Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 3, 1968, edition 1 / Page 3
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ft McCarthy Editor's Note Ernest Yanarella attended me Chicaan .rvr..,: --ft- "MVCIILiOn in eyewitness LIT" XL , ?J? ,v,V?linB ns personal reactions, is a vivid account. This is the first part of a series. By ERNEST YANORELLA Monday, September 26th, "'""til - !' In i " AH, FOOTBALL-While the weather is still warm, and tew leisure hours may be spent playing sandlot football. Castroite Dehray Writes By JOHN SLUDER, IL Regis Debra y 's REVOLUTION DANS LA REVOLUTION? is now available from Pelican Books in soft cover, and it's well worth whatever you have to pay for it. M. Debray is not easily classified, except to say that he is a Castroite with all the contradictions and ambiguities of ; the Cuban Marxists. He wants to write about the Cuban Revolution, and apparently he was given access to much sub rosa information, DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Study, student style 5. Stance 9. Creamery 10. Sheeplike 12. Otherwise 13. Seaboards 14. Stout, for one 15. Brimming 16. Latin connective 17. Bigger 19. Girl's name 21. Smorgas bord treat 23. Moist 24. Part of a barrow 27. Diacritic 29. Dried grass 30. Revolved 32. Once more 34. Tarsi 38. Behold 39. Wading bird 41. Harem . room 42. Leveled 44. Invent, as a new word 45. Suit material 46. Charley's famous relative and others 47. M.D.'s . order 48. Voters for. the 18th Amendment DOWN 1. Kind of lily 2. Stairway part 3. Auxiliary verb 4. Possessive prondun 5. Table game 6. Face shapes 7. Little girl 8. Came in 9. Transaction 11. Property 13. Ringlet 15. Touches 18. Command to a horse 20. Leather worker's . tool 22. Dazes 24. Grampus and others r l LETS 5EE NOW-. r iM A TRUE Oft FALSETE5T,7HERfST QUESTION r5ALMUt? I proved to be a rather uneventful day. True, the mood of the Pennsylvania ? ?"n,ent l"at the i i i lit) i s noiorroritf-hw remaining uncommitted for several days more. Moreover, we were heartened by several new polls released over the weekend which indicated our candidate's greater popular appeal in comparison with - a rr ci 1. I 1 1 4 v. r and he wants to bring to the notice of other Marxists the varieties of guerrilla revolutionary tactics, that the Cuban, the Chinese, and the Vietnamese Revolutions have basically different origins and philosophies. He is an anti-Trotskyist, whose ideology (he implies) is concerned only with the paraphernalia of class-consciousness and revolution-by-class Debray is best described as a man who is concerned with the act of revolution and how it determines the success of the revolution, how it determines revolutionary politics. 25. Ruling family of England (1714- 1901) 26. Hurri cane center 28. The black or the red 31. Remunerated 33. First picture to win Academy Award 35. Crazy Yesterday'! Answer 36. Revises 37. Poetic preposition 40. Root vegetable 43. Before 44. Mongrel 46. Classified item MAR I OMH IVES URGE lARN I C A 1 o Zt a&ed 3r F. NNQ B EC SUN M A lN S T RIE T S A" N Nlf" TV O NL K I NC P 0 sItjE IWiSl E M StD I N eHl op RAVE NlSLJL t MA S L I N KHA I DESj 3S A YisUAlDlElsrj : Ii - i ia W,r 2 is it vy 5i M r"i::::i::: 71 777 ' I THAT MEANS THE NEXT ONE WILL RP PAl 45P TO SORT OF BALANCE THE TRUE ONE. .THE NEXT ONE WILL ALSO BE FALSE 10 cKtPJk mt mi ickn., Worker Caught In Chicago Humphrey's. But, aside from the excitement of putting out our first issue of "The Pennsylvania" the only thing which remains etched in my mind of that day's happenings was hearing Miss Aretha Franklin begin the first evening's proceedings by singing the "National Anthem" in soul-rock. Wednesday morning, September 28th: The second issue of the news bulletin out, I K V. before studies pile up, a The author of REVOLUTION IN THE REVOLUTION? is, if there can be such a thing, a charismatic writer. Each sentence is compact, full of information, and each phrase is a slogan. A DTH Review Unlike soldier-writers on revolutionary tactics of the Mao and General Giap variety, Debray is neither dull nor bloated with dogma. He is ultimately quotable. His premises are that each revolution is of a kind to itself, but that once the conditions are learned (preferably from military experience in the field) and once the military leader has decided on a course of revolutionary action, the revolution ought not to be bogged down by political squabbles over "lines". As Debray puts it, "In a given historic situation there may be one necessary concordance among all those who have resolved to make it." As to the first premise, which is the book's most theoretical section, Debray argues that the four great revolutions of the century, the Russian, the Chinese, the Cuban and the Vietnamese, had different bases, or focos, a Spanish word Debray uses to refer to the centers of guerrilla operations, and different ideologies ENGLISH RIDING LESSONS Hunt Seat Equitation 3 Miles from Chapel Hill Transportation Provided for Students from Campus SHEFFIELD FARMS Telephone 942-2079 them Another true and them TWO MORE FALSE OWES AND THEN THREE TRUES IM A R0U..HEV ALUAtS have three tkues in a SOME PLACE ...THEN ANOTHER FALSE AMP ANOTHER TRUE... 1 DRINKS ALL ROUND? I TntKt S ONLY YOU AN ME IN 'ERE- In Erivitness Account had breakfast at 6:30 A.M. and then walked down to the Conrad Hilton to submit another article to the national McCarthy press outfit. The street bordering the front of the Hilton, to my amazement was ringed with National Guardsmen. "Inside the hotel, 'patrolling the lobby were more troops dressed in full battle regalia, including rifles slung over their shoulders. They ocial Program Gets Boost The established pattern of five elected officials operating the residence college program was broken this week by Scott Residence College. Nick Didow, Social Lieutenant Governor, and Susan Peck, Social Chairman of Parker House, last Wednesday gathered together interested residents in the Scott College Social Room. Some 30 persons from Parker, Teague and Avery Houses joined in forming the Scott College Social Committee. The members of the . committee, mostly freshmen and sophomores, then divided themselves into sub-committees for the fall social functions of . Scott Residence College. "It is evident," commented Of 'Revolution developed revolution. towards the The Soviet revolution was an inside affair, the Chinese, a peasant based revolt which had from the beginning several divisions of regular army in its command. The Cuban revolution, Debray says, was built from the apex down, the small focos first, regular militia developed, whereas the revolution in Vietnam was a pyramid constructed from the base up, with areas of local" self-defense" and "safe-areas" developing. What Debray does not make clear is why some revolutions succeed, and why some do not. Why were the Cubans able to defeat the National Army when their forces reached the figure of 1 to each 500 nationalist soldiers, or why is the revolution in Bolivia and Venezuela failing? Other historical facts, other theories can predict that conditions are or are not ripe for social change. It is not necessarily the actions of Trotskyites or Anarcho-Syndicalists that doom a revolution; as often it is the political and social milieu. Debray's insistence in REVOLUTION IN THE REVOLUTION? that the act of revolt itself is the sine qua non, that politics is determined by the revolutionary-military act, is all too reminiscent, despite the neo-Marxist mumbo-jumbo that the acting creates its own dialectic, of fascism, with its dogma that Violence is the sine qua non of ideology. The Marxist historian can criticize Debray for acting IF. VOU'SE SMART, WU CAN PASS A TRUE OR FALSE TEST WITHOUT BEINS SMART J - ' r TELLMESOMETHiN I DON'T KNOW, CKAUOEfl r i Tr" Intermnty- a hotel P.HF r a "niformed policeman traversed the lobby And, straddling the to the lobb-wasamiddle-aaed copies of the morning's Christian . Science Monitor." trom her, I learned that, around midnight the night before, the first big bust took place at Lincoln Park. In Didow, "that the success of our social functions will be due to the enthusiasm that has already been shown. Not only through the residents' eagerness to get involved but also through their response to the social activities that have already taken place." Thus far the residence college, which has 638 members, has sponsored four functions. The average attendance for each of the activities has numbered about 240 residents and dates. Rick Taylor and George Perkinson were chairmen for a beer party which was held Sept. 20. Attendance for the function was 50. Scott, which is the first residence college with men and without proper theoretical base, but this is exactly Debray's a priori thesis. Debray simply ignores the fact that some revolutions are unattainable with the methods he attributes to the tactics of revolution, wherever they have been practiced. He has written a good and enlightening, a refreshingly straight-forward book on dead revolutions, but .has neglected to tell us that it is just that; with all its v exhilarating slogans, it offers n o solutions for 4 he future-which is the present " - ' 1 - - Don't Miss The Old Book Week Bargains at the Intimate Luxurious arolma "ULTRA-VISION" More Vivid Color Constant Light Flow More Depth No Distortion Startling Realism NOW PLAYING "A DELICATE MASTERPIECE... IT OFFERS BEAUTY, SENSUALITY, AND PERFECT TASTEf - GM r . Jul nch ro'lf MlCHELE MORGAN MICHEL PICC0U PIERRE CLEMENTI CATHERINE DENEUVE "Benjamin" THE Diary of an Innocent Young Boy f f J keeping with the Mayor's ordinance to clear the park by eleven, and in opposition to the protesters' contention that 'the parks belong to the people," the cops routed the -''violators" using freely-swinging nightsticks and cannisters of tear gas. Fearing some form of retaliation by the demonstrators, the Mayor called in the National Guard to seal, off and to protect the Hilton. women in adjoining dorms, sponsored a combo party Sept. 21. Over three hundred residents and their dates attended the event which was arranged by Tony Wheeler, Bracy Bobbitt, Penn Dameron, Ed Darrow, Anna Burgess and James Hines. "There is so much interest that the YMCA is letting us have a reception Oct. 14 from 4-6 p.m. for Julian Bond," added Didow. "A week ago the cheerleaders held the pep rally in Scott College." Other upcoming events and their chairmen include a Christmas dance being planned by Susan Stagg Pat Birchfield, Jimmy Delbridge, Sam Dark and Anna Burgess; a jukebox party being planned by Kirk Rucher, Susan Stagg, Pat Birchfield, Sam Dark, John Lindsay and James Hines; and a picnic-flick being planned by Jack Dillard and Ken Tilley. Members of the special affairs committee include Sandra Stallings, Ben Reid, Jim Powell, Allen Gordon, Richard Sowers and Van Kennedy. rxn log I if - - mez: ll This lean, lithe Honda 125 Super Sport can be the answer to a lot of problems besides parking. Consider price. You can buy this beauty at an impressively low initial price; fuel it for a fraction of what you'd spend on a four-vheel gas gulper. And, of course, there are the pleasantly painless costs of main taining and insuring a Honda. The 125 Super Sport couples lightweight economy with red hot per formance features. Its dependable four-stroke parallel twin engine pro duces a dazzling 13 bhp; acceleration that matches the best of them. And styling. The 125 Super Sport is nothing but class from its stream lined pipes to its sculptured tank to its rugged telescopic front forks. The sleek and sassy 125 Super Sport. Is there a better way to solve your problems? See your Hcnda de3'.er for or write: American Honda Violence The desire for sleep had nearly overcome me by this time; so, I retraced my steps back to the Sherman House and, arriving there, went to my room for what was to be a troubled, restless slumber. Four hours later, I rolled out of bed and flicked on the tube to watch the vote on the Vietnam plank. Us defeat did not even cause me to wince, after the votes were totalled. Not wishing to remain in my room to view the nomination of Hubert COREY ENTERPRISES PRESENTS THE HOTTEST C0LLEGIANT ATTRACTION IN THE WORLD IN THEIR ONLY APPEARANCE IN THIS AREA THIS YEAR. T SUN. OCT. 6 TWO SHOWS 7:00 and 9:15 in concert in person RALEIGH MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM Motown's Greatest H E T E P T 1 N G PTAT My Girl, Don't Look Back, You're My Everything, I Wish It Would Rain, I'm Losing You, Get Ready, Please Return Your Love To Me. THE MARVELETTES Here I Am Baby, When You're Young And In Love, My Baby Must Be A Magician, Don't Mess With Bill. TICKET PRICES: $5, $4, and $3. ALL SEATS RESFRVFn TICKET OUTLETS: THEIMS RECORD SHOP IN RALEIGH RECORD BAR IN RALEIGH, DURHAM AND CHAPEL HILL t Wi : nth Sh y,if Vi a color brochure, safety pamphlet Motor Co., Inc., Dept. 13. Box 50. Humphrey, t dressed, had a bit to eat, and made my way to the McCarthy hospitality room at the Conrad Hilton. Better, I thought, to huddle close with compatriots in a time of crisis than brave it alone in one's solitude, at least for a while. Few people in the room, watching the progress of the nomination proceedings, spoke more than a word or two to friends, partners or co-w orkers, except to hurl a barb at, or make a quip about, one of the villains as his face or profile illumined the T.V. screen. (Continued on page 7) r ."""--t.-v """" ' """""" I- ; ?- I j - lit IONS and "Invisible Circle" film; Cardena. California 90247. Shows 1-3-5-7-8:40
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 3, 1968, edition 1
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