1 2 w -f --r ff , _, IIW Uncle Tom in a Button-Down Collar History of the Chicago Urban League, by Arvarh E. Strickland. University of Illinois Press. $7.50. To the more militant strains of the civil rights movement, the Ur- ban Leagte headquarters is "a veri- tible 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' where middle class Negroes, misguided so- cial workers, and do-nothing white liberals busily eat out of the hands of white power, and, in return for the privilege, make concessions left and right, leaving Mr. Charlie with a good conscience and the Negro population with a few token bene- sis of what the League actually does is necessary if we are to evaluate its role in the civil rights struggle to- day. Strickland provides us with such an analysis. In -Strickland's view, the Urban League tried in the past to alleviate the problems facing the Negro com- munity through social work and aid to particular individuals. Conse- quently, the League proved ineffec- tive in dealing with widespread so- cial and economic problems. But in the 1960's, because Negroes have developed higher aspirations and an been of use to other organizations that can organize active protest. This is what happened in the Willis school controversy of 1961-1962. The League's findings on the con- ditions in white and Negro schools gave groups such as T.W.O. clear objective facts around which their campaign was built. The League can use its personal contacts and associational influence both in negotiations with city and business officials as well as in aid- ing needed legislation. The League was influential in the passage of the Illinois Fair Employment Bill and took part in the negotiations with character, the League neither tries to organize the majority of the Ne- gro population nor to force the rec- ognition of the problems on white moderates as SNCC does. Before passing judgment it must be real- ized that the functions the League performs demand such methods. Often the League cannot take a public, activist stand on issues for fear of- alienating its prime source of income and influence, the white moderate community. If it is to do its work, it needs to calm and reas- sure moderate sentiment. Only such tactics can accomplish the political and legal aims of the League; the League cannot expect to threaten the power structure and still work within and under its graces. Mili- tant organizations by their very na- tures cannot act with the diplomacy needed to nlay both sides. Likewise the fact that the League is tightly organized with a small, permanent staff enables it to function with a unity of purpose foreign to the loosely-structured mass movements of radical groups. The Urban League has a definite place in the movement; it can act as a mediator between the establish- ment and the more militant organi- zations. In addition, the League can effect certain legislative and judi- cial decisions that pressure from ac- tivist groups cannot even initiate. There is a place in the psycholo- gy of the civil rights movement for a moderate position as well as black power. The Urban League gives the white liberal something to do. By the nature of its program, SNCC, unlike the Urban League, would nei- ther want nor need alliances with powerful business concerns. Howev- er, if such assistance can further the interest of the movement, then it should be used. Only a moderate organization can gain the confi- dence of the establishment and put that confidence into effective ac- tion. Therefore, the Urban League has a unique position in the civil rights struggle, and new develop- ments in leadership and technique seem to suggest that it will fulfill the potential of its role. Strickland presents a detailed re- view of the League's history in terms of its functions and methods of operation. His account is purely chronological, and discussion of theoretical problems and issues arises only as a digression from the dry analysis of the facts. But if the book is not a clarification of the problems that beset the League and other such organizations, it is a well-researched, objective work on what the Urban League has done. As such, it clarifies the problems of a moderate organization which must achieve reforms while working within the establishment. Lulan O nger Miss Oinger is a third-ear student majoring in psychology at Lake Forest College. 14 f "-- : I I it --- -- i .164 ff tfl-I I got RX-111 --I a t I a 1 It . S --1-10000 I5x 100, agar~ Paul Bunyan Behind Prison Bars The Riot, by Frank Elli. Coward- McCann. $4.95. To a reading public that likes its literature either hot or in cold blood, Frank Elli's modest escape thriller promises little. His prison riot is more a con style carnival- in-the carnal than a bloody rampage of vandalism. No one gets killed or maimed in the two days of confused jubilation, and with touching irony Elli shows that his inmates really do not know what to do with their brief freedom. But neither does the author. Like a benny hangover, a headachy boredom follows the un- certain anticipation of big kids in a candy store. The riot progresses to the expected conclusion, as Elli can rescue neither his fellow cons nor his readers from the stale taste of a stale plot. But Elli writes with directness and precision, like a TV cameraman astride a dolly behind his main character, he photographs a clear - if transparent - outline of action. His mania for detail does not hinder swift plot movement; he skillfully makes us unaware of his art with words. To his credit, the two ac- t i o n -p a c k e d days are tautly stretched into 255 pages of lively description holding our attention throughout. In the pandemonium of seventeen hundred rioting inmates, Elli does not flounder, although this handy manipulation of interlocking details is an attribute of Elli's prom- ising style rather than a tour de force of ingenious plotmaking. Beginnings are ordinarily diffi- cult. Elli uses a common stylistic device to introduce his riot: "On the surface it was a lazy Monday morn- ing in the State Penitentiary." Of course, something is brewing, and it ain't just illegal greenpotato beer. By the second inch of print, Elli's empathy is clear: "Cully Briston, a tall, muscular man in his late twen- ties, stood alone on the shopline walk." We can relax; we can identi- fy. We need not stretch our imagi- nations below the surface: Elli will offer us a shallow pot of common- place , psychological responses for the terrible mystery of self which, in other recent novels, wears on our nerves so. He will whitewash and blackeye his characters so we need no Sherlock lens to spy out hidden fingerprints. And he will give us Our Man: Cully Briston, with the unmistakable twin bluebirds tat- tooed on his manly chest; Cully- Briston, fountain of respect and manhood, convicted for "one lousy beer-joint robbery," which isn't really so bad; Cully, who gruffly vows he is no Boy Scout, but after all can't help feeling nausea at baby-rapers, queens, screws, snitch kites, and wardens-quite right. And quite real is Elli's second iro- ny-that Cully in the end is ridi- culed by those who formerly re- spected him: just because he saved a warden's life, and for sound rea- sons too. And ain't that life? Cully never learns. Although Elli may be angling for prison reform, he maintains the public's conception of hardened criminals by overworking his all- stock cast of characters. There are notably "Rick, the Reformatory transfer" and Surefoot, the shiv- happy Indian made into a psychot- ic murderer by prison beatings and tear gassings. While reproducing in fiction the TV type of criminal, Elli turns around to ridicule the very public he satisfies. Concerned citi- zens crowd into the lobby and line the prison walls, pushing and stretching with the notorious public thirst for violence. The radio an- nouncer, herald of public opinion, ominously broadcasts the emergen- cies of "seventeen hundred rioting inmates" (who are only breaking into contraband benny supplies, brewing raisinjack, and stealing eggs to remember what they taste like) and treats the demands of "hardened criminals" with an in- sensitivity of a more insidious type. The final doublecross of prison offi- cials is a telling contast to Cully's trust and promise keeping; yet for an American public that readily (if briefly) sympathizes with victims of police brutality, Elli's revelation of this truth through journalistic fic- tion is hardly an important excuse for his book. Tough-guy talk is ripped off page after page with almost laughable consistency. This is appropriate for a tough-guy novel, but there is so much of it here that the book might be seen as a dictionary for eager delinquent readers - and nothing more. For more sheltered readers. Elli delicately explains his terms (such as why the queens sashay with limp wrists) with a quasi-PTA sense of decency. The near-vio- lence, the subtle crudities, the bland swearing are all displayed as if to remind us these are pris- oners, but to shock us only a little. There are moments of sympathet- ic emotion. Cully forgives an old enemy and invites him to share in February, 1967 * M ID0W E S T the stashed raisinja big brother to Sk wife-killer who i blamed if his wife v Before troopers me the wrecked prison lv soliloquizes in to Never had ho world '- had se, 'bi way d f 'ine. ing Ii ,',throe fourteen-carat chat it was always the back and regrettin story of his life. After this, the Grossman, who had tage, recovers fr( heart attacks to mi into Isolation, wh first turned loose. channel, the novel came in with a nic things even if noth tween. Frank Elli's of the ways and v has utilized a tighti hard-hitting style dog-earned plot wil that literary magic the commonvlace the justifiable. A, thrillers, little is lef atrophied imagina wonder just what tl you will, a pragmat those of us with we bles. Elli has given place next to all ti teries. And for that of the nation can be Mr. Kristen is a fo majoring in political lish at Valparaiso Uni LI T E R A R Y R E fits." Radical activists level the same criticism at the League as they do at white liberals: "We hear all you say, but we see nothing you do.", The radicals are right when they s,+. "We see nothing you do," for the League functions inconspicuous- ly outside the public view and by means of individual rather 'than mass influence. The executive di- rector of the Chicago League, Ed- win C. Berry. describes the process this way: "something else (is) going on ouietly behind the facade of ar- ticulation and public demonstra- tion." Thus, a careful inside analy- organized movement with new lead- ership as well as drawing a more sympathetic response from the white population, Strickland feels the League can abandon the limita- tions of its traditional approach and deal with larger social problems, working with and for like-minded groups. For example, one of the League's traditional functions has been sociological and economic re- search on Negro life. But such re- search is useless unless it clarifies specific problems. In the past, the League has been unable to use the results of its investigations effec- tively, but recently the material has Mayor Daley this summer. Strickland's analysis asserts, how- ever, that the criticism of the League is correct in that the League achieves the above goals t h r o u g h compromising "uncle- tomish" methods depending on white sentiment. The question is whether these methods are neces- sary for the League to perform its functions, and whether these meth- ods can co-exist in the movement with the black power pressure. The League does depend on moderate white business support in fund rais- ing and gains much of its influence from this affilation. Non-activist in 10 * MIDWEST LITERARY R E V I E W " February, 1967 }