t D aly Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Black Power: The Angry Reappraisal :. tere Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBoR, MICH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors.'This must be noted in alt reprints. SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SHIRLEY ROSICK The Sounds of Summer: Ann Arbor Is Dead ANN ARBOR is dead, in the summer at any rate. The Great Trimester Plan is crumbling before our very eyes. It is not, regardless of defensive cries from the administrators, like the Fall or Winter semester. Just take a look around you- the decay is obvious; There are actually vacant seats to be found in the UGLI. Even the basement provides a quiet atmosphere for those of you who intend to use it. Gone are the days when one rushed to the library doors at 7:45 a.m. to reserve a seat. One no longer has to place his books on that rare, empty desk to preserve it for his use in the future. THE NUMBER of thieves who were fond of concealing reserved books in their pockets, purses, or whatever, are rapidly disappearing. Pangs of conscience? Not on your life. Reserved books are simply there for the asking. In the past, the six books reserved for a lectured body of 500 were simply not enough; but the lecture halls are fairly empty now, six are enough. You can find a parking space. You can also drive a car, even if you haven't reached the golden age of 21. Merchants of Liquor are forgetting to ask for ID. You can find a seat on the Diag but there's no one to look at; even the squir- rels have gone home for the summer. Rallies on the Diag have disappeared and have been replaced by puppet shows; but even then the vociferous crowd of three is not particularly exciting. THE BIGGEST campus event of the summer has been the burning of the West Physics Building, putting UAC's Summer Weekend to shame for the crowds it collected. The crowds, however, were forced out of the library and sur- rounding classrooms in order to provide mass interest. (The officials, however, in- sist that the Exodus was for the students safety; our photographers know better.) UAC hunted for people to serve at the Hatcher Tea. They even came to The Daily. Cinema Guild only presents films on Friday and Saturday night and they lost Bogy on an airplane. You can get tickets for any event, if you can find the event. The lions beside the front door of thej museum have been roaring for months. You don't have to spend two days in health service in order to see one of the doctors. "'THE SOUNDS OF Silence" are around us everywhere; what has happened to the student of yesteryear? He has been replaced by the senior who never made it to graduation; the boundless participants of the wondrous system of Ihcompletes and last but not least, the oriented freshman with his own little bluebook, the 'M' manual contain- ing useless tidbits of information which he will never use when school actually begins. -PAT O'DONOHUE, Beautification Program APROPOS OF the removal from the Diag by Plant Department workers of a sign a spokesman for that office found politically objectionable, it was suggested, that the Plant Department might want to undertake the following projects in aesthetics. -Remove the Economics Building; re- placing it with a Center for the Study of Political Aesthetics; --Offer a course in the "Aesthetics of the Michigan Flowering Shurb"; -Write a book entitled "The War in Vietnam and Homeowners Guide to Scientific Gardening", -Replace Burton Tower with a large concrete slab to be used as a memorial commemorating the first Plant Depart- ment worker to consume 473.5 gallons of coffee during one working day. -CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER Co-Editor WHITNEY M. YOUNG, Jr., exe- utive director of the National Urban League, a civil rights or- ganization, has denounced the current controversy over the term "black power" because, he believes, it has diverted attention from the more pressing issues at hand in the Negro's struggle for equality. Young said the league "has care- fully refrained from becoming in- volved in the fruitless dispute over the value of a slogan which has not even yet been clearly de- fined by its originators. "Rather, we will continue to devote ourselves to bettering the position of the Negro in the na- tion." YOUNG'S ORGANIZATION has often been criticized by groups like the Student Non-Violent Co- ordinating Committee (SNCC), which first supported black power. because it is not "militant." Never- chosen to support the possibility theless, Young has obviously that the slogan, black power, may have some meaning for the whole Negro movement if, indeed, as he suggests, it is given the chance to define itself completely and to show exactly what it means in action. The controversy over the term itself, and the organization from which it apparently came, SNCC, has up to this point only deterred any real application of the philos- ophy of black power. One of the first consequences to those organizations who have ex- pressed approval of the term or the whole philosophy of black power, has been the loss of valu- able monetary support from white liberals in the North. A recent article in the St. Louis Post- Dispatch pointed out that many northern whites who had pre- viously contributed heavily to SNCP and CORE were withdraw- ing their support. Paradoxically, many of those who withdrew were Jewish busi- nessmen and executives, alarmed by reports of anti-Semetic re- marks by SNCC leaders. Yet these are people who not so long ago fought their own battle against discrimination. MORE IMPORTANT than the loss of financial support, though, is the disapproval of the term ex- pressed by many congressmen and members of the judicial structure of the government. In the legal battles of the past few years, the unquestioned support of these liberal elements in Congress and on the Supreme Court was even more important, to the legitimacy of the movement, than the mone- tary support. Thus, without the financial sup- port to contribute to the many services provided by civil rights organizations, and without the political support of the govern- ment, there is little hope that black power, whatever it means at this time, can ever be applied in a legitimate way to this social movement. But another consequence, with- in the movement as a whole, may be the most damaging. IT IS OBVIOUS that approval or disapproval of the term has seriously split the various organi- zations of the civil rights move- ment. SNCC and CORE, in re- sponse to the noses-up attitude of organizations like NAACP, have further radicalized their inter- pretations of the term in an ef- fort to strengthen the force of their argument for its adoption. NAACP and related liberal groups, consequently, have become more sententious in their disdain for any connection with the slogan or its implications. While the civil rights movement is divided in this manner, there is little possibility that the construc- tive work of eradicating the social maladys that are the by-products of discrimination. In essense, the dispute over black power is more of a delaying action by those groups who either do not wish to come to terms with the realities of political power that must enter into any social movement's work in a power con- scious world,- or do not wish to come to terms with the radical implications of black power. BLACK POWER, and few deny ttis, does have racial implications. It implies that the Negro, in ad- dition to working to obtain rights equal to those of the white nlmn, must work toward a consciousness of his uniquesness, of the fact The Associates by carney and woter that he is different, as far as his current position in American so- ciety is concerned. It also means that he must be prepared to work alone, to associate only with other Negroes in his struggle to obtain equal rights. It doesNnot necessarily mean that the Negro, once he has ob- tained status, and uniqueness, equal to that of the white, will remain separate from the white society of this country. Black power, can be, and probably will be a tool used to gain equal status. But this whole issue, the use of black power, the present real dif- ference of the Negro society from the white society in this country, the possibilities of separation- or eventual joining of Negro and white society, will never be dealt with if the current controversy. . ONE CAN GIVE credit to Sto- kely Carmichael for his courage in bringing up an explosive issue like black power at a time when the civil rights movement was con- vulsed by an argument over which new tactics it could employ-"old" tactics like the sit-in or the picket ostensibly having been exhausted. More important than the tacti- cal dispute, was the question of what areas of social breakdown or deficiency in the Negro com- munity should and could be at- tacked by civil rights organiza- tions. Again, indecision and half- hearted efforts were rampant among the civil rights organiza- tions with the general impression being one of a slowdown in activ- ity. Therefore, considered in this perspective, the use of the term black power, in fact, the proud, taunting manner in which it was used by Carmichael and others in SNCC and CORE, was. a stroke of political genius. It may have been distasteful to the white com- munity, to the moderate Negro or- ganizations, to Congress, the courts and the like, but it did raise the civil rights movement out of a lethargy that was only artificially broken by events like the Meredith march. HOWEVER, as has been pointed out before, the danger now is that the dust devil, of black power will merely wreck havoc upon the or- ganizational "brotherhood" of the Negro movement rather than stir it to the painful reappraisal and redirection that it presently needs. Stokely Carmichael has shown that he is a more than effective gadfly. He shocked, repulsed, and deeply troubled the leaders of the more Establishment-oriented civil, rights organizations. He has tried to establish contact with the po- tentially powerful, but hitherto shunned Negro organizations like the Black Muslims, which could in themselves be a powerful tool in the fight for civil rights, if only for purposes of frightening the white population to real action. Carmichael has also shown that he could just possibly, make a sub- stantialdcontribution to the whole civil rights movement's attempt at redirection through his call for a conference of all civil rights lead- ers to discuss black power and the other issues now confronting them. IF HE IS as successfuljin getting several hundred angry people to sit down and talk to one another about black power and pressing social issues as he was in orginally making them angry, then the civil rights movement may be well on the road to accomplishing its orig- inal goal: the true equality of the Negro in America. 'what Do You Think This Ise Some Kind Of Great Society Or Something?" V r ;, 1-- - 4 . OC Rti S ti ti 5 . I 00~ to .: The Pern icous Disease of Nationalism How To Argue, Fruitlessly, With a Conservative IT IS NOT SURPRISING to find that the hue and cry over Viet Nam has pro- duced disagreements about what consti- tutes an authority on Southeast Asia, U.S. policy, military strategy, and various other related subjects. Sometimes it appears that no one real- ly knows .anything. Each shade of opin- ion is based on a different set of "facts" -as impossible to prove as they are to disprove. IT IS A FAVORITE tactic of those who defend U.S. policy to counter a state- ment with "Who says so? How do you know? Have you been there?" in an ef- fort to discredit the remarks of a dis- senter. This is usually an effective technique for changing the subject, burying the real issues when the discussion becomes em- barrassing. All of a sudden, instead of discussing the war, you find yourselves arguing about who is or is not qualified to make judgments. In particular, supporters of the war seem to feel that being an authority on Southeast Asia is not a valid qualifica- tion. They say that professors don't real- ly understand present-day forces and pressures, that books can't give a true picture (although I have yet to hear any mention the title of a book a professor might have read, and tell why and how it was wrong). A DISCUSSION of this sort took place on the Diag yesterday, during the Voice-sponsored Viet Nam protest. A dissenter commented that the situa- tion in Viet Nam is not the same as the situation during the Korean War. A man in the crowd retorted, "How do you know? That's just your opinion. Were you there?" The speaker answered that he had read a discussion of the situation by someone who was there. The supporter of the war retorted, "Yes, but what school did he go to? Where did he get his PhD?" IT SEEMS THAT, no matter how many statements are made concerning the mistakes the United States is making in Viet Nam, defenders of U.S. policy will not admit that the men who make these statements are qualified. If professors, who have studied human behavior and institutions all their lives, are unqualified because they don't have PhD's, who is left? It is a grave mistake to shrug of f the observations and analysis of these experts. Even if we don't agree with everything they say, we must respect their qualifica- tions, their superior training and exper- ience. IF WE REFUSE to listen to the state- ments of all those who are not com- mitted to U.S. policy (as Secretary Mc- Namara certainly is), we will never be able to make any sense out of a policy that, at present, seems to many of us to be nonsense. -CAROLE KAPLAN Thoughtful Foreign Policy LINCOLN GEORGE, assistant secretary of state for Inter-American Affairs, has assaulted the academic crackdowns of the Argentinian military, largely in an effort to defend himself against charges of having favored them. "I do not believe that the regime in Argentina was justified in 'cracking down' as it did in the universities. We have indicated our dismay and concern at this action, .. ." he said. That's, + hrmia fil By DAVID KNOKE THE WORLD HAS suffered from a pernicious disease for almost a millenium. Claiming the lives and energies of billions of peoples, th disease has defied eradiction by closkina its dangers in the guise of virtue. The name of this disease is nationalism. The growth of the nation-state paralleled the decreasing self- sufficiency of small human so- cieties. As neolithic nomad fami- lies banded into tribal units tilling the soil, then formed regional conglomeration of city-and-coun- try, the concept of cultural boun- daries and territorial superiority became fixed in men's minds. Be- yond the city walls or guarded frontiers, "they" were always the "barbarians." THE PROCESS of empire seems to have been reversed, not just in size but in kind, during the feudal period in Europe. The lord- villain relationship, although created under deprived economic circumstances, was essentially a business transaction: tithes ex- changed for police protection. The petty feudal wars that plagued the era carried no over- tones of national, racial or class hatred; the conquest and absorp- tion of principalities was more the personal aggrandizement of the lord's house than the colonial acquisition of a victorious coun- try. The Church did assume a nebulous role as an infra-nation, but even at the time she could command the crusading power of princesagainst the infidels,sthe foundations of the modern state were being formed. From the crude beginnings of the English Plantagenets, the French Bourbons and Cardinal Richelieu, the Germanic Hohen- stauffen and Spanish Castellians came the lasting divisions of peoples which criss-cross modern Europe. While regional differences -language and dialect, custom, tradition and folklore-indicate that the Silesian peasant has little cultural affinity with the Breton fisherman, -neither does he with the Ruhr miner, although they are both "Germans" belonging to the same nation. THE CONCEPT of the nation- state is a highly artificial one, an anachronism, a temporary stage in the development of human so- cial organizations which has solid- ified as though it were the ulti- mate form of organization. The family unit-the multi-generation family-is a universal social struc- ture permitting the maximum de- velopment of the individual. The self-sufficient community of fam- ilies within the regional cultural heritage is the optimal organiza- tion for economic and cultural autonomy. But the nation-state seals off its boundaries artificially, setting its "self-interest" above that of its rival nations and forcing economic patterns into a "political econ- omy." The social intercourse of neighboring geographic communi- ties is vastly hampered by the in- visible lines drawn in the maps of men's minds. THE EXTREME CASE of the artificial geo-political division can be seen in the difficulties of for- mer colonial states struggling to assume Western-stylenationhood. The "nationalism" of the so-called third-world is a frenetic one. Leaders, unskilled in the size and complexity of the task, hope to amalgamate their populaces by raising a spectre of the Outsider. The Outsider is a scapegoat upon which to heap the blame for na- tional frustrations. It acts as a presumed threat to the new na- tion, mobilizing the populace in' a united front. In some newly freed nations, the boundaries were drawn by British colonists and the new government models itself after the Europeans. The ages-old antagon- isms of the Yoruba, Ibo and Hausa tribes, however, are threatening to break Nigeria into petty fac- tions fighting for domination of the other two. IN INDIA, the disparity of lan- guages, religions, and ways of life present enormous stumbling blocks to any organization beyond loose confederation. The desire of Ne- hru to catalyze the process of nation-building through indus- trialization has indeed hurt the country, with its neglect of agri- culture and indelicacy in trying to create a common language. In China's forging of national pride, the use of the Outsider as a galvanzing force is evident. The doctorine of Maoism, currently reaching to fever pitch and to absurd claims of omniscience, is communistic only incidental to its nationalistic character. Maoism aims at stripping away the accumulated centuries of Chinese culture and reorienting institutions like community, school and family to' one purpose: exul- tation of the state welfare above individual fulfillment. The Com- munist Party to this end has en- forced international isolation and created the double-monster of U.S.-USSR encirclement in an at- tempt to draw tighter the bonds of paranoic nationalism. NATIONALISM is perpetuated by the process whereby "educa- tion" becomes indoctrination in the superior virtues of one's own nation. The indoctrination need not be so blatent as the Nazi ver- sion of Herrenvolk to be effective. The history textbooks of every nation subjectify confrontations of their nation with others to cast themselves in the role of right- eousness. The pernicious doctrine of na- tionalism, perpetuated in every nation, shows its worst aspects in international interaction. Patriotic self-interest compels nations to compete unreasonably more often than to cooperate rationally. Human social development has calcifiedrover an 800-year period into a rigid structure in' which every square mile of earth has been carved into nation-states and spheres of influence. Thq nation- unit of organization has brought a measure of material well-being to the inhabitants of some nations, but deprived many of the bene- fits of shared knowledge, resources and techniques by restraint of in- teraction. NATIONAL PRIDE, erupting in- to antagonisms and wars, now endangers every nation on the planet. The time is at hand when more fervent nationalism has out- lived its usefulness; new ways must be sought by which the family of man may live more con- structively. '4 '.j ,NATIaroN~L uI ( .... REVIEW: 'Lady L' Is Colorful, Glorious Cinema I By ANDREW LUGG PETER USTINOV is a past- master of quiet wordy humour. His film, "Lady L," showing this week at the State Theatre is no exception. Besides directing "Lady L," Ustinov wrote the screenplay, an adaption of Romain Gary's novel, which I have not read, and acts a bit part. He shows vir- tuosity in each of these roles. Whatever the quality of Gary's novel, it provides just the vehicle that Ustinov requires to show off his unique and askew glance at decrepit aristocracy, princes, dukes and high living; to mimic the English, the French, the Italian and to introduce an anarchist- pianist, Krajewski, from, we are told, Poland. In reality" we know he is a citizen of Concordia. LADY LENDALE (Sophia Lo- ren) is now eighty years old. She appears cantankerous and crotch- etv. but for all of that still Sophia earlier recollections Sophia Loren is cast as being French but the overriding impression we have is still of a beautifully charming Italian woman, still Sophia Loren, but who cares? HOWEVER we do care about Paul Newman. He is Armard the lover and then husband of house, and is quite out of touch with the part he is playing-that of a Corsican anarchist. Newman at- tempts to portray a dashing 'and wild young political rebel, hand- some and romantic. He manages his performance well in the be- ginning but when he needs tem- per it with "unrequited love" he reverts to the sullen Luster. That Louise is in love with him despite his wildness is suprising since he has no style at all. Mis- cast or just bad acting-take your choice David Niven. on the other hand. I A M WV 'TL4VWIr