i 43 9t Sir $kan Dai1 Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited ond.managed by students at the University of Michigan Behavior control: Tyranny of the mind Saturday, October 25, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Cause of death: Neglect TE LS&A EXECUTIVE and Cur- riculum Committees, collectively charged with the task of deciding the fate of the Teach-In mini-course plan submitted to them five weeks ago, have to date been negligent in not granting approval of the one- hour course. Much of the prolonged bureaucra- tic inaction on the mini-course has hinged on debate over whether a highly political event would provide a suitable forum for a valid academic exercise. In their initial objections to the mini-course plan, (objections forwarded to Philosophy Professor William Rosenberg, planner of the course) several Curriculum Commit- tee members voiced reservations as to whether students would be able to take an objective and analytical ap- proach to the highly subjective con- tent of the Teach-in. These reservations took the form of a number of conditions for course approval, including unspecified re- vision of the reading list and special sections to be held before Teach-In wherein faculty members would pro- vide students with guidelines for ap- proaching the lectures "analytically". WITH GOOD REASON, Prof. Rosen- berg views this attitude as un- founded and degrading. In a recent letter to the Curriculum Committee Rosenberg countered, "Our assump- tion is that Michigan students are sufficiently intelligent and have. enough intellectual discipline to deal with what they find analytically, emotionally, intellectually, political- ly or otherwise objectionable. "I find it disturbing," he continued, "that the Curriculum Committee has such a low opinion of those it osten- sibly represents and officially serves." The proposed mini-course has been likened to a social science appli- cation of the Outreach model. Isn't attendance of the Teach-In and rig- orous evaluation of its proceedings at least as valid an educational ex- perience as working at a day care center for credit? It would be ridiculous to suggest that the LS&A bureaucracy should have blindly approved the teach-in mini-course without looking to en- sure its organizational integrity and intellectual value. *RUT THE REAL tragedy here is that the mini-course will probably fall through on a question of bureau- cratic logistics rather than of merit. One of the Curriculum Commit- tee's objections to the course dealt with whether the involved faculty members would have enough time to TODAY'S STAFF: News: Jay Levin, Ann Marie Lipinski Cheryl Pilate, Cathy Reutter, Sara Rimer, Jeff Ristine' Rick Soble, Margaret Yao Editorial Page: Bruce Braverman, Paul Haskins, Debra Hurwitz, Linda Kloote Arts Page: Chris Kochmanski Photo Technician: Ken Fink make the course work. Subsequently, the committee moved to make unrea- sonable and exceptional demands on faculty resources in establishing con- ditions for evaluating the course. One condition would require facul- ty members to, read, comment on, and grade all papers submitted to by mini - course students. This action was supposedly prompted by com- mittee members fears that the course's teaching assistants would be biased against those students whose politics they found objectionable. This notion is an insult to the teaching assistants, both of whom are Phi Beta Kappa and Angell schol- ars, and an unnecessary burden on course planners. THE COMMITTEES' HANDLING of the teach-in issue effectively if not maliciously has worked to stifle just the sort of educational alterna- tive that the mini-course concept was designed to accommodate. When initiated the mini-course plan was defined in broad terms and intended to encourage supplemental educa- tion, not inhibit it. The Teach-In people were given the impression, though unofficial, that pro-forma approval of the mini- course proposal would be forthcom- ing when they presented it to the Curriculum Committee five weeks ago. That proposal has been kicking around ever since. And with the Teach-In less than a week away, its chances for approval and implemen- tation now are practically zero. It may not be the case that politi- cal motives underscore the LS&A bureaucracy's procrastination on this issue. However, for whatever reason, it is they who have likely killed the Teach-In mini-course by tabling it into oblivion. WE HOPE THE Curriculum Com- mittee, and its parent, the Exec- utive Committee, will quickly redis- cover the meaning of alternative ed- ucation and the original intent of the mini-course concept and grant approval to the Teach-In mini- course by this coming Tuesday, the day after the next Curriculum Com- mittee meeting. It is a shame that we may merely be left with the choice between too little or too late. S>orts Staff BRIAN DEMING Sports Editor MARCIA MERKER.......Executive Editor LEBA HERTZ ... .Managing Editor JEFF SCHILLER . . . ...... Associate Editor CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Al Hrapsky, Jeff Liebster, Ra O'Hara, Michael Wilson NIGHT EDITORS: Rick Bonino, Tom Cameron. Tom Duranceau, Andy Glazer, Kathy Henne- ghan, Ed Lange, Rich Lerner, Scott Lewis, Bill Stieg ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Enid Goldman. Marcia Katz, John Niemeyer, Dave Wihak DESK ASSISTANTS: Paul Campbell, Marybeth Dillon, Larry Engle, Aaron Gerstman, Jerome Gilbert, Andy Lebet, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, Joyce My, Patrick Rode, Arthur Wightman (Editor's Note: Blanche Wies- sen Cook teaches at John Jay College of the City University of New York. She is a military historian concentrating on peace research, and will be speaking, along with others, at the Ann Arbor Teach-in, November 2 through 4.) By BLANCHE WIESSEN COOK WE ENTER THE ERA of our bicentennial with new knowl- edge. Our government tells us we cannot afford to safeguard the health and well-being of our citizens. We cannot secure em- ployment, guaranteepensions, provide small classrooms, insure comfort for the aged or rebuild our ruined public transit sys- tems. Yet the United States has a gross national product of more than one trillion dollars. On what then do we invest more money than ever before minted, in figures most of us cannot even calculate? The money we refuse to spend on social services, we are will- ing to spend on the greatest variety of experiments leading toward total social control. During the 1960's the govern- ment hired experts to study peo- ple who demonstrated for social change. Although many theories were offered, the government favored those experts who con- cluded that "people riot because they are undisciplined and sick." ON BEHALF OF that inter- pretation, money was poured into the old Safe Streets Act to modify the behavior of "sick" people. Law and order would prevail - as would hunger, un-, employment and garbage. Experts continue to think in terms of funding a multi-billion dollar "crime deterrance trans- ponder surveillance system: "problem - Americans," subver- sives and unemployed malcon- tents. It can monitor their loca- tions, register their blood and adrenalin flow, and control their behavior by computerized elec- trical shock apparatus. In the 1960's the Law Enforce- ment Administrative Agency, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute for Neurological Disease and Stroke and the National Insti- tute of Health spent millions of our tax dollars to control vio- lent behavior surgically. This work has been discredited And in the long run, we are told, the money we spend on chemical and surgical brain modification may prove superb- ly beneficial. As Professor James McCon- nell of the University of Michi- gan's Department of Mental Health Research. explained in the popular magazine Psycholo- gy Today: "We want to reshape our so- ciety drastically, so that all of us will be trained from birth to want to do what society wants us to do. We have the techniques now to do it ... The techniques of behavioral control make even the hydrogen bomb .:"|iW 7| .. ..A . *A:'. s 'ac' .o4 t o - "We want to reshape our society drastically, so that all of will be trained from birth to do what society wants us to do ... The techniques of behavioral control make even the hydrogen bomb look like a child's toy '. ." +.. h~ ..,.:3: ~.... f v.., t ' .ct. ..:.. n. -a^n1:".:...:.i .'............ ........ . .. toward behavior can be replaced by "positive pleasure feelings" t h r o u g h psychosurgery. To prove his case, he has gene- rously wired his patients up for sensations that he describes as "better than sex." FOR HEATH, drug addicts are not victims of poverty, alienation, or criminal pushers. They "have a neurological de- fect in their pleasures centers." Heath believes that untoward behavior can be replaced by "positive pleasure that can be cured by ESB. He notes that his patients are not troublesome once they can "indulge them- selves at the rate of 1,000 stimulations an hour." Dr. Jose Delgado, the most prominent ESB researcher, is very specific about its potential for social control. During the 1960's his projects were pgrtly funded by the Air Force and Navy. Our tax dollars enabled him and his associates to ex- plore such questions as: "Could drives, d e s i r e s, thoughts be placed under the artificial command of electron- ics?" With a careless disregard for, individual freedom, personal in- tegrity, and the fact that the effects of brain surgery are permanent," "sedative neuro- surgery" has been employed to quiet hyperactive or trouble- some children as young as five. IN THE United States, Dr. O.J. Andy, director of neurosur- gery at the University, operates on children to reduce hyper- activity to "levels manageable by parents." These operations free parents and society from the respon- sibility of their children's prob- by many scientists. Follow up, investigations by Drs. Peter Breggin, Stephen Chorover, and Ernest Rudin, for example, have proved the work of one of the government's favorite teams, Drs. Vernon Mark and Frank Ervin, authors of "Violence and the Brain," to be insignificant. Nevertheless, public funding has continued to support the work of behavior controllers and psy- cho-surgeons. IT IS CHEAPER, we are told, to, burn out brains than it is to restore dilapidated cities and fund total health care programs. look like a child's toy..." Electrical Stimulation of the Brain (ESB) represents one of the most sophisticated advances in medical technology. According to Medical World News, Dr. Robert Heath of Tu- lane University and former president of the Society for Bio- logical Psychiatry, has implant- ed more electrodes into the hu- man brain than anyone else. With 125 implantations, he has been able to turn his patients into puppets. They carry around "electrical self-stimulators" con- nected to their brain's "pleasure centers." Heath believes that un- lems. Once lobotomized, nobody has to consider the fact that children reflect the environment in which they find themselves. Psychosurgery reinforces a so- ciety's escape mechanism. It is the victim's fault. In such a society neither the family nor violent institutions such as pov- erty, forced unemployment or racism are to blame. If this trend continues, some form of brain control may be offered as a solution for your adolescent daughter's or son's growing pains, or for the un- employed miners demonstrating in the valley. Eventually, it -will become as routine as a prescrip- tion for aspirin; and just as serviceable. In a society mov- ing toward its own death by economic neglect, dehumaniza- tion is inevitable. IN SUCH A PLACE noth- ing can be dismissed as science fiction. alibum To Ths Daily: CONCERNING Paul Simon's lates album which was review- ed in the Daily yesterday; ad- mittedly, it is not up to par with his previous efforts, but it is still a fine record and many of the criticisms in the review were way off blase. In nearly every other song, Simon alludes to his recent divorce in one way or another (I met my old lover/Onsthe street last night," "There must be fifty ways to leave your lover," "Yesterday it was my birthday . . . My life's a mess") so how can the reviewer imply that the al- bums lyrics are impersonal and vapidly pleasant? The lyric passage quoted from one song - "God bless the U.S. of A., And God bless our standard of living. Let's keep it that way" - is obviously meant sa- tirically rather straightforward- ly, as the reviewer discerned it. There are some excellent songs on the album, notably, the title track, "50 Ways to leave your Lover" and "Night Game", and, although Simon is capable of doing better, "Still Crazy after all these Years" is a strong album and easily better than 95 per cent of the records coming out these days. Tom Field October 22, 1975 repression STo The Daily: WITH THEIR RECENT con- doning of corporal punishment for children in public schools (against the wishes of parents), the Neanderthal minds com- prising the Supreme Court have succeeded in dragging child healthdand welfare back to at least the Middle Ages, if not to their own level. At a time when medical re- search indicates that child bat- tering is a leading cause of serious injury and death for children (if not the leading cause), the support of this ac- tivity in the "public's" schools by members of "Nixon's" court is nothing short of crimi- nal behavior on their part. They are materially aiding and abetting the assaulting of chil- dren by all frustrated adults, hereby entitled to act out their legal limit of displaced aggres- sion. In short, by this action, the court is putting public school teachers and principals in an untenable position. The court is saying that public schools are staffed by highly trained, pro- fessional teachers who require 4 to 10 years of University training in order to demonstrate to nonprofessional parents how to teach children resect for rules and respect for adults who enforce these rules . . . by beating their asses!! Letters girls ... and of course not just any lad - spch as the son of your principal or a school board member, etc., etc. Corporal punishment in the public schools most certainly does teach children a lesson in how law and order works in America. Stan Flory School of Public Health sensationalisn To The Daily: E V E R Y WEDNESDAY noon when I walk through the fishbowl on my way to class I pass a crowd of students ser- ried around a video-tape of the Zapruder film capturing the assassination of John Kenne- dy. And always there is some- one explaining how the se- quence of events portrayed in the film, viz. the violent snap- ping back of Kennedy's head, demonstrates beyond any rea- sonable doubt that JFK had to have been shot by more than one sniper; and thus his assas- sination was a conspiracy and not the work of one lone gun- man, namely Lee Harvey Os- wald. Now, given that this Univer- sity is often a big, mean, and ugly place, I've always been glad for one thing - that ev- eryone, as well as I can tell, has an opportunity to evpress their opinions; which often, giv- en a small-town, more conser- vative college, would never be allowed. Yet, recently I, have been bothered to see how edu- cated students here at the uni- versity can be so easily sway- ed by the sensationalism of the Kennedy assassination, without really doing any reasonably in- telligent thinking on the sub- ject. Sometimes I think we will go out of our way to be independent and different as the young liberal college stu- dent of the seventies. So when something controversial such as this comes along, it is all to easy to jump up on the band- wagon and to hollar along with the rest. ANYWAY, I DON'T deny that the course of events in Kenne- dy's assassination are, in many instances, extremely strange and perhaps suspicious; and I would agree for a new investi- gation, hopefully headed by someone other than Rockefel- ler. I do not agree, though, that any reasonable person should be nearly one-hundred percent convinced of a conspir- acy by the Zapruder film or any other evidence given to this date. I have the advantage of an uncle who served on the War- iren Commission, and who also wrote speeches for John Ken- nedy while he was running for the Presidency. My uncle has written various articles and has sxonken to me, especially to time lag between the impact of the bullet, seen by the spray of flesh forward together with a slight slumping forward of the body, and the consequent head- jerk backwards. But so quick- ly afterwards that in a normal viewing it is almost impossible to distinguish the two events. This phenomenon has been theorized as a neuromuscular reaction by some; but more plausibly for me as a physical reaction to the exit of the bul- The Daily let from Kennedy's head in front, concomitant with the propulsion of a mass of flesh and bone forwards (in the well- known jet effect of physics). Also possibly coupled with the car accelerating forwards. THE POINT IS, that things are not so clear cut as they seem in the film. And there are many other allegations too which can be answered if peo- ple would just take the time to investigate all the facts, which can be found. Again, I stress my position that I do not accept the War- ren Report in its entirety. I am far from satisfied with the results. But I am not so utter- ly convinced there was a con- spiracy either. I'm only sad- dened to see how many other students are so easily taken in by the sensationalism of this liberal college atmosphere. David C. Slawson LSA McDonald's latest adventure: Sweet and sour hamburgers .1 0 By RICHARD BORSUK THE EXPRESSION "as American as apple pie" may soon become "as Chinese as apple pie, "thanks to McDonald's hamburgers' latest foray into global franchising. Ignoring warnings that its food would not agree with Chinese palates, the hamburger em- pire has now established a foothold in this British colony where 98 per cent of the 4.3 mil- lion residents are Chinese. The first store was opened this January-com- plete with a Chinese Ronnie McDonald promot- ing Big Macs, french fries and tea - and two more will open by the end of this year. It is ex- pected there will eventually be about 20 here. Each month, the store has sold more apple pies (about 10,000) than any other of the chain's 3,300 stores across the world. Hamburger sales are totalling about 7,000 a day. "We're doing better business over-all than 90 per cent of the McDonald's in America," said managing director Daniel Ng, whom friends now call the "Hamburger King of Hong Kong." NG TAKES PARTICULAR pride that McDon- ald's is proving successful here while other American fast-food imports have failed. The lat- est and largest flop was Kentucky Fried Chicken, which last year had to close down the 11 stores it had opened in 1973. Food industry experts have suggested various theories on why Kentucky Fried failed while McDonald's is making it big. One is poor man- agement, including the precipitous 11-store leap into the market. Another is that Colonel Sanders didn't under- stand local customs. According to this theory, the slogan "finger-lickin' good" was a hindrance when translated into Chinese, because the Chi- nese don't lick their fingers during or after eat- ing. In fact, they usually don't eat chicken with fingers at all, preferring skillful maneuvering of chopsticks. A third theory is that something in the batter was foreign and didn't go down well with local stomachs. BUT IT SEEMS that all McDonald's products are going down well. The taste is identical to McDonald's in America, as is the prepar ton- right down to the amount of grease in the french fries. The menu is identical, too, except for the addi- tion of tea as a concession to Chinese eating habits. Each item has been given an equivalent Chinese name. McDonald's itself comes out as "Mak Don Now" in Chinese, loosely (and promo- tionally) translated as "to make at your serv- ice." pie sales aren't so high because everyone's mom makes better ones at home. "Chinese mothers don't know how to make apple pie, least not yet," he noted. BUT HONG KONG PEOPLE don't know how to make hamburgers either, though they've been trying for a number of years. That's what makes McDonald's hamburgers seem so good here. The others, one .English- language newspaper wrote in praising the arrival of the golden arches, are a "stringy, rubbery ball of hash capped by a slab of bullet-hard bun that restaurants have the audacity to call a hamburger. Another ingredient in McDonald's success has been the chain's cautious approach to expansion, unlike that of Kentucky Fried. The official campaign to introduce the Mc- Donald's name - practically unknown to every- one except the 7,000-member American commun- ity - soon ended when the public relations firm handling the account was dropped as unneces- sary. Hong Kong is a city where word of mouth travels faster than the speed of light, carrying oft-heard rumors like Mao is dead. THE LITTLE ADVERTISING that was done before Ng dropped his PR firm was directed at teenagers and children, not at the general pub- lic. About one-half of Hong King's population is 21 years of age or younger, and McDonald's long- range success hinges on this group. "We ignore the older Chinese population as we can't expect them to eat this," Ng says. The strategy has so far proved sound. Large numbers of young people, who have adopted many American tastes in fashion and music, have flocked to the stores. Ng, who is a 50-50 partner in the $1-million venture with McDonald's Corp., says he will con- tinue to expand at a slow pace. But he seems increasingly confident McDonald's will become a fixture in Hong Kong. "Up until now, we've been so successful and busy here that we've had no time to consolidate and expand our basic operation," he said. "Now we're getting ready to move on." NG ANTICIPATES THAT McDonald's will eventually move on to Singapore and the Philip- pines. Hong Kong was the third Asian location for McDonald's, the first two being Tokyo (now with 60 stores) and Guam (where what is adver- tised as the world's largest McDonald's partici- pated i nthe American "Oneration New Life" for Vietnamese refugees by donating tens of I a' I , k , p1: I L- I r I I 11 ] i1'E-