EDITORnThomas FlemingnMANAGING EDITORnKatherine DaltonnSENIOR EDITOR, BOOKSnChilton Williamson ]r.nASSISTANT EDITORnTheodore PappasnART DIRECTORnAnna Mycek-WodeckinCONTRIBUTING EDITORSnJohn W. Aldridge, Harold O.J.nBrown, Samuel Francis, GeorgenGarrett, Russell Kirk, E. ChristiannKopff, Clyde WilsonnCORRESPONDING EDITORSnBryce Christensen,’Odie Faulk, JanenGreer, John Shelton Reed, JosephnSchwartz, Gary VasilashnEDITORIAL SECRETARYnLeann DobbsnPUBLISHERnAllan C. CarlsonnASSOCIATE PUBLISHERnMichael WardernPUBLICATION DIRECTORnGuy C. RejffettnCOMPOSITION MANAGERnAnita FedoranCIRCULATION MANAGERnRochelle FranknA Publication ofnThe Rockford InstitutenEditorial and Advertising Offices: 934 NorthnMain Street, Rockford, IL 61103.nEditorial Phone: (815) 964-5054.nAdvertising Phone: (815) 964-5811.nSubscription Department: P.O. Box 800, MountnMorris, IL 61054. Call 1-800-435-0715, innIllinois 1-800-892-0753.nU.S.A. Newsstand Distribution by EasternnNews Distributors, Inc., 1130 Cleveland Road,nSandusky, OH 44870.nCopyright © 1989 by The Rockford Institute.nAll rights reserved.nCHRONICLES (ISSN 0887-5731) is publishednmonthly for $21 per year by The RockfordnInstitute, 934 North Main Street, Rockford, ILn61103-7061.nSecond-class postage paid at Rockford, IL andnadditional mailing offices.nPOSTMASTER: Send address changes tonCHRONICLES, P.O. Box 800, Mount Morris,nIL 61054.nThe views expressed in Chronicles are thenauthors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect thenviews of The Rockford Institute or of itsndirectors. Unsolicited manuscripts cannot benreturned unless accompanied by a self-addressednstamped envelope.nChroniclesnA M t G A Z I N ( ]F AMEIICikll (UlIUtEn4/CHRONICLESnVol. 13, No. 10 October 1989nPOLEMICS & EXCHANGESnOn ‘Enemies of Society’nProfessor Arthur Eckstein’s fine reviewnof Pete Collier and David Horowitz’snDestructive Generation: SecondnTliougJits About the Sixties (Augustn1989) calls attention to the fact thatnthe revolutionaries of the 60’s turnednthemselves into the professors of then70’s and the deans of the 80’s. Why?nBecause the universities in the 1960’snwere expanding. So the academynprovided not only a great public squarenfor revolutionary theater but also affordedna fine living for the actors. Thensame good folk who disrupted Columbianand subverted Stanford and Berkeley,nlike the Christian missionaries tonHawaii, did rather well by doing (whatnthey thought of as) good. Well paid bynthe very institution they both subvertednand used for their subversion of society,nthey prospered.nTrue, the universities paid a heavynprice: the destruction of public confidence,ndelivery into the power of annanti-academic administration in thencorporate model, and loss of sharedngoals and acknowledged educationalnpurpose, not to mention nearly twondecades of steady-state faculties, withnlittle movement in or out or up. Butnthe tenured and secure self-stylednprophets and troublers of the publicnorder got paid at the end of the month,nand never mind the rest. That explainsnthe left-wing bias of the softer socialnsciences (sociology, not economics)nand the ideologization of the mushiernhumanities (literature, not classics),nscripts for the second act of the revolutionarynplay. True, the audience hasnlong since walked out; even the medianlost interest. But the now-respectablenrevolutionaries retain control of thentheater, and, alas, require the succeedingngenerations to form the audiencesnfor their courses.nWhat is to be done? Not a thing.nJust wait. Time not only heals, it alsoncorrects. The youthful vision of then60’s, now the lost dream of a disappointednand bitter generation of ruinednnnand barren intellectuals nearing oldnage, describes no world known to thennew generation, defines no use ofnyoung lives, oflFers no goals, sets nongrand tasks. Two decades of youngnpeople have passed through the classroomsncontrolled by the idiot-left andnnow form the phalanx of a genuinelynconservative youth. America has survivedneven the ruin of the academy;npeople came and learned what wasnuseful and illuminating and dismissednthe rest, and the next generation of thenacademy is in the process of repudiatingnthe discredited past. It is time fornrenewal.n—Jacob NeusnernMember, The Institute fornAdvanced Study,nPrinceton, N/nUniversity Professor,nBrown University,nProvidence, RInTHE CHILD ABUSEn’CRISIS’:nFORGOHEN FACTS AND HIDDENnAGENDASnAn air clearing analysis of one of the mostnmisunderstood and controversial issuesnfacing Americans today.nSend for a copy(s) of this remarkablenreport by sending this coupon and $2.50neach (includes postage & handling) to:nSpecial Issue Offer, The Rockford InstitutenCenter on The Family in America *n934 North Main Street * Rockford,nIL 61103.nSPECUL ISSUE ORDER FORMnEnclosed is J for copies ofnThe Child Abuse Crisis’nName_nAddress.nCity . Slate. . Zip .nThe Rockford Institute Cemer on The Family in American934 North Main Street • Rockford, II. 61103n• 4/89n