-..-, PAGE FIVE Doubt, Alienation, Chaos, Liberty ----, .4 ::; - :,: ; k Hillel -MIX-ER- removed from the coed overnight- ing it with her boyfriend in his apartment, but the experience which the couple will have is not simply a matter of lust or a full moon or even necessarily their affection for each other. Sexual drive and affection are standard items, but it is the forces described above that impel at least 25 per cent or more of college women and even more college men to seek expression of these tendencies, in an activity that before this cen- tury was considered morally wrong -and that's all there was to it. We of this generation no longer worship our chastity as we might still worship God. If we preserve it, it is for emotional reasons! which we can explain-remnants of earlier years which, despite their firmness, are not moralisti- cally solidified but open to argu- ment and counter-emotions. And if the emotional reasons are absent, they may be replaced by practical stops, or they may have vanished under a pseudo- sophisticated justification for in- dulgence on intellectual lines. handle and benefit from sex, this last unexpressed expression of our maturity. * * * WE ARE catapulted into the chaos of every other adult feeling and fear; when we realize that the girl may not get pregnant and that the horrible act may not have horrible consequences, but may actually be beautiful and bene- ficial, when we perceive hypocrisy in the adult world and when we feel that opportunities must be seized or else perhaps wasted- then the decision can only become terribly difficult. Besides, we have Freud telling us of the naturalness and power of the sex drive and the dangers of repression; we have Enovid and diaphragms and concoms for only 20 cents; we have an almost certain bombardment of sex from Madison Avenue; we have Kinsey telling us that everyone's doing it-or at least 50 per cent of everyone-and we have fast cars, more money and private apart- ments. *[ * * According to Prof. Blood's survey, only 15 per cent of the coeds still subscribe to the double standard. * * * IT IS HARD to separate cause from effect. In any case, many critics feel that a-good deal of the forces described here are simply quantitative differences, that there is nothing essentially unique or qualitatively different in the forces present in today's world from those present a few decades ago. Somehow this is just too hard. to believe. Even granting the com- mon seller's bias for his own pro- duct, there are significantly differ- ent forces at work today than at other times. Barring an unlikely return to an impossible pastoral society or an equally unlikely rushing back into the arms of Victorianism; barring 'nature-lovers" destroying our industrial plants and cities, our superhighways and television antennas; barriig, of course, nu- clear war, there seems little chance of America's surrendering its headlong plunge toward an even more massive mass society. * * * . NOR IS MAN likely to give up his somewhat new-found ecstasy in expanding his mind or in scrut- inizing his heritage. Even if the changes are only quantitative, the quantities are large and growing larger. Just where does this leave us today with respect to University sexual practices and attitudes? What are the characteristics of the so-called sexual revolution? Part Two will take a look at just these characteristics. featuring: The This Sat., April 1 1- Vagrants Admission: 25c preceded by Hillel's Saturday Night Movie "THE GOLEM" starting at 8 P.M.-25c 1429 Hill St. ". . studies, evaluations, exhortations, worries" and a reaction * * * AS MUCH a cause as an effect WE CANNOT nand nften do rnt If evll hlFn i h iw be included in the list, not only as a direct and personal threat that nurtures hedonism but for what it symbolizes. The bomb is that creeping knowledge in each of us of the disorder and im- potence of the human endeavor, of the fact that the good in man may well suffer and the bad pros- per, without regard to what we think should happen. The bomb symbolizes our aware- ness, further, that there is too often little or nothing we can do about our condition, that our best efforts are at best approxima- tions and even they may just as well explode in our faces as suc- ceed. And while science gives us more effective levers with which to move the world, at the same time it opens up vast new worlds with which our standard beliefs cannot cope. * * * ALL OF TIS might sound far V V r. LkA'* 'S.! ~. lu I L&1 ouim want to discuss our sex lives with our parents, and even friends are frequently distant or superficial when the subject comes up. More and more we must decide solely from our own feelings about our- selves whether or not to give sex- ual expression to our drives and our loves. And the decision is clouded by a feeling that if we can experience the rest of the troubles and un- certainties of the world so deeply, then we can also accept and of sexua llberation is the lpera- tion of the woman, the common cultural phenomenon whereby women are no longer expected to be satisfied with discontinued studies and a life of childbearing and housework. And since the weight of these new responsibilities and oppor- tunities and of all the other forces in the modern world bears down upon women just as much as upon men, the college female is little inclined to relinquish her share in something as significant as sex. THE WESLEY FOUNDATION THE JOHN BARTON WOLGAMOT SOCIETY AND THE DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER present two poets reading froi their own work: ROBERT DUNCAN X. J. KENNEDY of the San Francisco of the Wolgamot Renaissance Reformation author of author of The Opening of the Field Nude Descending and Faust Foutu a Staircase TONIGHT AT 8:30 SATURDAY AT 8:30 Wesley Foundation Lounge, across from Frieze Bldg. (towards Metzgers) Admission 90c or $1.50 for both readings (all proceeds will go to the poets) THE COUP IN BRAZIL: U.S. Must Understand, Condone Real Revolution (EDITOR S NOTE: This is the Last in a three-part series of ar- ticles on the coup d'etat which ousted BrazilianPresident Joao Goulart.) By STEPHEN BERKOWITZ Daily Guest Writer A NEW American diplomacy- Aor,' at least, a new candor i United States' relations with Lati America-seems to be in the mak ing. In recent weeks, a debat has been conducted within th national consciousness regardin the attitude which the Johnsor administration has sought to adop toward the southern portion o this hemisphere. Yet in many ways this dialogu is a false one--one which dis regards both the long term in terests. of this country and wha might be referred to as th "moral-logical" problem inheren in the recent actions of the John son administration towards Brazil IN A STATEMENT attributed to him by the New York Times White House advisor and Assistant Secretary of State for Inter- American Affairs Thomas C. Mann said that in our future relations with Latin America no distinction would be drawn by this govern- ment between democratic and nondemocratic regimes. Our fu- ture policy will center on the "pragmatic." Yet, the disturbing aspect of American "pragmatism" in Latin America thus far-if the Brazilian episode may be taken as some measure of the course it is to follow-is that it structures and defines pragmatism in such a way as to be detrimental to the moral and societal commitments of the United States and its long term world interests. IT WAS this debate between pragmatic and ethical alternatives that Sen. J .William Fulbright was contributing to when he re- cently decried the "excessive mor- alism" inherent in the conduct of American foreign . policy. So can- did a statement-within the shib- boleth-ridden context of Ameri- can politics - was, of course, roundly attacked by the happy proponents of congressional mis- feasance. In this regard, it is interesting to note, however, that this posture of ostensible moralism, more often than not, sprang either from the lack of an informed or enlightened opinion on the part of the United States toward various develop- ments in other parts of the world, X or from an unwillingness on the part of this country to experiment beyond the formal boundaries of traditional diplomacy. Thus, as a reflection of its lack of inventiveness or its inability to systematically and completely re- think its rolein world affairs, the United States adopted an inflex- ibly "moral" and-paradoxicaily indecisive attitude toward the con- duct of its foreign affairs. YET, IN RETREATING from this posture of self-satisfied and 1 nnlQ t satisfying moralism, the Johnson administration has seriously com- promised the long term interests of the United States. There is abroad in the world today a spirit both revolutionary in its ends and justifiably impa- n tient in its desire for fulfillment. n It has been variously referred to as the "revolution of rising ex- e pectations," the rise of industrial e nationalism" and the "anti- g colonial revolution." It is the de- a sire on the part of the vast ma- t jority of the world's people to f share in the benefits wrought by the machine. More than this, however, it is e the desire of men everywhere to - determine the course which their t lives are to follow; to make the e decisions which most affect their t mode of life. - s THIS REVOLUTION, then, is a ' revolution which seeks as its end the growth and extention of hu- man freedom-political, economic , and intellectual. It is broad in conception-it seeks, not simply, a change in the forms of governance of the past-but a revolutions in the ideas, modes of life and boun- daries of thought which gave them support. If this revolution is to have real meaning-if, that is to say. it is to succeed-it must be a f revolution of the great mass of people against their mode of life. Thus it must be a real revolu- tion-a revolution which tran- scends the purely political and brings about a radical restructur- ing of world society IT HAS BECOME a truism to say that people in Latin America, 'South.Viet Nam, Africa and else- where are "ripe for Communist takeover" because, shallow indi- viduals that they are, they are more concerned with filling their bellies than with furthering "the cause of human freedom" as de- fined by the United States State Department, enacted by the United Fruit Companies and bolstered by the ideology of Free Enterprise- unfettered, rampant and holy. Yet, this too is true: That the majority of the world's men today live in want, in abject poverty; that, compared to the poverty of the mass of men, the condition toward which the administration's "War on Poverty" is directed is a poverty of affluence. * * * FURTHER, it is true that in the past it has not been the United States that has personified and been responsive to these de-' sires, but those dark people-the Russians-and those darker peoples -the Chinese. The reason for this is simple: There is a lack of consistency1 between our ideals and our prac- tices that is truly remarkable- there has been a dearth of com- munication between Americans as a people and the rest of the world's men. This is, of course, an easily recognizable failing which our attempts to promote "cul- tural" exchange, personal con- tact and such seeks to rectify. *' * * I macy-is caught up in a syndrome - of necrophilia. We are tied, by the nature of our cocktail-circuit diplomacy and our cocktail quar- ter culture, economically and so- r cially to the elite. Thus we are divorced from the majority of the world's people-and their move- ments. CHARACTERISTIC of this lack' of ethos, of course, was the United States treatment of the coup in Brazil. Much was made in the Ameri- can press and by the United States government of the intervention of the military in Brazil to "protect constitutional forms," preserve democracy and so on. Why has the army, in its be- nevolence, done so nice a thing? According to various sources (among them the New York Times), it was because an im- portant distinction exists between the military In other countries in Latin America, which is a tool of the oligarchy, and the Brazilian army, whose officers come from a "burgeoning modern middle class." Thus it was held that the Brazilian army has a history ("in recent years") of taking power, restoring order and going home. WHO ARE the leaders of this modern, enlightened military, which, by the way, for the first time "in recent years" is going to install itself in the presidential palace for the next 18 months or more? They are Marshal Humberto Castelo Branco, "reluctant leader" of the coup, and former Marshal Eurioo Gaspar Dutra, the 78-year- old former president of Brazil who ruled the country immediately after-and in much the same way as former dictator Getulio Vargas. The first act of this enlightened military consensus, so to speak, has been to purge the government bureaucracy, the congress, the mu- nicipal government and almost everything else of every source of opposition. The military leaders seem to be falling all over each other in pursuit of this laudable goal. ONE SOURCE of this develop- ment-which seems to have sur- prised no one except the Johnson administration and the news me- dia-is the fact that "burgeoning" or no-the middle class is far from being a numerical majority of the population. And further, (as was stated in a 1952 UNESCO report), "The members of this Brazilian middle class generally identify themselves with the upper class, sharing to a great extent in their 'aristocratic' values and ideals . . . and follow an upper- class pattern of life so far as their smaller incomes will allow.." In this regard it should be ap- parent that, American reverence for that group notwithstanding, until the majority of the world's people actually enjoy middle class economic standards-that is, until there is an adequate adjustment of landownership and a more equit- able distribution of wealth-a commitment to magical effects by a representation of this class in any institution is illusory. * * * LET US, then, explore the fu- ture of Brazil, and of the relation- ship between the people of that country and this, within the con- text of the regime which we have bolstered in power and, to which we have tied our prestige since the coup. In our relations with Brazil we. face a moral-logical problem which may be stated thusly: If the government of the United States-speaking for the people of this country-in order to serve short term "pragmatic" ends, sup- ports and allies itself with the, dominating elite of Brazil, we make impotent any attempts we may wish to undertake in the fu-, ture to ally ourselves with their movement. Further, as may be seen from! the progressive deterioration of American understanding vis-a-vis Goulart, a commitment to popular aspirations in another country must be both real, in the sense that it is expressive of genuine concern, and enduring. THE HISTORY of the incipa- tion and extension of repression of popular desires in Brazil. is the history of the growth of a revolu- tionary movement. In much the same way that government force occasioned revolutionary opposi- tion in Cuba (and the parallels are striking), the Brazilian gov- ernment will-if not now, five years from now-bring about the growth of a movement that will overthrow it. The theory of guerrilla warfare advanced by Ernesto (Che) Gue- vara, is very simple: First, you create a small guer- rilla band in a reasonably con- trolable area. Second, you build up good will between the populace and the guerrillas. Third, you carry on operations just outside this sector, thus in- viting the government to come in and antagonize the population. Thus, as Theodore Draper holds, repression occasions opposition until the majority of the popula- tion opposes the government. * * * THE SAME SORT of history of opposition to government through guerrilla action which existed in Cuba exists in Brazil. The same sort of leadership is present. The same sort of terrain for guerrilla' activity exists. The same sort of government is in power. Thus, what we may expect from Brazil is the same sort of agrarian- begun revolution that we witness- ed in Cuba. It will be a revolution that is social in character and, probably, both historically and temperamentally opposed to the United States. But it is a revolu- tion which we, nonetheless, helped to create. THE UNITED STATES must recognize that its real and long- term interests rest with those of the rest of the world's population. It must recognize further that these interests, both in terms of the American liberal democratic heritage and contemporary notions of moral commitment, lie in the governance of a country by the majority of its people. The United States must make real her commitment to democ- racy. She must promote popular revolutions against oligarchy and tyranny and thus seek to make these revolutions sympathetic to herself. She must subvert the forces of oppression wherever they exist. * * * G & S PRODUCTION: Jo lanthe' Offers Rich, Entertaining Evening THE GILBERT and Sullivan Society's opening performance of "Iolanthe" afforded its audience a full, rich evening's entertain- ment. William J. Donahue's musical direction resulted in a rare balance of orchestra and singers, with some of the finest choral music heard in a long time. Director Allan D. Schreiber's deft touches of comic staging were, for the most part,,successful; and Paul Shortt gave the performers two imaginative, airy, colorful sets in which to unfold their story. "Iolanthe" was played with a true Wagnerian (Fairy) Queen portrayed by Judy Reicker whose performance was controlled and even in its overpowering characterization. Diane Magaw's Phyllis was delightfully youthful and naive as was newcomer Charles Suther- land's Strephon. MUCH HAS been made of American "counter-insurgency" in Viet Nam. I think it logically follows from the analysis present- THE THREE most outstanding performances of the evening were ed here that such activity is not tun ed THREE osto utllenastanLrding Cpr ance of theJvenalbionly futile, but self destructive. turned in by John Allen as the Lord Chancellor, James Galbraith as The United States, and, at the Lord Tolloller and a G&S veteran Gershom Clarke Morningstarr as moment, the Johnson administra- Lord Mauntararat. Mr. Allen showed a fantastic ability to move tion most especially-must be while singing several difficult numbers among them "Love, Unrequited, made to realize that insurgency Roh Me of Mv Rt" (The NightmareS on) which many a nrnfes- is not a techniaue, but is incietive