l 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 "There, Now, You'll be Sound as a Dollar-Though Not Quite as Important, of Course" 'hen Opinions Are Free Truth WiMlPrVail" AT HILL AUDITORIUM: Brilliance, Dullness Alternate in Concert THE SECOND concert of this year's May ,Festival must be described as interesting or at least worthwhile, but really quite dull. The explanation of this seeming conundrum is not nearly so abstruse as its expression is obtuse: the music on the program was rare so that one is glad to have heard it at least once. Some but not all of the program one will be glad to hear no more than once. There were two works for chorus and quaint orchestra from south of our borders. "Corrido del 'El Sol'" by Chavez should be dismissed from the repertoire. One hears of Chavez occasionally: he has a certain Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, MAY 7, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY DONER t Membership Committee: Pressure or Delay ? LIKE ANTS at a picnic, dire questions are creeping into the general jubilation among he supporters of the new Student Government ;ouncil policy on, discrimination in student irganizations. After at least two years of poradic efforts toward a replacement for the 9 ruling, students may well be proud of a egulation that provides for progress temper- d by equity. But the confidential nature of th3e Com-' nittee on Membership which will implement he new policy can also operate to delay pro- ress in, this sensitive area. Under the guise I moderation, rationality, or fairness, a com- nittee of this . kind could hinder action on iolations indefinitely, THAT SUCH an idea was no secret to the Council is revealed in the part of the mo- Lon that states, "The Council may at any lme require that the Committee report on a articular case." Rash action can also be hecked through the provision that a group rhich so desires may have the facts of its ase made public. How well the balance on the tightrope be- ween rash action and no action is maintained .epends upon the personnel selected for the ommittee. Since SGC will be directly appointing at east a majority of the board, four student nembers out of a total of seven persons on he group, it is a safe assumption that the ommittee on Membership will in some meas- ire reflect the prevailing attitudes on the !ouncil. Some people shudder at the idea that "conservative" Council would probably ap- oint a "conservative" board and so-called iberals would act similarly. This is probably an accurate estimation, with two qualifications. FIRST, that such a board would not be a bad idea in that it would reflect repre- sentative assembly. SGC represents the cam- pus temper both directly; by representing the voters, and indirectly, as a reflection of those who failed to vote. Its members can be as- sumed to reflect the concerned and vocal ele- ments of the student population. They can, in this sense, be considered fairly accurate judges of "what the traffic will bear" in the highly sensitive area of discrimination. S-ECONDLY, the Council has shown a tend- ency to appoint competent people to its semi-autonomous boards with minimum con- cern over how closely such people's views co- incided wtih those of the interviewing com- mittee on particular questions. In the most objective evaluation of merit, of course, the quality of "reasonableness"-one much to be desired in a member of the Committee on Membership-will be determined according to the interviewers' definition of "reasonable." These concepts will, in turn, be reflective of the interviewers' - and the Council's-general attitudes on the rate of progress that should govern the committee. S0, IN THE Committee on Membership, the University will have a reflection of a re- flection; a committee that reflects a repre- sentative government. Just how good a baro- meter of student opinion that government and that committee are depends both on their own competence in the area and upon the students who elect them-directly or indirectly. -JO HARDEE reputation which, though small, is ,I have heard. IN GLORIOUS contrast to this was Choros No. 10 by Villa-Lobos. How futile it is, really, to classify music geographically! It is the individual composer that counts. In this work we have again a few unusual rhythms and instruments, but they serve a purpose in a uni- fied whole. Nothing is superfluous. The orchestration is superb., Structurally the piece is not complicated. A few ideas, notably a descending motive which often appears in the brasses, are intro- duced and developed. A recapitu- lation leads through a sharp cli- max to the introduction of an ostinato figure in the woodwinds. Unfortunately last night's perfor- mance lacked dynamism in build- ing toward the tremendous climax which can be made 'of the ending. * * * THERE WERE two works for guitar and orchestra, an unusual combination. The program notes, in fact, made much of the diffi- culty of balancing the rather fragile solo instrument against the masses of the orchestra. This problem can be handled in an absurdly simple fashion: one dispenses with most' of the orchestra, tells the rest to play rather quietly, and writes many passages for only one or two in- struments. This result, however, in a chamber work, which hardly belongs in Hill Auditorium. One can, of course, make much or little of such an instrumental combination. Castelnuovo-Tedesco makes little. His Concerto for Guitar and Orchestra could at best be called charming. *.* * THE FANTASIA para un gen- tilhombre by Rodrigo is consider- ably better. There is much more imaginative use of the small or- chestra, some interesting har- monies, and a lovely fugue for two voicesofguitar and winds. The only trouble is that the work is too long for its material. With judicious cutting the work would be quite satisfying. Mr. Segovia's playing was beyond reproach. By far the best piece of music on the program was the Sym- phonie de psaumes of Strayinsky. Unfortunately the performance was inadequate. The orchestra was clear and precise, but the chorus was dull. The women's voices lacked brilliance. Further, th~e final section, clearly mharked in the score to be played at mm72, was taken at a tempo nearer to mm90. Pity. -J. Philip Benkard larger' than any works of his that AT THE CAMPUS: Cousin HAVING HAD my fill of the cute, darling movieuthat ollywood seems to turn out for the con- sumption of love-sick 13 year old girls, the thought of a movie called "Mating Time" and starring a per- son called "Wee Geordie" Travers slightly sickened me. But somehow the freshness and vitality of a movie made in a coun- try such as Scotland turns pos- sible triteness into intelligent en- tertainment. Plot - two first cousins, boy and girl, live on a small island off. Scotland till they become young adults. Suddenly the minister makes an impassioned sermon against consanguinity, and their, dreams are shattered. The two innocents then leave their island sanctity for the first time to find happiness outside the family-they don't. * * * BEFORE GOING to the main- land, the elders of the island warn "Wee Geordie" to look for a girl with good shoulders, hips and legs. (Good legs are needed for climb- ing up and down the mountains.) Also the ideal mate must not be Catholic, a Campbell Irish, Welsh, English or a, widow.' And; so with these membership restrictions, this one - man affiliated organization goes into the world. As life would have it, all pos- sible mates seem to be members of minority groups. * * * INTERSPERSED among "Wee Geordie" and the women of the mainland are befuddled, booby bobbies, who race around Scotland on their Scottish bikes attempting to capture the hero-they fail, too. Finally making his way back to the coast, he buys a boat and rows back to his island, interrupted only by two short, but unimportant episodes in which he obtains a Catholic, Campbell woman and a German Shepard dog. Following a short scene in which the islanders mistakenly believe one of his two companions, not the dog, is to be his future wife, the two cousins live happily ever after -with the dog, Be smart-beat the television reruns of Meg's marriage and see "Mating Time." -Kenneth McEldowney MEDICAL CARE PLAN: GOP Counters Forand Bill (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a two-part series discuss- ing election-year speculation on federal solutions to the high cost, of medical care for the aged. This article concerns the Republican al- ternate to the Forand Bill.)' By ANDREW HAWLEY Daily Staff Writer THE REPUBLICANS have coun- tered the Democrat-sponsored Forand medical care bill with a plan of their own. Sponsored by the administration and probably backed by several Republicans, this proposal was sent to the Ways and Means Committee Wednes- day. Under the new proposal partici- pants would receive benefits on health and medical expenses ex- ceeding $250 a year for individ- uals and $400 for a couple. Wel- Student Voters Encouraged i NCOURAGEMENT of student voter regis- tration now seems imminent after a rather zng delay. City Attorney Jacob Fahrner is attempting compile a simplified list of rulings and pro- edures concerning student registration for sting. The effort is not one to change exist- ig rulings and past precedents but to present iem in a clear and concise form, The rules will be of benefit to all qualified ersons interested in registering, but particu- rly to students whose past experiences have een confusing and discouraging. 'TUDENT Government Council's motion of April 6 calling for letters to be sent to the ity Council and the Board of Regents con- rning voter registration clarification was a imary factor in initiating the city attorney's tions. Their concern was with students who have complained in the past that they were not aware of registration procedures and that red-tape had discouraged them. Nancy Adams, SGC executive vice-president, noted that students had been discouraged by the city clerk's office and their eligibility was determined by personnel in the office with in- adequate experience and lack of complete knowledge of the various rulings affecting registration qualifications. These factors plus basic lack of information by the students has created the impression that University students are not eligible to vote. WHETHER students have been denied their rights in any sense is debatable, Their problems in registering, however, have been difficult, since many students who were not rejected by the city clerk's office were referred to Fahrner for individual investigation. Most of these cases resulted in refusal of registration privileges. The fact remains that students have been discouraged from voting registration. Fahrner's attempt to clarify and simplify the registration procedures and qualifications is an admirable effort. It has been long over- due and with national elections taking place this year it is especially important that the rulings be completed soon. The city attorney has said they will be fin- ished within two weeks. One can only hope so, remembering the continual fight in our society for suffrage for all, even students. --MICHAEL BURNS AS OTHERS SEE IT: Sit-In Protests Need Support A re You Cereus? T SEEMS that the mighty colossus of the East, Harvard University, even knows how o operate an Arb better than the University, Not only are their gates closed at sundown, ut also heavy patrols guard the area through- ut the night. No plastic coated milk shake ontainers, chewing gum wrappers, and ugly rown bottles stain the beauty of the fields of 3arvard's Arnold Arboretum. Men at Cambridge arise else you will never ee the glory of a night-blooming cereus. --MICHAEL OLINICK DELINE ON SGC: Surplus of Liberalism? (FDITOR'S NOTE: The following article is a letter received by the editors of the Harvard Crimson, who released it to University Press service.) To the Editors of the Crimson: HAVE just returned from a conference on the Southern sit- in movement sponsored by NSA in Washington and attended by many students who ar participat- ing in the sit-ins. It is my feeling that we have greatly misunder- stood this movement in the North and that a serious reevaluation is necessary. The thing that impressed me most about the movement was the lack of bitterness among the Ne- gro participants. Most of the stu- dents have an optimistic and cheerful spirit; there is relatively little resentment toward the South, and certainly none toward tre country as a whole. The move- ment is composed not simply of the radical fringe of the student body but rather the overwhelming majority of the Southern Negro students. These students are not interested in radically overthrow- ing the social structure of the South. They are not planning to isolate themselves in a life-long radical movement. They have no illusions about the South and they have no intention of creating a structure in which neither the White or the Negro can live in peace. THE TENOR of the whole move- ment is set by an emphasis on non-violence. This aspect of the movement was not once questioned by any of the delegates at the conference. For a few, non-vio- lence was a matter of strategy, but for the vast majority of the Southern Negro delegates, it was a religious principle. More im- portant, the emphasis upon reli- gion was especially noticeable among the non-professional lead- ership-those who hold offices in the student organizations on the Southern campuses and who lead the student bodies from which the movement gets its mass support. The religious principles of these leaders emphasize the doctrine of Christian love and urges the par- ticipants not to hate the South- ern Whites, not even those who threaten violence. These principles are reemphasized every Sunday in the chapels on Southern campuses hb nreachers who are themselves playing games. But those who think that this movement is radi- cal ought to ask the Algerian colon or the Tibetan Communist to characterize it. There is only one reason to advocate more mod- eration, and that is the desire to see segregation continue, this is not what the so-called moder- ates profess to believe. While the non-radical character of the sit-in movement is main- tained to a large extent by the religious affiliation, I think that it is also partially due to the re- sponse in the North. The sympa- thetic picketing of Northern stores, whatever its economic val- ue, has prevented the Southern Negro from feeling that he is cut off from the society as a whole. AT THE SAME TIME, the pro- vision of funds by Northern stu- dents has provided a kind of security for the Southern partici- pants; so long as the participants know that they will be able to pay their fines if they are arrested (and are free to make the choice as to whether to serve or not), that they will have funds for their defense if they are arrested, and that they will be able to at- tain Northern scholarships if they are expelled from college, the movement will not develop the sense of desperation that has characterized some of the African anti-colonial movements. The situation has progressed far enough and the Negro stu- dents have developed such a de- termination, however, that they will not stop even if these funds are cut off. It is therefore not really the movement itself which Northern action supports, but rather the character of that move- ment. * * * THUS THE NORTH does have an essential role to play in the sit-in movement. It must continue to encourage the Southern Ne- groes through sympathetic picket-. ing and through fund drives. More important, however, these actions must have broader support within Northern student bodies. The ma- jority of the sit-in participants are not especially sympathetic to the very liberal groups from which most of the Harvard support has come from up to now; they do not value this encouragement so much as the encouragement of the more fare recipients would not have to pay this minimum; it would be paid by the states. The program would pay 80 per cent of the costs of 180 days hos- pital care, a year of nursing home care and home care services, sur- gical procedure, laboratory and X-ray services, up to $200 physi- cians services, dental services, pre- scribed drugs up to $350, and a few others. Welfare" recipients would have all bills paid, * * * EACH NON-WELFARE partici- pant would pay $24 a year for the program. It would be open to all persons aged 65 and over who did not pay an income tax in the pre- ceding year and to taxpayers 65 and over whose adjusted gross in- come did not exceed $2,500 for an individual or $3800 for a couple. It would be administered by the states and financed jointly by the federal government and the states on a matching basis with an equalization formula ranging from thirty-three and a third to sixty- six and two-thirds per cent; the poorer states receiving a larger portion of federal aid. If a person'seincome rose above the eligibility figure his fee would be raised for each $500 of increase until it covered the full cost of benefits. EACH STATE would be allowed to decide if it wished to participate in the program. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Ar- thur Flemming, who outlined the bill to the Ways and Means Com- mittee, said the initial cost, in- cluding funds to help the states develop their plans, would be about five million dollars. Flemming said the annual cost once the program got going would be about $1.2 billion, based on the assumption that all states partici- pate and that 80 per cent of those who are eligible enroll. The states would be allowed to adlinister their plans through private con- cerns. * * * THIS PROGRAM has many ap- parent weak spots. First, three and a half million peopleover 65, those with incomes over the suggested minimum, would not be covered. Next, the plan would not be fi- nancially feasible unless most of the states and most of the people eligible enrolled. This coopera- tion cannot be assured. Next, everyone except welfare recipients would have to pay the first $250, and 20 per cent of ev- erything beyond that. A government survey has shown that the average medical expense for people over 65 is $177. Thus, most participants would have to pay their entire medical bills, as well as the $24 enrollment fee. TO CONCLUDE, this program appears to cover the needs of ex- actly the people neglected by the Forand Bill, and vice versa. The Forand Bill takes care of you if you have social security for the first 60 days in the hospital and under nursing care, no matter what, vn * m in1rnrmrai. I'S HARD TO criticize moralists, for if one does, they always cray insincerity. In fact, it usually impossible to criticize any act rele- ant to the moral question of integration in ae South, without getting questions as to basic .orality and ehicst. However, it is possible to believe in inte- ation and civil rights, and to do things bout these beliefs, without endorsing every 'oposal on the subject. Such a proposal that need not be supported the motion passed by Student Government Council at the suggestion of Roger Seasonwein and Al Haber for setting aside May 17-the sixth anniversary of the Supreme Court inte- gration decision-for "appropriate action" by student and local groups. As originally proposed the motion had cer- tain operative passages, later deleted to get it through the Council without a floor fight. As it was, the motion was somewhat meaningless, but its larger implications, for the Council, cannot be ignored. IT MEANS, if it is part of a trend, as it seems to be, that the Council is going to be spending a lot of time commenting on the world and national and other remote situa- tions. The Council would do better to set its sights on events of more local importance, looking at issues of the "outside world" only on occa- sion-when the issue has definite implications for the campus or when it is one of those burning immediate issues that every so often crosses the national scene. Commemorating the Supreme Court deci- sion is not one of these issues; the letter in support of Prof. Leo Koch is in the shadow AT THE MICHIGAN: Kendall, Ilrynner Run Throuh 'Once More' "ONCE MORE with Feeling" owes its success largely to the sophis- ticated clowning of co-star Kay Kendall, who shines like a jewel amidst the roughness of the plot. The story line is essentially non-complex-just another re-hash of tpe old boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-gets-girl-and-they-walk- off-together-into-the-sunset routine. IN DETAIL: temperamental symphony orchestra conductor Victor Fabian (Yul Brynner) has conducted the London Festival Symphony Orchestra, building it up almost from scratch into a fairly first-rate organization. All of his success off the podium has been due to the extraordinary charm and winning ways of his wife, Dolly (Miss Ken- dall). However, the inevitable happens-one night when she is out with doddering old fossils on the Board, spreading charm and secretive winks and leers like butter over the men who hold the money, her husband is auditioning a child prodigy. Unfortunately, though, the prodigy turns out to have Lolita-like tendencies and Dolly leaves in a huff, returning to "the 'simple life," teaching music in a country college. OF COURSE, the Board of Trustees will not accept Fabian and orchestra without Mrs. Fabian. Meanwhile, back at the campus, Dolly has fallen for a stolid physi- cist who wants to marry her. So, she returns to ask her "husband" for a divorce, but, in an effort to win her back to his menage, he brings .ynth ,ahe aent nnn, th, tevnevr aveben arrid-an Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor ILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER itorial Director City Editor M BENAGH ..,.. Sports Editor ;TER ZDAWSON............ Associate City Editor ARLES KOZOLL ......,......,. rsonnel Director AN KAATZa........ Magazine Editor RTON HT .WAITE ...Associate Editorial Director El) KAT . ........... ..:.; Associate Sports Editor VE LYON ................ Associate Sports Editor IHARDEE ....., ........ Contributing Editor