Ghr drhigatt Balg Seventy-Fifth Year EDITD AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ore Opinions Aree 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MicH. Truth Will Prevail NEw's ProNE: 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. SUNDAY, 21 FEBRUARY 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JOHNSTON Beyond Poverty: The Problem of Affluence EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two edi- torials exploring some of the implications of auto- mation upon poverty. POVERTY-FIGHTING is fast becoming America's newest honorable profes- sion. Even business is doing it (to "make taxpayers out of tax-eaters," as Presi- dent Johnson said). But poverty is little more than one tangible manifestation of a much more basic problem, which is our burgeoning affluence, and it seems few if any of the Established powers realize just what the vital questions are. These powers recognize well enough the particular disadvantages of America's new lumpen poor: they never really had a chance. They were born into isolation -from political efficacy, from good edu- cation, from hope for personal advance, from the opportunities and intellectual background needed to get good jobs. Thus the idea of a poverty program becomes to shift the major burden of the welfare state from mere dollars to job retraining-so the poor can get em- ployment and thereby gain a place in society. And here the powers stop, pro- claiming that by mobilizing manpower to fill the demands of the job market they will eventually provide the poor with power, knowledge, hope and mobility. There is, of course, much to be said for the idea that decent work at decent wages provides at least a necessary start for getting out of the poverty cycle. But there is little to be said for the notion that today's job market-or that portion of it the powers see within the capabili- ties and potential of the poor-has much relevance to the real issues. MANPOWER RETRAINING may, per- haps, solve the poverty problem for a few poor for a short time. As it is pres- ently conceived, however, it cannot solve the problems of the automted super- abundance which the future will most likely bring and which could very well devastate the whole working class. The farther ahead one projects the job mar- ket, the clearer it becomes that the fu- ture will offer gainful employment to few except the scientists, managers, art- ists, politicians and professionals. The technological upheaval which the Industrial Revolution heralded is contin- uing-and should continue-its geometric pace toward the day when metal slaves will free men to do .those things which are human. To the automated, self- regulating machine we are adding in this century the computer, not only to run the workerless factory but to do our tedious clerking functions as well. Already we are experiencing a widen- ing gap between "the engineers and the janitors," according to the "discoverer" of modern poverty, author Michael Har- rington. It is no longer a viable solution to train the poor to be janitors. Nor can the poor be made into engineers or pro- fessionals or artists: growing up poor in America, they have been too much iso- lated from the necessary conceptual abilities for such work. So retraining programs today conclude the poor must be educated for jobs in be- tween-factory operatives, clerks and the like. But these are precisely the kinds of jobs that offer no real future, much less any intrinsic human satisfactions. LOCAL BUSINESS gets together with local government. (There are rarely if ever poor people on the boards which administer the war on poverty. This is the first reason it will fail in its grand goals: it becomes a political boondoggle, a way of buying off protestors without rocking the boat.) Together, they draw up, programs for vocational education and training, job development and place- ment. All is geared to the job market of the short-range future-if the future at all. There being little thought of the more distant future, the whole program be- comes a mere stopgap-and a bad one at that. H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor KENNETH WINTER EDWARD HERSTEIN Managing Editor Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN . ... Personnel Director BILL BULLARD................... Sports Editor This is not simply because the de- pendence on certain kinds of work for in- come will eventually be shattered once these kinds of work are non-existent (a problem which will be even more acute for the lower middle class union member than for today's poor, who still have not been tied to any single category of occu- pations). For to the extent that many of these middle-range jobs are still needed, to feed people into them is to make it structurally more difficult than it al- ready is to complete the technological revolution. To bolster the present forms of production is to delay the time when we can automate out of existence the bad features inhering in these forms. The most basic of these features is' that perhaps half the economy is found- ed on feverish production and consump- tion aimed at satisfying artificially-i created demands, as opposed to activi-I ties which fulfill peoples' natural and in-i dividual desires but may not be econom- ically productive. Such a condition is a function of our technology, which has been built up only by the invention of methods-i.e., adver- tising and public relations - to ensure buyers for its goods and services. And it is a necessary condition, for only tech- nological development ultimately offers freedom from the synthetic tasks and consumption on which it depends in the first place. BUT IF A FORM of economic organiza- tion which denies people fulfillment of their intrinsic needs is a necessary transition, it is not therefore necessary that the form persist forever. And so one feels a war on poverty which as- sumes the present economic form to be the end product of society's efforts, which does not recognize the basic changes which will have to be made if the ground- work we are now preparing is to be prop- erly utilized-one feels such a program is reactionary instead of progressive. If we are to make good use of the metal slaves waiting in factories and computer centers and on drawing boards to serve us, we must begin now to free people from the fetters of our present economic and political forms. People shall have to begin doing, or thinking about doing, or learning it is not futile to think about doing what will ful- fill them-creating artistically, playing absorbing games, planning and manag- ing, curing or teaching or politically rep- resenting others, reading, loving, invent- ing, engaging in community endeavors, building small things or whole houses. There is little reason to delay the time when these things involve men wholly, instead of being left to "leisure" hours clouded by the emotional exhaustion of having to earn a living. Moreover, the more reinforcement given to current eco- nomic forms, the more chaotic and the less likely the eventual change becomes. THE PRECISE FORM the automated so- ciety should take is not clear, but it is safe to say at least three requirements will have to be met: 1) The means of production and dis-i tribution will have to be controlled public- ly. The potential for disastrous social con- sequences, in a time when few must work directly at making and selling goods yet enough can be produced for everyone, is too great if the private profit motive di- rects the economic apparatus. 2) Public direction of economic process- es will have to ensure everyone, as a mat- ter of right, either a minimum level of existence or-farther in the future-as much as he needs. It will no longer be possible to make income dependent on traditional conceptions of work; even- tually society will have to and want to redefine work to include all those ful- filling activities which are repeatedly proclaimed the true ends of human life. If physical existence is not made a right, just as free speech is now, the danger of majority tyranny over the choices of ac- tivity of minorities is too great. 3) Fundamental substantive changes will have to be made in education, allow- ing individuals to develop satisfying life patterns instead of training them to fit existing economic niches. IF WE CANNOT DEVELOP comprehen- Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. A Responsible Position on Flint Expansion by H. Neil Berkson THE DETROIT FREE PRESS is about as querulous as Now, partially because of enrollment pressures in evaluate the opposing points of view or seeking to have a frustrated old maid. Ann Arbor, and partially because of the desires of the them evaluated elsewhere, merely asks everyone to wait And about as relevant, too. Flint community, the University intends to extend Flint for a few years. Every day it "tsks-tsks" about the latest breakdown College to the freshman-sophomore level by adding 200 There may be some irresponsible people floating in the moral order and comes to the renewed conclusion freshmen next year. The accusations of empire-building, around, but in the case this university's president isn't that Governor Romney knows the only road to salvation. which originated from an aliance between Michigan State one of them. Two days ago, President Hatcher had the temerity to University and the community college lobby, just don't disagree with Romney's evaluation of the University's hold up-the University is already in Flint; with the UNIVERSITY Executive Vice-President Marvin L. Flint plans, so the Free Press indignantly sought to enrollment pressures what they are it is not stealing Niehuss admitted last week that the University would deliver an editorial spanking. anyone else's students. again reduce the in-state, out-of-state student ratio next "'Irresponsible' Is a Word To Hurl at Dr. Hatcher," IN THE LONG RUN, the branch question and every year. The percentage, which will fall to about 25.8 per the Free Press blared out yesterday, thus raising two other issue of higher education planning in the state cent, will thus drop for the seventh year in a row. More- issues; the pompous innaccuracy of its own words and should come under the control of an effective State over, the figures are misleading because certain special- the real questions surrounding expansion of the Univer- Board of Education. The coordination which is evident ized schools such as law and public health are well over sity's Flint branch. The second is, of course, the impor- in California, for instance, is clearly needed in Michigan. 50 per cent while the literary college has been rumored tant one, although I can't help but note that the news- But though a state board has come into existence, to be under 20 per cent. paper had to distort both Mr. Hatcher's speech and its members would be the first to admit that they are It isn't Mr. Niehuss' fault. He always protests his other facts in order to "justify" its attack. not ready to assume control of the future of higher edu- disturbance at the declining ratio, as does every other THE UNIVERSITY has had a senior college in Flint cation. In the meantime-i.e. the coming 3-5 years when official. Nevertheless, the University must stand up to since 1956. The establishment of this branch came at enrollment pressures will be heaviest-the University Lansing on this issue. the initiative of C. S. Mott, who has poured millions of and other state schools are forced to act. Out-of-state students are responsible out of all pro- dollars into various University programs (including $6 They certainly receive little help when a report on portion to their numbers for the standing of the Univer- million last year for a children's hospital). Moreover, branches-the Davis report which came out in December sity. Legislators' threats to cut the University's budget if both the executive and legislative branches of the state -wallows in the politics of the issue, rather than the it doesn't cut back on these students are pointless, for government gave their full approval to the University's alternatives. They receive less help when the governor the University would be a much less ambitious place aims. and his budget commission, instead of attempting to without them. F i:I FIE B 5617'THEN-ME YT" TI 1BY T 10 TO T J< yTOLDP M K ITWAS 9EF Z WAS WASM T 9 FEATnJG To RPOMK oF M \'( 4-F WAS A AWEE ( IE PY.WAS PRIVMc THM THEY 'OLDM E THEN' THEY Tow METSTLt13 U NAV6 Pr PRIVEP WAS A U ERPRMV1E660 m'T A GREAT BA IHA66,1I WAS WAS OV RUSE. f -HAV A OCAL)AR UNDERPRIVIL606D WiA DISADVANTAGED. " I -_- The Week in Review Private Gifts Soften Flak; State, City Play Poltics .r By MICHAEL SATTINGER Associate Managing Editor HINGS BEGAN to look pretty bleak for the University last week. Just hours before Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher an- nounced that the University would go ahead with its Flint expansion, Gov. George Romney asked col- leges to forego such plans. And then the whole Detroit metropoli- tan area may have had its in- habitants swayed against the Uni- versity, for the Detroit Free Press came out with a lead news story and editorial blasting Hatcher's stand. Is there no hope? Well, yes, there is. At yester- day's Regents meeting, Vice- President for Business and Fi- nance Wilbur K. Pierpont an- nounced that thetUniversity had been given about $2.5 million. "Isn't that some sort of record?" one of the Regents asked. It was. THE BIGGEST GIFTS: -$700,000 from the Harry A. and Margaret D. Towsley Founda- tion for construction of a medical and health continuing education center: -$700,000 in securities from the estate of Aimee Tucker McCulloch of San Bernadino for student aid; -$395,000 from the W. K. Kel- logg Foundation to remodel and air condition the W. K Kellogg Foundation next to the Dental Bldg. In the final analysis, it is not committees or reports or demon- Viet Narn W OULD IT HAVE seemed less Tubversive if they carried banners against democracy? "One banner (in the Buddhist demonstration against the U.S. and the Houng government) paralleled a slogan of the Com- nunist guerrillas, 'We desirede- mocracy, freedom and peace of the Vietnamese people'." (From another AP dispatch from Saigon implying that the Buddhists are fronts for the Reds) 'B * * strations that cause University changes; it is money. Just as the state channels seemed about ready to fail the University, the $2.5 million from private sources provided a needed shot in the arm. Cause for optimism may exist on another front, too. State Demo- cratic leader Zolton Ferency thinks he can solve capital out- lay problems by getting the Legis- lature to pass a $50 million bond issue. From Ferency's comments Fri- day, the Democratic Party will support both the bond issue and tax reform, while Romney just wants tax reform. It seems almost funny that while both factions see such reform as the solution to state revenue problems, neither will initiate legislation. ON THE LOCAL SCENE, an is- sue which Ann Arbor Democrats and Republicans both agree is nonpartisan has become a political blooper ball. As it stands, City Council's Fair Housing Law, although stiil on tenuous legal grounds, is amend- able. On March 3, the council will meet with the State Civil Rights Commission to see about the pos- sibility of incorporating the state's article on discriminatoon into the law, as Wendell Hul- cher, the Republican candidate for mayor, has suggested. Opposing Hulcher's proposal, the Democrats urge adoption of three amendments to extend the housing units covered, pronibit discriminatory practices by real estate agents and prevent reta ia- tion against persons supporting the ordinance. PERHAPS seeking to be sure that the conditions result ng in the Berkeley riots never come about here,the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs created a University-wide com- mittee to probe the role of the student in University affairs. Odd- ly enough, the committee's very creation will add to that role. At the University of California, a completely opposite approach was taken recently. The regents thpre are snnnsoring an investiga- when it came forth with its latest neatly packaged proposal. Under the proposal, landlords would make individual leases for students renting apartments so that if one roommate finks out, the other roommates can leave the worrying to the landlord. Yet when the Off-Campus Of- fice politely informed SGC that landlords woudln't take too kindly to the proposal and that they'd probably raise rents because of added risk and bother, SGC blast- ed the housing office for its "ap- parent lack of concern for stu- dent welfare." Brilliant rebuttal. * SURPRISINGLY enough, there are 24 students running for SGC seats this election, in contrast to last fall when there were only enough running to fill the six spaces available. With the large number running comes, hopefully, better candidates, choice on the part of students and, subsequently, more interest. But there's nothing that livens a campaign up more than a new party. Last year at this time it. was Student Government Reform Union (SGRU) leading the way, with Students United fortRespon- sible Government (eventually) (SURGe), following close behind. This year it's GROUP (Govern- mental Revision of University Policy) that's keeping things stir - red up, claiming that SGC fails to use its power to act upon stu- dent needs. Let's hope the issues GROUP raises aren't as contrived as its name. SIGNALING the end of an era, the Women's League last week began celebrating its 75th anni- versary. From now on activities sector of the League will be com- bined with that of the Union. As Mrs. Edna French, '62, pointed out, women at the University have been fighting an uphill battle to be accepted into the Universitydcom- munity. Taking this attitude, the Union-League merger should be seen as a step forward-not down- ward-for University women. CONCERT PREVIEW TwoNights Two Programs Tonight THE UNIVERSITY Symphony Orchestra will pre- sent a concert of well-known orchestral works, all of which are taken from the standard profes- sional repertoire, at 8:30 tonight in Hill Aud. A symphony and a theme and variations comprise the heart of the program, with shorter programatic works opening and closing the concert. A variety of musical styles will be presented, including neo- Classical, Romantic, late-Romantic and Impression- istic pieces. The program begins with Debussy's "Prelude to Afternoon of a Faun." This work, describing through the medium of music Mallarme's poem "The After- ncon of a Faun," is a milestone in music. The world had not, at this time (1894) been subjected to the type of composition which attempted to paint im- pressions and evoke moods through the medium of orchestral color and intensity. Next on the program is Prokofieff's "Classical Symphony" (No. 1) composed in 1916-17. This work is organized in the Classical style, using classical forms and compositional practices. The first and last movements demand considerable virtuosity from the string section, in contrast to the serenity of the second movement and the gay, jaunty Gavotte of the third. matic work, in rondo form, depicting the various events in the life of Till. The work is based on two themes which are brought back in various guises. These themes characterize the events in the typical style of Strauss, the master of the tone poem. -Dennis Horton Tonorrow INSTRUMENTAL and textural variety characterizes the Composers' Forum to be held at 8:30 p.m. Monday in the recital hall of the Music School Bldg. The program will open with "Triptych for Per- cussion Instruments" by Jerome Hartweg. Performers are Martin Zyskowski, Donald Carroll, Earl Sherburn, Richard McElhenie, and the composer. The work is for non-pitched percussion only. Each player becomes an improvising solist above the rhythmic texture of the ensemble. "Drei Gesange," opus 23. of Anton Webern, per- formed by Judith Toensing, soprano, and Diana Boylan, pianist, is second. Following the Webern is "Frescos" for woodwind quartet by William Albright. Performers are Joan Ramee, Robert Phillips, Paul Kirby, John Courtney, with Barry Vercoe, conductor. Each of the work's four movements begins and ends with a solo for one of the players. These linking passages are one of the more evident manifestions of a cyclical serial