a , I .. w- Angela Davis: Po itical primer SDS IN RETROSPECT By GAYLE POLLARD If They Come in the Morning is more than a political biog- raphy of black militant Angela. Davis. It is a primer on political prisoners and a testimonial of widespread support for Sister Angela as well. The collection of articles and letters reveals the inequities of America's penal system-specifi- cally for black and brown people. Moreover, Angela Davis discuss- es her own particular situation while rallying support for all political prisoners. And while the black militant Marxist contributes heavily to the book, the anthology includes letters and articles by the Sole- dad Brothers-including the late George Jackson, Panthers Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins, prom- inent civil rights leaders such as Rev. Ralph David Abernathy of the Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference, Coretta Scott King, W.E.B. DuBois' widow, Herbert Aptheker and others. However the anthology re- volves around Angela Yvonne Davis, the 28-year-old black wo- man who is-at the time of this writing - charged with murder and kidnapping in a California. courtroom shootout, which re- sulted in four deaths-Jonathan Jackscn, younger brother of Sole- dad brother George Jackson, William Christmas, and James McClain - all black prisoners, and white federal Judge Harold J. Haley. Although the avowed Communist was not seen in the San Rafael courtroom during the escape attempt on August 7,- 1970, the defense alleges that all guns used by the blacks in the breakout belonged to Davis. She is charged with murder and kid- napping under a California law which makes an accomplice equally guilty. Davis first attracted public at- tention when she became an as- sistant professor of philosophy at UCLA. The native from Birm- ingham, Ala., created contro- versy when she responded to the university's chancellor's ques- tioning that she belonged to the Communist party. Then, the university regents fired her under a 30-year old policy against employing Com- munists. However, a county Su- perior court overruled their de- cision. But the regents failed to renew her contract in June of 1970, ruling her as an incom- petent instructor. During that summer, the black militant be- came involved in the Soledad Brothers cause-the case of three black prisoners, George Jack- son, Fleeta Drumgo, and John Cluchette, a w a i t i n g trial on charges of murdering a Soledad Prison guard in retaliation for the deaths of three black pris- oners. George Jackson died last August 21, from the gunfire of San Quentin prison guards, dur- ing an alleged escape attempt. Recently the two re'maining Soledad brothers were acquitted of the charges. If They Come in the Morning probes the thoughts and details beneath the Davis case, the Sole- dad situation, and the fate of other political prisoners. Davis discusses her brand of Marxism, focusing on a coalition of all oppressed peoples, with blacks, Puerto Ricans and chi- canos at the vanguard. More- over, she defines political pris- oners as "largely the victims of an oppressive politico-economic order swiftly becoming conscious of the causes underlying their victimization." Initially many of the articles seem mere mouthings of rheto- ric. Essays peppered with Power to the Peoples and Right Ons do compose part of the collection. But the book offers more than empty pseudo-political chatter. Sections emphasize the realities of political prisoners, prisons and black liberation, the prison system, repression, the Soledad Brothers, Ruchell Magee and Angela Davis. Panthers present their prob- lems with prisons. Current lead- er of the Black Panther Party, Huey P. Newton discusses two types of prisoners--"The largest number are those who accept the legitimacy of the assumptions upon which society is based. They wish, to acquire the same goals as everybody else, money, power, greed, and conspicuous consumption. In order to do so, however they adopt techniques and methods which the society has defined as illegitimate. The second type of prisoner is the one who rejects the legitimacy of the assumptions upon which this society is based. He argues that the people at the bottom of the society are exploited for the profit and advantage of those at the top." Newton also maintains that while the "illegitimate capital- ist" type prisoner will serve his time and choose to achieve a quicker release, the political prisoner never accepts the legi- timacy of the. exploitive eco- nomic system of this country and therefore will not allow cap- tivity to crush his spirit. Both Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins, in addition, contribute to the book. Seale sends a po- (Continued on Page 14) Ac (Continued from Page 1 and off campus who wet aat- tracted to the Left were grow- ing. As Jerry-Rubin put it once: The Left grew faster than it could turn people off. All this leaves us more or less where we are now. More people than ever before share an analysis of the society's prob- lems that could be called radical or socialist; but fewer are or- ganized or inspired than only 20 months ago. An overview of writing about the New Left and SDS leads this writer to deep despair. From Port Huron (at the Michigan AFL-CIO summer camp), to community organizing' (started with UAW money), to the first (April 1965) March on Washing- ton to End the War in Vietnam, to the Pentagon (October 1967), to Chicago (1968), to the Coun- ter-Inaugural, I have not yet seen an account which combines historical knowledge with the authenticity of experience. Alan Adelson calls his book, with no pretense to scholarship or historical accuracy, "a pro- file." It presumes to inform the reader as to what SDS really is in 1970. But Adelson is un- abashed, even brazen as he ap- proaches the problem. Not for him to wonder whether what he is looking at is SDS or not; he is a nominalist: the thing is what it calls itself. So he de- scribes SDS at Columbia, Berke- ley. Harvard, an unnamed New England college. and tacks a bit of history on the end. But either he is ignorant, or he is firmly committed to the politics of the Progressive La- bor Party, for he writes the wrong organization's history. This is too bad, for Adelson's only acceptably decent writing occurs occasionally in his his- torical chapters. Preceding these he attempts to capture the at- mosphere of Worker-Student- Alliance (WSA) chapters which call themselves SDS. In doing so he fails; in part, one should point out, because the somewhat simplistic ideological thinking of the faction is not easy to cap- ture on paper without robbing its advocates of their wholeness as people. But Adelson fails at the easier tasks too. Rather than patiently explicate the differ- ence between pacificism, terror- ism, and revolutionary self de- fense he merely labels. And in presenting PL-WSA-SDS in ac- - - ritical tion he makes them look more idiotic than they are. Describing the excellence of a campus chapter's alliance with local Teamsters, he gleefully points out that the unionists nearly "beat to death' a scab- bing driver. Now, working class violence in defense of rights and justice may be, and to this re- viewer is, defensible. But not because violence is "good" - an impression related by Adelson's syntax; and terrorism - bomb- ing, assassinations, etc. - is not bad merely because- it is violent. Rather, PL's generally correct view of this matter is based on strategic considera- tions. But Adelson seems to drool at the prospect of blood- ied scabs. Similarly, he dismisses, through the lens of PL's long held position, student p o w e r struggles as trivial pursuits of the privileged. There is, some- where, some truth in this judg- ment. But not enough to jus- tify PL's or Adelson's b l i t h e contempt. For example, the education- oriented turmoil has created two kinds of resources for progres- sive change. First, by demysti- fying much of the elite atmos- phere and culture of the uni- versities, substantial numbers of bosh students and faculty have come to understand the ruling class role their institutions tend to perform. And second, by creating small niches of student control in the curriculum a n d elsewhere, the student power thrust of the last decade h a s made some activity possible which was not possible previous- ly. A very good example is the program for Educational a n d Social Change - a program at The University of Michigan which is oriented to opening the University's educational process to working class people a n d change-oriented students. These creations, contributed to by stu- dent power, are not merely priv- ileged, nor in their potential are they trivial. If one contrasts them with PL's preferred line - support of campus workers' struggles - the obviousness of the latter's superiority is lost. The reasons are there: much of PL's public reasoning f or pushing the student movement into this activity is that "only the workers can stop the wheels from turning, and therefore only Ook at they can make the revolution." In practice however, PL's work is not at the core of the indus- trial apparatus, but at its dis- tant, nonstrategic periphery: campus cafeterias, hospitals, etc. By basing their argument stra- tegically PL loses; for the rea- son students should support such strikes is not because of the power of these service work- ers, but because of the justice of their demands and the op- pression of their roles. Beginning with_ the ominous suggestion that his reader "be- gin by forgetting" Adelson sus- tains through repetition a vindi- cation of PL in its shadow box- ing with the Weathermen. The tragedy of course is that the New Left created the pit which PL and its sycophants can now fill with dung. Serious revolutionaries h a v e battled terrorism, sectarian iso- lation and secrecy throughout the last century of social c o n- flict. And now, in an era of awe- some technology, overweening surveillance, vast absorbtive re- sources of our rulers (who can replace all the broken glass the freaks can create without so much as a glance at the balance sheets), no plausible political strategy for gaining democracy, socialism, or even an end to the war can exclude the necessity of mass action. So much for PL's line in response to Weathermen -they are right. But such a iine line can be well or poorly im- plemented by good or inept leadership in adaptive or rigid ways. The fruits of PL's own- ership of SDS' name were earn- ed only because the nominal leadership of SDS decided, to close their office and go un- derground. Even with the re- signation of their competitors, PL has managed to turn SDS into a minor footnote on the what's dossiers of East Coast F Squads. From an organization of 400 chapters, of perhaps 2 000 people involved or on periphery, it is now a small ganization with a handful chapters concentrated at E ern elite schools. Thousand people around the country n quit SDS: the factions q them. But for Adelson this i, a matter of a working class defeating terrorism. No comp ity for him; no history hapr ed before 1968; no optioi open to student radicals o than supporting strikes. What is left for those young and old - who see America the prospects of a ialist democracy, a coopera OPEN 7 DAYS Sun.-- 2 noon-midnite Mon. -Thurs.- 11 a.m.-midnite Fri.-Sat.- 11 a.m.-2 a.m. DICK SUTTON Manager SAME POF An earing Fridays and Saturdays 4 From 9:15 P.M. Door Charge $1.00 (50c after 11 :30) NORTH CAMPUS PLAZA ( SDS IN RETROSPECT s A Alan Adelson, SDS: A Profile, Scribners, $10.00. By ROBERT ROSS History tends to be written from the victor's point of view. Events preceding the victory are all combed for their contribution to it. People acting before it are analyzed in terms of their rele- vance to the victor's struggle. Most prominent, usually, is the last significant g-roup overcome by the eventual winner. Ameri- cans know Kerensky's name, as the man the Bolsheviks beat, but are hardly aware of the other pre-October politicians. Historians may object that their specialized work avoids this pitfall of post-hoc deter- minism; but thein historians do not own history, the popular consciousness does. And it is journalists who come closest to this consciousnes. Writing about current event, they tend to call ritical I ANN- . on the most current version of the past to order their percep- tions. And herein lie pitfalls the size of nuclear craters. Alan Adelson, graduate of Co- lumbia's School of Journalism and the Wall Street Journal has written what he calls "a profile" of Students for a Democratic Society. He has written it from the perspective of the momen- tary victors - the Progressive Labor Party (PL). Aside from crude writing, few facts, and theoretical comprehension more fitting to a leaflet than a book, this very bad account suffers from an historical perspective which defines history as 18 months past. The result is five chapters devoted to SDS at Co- lumbia in 1970; one on SDS at Berkeley, at the same general period; some superficial com- ments about radicals with Jew- ish parents; another series of observations about rich intellec- ook at what's L eft' tual youth; and a chapter on leafleting (yes!). Adelson's chapter on "politics of radical- ism" covers women's liberation, the Middle East, ecology, popu- lation control, and Marxism in . . . 10 (ten!) pages. His three chapters (43 pages) on recent history, though written from a PL predestination perspective, are at least brisk and dramatic; but his two ending chapters, (a) on the failure of PL's working class line; and, (b) containing some pious evocation of the coming revolution, are more or less worthless. One contributing factoir to the lack of depth found in this book is that Adelson has taken as his task the defense and presenta- tion of Progressive Labor's per- spective on the student move- ment and the New Left as con- trasted with the Weathermen. And indeed, this reflects the conditions found in SDS at the moment of the historic split in 1909. But Weatherman as an or- gahized political tendency was never more than a micro-fac- tion, raised to high leadership in SDS by a combination of mood youth culture) and the lack of a national and organizational perspective on the part of thou- sands of members of SDS. PL, too, was a minority faction, but was able to more completely mobilize its supporters toward the end. In the meantime, the great amorphous mass of SDS members and sympathizers watched the charade from the sidelines. The history of the people who now call themselves SDS should really be the history of the PLP's attempts to find a mass-based student organization in which it could recruit and evangelize in the sixties. Beyond that, such a history would describe the crisis of the Communist Party - USA- in the period after 1956 and the Hungarian intervention, and the groups of American Communists who would not stomach a de- Stalinized revisionist party. A relatively small but brilliant fac- tion formed PL, and through slow, patient work created a sect with some organizational strength, and rather powerful domination over the shell of what once was SDS. This last domination was accomplished when the leadership of SDS either capitulated, became ter- rorist, or simply lost their fol- lowing, leaving the organization to PL. Adelson has some crude un- derstanding of the SDS end of the evolution. He has, or shows, no understanding of PL's long struggle (four years at least) to accomplish the task. And Adel- son uses his hybrid instruments of spotty knowledge and spotty ignorance to beat the straw horse of the Weathermen. For him, the only major contestant with PL was the Weather fac- tion. So when he sketches - in the least intelligent language he can find at any given moment - the PL-SDS line on a given question, and then argues for its validity, the opponent is always Weatherman. So, if the book- may be seen as a put-up job of a dialogue it is between two sects of the Left: Weatherman and PLP. And rational socialists, nonsectarian marxists, demo- cratic radicals, populists, the whole patchwork of variety and wonder that composed SDS in the Sixties is lost. No bother to Adelson, this, he just lumps it all in the "liberal" ancestors bag. Yet, throughout the Sixties4al- ternative ways to define the pol- itics of the growing New Left were available and were being used. They do not appear in this book for two reasons. The first reason is that Adelson is gener- ally ignorant of them. The sec- ond reason is that these alterna- tives participated in the ambi- ence of the time - they were anti-leadership, anti-organiza- tional, always in favor of the "new wave" in contrast to the "old leadership." Thus, a stable, undogmatic marxist politics could not find a stable organi- zational base. Ann Arbor's experience is in- structive in this regard. The ori- ginal leadership of SDS.in 1960- 64 period, was recruited here, and the first large SDS chapter was VOICE political party which, among other activities, ran candidates for Student Gov- ernment Council in the early Sixties. Here, as in Berkeley, there tended to be overlapping generations of New Left leader- ship which, for a while, provid- ed a good bit of continuity - at least in experience, if not in perspective. At limes this lead- ership was immensely effective -it had a mass following. But starting roughly in 1968, with the development of the Jesse James Gang (which included some of the core leadership of Weatherman) these patterns of continuity broke down. The lo- cal chapter was seriously and rancorously split. The Radical Caucus developed, in parallel with Independent S o c i a 1 i s t groups in and out of SDS else- where. Then the SDS people who had been part of the Weatherman split, went under- ground, and some were killed. By 1969 the younger SDS peo- ple left on campus had to re- create their organization. For a while thy ewere extremely ef- fective. But influenced by Weather outlooks they began to estimate the success of actions as to whether each was an esca- lation, more militant, more out front. than the one before. Fi- nally, a large group of the lead- ership formed a political com- mune which soon split over a host of issues. SDS has not been an organ- ized force on campus since then. Throughout this period, though, while SDS was shrinking and becoming more isolated, and PL was becoming internally strong- er, the_. numbers of people on (Continued on Page 11) 50 FREE GAL OF GASOLINE WITH THE PURCHASE OF 4 NEW ATLAS PASSENGER 25 GALLONS FREE WITH ANY 2 ATLAS PASSENGER TIRES Introducing the new Dual 1218. We expect this to be the most popular turntable Dual has ever made. If You've Always Wanted Those Costly Dual Features, Plus Dual's Famed Precision and Re- liabilty, But Found $175 a Bit High, the 1218 Is Your Answer. And Your "Best Buy." >. 'Alj e usiccenter ilicm 308 South State Street Phone 665-8607 or 8 ANN ARBOR, MICH. C-TED STANDARD 1220 S. UNIVERSITY A little bit of California brought to you by Orange Juliu The refreshing drink made of just-sc blended with our own exclusive ingi delicious way to get your vitamin C. ALSO: ORANGE JULIUS GOES HAI Try a PINEAPPLE JULIUS-Another.I Try our delicious food Mor.-Sat. from 1 I a.m. to 12 a.m. and 1237 S. 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