Sunday, January 23, 1977. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, January 23, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five 3UNDAY MAGAZINE ~PROF ILES.. hlioo Amalri has the Soviet AlIIo form of samizdat (undergroundt self-publication). Both, however, reached the West and went into print in' 1970. For this, Amalrik was con- victed on charges of "slander-l ing the Soviet state" and sen- tenced to three years in an East Asian labor camp. After that experience, Ann Arbor's recent cold snap didn'ti faze him in the least:l "In Magadan, the tempera-1 ture would get down to -60 de-l grees (-76° Fahrenheit), al-1 though," he quickly added, "it only averaged -30 (-22° Fahren- heit) in the winter.", In 1984, Amalrik charged,a "Self government, equality be- fore the law, and personal free- dom . .. are completely foreign, to the Russian people." He described the Soviet Com- munist regime as the directa continuation of tha Tsarist Rus-; sian Empire, saying, "I hope toI be a witness to the end of that state." Amalrik went on to outline, factors pointing to the USSR's inevitable destruction, among which were: * that liberalization of Soviet society as a result of internal forces was "unlikely;" r that "declining r e g i m e s (like the Soviet government) have historically produced ag- gressive foreign policies;" f that China was also under- going strong pressures to ex= pand, and would likely direct its aggression towards the USSR. He said this war would break out as soon as China achieved military readiness in the early 1980's; O that this war would unleash pent up national discontents among Eastern Europeantand minority Soviet peoples, leading to the dissolution of the Soviet, "empire."x During his speech, Amalrik observed, "The tendencies that I noted in my book have turned out to be true., Apparently, I un- derestimated the flexibility of Soviet production and bureauc- racy. And, on the other hand, I overestimated the ability of: China to produce arms. This .breakdown of Soviet so- ciety will happen later than I had anticipated." rPHE SOVIET dissident move- ment includes people with diverse and conflicting political beliefs. These range from those like Roy and Zhores Medvedev, who advocate "the restoration of true Marxism-Leninism" to! others like Aleksandr Solzhenit- syn, who call for a return to "Christian morality." Amalrik was reluctant to put himself in such a category, however. "I am one of the writers, and as a writer, I'm not in one of those types of intellectuals. But if I were to say what kinds of' political viewpoints I'm closest to, I would say I'm part of the liberal democratic viewpoint, that is, the middle group. "I believe in the co-existence of various viewpoints within so- ciety. Within the so-called Chris- tian type of ideology, there is a strong tendency to move to- wards totalitarianism, that is, complete answers on all ques- tions, and this is also shown to be true in Marxism. Marxism on one hand, the Christian move- ment on the other, both have these tendencies." Amalrik said he has seen a change in how the Soviet gov- ernment handled the dissident, movement in r e c e n t years. When the movement first arose about 1968, the government at- tempted to wipe it out, but this tactic failed, he said. "The Soviet government has now realized that, it can't de- stroy the dissident movement, but (instead) it has tried to limit it," that is, keep it con- fined to certain large cities and away from the countryside. Widespread discontent among Russian J e w s has received much publicity in the U.S. What accounts for this dissatisfaction? Amalrik explained it this way: "Russian tradition is a mes- sianic tradition. Marxist tradi- tion is a messianic tradition. And Jewish tradition is also a messianic tradition. What this means is that the Russian and. the Marxist traditions get to- gether and they don't make any room for the Jewish tradition ...and, consequently, it gets pushed out of the way. "Jews within Soviet society just don't have a place there, really," he continued. "They al- ways feel themselves a little bit of an outsider, somehow foreign to the whole system." At Rackhan that night, much of the audience understood Rus- sian, and Amalrik's jokes got as many laughs before translation as after. He employed irony, vivid metaphor and many sharp jabs to attack current American policies on the Soviet Union. "The strangest thing about U.S. policy," he remarked, "has been that the U.S. supported Communism in countries whose people didn't want it, and then fought it where they did want it." A m a l r i k put Eastern Europe in the first category and Vietnam in the second. He continually returned to his central theme that U.S. security and Soviet liberalization are di- rectly tied to one another. "While the USSR is a closed totalitarian society, the U.S. will See SOVIET, Page 4 UNIVERSITY SHOWCASE PRODUCTION -"When You Commn' Back, Red Ryder?" an adult drama by MARK MEDOFF JANUARY 26-29 ARENA THEATER (located in Frieze Bldg') $2.00 general admission PTP Box Office 764-0450 Let the Sun Shine In Canterbury House and M.M. Productions present as a 'Friendshipment' benefit: THE AMERICAN TRIBAL LOVE-ROOK MUSICAL Book & Lyrics:Gerome Ragni, James Rado /Music: Gait Mac Dermot February 17 thru 20, 1977 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor Tickets: $3.00 and $4.00 at Jacobsons, Liberty Music, Hli Auditorium. $1.00 from the price of each ticket will go to "Friendshipment", which sends rice to Vietnamese and Orphans. To Orderb 1. Mailorc 2. Include 3. Make C ~Get the best seat n the house. .ORDER AS SOON AS POSSIBLE._ HAIR TICKETS/MAIL ORDER FORM y Mail: Help support FRIENDSHIPMENT: -der form to: MM. Productions .., Friend @ $25.00 (4 tickets) 737 Peninsula Ct. Patron @1 $50.00 i6,tickets) Ann Arbor, Mi. 48105 - Sponsor @' over $50.00 (S tickets) stamped, self addressed envelope.amut ncoed _ _ __ __ :eck or MQ. payabie to: M.M.Poductions Ttlaon nksd All contributors listed in the HAIR play, program if Date Time Price requested; - yes - nro inrsaav. e 17 Ar, it u p*m. Qty. Th.... Thusday eb 1 :0 PM Friday, Feb.I8 800p.M. Saturday, Feb. 218:00 p.M. Sunday. Feb. 20' 8:00 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20 2:00 p. $4.00 $400 $400 $300 Address City ds d Statep Phone number Please include stamped, self-addressed envelope. Call 9952073 for further infornation Thank you very much for helping Friendshipment. By DAVID GOODMAN W HY DID ANDREI AmairixK rebel? What induced him first to question, then to reject, and fi- nally to take up battle against all the basic assumptions of So- viet society? Why did he revolt, when every social pressure told him, "Go along, don't make waves."? "If a person grew up in a period when so c iety never changes, then unconsciously he would get the idea that it could never change. But that's not what happened in my case," Amalrik explained. For the past 11 of his 38 years, the Moscow-born Russian his- torian has been 'engaged in a continuous struggle with the So- viet establishment for the right to freely express his views. Views which are highly critical of. that regime. Last Monday, Amalrik carried his private war to Ann Arbor, telling 400 people at Rackham Auditorium that the U.S. gov- ernment should use political and economic muscle to force liberal reforms on the Soviet govern- ment. Amalrik looks as though he could be anywhere from 20 to 60 years old. His clean-shaven face stares out from behind thick horn-rimmed glasses. He stands about five and a half feet tall, and his short brown hair is cropped just slightly longer than your average 1956- style crew cut. He was wearing a conserva- tive white linen shirt, but his grey pin-stripe suit was cut in a mod style, and his chunky- heeled shoes looked like some- thing out of the disco scene. Amalrik was born in 1938, in the middle of Joseph Stalin's rule. The dissident referred to his childhood as "a very, very gloomy period." "It was a society of isolation, a society of great represison and great poverty. It wasn't just gloomy within, it was gloomy without. People would wear clothing that was very black and )depressing." Several mem- bers of Amalrik's own family died in Stalin's purges. "But during my youth," he continued, "began my period of hope and seeing that change was possible. Why? Well, be- cause when I was about 18, that's when de-Stalinization hap- pened, see? And so I could see that change was posible in this world." EThis marked the 'birth of Amalrik the optimist aid Armal- rik the rebel. tWH A T ARE Andrei Amalrik's views that so threatened' the Soviet establishment that it sought to suppress them by exil- ing him to Siberia, throwing him in prison, and finally expelling him last April? His first clash with authori- ties came in 1965 over a thesis written for the History Depart ment at Moscow State Univer- sity. In that paper, Amalrik ad- vanced the heretical proposition 'that the Kiev Rus, the medieval state which was the precursor of modern Russia, had strong 1 Norse cultural influences. This contradicted the accepted dogma that Russian civilization developed autonomously. When he refused to retract the offend- ing document, Amalrik was ex- Spelled. His wide-ranging and funda- mental critique of Soviet society seems to have crystalized dur- ing a one year stint on a col- lective farm in Siberia. He was sent there after a court con- victed him in 1965 of "economic parasitism"-or failure to hold a "normal" job. During that exile in the small farming village of Krivosheino, Amalrik wrote Involuntary Jourd ney to Siberia, which contained a scathing attack on the Soviet legal and scollective farm sys- tems. Soon after his return to Mos- cow, Amalrik wrote the work which stands out as one of the 1 a n d m a r k s of the dissident movement in the USSR, Will the Soviet Union Survive Until 1984? Neither book was published in the Soviet Union except in the [~o Cover Toxte] h11 CHURCH A2 9955955] p mms I WAE WANT YOU to help new students next fall apply to be a FALL ORIENTATION LEADER Come to the Orientation Office 2530 SAB from Monday, Jan. 23- Friday, Feb. 21 An affirmative action, non-discriminatory employer. SPRING BREAK SPECIALS NEW YORK .... $102* NEWARK. .... $1O2* BOSTON . .. . $111* PHILADELPHIA . .$95* WARM WEATHER VACATIONS! FT. 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Full Contact Lens Service ROOM 4202 Cold Sterliation for MICHIGAN UNION Soft Lenses 545 CHURCH ST. TUES., JAN. 25 769-1222 at 7:00 P.M. Marvella Bayh I have had breast cancer and a mastectomy to cure it. But it didn't change my life-or my femininity. Of course, right after surgery, I was discour-" aged. But then I received a visit from an American Can- cei Society volunteer. She art 'm a haIicll a~nd azsrove. when she gave me faith. I knew then, if other women could do it, so could I. I did. If you know a cancer pa- tient who needs help, call your Unit of the American Cancer Society. We can give people information and counseling on all kinds of cancer. We can also give them hope. I know. Because I had