I Pablo Neruda, Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan One year later \ I Tuesday, October 8, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 I / / 1 '10 SOLVE 14E ECONOMIC CRISIS WE MUST HAV6 WAGE AND PRICE CONTROLS ! WELL, IF YOU ASK MvE W&'VE GjOT -ro TOLIaiFITOUT'!FACE UP TO JiJEHI LONGi 700 No KUNEMP L y R-- #AP, 'LoymeN T.' i NU'S! ?'NE ANSWER 15 LOWAER PRICE5 ANA41 HIONR OV, AYV! NA9.I Y- HOW ABOUT IF WE ALL PITCH IN AND PLANT ANTI-INFLATION' GARPENS ? NEAR, ./l n 6" .1-1 S / IA S'4 A9LY -SAIL 7 , " GTOOD) sxo v.' r Editor's Note: Pablo Neruda was born Neftali Ricardo Reyes Basoalto in a small community in the south of Chile in 1904. His early fame as a poet afforded him a position in the national consular core, which during the 1920's and 1930's took him to Rangoon, Calcutta, Buenos Aires, Barcelona and Paris. Throughout his life he was ac- tive in publishing, academic and political affairs in addition to his "ofico" as a poet. Among the many awards and prizes presented to him are the Stalin (now Lenin) Peace Prize in 1953 and the Nobel Prize for Liter- ature in 1971. In September of last year in Santiago the poet died. * * * By BILL KATRA JUST A YEAR ago we read with stupor of the tragic events in Chlie, the violent mili- tary takeover of the legitimate government accompanied by the murder of various key person- ages in that government, in- cluding President Salvador Al- lende. Some twelve days later it was announced that in that treason-torn capital the world- famous Pablo Neruda had died. For many of us the deaths of these two men were intimately related, for the president poli- tician and the poet of the peo- ple were close personal friends and brothers in the political struggle. Few people could be- lieve that the Socialist president had died by his own hand as the official bulletins announced. Few also, who knew of the life and works of Neruda, could accept that the moment of his death was entirely fortuitous and without relation to the con- current historical events. Con- cerning the death of the poet my office-mate appropriately wrote, initating on a lower key some well-known lines of the Cuban poet-patriot Jose Marti, Dicen que se murio de cancer Yo se kue se murio de asco. They say that he died of cancer I know that he died of digst. In September of 1973, when blood flowed through the streets of Santiago, poetry's breath was cut short. YEARS BEFORE Salvador Allende had come to the atten- tion of the world, Neruda had been acclaimed as one of the greatest poets of our century. His versus have always had a great impact on me, touching that sensitive core which reacts to beauty, causing me to over- flow with feelings that I want to share with others. It is a poetry to be enjoyed, lived beside and within, a poe- try of everyday things and com- mon human sentiments. Neruda himself has described it as "im- pure" because it refuses to be presumptuous by standing above the "impurity of the human cn- dition". "Those who shun the 'bad taste' of things, he de- creed, will fall on th.ir face in the snow." NERUDA made a fresh im- pact on me this summer when I saw, anxiously bought and iater consumed from cover to cover, his posthumously published me- moirs. I had known that little after his death his houses in Valparaiso and in Santiago had been sacked and all documents supposedly had been destroyed. Therefore the appearance of the work caused me no smll joy and surprise. (Apparendy with foresight he had sent copies out- side of the country only a few days before his death; the last chapter treats the events of the Allende overthrow.) The title of the work immediately strucx my imagination for its perplexing but in the end revealing words, Confieso que he vivido I confess that I have lived. My immediate reaction to the title was as would say ai relish- er of good things, joining his hands in front of nis satisfied digestive system after having consumed an especially well- prepared meal. Not in a pejora- tive sense: Neruda was known to me first as a lover of hfe in the fullest way, and in a manner that was never at the expense of the other man. In fact, that is, what I like best of him: he was able to combine a positive, vigorous spirit with - a life-long commitment in the poli- tical realm. Politics is generally an activity for serious-faced in- dividuals, but Neruda -seems to me to be the type of person who never lost his ability to laugh deeply and genuinely, to apprec- iate the beauty of springtime or the tenderness of a chill. IN THAT sense, he has always been for me the prototype of the New Socialist Man that Latin America has been laboring to give birth to in the last few decades: not with the cold-steel "love" of the revolutionary, as in the case of El Che (althouth who knods, that type of "love", too, might sometimes be neces- sarv), but that of a father oho, while communicating his Jast moral code to his children, en- comnasses them with te warm- th of his sincere affection. I gness what I am trying to sav is simply that although my image of the man is insepar- able from his political se'ng, he was always and foremost a poet. To me this means that he was able to capture in words the affective essence of the oi- verse human experiences ie had lived. All of us can identify with what he felt when he wrte his Twenty Love Poems and a Despairing Song, unsurpassed lines for the intensity w i t h which he communica-es his youthful erotic emotions. He loved nature. The rain ("the sole unforgetable personage" of his infancy), the Chilean forest, the incommunicable sound of the ocean that he first knew at Val- paraiso, and later at nis house on the Isla Negra in southern Chile, populate his verses. Nr- uda also had a deep apprecia- tion for common, ordinary things. In one period of his life he set himself to writing odes to the every-day objects and substances which surraund us and which we too easily take for granted. "Ode to Air", "Ode to the Onion", "Ode to Wood," and "Ode to Barbed Wire", are a few examples. And as all real poets must, Neruda loved words: "I prostrate myself be- fore them, I love them, I em- brace them, I pursue tain, I bite them, I spill them. . . I love words so much .'. I PICTURED the poet there- fore, coming upon an appro- priate title for the story of his life, "Confiesco que he vivido", meaning that he had given him- self over enthusiastically and had fulfilled the demands of his situation at every stage. Ile had resolved early to commit him- self to sing of nature and erotic love, to praise the simple tings of the universe, and to enter in- to the political struggle. He had refused at every turn in the road an existence without sub- stance or direction, that of "the little death of each day". Instead, he had chosen to Em- brace a multifaceted life un- hesitatingly and without regret. This was my immediate inter- pretation of the tite of his memoirs. I accounted for those words in a way that unified the poetic calling he must have felt at all stages of his life: to inter- pret for mankind ail concrete and potenital experiences. BUT UPON reflection I be- came convinced that my inter- pretation was only partlly cr- rect. Neruda's life and poetic work took an abrupt change of course around the years 1935-40 with the events of ±he Spanish Civil War. He identified strongly with the ideological struggle and participated wholeheartedly for the cause of the Republicans. Their military defeat, the ensu- ing horrors of the Facist re- gime, and the murders of two intimate friends, Federico Gar- cia Lorca and Miguel Hernan- dez, all caused him a radical change in consciousness and the development of an entirely new conception of his mission as poet and man in socierv. He rejects then the melancholic sub)ec- tivism of his early erd-z verses and the dolorous pathos of his famous Residencos on Earth in favor of a poetry, i his works, "in the road of humanism, with profound roots in the aspera- tions of the human beina." In his manumental poem "Heights of Macchu Picchu", he sets forth his resolve to take uon himself the burdens of the exploited classes of mankind and to fight, through his verses, the injustices they suffer: Ascend to be reborn with me, my brother. Givedme your hand from the depths of your disseminated pain .. - Show me your blood and your furrow, tell me: here I vas punished, because the jewel did not shine or the earth did not yield in time its gem- stone or its grain; Point out to me the stone over which you fell and the timber they used to crucify you .. . I come to speak for your stilled tongue. I THEN remembered anthber poem written in the same per- iod, "Voy a Vivir", "I am going to Live". We of the Span- ish department had selected it a year ago as the opening for our session commemorating the poet upon his death. It title and message, it occurred to me, suggest a second meaning to the words, "Confieso qu he vivido": I am not going to die. I go out TH MIWE. jRNI C'uborhsr-Ha s ss uing197s Congress cuts purse strings LAST WEDNESDAY, the Senate re- jected a $2.5 billion foreign aid authorization bill. It was returned to the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee for further study by a narrow two vote margin. The surprising thing is that the debate did not rage over the amount of the money in- volved - which in itself seems ex- cessive - but rather certain amend- ments attached to the bill. These amendments represent ef- forts by Congress to exert its consti- tutional control over the Administra- tion's gross mismanagement of Amer- ican foreign policy. Since Congress appropriates the money for American giveaways to foreign governments and for the covert operations of the CIA, it is Congress' responsibility to insure that it is spent in the proper way and without waste. These amend- ments are in response to what Sena- tor Humphrey (D-Minn.) correctly calls "a sorry lack of planning on the whole policy of foreign assistance." THE FIRST AMENDMENT is intend- ed to cut off military aid to Tur- key because of its use of American equipment when invading Cyprus. This would merely enforce existing U. S. foreign aid laws which require curtailment to countries which use American arms for aggressive pur- poses. The important point is that these American weapons are given away free of charge, on loans which every- one knows will not be repaid, or at Sports Staff MARC FELDMAN Sports Editor GEORGE HASTINGS Executive Sports Editor ROGER ROSSITER ,.... Managing Sports Editor JOHN KAHLER ........ Associate Sports Editor Editorial Staff DANIEL BIDDLE Editor-in-Chief JUDY RUSKIN and REBECCA WARNER Managing Editors KENNETH FINK. .. ................. Arts Editor MARNIE HEYN ............Editorial Director SUE STEPHENSON ............. Feature Editor CINDY HILL .....Executive Director STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon At- cheson, Laura Berman, Barb Cornell, Jeff Day. Della DiPietro, William Heenan, Steve Hersh, Jack Krost, Andrea Lilly, Mary Long, Jeff Lux- en berg, Josephine Maircotty, Beth Nissen, Cheryl Pilate, Sara Rimer, Stephen 6elbst, Jeff Soren- son, Paul Terwilliger. Fhotogra pdhy Staff KAREN KASMAUSKI Chief Photographer KEN' FINK Picture Editor STUART HOLLANDER .......Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN ............ Staff Photographer PAULINE LUBENS....... Staff Photographer Business Staff bargain basement prices, the subsi- dized courtesy of American taxpayers. The taxpayer should not have to fi- nance the aggressive and repressive whims of foreign governments. Con- gress should see to it that existing foreign aid laws are enforced. The second amendment requires that CIA covert operations be under- taken only after a report to Congress and solely for national defense pur- poses. 11OW EFFECTIVE this measure will be is open to question.. The ex- cuse of "national defense" and "se- curity" has been given many times in the past for actions that weren't even distantly related to those areas. Hopefully, Congress will not rubber- stamp all operations simply because some CIA operative labels it as neces- sary for "national defense". Consid- ering past events, the CIA has shown itself to have a very warped view of what constitutes "national security". Needless to say, these two amend- ments were strongly oposed by the Ford administration. The executive branch has always desired to manip- ulate and play politics with foreign nolicy. It resents this intrusion by Congress into what it considers its private domain, There is a long road ahead. These are simply amendments to the for- eign aid bill. They may be deleted back in committee, killed on the Sen- ate floor, or watered down so much as to be meaningless. President Ford also has the option of vetoing the whole bill and sending it back. ]TIOPEFULLY, HOWEVER, Congress will stand firm. If this foreign aid bill is so passionately desired and desperately needed by the Adminis- tration, they will have to take it with conditions attached. The day of the Congressionallv-ap- proved "free hand" and "blank check" for the Administration's for- eign policy appears to be over. Con- gress has finally awakened to the ex- cesses of the executive branch: the checks have become enormous and the hand has been caught, stained red with the blood of subversion. -STEVE STOJIC Oops! IN LAST SATURDAY'S Daily article "AA threatens student rights", the statement "With the spectre of the 18-year-old citizen looming in 1972, city Democrats and Republi- cans redrew ward boundaries, con- centrating students in the present Second Ward" is incorrect. Rather, the Human Rights Party, and the Democrats redrew the ward. The now in this day full of volcanoes towards the mul'itude, towards life. Here I leave these things all attended to now that "pistoleros" roam' with "Western Custure ' crad- led in their arms, with hands that murder in Spain and gallows that twist in Athens, and the dishonor that goveins in Chile and I count no mere. Here I stay with words and peoples and roads that await me a .g3, and that knock at my door with hands liae constellations. HE PROCLAIMS a new poetPc purpose of going forth and em- bracing the cause of th com- mon man. At times this would demand a poetry (f "fire rd smoke" and to go amidst one's enemies - be trey the facists of Spain, the goons hired to break the strikes of the sal',petre mine workers in Northern Chile, or the military forces of the national oligarchy who are paid by foreign econo nic interests. At other moments, however, it would mean to search for the "profound weave" uniting men in society and with Nature, ... that is my trade, to know one life is not enough nor to know all the lives .. . This newly resolved cetiz mission demanded a different style of poetry, one tnat coud be understood by all. A poetry of the immediate exp.-lence: a poetry with the foremost goal of communication, useful and usable like metal and "ereai that waits for the plowshare tools for the hand. PERHAPS ONE of the great- est accomplishments of Naruda is that he creates an "engaged" poetry, without any loss of ar- tistic quality. His is an esthe- tic expression which c in be as- similiated and enjoyed by "el hombre sencillo", who does not belong to the cultural elite. He desired a poetry which would be transparent-with nothing com- plicated - as he envisioned the daily process of living in itself. His ideal was a literature "worn with the hand's obligations, as by acids, steped in sweat and in smoke, smelling of lilies and urine, spattered diversely by the trades that we live by, in- side the law or beyond it." A poetry that would not fear to go where men and men's thoughts penetrate: the simple joys of bread and wine, or dispoied, if necessary, to fight shoulder to shoulder and to fall tothe earth copiously bleeding. TO LIVE then, meant for Neruda to enter comple-ely into man's social experience: to know intimately, and then sing its song, the joys and sufferings of the people. I desire that all live in my life and sing in my song, I have no importance, I have no time for personal matters I cannot without life live without mankind be a man . Give me for my life all the lives give me all the suffering of all people of the wrld I am going to transform it into hope. "Confieso que he vi;ido' are appropriate words cnosen by ihe poet himsef to sum up a life- long commitment to the sacial cause. In them he admits that he has been faithful and con- stant in the course he had set out for himself in 'his "Heights of Macchu Picchu" aad "I am Going to Live". Neruda did live, and for so many he still does. A0'o IN RESPONSE to the grow- ing distrust of the American people in the ability of govern- mental economists and so-called "experts" to either explain or reverse the worsening economic situation, a nationwide Ad Hoc Committee has been formed to conduct teach-ins throughout the country providing an alter- native to the Washington "char- ade". As part of this nationwide effort, the Ann Arbor chapter of the Union for Radical Politi- cal Economics has organized a panel discussion (co-sponsored by Economics 691) to be h a I d on Wednesday, October 9, at 8:00 p.m. in Angell Auditorium B on the University of Michi- gan Campus as the first step in providing a real understanding of the roots of the current crisis. The objective is to establish a local base for ongoing discus- sion, analysis, and action relat- ing to the developing crisis, in conjunction with similar groups throughout the country. In ad- dition it will provide an infor- mation and resource base for other progressive movements and orgnnizations to help them deel with concrete decisions they will be faced with as cor- norations attempt to avoid the conseo'llees of what thev have Committee for National Teach- ins. AMERICANS are daily faced witth higher prices, more unem- ployment, worse housing, a n d growing economic insecurity. iPresident Ford has brought to- gether for his "economic sum- mit conference" a group of economists who are incapable of dealing with economic crisis. The inadequacy of Keynesian theories is becoming increasing- ly clear. As the summit ap- proaches, more of those "ex- perts" are themselves admitting the futility of their proposed pragmatic adjustments in gov- ernment expenditures, taxes, or the interest rate as ways of dealing with the current crisis. This parade of expertise serv- es only to cover up a -ontinued direct assault on the living stan- dards of American workers in general; women workers, black people and other minority groups in particular; and stu- dents and the middle class. in- creased unemployment, massive cutbacks in social services, and several years of rising prices are being considered by the Ad- ministration and their experts. Working people may appear to he ,.P.re a d at h sum- differ on particular details, they are unified in trying to effect or legitimize the sacrifice of the American people in the interests of the continuing corporate pur- suit of profits. Amid all the talk of "belt tightening" and "un- precedented sacrifices" for the people, great attention is being paid to continuing the reccrd high profits of giant corporations and securing for them ever more favorable conditions for investment. We are therefore calling for immediate National Teach-Ins on the Economic Crisis of Mono- poly Capitalism. We urge stu- dents and faculty oa:ce again to organize teach-ins on the campuses, this time t~o investi- gate the truth about the current economic crisis. Andmthe lessons of the war in Vietnam should helo guide the investigation and activities relating to the current econo-ic crisis. The 'experts" in govern- ment, labor, and business began in 1965 by telling us that the war was only a technical problem, best left to those like themselv- es who "understood." Then they said that the war 'vas an io- lated situation, a m i s e, a flake, a result of incompetent miscalculation. We learned oth- __;o W nn ntrl nn c -. nationally and domestically. U.S. operations in such Ioun- tries as Brazil, Chile, Greece and South Africa help to sup- press workers, to keen wages and working conditions at low levels, and to boost prolits. Those international activities al- so put pressure on American' working people to accept lower wages and poorer working con- ditions. At home, the Watergate investigations have provided. striking new evidence that giant monopoly corporations like ITT and the milk and oil industries exercise tremendous political power domestically, building upon their massive economic strength. We are being told tnoat rising unemployment, inflaeon and falling real wages ate isvlated problems. They are supposedly a matter of technical aajust- ments for experts, a fluke of weather conditions, a result of Arab intransigence, a result of past economic mismanagement . . . but that there is light at the end of the tunnel if only we stick together. WE WHO have signed this statement say that Jll of these "explanations" direct our at- tention away from the funda- mental character of the current economic crisis. There is a range of opinion among us about specifics, but we are united in our agreement that any serious study and action addressing the current economic crisis must be- gin from a recognition of the basic instabilities of the capi- talistic economic system. In short, the current crisis cannot be solved by "band-aid liberalism" - by tinke-ing with the economy or reducing the living standards of the Ameri- can people. The solution to the current crisis requires a funda- mental restructuring of our economic system - an end to monopoly capitalism. -ANN ARBOR URPE COLLECTIVE .4"":""* . .r .:::."::h"3 ... -...... . i. ..... ~., ;r-^}b b Contact your reps- Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem), Rm 253, Old Senate Bldg., Capitol lill, Washington, D.C. 20515. c - st. . -1.92_ ri. r.. C M m.faVA Ati