J- Eac...m.I hac_ She irh t tt ail Seventy-Fifth Year EDrrD AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORiTY OF BOARD rN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Wh4ereOpinions AeFr, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MicH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Truth will Prevail. Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staf f writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: JEFFREY GOODMAN Toward a More Relevant Two-Party System by iI. Neil eierkson i The Coming Soeal Crisis: Trial of True Conservatism UNEMPLOYMENT, poverty, social stag- nation, and the forces working to per- petuate them in the United States soon will force the conservative politicians who govern America to make major decisions of far-reaching significance in domestic policy. The politicians who must make these decisions will face a terrrific prob- lem. To act effectively, they will have to introduce just the right amount of rad- icalism into their practices. Too add too little could lead to social disaster; to add too "much could bring on political disin- tegration. The politicians' main problem will be the social stagnation which has gripped the United States over the last 10 years. Since 1954, the poor have witnessed no improvementin their relative position in American society; the ich have given 4up not one iota of the power and priv- lege which has been their inheritance. The current rebellion of the civil rights movement against its moderate leaders indicates the approaching social crisis. The whole movement is sliding quickly to the left because it feels itself in the clutch of this social stasis, now the domi- nant character of American life. They feel they have made no progress-though they have made a little. They know for certain the poignant truth that there are more Negroes in segregated schools to- day than there were on the day of the 1954 Supreme Court decision. ANOTHER SIGN of the approaching crisis is the feeling of despair and apathy which dominates a huge section of America's poor. The poor know that it is harder to get a job now than it was ten years ago, and they have experienced three depressions in the last ten years. After each depression unemployment has been at a higher level than before. The poor know that automation is snatching thousands of jobs from them every day. Perhaps they do not know that the bustling, free American economy has produced only a net of about 100,000 new jobs in private enterprise since the end of the 1956-7 expansion, and that ma- chines have accounted for most of the increase in production since then. The poor. do know that a huge force of un- skilled teenagers-the "grown-ups" of the post-war baby boom-are just beginning to pour into the private labor market, a market with very few new jobs for any- body. _ So the poor, left in the lurch by a pri- vate economy, look to their government. What do they see? They see a "war on poverty,' designed almost solely for poli- tical purposes, which will ease their plight little, if at all. They see Congress struggling to pass a weak public works program for Appalachia; the program is currently being crippled with amend- mnents which give it little chance-if it is passed-of snatching Appalachia from the eastern mining and power interests which hold it as their private fief. THE POOR have looked to the left- the Democrats now in power - and have seen almost nothing. Out of curiosi- ty, they peek at the right and there rises before them a paragon of middle class selfishness, simplicity and reaction. They see a man who is willing to curtail what- ever government has done for them, who is willing to abandon them to the pri- vate economy which has failed them so H. NEL BERKsON, Editor miserably, and a man who sometimes denies their very existence. They see this man-a reactionary, not at all a conservative-entering a political contest against the true conservative now in the White House. As they see the whole cam- paign drift to the right and away from the issues, they lose all hope that either candidate can help them in the foresee- able future. Something must be done about the plight of this poor and frustrated seg- ment of American society, and the true conservative now in the White House realizes this. If he wins this election, as he must and surely will, he must set in his mind two goals: a short-range one and a long-range one. First, he must give substantial atten- tion to his vociferous opposition on the right, and at the same time keep the support of the rising dissatisfied forces on the left. In other words, he must work for enough government action to keep the left solidly with him,. but not for so much that the right consolidates against him. He must hope that his first and token efforts at social improvement will meet with enough success over a period of several years to substantially weaken the forces on the right. Then, if this hap- pens, he can turn his attention to the long-range goal. THE LONG-RANGE GOAL can only be to rid America of the causes of the social and economic diseases that debili- tate it. The federal government must work to cure the ailments which the fail- ures of private enterprise have allowed to take hold. This work can take many forms-a massive public works program for Appalachia, a widespread urban re- newal campaign, additions to Peace Corps personnel, a significant extension of federal aid and central planning for the public school system. But in trying to achieve this long- range goal, the true conservatives, who will control the government tomorrow as well as today, will need to meet head on, and in its most evil form, the basic contradiction on which American society was founded and has risen to power. This is that the means of producing the nation's goods, goods which must supply the public, are in private hands, and in very few private hands. As automation eliminates bit by bit the need for human labor over the next few decades, are those who cannot get jobs to continue to depend on those who can get jobs for their only sizable source of income? Is society eventually to reach a point where a majority depends on the efforts-and the charity-of a minority for its survival? Is the one per cent of America which owns 80 per cent of all public stock to become, through the ad- vance of automation, the absolute bene- factor of a nation which is forced to live on it like a huge leech? Or will Americans realize that fair- ness-leaving any economic arguments aside-requires that a person deprived of his employment by a wealthy so- ciety be treated as more than a leech, and that the benefits of his labors and those of his forbearers belong as much to him as to those who have used him and then thrown him aside? IF THEY EVER REACH this point, the conservatives of the future will at last enter in earnest the controversy of pub- lic authority versus private liberty. They will be required to use their conserva- tism to ensure that with the increased functions and power of government there will come an increased respect for the rights of the individual. These men must guide the United States to maturity, so it can be responsible to the joint concept of huge government plus extensive private liberty in the manner of many Western European countries. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. has briefly out- lined this conservative course of action- a mixture of liberal radicalism with lib- eral conservatism: "If socialism is to pre- serve democracy, ibi must be brought about step by step in a way which will not disrupt the fabric of custom, law and mu- tual .confidence upon, which personal JAMES RESTON'S SENSE of fairness sometimes over- whelms him. His Sunday column in the New York Times strongly condemned the Democratic Party for seeking both a presidential and congressional landslide in the coming election. The Times' new associate editor doesn't mind seeing Goldwater get trounced, "but it is not going to help the country, the two-party system, the Republicans, or even Johnson, to weaken the moderate Republicans who have done so much to defend the prin- ciples of collective security abroad and social security and racial equality at home over the last generation," he says. "There is, in short, a powerful case to be made for ticket splitting. If the South likes Goldwater's social and economic policies well enough to risk his foreign policies, let it vote Republican all the way and create a vigorous two-party system in the Old Confederacy. This could be one of the few positive results of this election." GRANTING THAT the two-party system is funda- mental to American politics, there remains nothing par- ticularly sacred about the system as it currently exists. The Republican and Democratic parties have been getting more and more remote from national problems. While the state department is beginning to realize that Stalin is dead, our economic thinking-especially in Congress-is basically pre-Depression. Even though the welfare state is a natural development and necessary for any complex, modern society, the term socialism carries ridiculous conspiratorial connotations reinforced by the prattlings of both parties. Meanwhile, the un- employment level remains over five per cent during an economic upswing while a permanent impoverished class of disaffected Americans-currently some 28 million- has developed. Or consider the race question. The Civil Rights Act, which finally passed Congress in an atmosphere of crisis, was substantively proposed in the late 1940's. Had pass- age been effected then, who knows how much agony would have been saved both North and South? By any standard but the American, the Democratic Party would be in the center-right half of the political spectrum. This makes even the moderate wing of the Republican Party an outdated voice. Only five Republi- can senators, after all, voted for Medicare. THE QUESTION IS how to get the country off dead-center, and I don't think the answer is to maintain the status quo. Let Goldwater destroy the Republican Party. The Democrats are already far from cohesive. As they grew more powerful the result would be much quarreling and an eventual split. The nature of that split cannot be predicted with certainty, but if it came along more realistic liberal-conservative lines, the two-party system' would be much more viable than it now is. * * * * LENORE ROMNEY, wife of one of Reston's supposed moderate Republicans, addressed Washtenaw County's Republican Convention Saturday night. Listen to her: "President Johnson says the states are strong be- cause the nation is strong. But how can the nation be strong if the states are not?" "Philosophers tell us that if you take the liberal approach to the extreme, you end up with a dictatorship.' "Thanks to the people of Washtenaw County, we have a new constitution which is the best in any field you'd want to name. Isn't this the sort of thing Sen. Goldwater means when he says let's give more power to the states?" INCIDENTALLY, THE new Republican frontier spirit really showed up at the convention. A number of delegates got in a fist fight over credentials, and'one of them had to get a tetanus shot at University Hospital after being bitten. * * * * AND FINALLY, Barry Goldwater. Coming here. For the Air Force game, of course. Pity that the Arizona senator can't stay on campus for more than a day. Two weeks of Political Science 100, Economics 101, Sociology 100, and Linguistics 411 might do wonders for him. i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Outraged Honors Housing Residents Strike Back To the Editor: AS A MEMBER in good standing (3.8750000-to eight significant figures) of Frost House at the University of Michigan Trade School, I take umbrage at your statements about myself and my exalted colleagues. It is true that I live an un- creative life of utter banality, as I move from honors course to honors course (honors courses are especially known for the trivia which they teach) , grubbing and grinding out my grades. It is true that my only home is my desk, where I grovel amidst books, papers, and IBM cards, which I leave only for few moments of fit- ful rest, a New York Times as my blanket, a Reader's Guide as my pillow. But why must you say "obviously the above is an exag- geration," when it's not? If you will excuse, please, I must now re.urn to my studies. -Bill Moore, '67 To the Editor: SOME JOURNALISTS have the happy ability to search out and find the precise mood of a society through observation and patient questioning. Sadly, Karen Kenah is not one of these. There is no paragraph in her ill-conceiv- ed editorial of September 13 about honors housing without a mis- represen;;ation, or misinterpreta - tion of the group with whom I re- side. Her thesis that by putting Hon- ors students together all student drives but the incentive to be on top of the academic heap are an- nihila.ed is simply not true. Frost House has more spirit for extra- curricular activities than any other house I know of; we have fielded a team for every IM event .since our founding. We have a wide and varied social schedule of some ingenuity, recognizing too the fact that in Blagdon house brains and beauty are not mutually exclusive. We have many guest lecturers on topics as varied as the Raw Car- rot test and the history of Exis- tentialism. None but a poor few of us are "chained" to desks. We study a bit more than the campus aver- age, as we would in any other dormitory environment, but the proximity of other honors stu- dents manifests itself not so much in increased competition as in honest group studying, ten-minute tutoring sessions, and a general sense of intellectual as well as social companionship. WE DO NOT leave the Univer- sity "crammed with facts but de- void of initiative." On the con- trary, having been exposed to the interrelationships of the various disciplines, we are willing to con- tinue our liberal educations far past graduation. Finally, we do not lose our in- dividualism. As many of us, if not more, than the campus average, are members of extracurricular groups. We have as many eccen- trics as the campus at large. We are not assembly-line robots des- tinedto make money and nothing else, but recipients of a rich, full varied academic experience much intensified by the other honors students around us. We wish that those who disagree with our goals would leave us alone. -Fred L. Bookstein, '67 To the Editor: SUNDAY'S EDITORIAL concern- ing the honors housing at Markley cofesses an exaggera- tion of the facts. I would suggest that while there is reason for had no other connection with the Honors College at all. Thus true honors housing was not tried. As for the effect of honors stu- dents' slavishness to syllabi on the ordinary student, this is non- sense. Honors classes and sections have very little communication with the large introductory classes. Their marks are usually indepen- dently determined on the basis of their fulfillment of their own in- tellectual possibilities. THIS POLICY, combined with honors housing does create a prob- lem, however. The students in the honors program realize very quick- ly that they are the darlings of the literary college. In small hon- ors classes, they get to know pro- fessors, and are assured that the University wants them to succeed and that C's are not usually given in any number to students of such ability. This feeling of natural superiority and patronage pampers academic sloppiness. Syllabi are not fulfilled, much less exceeded, papers for Great Books 191, 192 are chronically late, and facts are passed over as irrelevant for great- er minds. Honors housing frequently en- courages this, by making even scared freshmen aware that people around him, honors students, are not responsible scholars. And this, Miss Kenah, scholar- ship, is the aim of the liberal education. "Raw intelligence" is enough to win sympathy, for a misguided adolescent, but by the age of 18 or 19, he must begin to perform, earn grades, if he is ever to realize his potential. There are many frustrated young adults in Ann Arbor who are vic- tims of the fallacy that if they are "liberal" and not "narrow" they need not produce anything of value. Raw intelligence, if left fallow too long, decays. It is not a magical birthright that can be retained without use. HONORS HOUSING, because it is located in Markley, emphasizes the worst of this slopy attitude. Sophomores and juniors, who may be facing their academic respon- sibilities more honestly because of their age or dissatisfaction with themselves, tend to move out after the first year. Markley has no single rooms, and serious students, no matter how much they like other people, often need the in- dependence and peace of a single. For men and senior women, there is the option of an apartment, which frees the student from rules like "no books in the dining room" and post-closing fire drills. For these reasons, I believe that honors housing will remain a pre- iominately freshman phenomenon, and one which may even dis- courage close attention to the dis- cipline of academic life. -Susan Riebel, '67 To the Editor: WHILE TAKING TIME off from "grinding," last Sunday, I happened to read my neighbor's copy of the Daily. My glance fell on an ominous sounding heading at the top of the first page. "Honors Housing vs. Education." Since I had never even dreamed that there was a basic contradic- tion implied by these two in- nocuous terms, you can imagine with what trembling eagerness I turned to the editorial page. What befell my eye was such a flagrant example of illogical and biased conclusions based upon ill-founded and slanderous accusations. that I could hardly believe even the Daily would print it. Written by a cer- tain Miss Karen Kenah, "Honors mighty grade." Had Miss Kenah even bothered to check her sources (assuming that she had any), she would have found this statement to be an outright falsehood. I am also interested in this statement. "The student forgets the existence of University facilities other than his own desk." Having lived in both non-honors and honors hous- ing, I have found from personal experience that Blagdon girls, far from being social misfits, were much more aware andparticipated in many more activities than the residents of non-honors housing. * *M * PERHAPS if Miss Kenah had bothered to examine Blagdon house residents, she would have found them as stimulating as I have. I did approve of one of her closing statements, though. "Mix- ture of types never hurt anyone." Too bad it's irrelevent to her case. The students in honors housing come from many different areas and exhibit as much or more di- versity of interests and back- grounds as any living group on campus. Naturally, this article bothers me, personally, for it attacks me and the girls of my house. But I think the problem goes deeper than a few gross exaggerations and ridiculous untruths. It touches on the problem of responsible journalism. Sure, the Daily may boast of "Seventy Four Years of by freedom here? Freedom to slan- der? Freedom to misrepresent? Freedom to print outright false- hoods? The Daily has a respon- sibility to every student on this campus, and part of this respon- sibility involves being fair, truth- ful, and just. Don't mistake me. I am in favor of differences of opinion and freeediscussion, but when I see. an editorial like Miss Kenah's masking under the guise of "editorial freedom," I know that this freedom has been twisted into abuse. -Judy Riley, '67 To the Editor:, A S INMATES of Frost Honors house, we have taken the time to unshackle ourselves from our omnipresent desk chains for a few preci~ous minutes to pen a brief reply to Miss Kenah's edi- torial in the Sunday Daily. Miss Kenah's thesis as stated in the headline ,of her article and developed through a series of shockingly misinformed statements is that the procedure of housing honors s rudents together repre- sents a two-pronged menace to liberal education at the Univer- sity: first, she asserts, the honors .student is necessarily limited to a grinding, super-competitive, at- mosphere which narrows his edu- cational horizons and stultifies his intellectual growth. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Put an honors student in a house with average compan- ions and he will be likely to be content with the superficial satis- faction and prestige that a good grade will bring him. Put the same student in a house with stu- dents of equal or better caliber and he will be more likely to judge his own intellectual achievements and those of others with a far more critical eye. THE GRADEPOINT is impor- tant among honors students as an indication of hard work -and solid achievement; but the key to a respectable intellectual reputation and the incentive to broaden and accelerate educational develop- ment comes with the articulate- ness and knowledgeability with which one can participate in the kind of intellectual interchange which is almost uniquely a char- acteristic of honors housing. Secondly, Miss Kenah contends that honors housing isolates the able student from his educational environment and deprives the Uni- versity of talents which could otherwise be developed and con- tributed to the overall intellec- tual life of the campus. We will leave the reply to this typically unsubstantiated and irresponsible statement to our sophomore col- leagues who, we are sure, will be more than happy to supply Miss Kenah with a detailed list of ex- periences from last year's Frost House program which should only serve to reveal once more the generally uninformed and care- less attitude that underlies the whole editorial. It appears, then, that Miss Kenah is suffering from a fatal disease among editorialists: she tries to pass off meaningless, mis- informed opinion as intelligent commentary. In conclusion, if Miss Kenah still entertains doubts as to the wholesomeness and utility of hon- ors housing, we will be glad to personally provide a unique op- portunity for her to sample the delights of life at Frost House at the same time that she is pur- suing a higher degree of enlight- enment in an °area about. which she has proven herself remark. ably ignorant. -Sam Sherman,;'S8 Alan Kaufman, '68 To the Editor: IAM WRITING this as a repre- sentsacive of a group in Blagdon House. The image of honors hous- ing created by Miss Karen Kenah in her .Sunday editorial is un- justifiable and inexcusable. This image of grade-point grinds was not merelyr"exaggerated," but totally incorrect. Rather than attempt to refute her points through the Daily, how- ever, Blagdon House invites Miss Kenah to visit with its members "at home"uand discover for her- self how untrue her accusations are. We trust hat her liberal edu- cation will alert her to the ad- van agesof using evidence ac- quired first-hand. -Clare Michelson, '68 A " /" >: ' " , ;.fir. s;> s r "' 1 f e"' / l .. ;, f -, _, . - e. e e ; .r & KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor Et)WARD HERSTE1N Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN..............Personnel Director MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY...........Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE.......Associate Editorial Director LOUISE LIND........Assistant z dtoral Director in Charge of the Magazine BILL BULLARD..................... Sports Editor TOM ROWLAND ............Asociate Sports Editor GARY WYNER................Associate Sports Editor CHARLES TOWLE.........Contributing Sports Editor Business Staff JONATHON R. WHITE, Business Manager JAY GAMPEL...........Associate Business Manager JUDY GOLDSTEIN ............... Finance Manager BARP ARA1 JOHNSTON.,.......... Personnel Manager SYDNEY PAUKER .......... Advertising Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ... .....,...Systems Manager .lTrNiOR MANAGERS: Bonnie Cowan, Sue Crawford, Joyce Feinberg, Judy Fields, Judy Grohne, sue Sucher, Pat Termini, Cy Wellman. e?: s.,.... '} f .4;: t ~ . . s , . i± , 5 i I