{ e waisgan Daily Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 I4 Black Salvation -- 2 A Time of Turmoil: Struggle for Civil Rights ..... . Friday, April 8, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Crter's registration. plan will increase voter turnout PRESIDENT CARTER is trying to improve the election process in this country. Last month he proposed the abolition of they Electoral Col-- lege, and now he is trying to per- mit previously unregistered voters to register on Election Day. But in its first hearing in Congress, the regis- tration bill met virtually unanimous Republican opposition. Just what are these Republicans up to? They claim that the bill "makes it too easy to vote," or that it would be "rejecting 180 years of history," or even that it would be unconstitutional - balderdash. Their real gripe is that the majority-of un- registered Americans are the less affluent, under-educated and often non-whites, who tend to vote Demo- crat. Opposing this bill is nothing less than blatant discrimination against those people. Some 55 million AmericAns voted in last year's presidential election, but 45 million persons who were eligible did not cast their ballots. With near- ly half the people not voting, Con- gress must act quickly to reverse the trend towards declining voter turn- out. We believe that Carter's pro- posal would not only bring more peo- ple to the polls, it would eradicate TODAY'S STAFF: News: Eileen Daley, Mark Eibert, Lisa Fisher, Robb Holmes, Ann' Marie Lipinski, Stu McConnell, Jim Tobin, Mike Yellin Editoria: Ken Parsigion Arts: Lois Josimovich Photo: Freeberg Sports: Errol Shifman the last vestiges of discrimination from our election process. VOTING IS AN inalienable right, not a privilege. There can be no such thing as "making it too easy to vote." Since the right to cast one's ballot is not something to be earned, we should make it as easy as possible to Vote. This country was founded on the principle of majority rule, but how can we pretend to live up to that principle when barely a majority of the public even votes? Jimmy Car- ter's 52 per cent majority on Novem- ber 3 was actually only a 28 per cent plurality of those eligible to vote.. If our elected public officials are going to be responsive to the public, then we must encourage more peo- ple to vote. President Carter's plan (while it may give more votes to the Democrats, will more importantly get more people out to the polls, and put us back on the road to true ma- jority rule. Hopefully those Republi- cans who oppose the plan will put politics behind them, and cast a vote for the future of democracy by sup- porting this bill. Sports Staff KATHY HENNEGHAN............sports Editor TOM CAMERON ........ Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIs .........Managing sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN .... Associate' Sports Editor Contributing Editors JOHN NIEMEYER and ENID GOLDMAN NIGHT EDITORS: Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, Patrick Rode, Cub Schwartz. ASST. NIGHT EDITORS: Jeff Frank, Cindy Gat- ziolis, Mike Halpin, Brian Martin, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Errol Shifman and Jarnie Tur- EDITOR'S NOTE: This sec- and installment of a five-part Easter series on the faith of blacks deals with the modern outbursts over their predica- ment, a time of trauma. By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer After the long silence, the storm broke. After the drawn- out, restrained waiting, after, the years of degradation and exclusion of American blacks, after the accumulated dis- appointments, postponement and evasions, the pent-up ang uish burst across the land - a seething cry for the rights of a race. T h e long-suffering plea, "How long, oh Lord?," became a reverberating demand, "Now is the time!" It began with the congrega- tion of a black Methodist pastor in Kansas, the Rev. Oliver Brown, whose lawsuit brought the historic U.S. Supreme Court decision of 1954 outlawing pub- lic school segregation. The spark flared in the Montgom- ery, Ala., bus boycott of 1955- '56 to integrate public trans- portation, led by the then little- known black minister, the Rev. Martin Luther King.; Turmoil spilled into Little Rock, Ark., where 16 pastors in 1957 raised the first organized protest against the use of state, troopers to bar black children from Central High School, pre-; cipitating federal military in-I tervention. Afterward cane the demon-I strations that erupted across the land from 1960 onward for a decade, the lunch-counter "sit- ins," the "freedom rides," the massive marches, the arrests, church bombings and burnings, the slain ministers, black and white, the manifestos, dis- ruptions and riots, an un- leashed fury that shook the cities with fire and violence frmn Los Angeles to Birming- ham to Boston. "And, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour," relates Luke 23:44 of the dying agony of Christ's crucifixion. An earthquake shook the region, says Matthew 27:41. "And behold, the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom; and the earth shook, and the rocks were split; the tombs also were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen' asleep were raised." It was a shattering interlude in that former time and also in the rending, battering turbu- lence that in modern times shuddered through this nation. Things had been quiet before, subdued, controlled, in check. And then it struck, a rumbling, a clap of legal thunder, and like a held-back flood bursting its banks, the tide slammed through the defiles, the indiffer- ences, hesitations and barri- cades of America.,. " "I cane to cast fire on earth," Jesus says in Luke 12:49. Acts 2:11 adds: "For God shows no partiality." The upheavals were not con- fined to any particular region,, North or South. Although the e arly,mneaningfulcon- frontations occurred in the South where blacks and whites knew each other closely and where the "Jim Crow" segre- gation system had been openly legislated and plainly deli- neated, the most destructive, MSA NOTES: CDIU: By CHRIS BACHELDER ; and MICHELE SPRAYREGEN { IF ONE WERE GOING to char- acterize Ann Arbor, the oc- j curence of lines would certain- ly be included in the discussion. The most recent controversy concerning lines has revolved i. A.. riT " 1 '; ,i .Tx\ rjs=' ,.'%' T,. -.r? iC.. .. r, ,fr_- , p-. 'C. " k A A r t r. k t l r , rw. i , f ..- . : r t ti k . F.'Y - z . : ,k a rw rr 1+ .V"s f r i '-'r" %7Y 4' l ,,,, . . ' y. A J , y - . r ^ RN vW r , ,'' '- ''" d ieds.. r a I IC S wig / AAM(eOF AN A"SwArCj? blind violence took place in cities of the North and West. There, the discrimination against blacks generally was covert, inflicted without law and carried on by surreptitious cua.ooms and procedures - the real estate agents who screened clients for neighborhood houses and city apartments, the labor unions that racially restricted certifications, the selective ad- missions offices, the companies that automatically chose only white personnel. In countless subtle and cir- cuitous ways, blacks com- paratively got brushed aside; turned down and refused. In that veiled, yet pervasively in- hibiting system, the adversary was shadowy, hidden, hard to pinpoint, and for that reason, seemed all the more frustrating and threatening. It spawned the squalor of Harlem, of Chicago's West Side, Boston's Roxbury and Cleveland's East End. The pat- tern formed the backdrop for the conflagrations and devas- tation that exploded in the Watts section of Los Angeles, in Newark, N.J., in Detroit, that convulsed Boston over school busing. The disorders seemed largely sheer chaos, directionless deto- nations of rage, harum-scarum and ambiguous, yet they ex- posed a smoldering malady. Rampages flared in more than 135 communities in the last half of the 1960s, small-scale and large, waves of destruction, looting, arson and shootings, usually of blacks. More than 130 blacks were killed in riots of that period. Black church leaders, along with whites, condemned the violence. Baptist minister King, who had organized the Southern Christian Leadership Confer- ence to press the integration cause and who himself had gone to jail 17 times despite his insistence on a Gandhi style of nonviolence, deplored the out- breaks saying: "We must all live together as brothers or we will perish together as fools." A U.S. presidential commis- sion, after a seven-month inves- tigation in 1969, blamed the riots on white racism, a failure of the white majority to deal justly with a black minority. Without massive remedies, the plans around CRISP appointment poli- cies. In response to long CRISP lines last fall, the administration has instituted a system calling for random distribution of CRISP appointment times for pre-registration. At first glance, it appears to be an eminently reasonable alternative to the current procedure. Unfortunately, one's first glance is deceiving; one finds that the Academic Services Board implemented a policy lacking any provision for sen- ior priority. Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) has empow- ered Brian Laskey to work with the Office of Academic Affairs toward implementing a system which guarantees senior priori- ty. This all points to the fact, how- ever, that the University has botched it for the students again. The entire matter would have been more aptly handled by students instead of the ad- ministration. Consider how the MSA responded in the face of a similar situation. LAST FALL, MSA received a flood of complaints from stu- commission said, "he condition would split the nation into "two societies, one black, one white - separate and unequal." Although slavery ended for blacks with the Civil War, the virus of racism had tough, knotted roots, passed on from parent to child, instilled by habit, phrases, supposition, self-aggrandizement and casual but cruel stereotypes. "The bows of the mighty are broken, but the feeble gird on strength," records the prophet in first Samuel 2. "The Lord kills and brings to life; he brings down to Sheolrand raises up... He brings low, he also exalts. He raises up the poor from the dust; he lifts the needy from the ash heap, to make them sit with princes and inherit a seat of honor." Remarkably, to an unprece- dented extent, religious forces joined together in the purpose- ful aspects of that process: Protestant, Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Jewish, North and South, black and white. Despite dissent, to a de- gree unmatched in American history before or since, the sep- arate bands of Christians as well as Jews locked arms in the early 1960s on behalf of greater human brotherhood. "We shall be one," they sang, striding side by side, ranks of varied creed and complexion, nuns and ministers, 'bishops, priests and, rabbis, poor folk, rich folk, bumptious youths and gray-haired oldsters. "We shall overcome." They made up a dedicatedly non-violent but stubborn pha- lanx, resisted by tangled prej- udices, power structures and sneering toughs; by beatings, bombings and imprisonments. :You share a deepening ecume- nical fellowship in jail," ob- served Presbyterian theologian Robert McAfee Brown,'one of about 500 clergy jailed between 1961 and 1965." The multireligious, inter- racial alliance first took gener- al shape in January 1963, in Chicago at a conference on race, the first national meeting in U.S. history convened jointly by all the major branches of faith. They planned together, prayed together, sounded a c o in in o n determination to eradicate racism with "all dili- gence and speed." A wave of interracial, inter- religious undertakings bur- geoned across the nation in the wake of that conference. The scenes, the strife, the concerted stands unfolded in many cities. In joint testimony before the U.S. Congress on July 24, 1963, officially representative Protes- tant, Orthodox and Catholic or- ganizations - speaking unite- dly for the first time - urged strengthened civil rights protec- t i o n s, calling racism a 'blasphemy against God." A month later, 200,000 people engulfed Washington on Aug. 28, 1963, a moving sea of hu- manity of many skin tones, of many churches, the great and humble of many ages and places, North and South, East and West. With that multitude assembled at the Lincoln Me- morial at noon on the 100th an- niversary of Lincoln's emanci- pation proclamation, its ideal was revivified by King: "I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.' I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia the sons of for- iner slaves and the sons of for- met slave-owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood. .'." 'Black churches became the mobilizing centers and deploy- ment points in the Southern struggle. More than 150 of them were bombed or burned from 1954 to 1964. It happened, amid. rising tremors of protests and repris- als springing up sporadically, of ministers jailed, black and white, of police dogs and fire hoses turned on demonstrators - with black churches resound- ing nightly with prayers, shout-' , ing and hymns. What had drawn the reli- giously divided whites together had been the blacks and their travail. Their cross strangely had effected a new reality for whites. It had acted unexpect- edly to blot out old religious es- trangements in that tortuous time and forged a previously unparalleled bond of conscience and companionship. In the heart of the South, 275 Atlanta clergymen, Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish, pleaded with believers to "im- plement the principles" of their faith so "brotherhood shall be- come a 'reality in our land.. .without regard to race, class or creed." The Delta Ministry got under- way in 1964, a trained inter- religious crew headed by clergymen and working for health, literacy and voters reg- istration among Mississippi blacks. Three workers were slain June 21, their bodies found a month later in a newly filled-in dirt dam. Then came Selma, Ala., the "bloody Sunday" of March 7, 1965. "Troopers -advance." A company of helmeted state troopers in gas masks and mounted sheriff's possemen moved into a throng of 550 blacks at the Pettus bridge and drove them back to their church refuge with tear gas, cattle prods, gun butts and bull- whips, the exploding clouds of gas obscuring in eerie con- fusion the victims and flailing weapons. Eighty-four were in- jured, 17 severely The crisis, sharpened by two months of futile efforts by blacks to register to vote and 3,800 arrests, had come as they started a protest march to the state capital, Montgomery, only to be turned back in bloody rout. At the call of King, an army of clergy from across the country converged on Selma: archbishops, theologians, pas- tors, seminarians and lay people. They bunked on mats in black homes, massed in the humble black church, Brown's Chapel, paraded the streets, hand- clapping, praying, singing. "His truth is marching on." Nuns, serene, smiling, in their flow- i n g , old-fashioned habits, clasped hands with preachers and black youths in the "free- dom stomp." Finally came the strange, massive trek of 54 miles to Montgomery, five days of heat, rains and chill nights. "Walk together children, don't you get weary," King told 3,400 blacks and whites as they left Selma March 21. Their numbers alternately thinned and grew, swelling to 25,000 as they entered Mont- gomery to present a voting- rights petition. "We're on the move now," King told the jubi- lant throng. ". . .We are mov- big to the land of freedom." Indeed, many things were changing. Obstructions were coming down, and more would come down. New laws we being written and implemented, and out of the death throes of black subjugation had sprung a new fellowship of races and faiths. But a heavy haze lingered, lanced with lightning rancor. King, who had won the Nobel Peace Prize for his reconciling work, said that he had been to the mountaintop mid looked over into the promised land, but doubted if he himself would get there.. But, he said, the people would get there. Next day, on April 4, 19%8, he was shot down at the age of 39 as he stood on a hotel baleony in Memphis. "You will weep and lament," Jesus said of his own dying in John 16:20. ... .You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy." TOMORROW: The Rising. Nr - Input Student Organizations Board has serious reservations about try- ing to implement such a policy for basketball tickets, however. It's quite possible that abolish- ing ticket lines for basketball would result in an increase in demand for tickets, perhaps forcing the athletic department to resort to some sort of a lot- tery. But, this isn't our inten- tion; since the random alloca- tioa plan won't go into effect this fall. The Student Organiza- tions Board will be recommend- ing to the Board in Control that the following procedures be en- forced for the 1977 football tick- et lines: * Two lines should be estab- lished, one for people seeking individual tickets and one for blocks. (The current athletic ticket policy already' requires this.) * In the indivtdual lines, a .person may represent up to four people. In the block lines, a per- son may represent a group of any size. * A 24-hour continuous phy- sical presence must be main- tained by each individual or need student Distributed by os %geles'Vanes SYNDICATE Letters Hash Bash To The Daily: This is in response to The Daily editorial of March 31st concerning the Hash Bash. While I certainly agree with you about the need for complete legalization of marijuana, I cannot agree with you about the value of the Hash Bash. It was a good idea when it was begun, but it has lost its rele- vance and has gotten out of hand. The original purpose of the Bash, to demonstrate in favor of the $5 pot fine to be voted on three days later; is largelv irrelevant now. While pot- to the Daily ceived student feedback on the subject. The Board quickly drafted five alternative propos- als for conducting athletic tick- et lines and placed it on the fall All-Campus Election ballot. Student opinion voted strongly in favor of a computerized sys- tem of random allocation for home football games. The Stu- dent Organizations Board work- ed out the mechanics of such a program in a proposal to the Board in Control of Intercollegi- ate Athletics. Included with the proposal was a random-samp- ling telephone survey done by the Student Organizationsi Board in conjunction with the Statisti- cal Research Laboratory. The results of the survey showed again that students favored a randomized computer system over the current system by a margin of 66 to 34 per cent. THE PROPOSED computer system retains the current sen- iors receiving first priority; jun- iors, second; and so forth. Each student would be issued a com- puter card at CRISP which would act as their football cou- pon. Students desiring to form ets. The need for waiting in line, though, is eliminated, since tick- et selection has already taken place. Armed with election and sur- vev results to illustrate student support for the random alloca- tion plan, MSA's representatives on the Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics presented the proposal at the Board's March meeting. The Board in Control refused to implement the policy for the upcoming football season, however, citing the needs for further feasibility studies, operating costs data, and trial runs. It is clear to these authors that more work needs to be done to implement the policy. We intend to work with the Board in Control to- ward implementing the policy for 1978. THE BOARD also contended tha: a ticket system which ask- ed for student responses in the spring would pass over many students who were not "think- ing football" at that time, but developed an interest in the latter part of the summer and early fall. These authors be- ing for the condition of the Diag or the mess they leave behind in the form of beer cans, cigarette butts, and, of course, the remnants of joints. This litter is left all over the Diag for the "benefit" of the University students who must pick their way through it and the University service workers who must clean it up. Most importantly, I must disagree with The Daily when it states that the Hash Bash is reminiscent of the six- ties, when students were concerned with such vital issues as the Viet Nam war and racial discrimination. I can think I couldn't agree more with The Daily when it states that "if people would get out and voice their opinions on issues more vital than marijuana smoking, we'd be better off." But this won't happen as long as those people spend their time sitting on the .Diag getting high. Virginia R. Boynton To The Daily: You and I don't want an atomic war! Here is how to learn these laws: * What you plant will grow. The planted murder in Russia in 1918 I