Sevent y-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICY'n AN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Vhere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Truth Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 3 - AT-LARGE Voices of Two Civilizations Ly NEIL SHISTER i ' EIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1967' NIGHT EDITOR: NEAL BRUSS The 8-Month Lease: It's Now or Never 1' THE NEWLY INSTITUTED eight-month lease at University Towers is probably the most significant development in the Ann Arbor apartment market since the building boom began about five years ago. The lease change has filled University Towers, which last year faced a large vacancy rate. More important, it has caused some serious thinking on the part of students and ladlords alike about the desirability of the.12-month lease. The time for passive thinking is over. Tlhe University's Off-Campus Housing Bureau has reported that only a few landlords have shown a definite inter- est in switching to the new lease. And certainly no more will change until it becomes obvious' that a switch is an ab- solute economic necessity.- This is a role that can and should be played by Student Housing Association and Student Rental Union with the firm backing of Student Government Council and the general student body. INN ARBOR LANDLORDS find them- selves in a -unique situation this year. The construction of Bursley Hall and the Baits complex have siphoned off about 1800 students into the University residence hall system, some of whom might be living in apartments. Furthermore, though the building boom in apartment units is about over, its leg- acy remains. The enrollment increase has remained steady but the rate of apart- ment construction has skyrocketed. The net effect this year has been vacancies in nearly every apartment complex: Charter Realty's new Albert Terrace, par- tially due to construction delays, faced nearly a 50 per cent vacancy rate. Though the figures on the average are much lower, somewhere between five and 10 per cent, the story is typical of all landlords. Thus, for the first time in anyone's memory, Ann Arbor actually has an over- supply of apartment units. The signifi- cance of this to implementation of ef- fective sanctions against the landlords Though many justifications for the 12- month lease have been offered by real- tors, ranging from "economic necessity" to the trimester, none seem quite suffi- cient. SHA has examined the rental rates and lease situation on campuses of near- ly 10 Midwestern universities and the University of California at Berkeley. The study revealed that Ann Arbor rent was significantly higher than any other sim- ilar college town, and this computation was made before the adjustment for the 12-month lease which further soaks the student. The study also showed that without' exception the standard lease for students on all these campuses was either eight or ;nine months, dependiig upon what term system was used. Even those on the tri- mester-Western Michigan, for example -operated' on an eight-month lease. THE TIME for vigorous action is now. With the falling construction rate and the increased enrollment, the oversup- ply may be wiped out within two or three years. By then it will be too late to promote any change. The Ann Arbor apartment market is finally a buyer's market. Student con- sumer power must be used to boycott certain landlords, as SHA has made ten- tative plans to do, A boycott of one or more select landlords, offering to fill the building in return for an eight-month lease, could thus be extremely effective. Students should realize that with the current oversupply, they will not be shut out of an apartment next year. They should wait to sign any lease until near the end of next semester. The good that might result from concerted action with SHA and SRU-keeping Ann Arbor apart- ment buildings as empty as possible for as long a time as possible-would be worth the effort and the wait. The Ann Arbor landlord this year is vulnerable. Next year he may not be. The time to institute the general eight- month lease is now. THEY CAN'T possibly be talking about the same things, and it is becoming increasingly evident that they aren't. Their vision of the world is too profoundly different, and the Diag speakers of Wednesday midnight cannot help but be pitted absolutely against the Wash- ington of Dean Acheson. The problem for the still uncommitted, however, should be clearer now than it was before the week be- gan. The University has been alive this week with what a university worth its salt is supposed to be alive with, and out of the discussions and debate has come a sharp picture of the 'constructive dilemma.' This dilemma is no longer one of trying to reconcile the two visions, for there appears no basis for reconcilia- tion }other than vague, hollow rhetoric. It is one of choice. The difference between the Dean Acheson and John Gerassi schools of thought is belief in the possibility of an Apocalypse. Gerassi is a believer, Acheson isn't. And the uncommitted, the 'good liberals' of sincere intentions, are hung-up in the middle wanting to share the faith in a new order of men and yet secretly fear- ing it. THIS IS NOT to imply that Acheson is a hopeless reactionary. On the contrary, the one-time secretary to Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis is an extremely warm and gracious man whose credentials as an advo- cate of genuine liberalism (the word is less disreputable than some maintain) in the historic Western tradition are quite good. But it is hard to picture the former Secretary of State standing on a flood-lit Diag imploring the people around him to 'start turning on for the principles that are within you, break-down the IBM machines and forget about moderate pragmatism" as did Gerassi. Forgetting about moderate pragmatism means re- jecting the Western brand of liberalism practiced by Acheson and contemporary Washington as something not only out-dated but also horribly perverted. For it emanates from an industrial capitalistic context, the essence of which is harsh competition and human ex- ploitation. HOW FAR WE have all come since the first teach-in two-and-a-half years ago, when the Vietnam war didn't yet seem real and the country was basking in the con- tentment of having rejected Goldwater. Then Vietnam was looked on as something, isolated, its legitimacy and conduct debated in terms of efficacy, common sense and human compassion. The war was approached as a single piece of policy-assailed or de- fended in its own right. But now, with the rise of the Negro rebellion in the United States and the inability to do anything in Viet- nam but wage war more intensely, the nature of dissent has changed dramatically. The war is now viewed as part of a larger pattern, as a natural expression of the Western practice of suppression and racism in the guise of the "white man's burden." ALL OF WHICH is a position that Acheson, who was the first to mention Dean Rusk to Kennedy, could never tolerate. For his west is the west of enlightenment supported by economic well-being, the general theme implicit in the formal speeches he has made here. He is the antithesis of the apocalyptic man, saying that events take years and decades to work themselves out and that by-and-large things aren't so bad now. Still quite concerned with Europe, he said in an in- terview yesterday that it is being neglected in policy considerations because of the bresent preoccupation with Asia. "France will serve notice within 18 months of its intention to withdraw from NATO," he said, "and when this happens we had better be doing a lot of thinking." Unlike many others, Acheson feels that Russia may again make its presence felt intensely in Western Europe, perhaps by rechallenging Berlin. IN THE RACIAL program, though, there is virtually no thought at all any more about Europe, The concern is with the Third World and revolution, imperialism and its overthrow. There were many who felt Acheson had nothing to say that wasn't 15 years old and a re- statement of America's 'superman' mission. While there were others who gave him 'a standing ovation Monday night at Hill Auditorium. Therein is reflected the division of the two views. You can stand up for Acheson or you can believe in Staughton Lynd when he says "RESIST." But the time, when, it could be had both ways is rapidly drawing to a close, and the 'voice' of today's civilization may not be too relevant tomorrow., N' A I 4 ON BOOKS: An American Nightmare not bo u nderestir ated. -GREG ZIEREN Sororities and Grade-Points IFTEEN SORORITY presidents struck a blow against their own system last eek when they voted against raising the Zitiation grade-point requirement from .0 to 2.2. While Panhellenic Executive Council's esolution to raise the standards was a eeessary step toward validating the reek system's self-proclaimed empha- s on academics, the council's six votes lus those of eight progressive house residents 'were not enough to stifle the arful "no's" of the 15 other presidents, ho presumably anticipated losing pledg- s. if the average were raised. Are the houses so afraid of missing ieir quota that they are willing to sub- ert high academic standards to accom- odate girls who can't muster a 2.2? ast year's pledges had an overall aver-' ge of 2.67. The all-sorority average was 88 while only -one chapter had an aver- ge below 2.2-and this house voted in avor of raising the requirement! Inter-Fraternity Council has already uled that fraternity pledges must have The Daily is a member of the Associatfd Press and :>legiate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by rrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school ar ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school ear Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular zmmer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 0 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Editorial Staff ROGER RAPOPORT, Editor MEREDITH EIKER, Managing Editor MICHAEL HEFFER ROBERT KLIVANS City Editor Editorial Director JSAN. ELAN.........Associate Managing Editor TEPHEN FIRSHEIN.... ,Associate Managing Editor AURENCE MEDOW...... Associate Managing Editor )HN LOTTI.ER....... Associate Editorial Director ONALD KLEMVPNER .... Associate Editorial Director USAN SCHNEPP ...............Personnel Directoi EIL SEITER.............. Magazine Editor AROLE KAPLAN...... Associate Magazine Editor at least 2.2 to be initiated. The require- ment was raised this year even though the all-fraternity average last year was .2 lower than the all-sorority average. And yet sorority pledge programs in- form the pledges that their primary con- cern is scholarship. Chapters should thus expect not minimal, but maximal per- formances from their pledges. They should not encourage "slipping by," which, in effect, is what they are doing when they set 2.0 as the "academic chal- lenge" to these freshmen. One president who opposed establish- ing the higher grade-point minimum ex- plained, "The University only requires a 2.0. It isn't fair for us to require more than the University does. We've taken a month away from their studies already with rush." The pledges do have three months to, catch up on the work they missed dur- ing rush, and a well-oriented pledge pro- gram should give them the motivation to do more than the minimum. Another president argued that "It's not the sorority's position to provide this kind of- incentive factor. Grade point is such an external thing, when it should be an individual thing. Incentive can be pro- vided in other way§." - But if a sorority doesn't have the back- bone to push scholarship, what does it push? Or perhaps the president meant: grades aren't a true indication, and there- fore should not be stressed. Grades cer- tainly don't spell IQ's,r but they tell much about the individual's orientation into the university, her assumption of, responsi- bility and her self-respect. Another protest from a house - presi- dent echoed the cry, "But this is a hard school! The competition is higher!" Exactly. This is a competitive institu- tion, which merely points up the fact that nobody here is mediocre. And medi- ocre work is not the norm and should certainly not be the norm in a sorority house, where it is essential that an active have at least a little lee-way for an aca- demic slump. Because living in a house By RONALD ROSENBLATT Daily Guest Writer WHY ARE WE IN VIET- NAM? by Norman Mailer, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1967, $4.95.' NORMAN MAILER, I would contend, is the most interest- ing and important author at work in America today, not because he is polished, or tasteful, or pleas- ant, for he is none of these things, and in spite of the fact that his latest novels are crude, offensive, and clumsy. Mailer is important because he is real, be- cause he has the almost fantastic courage to confront and to in- corporate into his korks the hot, bleeding reality of today, of right now, in a way that transcends the merely fashionable or topical. If Ernest Hemingway and Scott Fitzgerald between them created the most recent installment of the American Myth, Mailer is our best and truest interpreter of it, and his sensitivity to what he feels are the deep throbbing undercurrents of the American reality is magnificent. And Mailer is important to the whole world, because America's nightmares keep the rest of the world awake at night, and Mailer seems to know' better than any- one else what the true horror of those nightmares of our collective American unconscious is. MAILER'S LAST novel before the one reviewed here, "An American Dream," was vulgar, ugly, horrifying, absurd. It was also fascinating, and in some un- definable way, impossible to ig- nore. Mailer is a man obsessed quite unashamedly with Power; he is a new' Machiavelli, a theo- retician of the Inside Scene, the Wheels Within Wheels. He is utterly serious about his obsessions, often to the point of absurdity. Yet, even as we snicker at Mailer's apparent mania about the Mafia, the CIA, the Negro hipsters, and the rich white WASPS, whe secretly suspect that maybe he has got a point to make, after all. Mailer is a student who has taken all America as his province, and no contemporary writer has a better feeling for what America is, for the sheer, raw vulgar beauty and horror of the place. Mailer, though much dominated by the memory of Hemingway, has been truer to America than was Hemingway, who devoted most of his life and writing to just about anyplace on earth but the United States. Mailer has not taken the expatriate's way, and has gone no further afield in his writing than Mexico (which is inextricably 1i n k e d up with America's fantasies and fears, anyway). MAILER IS a fantasy figure himself, self-created, to be sure. He is the man equally at home in the pages of Commentary and the pages of Playboy, the curly- headed wonder-boy who mixes with New York socialites, prize- fighters, and intellectuals, who pals with James Baldwin and gets invited to Hugh Hefner's fan- tasy-mansion. He is an incorrigible social- climber and name-dropper, but with him, it all seems to have a magic significance. He says the name "Kennedy" and we are sud- denly staring into unfathomable abysses of glamour, intrigue, sex- ual excitement, and who knows what else. Mailer thrives on vulgarity, but he never ceases to remind us he is a Harvard man. He is a Jew and an intellectual, and so out- side the mainstream of American life, which he attacks, penetrates, and investigates with monumental gusto and pleasure. His heroes are essentially people nothing like himself but to whom he is irre- sistibly drawn: CIA agents, gang- sters, and millionaires, and in the case of his latest novel, "Why Are We in Vietnam," gun-crazy Tex- ans. These are the people who make up Mailer's America, and somehow they form a fabric of reality. TEXAS IS perhaps, especially abroad, the union's most famous state. We do not smoke Marlboro cigarettes, wear tan Levis and boots, and spend millions of dol- lars annually on guns and am- munition for nothing. Texas is the archetype of the American myth: it is at once the dark night of the soul of America and its most treasured fantasy. Every American male secretly longs to be a mythical Texan, just as every American knows that President Kennedy could have been killed nowhere but where he was, not perhaps in the geographical Texas that lies be- tween Oklahoma and Mexico, but in the mental Texas of violence that lies in the American soul. And every American secretly longs for the image of masculinity symbolizes by the "Marlboro man": in a society that psycho- logically castrates and effemin- izes men, who doesn't yearn to ride away into the sunset and never come back? MAILER'S NOVEL is about this Texas of the American uncon- scious. The story is mainly con- cerned with a group of wealthy Dallas businessmen and two boys on a hunting trip in Alaska. Through the medium of this tale, Mailer presents his thesis, im- plied by .the title: that America is a violent nation, haunted by its own mad dreams of the past, which, coming into conflict with the realities of the present, are making the country sick. The story is narrated by a character called "D.J." He is the spoiled, wealthy son of a Dallas tycoon. Not long after the story unfolds, we become aware that Mailer has avoided the traps in- herent in his undertaking. "D.J." is no drawling stereotype: he talks like a hippy and thinks nostalgi- cally of MacDougal Street. In him the 'old Texas and the new America meet; he will slaughter animals from a helicopter as his father does, but he is at the same time aware that what he is doing is senseless, insane violence. At the same time, he knows he enjoys it. "D.J." is a cynical youth, and the narration of the symbolic hunting expedition, is interspersed with his long soliloquies, com- menting sarcastically on h i s mother's psychiatrist or the gen- eral state of Dallas high-society and its remarkable competitive- ness, expressed in the primitive terms which belie the origins of the socialites before someone found oil behind the corral: kill- ing a bear on the hunting trip will enhance his father's status in the corporation he controls. Indeed, it is made only too clear that the chief motivation for the hunting trip is the need to build up prestige back home. The implication is that people with primitive backgrounds may now be acting out their frontier life- style on the international scene. MAILER'S BOOK functions re- markably well on two levels. On the first level, it is a reasonably realistic description of an Alas- kan hunting trip in 1967 style, with a good deal' of interest in the interplay between "D.J." and both his father and "D;J.'s" part- Indian friend, Tex, to whom he is bound by strange, compulsive ties. On the second level, it is a symbolic allegory of 'the Ameri- can experience in Vietnam. Hence seem. If helicopters and Coca Cola bottles have gotten to the grizzly bears' sanity, Mailer seems to ask, what hope for the people? MAILER 'DELIBERATELY im- itates the prose style of, hunting and fishing mazines. No\ one has a gun or binoculars; they have instead a "Model 70 Winchester .375 Magnum restocked (with maple Japanese Shigui finish) . with a Unertl 21'X scope" or a "Weaver K-4 scope."k What he is doing, of course, is satirizing the American's fond- ness for shiny gadgets and dan- gerous toys, and the implication is that the fascination with weap- ons and engines of destruction may lead to a desire to see how they work, on people, with disas- trous results. He prefaces one of his chapters with the statement, 'Well, now here, let's give a run- down on the guns for those good Americans who care." The young narrator's father, Rusty, is a highly symbolic char- acter. A braggart and coward, he takes credit for having killed a charging bear that in reality he Tex run away from the rest of the party and escape to the mountains. They are nauseated by the competitive spirit and lack of sportsmanship of the hunters and throw away their guns. In the mountains, they watch ani- mals who are as yet not driven mad by the encroaching tech- nology and have a psychedelic experience observing the North- ern Lights. But there is no real conversion: they are too deeply immersed in American life for any real escape, and later on, they appear at a dinner party In Dallas, seducing married wolpen and, it is hinted, carrying on some sort ,of black magic rites with corpses. This last seems strange enough, but Mailer is constantly implying that at the root of Anierica's behavior at home and abroad is a great deal of madness and deviltry. IT SHOULD BE noted that one peculiar characteristic of Mailer's writing is his ability to describe ,very attractively people or be- havior which he osiensibly Is condemning. One.senses a certain ambivalence in Mailer's fascina- tion with the black arts of power and secrecy. He cannot help making the sinister Barney Oswald Kelly in "An American Dream" a very charismatic and almost appealing figure. (After all, the prospect of great wealth and secret power has a certain attractiveness. And we should remember that for Mailer, real power is always sec- ret power. He seems to feel that what we read in Time magazine may, after all, not be really true), Likewise, while the hunters are not exactly seen in a heroic light, Mailer manages to make the hunting scenes exciting and co- lorful. Probably, never before has the existentialist-Texas-hippy as big-game hunter ever appeared in literature, and Mailer does make it seem all very interesting. THE BURDEN of Mailer's novel is clear enough. He obviously be- lieves that certain traits of American culture, such as the fondness for weapons and ma- chines, the tendency to settle dis- putes violently ('D.J.'s father tells him that a "good man with a good rifle" need never fear), and a certain unrealistic clinging to a myth of a romanticized past when every man packed a pistol and shot it out With the bad guys, may have led America into ser- ious trouble, when these traits come into conflict with the com- plexities of the modern world rep- resented by "D.J. It is significant that the story takes place in Alaska, one of the newest states, and really the last wild frontier-the only place left in America where the grizzly bear and the helicopter, the archaic and the technologic, can come into such violent confrontation. The savage grizzly is a symbol of the violence within the hunt- ers, that they externalize and pursue, and in the end, both men and grizzlies behave madly. MAILER'S NOVEL is an im- portant statement about the sick and troubled America he hunts and studies as relentlessly as the Texans seek their grizzly. I a A the title, although the word "Vietnam" is mentioned only once in the book-at the very end -when "D.J." contemplates with great pleasure the prospect of go- ing to fight in Vietnam. THE PARALLEL between the hunting trip and the war in Southeast Asia is primarily em- phasized by the use of the heli- copter, which is a symbol of mad- ness for Mailer. The Indian hunting guide Big Ollie describes what has happened to the wild animals in Alaska, now that it has become a state: "Brooks Range no wilderness now. Air- plane go over the head, animal no wild no more, now crazy." Even the animals in America have been driven mad by a tech- nology out of control, it would was rescued from by his son. He must, of course, be constantly proving himself better than those around him, and drags his son off on dangerous adventures to prove his own manhood, no mat- ter how foolhardy. The key statement of the novel comes when Rusty has forced his son to go with him in pursuit of a dangerous wounded grizzly. Both are terrified, but neither dare admit it. "D.J." comments, "that Texas will carries Texas cowards to places they never, dreamed of being." The implica- tion, of course, is that Texas will is at the moment carrying a great many people to a place they never dreamed of being. AT THE CONCLUSION of the novel, the narrator and his friend ....... ...................... .................. ........ ........................ .,........ «.......,........,.,... . ."..,..........,..., ...... ,..........,............ .,....... ......,....,.,......,..:..::::::: .................. <""t.}': wh ... ........r..........r......,.... r ....... . .................. s.......r. r....r.. 1 .. ... s. . .. hJ. .......t..........t" .. ... ...........th... ...5...............,..... ....t....... ........ .A....,. J....... ......................,............................ h.h........... ........'. ....h.......... ....................y.t...:.y..... ..,.......:'. ::.';A .M1 . J" y y .. h ..........................}.... .rY............., .,......... .... .. .... .. ... ...................................................,...........................,............,..r...m,.,......,........,...,............,..........,.nt ..Y.. .......rB jL.... LL.. HN;:;h.r 4 .................................t....hh.t..........ti"..,....:..L.. rrdd.........b....L....h.......4.....h............. ........................ . i" : '. ::;.".... jh Letters,* Vietnam, pan the Christian Couscienee s To the Editor: 13 American chaplains whom he to is this: the principle effect of she should be doing just the op- tion-be they Christians or not-