0 Ehe t Mcgan Daily Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Literacy: Menace or Madness? Friday, February 1 3, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wyidwe arm UNITA? SECRETARY OF STATE Kissinger has said that the reasons for U. S. intervention in Angola were the Soviet presence in the area and the U. S. policy of encouraging moderate independence groups in southern Africa. However, according to a text pub- lished Wednesday in The Village Voice and said to be part of the Con- gressional Committee's report on the CIA, "the military intervention of the Soviet Union and Cuba is in large part a reaction to U. S. efforts to break a political stalemate in favor of its clients ... This infusion of U.S. aid, unprecedented and massive in the underdeveloped colony, may have panicked the Soviets into arming their MPLA (Popular Front) clients, who they have backed for over a dec- ade and who were now in danger of being eclipsed by the National Front (UNITA)." The Commnittee report also saw only scant ideological differences among the three major factions in Angola. And it reported likely that the paramount factor in U. S. in- volvement probably was Kissinger's desire to reward and protect African leaders in the area. The CIA funding of arms in An- gola is a clear violation of legal lim- its on the scope of the agency's ac- tions. The CIA intervention provok- ed the Soviet build-up, to which President Ford reacted by calling for overt financial aid to UNITA and the National Front (FNLA). A MERICA'S DRIVE FOR the defeat of the MPLA has been wrong since its inception. The MPLA is the faction which fought the longest for Angolan independence. It is the only faction which draws significant su- port from all three of Angola's eth- nic groups. And it advocates a social- ist program for the development of Angola which would advance the country at least as efficiently as the programs advocated by its rivals. Kissinger's support of UNITA and FNLA can hardly be justified on ideological grounds. Setting aside for the moment that Western-style de- mocracy is not the best style of gov- ernment for developing African na- tions, UNITA and FNLA are not any closer than the MPLA to being dem- ocratically oriented. As for Kissinger's argument that we should' defeat the MPLA because it is Soviet-backed, the House report names CIA involvement as the rea- son for the Russians coming to the aid of the MPLA. The Popular Movement asked the U. S. for aid before it went to the USSR TODAY'S STAFF News: Glen Allerhand, Phil Foley, Rob Meachum, Maureen Nolan, Tim Schick, David Whiting Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Michael Beckman, Stephen Hersh, Dale Hickley, Jon Pansius Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: Steve Kagan By MARNIE HEYN T AM WRITING this because I crave words, and books, and reading. And you, since you are reading this, are probably a member of the same name-° less fraternal organization, which for the sake of discussion I will dub Literates Anonymous. Those who meet the member- ship requirements may realize they have a problem: they jok-. ingly call themselves "Book- aholics," sneakily join mail or- der book clubs, and go on glaz- ed - eye bank - balance - de- stroying rampages in book stores. Even then they may not admit that their problem is serious. And for every obvious Literate, there are probably two secret Literates who keep a paperback wrapped in plastic in the toilet tank and read un- der the covers with flashlights when their spouses are asleep. But it is not enough to decry print - junkie symptoms; we must examine root causes if we are to dry out and ultimately sober up the general populace. Readers have had their way in academic and government cir- cles for centuries, and one of us has completely escaped their pernicious indoctrination. Bacl in the olden days, long before the GI Bill, The Roman Catholic Church attempted full- scale prohibition of Literacy. The church confined hard-core printites in monasteries and running hit: it burned women (called witches, op cit) who could count past ten and thus keep track of their husbands' squandering, and men who could spell out addresses well enough to read of the where- abouts of illegal but amorous ladies. BUT ULTIMATELY, as the church learned to its eternal sorrow, prohibition never works. Gutenberg created bathtub ink and move-easy type. Skid row priests like Martin Luther leaf- letted and fomented. Dissident' factions siezed the cause of Literacy for political, advan- tage, and the binge was on. Consumers learned to read, write, even do sums. Social or- der descended to chaos. Power was wrenched from classes that held legal title and sacred writ. The word 'meritocracy' was coined, and all sorts of upstart social currency was printed and passed.** Ambition and a little learning could get a person al- most anywhere (luck, money, and nice features not withstand- ing), even the Senate, or Par- liament, or Afghanistan with the Peace Corps.*** The emerging ruling class could read (so they said) and peons aspired to read. Although Bookaholism can strike any sex or station of life,' certain important genetic con- tent can be discerned in the an- r PA Paul Tassie/Michigan Daily A ,I Henry Kissinger 'Environment is a key contributory factor in print addiction, because it not only condi- tions the victim to accept his or her condition, but imparts an unwarranted but exhilarating sensation of moral superiority.' sustained them on maintain- ance dosages of readigg and writing, mostly writing. Itin- erant clerical lecturers mysti- fied Literacy in the same way that Reefer Madness mystified marijuana users some centuries later. And, in a move that had very little popular support, re- ligious orders suppressed the technology necessary to pro- duce and distribute books and pamphlets. *In an attempt to regain credibility with the masses, the church initiated a campaign that became a long- Marnie Heyn is a former Lit- erate who kicked the habit and enrolled in graduate school; she is also a reformed Daily Edi- torial Director. cestral background of commit- ted Literates: parental desire for upward mobility, and the in- stinct for earning a living sit- ting down (or, marginally, rid- ing about in a limosine). But we know, through the benefits" of theological research, that en- vironment is a key contribu.tory factor in print addiction, be- cause it not only conditions the victim to accept his or her con- dition, but imparts an unwar- ranted but exhilarating sensa- tion of moral superiority. In part, this sense of super- iority is instilled by ingenuous faculty members who believe the propaganda in catalogues and brochures issued by the businessmen who were trying to pumo up their establish- nents. These early education entrepreneurs believed that fos- tering the image of competition would bring in curious hordes eager to play on one side or. the other in various ancient riv- alries: Arts or Sciences, College Prep or. Manual Training, Aca- demic or Vocational, Public or Private, Fiction or Poetry, His- tory or Biography. S C H 0 L A S T I C U M TREMENS. An already byzan- tine system of values about learning and reading became more "elaborate and convoluted in trying toraccount for certain pecularities. F o r instance, whole generations of American students grew up unable to dis- tinguish grey from either black or white.. They - refused to be- lieve that a questioned could be answered "Maybe" or "I don't know." They learned to sym- pathize with and tolerate schol- ars and experts. They put up with all that in order to Go To College and Get a Head. But the Sputnik Crisis knock- ed all that into a cocked hat. It suddenly became necessary not only to identify grey, but to quantify how grey. The public cried out for Progress in the schools: measurable, countable Progress. Always happy to klist and count, school entrepreneurs, distilled their programs to in- crease the content of math and science, even social science. In softer subjects, more stress was placed on history and tech- nique. The vaults of learning hummed with data collection, soientific method. new this and that, programmed anything, and Absolute Standards. Liter- ates got one whiff of Salk and moon and psychometrics, and promptly got excessively intox- icated. But something far dif- ferent was fermenting in sub- conscious cellars; presently, foaming, libidinous juvenile masses would agitate and un- settle Progress tipplers and Standards swiggers alike. The youth uprising hit schools and older, confirmed Literates harder than the Reds had. Not only did these young quaffers assume personal control over the way they dressed and bar- bered; they made a much more substantial, revolutionary de- mand: Teach us, not subjects or material or information. They were still pathetically will- ing to soak: up their three R's, but they refused to ingest a lot of toxic nonsense and watered beer at the same time. Then Richard Nixon shipped all the wheat, rice, potato peel- ings, wood pulp, and grapes to Russia; the flow of finances for the wine of learning slowed to a trickle and dried up. Booka- holics and Literacy pushers panicked. Prices soared. Hoard- ing became rampant. In the public sector, rationing became necessary. The problem, as al- ways with rationing, was to es- tablish priorities in allocating precious full-bodied fluids. Few- er students shelled out more dough to get their fixes. Teach- ers and janitors demanded a bigger slice of the barrel for peddling Literacy. Administra- tors and school boards patent- ed their siphoning process, and guarded their books carefully, almost jealously. Some reading plants stood empty while other popped their corks. MANY THEORIES WERE brewed about: Jerry Ford thought that Vocational Educa- tion was a good idea, but couldn'tthink of any jobs to train people for: Ivan Illich ad- vocated a, return to feudal ideals, but had grown very fond of flush toilets and Magic Fingers; The PTA called forap- ple pie, but all the apples had been shipped to Russia too; school superintendents touted Functional Literacy, but she got religion and split for the underdeveloped countries; most students could kick the habit. God was dead, at least in the form of Bible-reading. Every- body spoke English, at least ev- erybody whom the society ,and economy needed. Factories had plenty of people who could sit still for eight hours on tap. Most people could write their names, and therefore sign time- purchase contracts; and tele- vision and telephone filled all communication needs. As a Talmud freak might ask, What can we learn from this? We already know that a small group of people with strong con- stitutions and/ specially - adapt- ed metabolisms not only want, but actually need large, contin- uous infusions of typed informa- tion and entertainment. That a far larger proportion of the population can handle Social reading, as long as they are warned off trying to drive at the same time. And that even moreAmericans can tolerate small doses in ritual forms like the Watchtower, newspapers, coupons, and Annual Reports. But for a substantial minority, a little Literacy is a dangerous thing, perhaps even a deadly thing. And yet, by law and cus- tom and marketplace dictum, print production continues 'Gutenberg created bathtub ink and move- easy type. Skid row priests like Martin Lu- ther leafletted and fo- mented. Dissident fac- tions seized the cause of Literary for politi- cql advantage, and the binge was on.' apace; innocent children, naive teenagers, and credulous adults are sloshed around in the de- luge, contrary ,to reason and mercy. Clearly, one of the largest tasks confronting our society is the uprooting of School Abuse and Literary Addiction, in the legislatures and in the streets, with evangelistic and detoxifi- cation programs, guidance for the young and comfort for the aged, until researchers find a cure for Bookaholism and the public reexamines and rede- fines its educational impera- tives. And, as with alcoholism, the first step on the road to normalcy is acknowledging that you have a problem. So confess. *This action incited a grass- roots movement whose mem- bers ran through the streets crying "Start the presses." **In the Constitution of the United States, even landless freemen were given the right to vote. See also "Forgery," "Diploma Mill.." ***See "The Impos a ble Dream," S. McDuck, The.In- dustrialist. G;eraIld1 Ford Editorial Staff ROB MEACHUM -BILL TURQUE Co-Editcors-in-Chief JEFF RISTINE................ Managing Editor TIM SCHICK . Executive Editor STEPHEN HERSH Editorial Director JEFF SORENSEN ................. Arts Editor CHERYL PILATF ..... ........ Magazine Editor STAFF WRITERS : Susan Adles, Tomn Allen, Glen A1erhand, Marc Basson, Dana Bauman, David Blomquist, James Burns, Kevin Counihan, Jodi Dimick, Mitch Dunitz, Elaine Fletcher, Phil Foley, Mark Friedlander. David Garfinkel, Tomi Godell, Kurt Harju, Charlotte Heeg, Richard James. Lois Josimovich, Tom Kettler, Chris Kochmanski, Jay Levin, Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lu- bens. Teri Maneau, Angelique Matney, Jim Nicoll, Maureen Nolan, Mike Norton, Ken Par- sigian, Kim Potter, Cathy Reutter, Anne Marie Schiav, Karen 8chulkins, Jeff Selbst, Rick Sobel, Toni Stevens, Steve StoJic, Cathi Suyak, Jim Tobin, Jim VaIk, Margaret Yao, Andrew Zerman, David Whiting. Editorial positions represent' consensus of the Daily staff. POLITICAL COVERAGE: Ignoring the Coast By GENE MARINE SAN FRANCISCO (PNS) - What do Ronald Reagan, Cali- fornia Governor "Jerry" Brown and Richard Nixon have in com- mon? Not much, you'd say, except that an importantspolitizian from the largest state is al- ways to be taken seriously on the national scene. But to California' political journalists, they share some- thing else. Each is an example of the domination of national political opinion by columnists and even reporters from east- ern states - writers of whoni the Californians despair for their ignorance even while they envy their prominence. In the cases of Reagan and Brown - whose futures, as Cal- ifornia humorist Mort Sahl might once have said, are still ahead - the California jour- nalist is likely to be impatient- ly frustrated with stories call- ing them "unknown quantities" or describing them in what seem from here to be' super- ficial terms. It hurts even more when otherwise knowledgeable politicians from other parts of the country seem to rely on these eastern judgments in mak- ing their own political assess- ments. WASHINGTON columnist John D. Lofton Jr., for example,, re- cently quoted the Republican governor of Missouri, Christoph- er Bond, who is usually describ- ed nationally as a "moderate": "I think Mr. Reagan's ideas are consistent with our broad general understandings as Re- publicans. I don't see that his campaign would necessarily be a narrow one. He's got a clean slate. Let's see what he writes on it." To a California journalist, the idea that a man has a "clean slate" who has conducted two statewide campaigns and serv- ed two terms as governor of one of America's most varied be a "new face" to most of America, but to the California reporter he's a man who has been in a lesser statewide of- fice for four years, ,whose in- terplay with legislators is al- ready known, whose adminis- trative abilities are at least un- der test and whose moralistic tendencies are feared by some as much as they are admired by others. CALIFORNIA political jour- nalists, convinced that they are as wise as those in New York City or Washington, are obvi- ously no nearer being infallible. Liberals among them were chagrined when Earl Warren- ??:;t "":::: a::.:::: e:if:i Ji m,::;«:;?";:i':':; 'While the national reaction to Watergate may have been shock, the reaction a m o n g people who had. been covering Nixon since 1946 was "Well, they finally caught him." Californians couldn't understand in 1968 and 1972 why their eastern colleagues did- .i' t understand Nix- on.' who had been a law-and-order district attorney and attorney general before becoming a moderate but definitely conser- vative governor - was appoint- ed to the Supreme Court. His turnabout is history. But while the national reac- tion to Watergate may have been shock at learning that a president could do such things, the reaction among people who had been covering Richard Nix- he characterized the instability of Richard Nixon, printing in full the remarkable statement that Nixon made to the pi ess. after his gubernatorial defeat in 1962. WHILE MOST AMERICANS know only the phrase, "You won't have Dick Nixon to kick around any more," the entire statement was a frightening and pitiable display by an emotion- ally exhausted man. When, seven years later, Theodore White said a very few of the same things in a best-selling book reviewed in the east as "living history," the frustration of western journalists was easi- ly enough understood. White is in fact a principal target of the criticisms by west- ern reporters. In his first cam- paign book in 1960, White dis- missed California with a Lingle line about then-governor "Pat" Brown (the present governor's father) and his "loss of con- trol" of the delegation 'to the Democratic convention. Although Californians knew perfectly well that no such thing had happened, White's version became "history," and the stig- ma still clings to the elder Brown. One of the more com- petent of the state's governors, he is remembered in out-of- state analyses as "ineffective." THE FRUSTRATION is not ideological. "Conservative" and "liberal" reporters alike resent the lofty ignorance of eastern- ers. Nor is it entirely geographi- cal, though there is much re- sentment, particularly in the north, of easterners who spend a week in Los Angeles and then write about "California." Rather, the resentment is pro- fessional. Assigned to any oth- er story, a competent reporter would be expected to go for information to those who know (and, if he or she is good, to those who dissent from the conventional' knowledge as I WAS SOMEWHAT amazed, but not surprised, to find that the CDU had a three - page "script" prepared for last Wesdnesday's Local 2001 mem- bership meeting. Among other things, their script detailed: f seating arrangements for CDU followers; * complete texts for motions; * complete dialogue for argu- ing in favor of or against mo-. tions; * directions to begin "chant- ing" certain phrases if they couldn't have their own way; * instructions to "storm the stage" and take control of the meeting in, the event things were going badly for them; * signals from "group leaders" W H Y D ObE S CAROLYN Weeks, as leader of CDU, have so little faith in-her own follow- ers that she must tell them ex- actly what to say and do? Why does she not trust her followers to conduct themselves at a membership meeting? Perhaps this is an indication of her at- titude. toward our entire bar- gaining unit. Have we elected a president who has no faith in clericals? Have we elected a president who feels that clericals must constantly be told what to do? Have we elected a president who feels that women cannot be trusted to think and act for themselves? Heaven help us if we have! Judy Sisung Secretary, Law School Feb. 6 Lh Ietters to the Dail CDII stationed in "key locations" throughout the meeting room. To The Editor: ....""'. :..... . :. , " ".'. ?= ? :3 Contact your reps- Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem), 253 Russell Bldg., Capitol 11111, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. 'JIMM