The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 27, 1978-Page 11 Vorster defends National Party JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - South Africa's ruling National Party celebrated 30 years of political power yesterday, savior of a way of life to its supporters and fount of racist evil to its foes. John Vorster, South Africa's prime minister for the past 12 years, says his party's greatest success has been that it "held the fort for so long against ex- ternal political pressure." The Nationalists, dominated by the Dutch-descended Afrikaners, came to power in 1948 and have ruled ever since, systematically implementing their in- ternationally condemned policy of apartheid, or separate racial develop- ment. "THE ROAD ahead is difficult," Vor- ster said in a newspaper interview published here. "There are no instant solutions which can be offered." He described the government's policy of restricting the citizenship of the nation's 19 million blacks to rural, tribal homelands outside "white" South Africa as "a great deed by the National Party." The homelands constitute 13 percent of the nation's entire land area. Blacks have been denied all political rights in the rest of the country, which has been declared a preserve for South Africa's 4.4 million whites. MANY OF the party's opponents, black and white, view the Nationalist's leadership as a national tragedy. "We see heartless, cruel enforcement of pass laws restricting black movement on our men and women, dispossession of property and the im- position of inferior education," said Dr. Nthatho Motlana, a community leader in the nearby segregated black township of Soweto. "We see a very catalogue of vicious measures imposed on a defenseless community in pursuit of a mirage of racial purity in a pure white state at the bottom of a black continent." He spoke in an interview ina black newspaper. THE NATIONALISTS succeeded the United Party of Prime Minister Jan Smuts, under whose rule racial segregation was widespread but not en- shrined in law, a task the National Par- ty embarked on with zeal once it gained power. The United Party advocated separation of white and black areas, but with representation for all in the central government, a policy rejected by the Nationalists. Three decades of Nationalist gover- nment have brought the whites of South Africa one of the highest standards of living in the world. Over the years it has also built up the most advanced in- dustrial and technical society in Africa and uplifted the 2.5 million Afrikaners it represents politically and economically. "I MAKE bold to say that the National Party will remain in power as long as it sticks to its basic policy," said Vorster. "The policy is designed to give each population group a place in the sun." "It takes some doing to achieve this in a multinational country where people have different languages, customs and beliefs and also different levels of development." "I do not fear the future," he said. "Not on the economic level, in spite of problems and boycotts, and not on the military level." The South African leader said the army would have to guard the nation's borders for as long as Communist nations arm black nationalist guerrillas and "continue their strategy of world domination.". I HAVE not the slightest doubt we can withstand this onslaught. We have the human material. We have the skilled and dedicated people and the people with the necessary brains," Vorster said. The deterioration of race relations under the National Party has been marked by increasing violence and bloodshed - security forces massacred 69 blacks at Sharpsville in 1960, black militants engaged in a widespread sabotage campaign in the early 1960s, and black student unrest in Soweto in 1976 flared into the nation's worst race rioting ever. The local press this weekhas been full of opposition attacks on the record of the Nationalists. THE PARTY'S foes accuse the government of stripping millions of blacks of their citizenship and uprooting some 2 million blacks from their homes in an effort to build a clearly defined wall of separation bet- ween black and white. They also charge that mounting cen- sorship and increased use of detention without trial is bringing South Africa ever closer to the repression of a police state. The Black Sash, a movement of white women dedicated to easing the plight of blacks in a white-ruled society, sum- med up the situation as they see it this way: "In 1948 we had hope and the respect and friendship of the world. In 1978 we are a divided nation in a fractures coun- try at odds with the world." SIDNEY LUMET'S 1974 MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS Albert Finney, Jacqueline Bisset, Sean Cannery, Michael York, Vanessa Red- grave, Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Ba- call, Anthany Perkins, Richard Mid- mark, Jahn Gieglund & Martin Balsam in an all-star who-dun-it based on Agatha Christie's Best Seller. IN COLOR. SUN: WAY DOWN EAST (Griffith Silent) FREE at 7:30 TONIGHT at 7:30 & 9:30 OLD ARCH. AUD. CINEMA GUILD $1.50 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 Saturday, May 27 TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (Howard Hawks, 1944) 7 ONLY-MLB 3 A cynical Caribbean seaman (Humphrey Bogart) is forced by circumstances and stubborness into the camp of the French resistance against Fascist Vichy. Luren Bacell's debut made her a star. A sus- penseful, sultry script by WilliamFaulkner and Jules Furthman of the Hemingway novel raised theatre temperatures 20-degrees as Bogie and Baby sparred playfully like jsded cats. One of Bogart's half-dozen best films. "If you wantanything, justwhistle." With Walter Brennan, HoagyCarmichaetl. THE BIG SLEEP (Howard Hawks, 1946) 9 ONLY-MLB 3 A detective (Humphrey Bogart) is hired by an aging, wealthy patriarch to investigate the possible blackmailing of his younger daughter. The detective begins to uncover motives for en old friend's disappearance, and is led to the patriarch's older daughter. Lauren Bcell: "I like that. Id like more." This is the best screen version of Chandler. The recent remakeis soinept, you can't help recalling one scene after another from the original. Screenplay by William Faulkner, Leigh Brackett, and Jules Furthman. With Elijah Cook, Jr., MarthaVickers, DorothyMolqne. Aclassic. TUESDAY: Anthony Mann's T-MEN." i -