4 jv Eighty year Edited and managed bys 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Editorials printed in The MichiganI or the editors. T i a# I i s of editorial freedom' students at the University of Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers his must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: HESTER PULLING 'U': Maintaining sexism THE NATION-WIDE demonstrations held in accordance with Interna- tional Women's Day Monday provided a chance for women to organize programs exploring their oppression - but the de- monstrations should not be viewed as a panacea for women's problems. Indeed, the problems which existed when the event was inaugurated in 1910 - low pay, poor working conditions, and oppressive societal roles - still exist to- day. This is especially true at the Uni- versity where the administration h a s been distressingly *slow in assuring the equality of female students and employes. For although it is the participant in an "historic" agreement with the Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare to end sex discrimination in hiring prac- tices, the University's attitude throughout the dispute, and even after the settle- ment, is typical of society's treatment of women. WHEN CONFRONTED with the charges of sexism, the University's reaction was to try and organize other universities to fight the contract bans imposed by HEW - a clear attempt to ignore the allegations of sex discrimination. When HEW stipulated that the University must improve the ratio of women admitted to Ph.D programs because the programs are connected to employment of teaching fel- lows and research assistants, the Univer- sity appealed' all the way to HEW Secre- tary Elliot Richardson, saying that ad- missions to graduate programs and em- ployment are two separate areas. When the University was asked to rectify the inequities in its admissions programs, it did not merely take its time doing so, it openly fought such proposals. But if the University did not mean business, HEW certainly did. Turning Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEAT TIE DAVE CHUD WIN Executive Editor ManagingUEditor STEVE KOPPMAN .. Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFF .. Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY .. .. Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE........... .... . .. Arts Editor ROBERT CONROW .. Books Editor JIM JUDKIS .... .. ......Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Tammy Jacobs, Jonathan Miller, Carla Rapoport, Hester Pulling, Robert Schreiner, W. B. Schrock. COPY EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald. DAY EDITORS: Linda Dreeben, Alan Lenhoff, Art Ler- ner, Jim McFerson. Hannah Morrison, Gene Robin- son, Geri Sprung, Debra Thai. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Juanita Anderson, Ken Cohn, Mike McCarthy John Mitchell, Kristin Ring- strom, Chris Parks, Zachary Schiller, Ken Schulze, John Shamraj, Gloria Smith, Ted Stein, Chuck Wil- bur. down the University's first "affirmative action" plan, it forced the administra- tion to adopt a plan which included equalization of pay between men and women, retroactive pay to women w h o could prove they were sibject to discrim- ination, and the establishment of a Women's Commission. A commission "all their own." B u t what commission? Working without pay in their own free time, the commission members can hardly be expected to scrape the surface of problems in this area. And when it has the chance to get directly involved, for instance, in the preparation of further goals and timetables which HEW requires, the commission was neat- ly swept aside by male administra- tors Who claim that the addition . of women workers would mean "too many fingers in the pot." THE UNIVERSITY also maintains t h e inferior status of women by discrim- inating against them in its admission .policies - although women have attend- ed the University for 100 years. Though statistics show women perform better academically than do men, and indicate that a higher percentage of women fin- ish college than do their male counter- parts, the University continues to admit a higher percentage of men than women. Yet ending job discrimination and in- equitable admission policies are only the surface problems involved in ending sex- ism in our society. The real roots of the problem go far beyond anything that can be corrected by an HEW report. Society as a wnole must change its at- titudes toward women. Women must come to be accepted as equals, intellect- ually, emotionally and' in all ways. From birth, women should not be channeled into subordinate positions with the sub- sequent sense of inferiority. Instead, so- ciety must enable women to realize their full potential as productive - and not just reproductive - members of society. IN THIS context, it is likely that many viewed International Women's Day as merely a day to honor women. This is simply a manifestation of the behavior of a society which gives women a brief moment of glory only for greater subjuga- tion later. Too often women are placed on a pedestal, in terms of meaningless manners and rituals, only to be denied a genuine position of importance in the world. Women are not asking to be "honored" on International Women's Day. They are asking that the oppression they encount- er, both tangible. and intangible, be end- ed. -SARA FITZGERALD Sex. By WALTER SHAPIRO S HAPIRO first became aware of the latest Norman Mailer Ex- travaganza when the cultural hucksters at Harper's in the media's self-aggrandizing tradi- tion announced to the assembled litterati that "the favorite target of women's lib chooses his weapon -Harper's Magazine" and t h e n carried this adrenal self -glorifica- tion one consciousness level fur- ther by adding, with nary a visi- ble wince, "Pick up a copy. Be- fore your newsstand is picketed." Alarmingly susceptible to t h e blandishments of the Current, but deeply offended by Harper's mar- keting strategy in merchandizing Mailer, Shapiro, reflecting t h e amorality of the age, compromised by picking up - but definitely not paying a dollar for - a misad- dressed copy of Harper's which was lying untended in a public place without a picketer in sight. (DAYS LATER upon learning that Harper's editor Willie Morris. who promoted the Mailer Extrava- ganza, had been forced out by the "money men" who apparently dis- agreed with Morris' assessment that "Mailer is a great writer, his work matters to our civilizatio," any number of wry comments and puckish questions sprung to Sha- pirq's lips. The Magazine-Swiper was unable to resist setting down for eternity a mere assortment, a veritable Whitman's Sampler of these bon mots: Was there some "money man" at Harper's with a slight touch of whimsy who sold advertising space in the middle of Mailer's dense prose for a com- mercial message peddling "Eve ... Pretty Eve . . . the first truly feminine cigarette . . . it's almost as pretty as you are." The Maga- zine-Swiper also pondered Mor- ris' job prospects along the New York middle-brow intellectual cir- cuit. What could he do now? Head the Ford Foundation? Be posthu- mously bar mitzvahed and given the editorship at Commentary?) The deep and ever-lasting sig- nificance of a rumble from the di- rection of his pancreas impelled the Magazine-Swiper to review the whole complex of his conflicting thoughts about Norman Mailer. Shapiro, reflecting the Zorastrian duality, the dichotomous w o r'l d view to which he was so fatally attracted, had always different- iated between the Political Mailer and the Literary Mailer. POLITICALLY, Shapiro, the Left Reactionary whose non-ideologi- cal radicalism often left him mut- tering about the curse of bigness. Shapiro the political Funster who wrote-in John Sinclair for Gover- nor and endorsed .Eldridge Cleav- er for President, could not help but be attracted to the quixotic, comic opera tendencies in Mail- er's 1969 New York mayorality campaign with its cry of "Neigh- borhood Power." With character- istic perverseness the Magazine- Swiper at the same time resented the almost incestuous Village Voice-New York Magazine origins of the Mailer crusade. The Literary Mailer was of equal interest because the Magazine- Swiper had been reading him late- ly. After resisting the best-selling, prize-winning, cover story allure of Armies of the Night because he, having been there, had his own feelings about the Pentagon March and didn't need Norman to put them into perspective, Sha- piro recently picked up the book after it was no longer fashion- able (yes, he paid for it) and Mailer's ball found himself, the Sometime His- torian, admiring Mailer's attempt to reach the interior of history, to reach those private realms of hu- man experience which seem only to be the province of the novelist. The Defrocked Journalist Sha- piro, entranced with the form and possibilities of s u c h personalized writing, yielded to Shapiro, t h e Camp Follower of Women's Lib- eration, who admired American Dream for its fidelity in replicat- ing the Locker-Room Fantasies, the emotional debris of masculine insecurities, the ugly, green, scaly residues of a lifetime of condi- tioning to use women as balm for the ever so fragile male ego. This fantasy vision was so therapeutic. so cathartic that Shapiro did not really care whether Mailer was ap- proving, disapproving or morally ambiguous. As he held - nay fondled - his "hot" copy of Harper's, sudden- ly there was the flash of insight, the gasp of an idea, the Kiliman- jaro of the Soul. Shapiro would climb out of the mire of indolence aid write a reaction to Mailer's "The Prisoner of Sex." But deep, darkling doubts remained. Was he man enough to attempt to take on Norman Mailer at the typewriter? Could the Magazine-Swiper even attempt to discuss, women and their liberation in response to Mailer - a Mailer who noted nodestly in Armies of the Night that "he (like all novelists) prided himself on his knowledge of women." And Shapiro also asked himself, with uncharacteristic directness, could he be honest about his own deep feelings about women, about his not altogether unchecked ten- dencies to use women of objects rather than to relate to them as people? Also, he wondered, would he merely write to please, write what those friends who were deep- ly involved in Women's Liberation would vant to hear? The complex of the questions posed an ines- capable and existential Challenge to Shapiro. * * * W ITH MAILER, substance, as f well as style is important. And here parody fails us. For despite the arid gaps between subject and predicate in so many of his long and convoluted sentences, Mailer is taken seriously. Both Kate Mil- lett and Mailer himself agree that he is one of our leading mytholo- gists of sex. And when Mailer writes, thousands of male sexual fantasies answer. Strangely enough many of Mail- er's attitudes towards Women's Liberation sound vaguely familiar. When one grasps the deep thema- tic affinity between Mailer's at- tempt to achieve a cosmic survey of Women's Liberation and soc- ialist critic Irving Howe's review of Sexual Politics in the December Harper's, a definite pattern of masculine myopia begins to emerge. Dwelling on the intellectual kin- ship between Mailer and : H o w e is emotionally satisfying because both castigate Millett (who Nor- man with rare subtlety and taste calls "Kate-baby") for such pe- dantic sins as too liberal a use of ellipsis and a lack of critical fidelity. Sounding vaguely like a racist academic muttering about the low level of black scholarship, Mailer writes, "He did not know why a lack of such literary nice- ties as fair quotation and measur- ed attack should bother him more in women. Was it because a male critic who practices such habits could not get far - the stern code of professionalism in other men is bound to cut him down THE UNACKNOWLEDGED fel- lowship of the spirit between Mail- er and Howe extends to a mutual failure to understand why Wo- men's Liberation does not limit itself to political action toward such reformist goals as vocational equality and free day care centers. Both male critics whine, why should women feel oppressed since they have so much power over men already? Mailer expresses this quaint no- tion in personal terms using the military imagery he cannot seem to avoid when writing about wo- men. "Four times beaten at wed- lock, his respect for the power of women was so large that the, way they would tear through him . . . would be reminiscent . . . of German tanks crunching through' straw huts on their was across a border." Presumably women should abandon their struggle for liberation and devote all their energies to tearing through Norm- an Mailer. But these are trivial concerns, mere dots on the landscape when compared to the horizon-filling blindspot in both Mailer's a n d Howe's treatment of Kate Millett. What is so breath-taking is the utter refusal of these two m a 1 e critics to face Milett's seemingly inescapable theme that the de- piction, and often the glorifica- tion, of women as sex objects is an integral element in almost all of our major modern novels. The shock value, as well as the critical and polemical import- ance of Sexual Politics is that it provides abundant documentation of this literary truism, reflecting andch as it does the dominant cutural tendencies of our sqiety. Any pro- tracted discussion of Millett's pro- fessional integrity, her paraphras- ing of Freud, her fairness to Henry Miller or any of the other tedious concerns which have been recently filling so many pages in Harper's, merely diverts, our attention from this fundamental theme. EVEN IN HIS current article, where others might be circum- spect, Mailer gleefully provides in- numerable examples of his con- stant view that women are mere appendages of the male ego. Mail- er confesses that he had felt help- less before the wordsmiths at Time "until the mighty occasion when he captured the mistress of a Po- tentate of Time! . and waskso intent on retribution that it took him months to recognize that the dear pudding of a lady in whom he was inserting his fast-rusting barb was a remarkable girl, almost as interesting, complex, Machia- vellian, and spiritual as himself." Mailer has become so entwined in his own sexual ideology that he fails to see that there is some- thing at once both deliciously ab- surd and horribly dehumanized in fucking a woman merely to vent one's spleen at a slick magazine with a bright red border. Although it would be unchar- acteristic, Mailer could justify his behavior by arguing that the mis- tress he captured (again that mili- tary mind) was herself "on the lookout for the particular sweet fellow who would most outrage her Boss." Yet there should be little justification and even less s u r- prise in discovering that 'some women have absorbed many of the sexual attitudes of the dominant male ethos. Although Mailer seems blithely unconcerned about his own reifi- cation of women, he has an al- most neurotic fear of a sexual Brave New World "of vibrators and plastic dildoes" in which men are expendable and women are freed from the burdens of child- birth. Utilizing some of the prose left on the cutting room floor of his moonshot book, Mailer likens Millett to a "technologist who drains all the swamps only to dis- cover that the ecological balance has been savaged." BUT WHAT MAILER really fears are not test-tube babies, but the demystification of sex. For Mailer is our leading sexual mys- tic, a self-appointed guru in the carnal wilderness, who can op- pose birth-control because it would deprive "women forever . (of) the existential edge of know- ing that to become pregnant, might mean their death, yet not to be pregnant might bring on the worst of illness ..." Sex is the road to self-aware- ness, that's Mailer's gospeL Wax- ing lyrical, he writes, "For when- a man and woman conceive would it not be best that they be able to see one another for a trans- cendent instant." Yet sex is also the ultimate testing ground, t h e veritable mirror of thesoul. "Give meaning to sex and one was the prisoner of sex," the self-describ- ed Prisioner intoned, "until every failure and misery, every evil of your life, spoke their. lines in its light." With these spiritual insights it is almost as if Mailer believes that his entire life is just a long and arduous preparation for that one transcendent fuck, that orgasm which will rattle the pillars of and write in flame across the sky, "Norman, this is what it's all about. Only You did I make in My image. For who could f u c k like that. except a God." There is an undeniably roman- tic appeal to this concept of trans- c-ndent sex. but the ideology be- comes oppressive, as well as banal, when one realizes that women are w merely convenient vessels through which men can attempt to achieve their self-awakening, eternity- rattling orgasms. This is made abundantly clear when Mailer glorifies D. H. Law- rence's attempt to overcome h i s latent homosexuality through the 4 subjugation of women. No wonder Lawrence "worshipped his phal- lus. he above all men knew what an achievement was its rise from the root." For Maile~r it is a short step from here to Lawrence "was ill and his wife was literally kill- ing him each time she failed to 4 worship his most proud and deli- cate cock." In terms of understanding the sexual politics which afflict us all, it is not enough to merely under- stand what Mailer is trying to say. Perhaps even more significant is the role played by Mailer and W other talented sexual gurus in creating and nurturing masculine erotic fantasies. FOR MANY, novels provide the earliest and most lasting source of vicarious sexual experience. It is the novelist's desperate search for . the ultimate sexual metaphor which has led many men to be- come victims of all sorts of des- tructive, plastic myths about all- consuming sex. The novelists have succeeded too well. They have left too many men with the lurking suspicion ,mj that the sexual myth-makers are having srotic experiences which bear almost no relation to their own. How many men have the gnawing fear that Norman Mailer is having better sex than they are? How many men, are disappointed upon achieving orgasm to discov- er that in real life thunder doesn't roll and the heavens don't light up with fire? Given this peculiar masculine in- security, it is a logical next step for males to begin to regard women as almost Stations of the Cross which one penetrates at will while striving. with almost relig- ious fervor to duplicate the sex- ual feats of Norman Mailer and those other talented chroniclers of sex. rain SMALL WONDER that the dia- lectics of this "notches on the bed- post syndrome" remain unfathom- able to Mailer. For rarely, if ever, has a writer become more securely entangled in a web of his own sex- ual myths. Poor Norman, it's just a terminal case of too much Army, too much ego and too much talent. Walter Shapiro, now a history grad student and once a Washing- ton political writer, returns to The Daily with the first installment of a projected series of .columns. Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to 'Mar y Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. A heaven, and God will come out Radicals: Trapped in a morass of By TAMMY JACOBS T WO WEEKS have passed since the most recent effort to raise radical conscious- ness on this campus. Hopefully participants in the mass meetings, sit-ins and march that marked the weeks before spring break will have had time to think about what went wrong. The glaring lack of effective politics and tactics during that week, indicated t h a t there is a lot to be learned from the abor- tive, but gallant, attempt to once again move this campus to action. When the invasion of Laos and the peace treaty convention stirred the members of the sleeping radical movement in Ann Ar- bor, certain erstwhile campus leaders came out of semi-retirement to once again try organizing a strong, or at least active, left. The handle they used to bring the war home was a list of six demands: abolish ROTC, end war research, ban recruiters from companies that discriminate, establish a free 24-hour child care center, g r a n t students control over Course Mart, and give anti-war groups use of University fa- cilities. By the time the sit-in started the Mon- day before break, support for the six de- mands and protest against the Indochina War had been supplemented by anger that two persons had been arrested at the Re- gents meeting the previous Friday (when the Regents also decided to negate the effective- ness of the Office of Student Services Policy Board's progressive recruiting policy). did not know why they were theie, they also didn't know why they were using the sit-in tactic. As one facet of building a political base, radical leaders must interest their audience and potential base of support. But that Friday when there were 200 people at People's Plaza waiting to be led, the radicals pursued the nearest interest- ing and relatively low-risk activity - tak- ing the LSA Bldg. While this is admittedly, not a crucial blow to the University, it does have a certain amount of dramatic impact. - When that impact thinned, the next tactic was to march around campus chanting poli- tical slogans, winding up in an engineer- ing college recruiting office - after all, one of the demands involved recruiting. After that, back to the original building, to plan for the next week's action. The next week's action started in the LSA Bldg. Monday with a sit-in that be- gan with 150 people and dwindled to 50 by nighttime. (A sit-in of course, because peo- ple would be interested and come to support it, the demonstrators hoped.) HOWEVER, NOT ONLY is a 50-person sit-in at the LSA Bldg. entirely irrelevant to the University's ability to function, it gets dull and tiring after a light of playing poker and bridge and eating peanut butter sandwiches. Some of the excitement also died when the University said it would allow the action to continue. Although the danger of arrest had been removed, the possibility of sitting in forever remained in the building for 27 hours, sent out two leaflets, and called a mass meet- ing, it was clear that massive groups of people were not becoming instantly radical- ized and flocking to the cause. As a matter of fact, the mass meeting Tuesday afternoon had managed to gather about 150 people, slightly less than the number that started the sit-in with the brief occupation on Fri- day. Obviously, the leafletting and non-violent sit-in had, at least in this case, proven miserably ineffective. Perhaps the hard core of radicals should have given up there, but it is a tribute to either their innate optim- ism or their action-orientation that they didn't. "TAKING THE LSA Bldg. is kind of a drag," one experienced radical had com- mented a few days earlier. "I've been here so many times before.". He added that the symbolic value of taking a building would be maximized by taking the Administration Bldg. And so the 150 marched to the second floor of the Administration Bldg., only to find that no miracle had occired, a n d they still were without active student sup- port. At the Administration Bldg., the Univer- sity decided to crack down, and the other alternative inherent in the sit-in tactic be- came real - getting arrested. Finally, faced with internal disputes, the possibility of arrests, and the grim indica- tion that nobody out there cared, the group tactics in the tactics used. Leafletting is just not enough-students have seen and continue to see too many leaflets about too many things,' and have learned to be immune to their mes- sages. SIT-INS, TOO, may be a thing of the past, with the choice between being left alone to disappate through sheer boredom and exhaus- tion, or being disappated by the hard clubs and heavy penalties of staying until, the bust comes. Unless a movement has so many people that it can neither be effectively ignored, nor effectively busted, there seems little hope that sitting in will either organize more par- ticipants, or coerce the administration to ac- cede to anything. The solution to the tactics problem is not simple to find. It may, in fact, be impossible. It could be that there is no way left to effec- tively organize large masses of students numbed and frustrated by too many actions too boring or too violent, and always inevit- ably too futile. But the left in Ann Arbor must try again to mobilize enough people to act constructively upon the issues that need acting upon-one at a painful time. "Let's face it," said one veteran of radical actions as Tuesday's sit-in drew to a close, "sometimes we lose." And the left lost this time. It was not the first, nor will it be the last time that the left has lost, but if the actions were more than just "an old rads slumber seemed to agree that it was clearly impossible to get all, or even some of the demands approved and implemented. It is now obvious that the radicals, rath- er than gaining the broad base they wanted by having demands that appealed to every- one, were instead discouraging support by The all-encompassing character of the demands made evident the purely educa- tional nature of the campaign, and any pretense of gaining concessions from t h e University was thus lost. Besides the impossibility of supporting all six demands strongly, there was a crippling tack of ronn unity amon the n nna uwho