l INTERNAIONAL PFAI PRODUCTION f gorE um.R Multipurpose Room, Undergrad Library Sponsored by: Dept. of Classical Studies, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages and Literature, Office of Religious Affairs. "r TUESDAY an WEDNESDAY r kdml M r 2:30, 4:40 6:50, 9:00 Li AMMMMMMjMFWM BNA I "BENJAMIN"-starts Thursday I This is the story of the self-confessed Bos- ton strangler. It is a remarkable motion picture based on fact. Why this man? Why did 13 women open their door willingly to him? The result is a film that is not what you expected.? -Ta"yl.Trb nrr;m tm;lkjl-dp I Limited Engagement Ends Thursday ULYSSES' A SUPERB FILM!" -Life Magazine I 2 EXCITING NEW, PLAYS! A powerful and prophetic An imaginative and play by the daring, young provocative new play by Czaechliberalleader. theauthor of 7 Presu"cesBlackboard Jun nowbanned THE WORLD PREMIERE OF by IVANKMAEVAN HUNTER Adapted by RUTHNW.FARDEATE TrUES., DEC. 3 -- SUIT., DEC. 8 MON., FEB. 3 - SAT., FEB. 8. i ww wririi MMRI i j 000*@@ guests? Do them a favor. Put them up at Bell Tower Hotel, then join then on the town after the game. Bell Tower Hotel- bigger than before, elegant new rooms and "BRILLIANT, FORCEFUL AND RESPECTABLE CINEMA ART. -Sosley crowther, New York Times ****...A RARE EXPERIENCE." -Wanda HaleNew York Daily News Tony Curis Henry Fondaf George Kennedy MatureAnces CiETARR inyCB e Mike Kelin Murray Hamilton iCREEiRPLAY iNOTH 7 I I 1 .-- I I i