age 4-Tuesday, November 29, 1977-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Et 420 Maynard St., Ann Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 67 I 1 Edited and managed by students at ti rhe misguided F EDERAL PROJECTS aimed at raising the standard of living for the nation's poor and underprivileged often net contrary results because of the guidelines set up to implement the programs. The federal government's welfare, program is a prime example. Aimed at providing relief for those unable to find jobs and the chronically unemployed, the present welfare system keeps nuclear families divided and en- courages unemployment. The faults of another ambigious federal program have been pointed out in a law suit against the Ann Arbor Board of Education in Federal District Court in Detroit. The complainants in the case are 15 black children who live in the Green Road public housing, project and attend Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School. King School does not qualify for fun- ds for remedial education aids under, the federal HEW Title I program because the school does not have enough low-income families in its at- tendance area. The judge in the suit, Charles Joiner was quoted as saying, "Perhaps the city of Ann Arbor discriminated by deliberately scattering its low-income housing sites and not grouping them in one area so that their school could benefit from the federal funds." Clearly the guidelines for the Title I program and Judge Joiner's statement foster the conditions that all com- munities try to avoid. When city planners decided to spread out the locations of public housing projects there was no malicious intent, In fact they were pro co hou diti far D fer mt Alt is seg zon are fou soc wit of eco wh soc L inc Ju tha Wa stu ma the T edu All inc ren W ney ned law tro fea The 5 litorial Freedom >!Barry Peterson, with "In D Arbor, MI 48109 Sociobiological Gene" (Daily, N sees the basic issue in the soci NesPhtroversy as the possible misa ews one: 764-0552 sociobiology in some hypothetic he University of Michigan attacks "groups such as 'Scie People,' which have condemned as a discipline which can only le Splications." Petersen's assertio benevolenc whole point. We criticize sociobiology no )tecting the best interests of the might be used, but for how it is b mmunity. Concentrating public the sociobiologists themsel sing sites give rise to ghetto con- statements they make on social iosn te ie neeti issues without supporting evid ons and oter vices inherent in methods are unscientific, and t my concentrations of low-income distorts or ignores much anthrop nilies. dence. If the issue were merely Dividing the public housing into dif- diting the future possibilities ofs ent parts of the city also helps foster it could perhaps be treated as a ;egra ted neighborhoods and schools. question, as Peterson does. But i future; it is being used today, a hough the Ann Arbor school district ic" statement of a particular id racially segregated, that best way to demonstrate this i ;regation is de facto. If the city had quote the sociobiologists themse ied all of the public housing into one ample, E. O. Wilson has written: ea of the city, Ann Arbor might be In hunter-gatherer societies, m nd guilty of de jure segregation. women stay at home. This stro, sists in most agricultural and I GEYOND THE RACIAL question, cieties and, on that ground alone many sociologists now suggest that have a genetic origin ... My own io-economic status has much to do the genetic biassisintenseenoug substantial division of labor even h the education of a child. Children free and most egalitarian of fut households having a low socio- ... even with identical education a Inomic status tend to learn better cess to all professions, men are i en mixed with students of a higher tinue to play a disproportionate r io-economic status. cal life, business and science. arger blocks of segregated and low New Yor te ome students would result from dge Joiner's suggestion. It is ironic In the film Sociobiology: I t the judge was the Dean of the Comes Naturally, Harvard so yne State law School when black theorist Robert Trivers says: dents there pressed for an affir- One of the most striking chara tive action policy. For sometime warfare, and certainly classical ir demands fell on deaf ears. that when you'overrun the other he federal guidelines for the Title I loot and pillage, but you also g cation programs must be revised. women, and you either insemina the spot or you take them back as children who come from low- You kill off the adult males; you ome families are entitled to certain castrate young boys and bring th nedial educational aids. servants. So I think warfare has t When Gabriel Kaimowitz, the attor- had a strong sexual counterpart t egthe 15 families, lear- certainly biological, and you d representing r as 5 anlis he look far to see that there's that te i that Judge Joiner was handling the ning today. V suit, he said, "Oh boy, we're in uble." It appears that Kaimowitz's Nor have our local sociobiol rs were justified. exempt from applying their theor cal subjects. W. D. Hamilton, re by the University of Michigan, 1 45 show that such things as racism roots in our animal past and th likely to rest on direct genetic f (in Biosocial Anthropology, 1975). tried to explain the Renaissance from either barbarian invasions "certain genes or traditions" f ett killer game To The Daily: I am appalled at the editorial concerning the 'Killer game' which appeared in the Sunday issue of the Daily. Your com- parison of the E. Quad game- players with Son-of-Sam was both v, shallow and ignorant. If your in- tentions were to be glamorous, then it is sad that you had to stoop to this kind of sensationalism to make a point. Even more upsetting is the possibility that you believe the analogy to be appropriate. Anyone who can draw com- parisons between the sick and disturbed actions of Son-of-Sam, and the firing of a toy dart gun is obviously unaware of the seriousness of the Son-of-Sam atrocities. While the comparison of the physical act of pulling a trigger is incredible, to say that "the East Quad 'hit man' is enjoying the same sensations which a real 1s support killer-like the Son-of- Sam-enjoys" is disgustingly in- sensitive. By what means do you e. Here at the University, one can claim to understand the 'sen- tribute $2.00 to PIRGIM by simply sations' experienced by a mur- R by sderer such as Son-of-Sam? Cer- nig the voluntary contribution tainly the feeling which accom- m which is attached to every panies the act of firing a bullet dent verification form. But with the knowledge that life will IGIM officials are worried that be vioently destroyed is not to be dents won't take the time to read compared with the feeling ac- form, and thus won't contribute. companying the firing of a toy dart gun, knowing that the only IRGIM needs our help if it is to con- result will be a harmless "Darn e fighting for public interest. Last it!, I'm out of the game." m only 18 per cent of the students While it is true that therte are ported PIRGIM, and that just isn't moral arguments which can be ugh. If PIRGIM doesn't elicit the simlatswainstr-lkebgaehior port of at least 33 per cent of the (chess, for instance), the overall dent hndv in the nming term it effect of the name must be con- efense of the rov. 16, 1977) obiology con- pplication of al future. He ence for the sociobiology ad to evil ap- - misses the t for how it eing used by les -- for and political dence. Their heir analysis ological evi- one of pre- sociobiology, an academic iis not in the s "scientif- deology. The is simply to ves. For ex- en hunt and ong bias per- ndistrial so- , appears to guess is that ;h to cause a ain the most ure societies and equal ac- ikely to con- ole in politi- es Magazine, 175, pp. 49-50 Doing What ciobiological cteristics of warfare, is country, you grab up. the. ate them on concubines. sometimes. em back as raditionally o it, which is in't havee to ndency run- ogists been ies to politi- cently hired has tried to "have deep- uis are quite oundations" He has also' as resulting bringing in or altruism ociobiology myt _ %../ w w "which tends to die out in a large panmictic (random breeding) population" (ibid.). An- other University sociobiologist, R.D. Alexan- der, has suggested to his classes that both rape and the degree to which women resist it have been selected for. Women would resisi a rapist only enough to be sure that they are being raped by someone who is strong and fit, and thus would pass on good genes to their offsprings. Does Petersen really believe that, in mak- ing such assertions, sociobiologists are merely asserting value-free facts and not en- tering the realm of politics and ethics? If so, he is going beyond the sociobiologists them- selves. Wilson, for example, forsees a future fusion of sociobiology and neurobiology as giving as "A genetically accurate and hence completely fair code of ethics" (Sociobiology, p. 574). Trivers predicts that "Sooner or later, political science, economics, law psychology, psychiatry and anthropology will all be bran- ches of sociobiology" (Time, 1 August 1977, p. 54).\ IF SOCIOBIOLOGISTS indeed stated flat- ly that such things as sexism were "justifi- able, inevitable, good, and right," in Peter- sen's phrase, their pronouncements would be much less dangerous, for then their political nature would be obvious to all. The dangerous versions are those which tell us about "genetic predispositions" or "genetic ten- dencies." Such phrases, though presented without evidence from genetics, are used to argue that "There are certain limitations and certain strong biases in the development of human behavior. We are not preordained to one specific behavior, but we are preordained to a definable range of behavior" (Wilson, National Observer, 16 August 1975, p.15). In fact, those who speak of "genetic predis- positions" reveal a misunderstanding of how genes and environment interact. It is clear from modern genetics that genes as well as environment are involved in every aspect of the phenotype (observable characteristics of an organism), including behavior. It is equally clear that they normally do not 'predispose''or ''bias'development toward preferred phenotypes; rather the resulting phenotype depends on what environment the genes grow up in. Without knowledge of both genotype and environment, we cannot predict the phenotype. Thus to say that human genes are "predisposed" or "preordained" to a determinable range of behaviors is like saying that a rectangle whose width is five centimeters is "predisposed" to have an area of about ten square centimeters. Unless we know that the length has to be about two cen- timeters, this is clearly nonsense. It is equally unscientific to assert that, as Wilson states (and Petersen repeats), "I see maybe ten per cent of human behavior as genetic and 90 per cent environmental" (New York Times, Nov. 9, 1975). He could just as well have said two per cent or 80 per cent or 50 per cent is genetic; it is like trying to say what percen- tage of the rectangle's area is due to its width. In fact, it makes even less sense, for at least we know what "ten per cent of the rectangle's area means, but the phrase "ten per cent of human behavior" is scientifically meaningless. Geneticists study the interaction of genes and environment, not by using such unscien- tific terms as "genetically predisposed" or "ten per cent of human behavior," but by ex- perimentally manipulating genotype and en- vironment and seeing what phenotype results. This method, much'.:used with such organisms as fruit flies, gives us what is called the "norm of reaction" - the pattern of gene-environment interaction to give a phenotype. However, its application to humans has a major drawback - it requires the experimenter to manipulate both the mating patterns and the environments of the subjects. Such a procedure is obviously totally unethical with humans, and no technical advances in research methodology can change this. THIS IS THE reason that sociobiologists cannot cite genetic evidence for their hypothetical "genetic biases," nor are they likely to. If Petersen believes that "empirical proofs are the basis of all scientific knowledge," he should tell us how the existence of "genetic predispositions can be empirically proved. But lack of evidence has not prevented sociobiologists from postulating gene effects and drawing conclusions from them. Indeed, sociobiology illustrates how easily one can discuss genes as "just hypothetical, and somewhere in the midst of the discussion, forget about the "hypothetical." Ironically, Petersen's own article provides a good exam- ple of this process. He initially tells us that E. 0. Wilson "hypothesizes, for example, that man could have a genetic predisposition to warfare," and asserts later' that this is "a statement which, given enough time and research, is capable of being empirically either verified or disproved." Exactly what this research would be is not made clear, but apparently by the end of the article it has already been done, for Petersen is telling us about "our inborn craving for annihilation." In fact, a major criticism of sociobiology is that it is unfalsifiable and thus not scientific. A legitimate scientific theory must be testable through observations. Further,'it must be, at least in theory, possible for your observations to contradict your hypothesis. If you know prior to your observations that your theory cannot be refuted or "falsified," then your observations are not a valid test of your theory. Because sociobiology can explain any conceivable behavior - selfish or altruistic, with relatives or with non-relatives - it can- not be contradicted by observational evi- dence, because anything you could possibly see will fit into the theory somewhere. TOMORROW: The evidence. This article was prepared by the Socio- biology Study Group of Ann Arbor Science for the People. They helped edit the recently published book Biology as a Social Weapon. A T~UR BUl ers to to meet each other. " been a fun change-of-pace from the constant pressures of school. I feel that these benefits of the game far outweigh the moral considerations which you failed to intelligently discuss, choosing instead to label each participant a 'David Berkowitz'. -Lenny Pitt Game Coordinator 2nd Annual EQ Killer Contest south africa To The Daily: Your front-page editorial of November 22 explained your position on the controversy regarding holding securities in companies which operate in South Africa: ".. . we oppose in- vestments in corporations whose activities benefit the nation's white minority regime." I won- der, though, if this is not an overly simplistic "solution" to a terribly difficult situation. What we seek, ultimately, is a change in the social and political situations within South Africa. Whether a divestiture of such securities would help to effect this change is the question at hand. Consider what would happen if this University, and others holding the same views, were to institute such a policy of divestiture. All stocks and bonds held by groups and individuals who felt that ownership involved conflict of morals would be sold. There would, of course, be no dire ect effect of the individual cor- poration; they are normally not involved with the trading of their The Daily cause of the blacks in South Africa who would be in control of the companies operating in that country. It is difficult to see how this would restrain these com- panies' activities in supporting the white minority regime. In fact, it would seem as though this would encourage this support in order to further extraordinary profits reaped at the expense of the South African blacks. Certainly, this facet of the situation does not, itself, present a clear-cut solution to this debate. What it does show is that intricate problems cannot always be solved by simplistic methods. Perhaps we need to re-evaluate the scope of the problem before we can act upon it. -Paul Andrew Fitzsimmons go blue To The Daily:- I would like to congratulate the University of Michigan. Before becoming a student here, I had visions of lectures with thousands of students. I conceived the University of Michigan to be a cold, unfriendly institution with little personal contact. To my surprise, I have found just the opposite. Granted, lectures are large but the discussion groups make the gap between professor, teaching fellow and student much smaller. The students and faculty are both friendly and helpful. When I or any of my fellow classmates need assistance, the professor or teaching fellow is there to help. I am pleased to see that a one to one relationship can be formed between student and teacher here at the University of Michigan. -Debbie Foran Letters should be typed and limited to 400 words. The Daily reserves th. right to edit letters for length and grammar. PIRGIM nee T'S REGISTRATION time, and the stat Ilast thing you want to do is fill out con any more forms than you must. But sigi there's one extra form that's worth fora reading-the PIRGIM voluntary con- stu( tribution form. PIN PIRGIM is a public interest group stu( comprised of students and professional thel persons who lobby in Lansing for pro- P consumer legislation, and work to in- tinu form the public about legislation of in- tern terest. Currently, they are pushing for sup a national bottle bill, that would eno eliminate all non-returnable con- sup] tainers. This would be similar to the gtni