egAtr igal tDt 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 hen Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevan" EAST GERMANY: Students' Minds In Straight Jackets (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the first of a two-part series of articles discussing the state of education in East Germany.) By BARBARA BERG (from the Antioch College Record's "University Series") "WE MUST SAY it quite clearly that all those students who are not loyally and unconditionally devoted to the cause of the socialistic construction in the German Democratic Republic, must no longer have the right to study at our universities and colleges." Dr. Girnus, State Secretary for Higher Education, thus admitted that political reliability is more important than academic standing. This was in May, 1957, when the ban on travel to NATO Germany, was Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, MARCH 2, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS KABAKER Some but Not Enough From the City Council TrrY COUNCIL accepted a Human Relations Commission report Monday night involving alleged racial discrimination in the Cousins Shop. Their action allays somewhat the suspi- cion that the present Council has been strange- ly cautious concerning human relations prob- lems. But it doest not fully allay the doubt. The suspicion has been provoked by two sit- uations: first, the Council's apparent reluctance (for six weeks) to make the Commission's re- port part of the city's privileged proceedings, which would allow local papers to print the name of the store concerned; second, the Coun- sil's failure to officially consider a report on liscrimination in Ann Arbor housing made by the Commission in March, 1959. T'HE FIRST situation was cleared Monday night when the Council made the report on the Cousins Shop part of official proceedings. [ts suspected "reticence" was explained as a series of reasonable procedural delays. To cite an example, the Council requested a supple- mental report of a phone conversation between Mrs. Cousins and the chairman of the Com- mission. The second matter, the 1959 report on hous- ing, still has not been brought up before the Council, and probably will not be brought up in the very near future, at least not until the April elections have passed. The report pre-' sented evidence of discriminatory practices in housing and advocated legislation be passed against such practices, although making no specific recommendations. A COUNCIL committee, headed by A. Nelson Dingle, has reportedly held four meetings on the housing report since itwas filed 12 months ago. But the Commission has not heard the Council's feelings about the report. Some have suggested that the committee and the Council are "sitting on" the report inten- tionally. Continued delay here would not only increase the feeling that Council is too sluggish in the area of discrimination, but it will also curtail the Commission's activity in housing problems. This is unfortunate since housing is a particu- larly sensitive problem, requiring constant attention from city administrative units. If the Council is actually sincere in wishing to make progress in the area of human rela- tions, simple acceptance of the Commission's report, as was the case Monday night, will not be enough. The Council should show greater moral concern regarding the housing report- and soon. -THOMAS HAYDEN JOINTJ shown go tem for pri the driving The new vides thate lation will choice of p Lation or a Judic. This allo riot guiltyo circumstanc their cases perfectly av to waste t hearing. This pro from conti the almost- MAX LI NDE oddyssey possibly pro for the sim always mor you meet in But thet rites the La the nature neighbor, e asking the States. is a I doubt Communist stage any it Journey of problem be demonstrat and Mikoya of Russian swarming a joint Judie: A Step Forward DICIARY COUNCIL has certainly been held when the load of traffic cases was ood sense in instituting its new sys- great. ocessing first-offense violations of HE NEW SYSTEM, should not affect the regulations. possibility of a student's receiving justice at system, still on a trial basis, pro- the Council's hands, for if he feels that he is each student accused of a first vio- not guilty of the offense, he may have a hear- be sent a letter giving him the ing before Joint Judie just as he would have aying the fine specified for the vio- under the old system. of having a hearing before Joint Nor should it affect the ability of the Council to act as a "peer-counselor," for only those .ne tstudents who are perfectly aware of what their ws students who feel that they are violation is and who agree to their guilt will or who feel there were extenuating pay their fines without a hearing. This means ces surrounding the case to have that those who need "peer counseling" will still heard; but keeps student who are receive it during the hearing on their case. ware of their violation from having And those for whom conviction would be a heir time attending a Joint Judic second offense or more, which may indicate that they should be "counseled," will still be cess should also save the Council dealt with just as they were under the old nual "coolie labor" and may prevent system. daily meetings that have previously --ROBERT FARRELL ERNER: Ike and the AlbatrOss LHI-The current Latin-American afterward, much as they lived with the Car- y of President Eisenhower cannot denas regime. ove as successful as his Asian trip, But Castro's self-image will not allow it. uple reason that your neighbor is In his ignorance of economics he has piled up re suspicious of you than someone problems which cannot be solved by revolu- n a distant exotic city. tionary slogans or decrees. As his headaches in trip was a good idea because it in- Cuba have increased he has enlarged his revo- atin-American countries to appraise lutionary field of action to include all of Latin and intent of their big Northern America. For this he requires an enemy symbol. xactly when a Caribbean leader is He once had Batista. Now he has made the world to believe that the United United States the enemy symbol, and has tried wicked imperialist ogre. to spread it as such from Mexico to Venezuela whether even the doughtiest pro- and Argentina. While the United States is his s along Eisenhower's route will dare enemy symbol, his real targets are the demo- ncidents as they did on that hapless cratic regimes of Latin America under hard- Vice-President Nixon. The thorny working realistic leaders who may condemn the setting Ike is not that of street United States'for particular blunders and illib- Ions, but what to do about Castro eralisms but accept the fact of its power. Castro n in an embrazza, and the prospect does not. a jet-bombers and "technicians" ver Cuba in a sugar-arms deal. HJE IS A MAN of strong passions, which lead him to gestures rather than judgment. In LY no American can be proud of his gesture of embracing the Deputy Prime llar diplomacy" phase of the history Minister of the Soviet Union, and striking an n policy. But what is past is past. economy-military deal with him, his strategy was over by the time of the New was obvious. If the United States cracks down was succeeded by Roosevelt's "Good and cuts the sugar quota, he will depict it as a policy, and that in turn by the reactionary imperialist bully. If the United n of American States. States stays calm and does nothing, he will ch is clear enough. Yet in dealing depict himself as the man who defied the American the United States in the Colossus of the North and got away with it. has never been able quite to decide The course for United States policy is clear- about the vestpocket Caesars and not to be trapped into making a martyr of ts who have seized porer and hold Castro, but to let his people decide what they guile and force. It has alternated think of a leader who brings Russian power ie policy of treating the tyrants into the Caribbean to redress a real or fancied nd that of handling the rotten grievance about the United States. The fact he real indictment of United States that Mikoyan had to be kept almost in hiding ot that it has been imperialist but during his visit is a sign of the lack of popular not been a policy. Cuban enthusiasm for a Communist alliance. If yesterday Castro was almost defied, to- E of Batista and Castro is an illus- morrow he may be defied-but that is some- The United States held on to thing to be settled between himself and his ger than the Castro partisans would people. d, but it was a half-hearted support t Castro today pretends or prefers THERE MUST however be an end to the end- iow much support he got from the 1 less American innocence and romanticism he United States. about revolutionaries who replace an old ty- a strong sentimental attachment ranny with a new one, who place cruel burdens Americans have toward any dra- on their people, and who hold no means too lutionary movement. As for Cuba, ruthless to achieve their grandiose dreams. Like be people of the United States any other fact of political life a revolution Castro before he won power, and must be judged by the vision it embodies in imposed on students - the first travel restriction since June 1953. Reports made by The Research and Information Commission of the International Student Confer- ence during 1955-56 and continu- ously supplemented since that time indicate both tightening of power and increasing ideological opposition. They have received little comment from the east G e r m a n Youth Organization. This is not surprising, since these reports have consisted mainly of quotations from East German authorities themselves. ALTHOUGH open resistance has not been displayed since the Berlin riots of 1953, the number of students who actually accept Commnism is estimated at no more than 20 or 30 per cent. It has become impossible to distin- gish between real loyalty and mere conformity, which is the easiest way to avoid pressure. Most students develop a sort of "schizophrenic" personality as a result of complete detachment of their personal lives from their political lives. Those who less suc- cessfully hide their animosity are shifted from university to univer- sity in an attempt to destroy op- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Today at 4:10 p.m. the Dept. of Speech will resume its Laboratory Play- bill series with a performance of Maur- ice Maeterlinck's "The Intruder." The performance will be given in the Arena theatre, Frieze Bldg. Ushering: Sign-up sheets for people who wish to usher for the next Dept. of Speech Playbill production are on the bulletin board outside Rm. 1502, Frieze Bldg. Lectures Lecture in journalism Thur., March S at 3 p.m. in Rackham amphitheatre. Speaker will be John Scott, special assistant to the publisher of Time mag- azine, on "Russia Revisited". Lecture: Dr. Hewson Swift, Prof. of Zoology, University of Chicago, will speak on "Nucleic Acid and Cell Mor- phology" on Thurs.. Mar. 3 at 4 p.m.. In the third level amphitheatre, Medical Science Bldg. Lecture: Dr. Torbjorn Caspersson, Director of the Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, will speak on "Nuceo-ctoplasmic Relationships in Cell Function and Growth," on Fri., March 4 at 4 p.m. in the third level amphitheater, Medical Science Bldg. Sigma Xi Lecture: Dr. William N. Hubbard, Jr., Dean of the Medical school will speak on "Medical Educa- tion - For What?" on Wed, March 9 at 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater, Academic Notices Psychology Colloquium: Dr. Stephen S. Fox will speak on "Sensory Depri- vation and Maintaining Sensory Input in the donkey.- on Fri., March 4 at 4:15 p.m. in Audd. B. (Continued on Page 5) position groups. Student bodies are. infiltrated and student mail opened. The Socialist United Party (SED) is gradually securing firm control over East German univer- sities and colleges. These univer- sities do not suffer from lack of official recruitment policy; regu- lations concerning admission, ef- fective since February 1958, have been laid down by the State Sec- retariat for Higher Education. Admission to a university or col- lege requires a party-loyalty at- titude, activity in mass organi- zations such as the FDJ (Freie Deutsche Jungend-Free German Youth), and willingness to under- go military training. AT THE THIRD Conference on Higher Education of the SED, which took place in Berlin in early 1958, the central power of the State Secretariat was empha- sized. An official publication, Das Hochschulwesen, said: "Universities and colleges train the future intelligentsia to be- come supporters of the develop- ment of socialism in the German Democratic Republic. University and college graduates will fill re- sponsible posts in industry, in gov- ernment and in the political and cultural life of our Workers' and Peasants' State. "Therefore, the permission to study at a university or college must be considered a high dis- tinction and a reward for the prospective student's model be- havior while doing political and professional work in industry, in the armed units, or school." * * * AN INTERESTING develop- ment in admissions requirements is an enforced year in industry. This idea, first announced in May 1951, was incorporated into legis- lation in October of that year by the State Secretariat. ". . . any future admissions to university studies will be obligatorially de- pendent on the applicant's having worked in a socialist enterprise, either, industrial or agricultural . .. By 1960 our programme will be fully implemented and only those students who have done their practical year will be en- rolled at our universities. "The main purpose of this practical year is not to familiar- ize the high-school graduate with the technical details of the pro- duction process. It is to instigate the student to establish close ties with the workers' class and the entire process of socialistic pro- duction. "For example, it will do no harm to a student of German lan- guage and literature to learn how to handle dung on a people's- owned farm. On the contrary, it will help him later on during his professional study to come to un- derstand much better the import- ance of the farmer for the entire field of literature." "YOU BEGIN with a musical image-a rhythmic pattern, a curve, or some group of sounds with a persistence of their own. The nature of the image and the quality of its persistence imply a musical form and precipitate de- velopment toward that form." This is one of the few ideas which several of a group of young composers-in search of an audi- ence-,seem to share. These six, David M. Schwartz, Melvin Kan- gas, Ed Coleman, 'Robert Ashley, Gregory Kosteck, and Roger Rey- nolds, all students of composi- tion, are preparing works for Com- poser's Forum, which is scheduled for Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Sunday, March 6, at 8:30 p.m. Composers' Forum is an occa- sional presentation sponsored by the School of Music, designed to allow young composers to have their works performed. The Uni- versity community, blessed with indigenous and imported musical offerings, from the most delicate- ly intimate chamber literature to the largest choral and symphonic works, is not particularly attuned much to contemporary music. * * * CONTEWPORARY music cannot be defined by the traditional vo- cabulary of music. The audience should try to accept contemporary music on the composers terms, which reflect the musical spirit of our times. The greater the lag in understanding between composer and audience, the more difficult it becomes for the composer to write at all." (Ed Coleman). To help close this gap in ex- perience and hence understand- ing is the raison d'etre of Com- posers' Forum. Two faculty com- -Daily-Michael Rontat A rehearsal of the Composers Forum takes place. The Forum offers University students the opportunity to have their works performed to the public. COMPOSERS' FORUM: "Iegin with a Musical Image To The Editfor_. . Letters to the Editor must be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Students as Citizens.. . To the Editor: WONDER if anyone can explain why (logically) Ann Arbor can count students as citizens for pur- poses fo tax rebates and practical- ly refuse ,them most other civi- lized considerations? I can, of course, guess why but maybe someone can come up with an answer that doesn't raise my blood pressure so severely. I, for one, will resist cooperation with this census though I'm sure the city's retaliation will be severe. Name Withheld by Request Activities . To the Editor: r E PROBLEMS faced by the many student organizations were quite well analyzed by Caro- line Dow, in her editorial of Feb- ruary 28. As a freshman, she ap- parently has seen enough of cam- pus activity to realize what is happening, however, her explana- tion of the current situation is "Ain't It Terrible About Those Sit-Downs?" lacking an honest appraisal which is truly needed. My personal experience with The Michigan Daily has not only given a basis for a clearer inter- pretation, but has brought me in contact with many organization representatives over the past three years. The problem is clearly stat- ed: there are not enough workers willing to put in the required time to effectively carry out the aspects of the many organizations. a . * * THE REASONS for this plight, however, are not as obvious as Miss Dow makes out. To say that the students interested in extra- curricular games are busier now than they were three years ago, and for this reason are running to the books to study is not so. The truth, I feel, is that there is not the great need for such di- verse undertakings which tax the student B.M.O.C.'s to their limits. The various organizations get bogged down with a profusion of committees, sub-committees, and paper work, that might rival any governmental bureaucracy. A basic change is required in the outlook of our clubs. Giving new "organization men," greater responsibilityand less window dressing, while cutting back on the great variety of interests in which they are apt to lose inter- est, furnishes a partial answer to the personnel problem. * * * TO ACCOMPANY this well de- served re-evaluation of organiza- tion functions, there is needed an emphasis on the values of "play- ing" at Campus Leader. The val- ues are real, intangible, and grossly overlooked by both leader and follower-to-be. The well rounded education (we are told) goes beyond the UGL coffee Lounge, Angell Hall, and Hill Aud- itorium. Many of the most valuable hours a person can spend on this campus lie in doing something a slight bit more than the three popular retreats, just noted, are able to offer. It is doubtful that there is an active seniorin any of the organ- izations here operating, that would not substantiate the truth of this point. Of course time is required, and even some creative thinking (if that is not demand- ing too much,) might be expected, but the wealth of possibilities so many students write off as Mickey Mouse, is incredible. THE PRACTICAL gains, and many less obvious benefits which exist, should be incentive enough for many "apathetic students" (excuse the stigma attached to this word, but the truth should be so painted) to get out and do something' worthy of their tal- posers, Professors Leslie Basset and Roberta Gerhard, will be pres- ent at Composers' Forum to lead and invite discussion of the works, all of which will be receiving their premier performances. "The twelve-tone technique is a natural evolution from the highly chromatic music of the late Nine- music, the basic tone row con teenth century. In twelve-tone veys no more information than the C-Major scale conveys about Beet- hoven's First Symphony." (Ed Coleman). AMONG the works programmed for Sunday night's forum will be a complete string quartet in three movements by Roger Reynolds. This quartet will be performed by Lloyd Brackman, first violin; Virginia Stumm, second violin; Elizabeth Lichty, viola and Marge Ramsey, cello. The Reynolds quartet is based on a kind of rhythmic pulse; it does not utilize the twelve tone technique. Growing from a basic musical image, the total form of the quartet is related to the in- ternal thematic development. Also scheduled for performance is Melvin Kanga's quartet for clarinet, viola, cello, and double bass. The work is made offour short movements which the com- poser has described as a personal kind of phantasy. Another work, a piano sonata, will be performed by its com- poser, Robert Ashley. * 9 * "ON VERY rare occasions a whole work comes by inspiration and can be written down in a very short time. Most of the time you start with an inspired idea, and developing it is hard work, often drudgery." (Melvin Kangas). "For one studies composition in much the same way that one stu- dies an instrument. You take a lesson every week, during which you present newly-composed ma- terial as well as return revised work to the instructor. The in- structor tries to point out weak spots and attempts to lead the student to new solutions for the problems he encounters." (Prof. Bassett). COMPOSERS' FORUM provides a concentration of new experi- ences. For the composer, it is a matter of hearing his work per- formed for the first time, and in circumstances for which he wrote it. He is able, further, to guide the performers in their interpre- tation of his work. For the exe- cutant, Composers' Forum is an opportunity to premier a work that is challenging, contemporary and unhackneyed by the tradi- tion that repeated performances of any work inevitably accumulates. For members of the audience, Composers' Forum provides the rare experience of witnessing and, in the question-and-answer period, of participating in the working out of the creative process. "The contemporary composer is not restricted in that he doesn't he must compose. While this fr have prescribed molds within which he must compose. While this frees the composer in one sense, it also makes for a con- stant concern and problem in composition. A work Writes itself, depending on how clever the com- poser is, or on how pregnant is his idea." (Roger Reynolds). Charlotte Davis COMPOSERS' FORUM PROGRAM MELVIN KANGAS Quartet for Clarinet, Viola, Cello and Bass Performed by: Rolf Legband, clarinet Elizabeth Lichty, viola Donald Tracy, cello su Malone, double bass EDWIN COLEMAN String Quartet Performed by: The School of Mu- sic Scholarship Quartet Lloyd Blackman, violin Virginia Stumm, violin Elizabeth Lichty, viola Marjorie Ramsey, cello I BVIOUS the "do America AIs phase al, andv ighbor" ganizatio This mu( th Latin st decade iat to do tty tyran to it by tween th iderly a ughly. TI licy is n( at it has 'HE CAS tration. tista lou ve wishes best. Ye forget h ople of tl Ihere Is at many tic revo ist of t ted for " .a £