fix' ,, Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. *Phone NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Truth WM Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN A S I SEE IT,. * By THOMAS TUIRNER "Eminent Authorities Testify-" tlS ccC v co~/14 tbe do!.,rme iN i - x515 i & 3 * eey rssr r -c ICC. a 'Vw J r. ~ ~ ~ /j e AT RACKHAM AUDITORIUM: Baroque Trio Gives Nice' Performance LAST NIGHT'S performance by the Baroque Trio afforded the cul- ture-minded public of Ann Arbor another opportunity to enjoy music which is not too often done by visiting artists. The fact that there are groups such as this trio performing on campus never ceases to give me delight as the music presented is pure and unadulterated; furthermore, the concerts are all free. The program itself was filled with some very exciting moments, as well as some very dull and almost boring spots. The majority of the time, the ensemble communicated with its audience quite capably. Perhaps the highlight of the program was the excellent rendition of A RATING SYSTEM not unlike the Top Twenty Tunes or the Social Register is reg- ularly employed by administrators of this school and others to compare their institutions. The University "has a very high even value through all faculties; a handsome, well-treed campus, and acceptance by the Ivy League group as virtually one of themselves," David Cort wrote in a recent Nation article, "In' Search of Athens, USA." This characterization is fair and accurate, according to Vice-President and Dean of Fac- ulties Marvin Niehuss, who job entails constant assessment of the University's quality, compar- ative and absolute. Niehuss keeps a file of articles (such as Cort's) which "rate" schools. Cort's ratings article is "not a great one," in Niehuss's opinion, but it does make some im- portant points. A LIST of the top 21 schools, which is "a commonplace" among experienced educa- tors," is first presented. Cort avoids trouble by listing these 21 not in terms of merit but of "the size of the endowment, excluding the value of the campus installation." They are: Harvard (including Radcliffe) Yale Columbia (including Barnard) Chicago MIT California (at Berkeley) Stanford Rice Cornell Princeton Minnesota Pennsylvania Washington (at St. Louis) Dartmouth Caltech Tulane Michigan Virginia Wisconsin North Carolina Colorado Cort follows this list by another, the twenty-one richest schools in America. Fourteen of the twenty-one "richest" are among the twenty-one "best." (Notable exceptions include Cort's "richest", Texas.) MAX LERNER: Comparison of these two lists, in Cort's opinion, gives a good measure of what factors make a university great. CORT PRESENTS thumb-nail sketches of the seven "that made the twenty-one without big money," among them the University as previously described, and on those among the rich and good which are named "not without much criticism," such as Stanford: "Stanford, a rich boy's school in red-tiled Spanish Mission, aspires too frankly, like Princeton, to the Athenian, but the weather is right." These, then, are the best universities, accord- ing to the customary list. "Most of the first twenty-one are too committed to conformism and the search for acceptability," Cort notes. NIEHUSS TAKES Into account factors like' those mentioned by Cort when rating schools. Michigan's "handsome, well-treed campus" has its antithesis in the surrounding of Columbia, whose laction is not "conducive to scholarly contemplation." The approach in terms of endowment is "not very valid" in itself, according to the vice- president, because of factors such as academic climate; composition of the student body and other resources. There is a more basic problem, which arises whenever a rating system is employed. Princeton, for example, "has excellent qual- ity, but is not quite as comprehensive" as the schools usually rated before it: Harvard, Yale, Berkeley. But Princeton, like Caltech or MIT, is as good as any other school in the fields in which it chooses to compete. The ratings thus are biased toward diverse institutions. [HATEVER the limitations of ratings, and of basing decisions on these ratings, thej University administrators continue to use them. A question well worth examining is whether the use of ratings and reliance on them is a factor in the conservative one can notice on the part of the administration and Regents. Maintain- ing a position on the rating ladder can become a goal in place of excellence. Is this in fact the case? Niehuss thinks not. The University comes out pretty well by any standard, he says. "Not as high as we'd like it to . . ." he adds. { r r ,.F., r? ° u ,7 o.- ai o ; _. +.. _ 1 .Y k< ' '.a 'y,,. ; ti 1.1 .,' ' r s f 1 "Cantabo domino in vita mea" where Richard Miller proved once again that his voice is as powerful, yet purely genuine as ever. There is no "cloudiness' that plagues so many tenors; there is nothing but a fine sound that makes everyone present glad to be there. In this number, the ensemble was per- haps best of all the selections, and the instrumentalists maintained a fine balance between solo and accompanimental sections. FLORIAN Mueller played the Telemann Concerto for Oboe and Harpsichord somewhat shakily. This may have been due to the fact that the continuo seemed to be overshadowing and anticipat- ing the tempi changes too much. A definite fluctuation within the movements themselves were quite obvious, and as music of the Ba- roque era calls for tempo changes only between movements, this was sometimes disturbing. The C.P.E. Bach Concerto in D as performed by Nelson Hauenstein was a charming piece and very well done. * * '. THE "Sonata da Chiesa" by Cardon Burnham was a decided change from the light quality of the preceding selections. How- ever, it was a pleasant change. This fellow teaches yocal music at Bowling Green and wrote the sonata, not for a trio but actually a quartet, utilizing a bassoon rather than the cello. The fact that it was not a trio was obvious, not only ,because there were four performers (plus page-turner) but also because of the integral part played by the cello. (Inci- dentally Harry Dunscombe is a very fine cellist, although some- times he over-continuoed even the continuo.) The piece as an entity held to- gether very well and was a de- lightful addition to an all-Baroque concert. Generally speaking, the pro- gram was nice. Richard Miller was a gas; what more is there to say? There are very few concerts from which the audience can go and say "It was great" and let it go. This was no exception. It was one of those from which I came and said, "It was great, but . .." -Karen McCann MATEY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEINESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1960 VOL LXX, NO. 106 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., March 18. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than March 8. Please submit nineteen copies of each comr munication. Correction: The Platform Attractions lecture by Hal Holbrook on "Mark Twain Tonight" is incorrectly listed for Feb. 27 on the University weekly calen- dar. This lecture has been postponed until April 12. General Undergraduate Scholarships: Undergraduate students may obtain an application for these scholarships by reporting to the Scholarship Office, 2011 Student Activities Bldg.Finan- cial need and an overall. academic av- erage of approximately B are basic re- quirements for applicants. Applica- tions must be returned by March 1. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society will have a board meeting at 5:00, Feb. 24, at the Student Activities Bldg. A 01i.- bert and Sullivan members invited. University of Michigan Non-Academ- lc Employees Local 1583, AFSCME, AFPI,- CIO, will hold a regular meeting on Thurs., Feb. 25 at 8:00 p.m. in Rm. C201 of the Ann Arbor High School. Mr. Howard Cottrell, Director of the Uni- versity Benefits Programs will present the University's retirement program to the local union. Special guest will be Mr. W. A. Earl, Asst. Personnel Director of the University. First Meeting of the Near East Club will be Thurs., Feb. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in W. Conference Rm., Rackham Bldg. Prof. John Muehl, English department will speak on "Interview With India." "Vienna and the Danube" travelogue tomorrow night. The Burton Holmes travelogue of beautiful Austria will be presented in Hill And. tomorrow, 8:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale today 2-4 p. and tomorrow 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m, (Continued on Page 5) - e I' # C'. 1G..: ... ' . ax I LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS: The Problems of Adjustment I By JOHN FISCHER Daily Staff Writer LATIN American students, de- spite charges that they are "millionaires," do encounter prob- lers adjusting to United States and University life. Among their major problems are adjustment to American language and social customs. These problems have been com- pounded by their difficulties in liv- ing with American roommates. In a survey taken at a meeting of the Venezuelan Students Association, the rstudents almost unanimously expressed a desire to live with stu- dents from the United States. However only a handful actually do so. Why? A report by Robert Klinger, counselor at the Inter- national Center gives a good indi- cation. 1 TlI2 INTERNA" L Center offers a housing listing service which matches international stu- dents with American roommates. However, despite the great ma- jority of American students on campus there are not enough Americans willing to room with an international student. Klinger estimates that the Cen- ter could handle a hundred more American applicants. For Latin Americans this has made it even more difficult to get a firm grasp of English and a full understanding of American cus- toms. One problem involves the dating customs of the American girl. In Latin America only girls with bad reputations date without a chaper- one. Hence when a Latin American dates a girl without a chaperone in the United States, because of his social background he tends to lose respect for her and tends to go too far. After being rebuffed the new- comer from Latin America is con- fused. Only until the "internal chaperone" of the United States girl-as one Latin American aptly put it-is explained to the new- comer will he begin to under- st..id. Mr. K's New Line NEW DELHI - Two things are clear enough to state flatly after Khrushchev's visit to India. The first is that he was received cooly by the Indian people and was unable to match or wipe out the impact of the Eisenhower visit. The second is that Russia is nevertheless a dangerous rival to American influence in India and is waging a tough economic and propa- ganda war here. When Khrushchev first came here with Bul- ganin in 1955 he came after the first summit conference at Geneva which failed to make peace but enabled Russia to turn its attention to the Middle East and Asia. His current trip comes before the second summit conference at Paris, which may or may not make peace. He got an impressive reception five years ago and enjoyed it, acting as salesman and show- man and ridiculing American aid. This time he seemed under wraps in his New Delhi speeches, perhaps out of pique at the public apathy toward him. But at Bhilai, the site of the Russian-built steel plant, and at Calcutta, where he scored a great mass triumph five years ago, he cut loose with his big propa- ganda guns. His burden was that the West with all its economic power never gave India aid until it grew frightened of communism, and that the aid now given under spur of this fear is only a new form of colonialism. Even now, he con- tinued, America hands out wheat and tinned meat to keep the Asians on a dole while Russia gives them factories to make them economical- ly independent. ONE KEEPS getting reassurances from In- dian friends that the Indian people are not so gullible as to be deceived by this. Perhaps not. Yet Americans here, in the euphoria of their self-congratulation because Khrushchev has had less success than he hoped and they feared. may easily ignore how clever this new propaganda line is. You have to remember how an idea which may be valid among top government people in Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER. Editor PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Eoil nieor CirtyEditor India can get simplified and distorted by the time it becomes a propaganda slogan. The Russians have an initial advantage because they foresaw that Indian planning would in- evitably put its stress on steel and heavy in- dustry, and they have put all their eggs in that basket. True, the Western visiting economists have backed up the Indian resolve to hasten their "takeoff" - the phase at which the developing economy can generate its own forward move- ment. YET I HAVE to report sadly that even high Indian circles tend to equate the heavy in- dustry emphasis with the thinking of "socialist countries." One official told me how impressed he was with the capacity of high Soviet visitors like Kozlov to discuss the technical aspects of heavy industry planning. I never heard any Indian say this about any member of President Eisenhower's entourage, for the adequate rea- son that Eisenhower had no one like Kozlov along. Yet the fact remains that while America is furnishing the most massive aid to India, it is the Russians who harvest the dividend of in- tellectual prestige. Several times recently I have had a question put to me somewhat as follows: We are grateful for the generous American aid in food and consumer goods, but do Americans fail to build steel plants here because they fear that India will develop its heavy industry and become economically in- dependent? I am certain that such questions are put sincerely. Yet behind the innocents who ask them you will find an active Communist who has set this train of thinking in motion. IT IS INTENDED to offset the sheer factual weight of American aid to India and the undoubted current American popularity in In- dia. The fact is that aside from food and grain shipments Americans have quietly helped res- cue India from a serious crisis of foreign ex- change and at the request of the Indian gov- ernment they have made heavy balance-of- payments aid available to it. But this is not very dramatic nor have either the Indians or the Americans known how to dramatize it. In the battle for propaganda advantage the Russians are using the Bhilai steel plant to the hilt, and th epoint is that all the talk in planning circles and in Nehru's speeches about he n eM hpavv industrv unwittincly mays BROKEN RECORD: Kingston Trio Sings A gainA gainA gainA gaint THE KINGSTON Trio faced another capacity crowd at Detroit's Ma- sonic Temple Sunday night after their last appearance there bare- ly five months ago. They spent the first portion of the program warming up and went on to give an energetic performance that kept the crowd's enthusiasm at a high pitch throughout the evening. The selections were mainly from their first three albums and a few of their singles. And they included just a smattering of numbers However too often this is ex- plained by another Latin Ameri- can who may not understand our social mores as well as an Ameri- can, and some of the misunder- standing persists. * * * HENCE a declaration in a recent Daily article that Latin Americans "do not take no for an answer" may be partially true. Another statement that Vene- zuelans make $350 a month is not substantiated by facts. A check in the fles at the International Cen- ter showednot one single Venezue- lan student received anything near this figure. Moreover, the files also show that in recent years no Latin American student has ever been arrested on a drunk and disorderly charge. Klinger added that the Venezuelans "are among the best behaved groups on campus." * * * BESIDES, there are no "million- aires" in evidence from South America. The Columbian psychol- ogy major who was interviewed in The Daily article said that in using the term "millionaires" when she was referring to non-scholar- ship Latin American students, she intended students from families which were wealthier than the South American average. She also explained that when she referred to psychology books, she meant to say that psychology books contained more difficult English sentences than some engi- neering textbooks which mainly are formulas, numbers and dia- grams. However two things to which she referred signified other prob- lems of adjustment which face most international students. One is their failure to partici- pate in extra-curricular activities. This failure arises not because "all they think about is getting home as soon as they can," but instead as a result of a heavy study load. International students must spend more time in studying than American students to make up their deficiencies in English, Klin- ger said. Despite this heavier load, how- ever, eight of thirty members present at a recent Venezuelan Students Association meeting (who were protesting The Daily article) said they actively participated in extra-curricular activities. * * * ANOTHER problem brought out is that most Latin American men lived in apartments. This seems to be true although almost half of the Venezuelans at the above meeting lived in organized hous- ing. Although there seems to be good evidence that Latin Americans have as high a propensity for hav- ing apartment parties as any other group, this does not appear to be their main reason for living in apartments. Klinger reported a difference of four years between the average ages of international students and American. The immaturity of the freshman in the residence halls will not help drive out the inter- from their latest album, "Here We Go Again." With the exception of these, "here we go again" sums up the entire performance. AGAIN we heard "Tom Dooley," "Coplas," "Weam Away," and so on - right down the sound track. They even used their sound track dialogue to introduce the numbers. Certainly it's worthwhile to see "La Boheme" on stage again and again even if one has heard the recording of it at home. But who particularly wants to see the Kingston Trio sing something as well worn as "MTA" at this late date? Their folk songs are admittedly commercialized but they thrive and survive on catchy, often hu- morous, adaptations of these songs. They are entertainers more than strictly folk singers, and they are not to be condemned for this. Where they are at fault, how- ever, is by not providing at Sun- day's performance, one of the basic elements that has so far kept them 'at large': an unmis- takable freshness of approach with every song they do, as well as presenting numerous unusual songs that have led many to in- quire of them, 'Where do you get your material?" in many cases, than the record- ings of them. But a stronger reason for the enthusiastic response was the vi- tality of the Trio personalities. * * * FROM THE onset the Trio es- tablished an atmosphere of in- formality and fun with their clownish antics and ad libbing. The mood caught on and the per- formance wound up with the audience joining in as the Trio sang "When the Saints Go March- ing In," (just as they concluded their previous performance at the Masonic, however.) The Kingston Trio's principle for personal appearances seems to be then, knock them dead by hav- ing a rollicking good time on stage with old numbers instead of knocking yourself out beforehand by perfecting the new ones. Apparently the Kingston Trio can get away with it. -Stephanie Roumell Tax Exempt r rHA'Tamusing primitive, Texas oil millionaire H. L. Hunt, who supported McCarthy and founded and dropped "Facts Forum," has a new baby. He's renortedly put- To The Editor 'Bicker' System . . To the Editor: IT IS extremely unfortunate that you dignified that Harvard boy's melodramatic essay ". .. dealing with the 'Bicker' system at Prince- ton for selection to eating clubs" by calling it an "article." It is unfortunate that you had to misrepresent in such a gross manner one of the nation's bet- ter universities. It is also unfor- tunate that you had to lower the standards of a reasonably good student newspaper. What you printed represents an extreme impression of a situation which no longer exists. I don't know whether this constitutes a deliberate lie, or unwitting mis- representation; but you should try to check facts before printing opinions. * * * TO SET the record a little straighter: Both the "one hundred per cent" system and Prospect Co- operative Club are deceased. The university is constructing a new quadrangle for those undergradu- ates who do not wish to enter the Bicker. From all reports, this will be a more-than-satisfactory al- ternative to the club system. At present Wilson Lodge provides eating and social facilities for up- perclassmen outside the clubs. Apparently it is prospering. Twenty-four of the faculty are members, according to the "Alum- ni Weekly." The eating clubs themselves have begun to recog- nize the desirability of giving more emphasis to the academic side of lif e. THESE changes are too com- plex to describe in an article, let alone this letter. May I close by saying that McNess' essay is about as relevant to the present situa- tion at Princeton as is Tender is the Night - and not quite as en- tertaining. Edward K. Dey, Grad. Amused . . point, even from his point of view. Does affiliation help us to learn the maze of university life, or would we perhaps learn this Just as well, affiliated or not? Cannot the non-affiliate acquire experi- ence in leadership? Does one not make 'friends in "sterile" dorms and "devastatingly narrow" apart- ments? NO ONE doubts what Mr. Seder says -- at least I don't - but he has shown no reason why affilia- tion is better than any other kind of university living. Has affilia- tion any unique advantage? If so, let him name it. If not, then let him cease belaboring the! obvious, and point out that affiliation is primarily social - is this so evil? Mr. Kozoll's refutation of affili- ation suffers as badly. He makes, for example, the suggestion that high marks do not mean high ability to think. So? What other criterion would one use? We hesi- tate to say that a beard, black sweater and guitar would suffice. What conclusions are we sup- posed to draw from such expres- sions as "a strong possibility .. . it is possible to conclude . . it may not . . . does not necessarily .. . quite likely . . ." and many other such expressions of mere logical possibility, which may or may not be substantiated in fact. We cannot use indiscriminate pos- sibility as justification, MR. KOZOLL did have one good argument, that the affiliate claim to tolerance is somewhat specious, since brothers and sis- ters are so carefully chosen with respect to how well they will fit in. But this is certainly not an edu- cational criticism. It would be a refreshing breath of clear air to have an impartial evaluation of affiliation based upon: _(1 what the affiliates do, not preach; (2) what their ad- vantages are, not claimed; (3) what is happening in fraternities, not what is possible only; (4) what is good and bad, based on cases and statistics, not so-called 1 4 I I