It 0 °? A, SI A' y Life on By ROBERT BENDELOW Two months ago, the job was im- possible. Now it's simple. Remember when you had only 22 seconds to do your job? Well, now you've got 10 seconds more than you. need, still 22 seconds. Minds crumble against the sheer he Line - boredom and monotony of the line. Nothing much happens, except that another engine, perhaps with a dif- ferent color -spring comes this time, instead of the usual greasy black. Every 22 seconds another one comes, and every day you've put on another 1200 pieces. 22 seconds a Ford iRbert klai On &'eok4 and 7hinf4 Twenty-twc seconds isn't much time to do a complicated job. But once it's learned, the part goes on in 10. The first weeks, it took 30 or 40. All you had was 22 seconds. Pick some action fairly complicat- ed, then repeat it 15 times in six minutes. Then repeat it another 15 times, in another six minutes, then again, and again, and again .... Boredom is murderous, the mental frustration is worse. If you think about what you're doing, you'll go crazy. So you don't. You don't think. All you do is put on parts. Place - Screw - turn - Lift -- Place - Screw- . . . And you're cheaper pounds. On your other side, man's tightening head bolts. wrench weighs 70 pounds, and two cables holding it up. the His has STRACK'S LONG SEAO. . Monontony, so you try his job--- splot! 70 pounds of wrench, driven by 200 pounds of air pressure had to move something when the belt jammed. It moved you, over a parts bench, and into the aisle, about 10 feet away. He lets go at the right time, you didn't. Well, at least it breaks the monotony. Somebody's humming. Radios don't work in this racket and around all this metal equipment. Humming or singing to yourself is the only mu- THE ANTI-POLITICS OF FREEDOM (Continued from page 15) tant part of coaching," Strack be- lieves. "But one of the nastiest things ever written about me was that I was a good recruiter, and couldn't do anything else. A good coach has to both get talent and a maximum effort from it." "Of course, you have to be able to take criticism as well as glory. It's a tough business, to be in the limelight and then have to accept what they dish out. But if you like the praise you have to accept the rest." Winning is difficult . . . "Just the pressure alone on five 20-year-olds can beat a team. It's tremendous. I don't know how I would perform un- der today's conditions." But there is no in-between "Winning is important for the play- ers. They have to be able to take pride in their performance." Winning has to be now . "I can't live on past victories and neither can anybody else. There aren't many residuals in sports. So what if I won last year. Where am I now?" But, in every event, winning has to be . . . "Nothing can compare with the feeling you get from victory--or from defeat - especially when it's your livelihood." A livelihood that holds little ten- ure anchored only by the conquests of the moment. A livelihood whose justification dangles precariously amidst an impossible double stand- ard inherent in inter-collegiate ath- letics: a coach theoretically exists primarily for the benefit of the young athletes with whom he works, yet in order to survive in a victory- conscious society must exact his own reward; a rewa-c? which at times may tempt him to consider other than the interests of those athletes. A livelihood in which one man's success means another man's fail- ure. "It's not an easy profession," the coach of the Wolverines admits. Especially when your own family rubs it in. At the Los Angeles Classic last Christmas, Strack had reason to cringe when his daughter pleaded, "Daddy, can you get me Lew Alcin- dor's autograph?" Strack would have preferred his autograph on a tender to play bas- ketball at Michigan. The difference between a winner and a loser has rested on less. "He was a god man, he did his share, His fault was that he was human. The line isn't. You can't be." , than any machine they could bring in, so you'll have this job for a while. It's a short exercise in Hell. Anything to break the spell will be accepted. Practical jokes, they're a lot of fun. Two months after the line's been making you metallic, you find your air wrench has a reverse. So does the wrench next to you. So you switch it. The man next to you Turns - Lifts - Places -- Screws and screws and screws and screws. Of course, somebody has to put his part on, so you tighten it when it gets by the guy. Then you switch his wrench back. Or maybe another job, perhaps a slight change in the routine. That little wrench you use weighs two sic you'll hear, at least it takes your mind off of what you're not doing. What were those words? But then, one phrase sticks, and is repeated over and over and over. It's stuck in a line, and you can't stop it any more then you can the line. Endless repetition is dehumaniz- ing. Initiative doesn't exist, and im- agination is outlawed. Change is a cussing word. Repetition is the bless- ing, following its tail like a prayer wheel. Once it was new. The job was something different in itself, but that was untold thousands of parts ago. Then 22 seconds was a breath, gone quickly, too short to really measure. But the line has slowed time, if it. moves at all. Now the 22 FAIR LANE FESTIVAL presented by The University Musical Society of The University of Michigan CHICAGO SYMPHONY'S BAROQUL ORCHESTRA TICKET ORDER FORM-1967 Sunday, June 4-3:00 p.m. ALL BACH PROGRAM Suite No. 1, C major (5.1066) Concerto for Flute, Violin and Harpsichord, A minor (8.1044) Concerto for Violin, A minor (5.1041) Suite No. 3, D major (S.1068) Sunday, June 4-8:30 p.m. ALL BACH PROGRAM Suite No. 2, B minor (S.1067) Concerto for Harpsichord. D minor (S 10521 Concerto for Two Violins. D minor (5.1043) Suite No. 4, D major (S.1069) PERSONAL FREEDOM and person- al authenticity, though never held quite in such disrepute by the older generation as some young people believe, seem now to be more pressing and essential concerns among the young than they have been for some time. They take their examples and their theories where they can find them-from French existentialists, German romantics, Russian mystics, this bearded poet and that barefoot ex-professor. And why not? But it is curious that so few have noticed, as it were under their noses, that the great works of American literature have been ob- sessed with the issue of personal freedom and personal authenticity for more than a century. It took an outsider, necessarily, to make this clear. D. H. Lawrence's Studies in Classic American Litera- ture, published in 1923, finally un- veiled the fundamental issues of our literature nearly a century after Tocqueville's Democracy in America posed the basic questions of our so- ciety. Lawrence saw in American lit- erature the western preoccupation with mind and will carried to its extreme limit, to a point where it must give way, so that human con- sciousness might at last return to the body. If you haven't heard more about Lawrence's Studies it is be- cause fundamental books raise fun- damental questions, and therefore must be frightening a little-or a lot. The best academic work I know that clarifies and extends Law- rence's perspective is Marius Bew- ley's The Eccentric Design: Form in the Classic American Novel. Bewley argues that the classic American writers are those who believe in democratic values and ideals, in op- position to the Hamiltonian-types who subvert those values and ideals in our political and social life. He names Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Henry James, and Fitzgerald. In the form of their fiction, Bewley says, they tried to create a unity between self and society that politics had failed to make. For.Bewley, then, as for Lawrence, the ultimate location of freedom is within society. Both Lawrence the novelist and Bewley the critic; held an essentially political view of per- sonal freedom. Whatever means are used to define freedom or to attain freedom-"self" or "will" are more common terms from our literature- freedom finds expression in a com- munity. THIS IS A familiar view among po- litical theorists-of contemporary writers perhaps Hannah Arendt has best expressed it, in her On Revolu- tion and elsewhere. But there have also been psychological, and now psychedelic, views of human free- dom, which insist that men are free, can only discover their true selves, outside society and in opposition to it. The gap between the political and anti-political views of personal free- dom certainly goes far beyond the grounds of literary criticism; but we Robert Sklar, assistant professor of History and American Studies at the University of Michigan, is the author of F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Last Laocoon. Address (after Mayl 10) Jean Martinon, Musi c Director-Violinist CHICAGO SYMPHONY'S BAROQUE ORCHESTRA Sunday, June 11-3:00 p.m. Sunday, June 11-8:30 p.m. ITALIAN BAROQUE PROGRAM LOCATELLI-Concerto Grosso in C minor, Op. 1, No, 2 BAROQUE CONCERTOS CORELLI-Concerto Grosso. Op. 6, No. 8 HANDEL-Concerto Grosso in G minor, Op. 6, No. 6 PERGOLESI--Concertos for Violin and Flute TELEMANN-Concertos for Trumpet; Three RICCIOTTI--Concertino II. G major Trumpets and Two Oboes; Two VIVALDI--Concertos for Piccolo, Flute, or Bassoon Violins; Three Horns; Flute VIVALDI-d-Indy-Sonata No. 5 for Cello and Orchestra HANDEL-Concerto Grosso No. 5, D major Antonio Janigro, Guest Conductor CARAMOOR FESTIVAL OPERA PRODUCTIONS Julius Rudel, MusiThursday, July 6-8:30 p.m. c Director-Organist; Wednesday, July 5-8:30 p.m. "THE BURNING FIERY FURNACE "CURLEW RIVER" The story about Shadrack, Meshack and A modern musical adaptation of the 12thAedgoadtirefncofig Century Japanese Noh Dance Drama, Abednego and their defiayoKing ""Sumnidagawa" Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. Operas Composed b y Benjamin Britten To be performed in costume with acast of twenty-five singers and instrumentalists (Duration time: Approximately one hour fifteen minutes each) YEHUDI MENUHIN and THE BATH FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA Sunday, July 16-3:00 p.m. Sunday, July 16-8:30 p.m. PURCELL-Suite from Theatre Musick HANDEL-Concerto Grosso, F major, Op. 6, No. 9 GOEHR-Little Music for Strings, Op. 16 MOZART-Violin Concerto. D major, K. 218 MOZART-Piano Concerto, E-flat, K. 449 "YEHUDI MENUHIN, soloist HEPHZIBAH MENUHIN, soloist BLACWOOD-(ALincln Cnte Comissin)BACH-Violin Concerto in a minor BLACK OD-nCenter Commission) B (Mr. MENUHIN) BACH-Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, G major HAYDN-Symphony No. 49 in F minor BRITTEN-Variations on theme of Frank Bridge, Op. 10 (la Passione) STRATFORD FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA OF CANADA Oscar Shumsky, Director of Music Sunday, July 23--3:00 p.m. Sunday, July 23-8:30 p.m. HAYDN-Violin Concerto No. 1 in C major OSCAR SHUMSKY volinist-Conductor ALL MOZART PROGRAM MURRAY SCHAFER-Minnelieder for Mezzo- Serenade No. 12 in C minor, for Winds, K. 388 Soprano and wind Quintet Violin Concerto No. 5 in A major, K. 219 PHYLLIS MAILING, soloist OSCAR SHUMSKY Violinist-Conductor MENDELSSOHN-Octet, E-flat major, for Strings, Piano Concerto, No. 22 in E-flat major, K. 482 Op. 20 JOSE ITURBI, Guest soloist Concerts will-take place in th e open air, from the Terrace State Zip Order Complete Season (10 events) or your Personally selected five events, for special series rates. (Check all concerts requested): Sunday, June 4.......3:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Sunday, June 11......3:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 5 8:30 p.m. Thursday, July 6 .. 8:30 p.m. Sunday, July 16......3:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Sunday, July 23. 3:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Cs (°l Cl are talking for the moment chiefly about American literature, and now for the first time we have a bril- liant and highly contemporary in- terpretation of self and personal freedom in American literature from the anti-political point of view. The book is A World Elsewhere: The Place of Style in American Lit- erature, and its author, Richard Poirier, is chairman of the English Department at Rutgers and an edi- tor of Partisan Review. American literature, Poirier says, offers "the most persistent, the most poignantly heroic example of a recurrent liter- ary compulsion, not at all confined. to our literature, to believe in the possibilities of a new style. The new American style was meant to release hitherto unexpressed dimensions of the self into space where it would encounter none of the antagonistic social systems which stifle it in the more enclosed and cultivated spaces of. England and of English books." In Poirier's view, the great Ameri- can writers struggled not to 'unite but to separate-to free themselves, to free their selves, from society, be- cause the freedom and opportunity they wanted for their selves could only be found outside society. To those who keep up with con- temporary styles, Poirier will sound quite familiar. His way of looking at works of art is very much like Susan Sontag's - which he recog- nizes - and his way of looking at the potentialities of the human self a little like Timothy Leary's (without the drugs)-which he does not ex- plicitly acknowledge, although Poir- ier and Leary both share the Ameri- can philosopher - psychologist Wil- liam James as a mentor. pOIRIER'S approach to literature is an unusual one for academic critics. He insists that it means little or nothing to judge a work of art "success" or "failure," at least by the common criteria of form or finisied shape or 'meaning.' Here his aesthet- ic views come closest to those Miss Sontag put forth in Against Inter- pretation. What matters in a work of art is the activity of creation. Art is not a product it is an action-and therefore it can only be approached through its style. Only Poirier in- sists that this approach to art be- longed to Emerson a hundred years before Miss Sontag. In fact, he says, it has served as the paradigm for the great American writers ever since our literature began. Poirier traces the roots of this aes- thetic sensibility back to transcen- dentalism, that curious combination of European romanticism and Orien- tal mysticism that flowered in New England in the early nineteenth cen- tury-in order to bring it alive for the unlettered, let us call it the orig- inal floating league for spiritual discovery. Thus the relevance of Leary, too. If you look back at Poirier's defi- nition of American literature, you have to admit that 'turn on, tune in, drop out" makes this point more succinctly. But of course Poirier is not talking about "station WDNA" or the two billion-year-old nervous sys- tem, he is talking about creating works of art-a subject which the contemporary prophets and mystics have so far graced with more heat than light, unless you believe, with Marshall McLuhan, that art is what you can get away with. Yet to relate Poirier here to Leary is not simply frivolity. This is the point where, as I have mentioned, Leary and Poirier acknowledge the same teacher, Wil- liam James in The Varieties of Reli- gious Experience. Poirier turns William James's psy- chological views into a kind of lit- erary structure. "There are moments of sentimental and mystical experi- ence," James wrote, "... that carry an enormous sense of inner authori- ty and illumination with them when they come." For James these spir- itual mon ing, and with the James w though, fc minate or -he, too, ley, thou@ society. But Po ture at le translatat perience. American and trans moments bassadors, ner's "Th berry Finn These bo moments him the c HERE h fascin difficult : James's d states an Therein 11 word "spa ter I meni the term ' way, and : space or e Usually as part of work-Hu on and al that is wants us aspect of is a strug literary, s izations fc and over struggle t All it can within la of inner il perience, 1 of the sel Style e and that i erature. E form or Finn so fails, the creates a s Huck and early part live and f no other Poirier's Huckleber summarizi fying trea have ever the most cal perspe Huckleb touchston view, for, political a have dra years, Poi tical at al managed that freet and made known po ther the f be maint (C PRICES Prices: (Ten)1 Inner Circle . . $50 These subscriptions include two invita- tional occasions, to be announced. Also, reserved parking areas,, from either gate entrance. Center arc .... $35 Outer arc.... $25 General admission . .$10 (lawn area) (Five) $30 Singles Checked $6.50 $20 $5.00 $15 $4.00 $ .8 $2.00 For tickets at $ $ $ Number of tickets . .- TOTAL enclosed: $ $ $ Checks payable to University Musical Society Mail to: University Musical Society, Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 3 f PAGE EIGHTEEN APRIL. 167 THE DAILY MAGA E APRIL. 67 THE DAILY MAGAZINE