FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1985 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ptr yAT RACKHAM Griffn Rcunsr SUBSCRIBE Reconts {F ~heT THE: Negro Experience I. A .~ x:MCIGN ce pns AUE SEVEN ESA S HERE cycle of International Prestige By JOYCE WINSLOW he gave of his experience as a Negro are all too familiar. "To know what ii is to be a "I'd call over the telephone in Negro in the South, you have to response to ads for jobs," Grif- wake up in his skin," said author fin said, and employers would tell John Howard Griffin to a more me to come in for an interview. than full house in Rackham last When I went to their offices, it night. was always immediately clear to "I wanted to know, so I under- me that I had no chance at the went medical pigmentation that job because I was a Negro. One would not wash or wear off. I employer even accused me of travelled extensively in the South 'talking white' over the telephone as a Negro, but maintained the to fool him." same identity I had had as a "Too many doors closed in my white." face," Griffin continued. "Too' Same Only Darker many employers said 'no.' Too In other words, Griffin was the many hotels couldn't accommo- same man, only darker. His pur- date me. Finally I learned. You pose was to discover for himself just stop knocking on doors. The whether a Negro was judged by real reason why Negroes don't white southerners on his own per- knock on doors today is not apa- sonal attributes, or discriminated thy. It is the people behind those against simply because of his doors." coloring. Hitler ard Racism "I did not think I would. pass Griffin compared racism in the as a Negro for two reasons,' South today to Hitler's Germany. Griffin said. "First of all, I do "Racism follows the same pat- not have the bone structure or tern regardless of.who the vic- eye color of a Negro. Secondly, Itim might be," griffin explained. did not know how to 'speak 'Ne-! "While it de-humanizes its scope- gro.' I thought that I had to goat, its most tragic victim is the sound like I was reading 'Uncle oppressor. But how'can you indict Remus.' a whole people? Some lead, others Whites' Illusions follow, others allow it to happen "Both of these reasons are illu- through apathy. In Germany, as sions we whites suffer under," in Mississippi, the good people re- Griffin said. "I wasn't in the Ne- mained silent too long." r SQUIBB GIVES OIL PAINTING- An original oil painting of the West Medical School Bldg. was presented yesterday to Dr. William N. Hubbard, Jr., dean of the medical school. The painting, done by Hughie Lee-Smith, Is one in a series called the "Collegia Medica Squibb." The old medical building was chosen because of the warm significance it represents to all the medical students of the last fifty-five years who have received at least part of their training in the building, Hubbard explained. This project, sponsored by the Squibb company during the Bicentennial of Medical Education in America, is the beginning of a long-range plan of the pharmaceutical firm to create a collection of fine oil paintings of all Ameri- . can medical colleges. Squibb said this program is an indication of the new willingness to cooperate and work together observed between the pharmaceutical industry and the medical profession. g gro community one lour- before I' realized that there are very fewf pure Negro types.' I saw Negroes with all types of bone structure, different degrees of pigmentation and with blue eyes. "I also realized that there are all kinds of speech patterns in the Negro community. Griffin blames these stereotyp-; ed illusions on the lack of com- munication between the white and Negro communities. He also blam- ed his personal lack of informa- tion on his childhood. He was rais- ed in the antebellum tradition by Georgian parents. -Stereotype Examples Although Griffin would have us abandon stereotype, the examples -- Man's Inhumanity Griffin shakes his head in be- wilderment at man's inhumanity to man. "I have been in too many rooms full of human tragedy," he said. "I was in a room in Mis- sissippi where a Negro mother sat holding the autopsy of her son chain-whipped to death. I was in a room where a mother sat cry- ing, saying that her son had so many bulet-holes in his head she couldn't count them. And outside, for one city block in any direction, men were quibbling, rationalizing, not knowing or caring about the tragedy in those rooms." "Apathy is a personal sin," Griffin said. 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