Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Student Innovators or Social Tools? I Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail 4 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, OCTOBER 12, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER SARASOHN The Katz Case at Berkeley: Imp ications for Academic Freedom ONE ASPECT of the controversy that has arisen all over the country in the past year over the role that the univer- sity should play in political affairs is typified by the case of Eli Katz, former teacher at the University of California at Berkeley. The reasons for his ouster, the decision of the faculty to rehire him and the subsequent inaction of the adminis- tration are all indicative of the extent to which our universities control the ac- tivities of students and professors. Hired in the fall of 1963 as an acting assistant professor of German, Katz was promised a two-year contract as assistant professor on completion of his doctorate. He was not given the promised contract when, the following January, he refused to answer questions put to him by the then-chancellor of Berkeley, Edward Strong, concerning his 1957 attendance at two Communist Party meetings. The questions were similar to ones he had not answered when appearing before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1958. Strong's decision to oust Katz was se- verely criticized by the Committee on Privilege and Tenure of Berkeley's facul- ty Senate, which urged 'that Katz be re- hired. No action was taken by the ad- ministration following the report, how- ever, and Strong refused to testify during the review of the case. HOPE WAS RAISED again last week when the new chancellor, Roger W. Heyns, indicated that a decision on the rehiring, including a complete statement giving reasons for the decision, would be made public within a few days. Since then, however, the administration has appeared to be backing down, saying that the case is being "actively worked on, no one is stalling, but there are many con- siderations." The whole manner in which the case has been handled raises several questions about the role of the university in con- trolling student and faculty actions. PAD KATZ' political viewpoints influ- enced his competency as a teacher there might have been some justification for his dismissal. But his competency was at no time questioned, since the German department backed his appointment by a -vote of 12-3. Thus, what justification could Strong have had for investigating Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOODMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH FIELDS........... .. ..Personnel Director LAUREN BAHR .... . Associate Managing Editor JUDITH WARREN........ Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT HIPPLER. Associate EditorialnDirector GAIL BLUMBERG . . ...... Magazine Editor LLOYD GRAFF.,.. ....... . Acting Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Susan Collins, John Meredith, Leonard Pratt, Peter Sarasohn, Bruce Wasserstein. DAY EDITORS: Robert Carney, Clarence Fanto, Mark Killingsworth, Harvey Wasserman, Dick Wingfield. Business Staff CY WELLMAN, Business Manager ALAN GLUECKMAN............ Advertising Manager JOYCE FEINBERG........ .. . Finance Manager SUSAN CRAWFORD ..... Associate Business Manager MA.NaGERS: Harry Bloch, Bruce Hiliman, Marline BAuethau, Jeffrey Leeds, Gail Levin, Susan Per- stadt, Vic Ptasznik, Elizabeth Rhein, Ruth Segall, Jill Tozer, Elizabeth Wissman. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail); $8 yearly by carrier ($9 by mail). Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. his activities, unless he was afraid of the consequences of retaining an alleged "Communist sympathizer" on the faculty. Ever since the reactionary McCarthy era of the early '50's, during which hun- dreds of professors all over the country were investigated and lost their jobs, there has been a latent fear of having "radical" teachers control the minds of the youth of this country. Every once in a while this fear explodes, as in the 1960 San Francisco HUAC hearings, when thousands of students rioted to protest the committee's subpoena of several pro- fessors and other liberals. The terror and intimidation of the com- mittee go on,subdued. Extreme pressure is placed on the administration of state- supported institutions by the FBI, which can influence state legislators into inves- tigating universities or threatening to cut appropriations. Having a "subversive" on the faculty could therefore prove a real threat to the university in the minds of the administrators, and there is no rea- son to assume that this fear did not play a part in the investigation and ouster of Katz. ANOTHER IMPORTANT problem the Katz case raises is the role played by the faculty in the running of a large uni- versity. The faculty Senate at Berkeley has no real legislative power, as can be seen by the fact that, while it voted over- whelmingly to rehire Katz and re-exam- ine the structure of review in cases sim- ilar to Katz', the administration has taken no definitive action on the matter for over a year. This lack of faculty voice on important decisions seems to be true of most of the large schools. For the most part, opera- tional control of the schools is held by the administrations and the regentts. What this means is that decisions con- cerning faculty conduct, hiring and ten- ure are to be decided by administrators, whose standards of judgment are ulti- mately less related to the requirements of good education than are the standards of the faculty. ELI KATZ is not alone in his opposi- tion to control by the universities of the political actions of students and pro- fessors. An entire movement, sparked by the free speech movement at Berkeley last year, has begun to grow up all over the country. Closer to home, Paul Schiff, a graduate student at Michigan State University, has been denied readmission because of his political affiliations and his refusal to comply with university regulations lim- iting his political activities. There is a great deal of similarity between Schiff's case and that of Katz. The American Civ- il Liberties Union has taken Schiff's case to court, and the same thing will be done at Berkeley if Heyns' decision does not come soon. The United States has made great strides in the field of education, both in terms of its quality and in the instigation of federal aid programs to enable more people to benefit from the higher qual- ity. But these achievements will be mean- ingless as long as irrelevant political con- siderations can be invoked against fear- ful faculty. -DAVID DUBOFF TMERE WERE 18,000 under- graduates at the University last year. It's no secret that they rep- resent a strongly upper middle class orientation, with their fam- ily incomes averaging up around $15,000 per year and with all the goal and achievement values of 18 years of living in a suburban, cor- porate social-climbing milieu. Since what you put into an in- stitution is related fairly directly to what you get out of it (even though the relationships may not be immediately evident), the com- position of the student body is one of the main determinants of the University's role in its society. The historical neglect of the student has obscured the truism that students are at least as im- porant in determining what a uni- versity is and does as the faculty (perhaps more so). Students are, by the time they get to a univer- sity, something close to finished products. Faculty do some final assembling and finishing opera- tions, and their effects are often great, but if the potential isn't there or has been destroyed years earlier, there is nothing they can do. ONE OF the untenable myths still hallowed to some degree in some circles is the university as teacher-scholar, i.e. the ivory tow- er. There is a function to be per- formed, the dissemination of knowledge, and the university should simply do it in the best time - honored traditions, letting the chips fall where they may. This is nonsense in a world where knowledge is the first requisite for power. The university cannot ex- tricate itself from considerations of who shall participate in this dissemination of knowledge, since it must make some decisions and be able to defend them or run the risk of being torn apart by those competing for the rewards. So how can that upper middle class bias be justified? ONE FIRST has to look broadly at the "uses" of the University and make a basic decision as to what the uses of this one are. In the most general terms it comes down to a choice between three alternatives: -To be self-serving and self- perpetuating, as much of the aca- demic establishment has been for years; -To be social-serving, produc- ing and disseminating knowledge with maximum efficiency for, put in the grossest terms, maximum contribution to the GNP; or -To be a social innovator, in- troducing i n t o society those changes in perspectives and in ways of doing things that require major social --adjustments, even revolution (peaceful or otherwise), in order to be understood and im- plemented. IN A UNIVERSITY the size of this one, it is not surprising that all three possibilities are repre- sented. What has happened is that the self-serving, self-perpetu- ating, ivory tower has become im- possible to maintain-math, phy- sics, sociology, political science are all becoming vitally important, and if you're important you can't be detached. At the same time, society-in the form of legislators, alumni parents, parents in general and an increasingly human welfare - or- iented federal government - has sought to make the University so- cial-serving, exerting pressures for useful knowledge (again in terms of that GNP) and lots of it. Parts of the University have, of course, rebelled at the idea of be- ing social tools and have instead sought to reinforce the role of Michigan MAD By ROBERT JOHNSTON social innovator. And that would indeed seem to be a role that the University is particularly well- qualified to adopt. UNFORTUNATELY, such a phi- losophy has not been officially ar- ticulated, let alone adopted or en- couraged, and, as the pressures mount, it is in danger of being- swamped by a hoard of in-state, middle c 1 a s s WASPs seeking $250,000 worth of education. (And they're not even seeking it for the $250,000; it's because "everybody goes to college now.") The University needn't fall into the trap of thinking that being a social tool is evil per se. One might gladly be tooled a little to make the poverty program work. But this University has far more abil- ities than that. It can be a leader -so why not be one? Which brings us back to the problem of the composition of the student body, for you are after vastly different types of students if you want to be innovative than if you just want to educate. , HERE THERE are some hard facts to be faced. The social in- novators are to be found not among the poor or among the Negroes or even among the middle class generally, but among the elite of the middle class and even the upper class. It is ridiculous for Barry Bluestone to yell that Ne- groes and sons of workers must be brought into the University. They -would come here precisely for that $250,000. Whereas, if the University is to supply innovators, it must seek them among its up- per middle class students. Clearly what the University doesn't want, if it is to carry out the role of social revolutionary, is what it's been getting more and more of: the well high-schooled, middle class, moderately goal-, and achiever-oriented, nicely ad- justed in-state freshman, neither a dirty (figuratively) capitalist nor an all-out SDSer. When the in state-out of state ratio is finally announced, the in-state percentage will almost surely have risen another point, having gone from 66 per cent in 1959 to 73 per cent last year. There can be little doubt that the richest component of the social innovator group is from out-of- state-New York and Chicago Jews, specifically. THE UNIVERSITY is clearly in no position to abandon complete- ly the social service education it must provide for the state. But there is a problem of emphasis: we could take in double our en- rollment and not get all those the Legislature would have us take. It therefore becomes a matter of shifting the emphasis, or even the outlook, to a vision more im- portant and more crucial for the University, a social innovator. If this function isn't recognized, and emphasized, it will disappear, and if the University doesn't produce some sort of commitment to it, it could easily be lost soon. To strengthen this role, the University, at least from the stu- dents' point of view, could become a laboratory in human relation- ships, the dominant theme of stu- dent unrest. Room should in fact be made for bringing in a much larger com- ponent of children from lower class and Negro homes, to see how they might be brought into society and be made capable of leading and organizing their people at a much faster pace than any of their own leaders or the commun- ity organization programs have yet been able to do. AN EXAMPLE of how this might work: The University has a large, active affiliate system. Why not turn the whole concept of affiliation on its head? Rather than making the fraternity or sorority an upper class status sym- bol to provide for the status needs and status cravings of its insecure members, it could set itself up as an internal Peace Corps, provid- ing a living environment with the fraternity and personal equality so often espoused now and so needed by any lower class person trying to adapt to an upper class society. The fraternities and sororities could participate in state-wide re- cruiting, lending personal encour- agement and liaison for the pros- pective lower class students, and they could administer large scho- larship programs in cooperation with the University on a personal rather than bureaucratic level. THE UNIVERSITY. is in a strong position to look down to those classes whose positions in society need to be remade, and it should seek out, on the other hand, students whose backgrounds have in the past led them to in- novative roles in society. The University must not be- come, and its leaders must not allow it to become, an exercise in social service. It should offer new ideas, new ways of doing things, new systems of human relation- ships. In the long run, of course, that role is far more important than any other to the humanly success- ful functioning of a society. ) J '4 The Student Right: Insight and Paradoxes By CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER THE STUDENT RIGHT on this and other campuses has long been an invisible or unorganized political force. With the relatively recent upsurge in conservative activity and the presidential cam- paign of Barry Goldwater, how- ever, student conservatives have discovered issues and organiza- tions around which they can co- alesce. By far the largest and most re- sponsible conservative student or- ganization is the Young Ameri- cans for Freedom (YAF). The group was formed in 1960 when William Buckley, conservative leader and editor of National Re- view magazine, called approxi- mately 200 young people active in conservative organizations to his home in Sharon, Connecticut. At this meeting the Young Americans for Freedom was of- ficially constituted, and the Shar- on Statement, and explanation of its basic beliefs, was drafted. THE SHARONSTATEMENT, considered by YAF to be the clearest explanation of its philos- ophy, lists as "eternal truths" such values as the overriding im- portance of individual initiative, economic laissez-faire, the perfec- tion of the Constitution, states' rights and the menace of com- munism. These are, however, only gen- eralities, found in the expressed doctrines of innumerable other conservative organizations. In practice, most YAFs exhibit a relatively moderate form of con- servatism, with some added ele- ments of activism that seem to spring more from youthful en- thusiasm than from ideological commitment. THE MODERATION of YAF is evidenced by its rejection, offi- cially declared at its National Con- ference this year, of the right- wing "fundamentalism" of the John Birch Society and other ex- treme conservative groups. For this reason also, YAF literature is free of the paranoia and smear tactics that have, wrongly, been considered a general attribute of all conservative organizations. The YAF -philosophy exhibits a slightly more liberal (and to some extent more "realistic") tenor than the Sharon Statement's con- centration on laissez-faire eco- nomics, strict individualism and the struggle with communism would suggest. However, as there is little dis- tinction between YAP doctrine and the mainstream of responsible conservative thought in this coun- try, the majority of YAF views can be discussed in the light of the general conservative philoso- phy. . IN THIS MODE of thought the individual is considered not only the strongest, most legitimate unit of society, but also the most moral. Man is inherently good, and if society isto reflect this good, the individual must be given the greatest freedom possible for its manifestation. Morality is, then, on an in- dividual basis: men are respon- sible to God or, to themselves. There is complete rejection of existence of a social good which would define standards of moral- ity; if each individual is moral, society will necessarily be moral, provided only that the individual is free to express himself. Somehow, YAFs do not see any harshness in this philosophy. They will stress over and over that this "rugged individualism" is, of course, difficult, but that man is ennobled and fulfilled when he must confront the world on his own initiative. THIS PERCEPTION of the in- dividual in society is related to, though not entirely, the fear of overcentralization of government. The conservative, looking at the past 30 years of domestic legis- lation concludes that social legis- lation will bring government con- trol and therefore a reduction of freedom. (Paradoxically, they do not at- tack the same centralization and bureaucratic organizations in big business. They have no objection to-and in fact admire-the achievements of men like Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, who amassed fortunes and built complex industrial organizations.) Significantly, conservative at- tacks on social legislation such as the War on Poverty, do not take the form of opposition to charity or community services for the poor. They emphasize that charit- able activities are completely legi- timate-but only if they are done on a local level and if the help is given in the form of an in- centive (although this is vaguely defined). THESE VALUES appear to be little more than a restatement of 19th Century liberalism and lais- sez-faire economics. The same ideas were used to justify the un- limited acquisition of money and power by a few men in the latter 1800's. It would be an injustice, how- ever, to say that these considera- tions alone characterizecconserva- tive opposition to many govern- ment programs. Perhaps ascertain affinity for tradition is also rele- vant-the fear of an accelerated breakdown of norms and social barriers which have characterized a more desirable past and which would not take place except for current legislation. ANOTHER AREA of frequent conservative ridicule is the use of nonviolence by organizations like those in the civil rights move- ment. Conservative groups state that they are philosophically op- posed to the implications of non- violence and civil disobedience. Yet groups likeYAF have dis-. covered and used extensively tac- tics such as the picket. The most notable example was the picket of a Firestone Rubber Company plant in Ohio, protesting Firestone's plans to build a rub- ber processing facility in Ru- mania because it would be "aid- ing the enemy." One YAF member justified the use of the picket by saying that it was an extreme case and the YAF has stringent rules governing dress and conduct to ensure maximum decorum even on a picket line. YAFs believe that the protests of civil rights groups, however, produce alienation and animosity and that a sounder tactic would be person-to-person discussion and resolution of differences. THUS YAFS on this campus and others have refrained from participation in local activist groups, even when they claim gen- eral agreement with their griev- ances, (although conservative par- ticipation in the Berkeley demon- stration is an exception that may indicate a change in this attitude). YAFs feel that means used by ac- tivist groups necessarily reflect ends with which they will ulti- mately disagree. Regardless of the objections to activism for tactical reasons, the or organizations operating outside the "system." THAT SOME reconciliation of the conservative point of view with the use of activism may eventually take-place is indicated in the views of several YAF mem- bers concerning their philosophi- cal relationship to the student left or "New Left." At the most basic (and there- fore most unspecific) level of so- cial and political thought, some of the objections and criticisms of modern society made by YAP are similar to those of its counter- parts on the radical left. There is the same dislike of bureaucracy and centralization. The conservative opposes them because, in the realm of govern- ment, they destroy human initia- tive. The radical opposes them because they are dehumanizing and alienating. The similarity of goals for both groups is a longing for a return or advance, depending on the out- look, of each, to social arrange- ments founded on and perpetuat- ing a more basic and personal concept of man andhhis relation- ship to others. Although this does not presuppose an impending un- ion of the two ideologies, it does show similarity in the experience and reaction of each group to modern society. THE DIFFENENCE remaining between the right and the left lies not only in the means to achieve the desired end but also in the structure of the envisioned society. While the radical does not see a viable model in any past or present system of society, the con- servative believes in a return to the original "pure" form of Amer- ican Constitutional government (whether this ever existed is de- batable). This love affair with the Con- stitution, and particularly some of its more awkward and inegali- tarian constructions, demonstrates the basic commitment of the con- servative to what has been estab- lished, what is traditional, what is "duly constituted." Hall Knoc Use of To the Editor: THURSDAY morning's "Schut- ze's Corner: Culture" did two kind things for us. First, it defined "Culture," a term The Daily likes to throw around and which puzzles some of us. The Schutze Formula for "Culture" is Keats, God and Van Gogh (a fourth name is added for the irony of it all) and this series has the ring of truth: to the semi-literate mind of 1965, "Culture" consists of two famous and popular 19th Century artists plus one spiritual entity generally associated with Church. This should not be mistaken for sterile authoritarianism or "Establishment" politics. The "go slow" urgings of conservative groups are more a distrust of rapid change and a respect for and need to preserve existing forms (though not necessarily endlessly). ALTOGETHER, considering the Political tenor of the country to- day, what does this movement imply for the ideological direction of both campus and national poli- tics? On this campus, the conserva- tive movement has produced a YAF, chapter whose, principal ac- tivities have been sporadic ridicule of the left, particularly of its action programs, and reorganiza- tion of the chapter. This lack of meaningful action and intellectual contribution seems to illustrate the major fault of the student right in general. Despite its claim that it has i mission and a valuable message to communicate to the American people, it fails, particularly in its journals of opinion and conserva- tive thought, to offer intelligent ideological alternatives to and criticism of left and, liberal thought. In addition, the student right's failure to take initiative, either through direct action or the formulation of viable solutions to the social, economic and political problems of the present, reveals a certain amount of indifference to the possible effects of their ideas on others. If the charge of blind concern with ideological cant can be leveled at conservatives, it hits hardest at this lack of in- sight. WHAT CONSERVATIVES need, beyond all their ideological pro- testations, is to make an effort to expose and seek solutions to mod- ern problems with the same vigor that characterizes left or liberal groups. Whether campus conser- vatives are capable of such;m action remains, unfortunately, unanswer- ed. ks Daily's Clulture' Student Signs To the Editor: WHY DOESN'T the University erect a number of kiosks at various points on the campus to serve as a place for student signs, notices and political activities? Some of the kiosks at high traf- fic points and in the vicinity of each of the schools and colleges could be small, newsstand-like structures of pleasing design and permanent construction f r o m which a few students could gather petition signatures, collect ballots, etc. Other kiosks need be little '1 4 FEIFFER c7 A SE )TWMN,IT5 TIME 0O ATCON5OLVIATfEI cA41,UTLOI4 eOTcF THE cxFUlJSV A~Jf CAVE '111 U pu.urc '7 THE PO9T'IVE SIDE OF -'WE A? IQW GRATR pOu laTI'.) TORY'. 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