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Hobart and William Smith Colleges L>*>€ HOBART AND WILLIAM SMITH COLLEGES L>*>€. GENEVA, NEW YORK November 2, 1962 Dear *>aula: Thank you for your letter. I was touched by your comment on "loving each other more, but write less". I can only echo such sentiments. At the moment I am, as usual, up to my earlaps in work - work of all sorts. Some of it is of popular value, other stuff more esoteric. The really BIG things of moment is two paperbacks of mine to be is­ sued February 1st - one called THE NKW CIVILIAN MILITARISTS is timely, topical, and can even be understood by normal people; the other is the work of Mills which I have edited with an introduction to be called POWER, POLITICS AND ^EOPLE. We shall probably have an author's party in New York City - I hope you will be able to come. What a clown I am: a wedding party I never had, but a book party yes. vSo goes the life. y plans are a trifle on the grandiose side at the moment. I plan on being at Brooklyn College next year (if all goes well) as a Visiting Professor; and the following year to ditto this at the University of Buenos Aires. Both would be at figures substantially above what I am now making, and if a two-year leave of absence cannot be obtained, well, I shall have to move along anyhow. Apparently my writing has caught on sufficiently in pop-kitsch cir­ cles to warrant getting an agent. I have a big-fallow who handles some important folks, and he promises me results. So, what do I have to lose. 10$ of nothing is nothing, 10^ of something is a tax deduction. This is turning into an egotistical and mundane letter? so before I slobber along, let me say the family is doing well. We shall all be in town this coming week - with luck. May I count on seeing you at that time? Love John W. Gotsch 608 Webster Ave. New Rochelle, N. Y. NEw Rochelle 6-6982 Objective: Position in Germany with an established firm, with emphasis on international sales, advertising and promotion, supervision, and distribution. Skills: Research Methods in Social Relations Public Speaking Promotion Comprehension of German Education: Hobart College, Geneva, New York. September 1956 to January 1958 February 1960 to June 1962 New York University - enrolled in the evening program, to complete my language requirement at Hobart, for the coming academic year. Major in: Sociology, Research Methods, and Anthropology. Scholastic Member of the Dean's List for the academic year Honors: 1961/1962. Undergraduate assistant in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology. Assisted the President of the Upstate New York Sociological Association in the preparation of papers for the conference on "Conflict, Consensus, And Cooperation". Military Service: U. S. Army. March 1958 to Feb. 1960. Hon. Discharge. Employment Information: Salary from $5,000 yearly. Immediate availability for employment. Preferable location: Berlin, Germany. Am able to provide own transportation to Europe. October 1958 to January 1960: U.S.Forces in Germany. Traveled throughout Scandinavia, Benelux, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, and France. Summer 1961: Traveled to Germany, Italy, Greece, and Yugoslavia via the compliments of a co-student/Greek ship-owner. Personal: Age 25 - Married - No children - 5'10" - 180 lbs. Wife is a citizen of the Federal Republic of Germany. She, a translator-interpreter, is the daughter of the late Berlin Judge, Johannes-Georg Heifer. Hobbies: Sociological reading and research, and travel. Experience Record: Summer - 1962 Newark State School, Newark, New York. College Student Attendant Program. Summer - 1960 Reliance Market, Inc., New Rochelle, New York Jan. to Mar. '58 Healthmore Co., North Ave., New Rochelle, sales. Summer - 1957 Seven-Up Beverage Co., New Rochelle, production. Summer - 1956 MacNamee Construction Co., New Rochelle, laborer. References: Mr. Robert Hemm, BLAIR-TV, 717 Fifth Ave.,New York 22 Prof. Irving L. Horowitz, 431 South Main Street, Geneva, New York Prof. Leon E. Stover, West Lake Road, Penn Yan, N. Y. Dr. Michael Westfall, 3 Garden Apts., Geneva, N. Y. Mr. Georges A. Pappadakis, Africa House 44-46 Leadenhall Street, London E.C.3, England Major Gerhard Wiesemann, Med. Dent., Crusemannalle 45, 28 Bremen - 5, Germany Mr. Karl Heifer, Export Agency, P.O.Box 34, Selbitz (Bavaria), Germany I i Page Eight THE JUSTICE • Reminiscences of Mills (Continued from Page 6) *r" — 77 77 . ' ; ~ ~~~ iuL„ TW«.„ «f p»w<»r he outlines divisions, than they might students, to remind us that so- ?!!*«nf wJolorical Dositions otherwise be; and it also influ- ciology has been in some of its L^I^wWrh had more and enced their view of their own greatest figures a way not only Jr\nl nf^ien had les^ support country, where such phrases as of looking at the world but also K «?,> AmS of that time- but "monopoly capitalism" or "im- of criticizing it and changing it. h»t^L^an of theT seriously perialism" often pass muster as Mills, though greatly influenced Sf-KEthLe whlrtTatteast Marxism and are not carried as I think we all should be by S mind werenot terribly further. For example, it was Karl Marx, was in the tradition i?B^L^t in ?™ of their a surprise to many Japanese of native American radicalism SSSht on the American polfti- with whom I spoke to discover in this respect. The student ZV^rJ? And mfa critfc of that there were student groups groups concerned with disarma- ?<w Mn'konTnpdtheDungen at such colleges as Harvard and ment I have just referred to &.^^tffi?tod2- Brandeis and Chicago and Anti- could look to his book, The Lwhf a narticu laT sort of och who were as interested in Causes of World War III, and Am£riP»nP mentality th£re- Peace as their own Zengakuren to his stand on many issues of m £» !f ftt.1™a, nractical and activists. They had gathered foreign and domestic policy for Swh minnen but that conceals this neither from Mills nor from a model of intransigence and ism a maniacal| bl ndness to Mills'Example war? I°Uve t^closeSo^ms other ways of looking at the fo meeting with a few Polish in the last years T regard this worl • sociologists visiting in this coun- as the all-important issue. He Foreign Influence try or in reading about them in saw it and helped others see it. As a critic of American life the vignettes of Professor Lewis If we think of him, we should and thought, Mills had a far Coser and others, I have been think of his concern with that greater impact, I believe, out- struck by the way in which so- issue above all. side this country than within it. ciology in Poland has played an Mills' The Power Elite has been enormous role in the post-Stalin immensely influential among liberalization of that country: Japanese intellectuals, for ex- to discover an empirical fact is ample. I told a number of them a way out of dogma and hier- pK that I defended the book within archical monopoly of revealed America where complacency doctrinaire "t r u t h." In this rules and where so-called con- country, as Mills bitterly and structive thinking is demanded correctly complained, sociology Check your opt of critics. But I added that I has become an industry as well added that I feared that in Ja- as a calling, but his own exam- pan it gave many students an pie has served, especially in excuse to be less curious about many of the less prestigeful in- America, its ambiguities and stitutions and among graduate SCHOO" C. WRIGHT MILLS . by Dan Wakefield "IF YOU do not specify and con­ hard, and found in mechanics a de­ for himself—to afford the luxury of front real issues, what you say will manding diversion whose specific so­ lengthy investigation and leisurely surely obscure them. If you do not lutions provided a happy relief from study. He felt that as a human being, alarm anyone morally, you will your­ the far more tangled questions he who was also a sociologist, his duty self remain morally asleep. If you do was trying to answer in his real work. was to persuade as well as to define; fcot embody controversy, what you Once, when a visiting intellectual, to grab the complacent citizen by will be an acceptance of the drift harried by Mills's attacks on his posi­ the collar and shout "Listen, Yankee!" ic coming human hell." tion from every angle, finally asked before it was too late. These books Q Wright Mills, who died a few in exasperation, "What do you be­ were frankly angry, with an anger weeks' ago at the age of forty-six. not lieve in?" Mills snapped back "Ger­ that Mills understood the times called only wrote those words, hut lived by man motors." for; as he wrote in The Causes of tin m^HHMpologist, social critic, hu­ World War Three, ". Today com­ manist and individualist, he brought OF course, he believed in and built passion without bitterness and terror his enormous intellect and energy to much larger and more complicated is mere girlish sentiment and not bear on Vhe great issues of our time, things than houses and motors. By worthy of a full-grown man." confronting questions that few of his the age of forty he had completed, in academic colleagues had the capacity addition to a staggering number of I VISITED him once just before he or the courage to grapple with. His other projects (from directing a study went to Cuba in 1960 and he was influence went far beyond the aca­ of the health needs of U.A.W.
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