Sunday! March 16, 1'975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sundy, Mrch16, 975THE ICHGAN AIL FEATURES Ron Dellums on his own V (Continued from Page 3) concludes, "is the politics of VET HE STAYS ON - even someone has to do it because it "The question before us to- coalition whereby the oppressed though he'd like to shuck is the right thing to do. If that night" - the crescendo in his of all colors unite and not let the whole trip. He's n o t a somebody is me, so be it. When voice reaching fortissimo - "the petty differences stand between I lawyer by training, he's a psy- Shirley (Chisholm) ran, she ad- question before us tonight is them in their fight against the chiatric social worker who start- mitted she wanted to play pow- whether we will live in a civ- common foe. Divide and con- ed in politics on the Berkeley er broker at the convention. ilized country." The professor quer has strengthened those in City Council in 1967. While re- You can't do that." has given way to hip poet. Meta- control. Legitimate interests presenting student, black, and phor replaces drawn-out analy- should not quarrel over which youth interests, he was so har- PUT DELLUMS s n martyr, sis. is the greatest evil because evil rassed and stymied by oppon- no radical suffering t ' he "We talk of saving black fur is all connected. ents, he considered retiring. But sln ad a ssfor th e from animals, but we let people "I am not naive enough to eventually he decided to con- slings and arrows for the self- with black skin rot. We speak suggest this coalition politics is tinue. Someone had to advocate worth sufferings brings. Del- ' lums wants to win. "This is the! of saving the mighty redwood easy. It is the politics of sophis- educate, and mobilize. time fortacton. Th ste forests, but we let red people' tication." At h ak tdn time for action. The system is Sbel After his talk, a student ap- tottering. The bonds are falling starve. We believe in preserv- It's words like this that have proached Dellums and asked apart," he' points out in quiet ing the yellow flowers, but we marked Dellums in California. j him about running for the Pres- conversation. "If they ever put bomb yellow people. Civilization In 1970, the first year he ran'idency. You get a measure of it back together, then it will be' requires less arrogance a n d for Congress, the Grand Old I the man by his answer. "I per- a rough time for the people. The more thought." He's rolling now Party designated the Seventh sonally don't dig it, man. Per- CIA disclosures prove ohe mna- and those moments of true fati- as a prime target area. His dis- sonally I don't dig being a chinery for fascism is in place, gue have vanished. He's in his trict has been re-apportioned Congressman. I am rapidly be- an Waerga demnstrated element. every time he has run. Each coming a mystery to my wife that the mentality is there. "mHE MARVELOUS quality time the district has fewer and a shadow to my kids. When; "We have to watch these CIA' about freedom," he re- blacks and more suburbanites. they give out A's or F's it is hearings very clearly. The flects, "is that once you trav- Because of his associations and they (his family members) who Agency will try to obfia,.ate el down the road, you can't turn views, he has been called the are going to give the grades and I through technical explan)tion back. No one can be secure in Black Panther Candidate, the what I am doing now ,s not- their freedom if his brother or leader of the lunatic left wing, benefiting those who give me SOLAR ENERGY sister is not.m rand in private conversation, a the strength to continue. "What I am proposing," he variety of racial slurs. "But someone has to do it and FRNWMSU 1 A t errns and through minimum disclos- ures. I think these investigaribns will give the American people a good look at their intelligence gathering apparatus, and they will be shocked. The NSA (Na- tional Security Agency, a com- puter-oriented spy network) is the least known and probably the most dangerous." There is another measure of the man besides his radical politics and tough rhetoric. De- spite his weariness, he waded into the crowd, answering quer- ies crisply. Still being followed onto the street by questioners, Dellums ventured in to t h e biting Ann Arbor cold, jacketed only in that blue Edwardian coat. There he stood for t e n minutes under the dim Thayer and North University lamp, talk- ing until his hosts could finally round him into their automobile and take him back to his room in the Michigan Union. MAYBE TIllS radical position is all for naught. Maybe D~ellums is as he says "a black Don Quixote tilting at conserva- tive windmills." But Dellums teres a0 Classiid would like to think Don Quix- otes are important in a country whose people are all too caught up in self-aggrandizement. Five years after Spiro Agnew tried to smear Dellums, it is Agnew who has been retired from public life. It didn't sur- prise Ron Dellums in the least. THE LAST RETURN THIS YEAR OF LUT IER ALLISO Y1 CHANCES ARE 00 Admission includes all 3 shows r- - - -f- The Univeresity of Michigan Professional Theatre Program Life in Camelot goes on for the creator of Prince Valiant RICHMOND UP) - The pro- posed new Science Museum of Virginia has been designed to make use of solar energy for heating and cooling, and when completed it will be the world's largest public building to utilize this energy source, according to Dr. Paul H. Knappenberger Jr., the museum's director. The 55,000 square foot facility on a 45 acre site here will in- clude a major planetarium with a tilted dome design, a multile- vel exhibit area, a totally oper- ational weather station and ac- tivity centers for astronomy, chemistry, geology, mathemat- ics, meteorology and physics. i' (Continued from Page 3) his do-it-yourself schooling as "an airy scaffold of scattered facts." Whenever he needs to know anything for his work, he begins a tireless job of re- searching. EOSTER'S OWN LIFE would make decent material for an adventure strip. Born in No- va Scotia in 1890, he spent his youth as a trapper and on ca- noe trips on unmapped rivers in Manitoba and Ontario. But when he realized that he could not find suitable art training; in Canada, he rode a bicycle a thousand miles from Winnipeg to Chicago and studied at the Art Institute and the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. "I was 27 at that time," he murmurs. "I would work all day, study all night I was get- ting what I wanted. It was a. very satisfactory time." He was an artist first, a stu-J ent and a painter. But wheni he Depression came, he was also penniless. He found a joba oing the illustration for the eekly cartoon strip "Tarzan and the Apes."J "1 ATE APE during the De-; pression," he says rueful-1 ly, "and thank God for it, Ic suppose. The bottom really fell out and Tarzan tided me over. We may be going through thet same kind of economic crisist again soon. It's a horriblei thing - so many of your best notions are kicked overboard."i He says he knew then that: he could do a better job on a cartoon strip than the Tarzanf idea. But he wanted to do hist own story too, not just the il-1 lustration. He spent four years researching and preparing hisy subject. The first Prince Valianti page appeared in February of 1936. It has been more than a fullI time job. Years ago, Fostert spent up to 70 hours a week ont his work; he spends no lessI than 40 now. "It's never been a hardship," he explains quick- ly, "always a pleasure. But to1 this day, I don't know where I used to find the time." A LITTLE LAMP over a large wooden drawing board is switched on. Propped on the board is a thick black leather binder filled with heavy white paper. On the left side of thej page Foster types the week's1 story. The original sketches, done lightly in pencil, are placed opposite. His syndicate, King Features, demands mater-, ial at least nine weeks in ad- vance. Foster who says he hates the thought of anyone "hanging over my shoulder screamingj "hurry, hurry!" has completed stories through August of this year. The pencil sketches become brush and ink drawings and are transferred to white mat board. "Then, each processing step takes your work down a little bit more," the artist grum- bles. "The constant reduction in size, the mass printing tech- niques. By the time gets repro- duced in the newspaper, I look, at it and I'm sick." He's unhappy with what has happened to art in general. "Ar- tists have become designers," he says. "The trend has to be- come more realistic. The cur- rent work is moods and mes- sages, at it's best. Some of these works are beautiful in their harmony of color. But at its worst, modern art is crazi- Afis. The type of artist who useai - make "paintings" is a non-existent type. And there isn't a young group coming up either. There's no money in fine art anymore and no mar- ket for it either." ANNOYED BY THE subject, he makes a face and then1 walks to the living room. He' blinks his eyes against the Flor- ida sun as he moves into the kitchen, emerging to show off two homegrown zuchinis the size of bowling pins. FosterI loves gardening and was an avid horseman and fisherman before his legs began to fail him. We eat ice cream under a ledge that holds awards from the National Cartoonists So- ciety, naming him cartoonist of the year in 1957, 1964, 1966 and 1967. There are also statues from the Newspaper Comics Council, and a citation from New York's Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art. HE IS ADMIRED AND very successful and appears con- tent, but probe a little deeper and you discover an old man's fear and pessimism. "Everything is being gob- bled up, wasted," he says quiet- ly. "I feel strange - abandon- ed - as if I'm here in some misty boundaries where just be- yond there's starvation, there's1 no hope, an end to life. It's an uncivilized age - there's less thought, less care, less quality! than before." "But" he says, shaking him- self out of the mood, "I am an old man. I have my work - and it's creative work. I read all the time now and sometimes I even get in a short swim if the wind isn't too chilly. And there are stories to think of. I have to spend a lot of time thinking - just sitting, my feet up. I like, sometimes, just being left here alone, dreaming." Which, surrounded by sun- light, was exactly how I left him. 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