Pone Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 10, 1969 . U 4 e Wi dyCity spreads dittlepeace By JIM HECK CHICAGO--I remember a city so worried it would be given up onto the people that its mayor sent out its cops onto the streets to club everybody bloody and thereby hope to discourage dissent and expression and all those things we are encouraged to fastidiously deny ourselves in the name of God, country and mother. There was Grant Park and tear gas and Michigan Boulevard and mace. There was West Madison St. and shotguns and Des Plaines Ave. and billy clubs There were a lot more people hurt and a lot more people killed than the police said there were. Unfortunately, it made many people angry. And for the first time it made many white people as angry as black people had been. And for a short time that dear ole city burned again and it wasn't started by any cow knocking over any oil lamp. Now a lot of people think that such activity involves a tiny minority of revolutionaries. Even after senators and congressmen denounce the fascist activities of our nation's defenders of law and order, somehow, mapy people still think the only wave in this status quo is caused by the proliferation of hair growing rampantly around unclean chins. Last Saturday more than 20,000 people marched in protest of the Vietnam War, the ABM, racism and a number of other related oppressions. They marched in Chicago in utter but passive de- fiance of any brutalism that city could muster.. They marched with babies, in Sax Fifth Avenue fur coats, in military uniforms, in vestments; they marched holding hands--and they all marched for peace. 1 So simple. Peace. I often wonder why it is so difficult for people to embrace peace. Do they fear it? Can the guilt and oppression of aggressive war be any less tormenting than the mythical, but be- lieved, fear of domination-yes, even by the communists? I don't think so, for the most burdening torment is that of guilt, not suppression. Suppression can always be resisted. Even if only by the mind. Suppression is resilient, easily dispensed with by a united and free spirit. Suppression, is always tenuous, always usurped by hope and faith that it can be overcome. Guilt lingers in the past as a regret and when it is not vindi- cated it grows and grows until it becomes a monstrous torment in the present ominously foretelling the future with even graver images. We have killed too many people and even if we stop killing today we will still always have killed too many people. There is none of us that can shed this burden. We are murderers, collectively united in war. And we murder the people who seek to lift themselves from the suppression of a feudal, inhibiting civilization. Thank you Mrs. Proctor and Army First Class Williams and 10-month-old Billy and Dr. Samuels and Reverend Thorn. You know peace, and for once the Chicago television people looked at you. The people on the sidewalks didn't jeer this time. The news- casters and editorials didn't call you "outside agitators." It was a wondgerful day, I think. Bittersweetly frosted on the winter of war. *1 Approxinately 50 counter-demonstrators walked along the parade route 4I Photographs by Peter IDreyf uss I : : .; >