V #' 0 rv_ I'p.16 I,. War With the Wrong Weapons ., .Z J (Continued from Page Four) in the most revered hails of the Republic. The overwhelming importance of this psycholgy can be stated veri briefly by referring to Clark's book: If every citizen of Harlem were given an income supple- ment rai ing his income above the pov- erty line, almost nothing would change. Vice, thievery and tragedy would prob-' ably increase. The schools would not change; neither would the outlook of the students in them. The temperature on the thermometer would go down; that in the cauldron would not. Dealing with effects cannot eradicate causes. And despite their environment, the poor will, generally, act-and thus start to destroy the psychology of poverty-if they can be -moved by a competent, shrewdly-planned organization which ni- tially focuses on urgent, deeply-felt, short-term objective. An example of the potential for or- ganization is a demonstration in New York City which occurred last June. A group of parents, outraged by the in- adequate, outmoded and filthy toilet fa- cilities of Manhattan's Public School 115, designed and built a six-foot outhouse and presented it to the Board of Educa- tion in an unveiling ceremony in front of the school. Exceedingly embarrassed administrators began hastening long- dormant and confused plans to renovate the building. IN SHORT: resentment; powerlessness; further resentment; organization; and then power-which is to say an increas- ing sense of self respect and involvement in one's own destiny. Government, it should be stressed, can play a significant role as a catalyst in the process. The recently-enacted New York State rent strike law-which allows tenants to convince a Civil Court judge that their building is unsafe, and thus to deposit their rents, to be used on needed repairs, with the court instead of the landlord-is an explicit recogni- tion of earlier, illegal rent strikes against slumlords in Harlem. The law is under a court test, and its legal procedures are cumbersome. But one can scarcely disagree with former New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner, its sponsor, who said it "is a trailblazer. It marks out a clear and legal path for slum tenants to follow in order to use the rent strike as a court-guided weapon to improve slum conditions." THE POOR have been ° organized by other programs as well, including ef- forts in several cities by the Students for a Democratic Society. The endeavors of SDS have been so effective that the Peace Corps is asking them to give it advice on tactics and techniques. A final example, and one which de- serves special attention because of its 0. "THE NATION'S mayors were alarmed by the, way in which poor peo- pie in their cities or in others were shaking up local goternments.. ." striking accomplishments, is the activity of the Industrial Areas Foundation, which is directed by Alinsky. Alinsky is a self-styled "professional revolutionary" and organizer of the poor who began as a criminologist, was once in sociology at the University of Chicago and is now directod of the Industrial Areas Foundation. Although he is by now so beloved by some and so detested by others that objective comment about him becomes nearly impossible to find, his own words give the best insight into his tactics and objectives. ... Do you think .. . when I go into a Negro community today I have to tell them that, they're discriminated against? Do you think I go in there and get them angry? Don't you think A LONG WAY TO. GO they have resentments to begin with, and how much rawer can I rub them? IN GOING INTO communities of poor people, Alinsky first has his organizers listen-carefully-to the complaints of the community in bars, barber shops and restaurants. Then his organizers "go public," declaring, "Look, you don't have to take this, there is something you can do about it .. But you have to have power to do it, and you'll only get it through organization." Mobilized together against common enemies towards whom they have tre- mendous resentment-slumlords, politi- clans, merchants and so on-the people in the area are spurred by the LAF organ- izers, choose their own leaders (the IAF then withdraws), weld community groups together and "all of a sudden you stand up." _.One remarkable area the IAF has or- ganized is the Woodlawn area in Chicago, where the organization is known as, simply, The Woodiawn Organization. It was originally organized in 1959 to halt the University of Chicago's "urban- renewal" expansion program into the area, until .they got guarantees of low- income housing for those displaced by the move (TWO succeeded). It has since become permanent-and prominent. JU RIOUS ABOUT garbage collection, TWO members rented a dump truck, collected all their garbage themselves and deposited it all on the front lawn .of the sanitation department. Woodlawn has had much less difficulty with garbage collection since then. TWO has also organized rent strikes against landlords who refuse to make repairs and sends picket squads of "the blackest Negroes we've got," as Alinsky puts it, out to the slumlords' houses in suburbia. Over 50 landlords, jolted by such strikes (and by irate calls from their neighbors), have come to terms with TWO. And TWO cracked down on short- weighted or overpriced goods and unfair contracts by setting down a code of ethics -and enforcing it by picketing, boycotts and a scale set up in a local church. Reading about the accomplishments of TWO, one begins to feel it is a com- bination of a guerrilla band and a popu- list rally. Its tactics of shrewdly using self interest, embarrassing publicity and economic pressure are substantially dif- ferent from the song-singing, "symbolic demonstrations" approach of many civil rights organizations-an approach Alin- sky deprecates as outmoded and no longer unusual enough to startle or surprise opponents. TWO'S TACTICS may not win it popu- larity contests in the rest of Chicago, and the squeamish may find them Machiavellian. But they are clearly pleas- ing to the previously powerless Woodlawn residents for the results they bring-and, as Alinsky is quick to say, the powerful are the only ones who can afford to preach about morality. No one maintains TWO has turned Woodlawn into an island of affluence. But it has at the very least served to erase the psychology of poverty in many Woodlawnites, and at most it could, given the resources, make a major attack on poverty itself. Labor Secretary Wirtz noted some time ago: The Woodlawn Organization,, com- posed of block units, churches, and similar small clusters in a Negro neigh- borhood contracted with the Labor De- partment to help the unemployed in their own neighborhood, using new methods to bring the poor into job training. Instead of specialized expertise, this grassroots organization offered deep personal involvement of its members in the life of their own neighborhood. The Woodlawn Organization lacked the usual trained staff for testing, vocational assessment, job development, training and counseling; the contrac- tors depended upon the unemployed person himself to tell them what he believed he could learn to do and then. helped guide him into training for the occupation of his choice, S ALINSKY described , the unique value of community organization in a talk in Ann Arbor recently: "o you think we can afford to fail? Of course not. Some federal or state outfit can train people and then leave, and if they can't get a job-too bad. If TWO fails them, it takes it in the neck, because it can't leave." The dropouts in TWO's program are 20 per cent of the number enrolled, lower than most; 98 per cent of TWO graduates have been hired for jobs, substantially higher than the aver- age for manpower training programs, (Continued on Page Seven) BUS SELL (Continued from Page Three) papers ballyhooed a supposed conflict between Cazzie and Oliver Darden, but Cazzie, Ollie, Strack, and other members of the team deny it vociferously. Cazzie lived with Darden for two years and they are still cordial. One respects the other. But Darden is captain, not Cazzie. "I just accept Oliver as captain. I-didn't think I was going to get it. You know, being an All-American and getting all the awards and everything, there's bound to be a little resentment." But the relationship between Cazzie and his teammates is affected little by resentment. There may be smidgeon, be- cause some rather hefty egos are in- volved, but not much. Oliver expresses what the team feels. "We're all college men. Now if you're a stable person who can think rationally the person who's the All-American, the superstar, should get the publicity. Sure. we all want more ink, but, face it, you get what you deserve." And last year's rumor of Bill Buntin's jealousy (Buntin surely would have been first team All-American center if Cazzie hadn't been scoring 26 per game) was a myth. Buntin's wife complained bitterly about it on occasion, but never Bill, him- self. THE PLAYERS don't begrudge Cazzie his fame. They all hope he scores most points in the conference and the country, and then lands a whopping con- tract in the pros. But the truth stands that Cazzie must be apart from his team- mates, his unrivaled drive demands it. Basketball is a huge part of Cazzie's life -it isn't for the rest of the team. "We all respect Cazzie as a person and as a player, but," echoes from many of Cazzie's teammates and several others near the team. "You're always going to have a bit of conflict because he can be somewhat overbearing on occasion," says a team- mate. Cazzie performs in practice like it's a game situation.. He'll club somebody and snap at a player even though he's a fellow Wolverine. A practice session con- sumes the most important two hours of the day for Cazzie and he ruthlessly tries to make the most of it. He's brutally intense on the court. For this reason it's difficult for a teammate to get close to him. As substitute forward Dan Brown ex- presses it. "Nobody can be really buddy- buddy with Cazzie." LOGICALLY, this inevitable apartness opens old sores because he desires to be likedsand to be one of the guys, but he can't. "You're practicing and you run into him accidentally, he thinks you've done. it on purpose," says a Michigan player. "Cazzie's a loner, not an outcast," he continues. "For instance, on a bus trip Caz is inclined to sit alone. And when we were abroad last summer we'd go out in twos and threes, but Cazzie'd generally go by himself." Cazzie has gone by himself up the pole of social mobility by excelling like few ever excelled in his given field. Fis dedication and singleness of purpose ha > cost him something but he continues to strive and compete. In his way Cazzie has fulfilled himself, perhaps more than any other student at the University. And he's done it alone. Under the ,Torrent Of Public Ad ulation: Pride and Sensitivity (Continued from Page Five) The activist heritage of the SGC mem- bers was becoming visible. They implied that if Cutler were unwilling to let the students have a more meaningful voice in decisions, the students who agitate for reform might have to work outside "the system." But what, in the meantime, can be done within the system? THE TIME HAS COME for a change in Cutler's attitude toward student participation. What is needed is a phi- losophy oriented toward the future rather than one anchored in the past. Students do not want to be on sham committees; rather they seek a meaningful voice. History's lesson should be obvious: stu- dent committees in the OSA should have structural power. In many respects the University faculty has been as negligent as the administra- tion in realizing that the student should have a voice in determining his own affairs. Students have no voice in tenure de- cisions and a rather weak role in cur- riculum changes. If the University does not decide appointments only on the basis of publications, it would seem logical that the people who have been taught by a man should judge how good a teacher he is. Or if the man is from another school students should be able to rate how he brought his point across as a guest lecturer and have a voting voice on the tenure committee. There is also no reason why students could not have a voting voice on cur- riculum committees. Currently there are advisory committees such as the Literary College Steering Committee, the Honors Steering Committee and the Residential college student advisory board, all of which have earned the praise of faculty members for their work. Why couldn't these committees be combined with the faculty committees, thus giving students a more meaningful institution. voice in their ANOTHER AREA in which students should have a voice is in the selec- tion of major University officials. It was rather appalling that students were not even asked for an advisory opinion when Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith was appointed last year. A major precedent could be set in the near future with the selection of the new University president. The man who will succeed Harlan Hatcher will determine the future of thhis institution, and there is no reason why students should not have a formative role in the selection of that man. The scheme adopted by the Regents at their past meeting could either de- velop into meaningful participation or a farce. If the committee develops into a farce because of a lack of interaction with the faculty committee and the reg- ents, the result will not only be a loss for the concept of student participation but would also take away .from the suc- cess of the presidential selection process. Students do have something to offer the process. They are the best equipped to judge how presidential candidates would interact with the student body. The point was conceded by the Regents in setting up the committee; they should not nullify their point by making the committee ineffective. HE VISION of an academic democracy presented here is not an idealistic fantasy.-Rather, it is the logical out- growth of the emergence of the student. If democracy can not work in an aca- demic community, where can it function? ty do not believe in self-government, why If members of thi senlightened communi- should anyone else? * We have come a long way from the days of Deborah Bacon, but we have not yet come far enough. SUSS' by LLOYD GRAFF "A ND THEN YOU'RE out there, on the court, and you've got this object, this ball in your hands, and it feels great. I mean if calms you, you want to do something, to move, move." The moment Cazzie Lee Russell Jr. lives for. That eerie moment of chill, fervor, climax, when a day; a week, a month, a year, a life's concentration fuses into that wierd soothing exhilaration. Basketball, A noncontact sport of flailing elbows, slapping forearms, and knees to the gut. A punishing game that sears the lungs of the chubby. A melange of leaping be- hemoths in short pants running hell-bent back and forth on ninety feet of over- shellacked boards. Basketball. Cazzie Russell's Game. Caz- zie Russell's Means. Cazzie Russell's End. Cazzie Russell's object of dedication. You know Cazzie Russell. He's six feet five and-one half inches, two hundred twenty two and one half pounds of num- ber thirty three. He dresses in white at Yost, blue away. He plays like he loves the game. Every pro team drools about having him, and the Detroit Pistons would give Cobo Hall to lure him-except they're cheap. That's the Cazzie Russell of the sta- tisticians, the sportswriters, the fans. THE CAZZIE RUSSELL that Cazzie Russell has to live with, that's today's story.. The basics of Cazzie's background are probably better known on this campus than the names of Lyndon Johnson's daughters (Linda and Luci Baines, inci- dentally). Cazzie's family, lived in a housing pro- ject on Chicago's South Side. He went to Carver High School, dominated Chicago Public League basketball, made several high school All-American teams, chose -Michigan from dozens of college offers, revived basketball interest and power at Michigan, and led the Wolverines to two straight Big Ten championships and second place in the NCAA last year. Natch. But focusing a bit on his background, Cazzie notes that his parents were strict and religious. "I was-raised in a church and I led the choir and taught Sunday school back in Chicago." CAZZIE'S FOLKS, in fact, prevented him from playing basketball until he was 14 because they didn't want him out late. "My parents said I had to be in by 8:00 or 8:30 and the recreation building where the guys played was only open from 7:00 to 10:00. I never got a chance to practice. But finally I just demanded that that they let me stay out or I'd just bounce the ball in the house and drive everybody crazy." Cazzie started three years behind his peers (most started at 11) in basketball, but he caught up with desire and dili- gence. He pushed himself harder than anyone else, and even cajoled the jani- tors at his high school to leave the gym open deep into night so he could practice. E CAME TO Michigan, a school with reputation for scholarship, not basket- LLOYD GRAFF, a senior in pre- legal studies, was Associate Sports Editor of The Daily lost year. Sall, because he liked the coaches, Bill Buntin, the prestige of a Michigan de- gree, and because the Wolverines "looked like a team that needed help." You know the rest. He broke the Michigan season scoring record as a sophomore and junior and is on the way this year. He made All-American both times and won Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten last season, with 24.8 per g;ame average in '64, 25.6 in '65. "Cazzie Russell makes shots you don't -ee made," remarks Ohio State's Coach Fred Taylor, who's taught boys like Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek. Cazzie Russell, basketball virtuoso, is on top like Bill Bradley of Princeton was last season - except Cazzie doesn't have anyone to challenge him as he, himself, challenged Bradley in '65. But Cazzie Russell, college basketball's 1966 King for a Year, still drives him- self. It's almost compulsive for him In a way he's possessed-or perhaps more accurately, obsessed, by his sport. COACH DAVE STRACK minces no words. "I'd have to say that Cazzie is the most dedicated player I've ever known." Adds Captain Oliver Darden: "The difference between Cazzie and I is that I just don't have the time. I give a hundred -per cent in practice and that's it. When it's over I have something else IN THE FIRST 18 games of this season, Cazzie Russell has seored 542 points, averaging 30.1 points per game, on 208 field goals and 126 free throws. le has made just under 50 per-cent of his field goal attempts and 84 per-eent of his free throw attempts. He has pulled down 157 rebounds. L .. .. r ........".'''. ... .w.*.. i . "l:'e.*,... w,:?1 .......r+is. And Cazzie actively participates in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, a group which tries to weave the strands of Christian thought and competitive athletics into a meaningful entity. JOHN CLAWSON TELLS of an incident which occurred while the team was out in Portland last year for the finals of the NCAA Championships. "We were in the hotel one morning and I walked by Cazzie's room. The door was open and the maid was making the bed and cleaning up the room. Then I spotted Cazzie carrying on an animated discussion with her about 'the Bible and religion in general." And down in Columbus this year on the night before the game Cazzie spent hours explaining a Baptist interpretation of the Old Testament to his teammates. Freddy Taylor wishes he'd explicated it Saturday afternoon instead. Cazzie notched 32 points, hitting 13 of 17 from the field, spurring Michigan to win in Columbus for the first time in 19 years. RUSSELL'S PROCEDURE for getting "up" foi a game differs from his of the team, at the pre-game h: fore the Indiana coupie jazz recor sive anxiety whit. Atter the Wol floor, with Cazz: den, Russell thi cises, like a fre His flashy dunk shooting display tion which set h Cazzie is Michi undeniably Cazzi AND FINALLY Cazzie first g He inhales the fe its pattern, and reflects the gam has an expansive a kilowatt on t can light up a cr And then a s steps in seven le of the packedt zoom, swish, za glow. That glow coni poker face of Bil centration grippe stare. A score o the controlled ble But underneat the Russell grin b dedication to be but great. THE LIFE OF talented,the clever, or the su character actors, sides. Cazzie beneath and postgame g a loner. He loves to be ing crowd and d graphs. He reli though he rema gards the avala received as enco "I've got to sh a lucky game las C AZZIE, WHO after his pro image and he kn ife an example I best to look good But under the Dects people. Cal rear, protection natural feeling Cazzie feels it. "I do study pe scious effort to m an instinct for t concern for me a who want reco You've got to w There are enoug And Cazzie ir that he's been c by those he alme insecurity couple zeal for basketba ed Cazzie's relat mates. THERE IS NO igan basketba (Cont~ni to do. Cazzie makes time to practice. I don't." Cazzie carries an intensity for basket- ball that few have for anyone or any- thing. It consumes him. During the en- tire year the game is foremost in his psycne. KEEPING HIS body in perfect shape all year is something he not only accepts but relishes. He plays golf (aver- age 87) during the summer and runs. Cazzie will never challenge Bob Hayes' records, but he proudly asserts that he's won the "Strack Mile" three years, in a row. Each season a Michigan player must run the distance in under six minutes to make the squad. Most of the guys trot it in 5:59.9, but Cazzie runs it like the Olympics. He broke the ribbon in 5:29 as a sophomore, 5:20 as a junior, and 5:09 this season. "It was a matter of pride. Nobody'd ever won it three years in a row." Cazzie guards his sleep and may often even snatch a nap beforea game. He schedules his days meticulously, even down to the chapters of thesBible he believes will be most appropriate reading for the given situation. He's active in the St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church, though he hasn't taught Sunday school since he left Chicago. teammates' by degree. In a sense, Cazzie's whole existence is a preparation for the explosion on the court, basketball occu- pies such a pivotal spot in his thinking. The night before a game the players often sit through a 45 minute scouting film of the opponent. Once is plenty for them, but not for Cazzie. "When Cazzie can persuade me to give him the projector and films, he'll watch them endlessly, like maybe four or five times, looking for a move here, a mistake there, that he can take advantage of in the game," says team manager John Phillips. "On a trip Cazzie often complains about the room or the bed. Often he'll say the bed is too soft or too hard and he'll sleep on the floor to keep himself occupied. And Cazzie snores, gee does he, and it makes it tough for anybody who rooms with him. Cazzie doesn't do anything halfway, even snore." PRIOR TO A NIGHT game Cazzie works out in the morning. refining his jump shot, free throws, hook, fak- ing. He practices alone, with silence in- terrupted only by the thump of the ball. The other players prefer to read, talk, savor the tingle of anticipation. And oddly, with the prescribed ritual of preparation that he obeys, Cazzie is the most jovial and easy-going member Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1966,