At U of Pennsylvania A Growing Number of Student 1 Fights Farc JAPAN TODAY, by James Cary, Freder- ick A. Praeger, Inc., 207 pages, $4.95. "JAPAN, without knowing why, had rip-. ped aside the surface of its social fab- ric and left a portion of its psyche naked in the public glare." This is James Cary's abstraction of the student riots which plagued Japan in the spring of 1960. He views them as a product of the many forces which have shaped modern Japan into a "mosaic of paradoxes." The con- flicts of past and present, the East and West, and the unique history and geog- raphy of the Asian country came to a head in the demonstrations. Students, political extremists, the labor movement, the intellectuals and the military joined forces in protesting the newly signed Se- curity Treaty between the United States and Japan. Cary, in a knowledgeable analysis of the ancient and modern forces which formed the basis for the explosions of 1960, re- flects his experience as news editor of the Associated Press Bureau in Tokyo at that time. His writing, however, is more de- scriptive and imaginative than the usual brisk journalistic style. For example, in describing modern Tokyo he says, "Skele- tons of new buildings, rearing against the sky, huge glassfronted stores, beer halls, bars, glittering cabarets and lusty night clubs . . . all are part of the new Japan." In setting the stage for his presenta- tion of the riots, Cary discusses the many conflicting forces which tear at Japanase political life. He places the Socialist Par- ty of Japan as the leader of the Left. This group stands for a strong concern for Marxist ideology and class warfare, a belief that Japan should be neutral in the Cold War, opposition to the alliance with the United States and advocation of closer ties with Communist China. Be- sides the Socialist Party, the Liberal- Democrats and Democratic Socialists are major contenders for positions in the 467- seat House of Representatives. On the other side is the leader of the Greater Japan Patriotic Party-the coun- try's fascist group. Bin Akao is a fanatic with a small following, which is generally discounted by most Japanase. But Hitler was in the same position before his rise to power in Germany, and Akao has said "God has destined me to be the Hitler of Japan." He is passionately devoted to rid- ding Japan of all Communists. He has built a semi-altar with giant pictures of Jesus Christ, Buddha, Emperor Meiji, and Nationalist China's President Chiang Kai- shek. The rightists entered the political arena and "took their place opposite the Com- munists, Socialists, Democratic Socialists" for the final battle over the Security Treaty. The Japanese intellectuals, Cary be- lieves, were one of the major powers in the demonstrations, as well as being the most difficult for the Westerner to un- derstand. In an intelligent and lucid pres- entation Cary covers the deeply based and highly organized opposition of "The Intellectuals," who some scholars believe "reason differently from Westerners," which partially accounts for the vast dis- crepancy in oriental and occidental logic. Cary offers no simple answer for the ideological explosion. It is intrinsically elusive because "the normal causes of rev- olution simply did not exist at that time." Cary feels that the demonstrations go far deeper than ordinary unrest or opposition to a political decision. They were a psychological revolt "against too many things that were new, ,unfamiliar, and foreign." They were a reaction against the rapid Westernization of a centuries-old Eastern culture. Cary's book is an inclusive presentation of a situation, which startled and shocked the world which is comprehensively and interestingly written. -Malinda Berry THE EXPLORATION OF OUTER SPACE, by Sir Bernard Lovell, Harper and Row, 84 pages, $3.00. SIR BERNARD LOVELL has often ap- peared in the New York Times to ex- pound his thoughts on astronomy, outer space and the contemporary problems these two fields raise. He is not the most eloquent or precise scientific writer around, but he is in a unique position to examine and elucidate vast amounts of information for the interested layman as director of the Jodrell Bank Experimental Station in England, where the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope is located. In October, 1961, the month of the fourth anniversary of the beginning of the space age, Lovell gave four lectures to the undergraduates of the Universityof Wales under the title of "The Exploration of Outer Space." The lectures were subse- quently published under the same title. Since radio telescopy is his forte, Lovell concentrates on it throughout the book showing how it has increased our knowl- edge of the universe beyond the limits imposed by optical telescopes and how the two branches work with each other. Sev- eral astronomers recently have criticized the importance radio astronomy has tak- en in the public mind as well as many scientific minds, to the detriment of opti- cal astronomy. Lovell doesn't dwell on this problem, maybe because as a radio-orient- ed astronomer he isn't aware of it. But his clarification of the many exciting and im- portant projects in radio astronomy gives one a perspective from which to view one side of the dispute. It is only since World War II that radio astronomy has grown to the gigantic pro- portions it possesses today. This fantastic rate of growth has a momentum that has not been achieved by optical astronomy in recent times. Without the radio tele- scope, long range space probes, such as the recent United States reach toward Venus, would be impossible without the sensitive radio telescope to send and re- ceive the probes' signals. The mapping of our galaxy, learning the processes of star formation and inves tigating the origin and evolution of the universe are just a few examples of what radio astronomy can do. Working in con- junction with optical astronomers, radio astronomers have helped to increase the ultimate range of the 200-inch optical telescope on Palomar by a factor of three -to some five billion light years. Lovell limits his discussions to the most interesting and important events in to- day's exploration of outer space. Natural- ly, he had to be selective in his choice of subject matter for such a short book (84 pages) based on only four lectures. It is fascinatingly readable for the interested layman. It has just the right balance be- tween figures to impress and theories to clarify. Other scientific authors know how to give the reader a more vivid presenta- tion of the subject matter without the slight sprinkling of unanswered questions Lovell leaves us with, but in his own field of contemporary advances in radio astronomy there isn't a better expert to consult. --Michael Juliar HONEY AND SALT, by Carl Sandburg, Harcourt, Brace & World, 111 pages, $4.75. IN HIS NEWEST collection of poems, "Honey and Salt," Carl Sandburg at 85 asks one of the oldest questions about life, love, and death: ". .. is being born, being loved, being dead, nothing but numbers?" His answer comes in 77 carefully con- ceived and carefully executed poems, sanctuaries of honey and salt. It is not a new one, but, like the name of the collection, it is sweet and well-seasoned. It comes In understatement and juxtapo- sition, underscored by numberless birds, flowers and trees; blue-hazed moonlight, fog and rainbows; eternal land, sea and sky. Timeless, yet itself encompassed by time, it spans. man's existence from his evolutionary beginnings to his speculated end by nuclear warfare. Outstanding answers to the old riddle are the title poem, "Honey and Salt" and the last entree, "Timesweep." Herein Sandburg culminates his career as poet which began with the publication of "Chicago Poems" in 1915. "Timesweep" in particular, reads as the peaceful benedic- tion of an old poet, untired, undulled, al- most untouched by time. It sounds the final statement of the collection with a clarity, a humility, an optimism that is Sandburg - a Sandburg who acknowl- edges that he is not the 'Head One . first over all," since: "There is only one man in the world and his name is All Men." But not all of the collected poems overt- ly probe the riddle of life, love and death. Some, such as "Lief the Lucky" and "God Is No Gentleman," are doubtlessly in- cluded for the whimsical humor of the poet who wrote -that: "Lief Ericson crossed the sea to get away from a woman-" and that: "God is no gentleman for God puts on overalls and gets dirty running the universe we know about and several other universes nobody knows about but Him." Others, like "Impasse" and "Impossible Iambics," appear as curiosities shaking a little salt into the "Honey and Salt" collection. All told, "Honey and Salt" asks the old question queried by poets for cen- turies and gives the old answer known to every man. But the answering is, itself, so fresh, so optimistic that everyman can- rot help but gain new light by it. -Louise Lind delio, he thinks immediately of Beetho- ven. Another possible reason why "Fidelio" should have been Beethoven's one and only opera is the poor reception it was accorded at its premiere performance in 1805. The fact that Vienna had just been occupied by French troops didn't help matters any. It meant that the first audi- ence to whom Beethoven entrusted the, results of his labors was made up mainly of French soldiers, a group of persons for whom Beethoven felt no great fondness and who were in turn cool towards Beethoven's opera. When this first performance of "Leon- ore," as the opera was then called, left the boards after three performances, it took with it the overture now known as Leonore No. 2. (The overture Leonore No. 1, bearing a later opus number, is considered by some authorities to have been intended for this same perform- ance but discarded before the premiere, while other musicologists claim it was composed for a production in Prague two years later which never came off.) In 1807, Beethoven tried again, due mainly to persistent-urging from his friends, and even composed a new over- ture for the occasion. But the consensus of opinion was that this work, Leonore No. 3, stole the drama from the actors on stage, so powerful was its effect, and this new production of Leonore failed. It was not until Beethoven's fourth try, in 1814, that the opera finally attained any measure of success. Beethoven had changed the title from "Leonore" to "Fi- delio" and composed an overture which contained none of the themes included in the opera. Unfortunately, Beethoven did not finish the work in time for "Fidelio's" first performance under its new design, so that his little-known "Ruins of Ath- ens" overture had to be substituted in its place. Every now and then a complete re- cording of "Fidelio" comes along but the Leonore Overture No. 3 is heard over and over again, with the Fidelio Overture second in popularity and the other two overtures farther behind. For years, one of the finest available versions was a re- cording by Charles Munch (LM-2015), which also contained the Coriolanus Overture. Now that this recording has been withdrawn, the monaural field was divided between the Scherchen (West. 18273) and Klemperer (Angel 35258) ver- sions. Of these two, the former is typi- cal Scherchen, with strident strings, over- bearing brass, and lacklustre perform- ances. The latter features performances which are surprisingly brisk for Klemper- er, yet with good solidity. For his part, Maazel seems to be emu- lating Munch (or Toscanini) in these per- formances, but they remain Maazel per- formances, and good ones. The three Leonore Overtures show good contrast between the slow introductions and the brisk allegros which follow. Maazel rare- ly lets the tempos get too fast, nor do the slower passages lag. The same judi- cious reading holds true in the Fidelio Overture. Surely these versions compare quite favorably with any and all compe- tition, at least where single-disk collec- tions of these four overtures are con- cerned. The only flaw is the fact that London's sound, which usually is among the best to be had, sometimes causes details of strings or brass to become blurred. Thus such details as the trumpet calls in the second and third Leonore Overtures could register with more bite; in the second Leonore overture especially, the last note of each call fades off into obscurity be- fore it can be heard. But these are purely minor quibbles, and they do not compel me to withhold recommendation from the recording as a whole. For anyone wish- ing to add top-notch stereo performances of these four overtures to his library, here is the record to buy. -Steven Haler By Richard Keller Simon and Samuel Bobrow AT THE UNIVERSITY of Pennsylvania campus in Philadelphia, along with, the ivy and the busts of founder Ben- jamin Franklin; there is an active group protesting the farcical Men's Student Government (MSG). Penn women have their own government, even more useless than its male counterpart. In two short years of existence MSG has met with more resistance at Penn than Student Government Council has encountered here in its eight year his- tory. Although most students on each campus are extremely apathetic, there is a concerned minority on both working toward a meaningful student government. However, each university group is using opposite means to a similar end. In Ann Arbor, the lone political party, Voice, has used a slow procedural method, attempting to elect a majority to SGC with rather quiet, uneventful election campaigns. Voice members of SGC are working for reform from within and are pushing liberal measures. When they do succeed, however, little concrete action follows. Voice supporters maintain that when they overcome the strong fraternity machine to capture a majority on Coun- cil, responsible student government will result. But Infraternity Council has interests of its own, different from those of Voice' and a more or less captive brotherhood of voters. To increase the party's strength at the polls, Voice will have to get out the apathetic independent votes. Up to now the party has not resorted to any unusual methods-especially when com- pared to the Penn reform movement. In Philadelphia concerned students have adopted considerably more colorful and bizarre techniques in the fight against stronger status quo forces. The reformers charge that Men's Student Government at Penn is now a complete farce and in magnificent old-fashioned collegiate style they are pushing for major changes. THE GOVERNMENT is organized on a strong party system with thirty seats up for campus-wide election each year. It uses a confused system of proportional representation by a multiplicity of polit- ical parties. Two years ago MSG replaced the Undergraduate Council which drew Its membership from among leaders of extracurricular activities. The Council failed because its members were too busy in their own organizations to spend enough time on student government. MSG operates on a cumbersome and unenforceable 13 page constitution which was never submitted to a popular vote. It is kept in line by the Committee on Student Affairs (CSA), the arm of the administration that enjoys veto control over it. In two years, MSG has managed to accomplish next to nothing. The reform protests are in good part cultivated by the student newspaper, the Daily Pennsylvanian, which for its trouble was suspended last year after calling.for the dissolution of MSG. Public pressure promptly forced reinstatement of the paper. Of the 30 students serving on MSG,. all but .eight are part of the fraternity machine. The minority has been described as "well meaning but inept." With this situation, the reformers de- cided that MSG was not worth-changing by ordinary election processes. They ex- plain that in a-large university the only students able to win election are well- known athletes and members of influ- ential fraternities. Thus, according to the reformers, the traditional elections favor "the most incompetent elements of the student body." - rTHE REFORMERS chose to fight a A farcical government with farce. The attitude even permeated to the freshmen elections, separate from the campus-wide MSG structure. This last fall a small group of freshmen caught the mood and supported the non- existent reformer Otto Schmink for class president. Otto's campaign was based on "free education,-free beer and free love." His slogans were "Think Schmink" and "Schmink in '66." Prior to voting, Otto's friends held a "Schmink for President" rally which attracted over 200 eager freshmen. His spokesman explained that "freshmen elections are ridiculous be- cause nobody knows the candidates, and nobody cares who wins or loses." The same spokesman refused to comment on statements that Schmink was running on the strength of his name. Otto won the election handily, polling more than twice as many votes as his nearest contender. MSG named the "real" person with the highest number of votes president despite protests from the Elect Otto Schmink Committee. On a campus-wide level, the battle over' MSG resulted in the rise of anarchist parties openly avowing the complete liquidation of the government. The orig- inal and still most extreme is the United Christian Front - Student A n a r c h i s t League, directed by Charles K. E. Horner. Horner, currently the editorial chair- man of the Daily Pennsylvanian, has re- marked that "the whole concept of stu- dent government is blatantly ridiculous." The UCF-SAL presented the following rather unique platform in this year's election campaign: 1) Opposition to ALL forms of student government. 2) Destruction a n d removal of all statues on campus - signs of creeping paganism. 3) A de-Franklinization program on the grounds that his memory represents the invasion of the cult of the person- ality. 4) Recognition that the right of revo- lution rests with the student body. 5) Abolition of CSA, and its replace- ment by a student-faculty government committee. 6) Non-compulsory dormitory residency. 7) Dissemination of birth control in- formation and materials by the student health service. Another party formed this year, the Populist party, also asked for the aboli- tion of CSA. In addition the Populists called for the establishment of a co-ed government and went on public record favoring the law of diminishing returns and the free and unlimited coinage of silver at a 16-1 ratio. T HE CAMPUS wide MSG battle started in the fall of 1961. The Red and Blue party and the Union party, both fratern- ity controlled and alternately referred to as the Bread and Glue and the Onion parties, presented next to identical slates. Horner organized the United Christian Front-Student Anarchist League. When the votes were countedhUCF-SAL held four seats with, the other two parties claiming 12 and 14 each. In a rather un- expected turn of events UCF-SAL hield the balance of power. The Daily Pennsylvanian wrote on the situation: "Student government at Penn nearly had itself laughed out of existence at that point as eachparty tried to bribe the UCF-SAL representatives and one party finally made a deal to'give them the vice-presidency of the government in return for their vote." Among the un- accepted bribes was membership in any campus fraternity. As Horner became vice-president he remarked, "One minute you''re a 'weirdo' and the next minute everybody loves you." The other representatives were awarded important committee chairman- ships. The newly elected anarchists became quickly disgusted with MSG political manuvering and resigned. The next day the Pennsylvanian called for the end of MSG. MSG retaliated, and with the dean of men suspended the paper on the grounds that the publication had pub- lished a "lewd" parody issue. The Penn- sylvanian had - accumulated a healthy share of enemies in attacking fratern- ities, exposing discrimination in univer- sity theatre groups, and in similar cam- paigns. After publication was resumed, the Pennsylvanian accused MSG of be- ing the stooge of the dean of men. HORNER handing in his resignation, observed that "MSG is made up of incompetent nincompoops who couldn't do anything if they tried." The remain- ing members of MSG literally cried in relief that the anarchists were gone and announced that everything would settle down to a "good" and effective student government. This did not prove to be the case. Ac- complishing little in the coming year, they explained it was their inability to assemble quorums at meetings. When election time rolled around again this year, the Pennsylvanian once more saluted MSG: "The present Men's Stu- dent Government has not, will not and can not provide the student body with the most competent and interested rep- resentatives. This fact and this fact alone justifies and necessitates a complete abandonment of the present form of government." The paper supported for- mation of a student-faculty-administra- tion government. Unable to suspend the paper again as it had the year before, MSG set about to loud crying. It demanded space to answer the charges. The paper replied that it was happy to present the "thrill- ing saga, 'Can a Harmless Student Gov- ernment Find Happiness with a Tryan- nical Newspaper'?" MSG began by claim- ing that "the Pennsylvanian has attempt- ed to condition the student body with its selective and biased news coverage for the day it would seek abolition of student government." It pointed to the "anarch- ist-infected Pennsylvanian staff." Several weeks before the election the anarchists attempted to hold a referen- dum on the continuation or suspension of MSG. MSG refused to stage the elec- tion, but another campus organization organized the vote on the condition that it would not be binding. Nearly two-thirds of those voting asked for the end of the government, but less than a quarter of eligible voters cast ballots. Nothing fur- ther came of it. Six parties ran slates in the election: Red and Blue, Progressive, Action, Pop- ulist, White Elephant, and UCF-SAL. The last three were protest parties. MSG managed to disqualify the White Ele- Ho phant and with the ch hered to cert tion. Other c violated by fearing a rec events, decid and overlook AT THE h MSG me The Pennsyl "Fists flewu MSG meetir identified st Franklin eni laration of I he was the 1 seceding fron "Charging to be here as ified masque ing a scene who was imr at arms. (He bodily forced MSG membe the secession premises. "During t: 'founding fat graphed 'D things, the ment of 'a those parts o ed them in tU paper furthe as 'a history usurptions, a the establish students. In sions we have most humble the group c December' im ". ..(the welfare coma 'press charg Franklin ma dents in the other minor back and I'll another chap in the Benja MSG meets). ON ELECTI backed F student-facul seats. Red an eight and Pr form victory. Although i archists are Currently, wi ing them, tli ing discrimir ing. They h against the v With all t the Universit playing a fas reforming gov color, and e same time. F absorbing. T vania experin many ways o Penn method certainly has LUDWIG VON BEETHOVEN, Overtures: Leonore No. 1, Op. 138; Leonore No. 2, Op. 72A; Leonore No. 3, Op. 72A; Fidelio, Op. 72B. Lorin Maazel con ducting the Israel Philharmonic Or- chestra, LONDON stereo CS 6328, $5.98 (Monaural CM 9328, $4.98). WITH THIS recording the brilliant young conductor Lorin Maazel joins the ranks of London Records. His decision (or was it London's?) to start off with the four overtures associated with Beetho- ven's only opera, "Fidelio," is most pro- pitious; this is the only stereo disc con- taining these overtures as a group, al- though all but the Leonore No. 1 may be had elsewhere in stereo and there are other monaural records available of the four-overtures. Just why it should be that Beethoven wrote only one opera is a mat-' ter of conjecture. To be sure, Beethoven was not one to take the task of compos- ing an opera lightly, for he said he was looking for "something I can take up with sincerity and love." The libretto he finally chose, an adaptation of "Leonore, ou l'amour conjugale" (Leonora, or Married Love) by Jean-Nicolas Bouilly, had already been used as the basis for an opera three times before. These other versions are today largely unknown, so that when one thinks of Leonora or i- Men's Student Government Meets Anarchist Ben THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINEZ E SUN