Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michgan,., Friday June 21, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 Fink- om othe ress. AN.ELL. HERE WE go again. The Federal Government is once more moving on one of our colleagues in the news industry in an attempt to force him to divulge the nature of his sources. Will Lewis. station manager of KPFK in Los Angeles, was sent to jail Wednesday night for refusing to answer a grand jury's questions about tapes and letters it re- ceived from the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) and the Weather Underground. The Associated Press reported that U. S. District Court Judge A. Andrew Hauk said that Lewis will be held "until he answers the questions as per my order." In other words, Lewis could conceivably remain in jail until the grand jury's term ends in September. Naturally, the SLA and Weather Underground cases are of a totally different nature from the usual govern- ment-media clashes. The principles involved, however, remain the same, The Justice Department believes that it requires data obtained by a reporter to complete a criminal case. Generally, the Department will request the newspaper or broadcast station involved for the information; usual- ly, we in the media are quite happy to comply. 1UT WHEN THE MATERIALS the Department requests were obtained confidentially, a totally different situ- ation arises. The media made a promise that the identity of the source would not be revealed, for one of a various reasons. To simply hand over our notes to the Govern- ment would not only be unfair to our source, but would jeopardize our chances of gaining further such confi- dential material - and would jeopardize your chance of receiving the complete, detailed reporting you expect us to provide. Several confidentiality-of-sources bills are present- ly before Congress, but have been stalled by the impeach- ment proceedings - a time when such legislation is ur- gently needed. A few letters of support might help con- vince Capitol Hill that it's time to get moving again. -DAVID BLOMQUIST America's 14 Editor's note: This is the conclusion of a three part series analzing the impart and meaning of the occupa/ion of Wounded Knee. Cp)right, Pacific Neuss Sers ie, 1974. By STEPHEN MOST PART Ill: GHOST DANCE RETURNS IN MAY, 1974 a year after the occupation and siege of Wounded Knee ended, Sioux Indians led by medicine man leonard Crow Dag danced the Ghost Dance for the first time in 84 years. Daring the months preceding the 1890 massacre at Wounded Knee, the Ghost Dance spread among Indians life wildfire across the plains. Dancing in a circle, wearing Ghost Shirts supposedly in- vulnerable to bulets, the celebrants believed their dead ancestors would return to earth and that the whites would vanish. This religion, born of desperation, led federal agents to fear an Indian outbreak. Attempting to stop the Ghost Dance, they arrested and killed the Sioux medicine man, Sitting Bull. It was then that a band of Oglala families headed to- ward Red Cloud's camp at. Pine Ridge, hoping that the chief could protect them from the soldiers who ranged Sioux territory in search of "hostiles." THE SEVENTH CAVALRY, which 14 years be- fore had gone down to disaster with Custer at Little Big Horn, intercepted the band at Wound- -ed Knee Creek, persuaded them to turn in their weapons, then shot them. On December 29, 1890, 350 Oglala lay dead in the snow, The Wounded Knee Massacre marked the end of the 19th century Indian wars. From then on the Indian became the "Vanishing American." Federal policy was designed to make Indians, as a separate cultural entity, disapear. Indians were encouraged to migrate to the cities though no jobs awaited them and the support of family and clan was lacking. The Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 eliminated traditional tribal forms of government, substituting tribal councils subject to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Reserva- tion lands were leased to white interests. And in the 1950's, the government initiated a policy of "terminating" the reservations entirely. BUT THE INDIAN stubbornly refused to dis- appear. In the 1960's the civil rights movement and the Viet Nam War led white Americans to take a more sympathetic look at the native mi- nority. The War on Poverty poured federal money into hastily improvised reservation programs. Still, whether he was seen as the god guy in Westerns, as a right-on Third World militant, or as a person in a "pocket of poverty", the In- dians' reality remained obscured behind irrele- vant images. Comprising less than one per cent of the na- tional population, separated geographically from the -other 99 per cent, living under distinct political conditions and within a culture which differs profoundly from that of the larger society, the Native American stands across a chasm from the rest of his compatriots. Indeed, although Congress "granted" Indians U.S. citizenship in 1924, it is no exageration to say that theirs is another country not yet discovered by inhabi- tants of the mass, industrial nation. IT IS, OF COURSE, a gross oversimplification to speak of "the Indian", but this is less true to- day than in the 19th century when hundreds of native languages were spoken. Even among the Navajo, Pueblo, and Sioux - cultures which have remained intact despite federal efforts - people refer to a lost generation of Indians: Indians, now middle-aged, who were made to forget their language and traditions in BIA schools; Indians who, despairing of their cul- tore's viability, identified with the dominant society; Indians whom the BIA employs to en- force its policies. Today, howver, elders, young people, and some members of the middle generation are "Indian" in an unprecedented sense. Participants in a pantribal movement, they assert their cultural heritage, human rights, and national ssvereignty. Seen in this context, the confrontation a' Wound- ed Knee is a major political event - hardly a media stunt or an outbreak of irrational mili- tancy. THE OCCUPATION of Wounded Knee was in fact the climax of a decade of activism. This new native movement began with a struggle over treaty-guaranteed fishing rights in the State of Washington. In the early 1960's, Indian fishermen suffered harassment, arrests and attacks by Fish and Game officers and vigilante groups. Rather than abandon their livelihood, northwest Ind- ians organized and won support from tribes throughout the continent. Fishing in spite of State bans was their form of protest - in re- taliation for which two white sportsment shot and nearly killed Indian leader Hank Adams. Urban Indians formed the American Indian Movement (AIM) after a 1966 meeting protesting BIA poliices in Minnesota. In 1968, AIM set up, an Indian Patrol which followed police who were ongest war arresting Indians gathered in Minneapolis bars. After a year of surveillance, arbitrary arrests of Indians ceased. AIM quickly spread to other cities. Since the Wounded Knee confrontation be- gan, the movement has gained members and supporters on many reservations. PANTRIBAL ACTIVISM caught fire in Cali- fornia in 1969. When the San Francisco Indian Center burned down and BIA officials refused to rebuild it, an organization called Indians of Alt Tribes occupied Alcatraz. The symbolim was potent: the barren rock was no worse than a reservation, activists declared, and its location suggested that Indians, pushed westward almost into the Pacific, were clinging to this last, use- less piece of earth.: After 19 months they were forced to abandon even Alcatraz. In 1970 medicine men from tribes in the Unit- ed States and Canada met on the Crw Reserva- tion in Montana. Here the strength of traditional Indian values was reafirmed. Spiritual leaders expressed the faith that nature would destroy the mechanized society and that native peoples would reclaim the continent:' a vision recalling that of the Paiute medicine man Wovoka whose prophecy of naive dominion sparked the G h o s t Dance of 1890. "The Wounded Knee Massacre marked the end of the 19th century Indian wars. From then on the Indian became the 'Vanishing American.' Federal policy was designed to make Indians disappear." DURING THE YEAR preceding Wounded Knee a pantribal caravan traveled the "Trail of Brok- en Treaties": a cross-country march on Wash- ington whose purpose was to draw attention, re- servation by reservation, to the 371 treaties the federal government made with sovereign Indian nations and later ignored. In December, 1972 the marchers arrived in Washington. Locked out of a promised auditorium and barred from Bureau of Indian Affairs headquarters, they occupied the BIA building. The media appeared, decrying Ind- ian militancy; then the government, which had not listened to their requests, agreed to their de- mands - until the Indians left the building. The pantribal group took with them papers which allegedly document illegal sales of tribal lands, misuse of government funds, and other abuses by BIA officials. THE OCCUPATION of BIA headquarters - re- garded by many Indians as symbol and source of federal oppression of native peoples - was a pre- lude to the occupation of Wounded Knee. The vio- lation of all the Indian treaties had been demon- strated; now attention turned to the immediate grievances of the Oglala Sioux. Sioux medicine men, among them Leonard Crow Dog, invited the American Indian Move- ment to come to Wounded Knee. According to prophecy, Wounded Knee was the place where spirits of the massacred ancestors -- and of the nation which died with them - would return to life. In a sense the taking of Wounded Knee and the proclamation there of a liberated Oglala Na- tion was a Ghose Dance: a summoning of pow- ers from the last to guide the living. While reporters at Wounded Knee were disap- pointed to find that instead of saying, "We will attack the long rifles," the Indians, many of them veterans of Viet Nam, said things like, "Yeah, man, cool it." It amused newsmen to see that some Indians needed help putting up a tee- pee and cutting up a carcass. These observers failed to realize that at Wounded Knee Indians were not only rediscoveting the culture the U.S. had tried to kill, but showing their readiness to die for it. AT WOUNDED KNEE some warrors, men and women, received Indian names for the first time. Inside the village, Leonard Crow Dog and Wal- lace Black Elk conducted sweat lodge, pipe and other ancient Sioux ceremonies. Many stories were told of the power of their medcine. Near misses by bullets were attributed to the spiritual discipline Leonard Crow Dog brought to Wounded Knee. When asked what Crow Dog's role was in the struggle, a member of Chicago AIM answered, "le is the struggle. In the minds of the Indians out there, that's where their power -- that's why they ain't been killed yet, through the power of the pipe and the power of their religion out there." This power - whether regarded in cultural, spiritual or political terms - has surely not run its course. Last May the Ghost Dance and its vision of the future as the past restored return- ed to Sioux territory. AP Photo The Chic of Araby? Richard of Arabia? No, it's King Richard in a cover montage for the Beirut magazine Al Diyar. The ac- companying article called him "arabized."