-f 9 9T 9 - ,f bWK EXCERPT American Prophet: The L of Care) E arey McWilliams is probably the most impor- tant American writer you've never heard of - especially if you were born after 1960. True, some aficionados know that he wrote many excellent books on labor, racial and ethnic preju- ice, civil rights and McCarthyism; that he worked prodigiously for social, political and legal causes; and that he edited The Nation from 1955 to 1975. A few old timers still recall his keen insights, including his 1950 assessment of Congressman Richard Nixon, "a dapper little man with an aston- ishing capacity for petty malice." But almost no one remembers that his book, "Prejudice," was cited repeatedly in a dissenting opinion to the Supreme Court ruling that upheld the constitution- ality of the Japanese-American internment. And even many film historians are unaware that his 1946 book on Southern California inspired Robert Towne's Oscar-winning screenplay for "Chinatown" (1974), perhaps the most widely admired Holly- wood film of its generation. - Peter Richardson Academics and journalists agree that McWil- liams has been woefully neglected. But a thorough assessment of his work leads to a more surprising conclusion: that McWilliams was one of the most versatile, productive, and consequential American public intellectuals of the twentieth century. McWilliams was an astonishingly productive writer. His first book, a biography of Ambrose Bierce, appeared when he was 24 and a full-time attorney. He composed his first bestseller, "Fac- tories in the Field," between court dates and by writing nights, weekends, and holidays. He pro- duced seven books in the 1940s alone, two while heading California's Division of Immigration and Housing (DIH). Half of his books are still in print, and most continue to attract the highest critical praise. Arthur Schlesinger Jr., no friend of McWilliams, conceded that four of his books were first-rate. "California: The Great Exception" (1949) is considered a minor classic, and "South- ern California Country: An Island on the Land" (1946) is still regarded as the best interpretive his- tory of the Los Angeles area. McWilliams was as influential as he was pro- ductive. Cesar Chavez credited much of his under- standing ofCalifornia agribusiness to McWilliams. Hunter S. Thompson freely acknowledged that his first big break-the idea for "Hell's Angels," his first bestseller-came from McWilliams. His other fans have included urban critic Mike Davis, playwright Luis Valdez, California historian Kevin Starr, writer John Gregory Dunne, Reagan biographer Lou Cannon, and countless journal- ists who continue to cite him extensively. In the academy, too, McWilliams's work still registers in Chicano studies, labor history, and urban plan- ning. Patricia Nelson Limerick, a leading histo- rian of the American West, noted in 1993 that her field was still catching up to McWilliams's work of 40 years earlier. At least some of McWilliams's influence began with his impressive network. Over his 50-year career, he came to know H.L. Mencken and Mar- tin Luther King Jr., Mary Austin and Jerry Brown, Robinson Jeffers and Orson Welles, Edmund Wil- son and Harry Bridges, Arthur Miller and Alger Hiss and Upton Sinclair and Eugene McCarthy. At "The Nation," he also published talented younger writers who would go on to reach even larger audiences, including Ralph Nader, counter culture observer Theodore Roszak and social his- torian Howard Zinn. Yet most of McWilliams's appeal now is due to his keen perception and trenchant writing. His ability to see social patterns steadily and whole led him to topics that other writers would neglect until their significance was more obvi- ous. In the 1940s, he helped reverse the unjust murder convictions of Latino youths and called for federal protections against racial discrimi- nation. In the 1950s, he opposed loyalty oaths on campus, denounced McCarthy at the height of his power, and championed civil rights in the South. Later, he became an early and outspoken critic of the Vietnam War and President Nixon's mischief. Most Americans eventually came around to these views, and the Supreme Court ultimately accepted his arguments about the Jap- anese-American internment, the Hollywood 10 and federal protections against discrimination. In this sense, he earned the title of American prophet many times over. When first offered, however, McWilliams's judgments earned him powerful enemies. The House Committee on Un-American Activities identified him as a radical in the late 1930s, and California's Associated Farmers labeled him "Agricultural Pest No. 1, worse than pear blight or boll weevil." In 1941, J. Edgar Hoover consid- ered McWilliams for detention in case of national emergency. Earl Warren announced that his first official act as governor of California would be to fire McWilliams. From 1943 to 1949, he was sme mitt whi his to s as t reso TerI onl) I inte ima brie Chc Wil sho call may hir held his cou reac a n war env sior its I mot pas to a wri pro dee EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily Pastor Steve Hayes talks about his favorite Bible verses at New Life Church, which meets in the Modern LanguagesEBuilding every Sunday. Leap of faith New Life Church puts a young spin on prayer By Margaret Havemannr/ Daily Staff Reporter icture yourself in a cramped dorm room, a floor lamp casting shad- ows onto the Dave Matthews Band and Michigan hockey team posters stuck to the wall. From down the hall, the occasional eruption of yells and laughter slips out from the crack under the door to a room of boys beginning their night of partying. Now imagine five girls sit- ting in the dark room around a bowl of raw brownie batter, each huddled over her own copy of the Holy Bible. It is 9 p.m. on a Thursday night, and while most students are holed up in the stacks, sprawled on their couch watching TV or getting ready for a night at The Necto, these five girls, along with hundreds of others in different rooms all around Ann Arbor, will spend the next two hours sharing their stories of how Jesus has touched their lives in the past seven days. Tonight is the weekly meeting of their Life Group, which is one of the many services offered by New Life Church. New Life: Church for the Next Gen- eration was officially recognized as a church six years ago, when Steve Hayes became the first full-time pastor. Since then, "God has done amazing things through NLC," its website says. In less than a decade, the Church has gone from nothing to being a staple in hundreds of lives through the use pop music, hip language and the creation of a social community founded on strict adherence to the Bible. "Ever since I first attended, I knew it was going to be the church," said Rebekah Mil- ian, a Kinesiology junior who joined New Life in her first week at the University. Mil- ian grew up as a pastor's daughter, so find- ing a church at school was very important to her. The Sunday church services - which start promptly at 10:01 a.m. and 12:01 p.m. - have grown from just 60 people to 500 regulars; the Life Group atten- dance has gone from 20 to 250 students. According to its website, "More than 40 students receive Christ each year, with another 80 people receiving Christ through NLC mission trips." The seeds of New Life took root not in the older, more conservative population often associated with practicing Christians, but instead among students at the Univer- sity. It is the younger generation's dedica- tion to New Life that enabled it to become a part of the Ann Arbor community and to grow into what has become one of the best- attended churches in the city. A new form of praise New Life differs from traditional churches, a fact that is obvious from the moment a New Life member into the congregation hall - also know as Auditorium 3 of the Modern Language Building. The MLB leads a double life. By week, it's the unremarkable lecture hall that houses hundreds of LSA stu- dents and their professors. By weekend, it's transformed: It's chalk boards are hung with heavy curtains and its lecture stage is taken over by rock-band equip- ment - drum set, electric piano, ampli- fiers - and a single microphone. MLB 3 becomes the meeting place for New Life members to praise God. For 30 minutes - half the service - the audience bobs, sways and in some cases head-bangs to catchy tunes laced with lyrics such as "Jesus, you are the savior of my soul," or "You're the only one I could live for." The audience - which fills the large auditorium and comprises mostly col- lege students and 20-something couples with babies - can in some cases be found during the songs with their arms outstretched above them and their eyes tightly shut. It's as if the music brings them closer to God, just as prayer does in a traditional service. Indeed the songs - whose lyrics are projected onto the same screen as a professor's Power Point presentation - are the only chance the congregation has "to praise Him for everything," said the lead singer, Karen Ostafinski, dressed in a vintage T-shirt and zip-up hoodie. She graduated from the University in 2003. The half-hour of surprisingly well- performed music (tunes that incidental- ly are the type that stick in one's head) is New Life's alternative to depressing organ music and lengthy prayer, which often turns younger Christians off from conventional churches, said Sarah Keyes, a student a Eastern Michigan University who is thinking about join- ing New Life. The upbeat music gets people moving and involved, she said, and it helps them feel closer to God at the same time. Milian said that the music is one of her favorite aspects of New Life, along with the sermons which are surprisi ngly accessible to students. New Life Church does not stray from the strict teachings of the Bible in its sermons. However, the pastors cater their lectures - which are significantly shorter than one would expect, at just under 30 minutes - to the younger generation. In a recent Sunday morn- ing program called "My Favorite Pas- sage," pastor Steve Hayes (who made his way onstage accompanied by a Bon Jovi song blasting over the loudspeaker) attempted to cement his favorite Bible Ong i I IMMINEEMEMEMEME " .. I .. Students Fly Cheaper Sample roundtrip Student Airfares from Detroit to: M New York $143 Mexico City $291 Madison $143 Boston $188 London $411 Florence $527 p~pN FR EE + TICKETS Text "PINT" to 22122 ,"4.i It's your chance to win one of ten pairs do * of roundtrip tickets to London SI* StudentUniverse.com 4B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 27, 2005 The Michigan Da