I' x DatdymTilig Sesenty-7TbiWd YW x = ~EDrITED ANDMANAGED BY STUDENTS OE TIME UNTYERSr "1'op MIIA~RY UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OW STUDENT PUBucATIoNs ree STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDL., ANN ARBOR, MKIH., PHONE NO 2-3241 La ,torias printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "I Got Him With A S hot From The Hip" HARD-HITTING Barry's Convention Tactics, Campaign, 'UESDAY, JULY 21, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HARRAH UAW Negotiations Seek 'Dignity of Labor' A ,slo ( 7 1) , ; SEATEY NY ONE WfO THINKS that UAW-Big T1hnree negotiations follow a repetitious pattern of merely quantitative demands should look again at this year's talks. For the auto workers are adamantly pressing a "dignity of labor" line which has some unusual and unprecedented implications. 2No longer is the UAW simply asking for better hours, better pay or even fuller employment, In the first-round bargain- ing completed last week, the union has made it quite clear that it is equally con- cerned with efforts to "civilize and hu- manize the factories and offices in which' our members spend half their waking lives." And this line is only secondary to demAandcs ta "the sovereignty of hu- man beirngs over machines" be me clear, at least implicitly, in new contracts. Specifically the UAW requests center on more rest periods-during which the ever-moving assembly line would be stop- ped instead of manned by relief-time re- placenients--and earlier retirement plans that do not necessarily depend on years of service. That the granting of these de- mands will not even approach ensuring human dignity and sovereignty is un- questionable. But then specific demands are not hat is significant about the pres- ent negotiations. T IS FAR MORE significant that the union is now striking at the qualita- tive structure of the factory system it- self and not merely at the quantitative distribution of wealth produced by that system. It is no longer thinking primarily of the worker's financial well-being; it is beginning to give more weight to his needs as an individual-as someone sup- posedly more valuable than billion-dollar profits and an endless stream of shiny metallic vehicles. Factory work in America cannot be rat- ed high for providing the opportunities fjnd challenges which are requisite to a feeling of human worth. It is not suffi-; cient that the worker's skills might be well developed; that it might be trouble- some to replace him; that'he may even have become resigned to liking what he does-though merely because he cannot Jive sanely with himself if he constantly wants a more satisfying job that usually is beyond easy reach- For despite these compensations, the workr will have a hard time escaping the sensation that he is prostituting his manihness, his abilities, his desires. He will have a hard time escaping the feel- ing that what he is doing is useless-to some extent because "he" is not really needed, to a greater extent because the product he works on is not essential to human life and because the company in- tends it to fall apart within a very few years so the customer will have to buy a new automobile. He cannot escape the feeling that the product contains noth- ing of "him" in it, and consequently that he has derived nothing valuable from making that product. TE CURRENT negotiations cannot al- leviate these humiliations, for that will require far more time, far more pow- er in the labor unions, far more public support than now exist. But the very proc- ess of speaking in terms of such humilia- tions will perhaps make the worker aware of his condition, perhapslead him to question the meaningfulness of his job and the satisfaction of his merely func- tional role within the factory system. Maybe then the worker will begin com- paring what he derives from that func- tion with what he would require to feel like a full human being. Maybe he will be- gin considering alternatives to unfulfill- ing labor -which does, not necessarily mean considering no labor at all. Perhaps he will even realize that he has been duped all these years into settling for moredmoney and fewer hours while his spirit slowly died, while he came to have nothing but an acquiescent resignation that there must be something worthwhile in his work, even though that worth was rarely evident to him. Even if the UAW gets what it demands from the automakers this year the battle for meaningful, fulfilling work will not have been won. For what the UAW is asking is only the barest beginning. IF THE UNION ever wants to ensure that factory work really does have some purpose for the worker, that it pays him in something besides cash for investing his life in a job, it will have to insist on nothing short of full participation in all the decisions that govern production. It will have to insist that the worker's stake in the process of production can be re- paid adequately only if the worker is al- lowed a voice in how the process can be most meaningful to him. The labor movement is a long way from demanding something like this, and indeed it may never achieve the demand alone. But the negotiations now under- way in Detroit are a significant step in the right direction. Even though they will eventually change little, they have set the factory worker to wondering just how much waste of humanity this coun- try can justifiably put up with. --JEFFREY GOODMAN r, EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of articles analyzing the Republican convention. Mihael Harrah covered the convention for The Daily. By MICHAEL HARRAH AT THE CONCLAVE of Republi- cans in San Francisco last week, they nominated a 100 per cent, dyed-in-the-wool, fighting conservative to take on President Lyndon Johnson in November; and the heavy odds are that this fiery challenger will go down to defeat. But if his performance in win- ning the nomination is any in- dicator, Johnson is in for a knock- down, drag-out fight. For Sen. Barry Goldwater pulled no punches in getting his way on the conven- tion floor. Though he probably need not have done so, his forces steamrollered any opposition on platform or candidacy into obliv- ion in a show of muscle that must have dismayed former President Dwight D. Eisenhower who favors the soft approach. If this can be taken as a model, Lyndon Johnson can expect a hard-hitting attack from the GOP. And regardless of how popular he may be now, he will certainly have to answer the questions and charges that will undoubtedly be put forth. Such issues as the President's involvement with Bobby Baker and just how messy that scandal is will come to the forefront. John- son will be called upon to explain the chicanery, if any, that sur- rounds his radio and television holdings in Austin, his two-faced stand on such issues as civil rights, deficit spending, states' rights and others, on which he expressed totally different views as a sen- ator than he does now. BUT ISSUES are thin at best; they don't leae a lasting impres- sion on the minds of the voters. The question becomes whether or not Barry Goldwater can capture the imagination of enough voters, for whatver reason, to swing the bulk of electoral votes. Clearly he will center his efforts on the South. He wouldn't have gone to such lengths to fight off strong statements on extremism, civil rights and federal supremacy if he didn't intend to fight South- erner Johnson on his home ground and his home issues. And it is also clear that if Goldwater is successful in winning away the traditional Democratic support, Johnson, no matter how popular he may be in the big cities, is in serious political trouble. For the traditional Southern core of Democratic votes has sent many a Democratic ticket to a victory it could not have won with- out it. This, coupled with the solid Republican states in the West and Midwest, is quite capable of giv- ing Goldwater an electoral vic- tory, all the votes of Negroes, big cities, labor unions, and what- have-you not withstanding. * * * ALL THIS Goldwater knows, and one rather imagines Johnson knows it too. The pros and cons of their separate beliefs could be hashed and hashed and no one APARTHEID POLICY South Africa in Upheaval EUROPEAN COMMENTARY Vews on Goldwater would be any further toward the "truth," for who is to say which is the "correct" position? The voters will be faced with a truly ideological choice-one which cuts across party loyalties and one which will arouse emotions and perhaps even violence before the campaign is over. It represents the first time in a long while that American voters can decide their vote on the strength of their con- victions rather than personality. No one can predict the outcome with any degree of accuracy, Tor the situation is so volatile that it can do an about face from day to day, depending upon the emo- tional impact of some statement or event. Whether Goldwater wants to acknowledge it or not, the so- called "backlash"-not only from civil rights strife, but also in reaction to repeated attacks on "extremism" and "super-patriot- ism"-pose a very Incalculable fac- tor in the campaign. For who is to say just how long it will take to offend how many people?" EDITOR' NOTE: Mary Beth Nor- ton, '64, is a former Assembly As- sociation president, Student Gov- ernment Council member and Unit- ed States National Student Associa- tion coordinator on this campus. In April she represented the University at a USNSA conference on South Africa. By MARY BETH NORTON Daily Guest Writer TODAY IN SOUTH AFRICA the future seems bleak. Recently the opposition leaders Nelson Man- dela and Walter Sisulu were sen- tenced to life imprisonment. Even their attorney has now been ar- rested under the law which per- mits the detention of a prisoner for 90 days without specifying any charges. Chief Albert Luthuli, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, has been banned for another five year period; now he may not even attend church. It was only last August at the National Student Congress that Jonty Driver, president of the Na- tional Union of South African Students, remarked in all serious- ness that the uniting of black African (or Bantu) groups into a sabotage organization was the most encouraging happening he'd seen in a long time. The policy which has caused this catastrophic state of affairs is known as apartheid: the com- plete separation of the races with very little pretense of equality. In South Africa a man's status de- pends entirely on his race. But this means of determining a per- son's rank in society did not ap- pear overnight; it has taken years to develop. THE POPULATION of South Africa is composed of many dif- ferent elements: Africaaners of Boer and Dutch descent, in com- plete control of thescountry since 1948 and chief authors of "Baas- kap," the policy of white suprem- acy; white of British origin, most of whom support the apartheid policies of the government; In- dians, who in recent years have been deprived of many of their previously-held rights; coloureds, or mixed blacks; and black Afri- cans (successively known as Kaf- firs, natives, and Africans, they are now called Bantus by the government). The Nationalist Party, headed by Prime Minister Hendrik Ver- woerd, terms its philosophy "Christian-nationalism"; in 1942 the present Minister of Justice, B. F. Vorster, declared that,,the doctrines of his party bore a great similarity to those of National Socialism, and the truth of this statement is apparent on close examination of National Party policies. A basic tenet of Christian-Na- tionalism is the natural inferiority of black Africans, and most of the laws passed since 1948 have been directed at keeping the Bantu in perpetual ignorance and poverty. T 1ZZT1_4 t~* lit ' ifr *la identity passbook (which natives call the "dompas") at all times. Found without one even for a moment (or if the arresting of- ficers conveniently "lose" the pass) the African may be deported to his tribal area, placed in a forced labor camp, or detained in prison for years-without his family and friends ever learning what has happened to him. And if a native in a white area loses his job, he has exactly 72 hours to find another one if he wants to avoid being sent to a bantustan. * * * THE GOVERNMENT claims that the goal of its bantustan policies is to create a self- supporting native community, and that its educational system is 'di- rected towards the same end. The Christian - nationalist principles upon which the government re- quires that native education be based are the following: -The Bantu is inferior: -He must be educated only in his tribal language and not in English; -His education must be ,dif- ferent from that of whites; -He must be taught Christian- nationalist principles; and --His education must never take' precedence over the educating of,/ white children. The implications of an educa- tional system which doesanot allow Africans to study academic sub- jects and which confines them to their own dialect (special care is taken to see that they do not learn English, which would permit them to communicate with other Bantus and whites) are obvious. THE PURPOSE of the govern- ment is not to make the Africans self-sufficient, but rather to make them completely dependent on whites for their contacts with the rest of the world. In recent years the situation has become worse rather than better. The Nationalist Party has solidi- fied its hold on the country, and it is completely supported by its nominal opposition, the British- 'dominated United Party. Indi- viduals and groups that seem to threaten the existence of the standing order are banned; all statements which appear to criti- cize the government can easily be termed "Communist" and thus treasonable under the recent Sup- pression of Communism and Sabo- tage Acts. The African National Congress and the Pan-African Congress, both banned, have turned to un- derground operations and terror- ism in the face of the incredibly strong Verwoerd government. ** * IT IS THE BELIEF of many observers, keeping 'all these facts in mind, that South Africa may soon be the scene of a revolution which will make Algeria look like a picnic. But it must be pointed out that this revolution, when it comes, will not necessarily be ra-. cial in nature.' Rather, it will be the struggle of both whites and blacks who believe in democracy against the fascist practices of the Africaaner government. LETTERS Statemn To Romney To the Editor: I AM SUBMITTING a copy of a letter for consideration as an "open letter" to Governor George Romney: Dear Sir: AF'TER SWITCHING the Michi- gan delegation's support to Senator Goldwater at the Republi- can National Convention, you said: "It is perfectly evident that we have dedicated ourselves to a rebirth of individualism in Amer- ica." This statement prompts me to make several observations. I am not a members of one of the national trade unions, and I do not own stock in any of the numerous national corporations. To attempt to defend myself in- dividually, against the enormous powers of these organizations would be utterly futile. I must therefore, act in concert with my fellow citizens to preserve my existence as, an individual-that is to say, I must exercise the countervailing power of govern- ment. For that reason, I reject as erroneous your view that the Re- publican Party in 1964 is dedicat- ed "to a rebirth of individualism in America." * * * IN THE COMING election cam- paign, my support will go to those citizens who, life myself, seek to maintain a government which is somewhat stronger than the huge, self -centered economic organiza- tions so characteristic of contem- porary American life. At present, this description seems to fit the members of the Democratic Party. --Thomas G. Powell LYRICAL ABILITY stornin: Clrity, Precision I B ILTHOVEN, HOLLAND-Senator Bar- ry Goldwater's victory in San Fran- cisco is scarcely welcomed in Europe. Gen- eral reaction is negative, with some ex- tremrightist wings standing neutral in the controversy. A This attitude is, of course, only natural. The Arizona senator has until now ex- presse d opinions that were all too often. in open contrast to the interests of Eu- ropean nations. In promoting American nationalism at the expense of other West- ern nations, Goldwater purposely antag- onizes European countries. This is true of big and small countries alike. Besides creating antagonism, Gold- water holds conservative views that are incomprehensible to most Europeans. In this country especially, very few people can grasp the reasoning behind the right wing's insistense on states' rights. THE NIGHTMARE that conservatives see in the increasing federal control cannot be understood by Europeans of fedei alist countries who generally have a much deeper faith in their national governments. Also, the need for more se- vere federalization of government, a.s pressed for by the right wing, cannot pos- sibly be realized by citizens of the much smaller Euro l an nations rm Of additional concern to many Euro- pean politicians is the effect which Gold- water may have on the GOP. If this re- sults in an overwhelming flow of votes to the Democrats, a healthy opposition party may not only be blemished in the Executive, but also in Congress. If the Democrats achieve a strong victory in November's legislative elections, the Unit- ed States might end up with something dangerously close to a one-party rule in Washington-a source of concern to peo- ple who are used to coalitions and num- erous parties. MORE AND MORE persistently, the ele- ment of fright is added to European reactions which had until now consisted of mere disgust. This element is caused by the overwhelming majority that Gold- water got on that first ballot. One wonders here in Europe whether Goldwater's support is really as narrow as the' pollsters make one believe. At least, if all Republicans act as Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania and former President Dwight Eisenhower did (who pledged their support to Goldwater after he was nominated), the Arizona senator's chances might not be so bad after all. Among other things, the result EUGENE ISTOMIN was present- ed by the University Musical Society in a piano concert last evening before a capacity crowd in Rackham Auditorium. Istomin is well known for his ability as a chamber performer and last night he demonstrated his skill as a soloist of the front rank. The program opened with Haydn's Sonata in A major. This delightful work is almost "bar- oque" rather than classical in tex- ture. The many embellishments of the first movement were executed with remarkable clarity and pre- cision' by Istomin. He seemed "Off We Go, Into The Wild Blue Yonder -- ' temperamentally well - suited for this work and he produced much] variety of sound in a rather thin l texture.1 The Minuetto and Trio demon-l strated one of Istomin's outstand-' ing qualities-his rhythm. The lastt movement, like the first, is high-l ly embellished and again Istomin achieved a wide variety of tone. This composer is too often refer- red to, especially on record jack- ets, as "Papa" Haydn-a ratheri nice old man who wrote nices "folksy" music. This is unfortu-i nate because it doesn't quite do1 justice to one of the true giantsI of music's history.I The two Schubert Impromptus which followed were very enjoy- able indeed. No one can writer beautiful melodies quite like this composer-as shown in the first impromptu in G flat. He took ! this composition a little slowerI than it is customarily played, but yet his performance was most1 convincing and enjoyable. The second impromptu, in E flat, isI marked by a fast and swirling line - Istomin literally made it breathe with delightful pauses andl nuances. THE WALDSTEIN Sonata of Beethoven concluded the first por- tion of the program. This work is the first in a veritable string of masterworks Beethoven wroteI between 1803-7. It is followed by the Eroica Symphony (Op. 55), Appassionata Sonata (Op. 57), The second movement opens in F major and abruptly shifts to E major, demonstrating the new harmonic language Beethoven was to employ in this period. Istomin's playing of this movement was marked by the lyricism of his line and the extreme gradations of dynamics giving this movement an especially dramatic quality. * * * THE LAST MOVEMENT was the highlight of the work-as far as his performance of it went. He took a rather slow and steady tempo-as compared with most pianists-but this certainly didn't detract from the fast and bril- liant sections of it. Rather, it added a good deal because of the clarity and precision of his play- ing. After intermission, Stravinsky's Sonata in Three Movements was performed. The first movement is marked by constant triplet mo- tion and could become monotonous unless handled by a sensitive per- former. Istomin made it an ar- resting movement to listen to. The second movement is a particular- ly beautiful piece of music and again demonstrated his lyrical -ibility. * * * THE TWO WORKS of Chopin which closed the program were somewhat of a letdown. I feel that Istomin handled the classi- cal and neo-classical works best. The Nocturne lacked the lyricism and intimacy one expects, espe- ;:p: i$;r d ............:: p '0 "A E ............ 4 ;: - ,% rt I I 1 9 MaiI >; 4 I