THE KING IS DEAD Both white and black suffer a great loss It is ironical how two diametrically opposed groups can respond so similiarly to a dire event. Not Americans, but blacks and whites grieve. Why this joint tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. instead of Malcolm X, for example? Possibly, because King spared blacks and wiites from engaging in a direct conflict with each other. Since Martin Luther King Jr. did not employ a "spit in their eye" approach, whites found it easier to concede to black demands. He was capable of presenting a positive position to blacks concern- ing "their progress." Martin Luther King Jr. made blacks and whites believe that they could "move forward together," and one day come to regard each other simply as Americans. He created and maintained an illusion of harmony-and herein lies his success. In this sense America is a leaderless nation. His death left a vacuum, and now Americans must choose sides. No one-not any of the Kennedy's, not Nixon, and not Abernathy-can inspire the hope or instill the faith that is necessary for this illusion of harmony to grow on. I HAVE A DREAM ... and his dream is everyone's Unfortunately life is real; and dreams come true only in fairy tales. King's image will be memorialized, and his name will be used as a tool by whites who will eulogize his own nonviolent credo. .This eulogy will be used as an absolution amidst the sins of oppres- sion against Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, H. Rap Brown, and countless others like the 100 for the New Republic of Africa. And when the ceremony is over, generals will go back to ABM, universities will return to the business of war research, and the forces of Huberlike Tories will direct their energies against Judge Crockett. Somehow, it is as farcical as going to church on Sunday. A4 -LORNA CHEROT r i / ic TauDuiWj Seventyreight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Memphis revisited White irreverence 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 1 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in ol reprints. fora black FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: CHRIS STEELEI King __ ,..r.-"---"-- Reconciling the, irreconcilable IT IS VERY difficult for those of us who respected Martin Luther King Jr. more in 1961 than in 1967 to come to grips with the continued complexities of the dicho- tomy between King's doctrine of passive resistance and the more radical demands of black separatism, black economic power and black revolution. Tfor struggling against problems such as the Vietnam war, the draft and academic oppression, many white students have only the recourse of strict, unrelenting pacifism as a defense against the increas- ingly militaristic character of their society. BUT THE BLACK man's dilemma is not a question of making the nonviolent white man comfortable with certain tactics. The real problem is for him to decide how he is going to seek his libera- tion,. It will be a struggle waged between the historical polarizations of national- ism and separatism on the one hand and integration on the other. To what extent the black man pursues the more radical nationalist alternative is one that he must decide. THE PROGRESS made by the black man for his liberation in the past decade has been pitifully small. It has been the tedious result of a combination of the force of violent change that kept the white publ'c fearful for its lives and prooerty and the forces of nonviolent cooDeration which mediate compromise. Progres hag come only when black militants frightened the white establish- ment enough for whites to seize upon Dr. King's solutions as moderate and '"rea- sonable" alternatives /to what it saw as black fanaticism. And thus, the solution to the black's problem almost necessitates lence. some vio- THIS LEAVES the white student in the somewhat awkward position of want- ing to support the militant blacks yet' finding himself unable to join with them in violent confrontation. And without a Dr. King to give us a collective dream, it seems that the horrid schism between "support" and"join" is inevitably insur- mountable. And so we go on hop' g that someone will come along again ith the mystical ability to surmount the insurmountable. In some incomprehensible way, Dr. King .a ." : v ";{ { N f q s. 5 ;. r T M I; . r:: .;:a::: By DAVID WEIR and HOWARD KOHN MEMPHIS 111EMPHIS is a sprawling city of 500,000 at the junction of three Southern states-Tennessee, Arkansas, and Mississippi. Through the center of town winds the muddy Mississippi Riv- er. Running perpendicular to it is historic Beale Street, home of the famous "Memphis Blues". The Beale-Hernando ghetto, which coalesced around the Blues district, is dirt streets and incred- ibly ramshackle cabins sloping down unleveled ground in the middle of the city. Most of Mem- phis' 227,000 blacks live in, these shacks. OLD PEOPLE SIT out on the steps of houses, often perched fifteen or twenty feet above street level because of the uneven ter! rain. Weeds and assorted pieces of junk litter the yards along the dirt roads. Little children r u n around nearly-naked. They are always dirty and covered by a minimum of tattered rags. There is very little cement. Ur- ban poverty in Detroit means rats, cold and concrete tenements. In M~emphis the black people live in ruralhslums - whether they're inside the city or not. FURTHERMORE, the tentative alliance between black workers and the students has now broken down. Laura Ingram, leader of t h e Memphis State University "Lib- eral Club" and an, organizer of student participation in the pro- test, last March explained, "There is tremendous social pressure at Memphis State against us. It is almost a paranoid reaction by the majority of the students against a minority. "The 'long-haired boys' are call- ed 'fags', and the girls in the Club are widely believed to sleep with every black man in town. At most, we can only count on a miniscule proportion of the student body- about 30 kids-for any kind of protest." Laura left Memphis in January after failing to brganize a campus chapter of Students for a Demo- cratic Society. Also ate the protests last year was Mike Fisher-a photographer, parttime student and veteran of the Coast Guard, with long hair and a mustache. "White Mem- phis really got uptight during the garbage worker's strike. And after King's murder, everyone started " buying guns." Fisher left Memphis in June. Back at Fisher's apartment, his roommate, an exchange student from Europe, explained why he wasn't at the march. "School of- ficials have already warned me that I'd lose my scholarship if I was seen at a demonstration." r "I want it said even if I die in the struggle that 'He died to make me free' ' -Mrtin Luther King Jr. Albany, Ga., 1962 bridged the gap between the forces of moderation and revolution, and suggested reconciliation between peace and the al too necessary violence. IT IS NOT insignificant that Stokely Carmichael, who had earlier branded Dr King an Uncle Tom, marched at the head of King's funeral procession. King could reconcile the' irreconcilable, and the year since his death has seen no other man who could do the same. -THE EDITORIAL DIRECTORS* BUT MEIPHIS blacks know the language of the police night- stick and the fawning of a self- righteous city government. They know that the white man's testament to Dr. Martin Luther King lies somewhere in the breach between the barrel end of a 12- gauge shotgun and the high bench of a grand jury. In keeping with the mood of America, Memphis has not re- sponded. The attitudes which nur- tured King's killer remain unchal- lenged, despite the rhetoric and polemics of "growing social aware- ness". Blacks have begun to date epi- sodes as "before King" and "af- ter King". But for most of them; including Mrs. Lizzie Payne, the encouragements of several city measure is only symbolic, leaders. LARRY PAYNE, 16-year-old high school dropout, was killed with a shotgun by Leslie B. Jones, 25-year-old junior grade police officer, on March 28, 1968, in the first day of last spring's rioting. Payne had stolen a Sears-Roe- buck television set as blacks loot- ed several downtown stores. Jones chased after Payne and cornered him in an alleyway. Jones claimed that Payne "waved the biggest butcher knife in the world at me." Witnesses said that Payne's hands were in the air and that a knife was planted on him after the shooting. Payne's widowed mother filed a complaint with police commis- sioner Frank Holloman's office. one of 40 .specific charges lodged against the police for alleged civil rights violations during t h e spring riots. Rev. James Lawson, a leader in the sanitation workers strike, asked for an inyestigation, citing the testimony of 15 witnesses who disputed Jones' story. HOLLOMAN GAVE them an in- vestigation. And some six weeks later a Shelby County (Memphis) grand jury set down a verdict of no true bill (not enough evi- dence). "I just couldn't believe what some of these witnesses were sqv- ing." one grand juror was auoted in the Memphis Press-Scimitar. Holloman. a former FBI agent, IN MANY WAYS Memphis and Mrs. Payne point up the utter hopelessness of the Southern black man. The events of a year ago did upset Memphis' traditional rac- ial balance between the shiny, downtown white peoples' world and the grimy, aged Beale-Her- nando ghetto. New-found militancy by black garbage collectors introduced a new force against the status quo. And in a burst of energy some li- beral/radical students forged an alliance to protest the city's in- trangiency. King had preached non-vio- lance; he came to Memphis to prove that non-violent action could settle the strike. But dur- ing his march on the 28th down Main Street in the proud a n d prosperous business district, some militants began breaking w i n - dows. Violence came after 48 days of tension, built up by numerous ar- rests and indiscreet use of police power, "I wouldn't have come if I had known the outbreak of violence was possible," King said after the riot. "I would have held up the march." BUT THE PEOPLE were tired of non-violence. They had been marching almost every day since Feb. 26. They had boycotted Mem- phis' two newspapers and all the downtown merchants. But the Loeb had been elected in Oc- tober, 1967, leaving his economic monopoly on the town's restaur- ant and laundromat business to his brother. He was not a friend of the black community. - After the riot, Loeb called in the Tennessee National Guard to cordon off the Beale Street area. A week later King lay dead on a Memphis hotel balcony. T w o weeks after that, Loeb agreed to the sanitation workers' demands, and the strike was settled. For the first time, the blacks had\broken Loeb's stronghold. THE MAYOR privately blamed this "defeat" on the pressures brought against him because of King's assassination. And he con4 tinued, with the help of his police force, to ignore justice. Evidence used against the 897 blacks arrested during the strike and on the night of the assassina-' tion was pressured out by police officers. Youths were threatened with prosecution for perjury if they changed their testimony in court from what they had said in the squadroom after their arrests. Nevertheless, blacks have con- tinued to give the city more pro- tests in the past year than it had known in all its history. Other municipal and county workers, such as hospital and utilities em- ployes, mostly black, have c a m- paigned for better working con- ditions. Victories in these protests have been largely token, like the Com- mercial Anpeal's disbanding of its 33-year-old racist cartoon "Ham- REPRESSION password. The Beale-Hernando shacks. REMAINS the black people in still live in And a year later there is still a running race between the rest- less young blacks and the police. Police attitudes were dramatized in the minutes following ;King's assassination. Jesse Jackson, black minister from Chicago, was on the balcony below King when the fatal shots were fired. Policemen converged on Jack- son the only black in sight, forc- ing him against the, wall despite his shouts that the shots had come from across the street. James Earl Ray escaped while police searched Jackson. RACISM REMAINS entrenched in Memphis. Efforts to locate housing projects for low-income blacks in white residential areas have twice been sabotaged by white civic clubs. One group sent a petition to City Hall, explaining that "The sole purpose of this outrageous federal project is a sneaky method developed to completely integrate our city by placing these cancer cells in selected areas presently owned by white persons of modest means . . this will devaluate their property." Summer in Memphis, 1968; marked an almost painful devo- 4 La