the sunday dcfily "Onaniscience is the cocoon which has sheltered this puny primate and giren him a sense of security and power." -Leslie White 4 Number 3 Night Editor: Bill Lovely March 23, 1969 *' 'Ecclesiastica I Leslie White Brimstone Scientist -Daily-Jay Cassidy 0 By LYNN WEINER PROF. LESLIE A. WHITE'S office in Angell Hall is cramped and cluttered. File cabinets and shelves crowd the walls of the room, and many indiscriminately scattered letters, pamphlets, books, papers and magazines escape attempts at organiza- tion and neatness. Dr. White, in shirt sleeves and a green eyesnace, looks more the smalltown news- paper editor than a distinguished and con- troversial anthropologist. This is his last semester at the Univer- sity. After 39 years on the faculty and 69 years of life, he must submit to University policy and retire. But he will leave behind a unique legacy of academic freedom and accomplishment. EARLY IN HIS career it became apparent that White would be controversial. Al- though a half-century had passed since Darwin's Origin of the Species, anthro-- pology had yet to embrace a theory of cultural evolution. White, much to the dis- may of fellow anthropologists, challenged and reformulated traditional concepts in the context of evolution. Even today White remains one of t h e most vehemently criticized scientists. His views on politics, sociology, 'religion and education still manage to enrage students, associates, and administrators. And thus his ability to weather the barrage of per- sonal and professional attacks constitutes as much a victory for the cause of simple dissent as it does for "Whitean" truth. LED BY the traditionalist Franz Boas, anthropologists before White had clung tightly to the antievolutionary, reactionary doctrines. "Boas was like the naked emperor who thought he had clothes on", White reflects. "I was the little boy who saw the truth." He was immediately tagged as naive and radical by the anthropological cliques. But he carried his ideas to the classroom and concocted the course "The Mind of Primi- tive Man." First taught at the University of Buffalo in 1927, the course has lasted as long as White. The first time the course was taught it was frighteningly unorthodox and after five weeks White ran out of material. But unlike the conventional professor who would have desperately tried to fill up the remaining weeks, he just stopped teaching. His stu- dents read books for the rest of the semes- ter. WHITE BROUGHT the course to the Uni- versity in 1930. Since then the famous An- thro 452 has evolved and expanded. White attacks religion, government and education. He warns the students about becoming "too abstract," bitterly assessing institutionalized philosophy and psychology as only semanti- cal play. "We must get down to earth," White explains, "Truth is not something out in the cosmos; it is something definite to each society." WHITE RECEIVFED his masters in psy- chology at Columbi& and his doctorate in sociology and anthropology at Chicago. His doctoral dissertation on the witchcraft of Indians alarmed the academicians and fin- ally resulted in a split of the sociology grad- uate school into sociology and anthropology departments. During one of his classes, he i n t e r- rupted the lecturer to exclaim the class was being taught entirely wrong. He challenged the professor to a major philosophical de- bate and continued his arguments until fin- ally both men agreed White would receive a passing grade if he said nothing more. The electric atmosphere was just as tense when White came here. He remembers he was "at war with my colleagues, the phil- osophy of ethnology was anti-evolutionary. The only voice raised in defense of evolu- tion in anthropology for a long time was mine." CONSEQUENTLY, White pursued h i s evolutionary ideas alone. Within a decade he had formplated an entirely new science, culturology. Culturology is defined in Websters New International Dictionary, 1961, as a "meth- odology especially associated with the Amer- ican anthropologist Leslie A. White that treats culture as a self-contained, self-deter- mineud process and regards culture traits as the products of antecedent and concomitant cultural elements and as developing inde- pendently of other data." White, often called the "Father of Cul- turology", has thereby rehabilitated and expanded the much suppressed opinions of Lewis Morgan, a famous anthropologist whose work had been obscured by Boas. WIILE TRAVELING through Russia in 1929, where he was exposed to the works of Marks and Engels, White became convinced that only socialism could prevail in western society. Upon his return he presented a paper to the American Association for the Advancement of Science claiming capital- ism was doomed. His position was in- fluenced by the depression which he at- tributed to the severe egotism of a pure- ly capitalistic system, His paper received world-wide attention, including front-page coverage by the New York Times and a favorable article by ' Maksim Gorki in Pravda. White, remem- bering the episode, says, "This didn't endear me to anyone in the United States except the Communists . . . the dean told me I was indiscreet, and didn't predict long tenure for me...' He met with the Dean who recounted the letters, phone calls and telegrams de- manding that White be fired. But White had become established, if not for his fame then surely for his infamy. WHITE SAID the violent reactions to his predictions were like those of the people "who angrily abuse the weatherman for pre- dicting bad weather." With the advent of the "bad weather," such as, social security, medical aid, and veterans' benefits, White's infamy turned to fame. But despite his fame, Church opposition to his atheism has never ceased. He has been harshly attacked by the clergy which has demanded throughout the years that .he be fired and whose relentless pursuit stalled his promotion to the rank of professor for 11 years. White feels religion has helped man adapt himself to the "earth and cosmos by an- swering unanswerable questions." He be- lieves it is directly correlated to the evolu- tion of culture as an unconscious "fabrica- tion." AT ONE POINT, local Catholic and Lu- theran clergymen brought an eight-page in- dictment of White to the desk of President Ruthven. "They said I was guilty of robbing young people of their faith and ideals - . - as they would accuse Socrates. I'm glad this hemlock business has gone out of style ... when you're pilloried for something you did that's bad, but when you're pilloried for something you didn't do, that's worse ... " In 1957 Detroit newspapers quoted part of a speech White presented to the American Anthropological Association. Local clergy- men attacked what White felt was a rather extraneous part of his discussion-a refu- tation of the thesis that religion evolves' independently of culture-and before long the issue gained enormous proportions. Nationwide headlines included, "'M' Pro- fessor Ripped on 'Godless' Culture," "How Long Will UM Let White Deride God?" and "Ecclesiastical Brimstone Scientist." INDIGNANT CITIZENS mailed angry letters to the professor; mail which reached absurd heights. One postcard which began "Sir: What stupidity!" was addressed to "Professor Leslie White, University of Mich- igan, Illinois." During White's career as department chairman from 1938 until his retirement from that post in 1957, he built the depart- ment into one of the most highly regarded in the world. His students, scattered across the country in leading departments, are among the most famous anthropologists in the field. Marshall Sahlins and Elman Service, both who came to the University to' study under W h i t e , published what has since been called an- thropology's most significant book since Darwin's Origin of the Species, Evolution and Culture. HIS LABORS began to receive belated praise in 1957 when the University accord- ed him one of the five first Distinguished Faculty Awards. Three years later he re- ceived the Viking Fund Medal of the Amer- ican Anthropological Association for his studies of Pueblo Indians and contribu- tions to ethnological theory. White has taught as visiting professor at Chicago, Columbia, Yale, Harvard and Yenching University in Peiping. THE NEGATIVE response he has received to many of his ideas amazes him. "People always assume that you're advocating some- thing," he reflects. "When often you are only stating that you 'not know."' He ex- plains that the concept of to not know "is not ignorance, but a self-conscious act of withholding an answer until it can pass a test. I know of no word in any language that describes this." White feels that a malady of our civiliza- tion is that of omniscience - "the opposite of 'not knowing,' the cocoon which has sheltered this puny primate and given him a sense of security and power." He muses on his controversies now, de- lighting in what he considers "human ab- surdity." He reflects on a time when an Associated Press reporter asked him if they could quote one of his rhetorical questions: "Why do people like dogs? They're noisy, dirty, unhealthful, useless and expensive. Why don't people like racoons instead?" THE PUBLIC, assuming he was "against dogs" flooded him with the mail he was by then accustomed to. A state legislator even began an investigation and sent an open letter to President Hatcher claiming "any man who has his attitude towards dogs isn't fit to teach our children." White's uncompromising stand on issues, has, according to Gertrude Dole in Essays in the Science of Culture, done much to strengthen the cause of academic freedom at the University of Michigan." Harry Elmer Barnes, in the same book, writes, "Dr. White not only challenged the overwhelm- ingly dominant dogmas and trends in his own professional field, but also resisted what has usually been the most powerful force in intimidating academicians and limiting aca- demic freedom, namely, ecclesiastical ob- scurantism." IT IS IRONIC that a man the University has retained through such sophisticated and vehement criticism must now leave because of his age. But Michigan's laws will not inhibit this scientific pioneer. He plans to continue teaching part-time out west, and will also travel, research and continue writing. Thirty years ago he said he felt socialism would prevail and no one believed him. Twenty years ago he said there would be peaceful uses for atomic energy and no one believed him. Ten years ago he said he felt Sputnik was partly responsible for bringing the decline of religion and no one believed him. And now - "I feel like I can teach fifty more years." Vi 'THE ARGUS' a tiny man with a meksml By JIM HECK E'S USUALLY THERE before most of the people arrive, looking shyly over his notes, his head always turned down revealing the redness of the shiny scalp. I almost want to say his bald head blushes. The lecture is usually crowded; students like to hear him talk in his meek, almost whining voice that begs you to agree with it no mat- ter what it says. "Today, I'm going to pose the question: Do we exist?" A petite smile comes onto his face which means a thousand words something more complex than "This is really funny asking such an absurd question but like all of you m ~ nIkn oknow I've asked lots of absurd S1 questions and we've found o u t there is really some substance to them afterall." This masqueraded around-the-bush way of getting me involved is only frustrating after I think about it. "AND," HE WHINCES, "I'm going to supply the answer." Laugh- ter, of course; it seems totally absurd. He laughs, too. A tiny man. with very tiny blue eyes, he scans each notecard and muses on it before telling the class about it. If it's at all funny or absurd, he steps back, looks up into the middle of the lecture and smiles, pursing his lips and finally burping a giggle or two. By this time everyone expects to laugh and even if what he says isn't hum- orous, we laugh anyway. He loves to poke fun at himself - almost righteously, as though to re-enforce his own self-confidence. He will read quotes from his adversaries who have sometimes valid criticism spaced among their personal invective against him. "NOW REALLY - REALLY," he utters bending his whole body as though squeezing out the emphasis his intonation can never pro- duce. "This is what he really said, it's right here." He reads the attacks, laughs quietly and looks up to the students, waits for their laughter and then continues, satisfied he has the sup- port of at least 500 others. A 100-eyed monster comes allve By MICHAEL THORYN and HOWARD KOHN Second of a three-part series NEWSPAPERS FUNCTION for some of you some of the time. But do you think The Michigan Daily really cares about any of you? "I know damn well it doesn't," answers Ken Kelley. "The Daily editors are an elitist clique who decide the news to satisfy their own egos." Kelley is an ex-Daily reporter who now edits The Ann Arbor Argus, an underground tabloid three issues old. The Argus, with plans to publish bi-weekly, is chock full of exciting news copy and exciteable graphics interspersed with long and often unedited interviews. Kelley quit The Daily last October after a disillusioning year within its bureaucratic structure. HIS BASIC quarrels with The Daily lie in its definition of journalism. "If they cover a meeting, that's fine, that's functional," he explains. "But if they try to make me believe the meeting is important to how I live, that's bullshit. "The Daily is a business. Their only goal is to get that paper out six days a week. They will run an AP story when they know damn well that the AP only checks with 'official sources'." Beyond his disagreement with The Daily's news policy, Kelley criticizes The Daily for being a closed corporation, excluding those who do not conform to the lifestyles of the editors. "I couldn't stand the eternal bitching and the internal politicking," he summarizes. focus on the forces of repression and to crystallize the issues in terms of self-versus- system. Lead stories in the latest issue of The Argus were an analytical rundown of the rent strike, written by rent strike coordi- nator Peter Denton, and an expose-fash- ioned article on the tenure denials of Prof. Tom Mayer and Prof. Julian Gendell. "The Daily has screwed up the rent strike so badly I can't believe it. They can't even get the facts straight. "And they act like they don't know about Mayer and Gendell getting shafted." Confrontations that are obvious from evening newscasts do not inspire Kelley. Instead he would like to document the in- dividual struggles of those people who are silently squashed by the weight of a bur- geoning society. Kelley was also a bellicose supporter of Barry Goldwater. But even in high school he operated under the assumption that rules meant repression. He wrote a column for The Lotus Leaf, school newspaper in Monroe, Mich., pointing out that people who have long hair don't necessarily have fleas. The principal lam- basted him for flaunting school rules. But Kelley simply turned around and walked away from his position as editorial editor. After three- semesters at the University he has also given up on formal academics. Instead his attention is devoted to The Argus, which demands more time than the most menial of courses . . . the day for selling ads, the night for writing and de- vising layouts, and the rest of the time for interviewing and reporting. "Media is the most important influence Consequently his national news comes from the Liberation News Service (LNS), a radical New York-based agency dedicated to that proposition. Most LNS releases re- cite episodes of conflict between the young in the world," is Kelley's motivation. "Media controls everything. KELLEY WORKED part-time on the New York Free Press last summer, learning the disciplines of a sometimes-literate critique u'.::t ..... .... S