Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 29, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 29, 1971 i Republicans present plan for redistricting CLEAGE ON NATIONALISM VKA!Tuesday, Nov. 2 a THE CLASSIFIED STAFF introduces an exercise for those readers who indulge in such mental gymnastics: The Crossword Puzzle A FASCINATING, STIMULATING, TITILATING, BRAIN-STRETCHING, MIND-BENDING FEATURE!! Black minister speaks LANSING (4'--A Republican plan Rep. Alfred Sheridan (D-Tay- By GEOFFREY JACQUES for redistricting the state's 19' lor), chairman of the House Elec- The Rev. Albert Cleage, black congressional seats was offered to tions Committee, to which the plan minister and pastor of Detroit's a House committee yesterday. and was offered, said he would present Shrine of the Black Madonna, spoke a Democratic plan is expected next a Democratic plan early next to a capacity crowd last night on week. week. his radical concepts concerning the Rep. Hal Ziegler (R-Jackson) in- He said he hoped that the com- relationship between Christianity, troduced a plan he said was de- mittee could report a plan out for and the black liberation move-! signed to maintain the present dis- House action by Nov. 10 and that ment. tricts as closely as possible and the House could act by the end of Beginning his speech, held in the not b r e a k township or city the year. UGLI multipurpose room, with ref- boundaries. erences to the historical experi- torical review of the relationship between the African and European peoples and the effect that that relationship has had on the former. After citing various examples of white oppression against blacks, Cleage outlined his conception of which direction the black libera- tion movement should move in. Cleage calls his concept Black Christian Nationalism. Black Chris- tian Nationalism, he said, rejects standard Christianity and its teach-3 ings as "lies" which were meant symbols in order to build the "al- ternative power base" - complete with the different life style and culture he feels is needed for black liberation. Cleage is the author of the book, "Black Messiah," which begins to explain his "black theology," and is expected to have a new book published. in February c a 11 e d "B 1 a c k Christian Nationalism," which explains his concept in detail. New boundary lines must b drawn because of population shift over the past 10 years. Ziegler's plan basically sough to preserve the present lineup, un der which Republicans hold a 12 lead. Democratic State Chairma James McNeely has suggested tha the redistricting should offer a opportunity to more closely refle the Democratic majority in th total vote cast at the last election Ziegler conceded the plan coul be subject to many alteration saying:'I'm putting up this pla as something to start throwing knives at. We have to start some where.", )e' is ht n- -7 Scans opposes pay increases ences of black people in the west-{ ern hemisphere and in Africa,i Cleage defined the black struggle as being, at the present time, pri-! marily one of survival. Referring to the 300 years of' Islaverv experienced by Africans to define ieality for whites and keep blacks in a state of oppres- sion. Draft But, Cleage argued, the only place where black radicals can be- gin to work towards forming what f he calls "institutional strength" is in the black churches Thus, he board aided Appearing daily on the Classified Page 143tti11; (Continued from Page 1in the west and i t poi however, saying all. wage I cited that this hi n increases withheld during the cur-sion has produced irent 90-day freeze or due after- io sanity" within bla ward under existing contracts Th erl ao e ' must be paid. The early part of np was mainly concer d In the first meeting of the -- - - s board Wednesday, labor leaders of the AFL - CIO were reported to " 1view the public members of the LiI-MliL e- board as generally reflecting busi-, ness and administration views. The AFL-CIO refers to the board, therefore, as a "stacked deck"in D e1 against labor. rn Africa, Cleage{ story of oppres- a "kind of in- cks. f Cleage's speech rned with an his- set to pris( troit jail by concludes, it is structure the bla a different set of .I 1LA , Al necessary to re- ack church along myths, ideas and - 1 m1ers court Part of the administration's sensitivity on the question of the, (Continued from Page ) only keep a person there for a powers of the Pay Board and ever, have indicated problems maximum of 24 hours." Price Commission is generally at- may arise because no local jails Although the order specifically tributed to fear that labor's rep- in the county have facilities to prohibits these judges from sen- house inmates for extended per- tencing a convicted person to the resentatives might walk out if it iods of time. jail in Detroit, a local judge or appeared that the administration The most immediate problem is olice chief can ask for exemp- had power to dictate or veto the feeding and supervising prisoners tion if he can show it is impos- board's decisions. according to District Judge Thom- sible for him to comply with the George Meany, president of the as Smith in Westland, a vice order. federation, and other leaders have president of theWayne County Despite Sullivan's move, the indicated that they will participate District Judges Association contempt suit is continuing and metingse ofat they Bardat District Judge Asseradn. McalBush adds that "it is still ques- in meetings of the Pay Board at District Judge Gerald McNally tionable whether this jail can be least at the beginning. But the ' in Trenton has jurisdiction over used, even with renovation." it cl that i seven downriver Detroit com- Wayne county inmates, the federation has made iceartmunities, but only two local jails, plaintiffs, have been contending it may pull out of the board if it in Trenton and Flat Rock. in a step by step analysis that the decides that the phase 2 policies "And the Trenton jail is con- plans the officials were required are unsatisfactory. demned," said McNally. " can to submit to end the "inhumane (Continued from page 1) The caller said draft records in Niagara Falls were doused with tar and liquid cement. Records in Batavia and Geneseo were scat- tered on floors. The FBI would not comment on the extent of damage. The anonymous caller said a note was left at each office ad- dressed to President Nixon, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and U.S. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. The notes, bearing the saluta- tion "Dear Dick, H and John," said the "East Coast Conspiracy" an antiwar underground group- still was alive. "You did not break its back, as you claimed on the morning of Aug. 22 when you arrested 25 of us," the caller quoted the notes as saying. This was an apparent reference to arrests made by the FBI fol- lowing break-ins at Selective Ser- vice offices in Buffalo and Cam- den. N.J. Five young people were arrested after the Buffalo office was ran- sacked Aug. 21. Twenty-eight per- sons were indicated in the Cam- den raid. The caller also said his group -AILL I.A6. 41P 4p %,I low. =trhtgatt Subscribe to The Michigai Daily We Rent to 21 Year-Olds and Up STARTING AT $5.00 PER DAY & 5c PER MILE _,. U IT'S ALMOST HALLOWEEN! 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He indicated it Secondly, the plaintiffs have might hold a news conference and charged that the defendants "take responsibility for the raids." would "be held in contempt and He quoted the note as saying, thrown in jail" for ignoring those "As long as there is a person alive parts of the court order calling who is free to act according to his for immediate action. conscience, as long as there is a The defendants include the person who believes human life Wayne County Board of Com- must take precedence over prop- missioners. Wayne County Sheriff ; erty and politics, there will be William Lucas, Wayne County someone to resist what you rep- Jail Administrator Frank Wilhel- resent." son, and Wayne County Board of Niagara Falls is 10 miles north Auditors members Arthur Sumer- of Buffalo, Batavia 2 miles to the achi and John Williams. U-M STUDENT BLOOD BANK Tues., Nov. 2-11-5 Wed., Nov. 3-1-7 at: First Floor Michigan Union Info: Call 76-Guide GIVE A LITTLE east and Geneseo 35 miles to the southwest. 'U' responds to Indian suit (Continued from page 1) courses and has also :,uggested Indian courses to course mart. According to Johnson, a full time Indian recruiter is needed immediately and the amount of money available for Indian scho- larships is not even clear. Richard Kennedy, assistant to President Fleming, denies that it is the responsibility of the University to provide secondary or elementary educational aid to the Indians. If such an inference exists in the treaty, Kennedy says, it stems from the outdated concept of the University "as a glorified secondary academy of the lower level type." i Fleetwood Mac )99 "Future Games" Grateful Dead (2 LP's) 598 PLUS OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF LP'S* ON SALE! 4.98 5.98 6.98 LIST LIST LIST N237 Now 459 ONLY ONLY ONLY Van Morrison "Tupelo Honey" Beach Boys "Surf's up" 299 299 wwommummmommow U HOMECOMING PARADE TODAY, 3:30 (Their new prise - and ner 1) LP for Re- it's a win- .et's Work Together Beach Boys "Sun lower" 2 99 (Their first LP for Re- prise--and it's a winner, too)I To Bring the Troops Home Now It's going to be a great PARTY Sat.' 9:00 P.M. Rive Gauche Music, Beer, Fun Girls Admitted FREE Read Daily Classifieds GO BLUE! Beer Mugs Glass- ware 0 Playing 4 Cards 0 Bookends Ash Trays 0 Sweat Shirts * T-Shirts Jackets Caps 'Hats9 Six F*'oters A 01 4 and TAPES! 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