PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1969 -AEIGTTUMCIGN AIYATRASPEBR1 96 An Embittered SNCC Adopts Black Power AP News Analysis ATLANTA-In six years of ex- istence the Student Nonviolent Co- ordinating Committee has changed from idealistic to bitter, from en- thusiastic to belligerent, but it has remained always embattled. The opposition has changed, from rural sheriffs to congress- men and metropolitan mayors; the memiership has changed and the focus has moved, 'but contention still follows SNCC like a swarm of hornets with its national chair- man facing riot charges and its publicity director having quit. Inciting to Riot Stokely Carmichael, 25, West Indies-born head of SNCC was jailed here Thursday night on charges of disturbing the peace and inciting to riot, the aftermath strong idealism. They are very idealistic about democracy." Voter registration was an early concern and working in remote areas of the South, many SNCC workers encountered brutality which fostered frustration and in- creasing bitterness. From an idealistic concern for democracy, a concern for politics naturally grew, with the climactic series of demonstrations in Bir- mingham, Ala., in 1963, SNCC leaders turned more and more to the idea of revamping democratic structures. In 1964, the SNCC-fostered Free- dom Democratic party emerged in Mississippi; so did a protest against drafting Negroes to serve in Viet Nam. In 1965, Carmichael and other SNCC workers organizes the all- Negro Black Panther party in Lowndes County, Ala. Black Power The inherent separatism in the move brought to light another element in the metamorphosis of SNCC - which recently emerged full grown as the concept of "black power." The begging posture of the ear- ly demonstrations did not sit well with the young militants. who were proud as well as impatient. Fur- thermore, integrated lunch coun- ters were not of much use to the frustrated stratum with which SNCC concerned itself; the poor- est, the least educated, the least ambitious to rise. "I never say anything bad about SNCC,". confided an official of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference long after a rift with the organization it helped start had become apparent. "They get right down there with the lowest, where often ;times we haven't gone."~ Non-Violence SCLC, started and headed by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., is totally committed to nonviolence and integration. It tried to heal the split and to present the ap- pearance of a united front. Singer Harry Belafonte mediated discus- sions between the two groups in the spring of 1965-confirming that the cleavage was there. But last May 14 Lewis was ousted and replaced by Carmichael. Lewis later quit, saying. "I am not prepared to give up my commit- ment to nonviolence." The multigroup march through Mississippi after the shooting of James Meredith proved once again to be a coalition of convenience, not conviction, and it was there the cry, "black power" emerged at full volume. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day. Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 Day Calendar Cinema Guild - Tony Richardson's "The Loneliness of the Long Distence Runner": Architecture Audi, 7 and 9 p.m. General Notices University Activities Center: Mass meeting will be held Sun., Sept. 11 at 7:30 in the Union Ballroom. Women's Research Club: Meets Mon., Sept. 12 at 8 p.m. In West Conference Room of Rackham Bldg. Prof. Rosemary Sarri of Social Work will speak on "Malperformance in the Public Schools." Linguistic Lecture: Tues., Sept. 13, at 4:30 p.m., at Rackham Amphithea- tre. Prof. O. L. Chavarria-Aguilar will speak on "Language and Politics in India" Public invited. Doctoral Examination for Richard Wilhelm Kopp, Chemistry; thesis: "Complexes of [ (CH3)2N] 3-nPCin with A1C13-Their Reactions and Existence as Intermediates in Ligand Dispropor- tionation Processes," Sat., Sept. 10, Room 3003 Chemistry, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, R. W. Parry. Doctoral Examination for Robert Or- tha Barr, Jr., Instrumentation Engineer- ing; thesis: "Computation of Optimal Controls by Quadratic Programming on Convex Reachable Sets," Mon., Sept. 12, ORGANIZATION NOTICES Room 1028 East Engineering, at 3 p.m. Chairman, E. G. Gilbert. Summary of Action Taken by Student Government Council at Its Meeting September 8, 1966 Accepted: Resignations of Council members Alex Goodwin and Donald Res- nick. Appointed: Richard Van House and Michael Dean to committee for inter- viewing new Council members. Appointed: Fred G. Smith, Pat Mc- Carty, Neill Hollenshead, Ruth Bau- mann and Marg Asman to committee to investigate the matter of disclosure of University records with reference to recent HUAC subpoena. Accepted: Voter registration report. Accepted: Student Housing Associa- tion report. Accepted: Treasurer's report and budg- et 1966-67. Approved: After suspension of rules that SGC grant Galens Honorary Medi- cal Society permission to conduct a bucket drive for the children's work- shop at University Hospital on Dec. 2 and 3 from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Approved: Changes in organizational recognition. Approved: Changes in Council Plan: Article 6, Section A: Delete "existing" and insert "voting" (membership); Ar- ticle 9, Section A: After "Once the petition has been submitted, the Coun- cil must either adopt the legislation or submit it to," delete the rest of the sentence and insert "either the ex- plicitly concerned segment of the stu- dent body or the entire student body (which must be determined by 2/3 vote of Council) for approval at the next regularly scheduled election." Block Tickets: Results of drawing showing order of preference for block tickets, Ferrante and Teicher Concert, Hill Aud., Sept. 17: Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Owen House, Alpha Sigma Phi, Chi- cago House, Winchell House, Hayden House, Betsy Barbour, Phi Alpha Kap- pa, Klein, Alice Lloyd, Alpha Omega, Tau Delta Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Phi, Pi Lambda Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Reeves House, Evans Scholars, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Epsilon Pi. Allen Rumsey, Law Club, Angell, Greene House, Zeta Beta Tau, Theta Delta Chi, Chi Phi, Sigma Pi, Phi Kap- pa Tau, Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Delta Phi, Kelsey House, Phi Sigma Kappa, Anderson House, Michigan Technic, Williams House, Lloyd House Butler House, Kappa Sigma. Scott House, Wenley House, WQ, Phi Gamma Delta, Theta Xi, Adams House, Cooley House, Sigma Alpha Mu, Little House, Markley, Frederick House, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Delta Sigma Delta, Al- pha Kappa Psi, Prescott House, Delta Chi, Palmer, Alice Lloyd. Henderson House, Michigan House, WQ, East Quad Tyler, Hinsdale House, EQ, Frost House, Hinsdale-Alice Lloyd, Delta Sigma Phi, Lutheran Collegians, Taylor SQ, Stockwell Hall, Delta Upsi- lon, Newberry, Mosher, Huber House, Jordan. Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Invitation to All December Grads and Seniors: Any student with a minimum of 12 semester hours at the University may register at the Bureau of Appoint- ments for services in teacher place- ment or general placement, including business, government, industry, and overseas. You are welcome to browse through listings of current openings, employers in all areas of the U.S., schools, government, and industry. Hours : 8:30-12:00 and 1:30-4:30 Monday through Friday. POSITION OPENINGS: Michigan Manufacturing Firm - At- tention students. Openings on night shift in assembly work. 10 hrs. per night, 6 nights a week. Within driving distance of Ann Arbor. Local Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich. -- Two positions. 1. Female Recreation Therapist, for children in psychiatric wards in patient service, 8-5 day, with 1-2 evenings, 40 hour week. Primar- ily with young girls, should be able to swim, have 6 mos. psychiatric exper. 2. Male recreation therapist for day-care patients, full time. Ingersoll Rand Co., Southfield, Mich. -Sales Engineers and Design Engineers, Engineering bkgd., primarily mechani- cal. Trng. program. Power tools and production equip. Every state and for- eign countries. Up to 32, or recent grad. 0 . For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Call 764-0558 4 r I U U :V:"}:"A} ',::'Y : :Y. .,%: "::Sti L:f{ { 1tiJ .YA:} "' y 4ti : T 't tf y} Y1}"{tf7 ..' .' jy~t. ..y.V R} {" r tti i' !. " ti\ h1fi. '.1Y.}44 wv ",e"; ,}yy l+". "v 1",, t!, " , M,+ .,+. .y. Up 1'\. y. ! { +.' ay1 ..+ '..r yy , '.',C . . ::::{: }.i:"}.ti':.1P:: .h. t ......1W .1..1y.....t ... }... . R R A '...} : . i1r 'r J '. J.SY . .'t4ti.Y: ' A ,s. .11,: . .1\1\: .' "}i " 1.h" '+4' '.1'h4L\La S\i: .ti4\A \.':.LM Y4 i i LSFi4N ' "iJi W q.!iS 'rti': Back to class? Go with class! -UIIIVCRSITY ry. -PLRZA USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Organizaations who. are planning to be active for the Fall Term must be registered in the Office of Student Organizations by Fri., Sept. 16. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * * GO HONDA!* just the ticket for campus traffic, crowded parking lots or just plain fun. And, instead of walking her to class, you can ride her to class! Hondas are more fun than a barrel of coeds. See all the Honda models (there's one just right fQr you) at SIX-O-EIGHT MONROE SHORT TERM LEASES AVAILABLE ti T. ew........ 4.. STOKELY CARMICHAEL of a slum disturbance Tuesday which cracked the city's image as a paragon of racial harmony. Julian Bond, twice elected to the Georgia House of Representatives and twice excluded after saying burning a draft card takes courage though he wouldn't do it himself, said Thursday he was resigning aftew five years with SNCC. The organization was born in April, 19O, in Greensboro, N.C., and survived a rugged infancy through the early sit-ins and free- dom rides. "SNCC workers," said former chairman John Lewis, "have a * Sound Conditioning s Decorator Furnished * Private Balconies " On Site Parking " Air-Conditioning " Master TV Antenna System 9 Laundry Facilities * GE Appliances Alpha Phi Omega, Directory meeting, Sat., Sept. 10, at 10 a.m. in Room 2528 SAB. All actives and pledges please at- tend. * * * The Twaddler, Mass meeting, Sat., Sept. 10, at 2 p.m. in Room 3529 SAB. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Sun., Sept.11, 9:45 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. services. Sermon by the Rev. A. Scheirs: "Students and the More Abundant Life." Holy Communion will be offered. Bible class at 11:15 a.m. enbeoun s s se a Gamma Delta, Regular meeting, Sun., Sept. 11, 6 to 8 p.m., University Luth- eran Chapel, 1311 Washtenaw. Supper followed by student-professor discus- sion led by Lutheran faculty members at 6.45. DOWNTOWN HONDA N Wenk Sales & Service 310 E. Wash ington State St. M aSt. Excitingly modern UNIVERSITY PLAZA located one block from campus at 608 Monroe Street is thoughtfully planned to offer all the conveniences of contemporary student living. Applications now being accepted from groups of four or five. Some units available now, build- ing to be completed by August 29th. FOR MORE RENTAL INFORMATION APARTMENTS LIMITED Returning Students Note! WE MOVED IN MAY 610 S. FOREST 663-051 1-Evenings: 761 -7064 9 -- I .S;":w.~*~**.** .......: d..}...\.:.f :"ni. {. ..": .:4.}...,r....... n....... . . . . . . . . . . . . t - t . i I 0 * FOOD " TOUR at C4c~ 4diriBE aait3 " INFORMATION 4 I I TODAY, SATURDAY, 2-5 P.M. 420 MAYNARD STREET (next to SAB) Enjoy! I. 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