Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNNVERSrTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where OpIniOnS Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MicH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Wil Preval" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions, of staf writers or the editors. This must bA noted in all reprints. ALLIANCE FOR PROGRESS: Brazil Faces Economic Woe ACADEMIC FRAT -,R] i: DAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH Demoeratie Ideals Prompt Student Demonstration WHILE STUDENTS picketed in front of the Administration Building yesterday, passers- by in automobiles shouted such delicate ad- monishments as "Ya' goddam Reds, go back to Russia" and less vehement messages about the severe cold and the uselessness of such a dem- onstration. The Human Relations Board picket, to con- tinue today, is quite the opposite of an irra- tional gesture. And, on the contrary to hazers who believe they sniff Reds, the action is defi- nitely an indication of faith in democratic processes. The immediate cause of the demonstration was President Harlan Hatcher's lack of re- sponse to a letter sent him by the HRB on February 3. The letter pointed out that the decision on a fair housing ordinance would soon 'confront the City Council. The board indicated that a positive statement supporting the ordinance would definitely be in line at this time because Regents Bylaw 2.14 pledges that the University will help to eliminate dis- crimination in housing where Iit affects stu- dents, faculty or employes. A STATEMENT from President Hatcher strongly encouraging enactment of the non- discriminatory ordinance would significantly facilitate passage of the proposal. Passage of the-housing legislation would benefit citizens of minority groups, many of whom are certain- ly students or faculty. A recent telephone poll taken by the board revealed that approximate- ly 50 per cent of the landlords contacted would deny a Negro student rental of their apartments while granting the housing to a white student. Hatcher, however, made no statement. The board was referred to the office of Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. He met with the board, and stated that it was against University policy to get involved in lo- cal legislation issues publicly., The board was aware that Bylaw 2.14 does not provide a definite mandate for issuance of public statements; it merely commits the Uni- versity to "helping" eliminate discrimination. The promise could be narrowly fulfilled by "behind the scenes" action. At his first meeting with board members Monday, Lewis promised that he would attempt to express University concern for the legislation through a letter from his office or other non-public means. Past experience with the above sort of end- deavor led HRB members to the conclusion that the act would be essentially ineffectual. CONCERN MOUNTED among members be- cause the date set for City Council consid- eration of the non-discriminatory housing law was yesterday. It was obvious that the Uni- versity, specifically president Hatcher, was going to ignore its opportunity to facilitate passage of legislation which would be a significant aid to students of the University being discriminat- ed against. The board decided that a public demonstra- tion would make apparent to President Hatcher the wide-spread student concern for the Uni- versity's effectual action on the discrimination problem.' Chairman of the HRB David Aroner planned to notify President Hatcher of the demonstra- tion ahead of time in the hope that such ex- pression of concern would impel him to speak and make the picket unnecessary. However, he was in Washington, D.C., and could not be reached by Lewis. The Human Relations Board voted to go ahead with the demonstration. T"HERE ARE MANY reasons it is a good thing that the student-faculty picket is taking place. The spirit of Bylaw 2.14 is' dying of neglect. In the four years since the passage of the bylaw President Hatcher has never public- ly supported it or expressed a commitment Grades Don't S ONE OF the threats facing learning today is the grading system. This system attempts to rank a student among his fellows according to the amount of knowledge he apparently has. In reality, it places the importance of getting a good grade above the importance of learn- ing. The intended use of a grade is to show the University how well a student is doing in comparison with other students. The Univer- sity uses grades for conferring academic honors and scholarships, and for showing other aca- demic institutions a student's progress and position in case the student wants to transfer or go on to graduate school. Because of the law of averages, the overall record of a student's achievement is fairly accurate. For adminis- trative purposes, this record need never be more than fairly accurate. GRADES as administrative tools are neces- sary. The University must know where its students stand in relation to each other. How- ever, there is no reason for the student to know his official standing. Each student knows his ability and can guess his achievement. If his guess of his achievement differs from his professor's guess, it is probably the profes- that the University would positively attempt to implement it. The Regents instituted the commitment on paper. The responsibility of carrying it out clearly lies with the adminis- tration. Aroner claims that Lewis is sincere in his desire to arrest the rampant discriminatory pratices in Ann Arbor. However, mere sincerity will not eradicate the problem. A genuine con- cern for the many, many students who have been discriminated against in Ann Arbor hous- ing would surely warrant- the most generous anti-discriminatory interpretation of Bylaw. 2.14. Lewis says that to "get involved in local leg- islation" is against University policy. It is easy to see why this might be a generally applicable policy; it would be wrong for the University to get involved in city politics except where its own legitimate concerns are at stake. HOWEVER, the housing ordinance is of great import to students. A blanket rule never to take a stand on local legislation can only imply that the administration cannot exercise reason, good judgment, a sense of discernment. This is of course false. Further, the Reed Report pledges the Uni- versity to increasing non-interference in the extra-curricular affairs of its students, ecept when such interference clearly benefits the student by enhancing his total educational environment. Yet foreign students live in little ghettos- largely because so many doors are slammed in their faces, so many integrated housing oppor- tunities denied them. Would not such integra- tion be a prime source of their education? Their education is stunted, their experience stifled. It is perhaps ironic that the influential Uni- versity would not speak up on the students' be- half, would not support the fair housing ordi- nance, would not exercise "paternalism" in this one instance. THE PURPOSE of the demonstration was to bring the concern of the students and fac- ulty before President Hatcher. Repeated pleas for statements supporting the bylaw have been ignored. A letter to President Hatcher in March, 1962 was somehow never acknowledged or answered. The letter sent last week was re- ferred to Lewis; the HRB request was not to be granted. Opponents of the demonstration have claimed that it would place the University in a very bad light, as it is occurring at the same time as the Regents and Development Council meet- ings. Underlying the decision of the Board was the belief that continuing University indiffer- ence to discriminatory practices against stu- dents would, in the long run, place the Univer- sity in a worse light. Further, and even more important, it is only in a totalitarian or hopelessly bureaucratic structure that vital information is deliberately kept from those whom it seriously concerns. Therefore, the HRB. did not see any reason why the University would want to hide the students' active interest from the Regents or Develop- ment Council. COMMUNICATION, rather than prior-censor- ship, between the administration and stu- dents was one of the larger underlying con- cepts in the Reed Report. There was no malice or attempt to slur in- tended by the demonstration. It was resorted to as a communication effort only because less formal efforts had failed. It was the only re- course the Human Relations Board had left, and can be Judged only on the basis of the ac- tion it brings from the University in support of the fair-housing law and in measures to im- plement Bylaw 2.14. -MARILYN KORAL erve AcademNes by students with great ability and little achievement to see. if their cleverness can cover up their lack of knowledge. Usually this bluffing doesn't fool the professor, and the general attitude is that cleverness deserves a reward which is a good grade, and that the clever student should receive a college educa- tion. If the student didn't have the fun of playing the grade game, if he were never given the satisfaction of seeing if he won, he might find more satisfaction in learning itself. Not every student misuses grades in the bluffing fashion, but every student does use them as an incentive. They are a very good incentive, but they are also false ones. The purpose of a college education is to give the student general knowledge as the basis for specific knowledge, and to sharpen his skill in a certain area. The goal of getting good grades never entirely dissolves the real purpose of an education, but it does dim it. If instead of receiving a grade for a paper, or an hourly exam, or even for a final exam, the student were given written criticism, he would have a better idea of not only where he stood, but how he should proceed. This solution would not work for all subjects. In lower levels of science By ROBERT SELWA FORWHOM does the bell toll in Brazil? For all of Latin America, since the problems of Brazil are the problems of Latin America'wrap- ped up in one big hunk of nation. With 3.3 million square miles and 67 million people, Brazil has half of South America's territory and population. With 60 per cent inflation in 1962, Brazil wastes United States aid even faster than the rest of Latin America. And in a continent known for its poverty, Brazil's Northeast section is one of the most deprived areas of the world. President John F. Kennedy re- cently expressed his concern about Brazilian inflation, and he sent roving assistant - President - at - large Robert Kennedy to Brazil. Kennedy and Brazilian President Joao Goulart met for three hours. When they emerged from their talk, Goulart looked grim. HE HAD REASON to be grim. Over the past 10 years the United States has pumped $1.4 billion worth of aid into Brazily. This aid is currently $200 million yearly. But, Kennedy no doubt told Gou- lart, public or Congressional opin- ion may force a cutoff in this aid unless Goulart can set his house in order. For Brazil's inflation has been increasing the cost of living 412 times as fast as per capita income growth during most of the postwar period. "Even as the .statesmen dined," Newsweek magazine noted at the time, "Brazil's economy spiraled further out of control. The cru- Spec tre WHAT A panorama, indeed, his- tory conjures up! We are still moved by the sight of Nebuchad- nezzar, his hair tangled on his shoulders, his uncombed beard hanging down his swarthy chest, his nails sharp as an eagle's talons, returning sane at last to the gates of Babylon. We still thrill to the shout of Xenophon's Ten Tousand as, reachong the crest of their final hill, they at last descry the dark line of the Euxine Sea. We catch the crash of brazen impact, the crackling of flames, and the yells of rage and pain as Antony's five hundred ships close with the Octavian fleet,-and then, we see the purple sails of Cleo- patra's ship puff in the breeze as she signals the Egyptian vessels to flee with her. We watch Diocle- tian, entering the massive amphi- theater near his palace at Spalato, take the salute of two bands of doomed criminals before, rushing upon one another with sword and spear, they open the gladiatorial show. We see the thin English line at Crecy 'halting at Edward's sharp command, planting their pointed stakes in the mud, drawing bow to ear, and suddenly darkening the air with clothyard arrows that crumple the French host in front. And so the story marches down with ever-widening sweep until we see Wolfe reciting the Elegy below Quebec, Lincoln sinking back unconscious in his chair at Ford's Theatre, Bismarck presid- ing over the Congress of Berlin, the German tide rolling through Brussels in 1914; until, with a start, we face the events of yes- terday-Hitler and Stalin invad- ing Poland, and an American air- plane exploding a bomb over Hiroshima. -Allen Nevins, The Gateway to History zeiro was at 850 to the U.S. dollar and still falling. Brazilians stood in rice queues to pick up 11-pound bags of rice distributed at con- trolled prices. Black beans, another staple, were just as scarce. Meat had all but disappeared." Goulart aims to cut the rate of inflation in half this year and to keep reducing it in future years. But he needs also to do some- thing about Brazil's foreign debt of $2.7 billion and about Brazil's great illiteracy. Half of the people cannot read nor write. * * * LIKE FRANKLIN Roosevelt, Goulart is a president who wants to go "all out" to get his country out of a severe economic crisis. Goulart now has been granted the powers as well as the office of the presidency. Roosevelt used and maximized his Presidential powers and was successful in both relief and reform. Effort was vigorous in the New Deal; great effort is needed for the success of Gou- lart's new deal, his three-year development program, for Brazil. Brazil sorely needs development. It is a country composed of pov- erty, illiteracy, inefficient feudal agriculture, lagging industrial de- velopment, insufficient capital, inadequate housing, chronic un- employment, disease, bitterly par- tisan politics aggravated by ultra- nationalists, unused natural re- sources and an enormous gap be- tween the rich and the Woor. Like the sharp contrast within, between affluence of a few and poverty of the many, Brazil pro- vides a sharp contrast without. Life expectancy is 70 years for the United States, 45 years for Brazil. The per capita national product is over $2,700 in the United States, only $210 in Brazil. There are 91 teachers per 10,000 people of the United States, 45 per 10,000 Brazilians. * * * BRAZIL SHARES with Latin America the long history of mis- treatment by the United States. This mistreatment continued even after Franklin Roosevelt began the so-called Good Neighbor policy of the United States. During World War II Latin America had supplied the Unted States with raw materials, and Brazil had even sent armies to fight. Yet Brazil and the rest of Latin America were almost vir- tually excluded from the Maishall Plan. "Now it seems belatedly," Prof. Irving Leonard of the history de- partment has noted, "that with the Alliance for Progress we are trying to remedy that very grave error that was made at the end of World War I. I believe that at the time of the Marshail Plan had we included as much as per- haps a billion, it would have ac- complished what the 20 billion now is going to try to accomplish. And we would have had a psy- chological advantage which we now lack. For Latin Americans say, thank you Fidel Casro, not Uncle Sam." Is it any wonder that Goulart, to be a successful politician in Brazil, finds it necessary to decry Yankee imperialism and to flirt with the Communists, our most forthright critics? * * * NOR IS IT any real surprise that Communism has a substan- tive following in Brazil and other Latin American countries. Much of the "proletariat" of Brazil have become resentful of the "bour- geoisie," and there is hardly any middle class. The system is feudal with "bourgeoisie" controlling the fazenda (hacienda) and exploit- ing the work of the peons-ten- ants or sharecroppers dependent for their survival on the planta- tion boss. Such patterns of exploitation and deprivation are especially prevalent in the Northeast where average income is less than $100 a year, where three-fourths of the population is illiterate, and where the population dies before the age of 30. POVERTY, former Brazilian President Janio Quadros has writ- ten, "separates us from North America . . . What solidarity can there be between a prosperous nation and a wretched people? What common ideals can . withstand the comparison between the rich, cultivated areas of the United States and the famine- ridden zones of the Brazilian Northeast?" Perhaps the answer to Qudros question is this: the common ideals of humanity, the fraternity ideal of democracy, an ideal that has helped make possible the $92 billion in total foreign aid that we have given since World War II. And perhaps the advent of the Kennedy Administration has marked the beginning of a change -a rededication to humanitarian goals and an attempt at their im- plementation through the Peace Corps and the Alliance for Pro- gress. * * * BUT THE YEARS scheduled for the Alliance for Progress will not be enough; we have made little progress in the two years that this Alliance has been in effect. The problems are too intrenched, the ways of men in power too set for rapid progress; yet progress should be as rapid as possible. The need to give aid increases every year because the split be- tween rich and poor nations is widening. And although Brazil and the other underdeveloped nations have been increasing their share in production, their share in con- sumption has been dropping.. In short, more and more poor are consuming less and less. And human multiplication is hindering Brazil and other underdeveloped countries from acquiring what they need-more capital and more skill. Thus the United States needs to ftspense birth control information in Brazil and to help Brazil make more jobs, largely through indus- trialization, for the increasing crop of youngsters who survive to adulthood. In Brazil and in Latin America, destitution need no longer be a reality, but prosperity is yet a dream. What is now happening in Brazil and in Latin America is a sincere attempt to challenge the reality of destitution. The Alliance for Progress is feeding one out of every four children in Latin America an extra ration from our farm surplus; the Alliance has dis- tributed 15 million school books and is building 17,000 classrooms; it has helped resettle tens of thousands of farm families on land they can call their own. * * *, THIS IS a good start, but it is only a start. Last year Theodoro Moscoso told his staff that there shall be no "celebation" of the first anniversary of the Alliance for Progress. Likewise there should be no "celebration" of the second an- niversary, for inflation plagues Brazil, poverty remains wide- spread, and economies continue to suffer. The demands of assistance are still heavy. But the fruits of generosity will be worthwhile. Phi Kappa T a Claims First 'New Concept' To the Editor: IN A RECENT Daily issue a letter was published in which Triangle Fraternity laid claim to being the first Michigan fraternity to orientate itself to an academic emphasis. This is very probably true, and I shall not dispute their claim. However, I cannot tolerate their claim that Phi Kappa Tau is their first disciple. The Phi Tau rush literature announced "a daring new concept in fraternity living" and that is what it meant. Unlike the Triangles,%Phi Tau does not discriminate on the basis of academic interest-a Phi Tau can major in anything. It must also be emphasized that Phi Tau has not resolved to surplant so- cial activities with seminars, it has accepted the challenge of be- ing a social fraternity that offers the fullest of academic opportun- ity to its members. * * * ' FINALLY, an important part of the Phi Tau program consists of the activities of its individual mem- bers. This is important because it must be realized that the class- room and the book are not by any means the exclusive agents of education at the University of Michigan. It is therefore obvious that a clear distinction must be made between the social fraternity, the academic fraternity, and the socio- academic fraternity, of which Phi Kappa Tau is the first. We reject the contention of the Triangles that we have taken up their cause. The Phi Tau concept yet remains unique among Michigan frater- nities. -James P. Starks, '65 Rush Chairman, Phi Kappa Tau Harmony MEAN to say that a harmony admits of degrees, and is more of a harmony, and more com- pletely a harmony, when more completely harmonized, if thatr be possible, and less of a harmony, and less completely a harmony, when less harmonized. True. -Plato, Phaedo AT THE STATE: Mediocre Double IN MY OLD DAYS at the Up- town Theatre in New York, I would never go unless they had a double-feature. Now, accustomed to Ann Arbor, such things are tiring, especially if they, are two such mediocrities as "Walk On The Wild Side" and "The Notor- ious Landlady." Oddly enough, both films have certain qualities which could have made them into passable movies. "Walk," the story of a Texan who searches New Orleans for his lost girl-friend (now a prostitute in Jo's [Barbara Stanwyck] estab- lishment) has Capucine, turning in a fine performance as Hallie, the lost girl-friend; but Laurence Harvey as the Texan and sup- posedly the focal point of the picture, negates her effectiveness completely and then some. Lines, such as "The cute ones ain't never talkers, and the talkers ain't never cute. You're cute," directed to Harvey, don't help at all. "NOTORIOUS" stars Kim No- vak as Carolee Hardwick, the one referred to in the title, who is suspected by Scotland Yard and just about everyone else of killing her husband. Fred Astaire turns in a fair performance as the har- ried and career-conscious state department official (in London), but it is Jack 'Lemmon, as Mrs. Hardwick's new roomer, who al- most manages to save the picture. But again, it goes under, due mainly to Kim Novak, who "is about 36-24-36" but can't act at all.- 5 --Steven Hendel ISTOMIN SHINES: Real Nifty Brahms THE BUDAPEST QUARTET is a musical phenomenon. They are also a psychological and scientific phenomenon. It would be fascinating to take them apart in a laboratory and find out just how 'their incredible coordination is achieved. But it just might not be possible to put them together again; and that were unforgivable. By now,. after two evenings, that is, I almost think of Eugene "Idol Must Have Human Sacrifice" Istomin as part of the Budapest. to the ensemble. His feelings about- the music and style of interpre-, tation are in close alliance with theirs. Further he utilizes his technique most ingeniously to adapt the large piano sound, which he uses in solo or concerted work, to the smaller idiom of the chamber. His pedalling, for example, is exem- plary. There is just enough to produce a liquidity of tone which blends with the continuous sound of the strings. He also varies the color of his instrument by bril- liant use of the una corda pedal, producing an almost muted tone when he is playing as a continuo, becoming suddenly brighter and incisive when his melodic line is more important. * s * LAST NIGHT'S concert at Rackham Auditorium got off to a slow start with Mozart's K-4789 Piano Quartet. The performance was marred by surprisingly many scratches from Boris Kroyt's :'ola. Most unusual for him, of course, but there are those days. I ,admit to a certain diffidence in discussion of chamber music. My record collection in that area is but modest, and the number of concerts is limited. It is then, perhaps, naive to observe that the early trios of Beethoven seem more substantial than much of his, other music of that period. The second work last night was his Piano Trio, Opus I, number 2. Though not of the power, depth, and subtlety of the master's later periods, it is a stronger work than the Mozart. The performance was brilliant. The slow movement was a particular extravaganza of de- light: gossamer strands of melody were played in interlocking solos by the three instruments with never a break in the melodic line or musical intent. * * * THE ENSEMBLE work cannot be described as incredible, for such things do happen, but it is a privilege to be there when they do. The evening ended with some nice juicy Brahms: the Piano Trio, Opus 87. It was Brahms as Brahms should be, warm, lush, but with- out a trace of flabby discipline. The slow movement shifts be- tween that throbbing, pulsating, fullness that seems' peculiarly Brahms and moments of exquisite Light Side' Of Divorce AH, SUNNY Southern Italy, where passion rules the hearts of the Italian male-where honor is worth more than life, and di- vorce is impossible. Ferdinado (Marcello Mastroianni) an arro- gant, moustachioed count is mar- ried to a love-sick, moustachioed wife who plagues him so much at night, he kills her by day. Ferin- ado sees his un-loved sinking into quicksand, simmering in a soap vat, rocketing to the moon. Ah- to be left in the arms of Angela, his beautiful, virginal, adoring cousin.. There is only one recourse-the crime of passion. And a wickedly planned crime of passion it turns out to be. Before the movie comes to its just end, Pietro Germi (The Straw Man, An Ugly Mess) gives us a chance to look and laugh at s lIi c k- Latin lovers, politicing priests, Italian communists, Sicil- ian customs and life. His handling of the, comedy is melodramatic and stylized. Each gesture is an Ital- ianism, each line an overstate- ment. * * * IN THIS COMIC soap opera, as in all soap operas, the music adds its perfect climatic touch. Here, instead of an organ, it's Italian brass. The director might have carried us through the film's in- evitable sequences a little faster, but after all this is Sicily where the pace is slow and crime (there's plenty) is calculated. As Ferdinado, Mastroianni (La Dolce Vita) gives the performance of his career. His slippery hair, drooping eyes and silvery cigarette holder present a caricature un- equalled by Rudolph Valentino. It's like the return of the Shiek in wolf's clothing. With a mere twitch of the mouth, a slouch of the shoulder, a hand to his smooth head, the entire complexion of a scene is change. The .other out- standing performance of the film belongs to Daniella Rocco who plays the, unfortunate wife. * * * THIS FILM is great Italian He is a most felicitous addition 'ITALIAN STYLE' U