THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 1, 191~ Minority conference: By PAUL TERWILLIGER The message was unity. Perhaps that will be the most enduring lesson 'of Ann Ar- bor's first minority affairs conclave - The Third World People's Solidarity Confer- ence. For awhile, it seemed that just about everyone w a s there. Certainly, m i n o r i t y leaders were there, not only from across campus, but from across the nation as well. Peo- ple of all races, and of all colors, including black :activ- ist Angela Davis, American Indian Movement (AIM) founder C 1 y d e Bellacourt, Chicano leader Ramsey Mu- niz, Asian leader Pat - Sumi, and locally, Native American Advocate Moose Pamp and Black Advocate Dick Garland. "Nothing has been handed amon to us on a golden platter," Angela Davis drawled to a crowd of 3,000 at Hill Audi- torium on Friday night. "Your very presence on this campus is the result of struggle and blood," she cried. The conference, sponsored by the minority affairs com- mittte of Student Govern- ment Council, was an attempt to consolidate the numerous minority groups across cam- pus. They voiced their com- plaints against the racism of many institutions - the Nix- on Administration, the Uni- versity administration, and, occasionally, the s t u d e n t s themselves. At times, it even seemed as if Davis knew more about the campus than the students did. She named professors, state legislators that she felt con- all tradicted "The Cause." She even blamed students for be- ing part of the problem. "That's what I mean by relaxing the pressure," she said, "So that the enemy no longer feels threatened by you." Although the form of ex- pression varied-from Davis' sharp, sardonic rhetoric to the beating of the huge, om- nipresent Indian drums - the message was the same. "The secret is unity, unity, unity!" Davis' voice rose, as she pounded her fist to em- phasize each syllable.' But the message was called other things as well. Pat Sumi termed it "the glorious tradi- tion" of slave rebellions, work- ers' strikes and the battle for civil rights. Eddie Benton, who partici- pated in the occupation at People' Wounded Knee, described it as a "spiritual closeness." Bellacourt described it sim- ply as the "willingness to die for what we believe in," as he recalled the Indian occupa- tion of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C. "We must keep in mind the fact that we all face the same problems and the same racist institutions . .. In short we all catch hell from the same man," he said. "The vast 'majority of us are poor, working people. The struggle has to relate to the needs of the poor, the work- ing class," said Davis. "We should be unified," Da- vis emphasized, "When one of us is attacked, we must all fight back, whether it is the blacks, Mexicans, Indians, Chinese, or any other oppres- sed people." 4 Photos by Karen Kasmauski 0 { Moose Pamp Clyde Bellacourt MOP"Fl