r .n. . i':.r. nv .. xn . .. r: ...rf. .Iu ,a i .v . 1 .i . .. . . .y r nII.:. S. . '... : III-ii:. 'i i ie Ciln . v 6 i euin , :: : .I U : ..l " x ui .lw..... e.i i :... C -. - -47 . . lie, .. Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Suriday, May 4, 1958 , Faith and Communism Religious Zeal of American Party Indicated by Ex-Leader John Gates Z CI [P 3fN r4igtan D4-at19 _r By MICHAEL KRAFT would work. But 27 years later, RELIGION assumes many forms after becoming a member of the but sometimes its common Communist Party's National Com- characteristics are illustrated most mittee and editor of the Daily sharply by those who most vehe- Worker, Gates apparently lost his mently deny its existence. faith On January 10 of this year, he quit the party. "Now, I'm a Despite the form, faith usually democratic socialist, with a small lies at its core. In numerous ways, 'd' and a small 's'," he says. acceptance of this faith requires However, during the Student the worshipper to look inward and ' ignore what he sees in the outside Government Council forum where world. Gates spoke one student with Yet frequently, it is the sight of socialist attitudes walked out and a world marred by unpleasantries. was heard to mutter "damn reac- perhaps the lack of equality or tionary." understanding between men, which Although Gates can now recog- sometimes makes even the most nine the blind faith which ab- anostic individual turn to some sorbed him for nearly three de- form of religion in the hopes of cades, he showed during his visit changing what he sees. to Ann Arbor that he has retained By 1931, the Great Depression at least part of the idealism which had caused a good many things originally brought him into the people did not care to look at. Communist Party. There was "only a vacuum in Like many conversions, Gates' which nothing seemed to work," 1was prompted by an incident-in John Gates recalled during his his case it was the suspension oT appearance in Ann Arbor in several fellow students at City to a feeling prompted by economic attitudes. AFTER JOINING the party in 1931, Gates, with almost a cru- sader's zeal, tramped through Youngstown, Ohio, to organize steel workers. In March 1933, when Franklin D. Roosevelt was inagur- ated Gates sat in jail, charged with "making a loud noise without a permit" while addressing a demon- stration. Four years later, he fought with the International Bri- gade in another demonstration, this time in the losing fight against Franco and his allies. Any religious faith has its de- tractors and doubtors, but usually they have little effect on those who embrace the doctrine no mat- ter how much evidence or argu- ment is offered.- The same is true of the Ameri- can Communists. The twists and turns of Russian strategy and pro-1 paganda were completely accept-9 able and plausible despite what Americans or others might say. ] Gates points back to Spain as the foundation of his faith which MndAyGAZ4NE Sunday, May 4, 1958 New Pl for W Po Vol. IV, No. 7 rI JOHN GATES-For 27 years he served the American Communist Party and then on Jan. 10, he resigned because it no longer offered an effective channel for "the ideals which give meaning to life." M March._ College, New York, because they planned to publish a magazine de- nouncing compulsory ROTC. Gates calls 'the suspension the "trigger" GATES left college in 1931 to enlist in a cause he thought CHANDIGARH, INDIA: New City from the Ground Up (Continued from Page 3) ing college, University and Mu- seum. In the heart of the town,I is the city center composed of Town Hall, main shopping center, post office, banks and other com- mercial buildings. The city sector plan echoes the neighborhood sector system but' replaces the open space without large pedestrian shopping areas on which are the city hall, post of- fice and the first business prem- ises. The whole city is composed of several cells of garden villages. The most fantastic thing is 40 miles of roads with no buildings facing them. The site as selected has poten- tialities to fulfill all these condi- tions. The panoramic view of the gradually ascending Himalayas,. the. possibilities of having large recreation parks in the Shivalaks, the possibility of hygienic life in the very beautiful climate of Chandigarh "where breeze never dies," contribute to an ideal city. Eight different kinds of trees have been selected according to1 the different colors of flowers, to1 give individuality to each road and1 to provide over-arching shade oni the fast motor roads.+ THE FOUR major buildings which make up the capitola group were designed by Le Cor- busier. The other buildings of the city were -designed by the other three architects - Mr. Fry, Miss Drew and Mr. Jeanret. These con-+ sist of the residentila quarters for the government employees, schools, colleges, hospitals, offices and the city centers. The houses are suited to the Chandigarh climate, which varies from an intensely hot summer; (115* F.) to a cold winter (just{ above freezing point). A great deal of life is passed out-of-doors- sleeping, eating' and sitting are more often done in the compound than in the house during the year., In general the design of the houses varies with its orientation to the city. To keep the peon's' quarters cool, the bricks have been projected and cast shadow on the exterior wall throughout the day.. For other houses, four different methods are used for shading the walls - verandahs, sun - breakers,; jali (screens) grill, or a sunshade roof. The character of each is ex- ploited so that it adds to the ar- chitectural features of the house. The sun-breakers do not touch the SECRETARIATE-The first skyscraper in East Punjab is a nine storyed Secretariate Building for the provincial government. The monotonous grid of such a large cellular building has been broken into sculpture by accenting the rooms of a few high officials and by pulling the ramp tower out as a great silo at the side. remained unbreachable until early this year. In his pamphlet "Evolu- tion of an American Communist," he says, "When someone asks me today, in all sincerity: 'How come it took you so long to learn about Stalin and what went wrong in Russia?' I can answer with equal sincerity that it looked nothing like that in Spain. Stalin had said 'the cause of the Spanish Republic is the cause of all advanced pro- gressive humanity." NOW that he has severed ties with the party, Gates can smoke a cigar and discuss the American Communists' loyalty to Russian party lines. "Communists had such a great admiration for Russia that it amounted to idola- try,' he said. Gates attributed this attitude to a number of sources, including admiration for Russian progress since the Communists took over in 1917. "The Russian Revolution had an enormous effect on Americans of a Socialist outlook. It helped bring the Communist movement into being. Socialists opposed the attempt to strangle the Soviet experiment and rightly so. "But in the legitimate admira- tion for the achievements of Soviet life (to which many non-com- munists are now awakening), the American Communists came to be- lieve that the Russians were the most authoritative, wisest men in the world. That there might be de- fects, crimes, blunders would not be admitted. The Soviet Commu- nists were supposed to know more than anybody else. They could do no wrong. If they did, they were smart enough to correct them- selves. "OURbasic assumption for a. long time was that revolu- tionary change in the rest of the capitalist world would follow the Russian pattern. If it succeeded there, and was well nigh perfect, why not elsewhere? "We defend what we are doing because it was right for them, and was, at the bottom, the only right way for us. We would not grant that any important part of it might be wrong for them, or in- valid for us. "Our natural sympathy for the Russian Revolution became subtly transformed. Anything they did which might conflict with our own better judgement of our own coun- try could only mean that they were right, and we were wrong." The result, said Gates during a press conference here in March, is that "when your ideas conflict with the facts, so much for the facts- truth becomes secondary and ends justify the means." Gates relates a fairly recent meeting of Communist Party na- tional officers. They were debat- ing whether to answer an article in a Soviet. publication which.said things about the 1957 national convention that "all of us knew to be false." SONE OFFICER declared, "We American Communists are in no position to criticize the Soviet Communists. They have just shot Sputnick into the skies. This is a brilliant achievement of Soviet sci- ence. When we are able to record such achievement as this, then maybe we can criticize the Rus- sians. "Until then, we have no right to do so. Even if we are right and they are wrong..." Gates declares "this is where the Communist dillemma lies." It has been disastrous for the American Communist party, which now ex- ists "only as a corpse, in an ad- vanced stage of decomposition." The party has fallen from its 1945 level of 75,000 members to less than 7,000 today. "No one knows the exact figure and this may be on the optimistic side, Gates said. Many left the party "because of the Khrushchev revelations about Stalin. Gates speculated that the biggest effect on party members was "the final, open admission of what Stalin was, making it so clear that no one could any longer' ra- tionalize." BESIDES the discovery that the demi-god was devilish, "others quit because they lost all faith in the leadership and decided the fight to change the party was a hopeless job". For Gates himself, "the day the Daily Worker died was the end. It dramatized for all to see what I had known for some time-that for all practical purposes, the Communist Party of the United States of America had ceased to exist." Now, he seems to grope-"after being so certain, and dogmatic, on most of what I did for a quarter of a century, I am not inclined to make hasty decisions. I want to talk to people-those who know me and those who don't. I want to do some listening, some reflecting, some study. Yet, faith dies slowly. When a member of the SGC forum audi- ence asked him which side he would take if Russia and the Unit- ed States ever went to war, he re- plied, "I am on the side of peace. I would be against Russia, or against the United States, depend- ing on which of them started the war." ALTHOUGH he has made his break from the party, some of the vestiges of the faith still cling to Gates. He says simply, "the con- viction remains that socialism is the next higher step in American democracy:" "As I see it, Socialism provides the framework for preserving that which is most precious in capitalist democracy, and offers us a far greater expansion of democracy than is possible today." John Foster 'Dulles may disa. gree with John Gates on the ap. The cheapest building material and labor available was brick and manual labor. All houses are constructed in brick and cement, and for relief the local stone is used. The most beautiful part is that the skyline is maintained. There are no flats except over shops. The emphasis on open air living makes flats less suitable here than in cooler cli- mates. Chandigarh's architecture re- ceived international recognition in a conference held in France. THE 350 feet long over-hanging concrete slab with 27 feet pro- jection at the top of the Punjab High Court is the real test of the engineering skill of the architects. This symbolizes the supreme court authority of the Courts of Justice. The court rooms, from the smaller courts to the High Court benches, gradually increase in height from 26 feet to 40 feet. Special acous- tical ceilings and rough plaster on the side walls are the main fea- tures of the court roopI s. From outside these buildings, a visitor may be led to believe that the construction is retrograde, but he will have many surprises in the details. The enormous parasol, the curved sun-breakers in the front, the free standing ramps in the building and unusual plasticity are further enhanced by a float- Jing effect given by the vast pool. Pedestrians and vehicular traffic the practical needs of those who will use it. The nine storied Secretariate building stands 836 feet long, 80, feet. deep and 121 feet high (first skyscraper in Punjab) on a pile foundation. The extensive facade of glass protected by an interwoven pattern of sun-breakers and parapets is used. The other visual features of this building are the terrace club (raised on columns) to permit a view of the Government House and the Assembly chamber through the building), the covered passage to the Assembly, and the artificial hills. In fact, the Capitol is an urban composition into which Corbusier has put not only the technical re- sources of this century, but has cast them in mould of a plastic imagination, which now exists as one of the richest and most per- sonal of the age. Jeanerat's brick, stone,.pre-cast concrete slabs, and Corbusier's "modular" dimensions govern all designs. The total cost for this new city is estimated to be about $36,000,- 000 of which part is met by five- year- plan, part by the Punjab government and the rest by the sale of lots to individIuals. Chandigarh is not only an ad- ministrative capital of the Punjab, but also it is an industrial and educational center.r- Chandigarh will afford its in- habitants a very healthy and rich life which few cities can boast of, and it promises to be what man has nfen sught. ut failAd to find A New Capital City-Page 3 I Michael Kraft is the newly- appointed editorial director of the Daily. He has reported po. litical news for the paper and IT ach, but this might only serve point out that political and eco-