THlE Summer Daily S innmcr Edlition of Till HfE M CGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, May 30, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 C Ity goVernment in a vacuum WE VIEW Mayor James Stephenson's recent decision to reschedule the public hearing on repeal of the city's $5 marijuana ordinance as an attempt to reduce citizen participation in Ann Arbor government. The mayor decided that he would "not be intimi- dated" by those opposing repeal of the "infamous" ordi- nance. He thus changed the date of the hearing from next Monday's Council meeting, when a final vote on the law was to be taken, to the following Saturday at nine o'clock in the morning. In a prepared statement, the mayor said that he would not repeat the "mistakes" of the previous Council by having lengthy public hearings before Monday night votes. Stephenson wrote, "I have purposely separated the public hearing from the Council meeting at which second reading will take place. The information gathering func- tion of City Council must be separated from the legisla- tive deliberation function whenever possible." APPARENTLY Mr. Stephenson feels that a citizen's right to have a say before his or her elected repre- sentatives at a decent hour of the week is a mistake. If he would prefer that City Council's "information- al" and "deliberative" functions be separated, perhaps public hearings could be held at midnight on alternate Fridays. Council meetings, of course, could then be pri- vate, free of troublesome constituents and their concerns. A NN ARBOR cannot be governed in a vacuum. A Sat- urday morning public hearing reveals to us a con- tempt on the part of Mayor Stephenson towards the rights of the people of this city. SkinnerWian theory leading to fascism within our society By MARSHA FREEMAN THE MOVIE Williard was no joke. Rats are becoming a serious problem, but not just in the ghettos. They're in the mental hosnitats, the prisons, the public schools, the factories, and, yes, in the universities. Recently t h e "King Rat" himself, B. F. Skin- ner, sddressed an audience in Ann Arbor. The frightening thing about it was not the speaker on t h e stage, but the hundreds of students - potential rats - who stayed to listen to Skinner and showed a positive response to the scientific nonsense spewed out. Stimulis-response psychology, which has been discredited for years by Lawrence Kubie and the earlier school of Gestault psycholo- gists, denies the existence of the human mind. By positing that man is only the most developed of the animal species it states that man responds to his immediate s u r- roundings, and is and can be con- trolled by what he finds around him. If this view were true, there would be no human race, as we know it, today. Man is the only species that con- trols, shapes, and actually defines nature, by actively intervening into the processes of his own reproduc- tion. In past historical periods, when man was faced, as he is now, with a discrepancy between what "nature" and technology could pro- vide, and what was needed by man- kind to continue to develop ma- terially and culturally, only the destruction-mongers like Malthus denied the ability of man to solve these problems. The people whose creativity had not been destroyed by bourgeois society, created the necessary conceptions through which man has been able to raise his standard of living, especially in the last hundred years. IF SKINNER'S methods are per- haps adequate for flat worms and rats. but clearly inept and destruc- exist and develop. He laments that, "New methods of agriculture and medicine will not help if they are not practiced, and housing is a matter not only of building cities but of how people live. Overcrowd- ing can be corrected only by in- ducing people not to crowd and the environment will continue to deteriorate until polluting p r a c- tices are abandoned." His solu- tion is "to make vast changes in human behavior." Is Skinner joking? People have to be "induced" to not crowd? Do people live in ghettos be tasre they prefer it? ONCE YOU assume that human creativity is equitable with rodent mentation and you realize there's a serious crisis nation and world- wide, you have to find ways to ra- tion out what you've got. This is principally what Phase Three poli- cies and Skinner have in common -the goal of regimentation of the working class, cutting the use of "Is Skinner joking? People have to be 'in- duced' to not crowd? Do people live in ghet- tos because they pre- fer it?" resources and consumption because we have reached the limit of capi- talist expansion, and trying to teach people to learn to accept it. When Dr. McConnel and others start Skinnerian programs in pri- sons and mental institutions, they are insuring that these inmates and patients will never be able to think or to revolt. When children a r e taught to read the same way pig- eons learn to do tricks, the child- ren will learn to creatively inter- vene into their environment to the same extent the pigeons do. In the Detroit schools the Self Instructional Reading Labratory places children in front of t a p e recorders and flash cards w h e r e they memorize words and sounis. There is no social interaction, no discussion and no conceptual devel- opment. In factories the beha or modifiers are concerned with ensuring a docile work force that will tighten its belt and learn to live in the same bestial manner that it is forced to now. By giving an academic "intelec- tual" cover to obvious scientific quackery the behavoral psycholo- gists are justifying anti-human be- havior control techniques. The main targets of this "rat training" are society's most easily manipu- lated layers -- prisoners, addicts, welfare victims, mental patients, and children. They are not merely being conditioned so they won't resist. They are being trained to be the shock troops and scab armies that will break any resistance and strikes of employed workers as you, the lieutenants, and the gen- erals incite them to believe that mankind no longer has the creative potential to provide for itself and that greedy workers will have to learn to live on less. This is haw a fascist movement is built. THE ALTERNATIVE is the kind of organizing that the National Un- employed and Welfare Rights Or- ganization (NUWRO) is now en- gaged in. It is based on the con- ception that a united front of work- ers, the unemployed, students, wel- fare victims, and socialists must demand a decent standard of living for the entire working class. NUWRO is organizing all of those normally self-competing sections to fight Phase III around t h e i r common interest. By demanding a decent minimum income, produc- tive jobs and the expansion of ne- cessary services at the expense of banks and corporations, NUWRO will present this country with a movement which will oppose Skin- nerism thought and thus help to insure the productive creative fu- ture of the working class. Marsha Freeman is a member of the Detroit-Ann Arbor Steering Committee of the National Caucus of Labor. Suninier Staff ROLFE TESSEM Editor MARTY STERN Ediorial Page Editor THAN BORUS Sports Editor BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager DAN nIDL E .......t . DAVE URHE N .... CHRISTOPHER PARKS. tive for human beings, then why are professors like Dr. McConnel teaching Skinner's theories? And why are college students, who are among the most creative people in society, swallowing it? Skinner begins Beyond Freedom and Dignity by observing that the human race is being faced with an extremely serious crisis. He at- tributes the cause to over-popula- Nit Eter tion and man's uncontrollable de- Nisht Editor sire to produce what he needs to Letters to The Daily --o. friedih ht osNOe E HARTS / " Gee, it must be nice to be a hero and have a friend in the White House.' Book to be revised To The Daily: Obstetrics and Gynecology, t h e 1971 medical text burned by AMI, will now be. revised. It contains a 20-page description of women's minds which we feel is medically harmful and undocumentable. A very few quotes from it follow: "Every phase of a woman's life is influenced by narcissism." "T h e normal sexual act . . . entails a masochistic surrender to the man . . . there is always an element of rape." (masochism is an ab- normal sexual condition in which satisfaction depends on being sub- jected to abuse or pain.) "The very act of coming to the physician puts the patient in a parent-child rela- tionship." Descriptions of women in the book vacillate between their being near-idiots and being in need of psychotherapy: "Many women equate orgasm with loss of bowel control." "Orgasm represents the woman's ability to accept her own feminine role in life." "She is like- ly to feel that she is 'animal-like' . or "to think of the vagina as a 'dirty cavity' ." ". . men- struation symbolizes her role in life . " "It is during rnenstrua- tion that women are most likely to become emotionally disturbed, sui- cidal, or homicidal." ". . . to the immature girl (with painful men- struation) menstrual blood conies from the same area as feces and urine; this causes her to transfer to menstruation the feelings she has toward these excretions." (If orgasm and menstruation symbol- ize women's role in life, do ejacula- tion and urination symbolize men's role in life?) disorders are punitively described as having "neurotic tendencies', "personality disorders", "enmotion- al difficulty in the home", deriving "emotional gain" from their sick' ness, in need of "mental hygiene', "sex education" and "intensive psychotherapy". "The husband of- ten can be helpful by not being too sympathetic and increasing time woman's guilt . Women in childbirth fear their "past sins". Ptyalism, byperemesis and headache are described as symptoms of "fear of pregnancy" rather than any organic cause the doctor need test for. Frigidity is "occasional failure to obtain orgasm." "Very few of these women ever seek medical help for their sexual inadequacy." If there is "only pleasure in clitoral stim- ulation" the suggestion is that she should be referred to a psychia- trist. (In spite of Masters & John- son's data that these "frigid" wo- men are 100 per cent normal.) Since the doctor is not going to have intercourse with the patient, we think the description of orgasm should be replaced with descrip- tions of the diagnosis and treatment of disease. Chps. 4 & I spend more space discussing how neurotic women -might be than they do the etiology and treatment of disease. Recently a woman went to Student Health Service with acute appendicities. Her symptoms were passed off as uninmportant and she was sent home. At home, her appendix rup- tured. Her life was saved only because she was "demanding and aggressive" and lacked the faith and. understanding trust in her doctor that this book so heavily depends upon. -Advocates for Medical Information May 24 NlYnlk4VTLT C!Tr'V IXTTrrU ,z"ckjjj ,j , 1~ ~ ~ ~ ~~OE NICK1545I~itl~iita WttfI eusssII