Friday, September 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY" Page Three-B L Friday, September 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three-B Wizards, circa 1974 The Klan stays in business CAMPTI, La. OP) - "Wel- two smaller tents for rank and come to Klan Country," the big file workers. sign said. And there beside U.S. -Two portable outhouses. 71, on a rented meadow three Two large and luxurious mo- miles north of Campti, the Ku tor homes, one for King, the oth- Klux Klan was hustling for new er for Robert Shelton of Tusca-1 recruits. loosa, Ala., the UKA's. imperial' Blacks and Jews and intellect- uals, liberals, skeptics and their ilk need not apply. THE SUN had slipped behind the green hills of central Louisi- ana but the day was still bright. Most cars whining along U.S. 71 zipped right on by the KKK sign and the ominous hoodedI figure beside it.a "People don't come until af- ter dark," shrugged a state grand dragon John King, a Winnfield lawyer. "They don't care to be seen at a Klan rally." He said that's because the Klan is famed for clandestine terrorism, murder, whippings and fire to impose its version of law and order-and word hasn't gotten around that times have changed. THE BLOODY image often repels potential members whose politics may lie just south of Attila the Hun's but who balk at violence - it appeals to what King calls the "nitwits, wild men and radicals." "But the haters pass right on through," King added. "Theyj don't stay long." This peaceful dragon is state commander for the United Klans of America, Inc. UKA, richest and most visible of the 15 separate and jealous Klan groups known to the FBI. THE encampment seemed remarkably well protected. It was patrolled by 10 armed men wearing gray military uniforms, boots, and black helmets. Each man's belt bore a hol- stered pistol. A two-foot billy club dangled beside it. Two troopers carried M-1 carbines with banana clips curved be- neath them. King, wearing coveralls, was $ fiery-faced and sweating hard from the unaccustomed labor of helping deck the grassy field with props for his "American- ism Rally." THEY included: -A 30-foot-tall wooden cross, wrapped in burlap and soaked with diesel fuel, to be lighted later; plus a four-foot cross made of lead pipe, perforated like the burners of a gas stove. Fueled by a tank of butane, the small cross flamed near the fence gate, beside the floodlit welcome sign. -An 18-wheel flatbed truck as a platform for musicians and speakers. Microphones stood on it, flanked by American and con- federate flags. Strings of elec- tric light bulbs dangled from temporary poles. wizard. Keeping tabs on the UKA and other Klans used to involve mil-{ lions of FBI dollars and hun- dreds of agents and informers.' But except for a militant klav-j ern here and there, FBI spnkes-' persons say things have been' routine since 1971. HOW MANY klansmen arej there today? How many klav-I erns in what states? People3 who know won't say. But Klan+ secrecy seems to hide weakness, not strength. "The secret of our power lies in the secrecy of our mem- bership," a leaflet boasts. "We are a great secret organization to aid officers of the law and we can do our best work when we are not known to the public." The FBI says membership in the Klans has declined consider- ably since 1971 but numbers of Klan organizations continue to be involved in atrocities deny- ing others their constitutional rights. The FBI estimates that United Klans of America, the largest group, has a, member- ship of 1,700. In 1972, they esti- mated it at 3,200. ACTUALLY, Klans were nev- er secret to the FBI or interest- ed police. Agents rated the worst onesj as dumb and easy compared to new radical left groups like the Weathermen or the Symbionese Liberation Army. "Members of the new radical left are educated and ingen- ious," an FBI veteran said, in ticking off the major differ- ences between the old Klan and the radical left. "THEY'RE a different breed,1 much more difficult to infil- trate. Hell, in the Klan if a man has finished grade school, he's educated. If he has finish- ed high school, he's got a mas- ter's degree. A college man ...+ wow! The radical left not only reads guerrilla textbooks but+ improves and refines them.1 They have more money, for ev-l eryday living purposes, and the+ Klan was always flat on its backside. "The Klan never robbed. And when they kidnapped it was for beating, intimidation, even kill- ing - not ransom." By dark nearly 200 cars and pickups were parked on the field but over half left when a rainstorm struck. ABOUT 100 spectators stuckE through two hours of speeches r e s e m b 1 i n g fundamen- talist preaching, condemning ra- cial integration, new math, com- munism and Jews. Antisemitism got more space than blacks. "The Jews are the anti- Christ!" cried Shelton. "People' say Christ was a Jew. He was not. Show me anywhere in the old King James Bible where it of people - not that we've got The Knights abbreviate their anything about the poor." title as KKK, ask members to Cynical FBI agents, who sus- pledge one per cent of their pect that money is the root of earnings, and predict a "final most Klans, say leaders have solution" resembling Hitler's nothing against the affluent, ei- attempt to exterminate the ther, but that any member will Jews. do. "We are headed into a race The UKA plainly has enough war," said the KKK's David money flowing is to pay Shel- Duke, a Louisiana State Uni- ton $15,000 a year and provide versity senior who -used to be him with a motor home nearly the youngest grand dfagon of as big as a greyhound bus to them all before Dimmie edged travel from klavern to klavern, him out. t coast to coast. He claims klaverns in almost every state. PROOF that the UKA had yankee klaverns came when five men identified by the FBI THEN there are Klans like the Fraternal Order of the KKK, which may have a mem- bership of one: A. Roswell Thompson, a New Orleans man who wants no part of a peace- "The secret of our power lies in the secrecy of our membership. We are a great secret organization to aid officers of the law and we can do our best work when we are not known to the public." -a Klan leaflet 3::::: iss~sa::::si::ssasi::sass~ssssas~li~imassissa rosaasiisss~iaassmisissm aisisas ssiasam ssasessississit."r:,s".::issvss . p AN ATLANTA GRAND DRAGON poses with a group of his fellow Klansmen at a meeting during the 1960's. Although Klan activities have decreased over the past few years, the organization is still much in evidence around the South. says Jesus Christ was a Jew;j "Our country was founded' by men with names like Hamil- ton, Adams and Washington," said Shelton, and he mourned today's "Kissingers, Schlesing- ers and Goldsteins." THE rednecks lounged against their cars, listening. Children fell asleep on the seats. At the end, 23 hooded klans- men in white satin robes waved torches in a ritual, then lit the big cross. It was not particular- ly spectacular; rain had di-' luted the diesel fuel. Not many heeded King's pleas to stick around and sign on. "If you're interested in talk- hig to us about the Klan, we're here to do it and we're not in any hurry to leave," he called. But it was around midnight. The exodus continued. "WE ARE planning to change our style," King told a reporter while unplugging his public ad- dress system. "We're going to hold meetings in motel banquet halls, places like that, instead of out in fields. "You don't get rained on and you also reach a different kind 1 I 1 I as "UKA affiliates" were ar-1 rested on a charge of bombing 10 parked school buses during integration troubles at Pontiac, Mich., in 1971. Shelton says the UKA is fi- nanced by a monthly assess- ment of 50 cents a member,1 paid to the national UKA from whatever dues are imposed by, the local. No other Klan of the 15 seems prosperous, though James Ven- During Reconstruction, t h e able of Stone Mountain, Ga., social club became the back- claims over 100,000 members bone of white undergroun*'re- for his National Knights. Shelton sistance to Yankee domination. is among those who doesn't. be- When the KKK got out of hand, lieve it. it was ordered disbanded. "aThe hardy KKK concept sur- "THEY'RE all paper tigers,' vived spread and took root in he scoffed. "Anybody can set both the South and Midwest af- up a Klan. But I doubt if all ter World War I, with its mem- the other Klans could muster in bership estimated at five mil- total membership what we have ip tiaea9fvs. in just two Louisiana parishes." Other Klans are a mixed bag. Now it's like crabgrass. It They range from the North and withers away periodically, but South Carolina Klans to the it never seems to die. new Texas Fiery Knights set up by Scott Nelson in Houston - After the Israeli government, now boasting the youngest Jerusalem's Hebrew University grand dragon in all Klandom, is the city's largest employer, 19-year-old Dimmie Johnson- with more than 6,000 teaching to the tough-talking Knights of and administrative staff, says the KK, headed by Edward the university's director-general, White of Nashville, Tenn. Yosef Harpaz. ful Klan image. "We are a terrorist organiz- ation," he insisted. "All our violence is secret, but we're violent - take my word for it." Some Klans, like the one that held a cake sale near Vidor, Tex., seem to have come full circle to the nature of the first KKK - set up by Civil War veterans in Pulaski, Tenn., in 1867 as a social club. iedical facilities are set up, -An old Army tent to shel- 'e're in complete compliance ter a concession stand, where ith the law." Launch Day is Klan women sold soft drinks, wo days away. sandwiches and slivers of cake; ATTEND THE KIWANIS SUMMER SALE Saturday, Sept. 7 8:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Complete your furnishings with furni- ture, housewares, appliances, boo ks, records, c a me r a s, antiques, and so forth. Kiwanis Activity Center Corner: W. Washington and First Streets TONITE! All Campus TG. DELTA SIGMA DELTA Dental Fraternity 1502 HILL LIVE BAND 8:00 P.M. BEER 25%~ OFF ALL NEW BOOKS D AVID"s BOOKS is now open at 529 E. Liberty also RARE and USED BOOKS S BVilS come in and I w I