~~t £f~41 3n~at Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan the unreformed source Notes on a southern journey: Part II by jim nenbacher 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ The Huber Report: Much ado about nothing THE REPORT of the Special State Sen- ate Committee on Campus Disorder is no cause for unbounded joy. The re- port - really no more than a handbook for administrators on how to undercut student unrest - solves no problems and supplies very few answers. The report was prepared by a second- rate academic consulting firm, Higher Education Executive Associates, and it does have one virtue. It did moderate the views of the arch-conservative state sen- wator from Troy, Robert Huber, a man whose first faith was in the existence of a conspiracy of outside agitators as the root cause of all the problems of Mich- igan's campuses. UNFORTUNATELY, that it convinced Huber is more a measure of the sena- tor's own dull intelligence than the re- port's strength, for in fact the report is a shoddy, sloppy academic fraud. It is a bad attempt to sell the State Senate and the public a small amount of decent reporting in lieu of $50,000 worth of aca- demic study. "RUT UNCONVINCING Huber is only half the problem. That the report is so bad is unbear- able. It is an unseemly combination of half-nonsense charts, silly conclusions that only loosely derive from the charts' data and recommendations that weret more the work of the researchers' imagi- nation than any careful thought. One illustration should suffice to show how untenable the entire report is. Part One of the report, the major part, has three sections--analysis of questionaire data, analysis of on-campus interviews, and recommendations to the Legislature and the academic community. The second section, the on-campus in- terviews, describes at great length the underlying causes of student unrest- black student complaints, dorm regula- tions, bad food, bad teaching and all the other usual campus issues - and says these are the real causes of student pro- test, even if students don't protest about them. And yet the first section of the report had gone to great lengths to pinpoint the top ten student protest issues, seven of which were on-campus issues. But after so ascertaining, the researchers plunge into the second section and call them all "underlying issues." IS THIS type of logical confusion that pervades the entire report. It is man- ifest every step of the way, from the confused use of "sociological" data to the generally-innocuous - recommendations, which one University researcher accur- ately pegged "accepted academic f o 1 k- lore." What is most troubling is not the fact that the state paid $50,000 for such un- mitigated nonsense, although that f a c t certainly isn't a source of uncontrolled pleasure. What is so contemptible is the attempt to fool the public and the press with what appears to be "social science." The people who parpared the report said they wanted to balance social science and informal reporting, which is a plausible goal. But the balance they struck is dub- ious. A "balance" should convince the social scientist that a solid, academic base rests under the report while being readable to the non-expert public. But every expert who has read the re- port or been checked with for specifics has concluded that the report is a sham --"ghastly," "atrocious," "shoddy," "slop- py" are the words they've used. W h e n they haven't been so critical, it's been because of the mild, liberal tone rather than the strength of the report. ON THE OTHER HAND, the reaction of the press, the agent of the public in this case, has generally been one of re- spectful silence on the competence of the report. One Detroit paper called ti "well-documented", and other state pap- ers were quietly, uncritically respectful. This was due, it seems, to the "social scientific" nature of the report, which the amateurs chose not to challenge. The "balance," then, accomplishes just the reverse of what is should. Rather than please both expert and non-expert, it does the opposite, leaving the expert uncon- vinced and the non-expert confused. That there hasn't been more complaint is im- possible to explain. A few people have commented that this report, in its mildness, deserves to be left alone because of the beneficial effect it may have on the University. Perhaps, but to do so would involve allowing some small-time academic frauds to get away with deceiving the public and the gov- ernment, a most unpleasant prospect. WE PROBLEM BECOMES, for those who might agree with the report but are wary of its methods, whether to em- brace the weak defenses it gives the state's universities and colleges. To accept such a report as this implicitly cuts one off from more credible later research on the same topic., It is a risky game to play. -RON LANDSMAN Managing Editor, 1969-70 Second of Two Parts AFTER SPENDING three days at Tuske- gee, I hitchhiked to Atlanta with the lovely young woman I had gone down to see. With her along, the rides were easier to get. From just outside Tuskegee all the way to downtown Atlanta, we rode in the front of a Chevy Pickup with a 30-year-old man going in for a weekend in the Air Force Reserve. He lived in Selma, and went to school at Auburn University, an all white, conservative state supported school in Alabama. He talked about his flying, and the countries he had visited-including Vietnam. Over lunch at a modest barbeque restaur- ant in Georgia, he talked about Laos. "Every month when I go in, they have to give us a briefing before we go up. I navi- gate big troop and supply transports, you know, and they tell us about Vietnam and Laos. They're supposed to be secret brief- ings, but let me tell you this, they pull out maps of Laos and if there was a red "X" on the map for every bomb we've dropped there, you couldn't see the country." TALKING ABOUT LAOS, the controver- sy developed while I was travelling. For someone who lives day to day with the news, being out of touch for a week is a straige feeling. I resisted the urge to buy newspapers, or, when I did, simply glanced at the headlines instead of reading the stories in depth. The Laotian controversy, seen from the headline point of view, went something like this: Wednesday, senators call for honest truth from the White House, which, in turns, denies that there is anything in Laos to discuss; Thursday, Nixon calls for help and cooperation from the Soviets in main- taining the neutrality of Laos; Friday, the state department announces that casualties in the non-existant Laotian War will be announced separately from the Vietnam casualties; Saturday, a chilling radio an- nouncement says that "Enemy troops in Laos have killed 27 Americans so far." Now they're the enemy. ATLANTA IS A NICE TOWN. Downtown Atlanta has some of the finest modern architecture in the United States, including a hotel that looks like it came out of "2001: A Space Odyssey." We went to the top of everything, all the beautiful skyscrapers. We looked down (from a 22-storey re- volving restaurant) upon a modern baseball stadium, an efficient bus line and ex- pressway system, and a well styled "Cul- tural Center." But within the limits of the same city, there are unpaved streets and poor sewers, shacks and blight. The skyscrapers belong to the bankers, the life insurance com- panies, and the hotel chains. The unpaved streets go to the black poor. GO WALKING IN downtown Atlanta. There is a de facto segregation that is frighteningly efficient. Simply cross a street and the faces are all black where they were once all white. The shops are Kresge chains and shabby stores where they were previously boutiques and men's shops' with fashionable clothing. And while Atlanta is a "liberal" town in comparison with the rest of the South (for example, they recently, voluntarily reassigned many of the city's teachers in order to provide more racial balance) it is still far from being a just and fair place to live. A black cab driver who was asked to drive us to Atlanta University felt obliged to ask "That's the colored university. You sure you want to go to the colored uni- versity?" BACK TO TUSKEGEE, on a Sunday evening. It is soft and warm, and smells like Ann Arbor in May. It's hard to believe that it's the first week in March. The stu- dents are relaxed. They're getting out of there soon, out of the South. I thought back to a meeting the week before. Repre- sentatives from federal, private, and local community programs came to talk, to en- list volunteer help from the students ;- providing food, clothing, education and pride to some of Macon County's many poor. There was little interest. After the meeting, however, the students got somewhat execited about the prospect of marching into town and offing the statue of a confederate soldier in the square in front of the county courthouse. Of course, you don't need a lot of time to de- face a symbol, and don't have to stay around to follow up your actions. It doesn't take any commitment to anything. Reg- istering voters and educating them does, however. I LEFT AND HEADED HOME. I passed a farmer plowing under his cotton field with a plowshare drawn by a horse. Past the fruitstands in Montgomery and the rebel flags on the staffs in front of the small town courthouse, up through the ridgehills of Tennessee to Nashville. In Nashville, I got a ride with Charlie, an ex-Marine with a wooden right shin and foot to replace the one he donated to Uncle Sam. Charlie had a strange mixture of politics, and we talked all the way to Indianapolis, his home. He was a former McCarthy staff man in the Indiana primary, but wasn't entirely against the Vietnam war. He was a com- munity organizer on the South Side of Indianapolis and worker for block power tenants rights, and popular control over building and remodeling programs. But he was suspicious of the civil rights movement and claimed that Martin Luther King was a disgrace to the Nobel Peace Prize because all he did was "stir up the niggers." HE SAID HE "KNEW" from personal experience that the blacks in the South were satisfied, and didn't want to make trouble. Just as surely, he knew that the commies were responsible for the discon- tent surfacing on the nation's campuses. Most of the students are satisfied and don't want to make trouble. He asked what good it was to make trouble on campus, when the end result would be students getting thrown out of school. "What if they wanted to suspend one of your friends for trying to make a radical speech?" he asked. "Then he's lost his chance for an education and you haven't accomplished anything." I told him we wouldn't let that happen. They couldn't suspend students like that. He laughed, and said I was a foolish young dreamer. WHEN IT SNOWED three inches in one hour in Ft. Wayne, Ind., I knew I was al- most home. The smell of magnolias and the blue sky was just a memory. Ann Arbor was close, just around a corner and down a ramp, at the end of the flashing white line. I walked back in, out of touch. "PAR- SONS SUSPENDED" was the news. I re- menibered Charlie, and two days later, I smiled inside when Parsons was reinstated. People are together in Ann Arbor. There are faults, but there is a dialogue. People are attacking things, and thinking, and living instead of just existing. For all its problems, life in Ann Arbor is pretty spe- cial. It's another world out there with a long way to go to catch up to this one. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR For an end to t he draft: Join us! To the Editor: THE PARAGRAPHS Bill Lave- ly uses to explain why the anti- war movement seeks to end the draft make a lot more sense than the rest of his March 3rd editor- ial, which urges opposition to a volunteer army. Lavely claims that the end of the draft would create an author- itarian, militarist nightmare ar- my. Impossible, B ill. We've al- ready got onet.Billsays, "T h e draftee keeps the Army healthy with his basic revulsion against the military authoritarianism." Just such revolted GI's - anti- war organizers and others we've known - haven't noticed that the Army is particularly "healthy." In fact, they will tell you, the main function of basic training is to crush the healthy "revulsion" out of a man. Physically and emo- tionally exhausted, mind numbed by stress to obedience, the veteran of basic training is ready to be used as the weapon of war. The g e n o c i d a l destruction wreaked upon Vietnam should amply demonstrate that the brass' attitude toward human life pre- vails totally over the draftee's. WE DON'T DENY the impact the GI antiwar movement is hav- ing on this whole process. But a volunteer army wouldn't stop that movement, both because opposi- tion to the war is distributed gen- erally throughout our society and because opposition to the war in- creases greatly with closeness to it .Some of the "Fort Jackson 8" were black enlistees. Second, and most important, it's not the movement's job to solve the warmakers' problems f o r them. The heart of Bill's argu- ment is that ". . . t h e people would be better off to preserve the draft and resist it, than to elim- inate it for its inconvenience and live forever in blissful detachment from the government's wars." In other words, the movement should preserve what it seeks to change, in order to have something to or- ganize people against! The warmakers provide us with plenty to fight against. Our task is to organize to end evils. The war machine's preferred method of raising manpower is the draft. They used it in both world wars and in Korea. They retained it as the best way to man the Cold War military. They sped it up for use against Vietnam. WE DON'T HAVE TO HELP our "leaders" come up with an ideal replacement for the draft. An article in this week's U.S. News & World Report quotes numerous Army generals to the effect that nothing can replace the draft in maintaining an Army of the size they need. In short, we're n o t playing games like "Preserve the Draft And Resist It." We're ser- iously organizing a movement that will have the strength to end the draft and force Nixon to bring all the troops home. Bill makes another point, that "it is still the poor and the black men who will fill the ranks of the- 'volunteer army'." First, this very real evil would not be a consequence of any changeover, but is already there in the draft. Second, naturally the warmakers' new system will be racist and exploit the poor. By op- posing the draft we don't pledge support to the replacement. We'll fight whatever means the Admin- istration devises to man and con- tinue its war under "difficult cir- cumstances." Having won a victory, we'll go on to force a further retreat by making the circumstances more difficult. And we won't stop until all the troops are brought home and the Vietnamese, have r e a l self-determination! JOIN US in marching to the draft board, Thursday, March 19th. Free Speech f o r anti-war GI's! End the Draft! -Joint Anti-draft Committee SMC-New Mobe March 5 -w I' m 41 !s 4i "Congratulations, Mr. President... it's about time we did something about land and air pollution!". Students and the University in the age of conscience (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author is a Pro- fessor in the History Department.) By ARTHUR MENDEL First of Two Parts WAVE OF innovations sweeping our campuses reflects more than a passing fever. Student activism responsible for .it will neither end when we leave Vietnam nor be cooled down by such remedies as abolishing the draft or lowering the voting age. For both the innovations and the ac- tivism are symptoms of a dramatic social transformation through which some of the essential attributes of the "modern age" are being challenged as vigorously as the early moderns challenged t h e medieval mind and mode. Convention lists three great revolutions as hallmarks of the modern age: scientific discovery, economic progress, and the tri- umph of the nation state. All three were linked by a common ethos which valued above all else growth, efficiency, and pow- er. "Better" was synonymous with bigger, faster, richer, stronger, more and more. Both ends and means were severely eco- nomic, obsessed, that is with maximization. Reason itself acquired this meaning asX did man, the rational being. Man was ho- mo sapien, and knowledge meant power. The portrait is tediously familiar, but, cliches though they are, "economic man" and "Protestant ethic" remain the most tional performance of whatever tasks were set before them. Pressured by too many instructors im- posing too-large assignments and by the relentless lecture schedules, deadlines, ex- aminations and grades, students had time only for rapid storage of great quantities of information and for mastering desig- nated techniques. Tasks were ardently or resentfully fulfilled, never questioned, and whatever pleasure there was derived not. from new insights gained or from a sense of personal growth, but from the stamp of official approval for jobs - any jobs -- well done. Judgment was reduced to weighing al- ternative strategies f o r achieving goals that others set. Evaluating the goals them- selves was regarded by students as well as faculty as intolerable presumption a n d seldom tried. Students worked hard, do- cilely did their best to win the grades that step by step secured their future, and cared next to nothing about what it all meant. AND THIS WAS just what the system wanted: since students were destined only for the world of efficient means, of fixed technical roles, there was no need to foster a critical judgment of ends and values. In the event that subjective judgment did somehow survive decades of primary, sec- ondary, and undergraduate busy-work, it was rooted out by the implacable "profes- sionalism" of the graduate school, which questions of goals, priorities, ends, and al- ternatives to the experts and, authorities, as they had so w e11 learned to do in school. Out of school as in school, they took no real part in the decisions that deter- mined their lives and, often, their deaths. Out of school, as in school, they were good material security. And they and the so- ciety they built won the battle gloriously on all fronts. Science conquered nature. The economic miracle conquered want at least for them. The state flourished. WRITING OVER A DECADE AGO, as insightful a social critic as Aldous.Huxley sadly foresaw only more of the same, a dreary advance of modern, post-industrial society toward his Brave New World. In the United States - and America is' the prophetic image of the rest of the urban-industrial world as it will be a few years from now - recent public opinion polls have revealed that an actual majority of young people in their teens, the voters of tomorrow, have no faith in democratic institu- tions, see no objection to censorship of unpopular ideas, do not believe that government of the people by the peo- ple is possible and would be perfectly content, if they can continue to live in the style to which the boom has ac- customed them, to be ruled f r o m above, by an oligarchy of assorted ex- grounded. (Brave New World Revisit- ed). We owe it to the youth of our country that Huxley's depressing prophecy strikes us today as groundless and even quaintly old-fashioned. Surprisingly, considering all that he had seen and described of the af- fluent elite, lie overlooked t h e dialectic that leads from satiety and boredom to conscience and commitment, from, in fact, his own Crome Yellow, Antic Hay, and Those Barren Leaves to his later activism as a social and political commentator. Ap- parently he did not believe that our youth would be able to see what h8 and so many like him had seen long ago, that the wea- pons of power and progress - science, economic growth, and the nation state - with which Western society won its se- curity have become principal threats to that security . IT IS THIS AWARENESS and the so- cially-conscious activism it inspires that more than anything else distinguishes the new students from their predecessors, Science may remain for the new students mankind's most prodigious benefactor and they may continue to regard its sense of demonstrable truth as one of mankind's most cherished possessions. But they know that scientists have stocked an arsenal of nuclear, bacteriological a n d chemical monstrocities and devised a battery of in- genious devices to invade our privacy and Similarly, our country's titanic economic growth, notwithstanding its acknowledged contribution to human welfare, outrages the new students by its compulsive accum- ulation of costly rubbish, its spoilation of our natural environment, its close asso- ciation with the preparation for and en- gagement in war, its indifference to social ills, and, underlying it all, i t s exclusive promotion within culture and personality of aggressive and materialistic drives to the detriment of more humane potentials. Finally the nation-state, often consider- ed the final stage in the long progress of communal security, appears to the new students as perhaps the greatest threat of all, not only to individual security (par- ticularly of those forced to honor with their lives the Leaders' paranoiac fantas- ies) but to the continuation of humanity itself. IT'IS THIS INCISIVE and radical -crit- ique of the cornerstones of our culture that lies behind the current turmoil in educa- tion, tle massive, chaotic, infuriating and inspiring efforts toward its fundamental reorientation. As long as scientific discovery, economic progress, and national power were accept- ed in fact (if not always in theory) as our principal goals, the purpose of education was simply to train technicians for the ef- ficient pursuit of these absolute ends, in 4-1.ma , n n.,nr .41,ohA an.nv EDUCATION FOR T H E new student, therefore, cannot be what it was for the compliant a n d complaisant ,functionary. For the functionary, concerned only with meeting successfully the prescribed tasks, education proceeds u n d e r the aegis of economics, the realm of means, techniques, and rationally ordered systems. For the new students, committed to opposing the customary ends and seeking 'alternatives, education is primarily a political process enacted in the realm of ends, v a 1 u e s, judgment, and choice. The functionary leaves higher education as an obedient occupant of some specified role, as homo economicus. The new stu- dent leaves as a citizen, homo humanus. The functionary asks no questions, since the big ones have already been answered for him. The citizen is above all concerned with the big questions and insists on tak- ing a persistent part in their resolution. The fuctionary takes no part in the decis- ions that affect his life either in school or out. The new student insists on taking part in the key decisions both before and after graduation, realizing full well that they go together, that there is no magic that trans- mutes submissive students into self-confi- dent, active citizens. IN BOTH FORM AND CONTENT, edu- cation for the new students is the opposite of what it is for the functionaries. With regard to content, the new students have 4 IT'Ir