Feiffer T av' t l 1 wlu Af0MC W K- OF 0C0 fl9fICu H owIT witS) I i (v eR 5ffI- 60 TP A pliJilef OFI MA RE 66 Hoget5Sf' 'O51p1AT BAUD502 WhJ kt WPT 5Q54f\\.YUREAt A SAE t~sJ& MUtMSAY\Xt A A I O65fIOu12 MIa If T 141 1 rA 101Ff' R)ADRE I J KRHLI$5AK)P iS WW 60cTOSffoui,120 T t) TIS"'a OF Hi; R. A 1200R Ri/fp rA100.ArcT o stag 1x 1CAWHO) -o ) _ CU' TK -24 / -- - /TAOOAO _7 0 Our Art Fair M ILAN HAS its Steam Engine Jubilee. Oscoda County has its Annual Tree Trunk Heave. And Chelsea has its Festival of Tractors '80. But Ann Arbor has its own claim to fame: its Art Fair, which brings art, artists, and suburban tourists to this quaint little town. The Art Fair was once limited to a select number of artists, but now has opened its arms to those who can offer a more options assortment of art. The Art Fair now means volcanic ash and used clothing, velvet bulls and clay pots. Yet the fair is much more than just oil lan- dscapes or turquoise jewelry from Arizona/ New Mexico/ Baja California. It's an amalgam of people: fat, skinny, young, old, short, tall, guys, gals. It's the couple from Toledo, the family from Fort Wayne. It's the unemployed truck mechanic who purchases an original wood etching; the Grosse Pointe debutante who goes home with tie- dyed wall hangings. The Art Fair is "Ann Arbor Summer Art Fair 1980" t-shirts for $7.00 on Main St., $4.95 on E. Liberty, and 3 for $10 on South University. It's out-of-towners buying Perrier at Eden's to drink with their Big Mac. And it's city residents and students disposing of their ethical philosophies in order to pay the rent.' They hawk such niceties as silver balloons, slur- pies, and Nickels Arboretum rock paperweights. It's the political menagerie of acronyms/ab- breviations: NORML, PIRGIM, SYL, YSA, NOW, MARAL, which mix amicably with the Liber- tarians, Marxists, Pro-Lifers and Choicers, Republicans, Democrats, and Scientologists. It is heartening to see that after many years, low- brow tastes have not spoiled the Art Fair; it has remained a pure and exclusive forum for the gifted. 4'dJAERlk , RNN L 9 The 'Black P The democratic charade we- call the American Political By Manning Marable System has reached the point of self-destruction. the 1 The two-party system, whose th 976 Republican platform. In Thetwopary sste, woseterms of economic policy, the standard bearers in this year's Republicans and Democrats are election of 1980 are Jimmy Carterei anndtDer cratin and Ronald Reagan, has ceased agreement." In short, it "doesn't to offer anything approaching make a great deal of difference fundamental alternatives for the eagetda fdfeec American people. The "Anderson whether Ronald Reagan or Jim- factor" amounts to an amalgam my Carter wins the presidential of corporate economics and New tedion in November," recoun- Deal social programs, neither of In effect, no liberal candi- which address theunderlying date with any chance of suc- problems which promote the current social crisis. cess will be on the ballot in WE HAVE ARRIVED at a November. Anderson must be point of rupture within our classified, at best, as a conser- politics-a time when the old vative-turned-moderate. Reagan politics no longer suffices. It represents the implicity racist, represents "a changing of the devoutly pro-business sector of guard," a fundamental period the Republican Party. where the old watchdogs of What about Carter? Greenspan socioeconomic privilege are thinks that Carter's record in the gradually yet firmly beginning to Presidency is so abysmal and yield to newer social forces. that his liberal constituency is so Alan Greenspan, former chair- disenchanted with him that he person of the Council of will attempt to upset Reagan by Economic Advisers under Gerald moving even further to the right. Ford, reviewed the current fiscal "Carter may try to circle around policies of both Democrats and Reagan and grab the ground to Republicans at a New York Reagan's right"-in effect, out- seminar. In his opinion, the two Reaganing Reagan. major parties "are running on The second item worthy of note LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Will registration lead to draft, wa To The Daily: home in a body bag to irrecon- "We urge young men, in the cilablygrieving relatives. Or, the interest of world peace, to hopelessly crippled are sent resist the call to register." home to live out their lives as (Daily, July 22) wards of the American taxpayer Aw, c'mon, in the interest of in the form of veteran's benefits world peace?! What, pray, does and/or welfare, Social Security, registration for "the Draft" or etc. (see "Coming Home" and even all-out conscription have to "The Deerhunter" for details). do with world peace? But, of This is not Spurious Sophistry course, conscription leads direc- 469, Professor Van Hesling tly to war, do not pass go, do not presiding. No (nyet), the collect $200. The possession of a possession of a standing army, or standing army leads to extreme "the Draft," or registration for anxiety among upper-echelon "the Draft," or even possession Soviets, resulting in an all-out at- of a box of irradiated Twinkies in tack upon the war-mongering violation of the SALT II treaty United States. Or a large body of are not precursors to war (i.e., a conscripted troops is sent (grum- threat to world peace). War does bling incessantly) to serve as not result from the aforemen- military advisors to struggling tioned items. Besides, in the revolutionaries valiantly op- event of a real war (as opposed to posing an imminent communist an imaginary one) any argument takeover, where they are prom- over conscription would be ren- ptly killed and maimed and sent dered academic. Whatever will arty? comes from a recent issue of Black Enterprise. In a recent poll of 5,000 subscribers, 36 per cent declared that there was "no sub- stantial difference between the Democratic and Republican par- ties." Another 31.3 per cent favor the creation of a Black Political Party. Almost 40 per cent of respondents under 40 years of age endorse an all-black party. The current social/political crisis has forced thousands of middle class blacks to abandon their political illusions and to ad- vocate an independent strategy toward black empowerment, a strategy which the great majority of blue collar and unemployed black men and women have long endorsed. The central question remains: during this "changing of the guard," whither and how do we begin to construct the black political par- ty, and advance a social contract which transcends the backwar- dness and reaction of the Reagan/Carter status quo? Manning Marable teaches. political economy at Cornell University s Africana Studies Center. He wrote this article for Pacific News Service. really rr? be necessary will be done, sur- vival being the primary con- sideration. You are students at one of the most prestigious universities in the world. It's time to find out blow the world really works, not how you're told it works or how you think it works or how you'd like it to work. Reality, that's the key. Wake up! Use your intellect to piece things together, to find out how things really are. This is not television, the movies, or a gothic horror. This is real life. Please, don't write such inestimable twaddle and pass it on as the considered opinion of "a higher vision." Please have more ethical consideration, especially as such serious consequences can result from the heeding of your advice. -Kevin Christensen July 22 0 0 0 S 6 6 6