-steve anzalone - in quiet desperation Ei~e 51r41&igau Datl Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Enter the Irrational Man 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. TUESDAY, MARCH 1 1, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN Woe unto himn who follows and leads not TUCKED AWAY IN LAST Tuesday's New York Times was a heartening piece of news about an intellectual dispute that may lead to the demise of thinking and reasoning. At a recent "theater of ideas," Norman Mailer and Leslie Fiedler came close to performing last rites on the long exalted concept of rationality. Mailer and Fiedler, the "laureates of irrationality," jousted in heated debate with authors Peter Gay and Jean Mala- quais over the question: Is rationality dead? Mailer shocked many of his con- temporaries when he expressed doubt whe- ther rationality ever lived. Fiedler outlined the cult of the new irrationality when he said that it was a response directed against the city, the church, and the university. CHAPTER I NOW IT CAME to pass that McNamara begat Clifford and Clifford begat Laird. And Laird was anointed prophet of the Americanese who were the Lord's chosen people. And in the eighth year that his people had striven in the land of the Vietnam- ites, the Lord, who was then called Jehovah, Prince of Knownothing, Richard M. Nixon, visited Laird in a dream. . And he spake unto Him and said, Go and tell my people that you shall lead them forth out of this land. Laird went and journeyed to the land of the Vietnamites, a heathen people who worshipped the idols of survival, and saw the Lord's people still tilling in the battle- field and reaping sheaves of casualties. A ND LAIRD WAS exceedingly wroth and. beseeched the Lord that he should rain brimstone down upon the Vietnam- ites, who slew 435 of his people in one week, and prayed for the day when the land of the Vietnamites would be de- livered into the hands of the Ameri- canese. Give unto me $70 million more and I shall wip6 this stain of iniquity frctr the earth, he cried, calling uponthe names of his forefathers. But the people of the Lord murmured among themselves and called upon Laird to release their brethren from the land of the Vietnamites, who were a war- ring people and could verily war among themselves. Sing praises to the Lord and trust not your enemies, answered Laird. The Vietnamites must be taught the way of the Lord. But the Lord remained in his heavens and gave no heed to the burnt offerings. He cursed the land of the Vietnamese and kindled anger at the ieetingplace in Paris. But he spake nothing but words. CHAPTER II AND THERE arose a tumult in the land of the Americanese that the missiles of death called the ABM should not be brought into the cities of the living. Then Laird summoned together the high priests and pharisees of the Penta- gon and brought forth a new plan which would move the missiles into desert places 25-30 miles from the cities. And Laird spake unto the people, Gather your gold and silver and bring tithes unto the Lord for he shall need $400 billion. And the people cried, Woe unto us, for we are already $365 billion behind in our tithes. CHAPTER III AND LAIRD the anointed prophet of the Lord Nixon kept all these things and pondered them in his heart. And he went forth and said, Let there be ABMs and let there be a million Americanese in the 'land of the Vietnam- ites. And he spake further, Vengeance is mine, I will repay, for I am the Lord. --HOWARD KOHN As a response to the the new irrationality ticing possibilities for college students. university at least, demonstrates en- today's disaffected to fit to what they perceive the teacher wants to hear. Many will also come to feel that a teacher's reply is not really an an- swer but usually just an acknowledge- ment of the question. It probably will become apparent to the new irrational man that dialogue serves no useful purpose in dealing with differences of opinion, that it has only minimal cathartic value as a means of registering disagreement. The irrational man is likely to shy away from futile intellectual embroglios where nothing is resolved. Instead, he might find that it is more desirable to insult his teacher or classmates. It may be that in- vective and absurdity have at least as much intellectual value as rational in- quiry and certainly can lead to much more visceral satisfaction. * * * * THE NEW IRRATIONALITY is likely to be spurred on by political frustration. Radi- cal students will become more convinced that rational things like elections, petitions and protest, produce no positive effects for seeking change. When disillusioned radical students come to believe that the nation is deaf, they will become irrational men. Then, in- stead of engaging in meaningless debate with disinterested government leaders, the irrational man will find that it is just as productive and certainly more enjoyable, to dismiss anyone to the right of Norman Mailer as a fascist. Ultimately, thinking and reasoning will be done better by machines. Will man then remain content to exist as a thinking ani- mal when he is outstripped by a machine? The ranks of the irrational men will swell as a response to omnisicient computers, and man perhaps will prefer to be a feeling animal. But for the present the new irrational man will probably be just the isolated in- dividual at the university-the very den of rationality-who can find comfort in the virtues of positive unthinking. o0 THE UNIVERSITY is purportedly an association of rational men in pursuit of knowledge. Ideally the purpose of the classroom is to serve as an arena f o r Socratic dialogue between 'teacher and student. Together, through rational dia- logue, student and teacher will arrive at truths just as Socrates and his students did. This rational tradition places unwaver- ing emphasis on the value of communica- tion. It is not surprising then that many rational men prescribe a little more Soc- ratic dialogue between the generations as an antidote for the disharmony on campus these days. But somewhere along the line, someone slipped a little hemlock to the unquestion- ed acceptance of the ideal of Socratic dialogue. Many students have discovered that dialogue does not exist and that their rational teachers have little of value to communicate anyway. Just the other day, students at the Uni- Mailer Fiedler versity saw first-hand how the language requirement controversy was solved ' in the best Socratic tradition. Both sides were virtually deaf to the arguments of the other; communication served only to gen- erate further ill-will between faculty and students. Concerned students who 'attended the faculty meetings looked with genuine dis- taste at an assembly of rational men meet- ing together in the spirit of sound think- ing. Many foolish arguments were trumpet- ed in favor of the language requirement, and the whole debacle finally ended in faculty non-action. Many students could safely conclude after the whole encounter with their rational teachers that rational- ity is not for them. THE NEW IRRATIONAL MAN will be$ come more apparent with the growing de- nial of the efficacy or even the desirabil- ity of communication. Likely. to replace the icon of communication will be the twin sacraments of irrationality - ab- surdity and the insult. Many students will become more dis- satisfied with the preponderance of lec- ture courses wheiae dialogue with the teacher is completely non-existent. If he cannot communicate with the teacher, per- haps the only relevant thing for the ir- rational student to do is to scream out in assertion of his own existence or to enter- tain himself and his classmates with ab- surd parody. Students are also likely to learn that communication is not necessarily facili- tated by seminars. Many will become more disillusioned, with tailoring their remarks LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The rent strike and the mayor The perils of parity THE LSA CURRICULUM COMMITTEE yesterday discussed extensively the problem of student representation on the committee. A decision, needless to say, is still rather far off, but the lines that it will follow are already forming. The de- cision is likely to be one most students will not appreciate. First, the curriculum committee as now constituted is not vitally important. It is an entirely advisory committee, and as the language requirement question has il- lustrated, there is no, reason to expect the entire faculty to follow its recommenda- tions very closely, On the other hand, the committee does handle all proposals, for curriculum and degree requirements, matters that a r e important to the college. BUT WHAT ROLE will students play on the committee?, While the logic of the student activists has consistently emphasized t h a t stu- dents should have parity in the decision- making process, the faculty is very far from that view. The faculty cannot understand why, students should have any major say in the operations of the college. Token vot- ing or advisory positions are fine, b u t anything approaching effective power is out of the question in the minds of al- most all faculty members. BUT THERE IS AT least -one more fac- tor-the ability of the faculty todecide some of the matters in which they claim expertise. Students do not challenge the expertise of professors in their stated areas of com- petence - their chosen academic disci- plines. But where they are not trained specifically - in education as a goal in itself, not academic skills or scholarship - students can rightfully claim an equal say. The recent agonies of the curriculum committee in trying to act on the lang- uage requirement are all too revealing. Most professors are not educators, they are academicians, and the difference was painfully obvious. It is not that students have any special expertise in education, but there are many who certainly have no less expertise than the faculty. Both groups must, in trying to make such decisions, appeal like every committee must to experts aid other out- side advisors. It is in this that students can be on a par with professors, it is in this that accomodation must be sought. This will be a hard lesson for the fac- ulty to learn. -RON LANDSMAN Managing Editor To the Editor: T HE ANN ARBOR TENANT'S Union Rent Strike has been a reality for less than a month. During this period of time we have been interested to observe the de- veloping debate between the two candidates for mayor concerning our impact on Ann Arbor housing. The Republican candidate Rich- ard Balzhiser has attempted to characterize himself as a neutral catalyst "to bring the two parties to the conference table." In the context of Ann Arbor, no candi- date can be a disinterested third party. Our impression is the same as the Ann Arbor News which headlined the article reporting his efforts "Balzhizer Attempts To End Rent Strike." The Rent Strike will not end, however, until the right of ten- ants to organize is recognized, and the landlords have engaged in meaningful collective bargain- ing. The history of labor move- ments has shown that labor strikes were necessary to bring trade un- ions into existence and win col- lective bargaining rights. Professor Harris, while he would "give government recognition and protection to the rights of tenants to organize and bargain collective- ly," is apparently unaware of this fact of history. He proposes to bring about t hi1s recognition througha"imaginative legislative proposals" and lobbying efforts. Such efforts will certainly be help- ful but will never be decisive. PROFESSOR HARRIS has at- tempted to justify his refusal to endorse the rent strike on the grounds that as a mayor his first duty must be to justice. Justice and the interest of the tenants may not be identical, says Harris, when tenants are striking reason- able landlords. We maintain that no "reasonable landlord" would refuse to bargain collectively with his tenants; yet no landlord has to date agreed to bargain collec- tively. Harris avers that the Tenants' Union has only a secondary al- legiance to the public interest. To whose "public interest" does Har- ris owe his allegiance? Is it the unreasonable landlord against whom Harris implies a rent strike is justified? Is it the "reasonable" landlords who refuse to negotiate. with their tenants? Is it those suc- cessive Republican administrations whom Harris correctly accuses of having presided over the deteriora- tion of housing in Ann Arbor? "Welcome to the United States of America 1" - 1 Harris' concern reminds us of a shepherd's concern for the "pub- lic interest" of wolves and sheep; that is, he must determine how hungry the wolves are before feed- ing them the sheep. The rent strike organizers have never contended that students are the most victimized people in Ann Arbor. In the contrary, the poor who are forced to live outside Ann Arbor to obtain housing within their means, working people v/ho must rent in Ann Arbor and stu- d e n t s prospectively prevented from attending the University are also victims of, the Ann Arbor landlords. Ours is a Tenants' Un- ion, not a students' union. We feel it must include all of the ten- ants of Ann Arbor is meaningful improvements are to be achieved. In Ann Arbor, which has for a decade elected conservative ad- ministrations, only a broadly based coalition of all of the pro- gressive, citizens can hope to ini- tiate substantive change. THERE IS NO contradiction between the interests of poor peo- ple and the formation of a Ten- ants' Union through a rent strike. Harris should endorse the rent strike as a means of improving the position of tenants vis a vis land- lords in the city and as a step toward the formation of the coali- tion which is a prerequisite for the attainment of his expressed polit- ical goals. ,Neither the Rent Strike Steering Committee nor any citizens con- cerned with changing the balance of power in the Ann Arbor hous- ing market should support 'either Harris or Balzhiser unless he gives To the Editor: WE HOPE THAT it might be useful to correct some inis- understandings that appeared in The Daily editorial by Mr. Anza- lone on March 4. . The letter sent, by 40 tTniversity of Michigan physicists to Senators Philip Hart and Robert Griffin was mailed on Feb. 25 (as was noted on the front page of the same issue of The Daily) and was not intended by the signers to be our substitute for any events on March 4. We hope that Mr. Anzalone is correct in assuming that sufficient opposition to ABM deployment al- ready exists in the Senate. Un- fortunately, it Is our impression that the Defense Department is still confident that they have enough votes to obtain the neces- sary appropriation. Most Senators are still unaware of the virtual unanimity of the scientific community in its op- position to an ABM system. Sen- ator Griffin's vote is one of the key uncommitted votes, and it is possible that many letters from Michigan voters will affect his position favorably. --Prof. Gordon Kane -Prof. Harvey Gould Physics department March 5 unqualified support to the Rent Strike and the Tenants' Union. -Barry Cohen, '70 -Dale Berry, Grad -Nancy Holmistrom, Grad Steering Committee Rent Strike Scientists maa L.- A JAMES WECHSLER-, Telling Nixon that we are not on the enemy's one-yard line IT IS A MATTER OF RECORD that, in the aftermath of the bombing halt over North Vietnam decreed by President Johnson last Oct. 31, Com- manding Gen. Creighton W. Abrams issued an order calling for "all-out pressure on the enemy' on other levels. What is not in the published re- ports is that Averell Harriman, then our chief negotiator at the Paris peace talks, somberly warned the out- going Administration that this step would inevitably invite the military reaction that we have been facing in recent days. REACHED BY TELEPHONE at his vacation refuge in Hobe Sound, Fla., Harriman acknowledged the other day that he had advanced this force- cast during the debate that preceded 1- taa i inn of nit,. , 4 ar, a .,ff In bring this war to an end," he said. "I don't want to say anything that could be regarded as a hostile judg- ment of the way Mr. Nixon is han- dling things. The big decisions are still to be made." EVEN HARRIMAN'S limited com- ment, however, assumes crucial sig- nificance at a moment when Defense Secretary' Laird is on his way to Vietnam and the question of resum- ing the bombing exercises is in the balance. In his telecast President Nixon took pains to point out that most of the recent targets were mili- tary; he appeared determined to avoid provocative rhetoric. But he left wide open the possibility of a bombing renewal, and that re- mark received the biggest press-no- tice. That is why Harriman's testi- ._ _ ..1 - -. . 1.. . . _ Nixon is confronting a fateful deci- sion in which the Pentagon and its political allies-with the enthusiastic cheers of the Thieu-Ky regime-are once again pressing the delusion of military "victory" and using the latest Viet Cong assults as a cover for their campaign. It should be reported in this con- text that Harriman has high regard for Gen. Abrams, viewing him as a, military figure with an unusual awareness of the complexities of the Vietnam conflict. But he has no comparable esteem for many chairborne strategists now conductingatheir annual exercise in the propaganda of promise; "We can clean this up if we get one more chance." ' He is also persuaded that each new foolish journalistic communique private negotiations (the only kind that he has ever deemed meaningful) can be destroyed by a reversion to the futile formula of air power against the North. In this crisis, as in the ABM dis- pute, Richard 'Nixon faces his first momentous test of strength with what Dwight Eisenhower described in his farewell address as the "military- industrial complex." His responses may determine the fate of his Ad- ministration. For a sudden expansion of the war, flimsily camouflaged by charges that Hanoi has violated the "understand- ing" of October when in fact the "all-out pressure" order first came from our side, will instantly recreate, on a larger scale, the discords that haunted the .Tnhnon era s