THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. MAT INTERNATIONALISM: Copland Notes Present Tastes Fricke Seeks To Relate Personality, Motivation INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS: School Launches New Series of Books --. By JEFFREY K. CHASE "Imagine, to be born in Brook- lyn and to try and make compe- tion with B e e t h o ve n a'nd Brahms!" Aaron Copland, Ameri- can composer, exclaimed: recently 'about his career. Copland'explained that -he grew up in a time during which Ameri- can composers were primarily con- cerned with putting America and American music onthe musical map. Those were the days of Amer- ican nationalism in miusic.: But this is not the situation to- day, Copland said. "Today inter- nationalism is the thing." . Jazz Harmonies, Rhythms_ In his "American period," Cop- land said he utilized American folk tunes-often cowboy and work songs--and jazz harmonies and rhythms in his compositions. But today his music "tends to be dry, emphatic, rhythmic and percus- sive." Copland has also ti'ied his hand at twelve-tone composition. The "Quartet for Piano and -Strings," written in 1950, is his first real twelve-tone work, he explained. "Connotations for ;, r c h e s t r a (1962)," commissioned for the opening of Lincoln Center in New1 York, is his first real twelve- tone orchestral work. "My twelve-tone pieces are not written to please Schoenbergians, but to please me," Copland em- phasized. Lets Material DictateS "I feel that a composer can write successfully in many styles. I have no embarrassment about-. the major triad; it is my material that determines the style a com-f position will take. Therefore I amI most comfortable in writing a' work in the style dictated by thet 4'1 " { Architeceture Inringement Must Cease By BURTON MICHAELS Architecture today must end the infringement on public and private, rights which is increasing in mod- ern cities, Prof. Serge Chermayeff, of Yale University said Thursday. "There is only one kind of ar- chitecture: total architecture. Great men must plan their world, from chairs to cities. And planning means making order," he said. The need for'- total planning stemsifrom the population growth, the result of which is that "the whole human habita soon will be man-made. Man's survival is at stake; it is a question of human ecology," he said. Private Vehicle One of the major' problems is "automania," which is making cities "not cities, lut a lot of places becoming inaccessible."' Prof. Chermayeff feels the car "is a private vehicle invading public places; and there is nothing more obscene than a car which is not moving." Exemplary is downtown Los Angeles, where two-thirds of the land is reserved for cars. Modern communications - es- pecially the television-represent "a public voice invading private places," he said. '"Noise is in- cessant today. And rather than being able to adjust, :we are'de- veloping all sorts of neuroses from it.', Prof. Chermayeff sees a solution in total planning, which will lead to "zoning as the obvious answer." He calls for a separation of fam- ily and civic centers, for places where the pedestrian "will be king" and places where "every- thing must move." Development Cycle But the never-efiding progres- sion of technology presents a problem even to total planning: Obsolescene. The "development cycle" has evolved to include re- search, design, production, distri-. bution, utilization and 'finally elimination. Furthermore, total ;planning must include the house, which must insure privacy without bring- ing complete withdrawaflfrom na- ture. Prof. Chermayeff's solution is a home like ,his. own, where children and adults -are' insured privacy from each other and from outsiders by living in different parts of the house, all of which have their own locks and which meet in the "family center"-the kitchen. The house should have court- yards formed by rooms of the house and closed :to the street, to afford an "everchanging view" of nature. This house, in the planned city, derives its merit from its "programmatic base, the aim of every architect," he. said. AARON COPLAND ... material dictates material, and do not have to force myself to employ it," Copland con- tinued. He noted that composers vary in temperament. Mahler, for in- stance, mainly wrote symphonies. As soon as he finished one he would begin on another. "I would be bored doing only one kind of work.However, the thing is to know what you were meant to do and do it well.", Copland went on to describe briefly the trend of music in the twentieth century and the general state of music today. "Everything that's going on now in music be- gan in the highly experimental period, of 1920-30. "Electronic music is the only exception because advanced engi- neering techniques did not exist then. Even chance music, stem- ming from jazz, came from that period! . . . .I.. 1 . Simple Style "By the time the '30's arrived composers felt they were getting too far away from their audience. They tried to communicate not by writing down 'to the level of the audience, but by writing good music* in a more -simplestyle. This emerged as the neo-classicism of the '30's. "Today, as was the' case during the '20's, is a Very revolutionary time in music-it seems like any- thing goes! Schoenberg and espe-- cially Webern seem to be the great- est influence on the younger gen- eration of composers, who are able to evaluate them and their tech- nique of serialization in an objec- tive manner. . These younger composers have made the twelve-tone technique international-not just -a thing of Vienna, the home of Schoenberg ,nd Webern. Theychose Webern as their mentr primarily bcause he was able to do what Schoen- berg- couldn't: he took the Scho- enbergian ideals and used them in a 20th century way. Schoenberg was still deeply rooted in the 19th century. Electronic Music "It is too early to tell about electronic music, but one prob- lem with it is evident. This is the limitation of starting sounds. "In 'sound stuff' every electron- ic piece resembles every other. The basic stuff is machine produced and is limited. Mostly everyone is familiar with the 'electronic sound.' But I think that this prob- l-m will eventually be solved. "If a composer cannot interest anybody with his idea, he is the ,only' one who has lost. Worthless composers don't continue to hold an audience, no matter how much they startled the people the first time." New Sources "It is inconceivable that music will stand still with all the new sources of sound today. Some peo- pie like to think 'of music as a quiet art, something you come home to relax to, but it just isn't!" Copland explained that audi- ences seem to catch up to the composer. But, because the com- poser is constantly advancing, the audience always lags about fifty years behind -him. The public has finally grown to accept Stravin- sky's "The Rite of Spring," com- pleted in 1913! The status of good works of the 19th century is in no. danger of being lowered by contemporary ideals, he said. Works of that cen- tury help us to sense what living in those times was like. "The greatest threat is that peo- BENTON HARBOR COMMUNITY COLLEGE SUMMER SESSION, June 17 to July 26. For information and application, write Director of Summer Session. ple think 19th century music is the only music. This is not good." Copland is glad that our gov- ernment is finally beginning to be concerned with the arts. He thinks, though, that it should "really" be concerned with the arts. But this will take a long time, he said. "I have a fascination for writ- ing film scores because no two films are alike," Copland stated. He pointed out that it is easier to write film scores than concert music, because in movies the ac- tion suggests t2:e music. Also it is rare for a musical por- tion of a film to be more than two or three minutes; "seven is like an eternity!" This time limi- tation simplifies the formal impli- cations tremendously. He explained that the biggest problem for the movie composer is staying out of the way of the dialogue. Any extraneous sounds, too, are a menace to the film music writer. The composer must know the places of all the extraneous noises before he begins to compose. "A love scene in the rain is absolute poison," Copland exclaimed. In Hurry The music is composed after the rest of the film has been finished. Therefore everyone is in a hurry for the music to be written. The movie officials and the composer usually discuss where the music should be and the composer usu- ally gets his way. - But he must be present when the sound is added to the reels to make sure that the dialogue and other sounds do not "completely" drown out all of his "beautiful" music. "It's funny," Copland contem- plated. "In Europe if an artist is discovered in a family everyone is happy. In America, where every- one is for the arts, if a talented son or daughter is found, the par- ents say, 'That's nice, but why does it have to be in my family.' "Every civilization has the drive to get down the essence of every- day living. No one chooses to be an artist, he is somehow picked out." By LAURENCE KIRSCHBAUM Relating the personality and motivation of an entering law student to his later success or failure in Law School is the goal of a study now being conducted by Prof. Benno G. Fricke of the psychology department. Administered to all entering University law freshmen over the past three years, the "Opinion, Attitude and Interest Survey"~ is attempting to find criteria other than the undergraduate grade- point average and Legal Scholastic Aptitude Test as indicators of academic promise, Prof. Fricke ex- plained. "The Law School here has a real problem in identifying the kinds of people who can succeed in Law School," he said. "We loose a substantial n umber of our stu- dents after their freshman year." OAIS Purposes The purpose of the OAIS is to find, by contrasting the attitudes of successful with unsuccessful law students, "the items which dis- criminate good from bad students and particularly those items which predict grades," Prof. Fricke noted. Although it is too early for con- clusions, both Prof. Fricke and Prof. Roy L. Steinheimer, admis- sions officer of the Law School, have expressed hope for success- ful results. According to Prof. Steinheimer, "if we could make a breakthrough on this motivation study it would add a new tool which would be extremely useful in connection with approving candidates for Law School." Striking Results Prof. Fricke explained that a similar survey administered to University undergraduate fresh- men, had "rather striking results." He said the OAIS scores had proved equally efective predictors of academic performance as the College Board tests or high-school class-ranking. The OAIS for law freshmen consists of about 400 statements requiring true or false answers. The statements are worded to call upon the responder "to make judg- ments about other people, himself and certain situations," Prof. said. For example, the statements re- quiring true-false personal evalua- tions ranged from "It is easy to admit when I am wrong" to "I enjoy thunder and lightening' storms" and to "I act differently with different people." PROF. BENNO G. FRICKE . . . law attitude, By TIM DRAPER The first in a new series, "Michigan International Business Studies," has been published re- cently under the auspices of the Program in International Business. The first book, "The Balance of Payments and Domestic Prosper- ity" consists of two papers by Prof. Paul W. McCracken of the business administration school and member of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisors and one by Prof. Emile Benoit of Columbia University. In Prof. McCracken's first paper, he deals with the question, "Is the United States caught with a slug- gish economy that we cannot af- ford to stimulate because of an uneasiness about the balance of payments?" Business Activity "The recovery in the business activity since early 1961 hasbeen the nation's poorest cyclical per- formance since World War I and is probably one of the weakest in our history," Prof. McCracken states. With equal economic signifi- cance, Prof. McCracken recalls the march of inflation from 1953 to 1959, and the need for a decision. "We had apparently come to a fork in the road. We could have played the game for short run gains (easy credit monetary poli- cies) . . . or we could try to coun- ter this emergent preoccupation with inflation, on the assumption that if this were done the economy would eventually be ahead of the game." Policy Results Commenting on the anti-infla- tionary decision, he says, "Indeed, it is probably not an overstate- ment to assert that in the last year or so there has been a pro-, found change in attitudes about our price-level prospects and prob- lems." Assuming inflation is sufficiently retarded, Prof. McCracken shifts attention to the problem of creat- ing a booming economy. He pre- sents the "central issue of eco- nomic policy confronting the na- tion": "Would a higher level of domestic business acitivity worsen the dollar's international position and undo the improvement that has been achieved? PROF. PAUL McCRACKEN ... payments balance "United States imports would certainly increase if business ac- 'tivity expanded, increasing the al- ready excessive outward flow of dollars to the rest of the world. And easier monetary and credit policies and lower interest gates, which would be one way to stimu- late business activity here, would almost certainly aggrevate further this imbalance . " Dual Role To perceive the problem clearly, Prof. ,McCracken emphasizes the "dual role of the United States in the world economy." That is, the United States is both a major world trader and banker. On this basis he defines two necessary objectives. The United States "must maintain reasonable, equilibrium in its balance of pay- ments" and it "must also keep the dollar strong." Of interest in the light of Gen. Lucias Clay's recent recommenda- tion to Congress to cut. foreign aid is one of the points Prof. Mc- Cracken develops in his review of the modern balance-of-payments problem. Dollar and Security "The idea that for reasons of international finance or a disequi, librium in our balance of pay- ments the nation should even en- tertain the possibility of reducing aid or our military operations Program Notes around the world may seem little short of horrendous. We must not however, underestimate the grave damage that would be done to the free world, and even our own na- tional security, from a critical weakening of confidence in the dollar," he points out. "Whether a nation's interna- tional balance of payments im- proves generally as domestic busi- ness activity strengthens depends on whether the favorable effect on capital account would be larger than the expected deterioration in its balance between exports and imports. Favorable Effect "For the United States, exports and imports are small in relation to the size of the economy. For this country it is quite reasonable to expect that the favorable effect which vigorous and orderly domes- tic business expansion would have on capital movements might well exceed the adverse effects of the higher level of imports." Dealing with the problem of achieving the initial steps towards domestic prosperity, Prof. Mc- Cracken differs somewhat on the policies prescribed in the Univer- sity's introductory economics course. "Clearly a massive use of easy credit and low interest rates would not work because such a policy would positively accelerate the outflow of United States capital. The preferred way for domestic policy to encourage domestic eco- nomic expansion would be a major overhaul of the tax structure," he notes. j The question of whether invest- ment by United States firms in foreign countries is a burden on the national balance of payments is handled in the third paper by Prof. Benoit. Prof. D. Maynard Phelps of the business administration graduate school and acting director of the program in international business said that there are five booklets of the series in prospect. - - D a 2 - 6 2 6 4 Shows Start at 1-3 5-7 & 9:08 0 Feature 20 Minutes Later The Ann Arbor Cantata Singers will present a special Lenten con- cert at 8 p.m. today at the First' Baptist Church. The concert will feature Heinrich Schuetz's "Pas- sion According to St. Matthew." The .cast will include Prof. Harold Haugh of the music school. The program also lists Scarlatti's "Te Deum Laudamus," Bach's "Can- tata Number 50" and Roman's' "Psalm 117." Ethno-Botany... Prof. Volney H. Jones of the anthropology department will ad- dress the Michigan Botanical Club on "The Ethno-Botany of the In- dians of North America" at 2 p.m. today at Ann Arbor High School. Quartet .. . The Stanley Quartet will play Mozart, Brahms and Gerhard at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Lecture Hall. Violinist . . Violinist Paul Makara will per- form Schubert, Stravinsky, De- bussy' and Bartok compositions ac- companied on piano and clarinet at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud A. Degree Recital . . Organ pieces of Bach, Dupre, Monnikendam a n d Clerambault will comprise the degree recital of. Brandeis Shelters Termed Voluntary WALTHAM, Mass.-The fallout shelter program at Brandeis Uni- versity was adopted voluntarily by the school, Richard'Draine of the Brandeis civil defense office said. The college was not bound by federal statutes in designating buildings as fallout shelters, he explained. organist Grace Zetterstrom, who will be assisted on trumpet ana trombone, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Aud. Lutenist . . Julian Bream, English lutenist and -guitarist, will present a pro- gram of works by Cutting, Dow- land, Byrd, Purcell; Bach and Al- beniz at 2:30 p.m. today in Rack- ham Aud. Poetic Drama*... The Student Laboratory Theatre will present Tennessee Williams' only poetic drama, "The Purifica- tion," at 4:10 p.m. Thursday in Trueblood Aud. The drama con- cerns the trial of a man for the murder of his unfaithful wife. Statements requiring judgments about people include "people are hard to get along with" "people generally want their own way," or "people can be happy without close friends." From the responses the various attributes which might possibly lead to academic success or fail- ure can then be tabulated. About 85 .of the responses on the test indicate the attributes which per- tain directly to academic, grade success. About the same number relate more indirectly to academic suc- cess, concerning the student's "in- tellectual orientation" or aptitude. Creative Behavior Finally, 101 of the responses are applied to predicting "creative be- havior," which reveals the students who "show the greatest imagina- tion and originality in their think- ing and the highest capacity for reorganizing ideas," Prof. Fricke said. The advantage of the OAIS is that-it not only -:ccgtains ,parts which "correlate highly with ap- titude test scores" but it is "more than an academic success. pre- dictor. It assesses those factors which are not already adequately measured by academic ability tests," he said. The original OAIS was prepared and checked out by Prof. Fricke over an 11 year period. He said that the "Law School officers hope that this pilot study being carried out here will be useful to law schools all over the .country." s yc. p CINEMA GUILD pee~ext4 Last Times Tonight at 7 and 9 EISENSTEINS STRIKE When Amvits's feao, I. songsdles givs a 21-fun na wo f theIavy. i THE RUSSIAN SILENT CLASSIC, "EXUBERANTLY YOUTHFUL AND ENORMOUSLY, CREATIVE" -Arthur Knight, Liveliest Art Prize Winner, Paris, 1925 A Must For Its Cinematic Technique and Stirring Story ! COMING APRIL 18-21 RAISIN IN THE SUN THE THREE-PENNY OPERA Continuous Today From 1 P.M. 4- ~A TtlfE t r~i' po p oi DIAL 8-6416 is surrounded by Y ilm b Ooverwhelming praise! "A MASTERPIECE OF FILM MAKING-A WOW OF A SHOW!" TIME fimaed in tho lamed playproand .... Fn , PA NA VS :0N A4m(RoCtolo PA , CCONNIES PPAULA- DANY RUSW RICHARD RON' ROGER. JAN1S TONG -RAN DES. -PERRY *Aid "DAZZLING!" TRIBUNE "CINEMATIC POWER!" TIMES P . "SUPERB!" MIRROR "NOT TO BE MISSED!" BAZAAR "MAGNIFICENT!" SAT. REVIEW "VISUALLY FAULTLESS!" 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