Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 6, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 6,1969 booksbooks books bool< Scottsboro:* The story they never tell B5y ROBERKT S14.IAK W F <<.~m ~ Scottsboro: A Tragedy of the American South, by Dan T. Carter. Louisiana State University Press, $10. History doesn't teach us many lessons - and' its lessons are too often of the wrong kind. The only people who learned something from the Scottsboro case were white Southern racists, and they found they were letting themselves in for un- welcome troubles when they gave accused blacks a court trial, instead of lynching them right away. During the 1930's, in the wake of the Stottsboro trials, many Southerners put that lesson to use, and went back to the r o p e instead of the judge. What was the Scottsboro case? Back in the 1930's it was a great political cause celebre. But in the standard United States history textbooks today one finds no reference to it. The story is too com- plicated to fit into a few lines of a crowd- ed textbook, and the central issue is in- terracial sex. Here is w h a t happened, summarized from the facts and inferences presented in Dan T. Carter's book; In March, 1931, a freight train travel- ing from Chattanooga to Memphis was carrying the usual complement of stray kids, hoboes, and unemployed men and women who rode the rails during the De- pression days. As the train dipped down into Alabama, following the course of the Tennessee River, a fight between white and blac youths broke out on the train. When the t r a i n slowed a few of the whites jumped off and t o I d a station master they wanted to "press charges" against blacks on the train who had, they said, started a fight. The station master called ahead and the train was stopped near Scottsboro, Ala., where a possee waited to search the cars and arrest every black they could find. They rounded up nine black boys ranging in age from 20 to thirteen. They also came upon two white girls wearing men's caps and overalls. A few minutes after a deputy sheriff had tied up the boys and put them on the back of a truck for transportation to j a 11, one of the white girls told him she and her friend had been forcibly raped by the n i n e blacks. It was pure luck that the boys weren't lynched then and there. When word of the alleged outrage got out, a crowd gath- ered and shouted for the blacks to be turned over to them. The county sheriff and the town mayor resisted, however, ,and they got the governor to send in na- tional guardsmen to protect the jail. One reporter pointed out that the girls and the blacks were strangers from another state; if any had been local people, the boys would not have escaped lynching. They were put on trial in Scottsboro and eight were'swiftly convicted and sen- tenced to death. A mistrial was declared in the case of the thirteen-year-old, be- cause th state had asked for life-im- prisonment and seven of the jurors re- fused to settle for less than a sentence of death. Presumably the sentences would have been speedily carried out, had not the Communist Party seen possibilities in the case. It is hard to do justice to the motives of those who wished to help the Scotts- boro boys. The case was a national jsen- sation - an alleged gang rape of white girls by blacks with guns and knives. You 'can guess the chances for a fair trial by an all-white jury in a s n\ a'11 Alabama town. The NAACP looked into it, but was frightened, cautious, and slow. The Com- munist Party, through its affiliate, the International Labor Defense (ILD), saw its chance to gain nationwide publicity and support and hopefully forge an alli- ance with black workers. The ILD won control of the boys' appeals. Of course the NAACP and the ILD spent m o s t of their energy attacking each other. Of course the interests of the boys were at various times jeopardized by ILD use of their parents or even of wit- nesses for publicity purposes. Of course, ILD participation in the case led white Southerners to cry Communism whenever black sharecroppers organized or fought for their rights during t h e Depression years. Of course, after the ILD took over the Scottsboro case, white Southerners decided to shoot or lynch rather than take a suspected black - especially whete the charge was rape - to court. In any case, the ILD appeal of t h e Scottsboro convictions did save the boys' lives. They carried the case to the United States Supreme Court, and won a rever- sal - the first of two Supreme Court re- versals in the case - on grounds that the state had not provided adequate counsel for the defendants. The case went back for re-trial, continuing in Alabama and U.S. courts through 1937, while boys grew into men in jail. Eventually four were re- leased in 1937, and the others at later times, until the last was set free in 1950. The legal tangles are too complicated to be unraveled here. The most signifi- cant point, however, is that the ILD re- tained a brilliant criminal lawyer, Samuel S. Liebowitz, who succeeded in subsequent trials in convincing an Alabama judge the boys were innocent (the Judge was promptly removed from the case) and in building a legal record that indicates not only that no rape had taken place, but also that there had been no intercourse between the black boys and the white girls on that train. This is an important fact. From my prior reading on the case, I had had the impression that intercourse h a d taken place on the train whether it had been white boys or black boys with the girls. But during the re-trials Liebowitz elic- ited testimony from the two Scottsboro doctors who had examined the girls when they got off the train that their physical condition gave no indication they had been raped. Moreover, there h a d been difficulty in finding traces bf semen, and what the doctors had found was non- motile, that is, at least twelve hours old. It was ironic that this crucial testimony was on a subject which no newspaper at that time would discuss. The public re- mained ignorant of these important facts. Why then was the charg of rape made in the first place? Liebowitz raised the possibility that the girls were being trans- ported by the white men from Chattan- ooga to Memphis for "immoral purposes." Thus they decided to accuse'the blacks in order to protect themselves from ar- rest as prostitutes, or on a Mann Act vio- lation, since they had crossed state lines. One of the girls, Ruby Bates, retracted her testimony and admitted no rape had taken place, though her recantation lost much of its impact when it came out that she had accepted money from the ILD. Dan T. Carter takes good advantage of the inherent dramatic form of a criminal case. Scottsboro is a long b o o k but it reads with speed and excitement, bogging down only in chapters recounting t h e dreary editorial battles waged by T h e Daily Worker. It is clear that Carter's sympathy lies with the defendants, but he tells the story in straight narrative form, offering few interpretations or di- rect opinions. There are no lessons to be gained from the Scottsboro case t h a t cannot be drawn from other racial or po- litical episodes in the history of the South or of America. It is just a story, as Car- ter says, a tragedy of the American b 0 0 k S b 0 0 k S b 0 theatre Duchess ofMalfi:' Close, but not quite By MARCIA ABRAMSON People were laughing at the end of last night's opening of the seldom produced Duchess of Malfi. But Webster's play is not humorous, and it was too bad that the Michigan Repertory Com- pany's version of the play fell so flat when confronted with the challenge of putting off seven consecutive and still meaningful stage murders, Somehow, the production failed to create a sense of terror, although the play is meant to be a forceful demonstration of the whirlwind destruction wrought by the proud, selfish fool that is so often man. The acting was not-quite strong enough to create such an ambience, and the play dragged on; perhaps it could have been wisely trimmed. And the most detracting element could well have been the company's use of disgustingly soap-opera-ish canned music to create tension. The music may in fact haire prevented the generally competent cast from creating any tension at all. A natural silence, filled with the sharp sounds of action-footsteps, movements, a sword hitting a set--would have been much more effective. The play was really quite well done until the first murder, that of the Duchess herself. The complex plot involves the lovely young widowed duchess and her two scheming brothers, one a hot-headed lord and the other a totally corrupt cardinal. They do not want the Duchess to sully the proud family name and they are wary of any remarriage. The Duchess of course has other ideas. She is in love with her steward, Antonio, who was unfortunately one of the weakest parts of the play. Antonio (Michael Hardy) looked and acted like the All- American boy, and spoke his lines with the stiff elocution of the hero of the high school play. Madeleine Ramsay as the Duchess was excellent, however, and developed the role well. The Duchess is at first only a very young girl, but the play covers a span of five years and Miss Ramsey's strong performance made this time lapse credible. The Duchess becomes skilled at intrigue as she hides her secret marriage to Antonio-along with three kids. But when the Duchess is captured and finally strangled by her brothers' henchnan-what turned out to be the dramatic high point of the play--The Duchess of Malfi began to drag out. Up to then, the production was very well done, including the delightful courtship of Antonio by the Duchess and later the psychological torments executed' on the captive Duchess by the hot-headed brother, Ferdinand.' By .the play's end, Ferdinand has been driven insane by his vengeance against Antonio and the Duchess. He has the Duchess killed and instantly repents. Both Ferdinand and the steely Car- dinal were played well by Victor Lazarow and Robert Holkeboer. The play itself offers many worthwhile moments. Like most plays of its kind, The Duchess of Malfi has a strong undercurrent of sexuality, and the players brought this out, well. Ferdinand falls into a fit as he visualizes the lovers. Especially good was Marilyn Gholson as Julia, the cardinal's mistryss. There is also much intentional humor in Webster, and the cast did not miss a chance to use it. The lavish costuming was also excellent. But the play did fail in the final analysis-it did not achieve the purpose intended by its creator. Yet even so The Duchess of Malfi is worth seeing, not only because it is so seldom offered, but also for its excellent initial section-well over half the play. The exact flavor, though, is left up to the imagination, or if you're fortunate enough to have seen a complete Duchess, the memory. DAly--Richard Lee A South. He was ,not a myth or a hero - only a hope By RON LANDSMAN Robert Kennedy: A Memoir, by Jack Newfield. E. P. Dutton & Co. $6.95. The political coalition put together by Franklin Delano Roosevelt over 35 years ago, the coalition that has dominated American politics since the Great Depression, is falling apart-every political reporter is saying so. Coalitions such as that one, which included Negroes, urban liberals, unionists and South- ern bourbons, are necessary for much of this country's legis- lative and political function- ing. They grease legislative wheels that otherwise might be- come horribly stuck. They have flaws in abundance, but for the non-revolutionary, they are the accepted way to make things move. With the breakdown of the old New Deal alliance, Richard Nixon now envisions himself moving into the breach, organ- izing the new coalition, a coali- tion he sees dominating Amer- ican politics for the next gen- eration. His is a coalition of stand- pattism. He hopes to join the traditional Republican party- men-business, the petty bour- geoisie, the farmers-with the conservative wing of the old FDR alliance: the South and the lower middleclass laborers. It is a more developed form of the "Southern .strategy" that won the 1968 election for Nixon. It is not a coalition of, in- novation, like the New Deal. Rather, it is a coalition of, con- servatism, of reaction against Negro gains and black de- mands, against the demand for drastic reform at home, recon- sideration abroad and new na- tional priorities.' Whether Nixon can put all the parts together is yet to be seen. But the greatest stumbling block was eliminated over a year ago-with the assassina- tion of Robert Kennedy. For all that was wrong with Jack Newfield's Robert Ken- nedy: A Memoir, a generally laudable effort, notes Kenne- dy's own coalition-making only as one of a number of themes of the inter-assassination per- iod, from November, 1963 to June, /1968. He stresses as much Kennedy's personality and the myths and near-myths that surrounded the heir apparent. But with the emergence of Nix- on's plans for America's future, the elucidation of, RFK's own vision becomes the crucial sec- tion. In a more general way, it was Today's writers . . ROBERT SKLAR is a pro- fessor of history and American studies at the University. RON LANDSMAN, Daily managing editor, is currently an employe of the Detroit bureau of the Associated Press and a resident of Oak Park. recognized last year what the loss of Robert Kennedy meant. He was a divided man who at his death was moving toward some yet undefined inner cohesion which could havesbeen of immense service to his fellow men. The special quality of this tragedy is that now the world will never know the great man he might have become. The New York Times was too ethereal about what the unreal- ized Robert Kennedy was to be. Newfield notes the unintellec- tualized nature of where Robert Kennedy was going, which the Times hinted at. But he goes on to spell out in detail what Kennedy himself saw. "He was not a hero, only a hope," New- field wrote. "He was not a myth, only a man." It was the hope that was Robert Kennedy that was so important for America in the late 1960s. The purists can go on supporting Eugene McCar- thy, for he did speak out first. But Kennedy was more than a domestic liberal. He saw, in- stead, a new liberalism, more relevant for the problems that New Deal liberalism is obvious- ly failing to meet. Newfield has a neat little thesis to explain Kennedy's role, which explains away very well Kennedy's atrocious record up to 1964. It was exactly' because Kennedy was a conservative during the '50s that he was able to define a new liberalism, Newfield says. Kennedy had none of the old liberal's obligations. For one, he did not think of the AFL-CIO and unionism generally as a progressive force, which it may have been 20 or 30 years ago. He had no crippling allegiance to . the hypocritical George Meany that made him com- promise himself every time he talked of union leadership. Likewise, because he was a conservative in the early 50s, he did not have to prove his anti-Communism the way every liberal did. Newfield's analysis, although reasonable, must seem super- fluous to most Kennedy sup- porters and unconvincing to the Bobby-haters. What is impor- tant was his recent record, es- pecially at the polls, that proved what he could do, given the chance. Robert Kennedy was quite likely the last mainstream politician of his generation who might have served as a bridge between the black and white faces that lined the op- posite sides of the railroad tracks to wave farewell to lis funeral train. The militant young 1-lacks, who wore "Free Huey New- ton" buttons as they cheered Kennedy in San Francisco the day before he was shot, and the low-income whites who signed George Wallace peti- tions in July, would have both voted for Kennedy in Novem- ber. He was able to talk to the two polarities of powerless- ness at the same time. They understood that if he haps the younger union men did not know of. Bobby's labor racketeering investigation, but remembered only the vitality of the President Kennedy to. with whom Bobby was so close. Whatever, the rich Irishman who spent summers yachting and winters skiing was the choice of the poor, the only op- timistic choice they had. Kennedy himself did not real- ize at first what his run for the presidency was to mean, though he would learn before his death. Kennedy sought the Presi- dency in 1968 he said, and believed, because of the war in Vietnam. But Dr. King's murder, preceded as it was by Johnson's abdication and the start of the peace talks, en- abled Kennedy to glimpse the deeper roots of America's in- ternal 'disease, and to imagine himself as the possible healer of that disease. Kennedy had for several years been tormented by the poverty and unhappiness of the other America. But it was only campaigning for the Pres- idency, feeling the love for him among the poor, seeing his huge vote margins from slum districts, that showed Kennedy that his passion for the poor was reciprocated. This did not happen in one moment. -It was perceived in action during the final weeks of Kennedy's life, as he spoke about poverty and racism, as he campaigned among the poor, and gradually came to comprehend how much he meant to them. Newfield deals with other problems, with Kennedy's rec- ord for ruthlessness, with his being political rather than idealistic. On both counts he is defensive. Newfield concedes the charges, but maintains that Kennedy changed and devel- oped, and that he was still changing and developing. He also concedes Kennedy's overly political habits, and the existence of the Bad Bobby, as opposed to the Good Bobby, that the Village Voice's Jules Feiffer made famous. But even after those conces- sions, he returns again to what Robert Kennedy could have been. Kennedy was, in the end, a compassionate man and leader. He saw a hope for a new Amer- ica, led by a coalition of the poor-urban and rural, black and white-of the young and of the middle class liberals. The loss of Robert Kennedy was a personali one, for many people. We of the white, col- lege-educated middle\ class will go on, more easily than the poor who looked only to Ken- nedy. Newfield's closing com- ments speak for both, though of necessity more for those who needed Robert Kennedy: Now I realized what makes our generation unique, what defines us apart from those who came before the hopeful winter of 1961, and those who came after the murderous spring of 1968. We are the first generation that learned from experience, in our innnocent twenties, that things were not really getting better, that we shall not overcome. We felt, by the time we reached thir- ty, that we had already glimpsed the most compasion- nate leaders our nation could produce, and they had all been assassinated. And from this time forward, 'things would get worse: our best political leaders were part of memory now, not hope. Ii TIE UNIVERSITY o fMC81aN GIEBERT & SULL IVAN SOCIETY PRESENTS FA~selT *urninA a 4l the middle class saw as ruth- lessness; what the poor saw as emotional warmth the rich saw as emotional instability or ro- manticism; what one saw as earthiness the other saw as lack of polish. I cannot agree with this analysis, though I am at a loss for a better explanation. Per- THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC and DEPARTMENT OF ART present Nicolai's opera uii i111 W 9"ITA L AT 1 11 1 1il Ing 9 10"m. n I I