Seventy-Third Year ErrMD AND MANAGED BY STUDSN T HE UNIVEKSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS + here Opinionla Are 'e STUDENT PUUCATIONS BiDG., AwN ARBoR, Mrcm., PHONE No 2-3241 Trutb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in a!; reprints. FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER THE SEX DILEMMA, PART II: Tension:*No Freedom in No-Man's-Land Race Communications: Civil Rights' Crucial Link THERE IS AN AWFUL LOT of talk these days about civil rights for the Negro, but precious little of this verbosity is running in the right channels-be- tween Negro and white leaders. Intermediates are used all too often, and the communication breaks down in this process of multiple transfer: The Ne- gro leaders talk at their Negro meetings, and the meetings produce everything from marches to court action. The white lead- ers respond with speeches to white meet- ings which produce measures to counter- act but not resolve the Negro protests. The effect is that white meets Negro on the streets or in the courts. These are singularly poor places for the amicable solution of differences that are of cru- cial importance to both groups. There are a few, very few, exceptions in either North or South. ATLANTA, HOWEVER, is one. This city has had biracial committees for over 40 years to discuss and negotiate problems. Jacksonville, scene of consid- erable violence recently, has just decid- ed to appoint such a committee. Such tardiness lends few assurances to those who are calling for prompt solutions to the civil rights problems. FURTHER, JACKSONVILLE is hardly alone in this situation. Many large Northern cities are only now discovering that they too have a racial problem. Fven worse, they are finding, to their dismay, that they have no idea of what to do about it. Philadelphia, a city just beginning to react to- any of its myriad problems, re- cently sent a delegation to Atlanta to discover how this city has managed to maintain its long-standing tradition of fairly good racial harmony. The delega- tion was greatly surprised, even shocked, to find whites and Negroes negotiating onek or another.oftheir many local dif- ferences around a conference table. It Is at the biracial conference table, however, that the ultimate answers to the civil rights movement will be found. Demonstrations, marches, sit-ins and pickets are all important in the Negro movement. But they are only important inasmuch as they lead to across-the-table discussion between the whites concern- ed in the issues and the Negro leaders. Give and take negotiation is the only atmosphere in which meaningful prog- ress can take place. THIS DOES NOT MEAN that a city's problems are solved with the appoint- Ment of a biracial committee. This is a start but little more. It is only a first step in the creation of a Negro-white com- 'Malcolntent' WHAT WAS PREVIOUSLY known as "X-House" in Mary Markley has re- cently been renamed ' "Robert Frost House" by the Regents. It is altogether fitting and proper that the University honor Frost, who actually taught a course here once. Besides, the University must have felt rather uncomfortable during the time the house was named after Malcolm X. -M. SATTINGER A ciigEditorial Staff H. NEIL BERKSON........................ Editor KENNETH WINTER . . ............Managing Editor EDWARD HEILSTEIN............. Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN ..............Personnel Director MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY ............ Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial Director LOUIS!; LIND........Assistant Editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine Acting Sports Staff BILL BULLARD.....................aSports Editor TOM ROWLAND ............. Associate Sports Editor GARY WINER ............... Associate Sports Editor CHARLES TOWLE.......Contributing Sports Editor Acting Business Staff JONATHON R. WHITE ...........Business Manager JAY GAMPEL ...,........ Associate Business Manager' JUDY GOLDSTEIN............... Finance Manager BARBARA JOHNSTON........... Personnel Manager SYDNEYAUKE....T.Advertising Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ................ Systems Manager munication network that is desperately needed in so many places. Such a committee must rest on a broad basis of popular Negro support and an ability to influence white leadership. Only then can it tackle problems with some hope of success. IN ATLANTA the system works such that the many Negro groups are coordinat- ed to some degree and, at the least, aware of what the others are doing. Through personal contacts or through the many, negotiations always in progress, the current Negro moods and plans can be communicated to the white leadership which, in turn, can respond to them. Very often there have been marches, sit-ins, pickets or boycotts, but these serve mainly to lend a certain sense of urgen- cy or drama to the behind-the-scenes discussion. It is in the smoke-filled rooms, as it were, where the white store-owner is persuaded to hire Negro clerks. It is here that a pressing combination of lead- ing businessmen, city hall and Negro lead- ers with broad Negro support convinces a restaurateur to desegregate his busi- ness. THIS COMMUNICATIONS web has work- ed well in Atlanta. The course of events in other areas has not been so promising. There are several reasons why this city has been distinctive. Atlanta's Negro community is very large, 200,000 out of a population of 500,000. It has been that way for some time and has thus developed a certain depth and comprehensiveness. The At- lanta University Center has provided a rare pool of well-trained Negro leadership. There are two Negro newspapers, a daily and a weekly, and two Negro radio sta- tions.- These have, especially in the last few years, become a major source of in- formation and impetus for the great ma- jority of lower class Negroes. The Negro population has developed some sense of community interest and co- herency, an understanding of what the leaders are trying to do. This spirit, this cohesiveness is lacking in most Northern cities. The Negroes there are collected from all over the South. They lack direc- tion, education, leadership and the gen- eral good will of the Southern Negro. In- evitably there is little coherent commu- nication emanating from the Negro side if the tracks. AND ALMOST NOWHERE is there ini- tiative or guidance from the white side of the tracks. City governments in the North are bewildered by the Negro demands. They don't know how to re- spond, and their white constituency is equally unnerved and distraught, lack- ing any experience of living with a large Negro population. This unsettledness is ,further compounded by the speed of the other revolutions in today's cities: the mass exodus of the middle class whites and the mass influx of the lower classes, white and Negro. The cities are swept by the whirlwinds and are little able to see clearly their way ahead. By and large, the Southern city's lead- ership is more unwilling than inexper- ienced in dealing with the Negro de- mands. This is not a breakdown in com- munications but a refusal to establish them. THERE ARE EXCEPTIONS to these gen- eralizations in both the North and South. However they only serve to em- phasize further that communications is the critical link in translating the Negro movement into new civil rights realities. Given white and Negro initiative, it can be established. ---ROBERT JOHNSTON up, Up UP... THE UNIVERSITY is clearly moving up in the world of commencement speak- ers. The predominant trend in the past few years has been for our graduation speakers to be closer and closer to the top. There was Edward R. Murrow, then Robert McNamara, then W. Willard Wirtz, then Pierre Salinger. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a'four-part series on the causes, characteristics, consequences and future of the six dilemma on the college campus today.) By JEFFREY GOODMAN "THE RULES of the game are: there are no rules. But there is a firm understanding: ostenta- tious display of virginity is strictly uncool." The passage is from a recent book by ex-Universityite and jour- nalist Gael Greene called "Sex and the College Girl," a finely detail- ed, frank and sensitive description, compiled from over 600 interviews with college coeds, of the modern university woman's sexual life. Miss Greene continues: "The voice of the cool coed is speaking out at colleges and uni- versities across the country, sound- ing the slogans, the boasts and the doubts of a new sex freedom. Although definitely a minority voice, the cool coed, as champion of the new sex ethic, makes a loud, impressive and persuasive noise." All talk and no action? Not ac- cording to numerous figures, among them Kinsey's estimate that at least 25 per cent of col- lege women are not virgin when they marry. Noted expert in the field Lester A. Kirkendall of Ore- gon State University is convinced, Miss Greene says, that the inci- dence of premarital intercourse is increasing. And she adds that en- gagement, not marriage, is regard- ed as license to enjoy complete sexual intimacy by most college girls, and some stretch that license to being pinned, lavaliered. going steady or-simply-in love." THIS SUGGESTS that what we're experiencing is not simply an increasing incidence of pre- marital intercourse; the change goes much deeper, manifesting it- self in twisting, torturous problems for virgins, nonvirgins and doubt- fuls alike. As Miss Greene notes: "The fact is, morality has a great deal to do with sex on the American campus, but the word 'morality' is avoided. Hours are consumed in a sober, painfully LETTERS: E lections In 1964 THE WORLD TODAY is in a state of radical change. Inter- nationally, we see the growing depth of the colonial revolution. In the United States, the silence of the '50's has been decisively broken by a rising wave of direct action. Each of us must take a clear stand on today's issues, par- ticularly on four important ques- tions facing America: Freedom: Freedom for the Negro people and all other minorities. Total eradication of all forms of segregation, North and South. Complete equality in hiring, pay and promotion. Full political equality. Democracy: Complete freedom of speech, press, organization and action for all. Defense of those whose democratic rights are at- tacked. Peace :An end to nuclear and conventional weapon production. An end to U.S. support of brutal wars of colonial repression as in Cunba, Korea, Venezuela, Angola and Viet Nam. Economic Welfare: A national minimum wage for all workers. Compensation for all who are un- employed throughout their unem- ployment. Greater employment through a thirty-hour week at forty-hour's pay. An end to slums through public construction of low cost housing for all families. * $ *H * THE 1964 presidential election provides us with an avenue for exposing the true role of the Democrats and Republicans, for clearly breaking with them, their policies and the interests they represent, and for counter-posing a militant campaign based on a program of progressive demands. In addition to supporting all in- dependent state and local can- didates, independents should give at least critical support touClifton De Barry and Ed Shaw, national candidates of the Socialist Work- ers Party. De Barry and Shaw sup- port all basic demands for free- dom, democratic rights, peace and economic welfare. De Berry and Shaw clearly oppose the Demo- cratic and Republican machines, expose them for what they are, and call for an independent alter- native based in the labor and civil rights movement. * *i * THE PRESIDENTIAL campaign of De Berry and Shaw poses the national issues and the choice as clearly as possible: Johnson: Southern white liberal and union buster; head of a re- gime resting on the war, racism and poverty of American capital- ism and pledged to defend it at any cost. candid and sometimes desperate search for answers, for values, for a reasonable code of behavior. But girls do not like to call it a moral dilemma because morality is an absolute, and absolutes are con- stantly under fire as part of the education process." It is this doubt and uneasiness that best characterize sexual lib- eralization today. It is a huge question mark that college women can resolve only temporarily, us- ually not satisfactorily. This is the Publicly they pretend .. . price that is paid in every transi- tion from constraint to freedom. On the tongue of the modern woman and in the intellectual centers of her mind an old moral- ity has been thrown off. Fear of pregnancy, unexamined abstinence and even the somewhat more lib- eral warnings that premarital sex must be carefully thought out and then should involve only the most serious of relationships-much of this increasingly sounds like old hat to today's young adults. *' * * WHAT LIES DEEPER in the mind, however, is something dif- ferent. Childhood training-per- haps it can be called conditioning -is never easily overcome. Fan- tastic and fear-filled thoughts about sex may be so deeply em- bedded that the modern college woman can face the whole issue only with the greatest pain. Were either a definite yes or a definite no readily available, people would probably worry a lot less about sex. But Miss Greene indicates that no definite answers are available: "Most of the college girls I in- terviewed are preoccupied with sex. They do not accept it so easily, they confess privately, as they pretend publicly. They do not all have the courage of their free-love convictions. Even those who embrace the 'sweet' life often discover they have more courage than conviction. "The college girl has sexual problems: misunderstanding and abuse of sex freedom, guilt and self-recrimination, the burden of constantly re-evaluating her own inner convictions to form and re- form the sexual code she must author herself . .. The general belief towards which college students-as well as the whole society, though much more slowly-tend is that advanced by psychiatrist Dr. Walter Stokes to an assembly of 34 educators re- cently called at Columbia Uni- versity on sex: "Anything that promotes successful interpersonal relations is moral." The problem for youth comes in deciding what promotes successful relations; it seems that only the small minority of the wholly and ,sincerely chaste or free can avoid the tortures of the dilemma. * * KINSEY GIVES an indication of the amount of regret experienc- ed after premarital intercourse among the women of his sample, showing that only about 20 per cent feel this emotion. The exact figures are an inverse function of the number of coital experiences and the number of partners. Definite difficulties in his sam- pling, however, militate against accepting so low a figure. Claiming to feel no regret may very well be, of course, only rationalizing, a process in which many indulge precisely because of conflicts in- volved in sexual freedom. Furthermore, Kinsey tested only those females who had had inter- course; as Prof. Robert O. Blood of the sociology department states in his textbook "Marriage," "By and large, it is those who feel (premarital intercourse) is right who engage in it-and consequent- ly do not regret it." On the other hand, many Uni- versity administratoras, besides generally endorsing the viewpoint of sociologist Lester A. Kirkendall that sex is good which promotes better interpersonal relations, feel that students are doing a good job of handling their dilemma-and in a healthy way. Affairs James A. Lewis finds stu- dent practices "no less wholesome today than in the 1920's; it's still not time to push the panic but- ton." PERHAPS. Final results, how- ever, are not necessarily an in- dication of the labrythine alleys of the decision-making process. And one might wonder just how con- fidential a student will be with an administrator. At least Gael Greene offered her interviewees complete anonymity and a guaran- tee that no moral judgments would be passed. And she wasin no po- sition to exercise any kind of in- fluence over them. The women having premarital intercourse have a wide variety of requirements, ranging from en- gagement to a love of the purely animal act. The latter is usually accompanied by serious personality disorders and is probably felt, not sincerely, but as a vaguely dis- guised rebellion against Mother or Society or even Herself. According to Kinsey, about 53 per cent of the nonvirgins in his sample havethad experience with only one partner, 46 per cent with the eventual spouse only and 41 per cent with the spouse and others. Another study, by Profes- sors Ernest Burgess and Paul Wal- lin in 1953, indicates that 75 per cent of unmarried females who had premarital intercourse-47 per cent of the total sample-had had it with their future spouse only. On the whole, these women es- pecially feel little regret. Burgess and Wallin report that 28 per cent felt justified because they were going to be married;s20per cent, because the affair was pri- vate and 45 per cent, because physical tensions were released. TWENTY-TWO per cent feared social disapproval, 26 per cent, pregnancy and 16 per cent express- ed guilt feelings. But below the category of en- gaged couples, affection becomes less stable, and, where intercourse is involved, the affection thres- hold is much lower. Here, it seems, many other factors begin to enter the picture. As the female requires less and less affection for intercourse, her submission more and more takes on the nature of a conquest-by the male it is a conquest of her in the true sense of the word; in the female, it is a conquest of society and morality. This is one of many overriding impressions gained from Miss Greene's book and from personal observation. It seems that to many girls with numbers of partners, sex becomes a way of proving to the world that one is really eman- cipated. There is little reason, further-- more, to doubt that such a motiva- tion is at least part of the drive behind engaged women as well. * * * GAEL GREENE quotes English Professor David Boroff, who says that "sex is the politics of the '60's -the last arena of adventure in the quasi-welfare state in which we live." And immediately after that: "Sex, says David Riesman, 'pro- vides a kind of defense against the threat of total apathy . . . The other-directed person looks to it for re-assurance that he is alive'." Or take the comment of an angry Brandeis coed quoted by Miss Greene: "We're bred to be breeders-but we're educated to be anything else. Then we're sent off to breed. We're always being told that the essential nature of woman de- mands security, emotional com- mitment; that the female can't enjoy love-making otherwise. But we're too busy proving we're equal as we've been told we are-in bed." * * *. WITH the tremendous stigma attached to sex-a stigma that seems to belie natural instincts, in- tellectual argument, dormitory revelation and observation of the adult world-intercourse cannot but become the great forbidden fruit, the exotic "real experience" which the romanticist in .:ach of us treasures and which the cynic in us says society owes us. Thus the very fact that sex is considered immoralaseems to impel it. Kinsey finds, for instance, that while 89 per cent of his >;ample-- with and without coital experience -express moral objections to pre- marital intimacy, 50 per cent en- gage in it. For the girls indulging in sexual intercourse as an unadmitted. and perhaps unrealized rebellion, it seems that sex must usually take place without, or at least before affection. Rather than a natural concommitant of strong emotional attachment, it becomes its own raison d'etre. And the male be- comes merely a vehicle for this re- bellion-much as the female is likely to be a vehicle for him. AND TO ADD to this picture of uncertainty; Miss Greene reports that the girls in her interviews al- most unanimously express little but contempt for promiscuity-in fact, rarely mention it. With the ambiguity of the word, it would not be hard to apply it to many of the behavior patterns discussed here. Of almost equal importance in this discussion of sexual behavior * * THE CHARACTERISTICS of contemporary sexual practices and attitudes are doubt, tension and rebellion, coupled with a declin- ing criterion for love and a bur- geoning desire to grab after sig- ston Ehrmann indicates that light and heavy petting is the maximum intimacy for 50 per cent of col- lege women; 34 per cent claimed they had never gone beyond neck- ing. Whatever figures are used, how- ever, almost all the writers on the subject agree that the dictionary definition of virginity is becoming less and less meaningful. And even- if petting is consider- ed relatively innocuous, there are definite indications of regret on the woman's part. Lumping all petting under one category, Pro- fessors Robert Bell and Leonard Blumberg found, in a 1960 survey at Temple University, that 54 per cent of the women who had petted in casual dating felt they had gone too far. Thirty-seven per cent of those involved in steady relation- ships agreed, as did 26 per cent of those engaged. Again, however, we might expect that actual figures are even high- er, given the selectivity of such samples and the subject's disin- clination to let anyone else know that perhaps she didn't know what she was doing after all. 0 -Daily-Jeffrey Bates ON THE SURFACE, the Arb and the beginning of a relaxed afternoon. But what lies deeper? is the incidence of petting among college youth. Virgins are just not what they used to be, as Miss Greene puts it: "American youth not only in- vented and patented petting to cope with the unique paradox of contemporary courtship conflicts, they are also the most promis- cuous petters anywhere ... Several sociologists believe that the great increase in premarital sexual be- havior is not in actual coitus but rather in the intimacy, sophistica- tion, acceptance and practice of sexual foreplay." The ambiguity of the term "pet- ting" makes for some difficulties in interpreting the available data, of course. The term applies to any- thing from caressing clothed breasts to oral-genital or actual genital-genital contact and mas- turbation without real intercourse. But the figures we have are the only ones, and it can always be argued that one thing is bound to lead to another anyway. The gist of Kinsey's figures is that at least 90 per cent of college women marrying between 20 and 30 have had petting experience; while this figure drops to around 30 per cent for petting to orgasm, about 80 per cent of Kinsey's wom- en had appreciable erotic response. Of Kinsey's whole sample, no fewer than 70 per cent of the females marrying between 21 and 25 had petted with at least 20 different men. * * * OTHER AUTHORITIES put the figure lower. A 1959 study by Win- nificant experiences. Let one of Miss Greene's coeds summarize "How we seem to punish our- selves . . . for going to bed. We like to feel how wholesome and modern sex is-how going to bed with The Man is right, proper, healthy. Unfortunately, you can take the girl out of Kenosha (Wis- consin), but you can't take Ken- osha you know . . . Something deep down in the back of your head just won't let loose . . . So then one night when you et mad enough at the world anU really down on your folks and you can't stand yourself, you anesthetize yourself with too much gin and fall into bed with some guy, some animal you don't even know his name and-" Doubtless there is, too, much real affection, much sincere love behind premarital intercourse, and in these cases sex is a highly meaningful physical expression of emotions that are too large to stay within the bounds of discussion, smiles, vows and kisses. Yet in many of these cases as well, the tenor of the current limbo in which students move about and think regarding sex initiates vague botherings in the mind. What kinds of effects result from this neither-here-nor-there- ism? Is the college student, the woman in particular, less healthy mentally or physically?Is she less likely to succeed in marriage men- tally or physically? * * * THESE QUESTIONS will be the basis of Part Three. CONSORT PREVIEW: Music of Shakespeare's Day By WILLIAM E. HETTRICK r"HE CONSORT, an ensemble of students, faculty and others interested in performing early mu- sic, will present a concert of Ren- aissance and early Baroque music tonight at 8:30 p.m., in the Rack- ham Aud. Prof. Robert A. Warner, the director of The Consort, has prepared a program of English and Italian music, both sacred and secular, in keeping with the theme of the current emphasis on Shake- speare and his age. Although the nucleus of The Consort is the ensemble of voices and viols, other instruments will be featured. A brass ensemble pre- pared for the program by Prof. Clifford Lillya of the music school (viola da gamba) is a fretted in- strument with six strings, played with a bow. It reached its matur- ity in the 16th and 17th centuries. and the larger bass viols (not to be confused with the modern double bass) were played well into the 18th century. Although gradually superseded by the more powerful violins, the viols were retained longer by the more conservative English. The construction, tuning and method of playing the viol produces its subtle, muted sound. Three sizes of viols are used by The Consort -from the treble to the bass-and all are held between the knees while being played. :' I