Pacifist discusses Washington protests and cultural revolution Igal Roodenko TONIGHT DIAL AT 7-9 P.M. 8-6416 "A MtASTtEE2i UtCt?- -HOLLIS ALPERT, Saturday Review COLUMBIA PCTURES Presents JEAN-CLAUDE BRIALY in A Filmby PIeTnflE ERIC ROHMER Color THURSDAY: ROLLING STONES IN "GIMME SHELTER" By JIM IRWIN "The individual in the move- ment often sustains so much an- guish that he becomes callous to it, he becomes mechanical. But the Vietnam veterans really brought the war home. They opened up the movement," anti- war and civil rights activist Igal Roodenko declared Sunday. Roodenko, current chairman of the War . Resisters League, (WRL), spoke Sunday morning at the Friends Meetinghouse. Roo- denko has been on the Executive Committee of the WRL since 1948. During World War II, he spent 20 months in prison for non- cooperation with the draft. Roodenko's comments in the Washington demonstrations were optimistic. "If the various anti- war groups had not been split there would only - have been one week instead of three weeks of activity," he said. "The veterans did a magnifi- cent job of setting the tone for the following weeks. They didn't bring heavy rhetoric but gut and life experience. This authenticity carried much weight with the public and the movement. It cleared away a lot of the rhetor- ical froth of radical demonstra- tions in the past few years," Roodenko added. Now that the movement has brought a great many people away from the problems of apathy it is more in danger of a sense of paralysis, Roodenko said. "The problem has become more, what do we do?" "As pacifists, we now have- the challenge of creating projects that will channel our energy into activities that are not only con- structive, but also will help peo- ple keep away from violence. If we expect our politicians to lis- ten to us we must face them with the assumption that they will," said Roodenko. The sense of paralysis comes from thinking the state of the world is static and unchangeable, Roodenko stated. "The intellect gives us too much. We think we can stand outside of ourselves and see ourselves objectively like a machine. This blinds ii and freezes us. This is the way the world is, we say, thus cannot move with it," Roodenr) said. "I'm not interested in fincir.g what the state of the world is-- I'm interested rather in finding the most promising view of reality," Roodenko declared. Roodenko believes social trans- formation must be approached -;, with a sense of optimism. "We can talk about the tragedies of the counter-culture; we've all heard about the disappointments and blind alleys," Roodenko commented- "People have nothing to lean on, so they try experiments, and many of them fail. But the trag- edies in this search are inevit- able. With confidence in the hu- man spirit, in this searching, new answers will come, and it is this we must support and en- courage. This is the essential emphasis of the WRL," said J Roodenko. . ... . ....... . . 1A 1 .::Y: B :.. ., .. ;:>: <:« ..... __ ... .: . rf, [' .... ....Yurw F,,". .. raspberry and vanilla sweeten Miss J's sportswear life in very brief and lengthier separates of striped polyester/cotton knit. Sizes 5 to 13. A. Raspberry top, $8. Pull-on skirt, $6. B. Cropped top, $6. Short-cut pant, $5 C Tunic top, $9. Long pull on pant $10. (ate 46 J~SO' Jaeobf 'R 1 ,AI