*w tDf 0, 4 NEW EPOWER IN SOCIETY.: Tom Wolfe TOM WOLFE: The Kandy-Kolored Tan- gerine-Flake Streamline Baby Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 1965 $5.50 By Mark R. Killingsworth IF QUALITY, not quantity, is the standard by which culture is judged, the best of American culture would doubt- less merit a highly favorable rating. Our musicians have continually been inno- vators. Our artists have been pre-emi- nent. We are quite possibly foremost in the dance. There is, of course, another culture, the Doris Day - Ray Coniff - John O'Hara syndrome, which has been discussed and criticized, both here and abroad, to such an extent that it seems neither necessary or valuable to carry the evaluation further. But there is a third culture in this country. As the press handout (a literary manifestation of this third culture) on The Kandy - Kolored Tangerine - Flake Streamlined Baby says, its author Tom Wolfe. takes a sharp-eyed look at the American scene, and zeroes in on the new, exotic forms of status-seeking- social, cultural, and otherwise-that are flourishing across the country. A central notion threading through Mr. Wolfe's rich assortment of observa- tions is that recent years have seen the emergence of a good many in- triguing art forms and styles of life, having nothing at all to do with the elite culture of the past. Vulgar and common to the Establishment, they really express the ordinary Ameri- can's sense of form and beauty. The blurb goes on to list "expressions of this exuberant new culture, which might be called Postwar Teenage," and suggests that "the upper crust has been frantically seeking new forms to pre- serve its status against the proles." That is the best brief analysis of Wolfe's book. Perhaps it may seem in- appropriate to some for a political re- porter to attempt to discuss such cul- tural phenomena (although, to be sure, students of cultural phenomena have evidently taken increasing interest re- cently in political events, from New York City to Saigon). On the other hand, perhaps culture and politics are linked together in the life of this great Republic to a greater extent than anyone might have imagined. This seems to be the case here; in any event, though, it is well to present more than a simple summary of Mr. Wolfe's book before discussing its implications of whatever nature. E TITLE of the book comes from an experience Wolfe had with the "Nether-culture" he has been investigat- ing. It seems he was asked to do a fea- ture story on the Hot Rod & Custom Car Show for Esquire Magazine (which, along with The New York Herald Tribune, has printed most of his material). The article, in his words, was supposed to be the opposite of the "totem formula" story, a genre usually reserved for events of this kind. "The totem story," Wolfe says disdainfully, "usually makes what is known as 'gentle fun' of the topic which is a way of saying, don't worry, these people are nothing." But Wolfe found, in doing his story, that these people were something. He returned from the show, he says in the introduction to the book, a collection of his reportage, so excited he couldn't write about his experiences. After a long wait, Byron Dobell, the magazine's managing editor, finally told Wolfe to write a memo on his experiences and someone else would write the story. Wolfe typed out his notes in a 49-page letter to Dobell. Esquire struck out the "Dear Byron" and ran the rest of the letter intact, and thus The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby. THE BOOK itself begins with a descrip- tion of Las Vegas, which Wolfe ideal- izes: "It is no accident .that Las Vegas and Versailles are the only two archi- tecturally uniform cities in Western his- tory. . . . Long after Las Vegas' influence as a gambling heaven has gone, Las Vegas' forms and symbols will be influ- encing American life." Wolfe adds a conversation with one Ted Blaney, chief designer of Federal Sign and Signal Corporation, on a "huge boomerang Shape" which prevails in the styling of neon signs in the city: "Well, that's what we call-what we sort of call- free form,'" Blaney told Wolfe. Wolfe rhapsodizes: Free form! Marvelous! No hung- up old art history words for these guys. America's first unconscious avant-garde! The hell with Mondri- an, whoever the hell he is. The hell with Moholy-Nagy, if anyone ever heard of him. Artists for the new age, sculptors for the new style and new money of the ... Yah! Lower orders, The new sensibility ... He also notes the music (Muzak) which is perpetual and which "pervades Las Vegas from the time you walk into the airport upon landing to the last time you leave the casinos. . It was as if there was a communal fear that someone, somewhere in Las Vegas, was going to be left with a totally vacant minute on his hands." And, in addition to noting "the Las Vegas buttocks decolletage;" the fact that (like most of the other manifesta- tions of this sort of American culture) the city all began after the war largely because of the new influx of money and eager consumers; the "electronic jolli- fidcation" of the "Urp! Wheep! Lulu!" of radio station KORK's "Action Check- point News"; Wolfe also has time to learn from Mr. Major A. Riddle, the president of the Dunes hotel, that the strip show this year for the -Dunes' Casino de Paris will cost $2.5 million to run and $1.5 mil- lion to produce. WOLFE MOVES on to Riverhead, Long Island, where drag races have created "what is culturally the most important sport ever originated in the United States, a sport that ranks with the gladitorial games -of Rome as a piece of national symbolism." There is as in medieval times, little prize money; most of it is done for fun and, presumably, ego-grati- fication and prestige. And, as Roman socialites did with the gladiators' games by the second century A.D., Wolfe finds the upper class is now beginning to enter these automotive lists themselves "for kicks." Wolfe examines other exponents of this Nether-culture of gleaming automo- biles, mindless music and pointless but frenetic "ACTION!" He goes from Mur- ray Kaufman, better known as Murray the K ("It's what's happening, baby!"), who became the "Fifth Beatle" (and thus cashed in on the Beatle craze himself) by becoming their American escort thanks to luck and intrepidity - to 23-year-old Phil Spector, the hirsute multimillionaire president of a large number of record corporations and accurately named "The First Tycoon of Teen." Discussing automobiles in the title article ("Kandy . . .") and in another piece on Junior Johnson, a revered stock- car driver from North Carolina, Wolfe adds that not only are a substantial num- ber of people interested in restyling and modifying cars along lines "Detroit didn't do until years later," but that they are also taking over a good deal of the car market. Detroit auto makers have responded to this new sense of taste and, as is well- known, are even providing topnotch cars "Nether culture and in-culture, conponents of a Schlock culture, are essentially com- posed of irrelevancies, trivia, rather useless material objects and 'personalities' of dif- ferent sorts." '..JG".{" > r A .e .3= .f-2:".. :. for auto races so, if as they hope, their cars consistently win, their company will capture part of this market. And then there are Cassius Clay, Cary Grant (whose inclusion in such a book seems curiously irrelevant) and Robert Harrison, the publisher of the now-de- funct Confidential magazine. INTERESTINGLY, t h e Nether-culture which Wolfe presents in such agonizing and exquisite (and, to be sure, highly entertaining) fashion is such that these people are indeed something. In fact, their culture seems to be seeping up into the Establishment. There is, for example, Baby Jane Hol- zer, "The Girl of the Year," in her twelve- room apartment on Park Avenue: "Her style of life has ereated her fame - rock and roll, underground movies, decaying lofts, models, pho- tographers, Living Pop Art, the twist, the frug, the mashed potatoes, stretch pants, pre-Raphaelite hair, Le Style Camp. All of it has a common de- nominator. Once it was power that created high style. But now high styles come from low places, from people who have no power, who slink away from it, in fact, who are mar- ginal, who carve out worlds for them- selves in the Nether depths, in taint- ed 'undergrounds' " Appropriately enough, Wolfe's piece opens with Baby Jane's visit to a concert by the Rolling Stones: "Bangs manes bouffants beehives Beatle caps butter faces brush-on lashes decal eyes puffy sweaters French thrust bras flailing leather blue jeans stretch pants stretch jeans honeydew bottoms eclair shanks elf boots ballerinas Knight slippers, hun- dreds of them, these flaming little buds, bobbing and screaming, rocket- ing around inside the Academy of Music Theater underneath that vast old cherub dome up there - aren't they super-marvelous!" And Baby Jane says: "Wait'1l you see the Stones! They're so sexy! . * . The Beatles, well, you know, Paul McCartney - sweet Paul McCartney. .. He's such a sweet person. I mean, the Stones are bitter-they're all from the work- ing class, you know." Apparently3, a lot of the Establishment's devotion to the Nether-culture comes from a fear of becoming what Wolfe re- peatedly calls "infarcted" and (particu- larly-and this recurs in nearly every piece in the book) "arteriosclerotic." "Now she looks worried," does Baby Jane, "as if the world could be such a simple and exhilerating place if there weren't so many old and arteriosclerotic people around to muck it up." OF COURSE, there is still the more traditional Establishment c u l t u r e, though it is highly changed, and Wolfe reports that too. "The Saturday Route," for example, is basically that of Middletown, U.S.A., but in Manhattan it involves Social Kisses and gossip and seeing what they are wearing and doing while marching along the Route along the art gallery section of Madison Avenue., There is also the "secret vice" of the Establishment for "marginal differentia- tions" in clothing, such as "Our Exclusive Shirtings," the "F i n e st Lairdsmoor Heather Hopsacking," and so on. Prob- ably one of the most interesting of the new Establishment culture's many in- teresting elements is the mania for coat buttons which actually button one's coat sleeves. In Wolfe's book, two friends, one with and one without this bit of arcane tail- oring, compare sleeves. As for Ross, who has the regular suit, Wolfe says: "That really got to old Ross. He practically couldn't wear that suit anymore." The Nether-culture and the "In-cul- ture," both fairly closely related, are thus both essentially composed ofirrel- levancies, trivia and rather useless mate- rial objects and "personalities" of differ- ent sorts. In these regions Wolfe makes a most interesting cicerone-stimulating, enter- taining, provocative. He deftly combines sociology (the ex- planations of the growth of Las Vegas, rock 'n' roll and the hotrod-dragracing culture, for example, are excellent), hum- or, a style perfectly adapted to his topic and a topic which is, in the least, differ- ent; the result, to many, will be an amus- ing and witty tour of the sideshow areas of an exhibit on American culture. BUT THIS SORT of attitude, above all things, is the one to avoid, and for good reason-because "these people are something." we currently face would have been licked before this. Q-So the report said, let's get going. How do you see the University getting going? A-Well, I think it is getting going in lots of ways. There are units that are beginning to state very clearly: we need the following new staff at a particular rate; so much space for instruction and offices. This is going on now in all the units. It may not be going fast, but this is the next step in the process. Q-Do you see the possibility of the University expanding with added smaller units as opposed to expanding existing departments? A-Yes, I think there are going to be questions about the social organization of the University that are going to be clarified. Certainly the size of the liter- ary college is one, I think the concept of growing by units, residential college units, or college units, is pretty well accepted as the way to go. Q-Can the Medical School get a class larger than 200? Can that go on indefi- nitely without, for instance, diluting edu- cational quality? A-My impression from Dean Hubbard is that they are talking about functional units that are smaller than the present college. I think there are going to be some inventions over on that part of the campus. Q-Would you say that is going to be the case all over the University? A-Not all over, because there are some places it doesn't have to happen, such as social work, or public health or dentistry. Innovation and Change Q-Do you see this as an impetus for innovation and change? A-I think there is going to be experi- mentation in forms of organization, but I don't think that we're going to just create something really new. I also be- lieve that a young person who comes to the University of Michigan or Berkeley does not elect to come here expecting to be at Swarthmore. He wants something of the richness, the complexity and even, of the anonymity. In conferences with students, when I start talking about small living and learning units, not everybody starts wav- ing a flag and shouting, hurrah. We have the challenge of creating neighborhoods of learning in a big city devoted to that process. The neighbor- hood probably should not be self-con- tained, and defining its relation to the central services and resources of the city is a delicate task. Q-Do you have a general philosophy of growth as a good or bad thing-that you can get too many people on one campus? For instance this campus is going to continue to grow fairly fast and yet Berkeley has a lid on growth. A-It is certainly true that I have been operating here with an attitude toward growth that would not have led to the imposition of the limit. I'm going to a place that quite clearly has been operat- ing under a different, or ostensibly op- erating under a different, philosophy than this institution has. I don't happen to believe myself that there is any necessary ideal limit on size just in general. I think it is a problem of social organization. A university of 11,000 can be too big, because it is poorly run, poorly organized. So I don't think there is any perfect relationship between the size and the quality of the educational effort. I've talked with a few people at Berke- ley about some of the consequences of limiting total size. Many of them have thought about some of the consequences. When there is an upper limit and some new area of learning and research needs development, what is going to be dropped? This is not a problem that most universities have had to face. This is a new challenge to Berkeley and the suc- cess with which it handles it will be instructive. Q-How far can this university go with its North Campus before it starts coming up with space problems again? A-I don't know. The University is not too far from it. Sometimes when we get into site discussions, the area that looked as big as Rhode Island is getting pretty small. To answer your question, it can't go very far. Q-The way we are housing these peo- ple is obviously developing more and more into a very dense situation here with righ rises and all. Yet the University still adheres to the concept of lawns and low buildtngs andso on, This Is going to have to change isn't it? A-I think there will be more of a, tendency for high rise University build- ings. Certainly the campus planning calls for emphasis on more tall buildings in order to preserve grassy areas. Q--What have been the components of the decision to grow at this university? Obviously there are various pressures that come from various areas for various reasons. A-As the growth report brings out, they are both internal and external. They come from needs of the society, pressures from the state, the young people who want to get in for professional training after the BA, social responsibility, and I think the aspirations and goals and drives of the faculty. They want to start new programs such as those in bio-en- gineering, genetics, communication sci- ences - and they want to bring in peo- ple to study these subjects. Q-Then your basic position is that this isn't at all a bad thing? A-That's right, provided the univer- sity is adequately supported. Educational Reform Q-What about educational reform? What's happening or ought to happen here? A-Let me take grading credit hours first. I don't see any real sign that these particular questions have been formu- lated in such a way that anybody is go- ing to work at them seriously, and it may be becauses they are not fundamental. They may be just kind of lightning rods that catch a lot of sparks, but nothing is really happening. It isn't very likely that right now any university is going to do anything drastic about grading systems. They might wor- ry a little bit about the fact that one de- partment gives two per cent E's and another gives 20 per cent or something, but I don't really believe that this is at the heart of any real discontent. At least the problem of grades hasn't been formulated in such a way as to get any real inventiveness out of it. Every- body understands that there must be some way of bookkeeping. It can be by. credit hours, or passing examinations or something like that, and again I don't believe that examination of this brings us to fundamentals. Now when we start talking about course structure and sequence of courses, and the factors that influence what courses are going to be offered, then you There will be much less of the kind of pedagogical situation in which the major function of the teacher is a monitor, who makes sure that people are really studying every day, learns the vocabu-' lary lists, or the content that must be mastered so that the student can tackle the next chapter. There is a great deal of the school- master kind of stuff even at the college level. These are the main ones I think of that will be developed. I think there will be other things which will drop out. The lecturer, for example, whose es- sential effect is the communication of fact that could be communicated in other ways, is going to go out of style. The lecturer who integrates, motivates, stimulates, is not. Q-The research explosion has brought about strong development here and else- where of inter-disciplinary work, inter- disciplinary institutes, and so on, and yet it always seemed to me that undergradu- ate education just hasn't shown any of these trends and goes along in the same ruts. Are things going to happen here? A-If you are talking about the impact of inter-disciplinary research on curricu- lum, I don't really think that's true. The Introduction to Asia course is a direct consequence of the stimulation of research dollars from Ford and Carnegie. The developments at the research level, and the graduate teaching of a core of faculty members led them to develop a course for freshmen and sophomores. This is a very good illustration of that kind of sequence. The communication sciences program is now an undergraduate major in the liter- ary college. It started out almost exclu- sively as a research effort. The bio-engineering program started out as a research effort, and it is still that primarily, but there is now small and growing numbers of undergraduates who are involved in it. Q-Are there more coming? A-I'm not as close to this as I was, but the sequence is there and indeed, it is almost enviable; people who are engaged in research are encouraged to teach, and so there is a great deal of influence. Courses in economics are influenced by the work of George Katona and Eva Muelleur and Jim Morgan from the In- stitute for Social Research. Courses in political science have been influenced by Angus Campbell and Philip Converse, also from the institute. biology. W ftor them t course nun tion of atti tional modi We have body and a certain set have a kin an extensiv knowledge1 there is gr quence we attracting have a kin only to und education c The educ special care because of t institution. a marvelous may do litt all right to non-major complex un of vigilance Q-Hasn' Kiety towar institutes a to be some A-This and it is a brs find m, unit the d teaching u easiest forn body under to somethir iture, andi hings goin would neve; I think t University1 thing abou teaching ur pretty good that you m ;hat prior1 such unit, t affairs anc search wor rhis decisic Nhich you Q-When who come they get in ary fields, a out and be and you w university, put him, be where he fi A-This is times there lisciplinary lisciplinary structure, l '>artments. graduates d obs in oth Looking a :nits need plinary lin sociology d narrow def ciologist sh the concept the latter ci the traditio quite readil dition. When an solid reputa wants to br n't quite fit trouble doi the campus ing certain ed somewhe Q-Do y you would n university i students th providing t an educatio speak; givir the place is just to walk every night, A-This i lem in part. pect the stu in the way o and so on? I'm certai bly invigora and excited fun living i done this ye I was ov about four about the v and they w were having from each o .ts . . . ..i4 .!S:""": "r; .;.!": ":v : , .. .. . .. :sll.*.*.**a........ .idi i ' l::....s .. ................... ( ...............vr::{{} {}..7v 1...". . . . '":::.::":.;::..;v....,:i. . ...... 'I don't really know whether it is actually true that there is a lot more political activity on the Berkeley campus than here. It has been more visible, and it was localized on a political issue, but we've had a lot of interest in political activity on this campus, it seems to me * . . It is hard to tell just how much of the intensity at Berkeley arose after the withdrawal of the famous piece of land. There was a large number of people who were not active before. .v" "tv. : .::..:"v."" ::::"s:.b2m s k' ## "S~i.0""};"a3.:31 ie",::;i-rY:4S,.g ..s.}, xr !: :t:r"..3 :""""!.i: ,..i :"k.>~c:: .r's i .:r: ":".:.r. :!r r.,~ai begin to get into some things which are more fundamental, and here I believe there are some encouraging signs-that faculty members are looking at these issues pretty carefully. There are some things on the horizon which suggest that University faculties and administrators are really going to have to take these seriously One is that there is going to be an increasing short- age in faculty. Secondly there is an ex- plosion of knowledge, and thirdly there is an increase in the number of students who want to get in. Now out of this-all of these external pressures on the conditions under which learning is going to take place, must come a re-examination of what is taught, and the conditions under which it is taught- the role of the teacher in teaching these things, the role of the peer group in help- ing learning take place, and so on. The kinds of external forces that make for revolutionary changes are beginning to be felt, and of those forces, student discontent with the quality of their ex- periences is one, but I don't think it is as likely to produce change as the others I have mentioned. , Q-As you look ahead in this field then, you say there are going to be changes coming, what are some of these? A-I think programmed instruction is one. It has great possibilities. Peer group instruction is another-where groups of people under some kind of general tute- lage learn from each other. Also reading or syllabus type courses, where the final :test is an examination. Two Cultures Q-What about the growing gap be- tween sciences and humanities as it is manifested in teaching? Or the problems at teaching science, especially biology, that Clark Kerr has mentioned? A-One issue here is the training of an individual in one field intensively, and in another field broadly, and this has problems apart from whether you talk about science or the humanities." These topics, I would say, are some of the best illustrations of issues that could profit from increased discussion between faculty members and students. This is a perennial question, it usually comes up in discussions of distribution requirements or general education or survey courses. There are some very real problems in these courses and in doing them well, and repeatedly. It would be very good if students knew how complicated this task is, and there is no other way of finding out how difficult it is than to be seriously involved in it and have a chance at it. There are some integrated courses that are very well done. I think there are sev- eral in the honors program. Kerr's description about the antiquated state of biology teaching may be true in biology in general; but we have some ex- cellent courses here in the literary col- lege, or we did have some. I don't know if they are still being taught. They were developed by young biologists, botanists and zoologists working together; not ort- ented toward descriptive biology, but cell Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1965