Wednesday, October 28, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Posg Five b 0 0 k s Uncertain Arthur W. Thompson and Robert A. Hart, THE UNCER- TAIN CRUSADE: AMERICA AND THE RUSSIAN REVO- LUTION OF 1905, University of Massachusetts Press, $6.50. By JOHN CUMBLER. One of the first lessons the student of American history learns about foreign policy is that from the very beginning it was based on what was consider- ed national self-interest, not ideological commitments. It is ironic that a nation which was based on revolution and help from abroad has not in turn helped revolutionary movements in Europe. Just eleven' years after its own revolution America showed the world, and pafticu- larly France, that the Republic's adherence to republicanism did not extend beyond its Eastern border and most certai not transcend national ; terest. Author W. Thompson died after doing resear the book but before it v tually written leaving th perhaps more shallowt was intended to be) and A. Hart explore the Ar response to the Russiana to overthrow the Tzar i They find that early struggle, before 1905, Am both aofficial and non- seemed unanimously opp the Tzar and 'in support Russian attempt at rev Clearly the Tzar was ti personification of evil a symbol of all that Amer posed. The U.S. governme a letter of protest to Ru the time of the progrs 1903. Roosevelt support Japanese in their early su crusade: ny did against Russia and had the self in- Navy Department prepare plans for possible action at Viadivo- ' (who stok. The American public fav- ch for ored the revolution, held mass was ac- meetings in support, sent peti- ie book tions, and wrote editorials call- than it ing for a Russian "1776." Robert But as time passed so did merican America's passion for the Rus- attempt sian Revolution. As Roosevelt n 1905. began to see Japan as the "yel- in the low peril," he no longer felt a ericans, Russian Revolution was the na- official, tional interest. (The government osed to was noticably mute on the of the bloody programs of 1905, prob- olution. ably the worst in Russian his- he very tory.) Editorials ceased support nd the of the revolution and began to ica op- portray the Tzar as a moderate ent sent and the Revolutionaries as the assia at source of Russia's troubles. ams of Thompson and Hart show ed the clearly that "American public accesses opinion" switched from a warm Americ support of a revolution to open hostility around 1905. The auth- ors imply that as the Russian revolution came closer to being a reality, for many Americans it began to look more like the Pullman Strike and less like the Boston Tea Party. The public began to see the revolutionaries looking more like Eugene Debs and Big Bill Haywood and less like good middle class gentle- man revolutionaries like George Washington and John Adams (Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson?). After reading The Uncertain Crusade one does not really know why the American public turned against the Revolution of 1905. The book unfortunate- ly fails to pose an answer to, the question which it raises. Thompson and Hart's method of arriving at "public opinion," is pai'tially responsible for this a and New Plans to save the Brtish Hedgerow Nan Fa irbr other, NEW LIVES, NEW LANDSCAPES, Afred Knopf, $12.50. . By JACK EICHENBAUM A warning: By rational; American standards, Britain is replete with preposterous contradictions and absurdities. From the people who brought you the country manor and the endlessly intriguing hedgerow agricultural landscape came also, the, urbanized society and the industrial wasteland. The cities that offer crescents of Georgian townhouses invented the work- ing class slum. The society that worshipped Adam Smith nur- tured Karl Marx. And the em- pire famous for its nonsetting sun now sjees precious little of it. These h i s t o r i c a l contrasts (which indeed heighten an alien's experience) combined with sharp cultural and environ- mental differences between Bri- tain and America, do not re- quire a wholesale adoption of the large - scale environmental planning ideas offered in Miss Fairbrother's book. This is probably why it is a rather good book. The author is not trying to save the world-- only the English landscape. A professional landscape architect and writer, well acquainted with the natural setting of the coun- try, with a background that in- cludes considerable rural experi- ence, she is well-equipped to deal with the geographical con- text at hand. Yet underlying her specific proposals for con- serving and improving particu- lar snatches of the British scene are a number of philoso- phical stands and conceptual notices which we might do well to import. Miss Fairbrother recognizes the greater mobility, productive capacity and increased leisure of our New Lives as positive quali- ties provided they can also be lived properly. They require new landscapes w h i c h respect his- torical continuity and the her- itage o treat Elizabe biles a links i econom a mean accessi an aes landsca ways experie tions.") are no they a sensitiv getic scarlet their eral, th as to3 the bo noncha everyb Cone makes tween landsca only th consid use imi f the past but do 'not re- into clumps of phony ethan preserves. Automo- md roads are seen as vital n a rural transport and nic system. They serve as ns of providing uncrowded ble recreation and also as sthetic experience. ("The apes of fast roads are al- moving, but our design ence is of static condi- Industry and new towns t bad in themselves, but re only as good as the vity of their designers. pylons-no longer apolo- grey, but painted proud like cranes to display airy elegance.") In gen- hough I am not quite sure how it is to be effected, ok espouses a remarkably auvinistic something-for- ody spirit. ceptually, the a u t h o r a good distinction be- land-use planning and ape planning. In practice. e former has usually been ered. But specifying land- pies only what sits on top land and does not deal local ecological relation- or an integrated aesthetic . We n e e d landscape rng to define these char- tics and we also need gen- d categories of land-use keep up with population rents, economic develop- and their resultant geo- c trends. r major land-use types are ted: the Built-up Urban cape, the province of man- surfaces, architecture, and Yindoor activities; the - urban Landscape, the limbo of suburbs, former green- belts and encroaching city; the New Farming Landscape, which is increasingly organized for large scale modernized agricul- ture; and the Man-made Wild, largely outdoor recreational land with some grazing and forestry. To complement these land-use distinctions, a four-point plan for landscape planning is pre- sented. This encompasses land- scape organization, which fo- cuses on well-designed diversity (much like Jane Jacobs' cities) ; landscape pattern, which im- plies large scale vegetational groupings to separate land-use categories; landscape material, which concerns the utilization of local resources in planting and building; and landscape texture, which chiefly involves creating plant groupings which respect natural processes and afford easy maintainance. Abstract ideas are substanti- ated with many illustrations and p 1 e a s a n t vignettes sprinkled throughout the book including many fine photographs and cartoons. Nevertheless the text is given to unnecessary repeti- tion and rambling and could probably have been shorter and better organized. When it comes to specific concrete proposals, Miss Fairbrother is somewhat limited to the effective use of trees and shrubs - though she has managed to increase my understanding of their impor- tance. It is encouraging to see a landscape architect go so far afield as the author in continu- ally looking at the whole society and its dynamics for her ideas rather than through the narrow blinders of a single academic discipline. But she has probably not gone far enough. New Lives are taken as essentially given and she is neither prone to dis- cern damaging trends such as the anonymity of cities, nor consider the feedback her New Landscapes w o u 1 d have on Lives! Furthermore, there is no discussion of how she would make her ideas politically tract- able. Good intentions are by no means legislative winners. If you are part of the growing breed of progressive ecologists, the book is well worth reading. Likewise, if you just like brisk scoutmistressly language. Yet it is essential to remember, when thinking of the States, that it rains everywhere in Britain, that in Britain public utilities have occasionally buried their lines voluntarily, and that the photo- graphs of middle aged couples in full business suits sipping tea while siting on portable lawn chairs by the side of a rural lane were probably not included for satirical purposes. The Brit- ish economy may have its peren- nial tired blood, but not the British culture. I have, met a sizeable number of respectable bourgeoisie who do not have a yen for Holiday Inns, Meadow- lark subdivisions, or power mowers and Astroturf. failure. The authors, while ad- mitting that public opinion is difficult to determine, confine themselves "only to opinions stated editorially in selected organs of the press." (69) They discover that "out of 56 impor- tant general circulation maga- zines and newspapers, 49 defi- nitely had favored the revolu- tion in January 1905. By Decem- ber of the same year 42 of the 49 could be counted as support- ers of the Tzar's regime." (69) By cQnfinirng themselves to the press the authors avoid the long standing problems about the re- lationship between the press and. "real" public attitudes. And then do not distinguish between the' public and the press in the rest of the book when they refer to the American attitude. The authors show that while U.S. socialists and Jews consis- tantly supported the revolution and opposed the Tzar, many editorials went to the other ex- treme. The Nation for example criticized American Jews for complaining about internal Rus- sian affairs (ie. the programs): "we should certainly resent it if Russia asked us to put a stop to lynching." (115) the more re- ligiously oriented Standard and Times expressed the feeling that "Programs . . . were the only logical way to deal with those 'universally hated people . . .!" (75) After the events of Easter, 1905 the. Tzar decreed religious freedom for all Russians except the Jews. The authors suggest that it was this act which was responsible for the positive at- titude to the - Tzar expressed by the American religious press. Clearly events like the Easter Ukase did effect the attitudes of some Americans towards Rus- sia; and as the revolution be- came more militant it is not surprising t h a t American lib- erals became more afraid. How- ever, after reading The Uncer- tain Crusade I am still not sure what actually did change the unofficial American attitude to- ward Russia. Certainly, as the authors state in their last chap- ter, the Russian revolution of 1905 remained a liberal demo- cratic revolution long after Am- erica had abandoned it. Later. when it became radical in na- ture, America had long, before abandoned the revolutionary cause and had supported the Russia, Tzar, (exception here is of the socialists and Jews). The auth- ors explain convincingly why those Americans with Russian investments supported the Tzar, but they do not explain the change in attitudes among those without any economic commit- ments in Tzarist Russia. The book raises an important point concerning the govern- ment's reaction to the revolu- tion, but does not pursue the implications of the official re- action and public opinion. Be- fore 1905 Roosevelt felt that a strong Russia was a threat to America's national interest in Asia. Accordingly, he supported both a liberal Russian revolu- tion and the Japanese successes in the Russo-Japanese war. Af- ter Japan proved to be' more than just a counter-force to an expansionistic Russia, Roosevelt, altered his view of both Japan and the Russian revolution. The miserable Tzar became a sym-. path'etic Christian, and the lib- eral revolutionaries (along with the already damned radicals) became insane bomb-throwing anarchists (not that Russia was without a few of these!) Feeling that he would rather have a relatively strong Tzarist Russia than a weak liberal (hea- ven forbid radical!) republican Russia to oppose Japan in Asia, Roosevelt engineered a peace . between Russia and Japan at Portsmouth - a peace which many felt was the doom of a Russian revolution. At the same time the government publicly changed its attitude toward the Tzar and the revolutionists. Shortly after the government changed in attitude toward Rus- sia, the American public began to change their attitude. The authors unfortunately do not explore the relationship between the official attitude'of the gov- ernment and the public atti- tude. kIn the opinion of this review- em, this study, the peculiar and unaccountable change in the American attitude toward Rus- sia, could easily have led the authors to an understanding be- tween official attitudes and public opinion. The leading journals and papers from which 1905 the authors attempt to gain an understanding a b o u t public opinion were not totally remov- ed from the same world view that Roosevelt expressed. Many of them were in sympathy with his domestic and foreign policy and may well have changed their attitudes in order to be in agree- ment with the President. To- day's Nixonites, especially the Vice President, are well aware of the power of the President and other leading officials to change or mold public opinion. Unfortunately, the book fails to fulfill its potential. We are left knowing that there was a pro- found change in what the au- thors define as the American opinion, but of the origin of that opinion we know no more at the end'of the study than at the beginning. The authors feel thatAmerica despite her attitude would never have helped the ,Russian revo- lution. Our sympathy, at most, would have confined itself to parties for visiting revolution- aries and editorials. With the exception of the Socialists, who had an ideological comm'itment to the Russian revolutionaries, and the American Jews, who had an ethnic tie with the oppres- sed in Russia, Americ s com.- mitment to the revolution, in the minds of the authors, was a fad. It was part of the enthu- siasm of the progressive move- ment. But since it was only a fad, it became stale. Americans became bored with the revolu- tion and its revolutioiaries. The authors feel that since America wasl never going to make a ma- jor commitment to the revolu- tion, it should never have made its original vague offers. Although the book does not come to terms fully with the reason behind the change in opinion, except for the hypothe- sis that the revolution was a fad (a thesis which does not ex- plain the change), it does shad some rather embarrassing light on some of our past national leaders; for example the anti- semetic remarks of both Roose- velt and Root. It also points out America's appalling lack of con- cern for Jews at the turn of the century, when her supposed self-interest was at stake. Cl osed William Rodgers, THIN BIOGRAPHY OF THE1 SONS AND IBM, Signet1 SI.50' cO .K: A WAT- Books, By JONATHAN MILLER Think is a disappointment. Although the cover notes prom- ise a revelation of racism, sex- ism and corporate madness the book itself is little more than a 340 page gossip column. IBM has progressed in less than half a century into one of the world's most profitable cor- porations. As the world's larg- est non-union company it em- ploys 250,000 people, half of them college graduates and it is worth more, quite literally, than Fort Knox. Through a holding company, "World Trade Corporation" IBM has wholly owned subsidiaries in 105 coun- tries, none of them owned in any part by indigenous nation- als. Through ingenious political maneuvering IBM has 'sunk computer company after com- puter company until is has reached a near monopolistic po- sition in the production of com- puter hardware. And by even greater political skill IBM has ignored or circumvented dozens of laws in as many countries requiring indigenous stock own- ership and control. The book does not provide the reader with more than a bare minimum of information on these, and other transgressions by the company. Rodgers makes criticism after criticism without enough, or any, supporting facts or figures. To understand the true na- tureof corporations, such as IBM one requires a multitude of information. It is a failure of this book that despite its size it is less Hof an indictment of IBM than one of the company's own annual reports. Oh, sure, the book offers fascinating glimpses of the internal power struggles and the "joe College" old school tie network that runs the company but it.is not suf- ficient evidence to justify the For the student body: FLARES, by Levi Farah Wright A rr.- 1 of the rporation, with I shipsc appeal accusations the author makes. planni He will haye to do better than acteris that. eralize Perhaps the most satisfactory, which and irrelevant, part of the book movei is' the first half which is de- ment, voted almost entirely to a bi- graphi ography of IBM's founder, Foui Thomas J. Watson,\ The story sugges of the country bumpkin made Lands( good is a fascinating glimpse of made one man's rise into the "rich" chiefly and from there into the "super- Green rich." So what?<- Ferdinand Lundberg in his two books America's Sixty Families and The Rich and the Super-- Rich provided more than suf- ficient information on each of his targets and it is quite ob- vious that Rodgers has read those books and attempted to emulate them by writing Think as an in-depth study of just one of them. Rodgers has regrettably failed and it remains an open market for anyone wishing to blow the lid off the IBM myth. SEX" is one of the many topics you can find in our complete selection of hardcover and paper- back books. O WR 0O F 0 0 fl oor "' ptcka '5r Oo QO CO'+t 0c~skssvm ' Poa ror - ' 4'hat a night. A/hat a tradition. W/hat a concert!, 'HE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Men's Glee Club WILLIS PATTERSON, Conductor and rHE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Men's Glee Club WILLIAM OLSON, Cinductor LITTLE PROFESSOR BOOK CENTER Maple Village, Shopping Center (next to Fox Village Theatre) Open every night till 9:00 662-4110 J { Today's Writers .. John Cumbler, a graduate student in the history depart- ment, specializes in r e c e n t American history. Jack Eich- enbaum, a Ph.D. candidate in geography, spent a year in Engla'kl learning to like warm beer. Jonathan Miller, a Daily reporter, boasts the unique cre- dentials of joint British-Cana- dian citizenship and detests Coca-Cola. TF TF 1 <:J.t Y tSf \ } t zippidytr"doo jumpsuits t )Sy' for Muss J form one ,> .1I B FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6 8:00 P.M. I'- r .1 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29-10:00-12:00 A.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER "The Fiscal Crisis the State an interdisciplinary conference sponsored by the Department of Economics MAIN SPEAKER: PROF. JAMES O'CONNOR Marxist Political Economist, San Jose State College RESPONDENTS: Prof. Harvey Brazer, University of Michigan Prof. William Neenon, University of Michigan sleeky-smooth line in acrylic knit with zipped-up fronts. Red, brown or black. 5-13 sizes. A. The sleeveless style with double diagonal zippers. B. Turtleneck jumpsuit. $16. 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