Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. UESDAY, MAY 5, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER DAWSON Self-Service Education A Sounder Approach, "It's Too Nice A Suit To Alter - Just Scrunch Down And Walk Like A Cripple" . .\, Ir. .j-_ Si ..-.- - ...... ... MAY FESTIVAL: Handel Concert; Partial Success THE SUNDAY afternoon performance of Handel's oratorio, "Solomon." was admirable in many respects and yet it left much to be desired. Lois Marshall unquestionably provided the highlights of the afternoon. Miss Marshall has a fine voice and seems to sing almost gffortlessly. Particularly outstanding were the two probing airs, "Every Sight These Eyes Behold" and "Will the Sun Forget to Streak Eastern Skies." Ilona Kombrink was also a delight to hear. Her "Blessed the Day" was sung gracefully and with much control, and the duet with Aurelio Estanislao, "Welcome as the Dawn of Day" was also noteworthy. Mr. Estanislao, more than adequate in his role, was perhaps most outstand- ing in his air, "What Though I Trace Each Herb and Flower." Howard Jarrett unfortunately was a disappointment. The quality of his voice on the whole was inadequate. He lacked the necessary con- f I "EDUCATION for democracy" has been a basic . . . and perhaps for too long, a sacred principle of American academics. Jefferson, trying to thwart a tendency to- ward rule by an elite, strongly advocated wide- spread public education aiming for a society able to participate fully in representative government. The idea he formulated has been turned into a compromise which threatens to anchor edu- cational progress in the throes of mediocrity- mediocrity caused by catering to a mass, many of whom lack the mental ability to achieve the idealistic goal that Jefferson conceived. To the potentially capable student, mediocri- ty is the lazy man's way out. Lacking stimuli, he may succumb to the rut of the "average" and fail to reach-his peak. Institutions attuned to giving the mass a light dusting with democ- racy (i.e., one semester of high school civics) will. neglect the exceptional individual who is forced to sit it out with the clods. A lack of institutions geared specifically to the discovered genii, a lack of the means to ascertain exceptional ability, a lack of courses for or means to aid the top students continues to hold back development of the present edu- cation scene. Recent additions in academic programs such as the University's honors pro- gram have partially rectified the situation. But the recent change in emphasis caused by the Soviet Union's scientific lead threatens to swing the arc in the opposite direction. Faced with the prospect of becoming the num- ber two nation academically, it is conceivable that mass producing "intellects" will become the goal in a stepped up "crash program." IN THAT SITUATION Jefferson's concept of education would be totally disregarded in favor of a more utilitarian philosophy-4geared to defeating a foreign idealogy. "Education for defense" prostitutes aca- demics and denies its real purpose. A sounder premise would make education the prime asset in the individual's "search for self." Self could mean absorbing enough facts to exist as an "average citizen" or complete ex- posure to all the technical aspects of nuclear physics. Then education wouldn't be a stopping off point where an individual would get a super- ficial dusting with the precepts of democracy or a factory where minds were molded to one pattern. It would resemble the "self-service counter" where variety and stimuli are present and the individual is guided to his particular individual ability slot. -CHARLES KOZOLL CAPITAL COMMENTARY: nActs as Party Eder ' ::fBy WILLIAM S. WHITE JUST INQUIRING*- . by Michael Kraft The Fading Notes ...... .... ... ..... ........ .....: r.,., : ..,...:.r., : *.*v r:..*. " s":. rc -".".{:{:..;: "."."... "_. ". :$..r"..'". %**}* %"S:r::*4":,.* , CRACKS and yellowed tones mar the pictures of 19th century University of Michigan. A concrete slab now covers the site of the Ro- mance Language Building, and students chat- ter in the Undergraduate Library at the place where engineers once coughed in the old auto- tive laboratory. And today, one more of Michigan's dwindl- ing links with the past becomes memory, Louis Elbel, composer of The Victors will be buried this afternoon in South Bend, Indiana. Sadly, but perhaps appropriately, he spent the last month of his 81 years in what he called "dear Ann Arbor town," receiving treatments at University hospital. But his previous returns to campus had been of a more pleasant nature. Every fall, Mr. El- bel journeyed to Ann Arbor for homecoming weekend to lead the band through "The Vic- tors" during. half-time ceremonies. The band also plays The Victors at the end of the games and sometimes, when the shadows from the scoreboard seem blacker than usual, the note of irony echoes through the stadium long after the strains of "Hail.to the Victors .. .hail to the conquering heroes, hail to the champions of the west" have ceased to hurry the sad, partisan throngs through the exits. And there are times when they march out, almost recapturing the spirit that prompted Elbel to write the famous song back in 1898. The birth of the march was described by him in the October 19, 1957 issue of the Michi- gan Alumnus. "WE HAD WONc nine games that season of 1898 and then came the tenth on Thanks- giving Day on Marshall Field in Chicago, with a crowd of about 12,000. We knew we had a fine team . . . about 1,400 went to Chicago from Ann Arbor. . a. "Michigan Band" that seemed to come out of nowhere that year . . . and then came the game . . . those who saw can never forget. it. Eleven men played eleven men never a substitute on either side. "In the second half Chicago led 11 to 6, Chuck Widman, our right half, got the ball for a line play right in front of me . . . backed a little, clipped our right end, and was on his way . . . for the Chicago goal 65 yards away. Chicago's Hamill tackled him on about the three-yard line, but Widman's speed let him slide over the goal line for a touchdown. Bill Caley kicked the goal and the score was Michi- gan 12, Chicago 11. "Well, that score stood and we won not only the game but also Michigan's first champion- ship in football. "Hail to Michigan, the cham- pions of the West! I wore a badge that said 'Cheer Leader' on it but they didn't need me to lead them. All our Michigan people were crazed with joy. Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor MICHAEL KRAFT JOHN WELCHER Editorial Director City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor DALE CANTOR................... Personnel Director JEAN WILLOUGHBY .... Associate .Editorial Director ALAN JONES ...... ..........sports Editor BEATA JORGENSON.........Associate City Editor ELIZABETH ERSKINE ... Associate Personnel Director SI COLEMAN ........Associate Sports Editor CARL RISEMAN ........... .Associate Sports Editor DAVID ARNOLD............... Chief Photographer "I was due to go to my sister's house in Englewood, a distance of about one and a half miles.Most of it I walked, and on my way thoughts came to me thath our band didn't have the right celebration song that night. Neither did Michigan and the thought came to me that Michigan should have one. Somewhere along the line my walk turned into a march and a band got to singing in my head, a sort of victory sound. And right there the refrain of 'The Victors' came to me. Not only the music, but the words, 'Hail to the Victors Valiant'." and "hail to the conqu'ring heroes!" . . . I completed the whole work on the train that took me back to Ann Arbor for Monday's classes." IT WAS a worthwhile weekend. Ann Arbor and the world first heard "The Victors" April 8, 1899 when John Philip Sousa arrived in town and Elbel gave him a copy asking him if he'd consider playing it. "The March King" did, in a concert at the old University Hall. Later Sousa called it one of the world's 10 best marches and perhaps the greatest college march of all time. But it is more than that. For the strains of the March are far more permanent than the. buildings, the people and the University that graced Ann Arbor at the turn of the century. Ironically; Louis Elbel never grdauated from the University nor did he make money from his famous .work. A child prodigy who toured the country at the age of 12, giving piano con- certs, he went in 1900 to Leipzig to study under Martin Krause. Elbel gave performances there and with the Chicago Symphony, but finally forsook the stage for teaching, and a family music store. BUT FOR YEARS, including this one, he re- turned to Ann Arbor to condu't the band, and live up to the description of one of the most loyal of Michigan's students. In 1947 the Regents presented him with the first Regent's citation ever given, declaring that to Elbel, the University of Michigan owes its best known and most characteristic song.. And for this march, he was made an hdnor- ary member of Kappa Kappa Psi, the band fraternity. A member of the fraternity, Ross Rowell, in a letter to The Daily, declares Mr. Elbel's con- tribution has given the University a tradition that, will far outlast any structure of stone or steel; he has given Michigan a tradition of dignity, of fellowship, of loyalty-the tradition of "The Victors." Described as a man of great vigor and de- termination, Mr. Elbel also was a man contin- ually loyal to Michigan. He wrote: "Thousands have spoken to me about 'The Victors,' how happy they were over it and thanking me for my inspiring all at Michigan. I can tell them all right here, it is the other way around, Michigan inspired 'The Victors'." And that in itself may be a measure of the past 61 years of change. New Books at the Library Updike, John - The Poorhouse Fair; N.Y., Alfred A. Knopf, 1958. Williams, William A. - The Tragedy of American Diplomacy; Cleveland World, 1959. Griffith, Thomas-Waist-high Culture; N.Y., Harper & Bros., 1959. Issacs, Harold R-Scratches on Our Minds: American images of China and India; N.Y., Jnhn na',y Ir48 HARR S. TRUMAN, who spent much of his time as President- in pleasurably loud combat, has adopted for 1960 the role of tran- quil peacemaker within the Demo- cratic party. Himself a scarred veteran of spectacular North-South Demo- cratic splits, the former Presi- dent's chief interest now is to avoid that kind of division, first in the Democratic convention and then in the Presidential election. A conversation with Mr. Tru- man in his Washington home away from home, the Mayflower Hotel, finds this energetic private citizen of Independence, Mo., in- finitely more optimistic about his party's future than he was in 1952 or in 1956. * * 4 HE IS undoubtedly fully con- vinced, not just for the record but in his bones, that the Democrats are going to regain the White House in '60, and certainly so if they remain reasonably united. Accordingly, he has set as one of his main tasks an accommoda- tion of the civil rights issue that will rest upon the compromise plank adopted by the 1956 conven- tion. Mr. Truman does not want the party to go significantly be- yond that plank in 1960. He knows, of course, that some extreme Dem- ocratic liberals (this description being this correspondent's and not necessarily Mr. Truman's) are de- termined to go far beyond. These, indeed, would like to drive even the moderate Southerners from the convention. The former President, in short, is the kind of working liberal who believes that slow progress, even if imperfect progress, is better than shouting demands for the impos- sible. It is easily possible to draw the impression that Mr. Truman is not enchanted with any of the liberal extremists. And he hopes this kind of liberal will not dominate the convention's platform committee. Actually, Mr. Truman himself ex- pects to have an important hand in that committee, as he did in the 1956 compromise. If he himself is not a member, the will have well- briefed friends there. HESEES the 1956 compromise, in fact, as a decent one then and a decent one for 1960. He does not, of course, want the party to run away from the issue to please the South. But he does not see the point of unnecessary provocation of the Southerners. And he is aware that more important than any platform, and almost as im- portant as the text of any civil rights law, is the kind of adminis- tration to be had of civil rights laws already enacted and to- be. enacted. What Mr. Truman wants, in sum, is for the Democrats to draw together on the many issues on which at bottom they are united and not to overinflate the one issue on which they really are apart. He thinks the party should run against the GOP next year basically on the traditionally "gut" issues--public power, farm relief, housing, labor -where he believes the Republicans to be most vulnerable. He deeply hopes that foreign policy can be kept out of the cam- paign, genuinely kept out. In for- eign matters, he will follow the wholly responsible line to which he has clung since leaving office. He has never once refused to back up the Eisenhower Administration when the going has been tough for us abroad. He wants to hit the GOP on the bread-and-butter domestic issues everywhere and all the time. But he knows that for the Democrats to make trouble for the Republi- cans abroad will- only make trouble for the country, too. *. * HARRY S. TRUMAN is, a far bigger man, casts a far taller shadow, now as always, than most of his critics have ever realized., As to who should be the' Demo- cratic Presidential nominee? Mr. Truman is not committed. He is, however, quite interested in Sena- tor Symington for a variety of reasons, not least of which is the plain fact that Symington is, after all, a fellow Missourian. But the Truman policy here basically is to lie low and most of all to keep himself sympathetically open to every party leader who might wish to talk to him about either candi- dates or issues. He sees hisrole, in the end, as that of party elder, party modera- tor, and party umpire to draw the heat from every avoidable party feud. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) tro: for executing "Sacred Rap- tures Cheer My Breast" and "See the Tall Palms," both of which contain many difficult runs. At certain points, his timing was not in accord with the timing of the orchestra. Mr. Jarrett was at his best THE CHORAL UNION, however, provided the biggest disappoint- ment of the afternoon. Choral parts, notably "Your Harps and Cymbals Sound," "From the Cen- ser Curling," and "Praise the Lord with Harp and Tongue" were conspicuously lacking in balance; the four voices took turns drowning each other out. The tenor section was always strained and in many places the tenors found it difficult to sing in uni- son. The Choral Union fared bet- ter on the more easily mastered parts such as "May No Rash In- truder" and "Music Spread Thy Nord Around." The Philadelphia Orchestra re- sponded beautifully to Thor John- son's conducting. The overture was dignified and the symphonia was attacked crisply. ,Mention must be made of the charming oboe duet in the symphonia par- alleled only by the equally charm- ing flute duet preceeding "May No Rash Intruder.", Throughout the oratorio, the Philadelphia Or- chestra had ample opportunity to show off its luscious string sec- tion.. -Michael Cohen AT THE CAMPUS: Psycho logy WintsAgain CRIME and Punishment, U.S.A. is another contribution to a swelling inventory of drama in- quiring into the nature of guilt. The word "compulsion" Is prom- inent on the Campus Theatre billboard plugging the flick. There are shameless references, too, to the novel written by that Russian chap who preceded'Freud in the temporal order of events. But this evaluation is of a movie, not a book; so your re- viewer will make no reference to Dostoievski's imperishable novel. The film story, with agreeable simplicity, confidently stands on its own contemporary feet. * IN A SETTING obviously Long Beach, Calif., but not so identi- fled, a law student (George Ham- ilton) has taken himself out of the LL.B. diploma race. Megalo- mania (delusions of grandeur, as Sigmpund would say) sweeps his lonely mind as he broods in a featureless student's apartment. Soon enough, and through dra- matic action, the movie lets you know that the family is on its uppers regarding coin of the realm. This gave the hero the tidy idea of knocking somebody off for the loot to be had. But an intelli- gent mind seeks a broader motive than mere poverty. The victim: a parsimonious, old-maid pawnshop proprietress to whom the hero is in hock. He, endowed as he is with a superior mind, convinces himself ("ration-, alizes") that said proprietress is the scum of the earth and unfit to live. (A "bug," in his up-dated vocabulary.) The moviegoer is mercifully spared any such un- settling scene as the taking of a life; it all happens antecedently. The processes of conscience ("Superego") go to work'even as\ the cash from the victim's till is beingastuffed beneath a within- city-limits oil well tower., Certain indiscretions point an unwavering finger of suspicion at our hero, even though he has in- geniously contrived to have a housepainter immediately arrest- ed as the prime suspect. The lieu- tenant, who believes that investi- gation and assembly of air-tight evidence is an art, links circuBm- stances to arrive at a hunch. But it iswell known that a hunch is way, way within the shadow of doubt. * * * THE MOVIE (a world premiere, we're given to understand) is a hit. Of course, it will never win an Oscar for cinematography. Not even though the director (or who- ever's in charge of such matters) has exploited every last camera shot to a perfection of this par- ticular ingredient of cinematic art. PUERTO RICO: Festival Casals By THOMAS TURNER Daily Staff Writer THE WORLD'S greatest cellist is performing and conducting this and the next two weeks, sur- rounded by other great musicians brought together in his adopted homeland. For 80-year-old Pablo Casals, Puerto> Rico has been a refuge from Franco-Spain. Morerthan that, it is a land in accord with the musican's aims. "My message is always the same," Casals said shortly before his 80th birthday in a; message to the world. "My wish is for happi- ness, and for people to have cour- age, and for people to 'manifest this courage in their love of lib- erty." This spirit of Casals dominates the annual Festival,, established for him three years ago by the Puerto Rican government. He has dedicated this year's Festival to the 'commonwealth's Operation Serenity, a stress on what Gov. Luis Munoz; Marin has called "spiritual purpose" to complement the economic push known as Op- eration Bootstrap. UNDER THE direction and in- s p i r a t i o n of cellist-conductor Casals, the two festivals thus far have admirably filled the role of emphasizing cultural values. In 1957, Casals was joined by pianists Mieczyslaw Horszowski, Eugene Istomin and Jesus Maria LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Electronic Music Still Controversial To the Editor: I AM WRITING with reference to Gordon Mumma's article en- titled "Challenge of Electronic Music," appearing in The Daily's Sunday Magazine of May 3. I do not propose to attack the music which Mr. Mumma seeks to champion. But I do feel that stern exception must be taken to the intolerant attitudes expressed in much of the article. Mr. Mumma postulates his dog- mas with an arrogance worthy of Karlheinz Stockhausen himself, and with an insistence which, it may be suggested, is not a char- acteristic ofhhonest, i n q u i r i n g thought. The medium of elec- tronic music is so recent, so alien to our conditionedcmusical re- sponses, and so inconclusively formulated, that blind and exclu- sive adherence to its methods is possible only to the individual who has*adopted "convictions" without having attained them through evaluative thought, or to the individual who, cynically or otherwise, seeks to arrest the world's attention by the peculiari- ties of his voice. The writer's curt and pompous dismissal of "archaic sounds and devices . . . still perpetrated by -indeamith Milhaid .Cnnland and nority) and those which welcome; its possible contributions to the' widening resources of artistic ex- pression but, lacking Mr. Mum- ma's prescient vision, reserve judgment until the results of its experiments are to be seen in clear perspective. Respect is due at least the second of these points of view. It may be argued that those conducting experiments' of this nature must of necessity adopt views condemning all that is tra- ditional - views as chauvinistic as those expressed in the article in question. This may or may not be true. But the public expression of such views cannot fail to be offensive and, even while wel- comed into an arena of free dis- cussion, cannot be permitted to go unchallenged. -Wallace T. Berry Silence ..-- To the Editor: THE "SILENCE" which you de- scribed as the end of our "Hyde Park," gave me the chance to think about their discussion of the Arab-Israeli problem. The "important" questions (i.e. "Refugees") are not really as im- portant as they appear - for it is mnA.u +n .rnv she mWa is say to the United Nations, and their own people, that they desire the friendship of Israel. The Arabs have a strength more powerful than oil, or guns; their people. This power can be used for the development of their own countries, instead of being wasted on the hatred and de- struction of Israel. If Israel were annihilated tomorrow, would the Arabs now starving or dying of disease, be any better off? Would the Arab rulers have more ofn a chance to combat poverty, and help their people? If the Arab leaders desire to build up their country on solid foundations, let them say to their people that their main problem is not how to destroy others, but how to help themselves. Then, and only then, will there be "Sa'alem" and "Shalom." -Martin Dann, '61 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- PABLO CASALS ... a wish for happiness Sanroma, violinists Isaac Stern and Joseph Szigeti, singers Maria iSta- der and Gerard Souzay, and the Budapest String Quartet. Last year, new soloists included Rudolph Serkin, A1ex an der Schneider and Victoria de los Angels-many of those from the first festival returning. The third Festival Casals, now going on, is bigger than ever. Fea- tured artists include, in addition to Casals: Julius Baker, Eli Car- men, Eileen Farrell, Horszowski, Istomin, Mitchell Lurie, Sanroma, Schneider, SerkinStern, Walter Trampler, the Bach Aria Group. and the Budapest String Quartet. Works of Vivaldi, Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Web- er, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schu- mann and Brahms will be per- formed. HOW GOOD will this program be? Of last year's Festival, the New York Times wrote: "This year Don Pablo, as he is universally and affectionately known, was the star performer as well as the inspiration . . . The soloists and the orchestra under the brilliant directorship of the violinist, Alexander Schneider, surpnsedor themselve. whic-h ise