The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 16, 1980-Page 7 WORKSHOPS HIGHLIGHT PEACE AND POLITICS CONF Teach-in peakers discuss anti-w (Continued from Page 1) Moya-Raggio said. "People are really starving," she said. "That is not repor- ted." Prof. IAtrence Shoup of the Univer- sity of California at Berkeley discussed the power of the "ruling class which he says 'dominates American foreign policy, THE "EASTERN Establishment" makes up this group, and economic considerations play a large part in its, decisions, Shoup said. History Prof. Godfrey Uzoigwe spoke about the U.S. involvement is Africa. He criticized the frequent changes of U.S. policy toward Africa. "The U.S. has not had a real foreign policy since the Monroe Doctrine," he said. Former University student and anti- war activist Alan Haber also spoke yesterday, raddressing the issue of organizing against the war. "WE ARE NOW, in my eyes, in a pre- war period," Berkeley, Calif., resident Haber said. "It's time for citizens to mobilize. Whatever power any of us have, it's time to mobilize." Detroit Free Press reporter. Ken Fireman, University English Prof. Buzz Alexander, WUOM programmer Mike Grofsorean, and Brett Eynon, a researcher with the Contemporary History Project,. spoke at a "Media .Issues" workshop yesterday. &j Eynon opened the conference by. charging that "The media is powerfully shaping our attitudes. . . in mediating reality." ALEXANDER DEALT chiefly with the current image of the Vietnam war in high school textbooks and popular films. He said high school texts "are neither hawkish nor dovish... simply evasive." Fireman denied the existence of a conspiracy to alter the objectivity of news coverage. "Many people say it happens by design; I'd argue that that isn't true," he said. "There isn't enough organization. Newspapers are very chaotic by nature. People do carry un- conscious biases that create a kind of unconscious censorship. Reporters become conditioned by the system they've been in." A morning session on non-violence skills discussed examples of passive resistance such as tax withholding, hunger strikes, and remaining limp in the midst of arrest. A COMMUNITY organizing workshop concentrated on organizing the black community and utilizing the religious sector. Because of the high unemployment rates among young blacks, Natural Resources Professor Bunyan Bryant said, it is "very tough" to convince them not to join the armed forces. "Lots of blacks see the army as a salvation," he said, for they see no hope of obtaining a job in any other way. This condition is not new, he added. "It has always been a recession for blacks," he said. More than 150 persons attended a late-night session of the teach-in featuring Vietnam veteran and former prisoner of war Bob Chenworth, Progressive Magazine contributing editor Sidney Lens, and long-time anti- war activist Elizabeth McAlister in the Lorch Hall Auditorium. CHENWORTH SAID his interment in a Viet Cong prison camp gave him time to re-evaluate the U.S. presence in Vietnam and led him to believe "that our nation was there against the Viet- namese peoples' wishes.' Lens said the nation "is involved in a self-propelling" arms race that cannot be stopped and that the nation is destined for nuclear war before the end of this generation. He said a com-, bination of increased technology, they strength of themilitary in this country, and a resurgence of anti-communism are the driving forces behind the arms race.. "These are dire circumstances that we haven't been willing to consider," he said. "Our image of nuclear war is that the Russians lob over a bomb, John Wayne catches it with one arm and lobs it back with the other." McAlister said that through our own creations ''we've made possible our own destruction. "Not just a period of history," she explained, "but all history. Unless and until this present course of events turns ERENCE ar organizing around, I will be forced to share in the draft in the 60s because of enrollment t belief that we'll see our own self- school, medical deferments. ab? destruction before the turn of the cen- conscientious objector status. tury." He explained that the unusually 1 ZARAGOSA VARGA, a Ph.D. can- number of racial minorities who fouAh didate in American culture and a in the war as also a result of t Vietnam veteran, spoke to a small tendency to volunteere crowd about racism and classism in thetn c o l e military. Varga, a Chicano who was wounded "i . ory ris rtteiun by G five times in the Vietnam War, said Wolper writh files frotum Iil, ingt e many more whites thanblacks and recm . ong beInGeor. foN #. ran other racial minorities escaped the InnI~ 41tir. and (;e.ff Ola is. AT THE MICHIGAN THEATRE * s ~ ma E'.Ewww 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 p.m. / Saturday 1:00, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. All programs are different and of substantially equal quality. Award winners and highlights are screened on Sunday at 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 p.m. Single admission is $2.00 / Daily Series: $5.00 (not available Sunday). Advance sales begin-at 6:00 p.m. for that day only / $20.00 series tickets are on sale the opening day of the Festival at 5:30. All tickets are sold at the Michigan Theatre ... Liberty near State St. r _ _ _ _ U . Southern (Continued from Page5) unfortunate by-product of a large aren perhaps, seemed to perpetuate thei indifferent attitudes and mechanica performance: YES, BUT WHAT about the encores You don't get four encores b issatisfytig your audience, do you Sure, the.. Marshall Tucker Ban satisfied, but their tumultuous cries fo more we mod' of deceiving. Afte leaving t age after-less than a hour, the a'ence's responses seeme more an expression of deprivation tha insatiability-to them, the Tucker boy had no business waving their Stetson and strutting backstage after such a absurdly short set, not for eight an nine bucks a pop. The encores wer clearly, contrived to excite th audience; this desperate tactic, als deployed by the Eagles last fall, is sure sign ota'decaying band. Enough about the concert; on disturbi " ;' tion "reyvalls whei contemplating the Marshall Tucke Band, and that concerns the state a rock sleeps Southern rock in general. Five years a ago, this was a promising area; bands r i like Lynard Skynard, Z.Z. Top, the il Charlie Daniels Band, Little Feat, The Outlaws, the Allman Brothers and the ? Marshall Tucker Band were producing y exciting music, and became accepted ? by the mainstreamers enough to give d FM rock stations a then-welcome r depth. Now, the diseased remnants of r some of these remain, and the others n have disappeared. To replace them, to d move Southern rock forward, we have, n uh, Molly Hatchet, the Dixie Dregs and s Asleep at the Wheel, occasionally fine s bands but not near enough. A revival is n needed in the South, and perhaps d necessitates the promt removal of the e, old guard, the deadweight, of the e Marshall Tucker Band. Toy Caldwell: 'o "If we ever get to the point where the a music doesn't do anything for us, we'll quit. As long as the ingredients are e there, we'll keep going." Undeniably, n the ingredients- are still there r physically, but the heart and soul of clearly are gone. A-, Put On Your Dancing Shoes. Learn From The Best. Take a U-M Dance Department Class. tE.cwry Spring Semester: MARCH 17-APRIL 26 All classes held in D'nce Building studios. ADULT DANCE DIVISION Beginning Modern (Willie Feuer) intermediate-Advanced Modern (Susan Mheke) Advanced-Beginning Ballet (Christopher Flynn) Intermediate Ballet (Christopher Flynn) BeglwIing Jazz (Larry Horn) PRI4PARATORY DANCE DIVISION I N THE MOR N I N G ANN ARBOR'S PAPER DELIVEI DOOR RFFORF ONLY MORNING NEWS- RS TO YOUR, DORM OR 8:0OAM TLJFSDAY-SUNDAY "I