C 4r er t liapt fanl Sevewty-Third Year EDrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Op1nio08 Ae r STUDENT PUWUCATIONS BLDG. ANN ARBOR, Mic., PHONE NO 2-3241 Trwth Win prevai" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in at reprints. SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin DO Sorenson Confused over Bias Issue by H. Neil Berkson Wisconsin .Election HI story: Failure of the Primary THE WISCONSIN FIASCO is now elec- . tion history. Gov. Reynolds ran scared and seemed to get 70 per cent of the Democrat vote; Gov. Wallace ran loud and seemed to get 30 per cent of the Democrat vote; Rep. John Byrnes also ran and seemed to get all of the Repub- lican vote, but therein lies the joke: Gov. Wallace probably got more Republi- can votes than Byrnes did. In Wisconsin, it is possible for Repub- licans to vote in the Democrat primary and vice versa, so the loyal Republicans, crossed party lines in great droves and voted for George Wallace-simply to em- barrass President Johnson, for whom Rey- nolds has pledged support. If embarrassment was the GOP's goal, they were successful. Whenever an arch- segregationist-racist and sometime bigot can glean over 100,000 in a supposedly virtuous state like Wisconsin, the result must mean something. IN THIS CASE, one can only suppose it means that all those Byrnes and Wal- lace supporters aren't enamoured of Lyn- don Johnson-else why didn't they vote for him? Reynolds can declare his own stirring victory-which he did, but Democrats across the nation had better not believe it, for Reynolds came far from winning. Wallace can declare a victory for seg- regation and other forms of provincial bigotry, but he'd better not believe it. THE ONLY PERSON who can declare anything and believe it is Lyndon Johnson, and he'd better chalk up Wis- consin as a loss and a bad one. He al- lowed his personal prestige to be laid on the line against a symbol of civil unrest and defiance, and well over 100,000 peo- ple came out in favor of civil unrest and defiance, regardless of their reason for doing so. There were no winners in Wisconsin; the Democrats had too many Republicans sloshing around in their affairs to get a clear picture of how the land, in a posi- tive sense, lies; the Republicans got stuck with voting for a favorite son (Byrnes) instead of a candidate or candidates with even a remote chance of being nominated, and thereby the Wisconsin GOP has little or no idea of the party sentiment. ALL THIS POINTS UP one thing clear- ly: The primary system in the United States has reached the ridiculous ex- treme and should be abandoned without delay. All that it accomplishes now is a fantastic waste of public money, a fan- tastic waste of newspaper space and a fantastic waste of peoples' time. A primary election that is set up so that each party can select its candidates and then allows every Tom, Dick and Harry to vote can hardly be termed rep- resentative of the party's choice. In fact, it represents an unfair intrusion upon party affairs. HE SOONER the 50 states return to the convention system of nominating, regardless of its shortcomings, the sooner a three-ring circus like the Wisconsin mess can become a thing of the past. And that glorious day, to those dis- gusted with the elaborate expenditures for campaigns and even more elaborate lies, smears and half-truths by the can- didate, cannot come too soon. -MICHAEL HARRAH THE WEEK THAT was was a week of lesson-learning outside the classroom. From Washington came word that when you invite the President of the United States to be your com- mencement speaker, you had better have someone else waiting in the wings. (The story is an interesting one. President Johnson accepted the University's invitation some time ago, but his staff thought it was for June, not May. Rumor has it that Dean Stephen H. Spurr is now preparing a brief for the White House on the im- plications of trimester.) ONE CLEAR LESSON emerged from Lansing's she- nanigans last week: the University ought to pray nightly for Sen. Stanley G. Thayer. As a matter of fact, per- haps we ought to pray to Sen. Thayer. * * * * AND IF IFC and Panhel learned nothing else, they learned not to invite The Daily editor to their banquets anymore. They made this mistake last Wednesday, and consequently Regent Allan R. Sorenson's proposal to cut all ties between the affiliate system and the University became the issue of the week. Sorenson's point of view has been public for some time. He explained it in a letter to The Daily as early as last November, but until last week he received little- reaction. His proposal raises a number of questions because it can be reinterpreted in so many different ways. A strong case could be made that the University should subsidize no student activity. If a Student Government Council or a Young Democrats or a WCBN wants to organize, fine, but is it the responsibility of the University to provide any assistance? A BETTER CASE could be made that, totally apart from the issue of discrimination, fraternities and sorori- ties are private clubs with a selective membership policy' that says some University students are better than others, based on thoroughly subjective criteria. The University should be educationally committed to oppose such an in-group, clique-oriented mode of thought. Consequently, it should dissociate itself from the Greek system. BUT THE UNIVERSITY made its mistake in the 1840's when, after much controversy, it decided to recog- nize fraternities as a part of the educational process. Is the University willing, 120 years later, to suffer all the problems which would arise by suddenly dislocating 70 organizations? Sorenson's basic premise involves neither of the above interpretations. He very clearly says that the University should break with the Greek system because fraternities and sororities always have, always will and should be able to discriminate. HE MAKES A very serious mistake when he bases his case on that premise. Discrimination is not a primary problem with the fraternity system. Even if the groups were unbiased with regard to race, religion, etc., they would still be an anti-intellectual force because of their inherent selection policies. Since fraternities and sororities have no objective criteria for selecting their members, the potential for discrimination may be higher than in other organiza- tions. On the other hand, there may well be more dis- crimination in various literary college departments than there is in certain Greek houses. * * * * THE QUESTION of bias in fraternities is incidental. The real problem comes with the process of selection, whereby certain individuals assume a false sense of status with regard to their peers. While Sorenson doesn't think so, his suggestion, if im- plemented, would quickly put fraternities and sororities out of business. This may be desirable. The issue will be sidetracked, however, if it is argued on the basis of discrimination. THE SEX DILEMMA, PART IV: The Future: Freeing the Search for Love, Sincerity 'U' Abdicates Responsibility In Alleged Discrimination Case UNIVERSITY Vice-President for Busi- ness and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont Friday confirmed rumors that the Uni- versity has since 1956, owned a $180,000 mortgage on the Parkhurst and Arbordale Apartments, the apartments currently under fire for allegedly having discrimi- natory renting practices. Some people might feel that owning such a mortgage is, in itself, ground for criticism of the University. But this can hardly be justified. In the first place, the mortgage was issued in 1956, long before the present case originated. And in the, second place, the mortgage changed hands to the present owners who are charged with discriminatory practices in 1960. THE UNIVERSITY can be criticized, however, for its behavior toward the present apartment owners when it dis- covered their alleged discrimination. This behavior has illustrated a great lack of either administrative information or interest in the matter, especially con- sidering that Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis said the Univer- sity knew of the existence of the mort- gage on the discriminatory housing be- fore the Congress of Racial Equality ap- proached him on the matter. Why, once University administrators. were aware that a University mortgage' was supporting a discriminatory hous- ing unit, was no action taken in the mat- ter until CORE forced the University's hand by making the issue public? WE MUST REMEMBER the effect of such actions on the two primary trusts placed in the University by the non-educational community. The first is its justifiable responsibil- ity to maintain a reputable public image; the second is to enforce, within reason- able administrative limits, the public mor- ality within its control. University admin- istrators were sadly deficient in both these areas in the Parkhurst and Ar- bordale case. By its lack of action, the University has ignored these two responsibilities. It is conceivable that the entire case could have been speeded up a great deal if an institution with the size and economic punch of the University had taken the side of the Fair Housing Ordinance at the outset and certainly its image would have improved if it had done so. NO INSTITUTION can afford to ignore its public responsibilities, least of all the University, considering the educa- tional and social trusts it must maintain. It is to be - hoped that lack of adminis trative information or interest in a mat- ter will not again put the University in the unfortunate position in which it finds itself today. LEONARD PRATT (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in a four-part series on the causes, characteristics, consequences and future of the sex dilemma on the college campus today.) By JEFFREY GOODMAN THE COMING YEARS will see the final death of a priori pro- hibitions on premarital sexual in- tercourse-unless something is done so that a couple may marry very soon after they begin to de- sire intercourse or unless we some- how forget all about sex. Barring these changes, inter- course-even before marriage-will finally be accepted for what it is: a natural expression of sincere human affection and a solution to the tensions of college youth to- day. On the surface there appears to be little hard-core evidence for this prediction of change: even though Kinsey and others looked at attitudes toward and rates of premarital intercourse as a func- tion of decade of birth, no one seems to have gathered data on people born after the 1920's. But what is happening today is qualitatively different from the experience of the '20's; it is a change in moral beliefs and not merely a change in practice. The forces at work in contemporary society are not different merely in quantity; 1964 has innumerable characteristics-discussed in Part One of this series-which seem to question the claim that we will soon, or ever, turn from our sexual limbo to sexual prohibtion. JUST WHAT are we to expect if things run their natural course, and how are we to evaluate the final product? To Gael Greene it is definitely a revolution, noticeable in the seven short years since she at- tended the University. Sex is more explicit, rawer, as well as more public; there is more sexual free- dom and more sexual panic; the old warnings no longer shock, though they still gnaw. Some disagree, seeing the trend as much more subtle. Christopher Jencks, reviewing Miss Greene's "Sex and the College Girl," writes in "The New Republic" that "if there is a sexual revolution afoot . . .it rests not so much on the incidence of intercourse as on the creation of an ideology to justify and limit it. "There can be no revolution among those who steal their sex in fraternity basementskand parked cars; it must be worked out in a more matter-of-fact way. This seems to be happening, but not often or everywhere. The new style might, for lack of a better word, be called proto-marital. It seems to rest on two imperatives: no in- tercourse without contraception. and no intercoure without a semi- permanent relationship. "This kind of revolt, which links sexual freedom with certain kinds of responsibility, and which re- places an old ethic with a new one, might, if it were widespread, be- come the basis for a true revolu- tion. But so far it is found only among a minority of students, mostly graduates rather than un- dergraduates." 4 , BUT INDEED, if what we are witnessing rests "not on the in- cidence of intercourse but on the creation of an ideology to justify and limit it," then there are even more significant things to look for in the future. To the vociferous critics of the trend, the changes forecast almost imply societal destruction: Youth will run wild in an orgy of sensuality; thousands of unwant- ed children will grow up under practices it doubtingly and rebel- liously and that cannot avoid the mental consequences inevitable when a way of behavior is at once good and bad and the whole society has made a fetish of both the behavior and its restriction. : THE HYPOTHESIS implicit in denying disastrous - consequences -both predicted and measured-is that the consequences are a direct function of the fear and stigma in which pex is shrouded. The con- sequences are not necessarily a function of sex itself. The state of affairs in the future will not be one in which men and women will, dash off to bed on a first date under the same kind of amoral desire for something sweet with which one buys a candy Beneath it all... that is carried over from the 19th century and from childhood and reproclaimed in church, home and media. The need for meaningful affec- tion is a constant, and it is only under duress from powerful ex- ternal forces that we are led to seek quality in quantity. The re- moval of those forces seems far more likely both to allow us and to spur us on to find that quality than to impel us into a necessarily unsatisfying orgy of quantity. * * * CERTAINLY there is a good deal of meaningless and harmful sexual activity today, but it is something into which we are lit- erally seduced by sexual satura- tion. The saturation is not in our impulses but in our doubts. It manifests itself in vague or even quite explicit desires to rebel, to prove that we can take it. It is seen in the compulsion literally to capture an emotional security which an act that is too much on our minds seems to ensure us. It can make sex a weapon for in- flicting harm on others. This is hardly freely chosen or physically impelled promiscuity. It is not unrestrained sex for sex's sake; it is sick sex. And the sick- ness-except for other, much deep- er neuroses is to a large extent a consequence of the uncompleted transition in moralities, in whose labyrinth the student is caught. There are, of course, other rea- sons why unmarried couples will have sexual intercourse: specific personality factors, other social forces impinging on us which a changed sexual code willhnothaf- fect, general personal insecurity, tremendous compulsions toward deep romantic involvement, and more. WITH ALL of these influences, the critics argue on, don't we need even stronger restrictions on sex to save individuals and so- ciety from themselves? On the contrary. First, the fact remains that sex cannot create truly meaningful affection. The in- dividual himself is the one who will feel the emptiness of sex where that affection does not or cannot exist, and it is the in- dividual himself who will most likely leave the purely sexual es- capade, knowing his own dissatis- faction, to search for sincerity. If people today are nevertheless capable of sex without affection it is only because social emphasis has vastly distorted the meaning of sex in the individual's mind, making it not an effect but almost a condition of love. SECOND, it seems highly likely that freer sex ethic will not only have few bad effects but numerous positive ones, notably unpon inter- personal relationships. Today's students are seriously shackled in their attempts to' find meaningful bonds with members of the opposite sex by the intense sexual preoccupation in which the whole college courtship pattern functions. Dating too often takes place in a context where sexual fears and concern overshadow much of the intellectual and emo- tional intimacy which are so necessary to significant relation- ships and without which the in- dividual is even more alone on an already lonely campus, in an al- ready lonely world. IT IS NOT just that men are worried about how far women will allow them to go and women about how far men will demand they go. Equally important is the fear on the part of both partners that the other will mistake a desire for a ing and a happiness with another person in which the whole person- ality is involved and fed. Such a search is only complicated and set back, can only be made tense and ultimately less rewarding when a majority of the motions of dating are linked with sex. It is eminently conceivable that if society permitted a prior under- standing within couples that inter- course would be a natural and mutually desired concommitant of strongly felt affection, much of the tremendous potential for find- ing meaning in life with another person could be released from its dark dungeon corners. * * THE SAME ARGUMENT can well apply to fears of increased extramarital intercourse. Too be much less inclination toward sex outside of marriage-at least in the early married years-if both partners have had a better chance during courtship to know just whom they are marrying. * * * THE COMBINED weight of two factors, then, seems to allay fears that the sexual freedom of the fu- ture will result in sexual chaos or social destruction. First, sex is, in at least one vital sense, indepen- dent of the moral code: it is in- timately tied up with the deep, asexual emotions that rise from and define sincere affections. The vast majority of sexually' experienced college. women today, engaged or not, claim this as their. motivation, according to Gael Greene, and the claim is not made simply to quell guilt. It is also because something in them, some- thing unconnected with any moral view, says that this is the. way they want their sex. Second, there is good reason to believe that freedom from mental, sex-based tensions will not only decrease the need for sex as re- bellion, thus allowing more mean- ingful standards of affection, but will also allow a much easier realization of the intimate knowl- edge of another person upon which that affection must be based. None of this makes any mention of the assertion by many students that sex is in any case solely an individual matter. Such may be true, but an analysis of the whole scene, projecting the personal and social effects of change into the future, must be more soundly bas- ed. ON THE other hand, sex ,is un- doubtedly becoming just such an individual matter, and this is as it should be. Though gradually, it is escaping the realm of societal coercion and entering that of per- sonal relationships. Throughout this change, it will remain and indeed grow as a deep- ly significant consummation of strong affection, and its withering as a bludgeon for society's use, its dying as an ever-present noxious odor in the air, will do much towards liberating the expression and the realization of that affec- tion. ... something of value bar. It will not be an orgy of sensuality for sensuality's sake, de- void of any and all further mean- ing. * * * PERHAPS to a limited extent this prediction is plain old op- timism. But what stands out is that sexual intercourse is un- changeably and intimately con- nected with deep and beautiful emotions-not appetities, but feel- ings of love, respect and warmth which of themselves seek an out- let more powerful and expressive than words, smiles or vows. D. H. Lawrence romanticized this idea perhaps best of all when he talked of intercourse in whose "final massive and dark collision of the blood" he saw man's apoth- eosis and fusion with the divine. THIS IS NOT to say that sex is the most vital part of love, that it is either a necessary or a sufficient condition for love or the cause of love. To be at all worth- while, it must rise out of much more meaningful bonds between two people. But once those bonds exist, the urge for sexual companionship is powerful, magnifying and inten- sifying the emotional feeling that gives it impetus. This interrelationship is so basic that society's profoundest con- demnations of sex cannot eradicate it, though they can well pervert it and certainly delay it. * * * BUT THE PROBLEM is still deeper. Critics assert that while sex is certainly meaningless with- out love, nevertheless the thres- hold for love will decline so far in the future as to rob love itself of all significance. And for sup- port they will point to the already declining requirements and the rising rate of premarital inter- heavily stigmatized in a society too much preoccupied with it, sex becomes a natural and potent ve- hicle for the expression' of dis- satisfaction from other sources in marriage. Robbed of its destruc- tive connotations, extramarital sex may very well cease to be a weap- on for those unhappy with their spouses. Furthermore, there will perhaps FOLKLORE SOCIETY: Bypass of Rights at Carleton CARLETON COLLEGE'S recent suspen- 12 Carleton students for pub- lishing an allegedly "vulgar" mimeo- graphed paper brings two larger issues to the forefront. First, did the Carleton ad- ministration infringe upon the student's basic rights of free speech? Second, did Carleton officials act in poor judgment by bypassing the proper and existing col- lege channels that are designed to judge complaints concerning Carleton publica- tions? The 12 students are now suspended and will be until they formally apologize in petitioning for readmittance. Many fac- ulty members in a full faculty meeting ble to the reputation of their school. He did not enumerate further. BUT EVEN IF WE ACCEPT Dean Gil- man's reasoning, the fact remains that the autonomous student body controlling Carleton publications, the Board of Pub- lications, was entirely circumvented by the administration. One of the duties of this board is controlling the material ap- pearing in student publications, according to Dean Gilman. Yet the board was cut out entirely in making the suspension de- cision. What justification does the school have to bypass an autonomous student body, n"C ofAl-4b +a ack +is o Pq11A,P t he 'Hoot' Players Enjoy 'Wildly .Different' Acts AT LAST NIGHT'S HOOTENNANY, there were 12 different acts, each of them wildly different, yet despite differences, you could divide the performers into two very rough categories: those con- cerned first with their especial sound, and those concerned with what they were saying. IN THE FIRST CATEGORY came Bob McAllen, 12-string player par excellence, whose vocal curliques were a bit too smooth for the meaning of the songs; his best was "900 Miles." Similarly, Dave Hirt played a first-rate blues guitar without any blues feeling, paying too much attention to getting bell-clear tone on his superbly handled guitar. Candy and Carol were a negative image of the same picture, concentrating not so much on guitar-playing as on artfully-woven harmony of their smooth, sweet voices. ON THE OTHER SIDE of the coin was the New York Public Library, Ann Arbor's answer to the Smothers Brothers, who bal- anced first-rate playing and "old-timey" singing with ribald humor. Mark Schover slugged rough and bawdy blues out of his big JT7 with a directness and intensity that had the audience howling. Similar in approachl were: Danny Dauterstein, remarkable 15- year-old blues player from Chicago; Rick Ruskin, with his deep- pounding treatment of "12 Gates to the City"; and old Folklorite Howie Abrams with the fantastically-fingered "Buck Dancer's Choice.' Ann Arbor's own bluegrass group, the Huron River Ramblers. avoided the instrumental scratchiness, vocal whine and overse 1,