- ,,y- , V ~;. - - . 4- U- s4 } ! Y}4Y' fV F r a.y _ Yyy_ l :4 '4Y k _ ti . .. C\S } Y: } 11h f 1} ! .l'. lFM1 /' A. i °e: v. r: iji f'xr f :':' :} ,M :rte ;ti : i : ;S y 'N ' !i If +rC . titi": :}j; u .:,: 'S;i :;w i is t{ ::>: "j, : jq ^'i,: a::: ii ~t S it a: F }{ },; ; ; :; :;i E }. I;} "f7 :y' $ $ t .. ii;: F rc. '..fi i' A !i i : V" :!:: Y M M1 j:,"f! , ;{ }{3 Ji1 .i4 ."!i "t ............ . . ...... In This Issue . . "THE YUGOSLAVIAN Enigma," pages four and five, has been a subject of considerable political analysis in the last few years. The American debate on "Foreign Aid to Yugoslavia-Yes or No?" is an example of the controversy sur- rounding this independent Com- munist state. Joe Oppenheimer, a Graduate student in Economics, holds an AB degree in political science from Cornell University, where he was a teaching fellow in international relations. He served as Acting Chilean Desk Officer for the Department of Commerce, a post of co-ordination of U.S. for- eign policy for Chile, and forma- tion of U.S. commercial and eco- nomic policy . .. a change in em- phasis from a political view to a personal view comes in the Editor's travel notes based on a week and a half spent in "Tito's Land of Hos- pitality" . , . Americans tend to be- lieve this is the only nation con- cerned about the state of its edu- cational facilities. B u t educa- tional systems all over the world are undergoing an "agonizing re- appraisal." Mrs. Carol Barker, a British citizen, considers her own nation's problems in "Soul-Search- ing in British Education" on this page. Mrs. Barker went to a private school in Wales until age ten, when she took up her private school edu- cation in Bristol, England, until age 15. Commercial trainng follow- ed. Mrs. Barker took two English courses at the University's summer session, noted she would "probably never get into an English univer- sity" and thus was very happy for the American opportunity . .. From "The Music Scene, Parts I and II," pages seven and eight, come articles from students in the Music School .. , Jeffrey K. Chase wrote "Bern- stein: A Study in Musical Passion" after backstage observation and conversation with the famed con- ductor. Chase is a Music Literature major and a Masters Candidate who has covered Hill Auditorium for The Daily for three years . . . The Uni- versity Musical Society, in another concert of the Choral Union Series, presented Gyorgy Sandor this week in a brilliant preformance. Evan Ferber interviewed the Hungarian- born pianist to write "Sandor: Artistic Expression in Hungary" Ferber is a senior concentrating in Piano. He plans to be a performer- teacher upon graduation . . . The Book Review Section is on page six. G.B. MAGAZINE EDITOR: GLORIA BOWLES COVER: "Haven and Hill" by Robert Chambers. A sewer at that address. PHOTO CREDITS: Daily, page three; Associated Press, pages four and five; James Keson, page six; Gerald Ahronheim, page seven; University News Service, page eight, In Ann Arbor. . .. MUSIC . , . Two Choral Union series concerts in October Monday, Oct. 7, Jerome Hines, Bass, of the Metropolitan Opera Company and Friday, Oct. 18, the Bulgarian Na- tional Ensemble, Philip Koutev, Director . . . "Tosca," Puccini's Op- era, Oct. 10. DRAMA AND CINEMA .. . The Association of Producing Artists be- gins its season Thursday, Oct. 10, with Shakespeare's "Much Ado About Nothing" . . . at the Cinema Guild in October, the controversial Alain Resnais film, "Last Year at Marienbad" (3, 4), "Grapes of Wrath" (5, 6) based on the Stein- beck novel.M ART . . . From the Guggenheim Museum, the most exciting art ex- position of the year . . . the Art Museum across from the Union will present pop art in "Six Painters and the Object." An art fair is scheduled for the Diag on Oct. 9. Also, student painters in a fall show at the Thalo Blue Gallery, 1004 Forest, shows at the Forsythe Gallery, Nickels Ar- cade, and the Artist's Gallery, Washington Street. Soul Searching in, British Elimination Of An Outmoded May Be A First Step LONDON-London has decided to do away with the controversial school exam- ination for 10-year-olds that bars all but the "clever" ones from a higher academic education. The test is called the 11-plus, because it determines whether a child will get an academic or vocational education from the age of i 1 onward. With few exceptions, the examinations remain in effect outside London. The London County Council announced recently that a working party of teachers and council officials was to begin work immediately on the procedure for doing away with the examination completely be- fore next fall. "There will no longer be any official designation of some pupils as being suited for academic courses and others, by impli- cation, being unsuited," the council said. Its intention, the council said, is to end official selection and leave it entirely to parents to decide what sort of education they want for their children. Copyright 1963, The New York Times By MRS. CAROL BARKER DURING THE LULL after the Second .World War, 600,000 children as well as their teachers returned home to London. Their evacuation experience was over, but for the education authorities problems were just beginning. 1150 out of 1200 schools in the London County area were either totally destroyed or badly dam- aged, there was an acute shortage of teachers, and the birthrate was increas- ing rapidly. Quick and effective educational reor- ganization was imperative. The 1944 Edu- cation Act achieved some sort of order and efficiency when it provided for a na- tional examination to be taken by all English school children at age eleven. The limited number of academic places were awarded to those who obtained the high- est marks and the remainder of students were filtered into schools of a more prac- tical nature, where the school-leaving age was generally fifteen. In effect, the English students' educational future was to be decided with a single examination taken at a very young eleven years of age. The idea was, however, sound at that time and functioned quite well during the post-war years. But as times have chang- ed dissatisfaction with 'the conclusive single examination has mounted, and more and more criticism levelled at the "Eleven-plus." It has now become one of the most controversial and talked-about problems in the British Isles. The writer therefore was both pleased and incredulous to see "New York Times" coverage of an important story from Brit- ain: "London Dropping Test for Schools." The article noted that, instead of the one- day examination, routine tests would be held as part of the normal primary school curriculum, and this series of tests would be the basis for a decision on a place- ment of the child. In light of this infor- mation, teachers and parents would dis- cuss the child's particular aptitude, and in the final event the parents would be entirely free in their nomination of two secondary schools, in order of preference. T HE NEWS CARRIED by the "Times" greater understanding of its import can be achieved by an initial look at the total scheme of English education. Under the 1944 Act, responsibility for education provision was laid on local au- thorities. The English school system is highly decentralized. The expenditures of local authorities are met partly from lo- cal taxes, partly from government grants. There are also voluntary, or private, schools in England, which are either con- trolled or aided by local authorities. As a result of the grants made locally to these voluntary schools, many with a long his- tory and the inheritors of ancient tradi- tions, their future has been assured. In London County alone, they provide places for abbut one quarter of the student pop- ulation, offering the same education as state schools. The Ministry of Education controls the system through rigid inspec- tion; even the private and independent schools are inspected and closed by the state if found inadequate. Central ad- visory councils act as liaison agencies be- tween the local authorities and the Min- istry of Education. A SHORTAGE of teachers has been a problem plaguing every Western nation since the war and England is no excep- tion. Birthrates are higher, and more and more children are staying at school be- yond the age of fifteen. Teachers are trained in a total of 185 institutions. These include 24 University Departments of Education providing a one-year course for graduates. Teacher-training colleges provide a three-year course for those prospective instructors who do not hold a university degree. It is not necessary for a teacher to hold a university degree, if he has undergone the approved courses in the training colleges. A large scale plan of expansion has now been initiated, pro- viding 24,000 additional places in the training colleges, the equivalent of three new universities, by 1966, thus almost doubling the previous number of places. Payment of teachers is standardized throughout England and Wales with a salary of £600-1,200 or $3,200-6,720 for a non-graduate three-year trained teacher, to £890-1,490 or $4,984-8,344 for an hon- ors graduate with six years degree study, research and professional training. The feminists rejoiced in April, 1961, when the salaries of men and women teachers be- came equal. A CHILD can start his education at the early age of two at a state-supported nursery school. Compulsory schooling, however, starts at age five when the chil- dren enter the primary stage of their edu- cation, and go first to the infant school, and then aged seven,- to the junior school where they remain for four years. To- wards the end of their period at primary level the more responsible children are made prefects and house-leaders. Their small duties are intended to foster the ideal of good citizenship in the students, although there does not seem to be so much emphasis on this as in the United States. The realization that this is foster- ing social responsibility does not occur to the student; probably the underlying point for all these duties is to help the overworked staff, rather than mold per- fect citizens, although this is the premise. But the examination begins to loom even larger on the horizon as the last term of primary school gets under way. A slip is sent around to the parents on which they write, in order of preference, the two schools favored by them. Most parents prefer the academic education. Children all over the country sit the examination on a certain day. Results start coming through about two months later. The children who did well learn that they will go to the secondary gram- mar schools and will have the oppor- tunity to take examinations leading to entrance into the universities. Those who did not do as well go to the secondary modern schools where the general school- THE MUSIC SCENE, PART I Bernstein: A Study in Musical By JEFFREY CHASE LEONARD BERNSTEIN "already be- strides the American musical scene like a federal bureau and, democracy that we are, it is we who have elected him to this office of ubiquity. We have packed his concerts to greater capacity than we did Toscanini's, Leonard Marcus writes. We have formed lines to his musicals, which we then voted Oscars and Tonys. We have tuned in to his Emmy-awarded telecasts for nearly a decade and have made both his record- ings and his books best sellers. He, in turn, has converted our teen-agers into musical enthusiasts, lectured our concert audiences on how to listen to the musical portions of his programs without becom- ing restless, and stimulated our intelli- gentia to buy television sets."_"High Fi- delity," May, 1963.) The Bernstein style arouses mixed emo- tions among serious concert goers, even though they admit the validity of the Marcus assertion. For Bernstein, music is a universal expression; it transcends the mundane and should be shared and enjoyed by all classes and conditions of people. He does not think that mass ap- preciation lowers the level of art, but that the high quality of the art brings the masses to it. The conductor's highly controversial and often criticized foot- stamping, singing and physical gesticula- tions at the podium are often looked upon as a vulgarization and an egocentric display by highbrows. But Bernstein feels that this style helps him to set the mood of the music and to project his intentions to his orchestra. For Bernstein, almost any means justify musical ends. Still, the conductor of the New York Philharmonic never forgets that he is a spectacle, a sensational personality. His popularity, in fact, rivals that of many Hollywood stars. Bernstein is unique: how many musicians do you know who try to be conducter, composer and pianist all at the same time? This is Leonard Bern- stein. How many conductors have a doting valet with lit cigarette, olive-colored towel, and a drink ready between bows? This, too, is Leonard Bernstein. What other conduuctor is impressed with Hill Auditorium acoustics, not for excellent projection of music, but for the deafen- ing noise of applause which reaches the performer on stage? "Hill Auditorium must have been made for applause," said Bernstein. And the list goes on and on .. . Sincerely amiable with all of the auto- graph seekers and curious admirers (mostly girls) who surround him after every concert, Bernstein greets them with a smile, and a look of interest, that one can only find charming. He is willing to speak with each one. No one is turned away. His friends, associates and even slight acquaintances call him "Lenny," a fact at first insignificant, but really a key to his personality. A friend of all, living in the glamorous world of the demigod, Lenny is the cute little boy of American music. His sincerity and devotion to his profession is boundless. "My music is my life," he says. Do people attend his concerts to watch the man or to listen to the music? "I know of nobody who goes to a concert for visual experience only; a musical con- cert is primarily an aural sensation," Bernstein said backstage at Hill. But there was a note in his voice which sug- gested that perhaps he recognizes people really do go to concerts to see just what this American "wunderkind" is all about. a