THE DAILY TAR HEEL WE FACE TWO WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1959 1 SP Meeting At lr.ixt hom tin- eyes ed one ;.; 1 e lie hlc .nul liotii the actions ol several nieinhcrs. I ho Student Paity me e t in.; Monday niht was a e nliiin:4 .ill.iii when it raine to endoise iiKfil nl e .indiel.ite s loi the oilier ol editor of I hr D.iiK I n Heel. One andid.'.e, in a campaign statement app atiii'4 on pae 1 . e Ii.ip.; e el that he and his oppmunt were not allowed to present their view on The Daily Tar Heel. This state ment U nnttne. At no time was either can didate piohihited fiotn speakim; in any dis union. Indeed, either candidate cotild have piohddv ptesented the hill tel ol their re sp (tie sHhes .it either the discussion as to whether to endorse or not or alter the diM usien in older to press the issue of re- oiiMdetation. It is no donht that the speech either e .mdid.itc minht have ;icn at this time would have fallen on deal ears in a snnnwli.it hostile i-udicnec. lint the oppor liniiiv was theie. I he statement that patlv metnhets had no lidit to eall "incompetent" is somewhat valid. One of the piinury teasons that the putv voieel not to endorse was that the hi paitiv'i selection hoaid had not met and that the competence of either candidate had not been judged. Ilowcvei. a one proponent ol endorse ment jMiiimd Mit. the pnhlie has had ade- pi.nc lime to see these candidates and in visrraie their capabilities . :id baekronnds. Ihiis. ii is clear that tin- comments were well within the tights ol the party, although b.r those who illicit cveiiiu.illv want to end-use aiiothei candidate or anv ol these can didates, the iciniiks. in laiiness. miln have waitctl until the endorsement meeting. Ii ii i.i b- jMiintcil out that some of those who spotisoicd the- motion not to endorse did so on the dual basis that thev felt the- paity had no ipialilicd alternative below them and that ; lot her candidate-. Norman l. Smith, intended to i ti ii lor editor. This is also a mis tale. Xoiman Smith, in a signed statement re leased vesteiclav to I he Daily Tar Heel, said "I will under no c ire unistaiu es be a candi date loi the cditotship of The Daily I at I Ic e 1 this spi in.;." 1 hose who would not believe his vetbal staumcui should be .idvised bv this declara tion. In the meantime, the Student l'.nty has piovided time lor : candidates to speak on Nl.mli . Uv tl" tin' iirpaitisan selec tion tM:ul will have met, and all candidates who iii.m run will be in the race. That even ing theie w ill be a minimum of two .speec lies which, il the Student Paity continues its past stand.nds of laiiness. will be heard by all members with opportunity given to all lo rec c ive an endorsement. Telephones 'I lie telephone system in Chapel Hill se c uis to avetae ;t least one foul up a clay in The Daily Tar Heel oflire which has in total onl two phones. No doubt the situa tion is as bad in other aieas. One es student repotted that it took her appiovimate Iv te n minutes to net an inform ation oper.'or. and that a I0114 distance op c i.itor in Rah was put to extreme trouble living to teach a patty in the Chapel Hill e ommiuiitv . II the state (the I'tiiveisiiy) cannot run the svstctu lii-lit. then it had better sell it to jKople who can. State ownership of phones is epiestionable to bein with, and ownership that does not pi oxide ; 'lecpiately for the eeimmunitv is intolerable. The editor would be willing to bet that if the Tniversity would sell the telephone svstem, it would realie enou di mone y to build almost all of a new student union, something that illicit leiti iii.itelv be coiisideucl a I'nivetsity enter pl ise-. )t nil) to $ecl The officii! itudcal publication of the Publication B.rd uf the University of North Carolina, where ii Ii published daily except Monday anJ rumination perlodi and aummer terra. Entered as second clat matter In ihe rrf.t office in Chapel SI ill N- C, under the act of March 8 1870. Subscription rates: $4 50 per se mester, $8 30 p The Dally Tar Heel Is printed by the News Inc.. Carrboro, N. C Editor Managing Editor Business Manager Sports Editor CURTIS CANS CHUCK FLINNEB STAN FISHER walker blanton 7 rustyTi am mond Business Jonathan Yardlcy (Continued fremt Yesterday) Does the Business major feel he is thinking "for himself" and be ins encouraged to le:irn more than a trade while in college? Many do not. Many are leaving the de partment, some because they can not do the difficult work and it is difficult), others because they feel that they and their parents are being cheated. Four years is a big cut out of one's life, they think, and maybe they should be getting more than a careful sample of the many ideas and particles of knowledge being tossed around outside the School of Business Ad ministration. The students cannot complain 0! the departmental leadership - they may, like students in every school of every university in the coun try, complain about individual in struct, but all seem to realize that both the Business and Econ omics Departments are being led by men of extra-ordinary percep tion, honesty, and intelligence. Maurice I.ee in the School of Bus iness Administration is an open man who is ready and anxious to talk about his woik. quick to de fend and criticise. He knows the failings of Business School through out the nation and is outspoken in his advocacy of change. His re cent booklet, "Redesigning the Products of the Business School," is testimony to this. Paul Guthrie in the Deparrmeni of Economics is equally honest and outspoken and is nationally known for his competence. These are good strong men, yet their aims are being thwarted by elements within the very nature ol their field over which they have no control. Business Schools belong in Uni versities but not in Colleges - the University is supposed to be a large foundation within which knowledge at an extensive level may be procured in many subjects; the college is in reality a glori lied high school in which the stu Oent begins to take definite steps toward specialization but is still broadening the foundation of his education which will further his aim of becoming a cultured man. When the Business Schools entered the universities on the college level they brought with them people who were not interest ed in be coming "cultured" - they brought potential technicians, men who at the age of nineteen were ready to forget all aspects of man's experi ence except tho.se involved in some way with the fine art of money changing. These are young men who do not care what Shakespeare wrote, what Jonson thought, why Napoleon lived, who Plato was. For they do not recognize the great contributions these men made to the developement of world culture; they are only concerned with the value of a dollar and the greater value of a thousand. What all of this is leading to is the fact that a business school is essentially a trade school. Like mechanics' schools and radio re pair schools, it deals with a deci sive facet 01 modern life which mast be studied in detail and with out particular attention to other aspects of contemporary and his torical culture. How, therefore, can any school of business adminis tration resolve itself logically to the rest of the campus of a uni versity supposedly devoted to the meting out of culture? This is dif ficult, perhaps impossible. And in stead of attempting to resolve themselves to the campuses upon which they are situated, the maj ority of the nation's university-lo cated business schools have taken 1, different tack: they become the dominating element on the cam pus. It is very difficult for anyone outside the Business School on the campus of the University of North Carolina to feel empathy for eith er the people or the aims of the Business School. The attitude they take is. in part, correct, but is also provincial and narrow-m i n d e d. Basically, they feel that the B. A. School is a conglomeration of Phil istine, manned bul automatons and attended by ignorami. Some of the people in the school itself agree - a few students have been heard to describe their fellow Business majors as "clods." These stand points, however, are not valid. The people who run the Business Schools and its instructors, are high ly compel ent men. Contrary to popular opinion, they are not men who could not make a success in business. They are interested, in telligent men. Some of the stu dents are smart, some intellectual ly volatile and inquistive. but the majority, while not "clods," seem to have one definite failing for a good student: they are not inter ested in anything except making money, and money is their God. This is the crux of the entire problem presented by the Business School on the American campus. There is a lack of concern for the arts, the sciences, history, an 1 the manifold and various achieve ments of man throughout his'ory. Because of this attitude, the Busi ness Schools produce an end re sult which is rather alarming. The important thing to realize is that the School itself is not completely responsible. To be sure, it has made definite steps toward furth er limiting the scope of the stu dent, by giving him a severe and heavy schedule in business and economics, by i.seilating him intel lectually from the rest of the cam pus, and by rivstricting his intel lectual contacts. But the fault real ly lies with the student. He is a young man who is going to col lege to get a college degree but who does not want a college edu cation. He realizes the value of the college degree in contempor ary society, and is very anxious to bo nbte to capitalize upon its worth. Bat the degree he is getting does not represent college work and achievement - it is a trade school degree, a symbol of the fact that he has learned a great deal about the world of business and very little about the rest of the world. A very interesting thing of note :.hout the Business Schools is the kind of businesman they seem to be aiming to turn out. The boys in the Business School at Carolina are not being trained to be clerks. Certified Public Accountants, what one student described as "the in tellectual janitors of the business world." The same student said that he felt that the training he was receiving was going to give him nothing more than maybe ten thou sand a year at the most - not much for a man of ambition. The point is, however, that these are not men of ambition. The most outstanding .single factor driving college sophomores to Business de grees is the most important fac tor in American life today - the security drive. These are not boys who want to make a million, not products of the Horatio Alger myth or followers of Andrew Car negie. These are boys who are scared stiff of not being able to And B. A. Schools "December, January, February, Marcli, April, May Here I Come, Readv Or Not" 1 1 1311 I Ml M I lkl Ml lind a job when they get out of college, boys who want to marry that sweetheart back home or the cute little coed and have two and a half children and live in Levit town with a black cocker spaniel nipping unpleasantly at the heels of the postman and sit at home at night in their undershirts and watch the fights or Ed Sullivan. Are they this bad? Not all of them, to be sure, but enough so that the School of Business Administra tion comes to represent not highly vaunt ed business ethics nor a mul timillion dollar future, but con summate mediocrity. These are the students, and that is the? school, and this is'hat they will be. It could very well, be that we are all waiting for another man to come and overturn the tables of the moneychangers! Big Business In 1924 the usually laconic Cal vin Collidge made an extremely accurate statement about the coun try of which he was President: "The business of America is busi ness." The truth of tnis cannot be denied, and the changing mean ing of the statement is as impor tant as the superficial meaning of the fact. We have always thought of America as a Capitalistic state, and with that expression comes certain definite implications: to us, capitalism represents one man monopolies, large concerns headed by one despotic old man who gives generously to worthy causes and makes great sacrifices to main tain good will with the rest of the nation. This is no longer the case; now America is a Business, of Corporation, state. While Capitalism implies to the average person a large one man monopoly, Business and Corpora tion imply organizations working with large staffs of little men who form an entity when operating to gether. "Togetherness" is the key word of the Business Society, and f K V . .JL 1 . U- V- VT v V r Il i r 9 1 1 rt 5 Advertliin Manager FUED KATZ1N i 0 I L V tv-f i 1 i nam. . i. ' i n-J only one thing, and it i s; to -v' emphasises Ins net v , --v7 1 tion to American cu .. ..v.;.. ... .... ...: v A - tetdt 1 . .... -v - ' - " J - 1 - Tn it A ' 1 v ;..: : . f ",. fin Kififniiin' Newt Editor ANNE FRYE THE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL it is this kind of business that is the business of America. Loring Mandel's Arthur Hennicut was the Chairman of the Board of a Cor poration, and all the other char acters were involved with the cor poration. These are the new Amer icans, and they represent the new America. The Corporation does .very fun ny things to men; some of them, little but willful, rise to the top be cause they are capable of working with others; some of them fall because, although strong, they are unwilling to sacrifice their indivi dualism to the group. Everything is done in groups, and consequent ly little individual credit is given. The boss praises not individuals but committees and branches and cliques. "Each man for himself' is passe; "each man for the group" is predominant. The dis turbing thing is that no one in the organization seems to care. Each member seems willing to be little, willing to let group desires and welfare over-ride h i s personal wishes and preferences. If this "individual" does not want fame or wealth or success, what docs he want? Who is he? "The Organization Man" wants only one thing: it is basic, it is very important, yet it is the yearn ing of LITTLE men - he wants security. He wants the afore-mentioned bourgeouis virtues. The old virtues held sacred by the Protes tant Ethic - success, material wealth, a place in the community are no longer meaningful to him. In more ways than one, he is a scared little man. Afraid of the omni-present threat of war and in ternational annihilation, he is con cerned with only one thing - sur vival. What he fails to understand is that survival is easily obtained in the twentieth century, and that ii we are going to war we are going to war and since there is little he can do about it the best thing he can do is forget it. He is fooling himself into thinking that the Corporation will at once main tain his individuality and offer him a refuge. The one thing that the Corpora tion will not do for him is help to maintain his individuality. He finds, if he is enough of a soul searcher to realize the fact, that he is actually heart and soul a part of the Corporation. He is a possessed man, a man who has forced himself to be enslaved be cause of his personal fears and doubts. His mind is involved with is this that jative contribu- Iture - the only thing with which he is concerned is the business and the money it brings him. It is the part of life with which he is not concerned which must necessarily bother us, and this is what we must examine. A few Corporations have made more than token el forts to be of use in furthering culture in Amer ica. Some through advertising, some through scholarship pro grams, some through endowments, some through intelligent sponsor ship of worthwhile television and Notes In Review Arthur Lessing In the last concert of the Chapel Hill Concert Series, the English pianist Louis Kentner presented a recital that contained many flashes of beautiful piano playing, but little in the way of consistent and thorough interpretation. Whether these flashes justified an entire evening of listening is ultimate ly up to the individuals that attended the concert for this reviewer they did not. Mr. Kentner opened his program with two of the very difficult interpretative works for the piano, Mo zart's Fantasia in C Minor, K. 475 and Beethoven E Major Sonata, Opus 109. The first work is curi ously unMozartian with its loose form, ambiguous themes, and strangely rambling development, it is a work that would tax even the greatest of pian ists because its interpretation does not present it self clearly from the score. That does not mean that a proper performance is impossible, but would sug gest that in any performance of this work both the intellectual grasp and imagination of the piar.i,t have to come to grips with the substance and focus of this work to an unusual extent. Mr. Kentner played the Fantasia with sensitivity and a piano tone that was masculine and properly dramatic. His feel ing for the predominantly melancholy themes in the work was evident in his touch. But the piece as it came from his performance seemed to suffer from unnecessary fragmentation. Mr. Kentner seem ed unable to fully comprehend the subtle bridge between the themes, and consequently we were left behind in one theme as he embarked upon an other or faced with making an almost bewildering jump from one mood of a theme to another. What would seem to be lacking here is a sense of unfolding that, unfortunately, Mr. Kentner was not able to convey in his performance. The Beethoven sonata, too, was given a playing that was truly beautiful at individual times in tone and temperament. But those moments were, for this reviewer, too infrequent to convey, fully the import of the movements' contents. In this particular piece of music, fragments were created by the pianist's inconsistent tempi (most evident in the variation of speed that was given to each thematic variation radio programs, some through gen- in 1he ,ast m0vement) and unreliable phrasing erous philanthropy - many have which, at times, seemed to badly obscure line and made lasting and valuable contri- rhythmic configuration. The second shortcoming buttons to American intellectual seemed to result from the first: within the rather life. But the Corporation cannot disorderly and fast tempi of the Vivace and Pre and does not represent the in- stissimo movements that Mr. Kentner accepted, it dividual within itself. He is not a would be difficult for any pianist to bring clarity "cultured man;" he does not ap- to music that by its very nature is already difficult predate paintings by Ben Shahn, to comprehend. Nevertheless, an overall and stead: music by Aaron Copeland, architec- tempo would have at least given the pianist the on turc by Frank Lloyd Wright, books portunity to develop within these two movements by William Faulkner, Shakespeare a greater sense of drive along fixed lines that, in by the Old Vic Company. His re- this performance, was lacking, making Mr. Kentner's creation consists of motor boats approach seem almost a bit tired. The last move ( there is an important distinction rnent was started with what I thought the proper to be made between those who phrasing and feeling for the phrase, but again, as sail on water and those who mo- s00n as the first variation appeared, Mr. Kentner tor; those who sail represent the radically changed mood, tempo, phrasing, and even genteel aristocracy who delight in idling over the seas, while those who motor are in a great hurry to get nowhere and get the only sensation from speed, not from the close and meaningful contact with nature) and Friday night fights, Life Magazine (probably the articulation, and the continuity of music fso very necessary within the variation form for Beethoven in his late works) was lost. The form of this move ment a theme and variation demands in one shape or another a consistency that Mr. Kentner did not provide to his interpretation, and thus, seriously damaged his performance. Chopin's Two Ballades (G Minor, Opus 23; A Flat worst publication in America), Ra- Major, Opus 7) received adequate if not particularly dio City Music Hall, Bar-B-Q, dazzling performances. I was impressed with Mr. chef's aprons with patent expres- Ken(ners classicaly subdued approach to the first sions like "Oh you kid!" and . , ,... . A , . u; u xT- u l u- Part of the first Ballade, but felt he sacrificed it Watch My Worchestershire printed on them, Thunderbirds to "necessary confusion in the second part. (the nouveau riche equivalent of After intermission, the artist played Schumann's the Mercedes), and lollin? nn t.hf 1 - . , , D - vraueSqUe) upus 10 ana mccaia upus 7. inese were followed by works of Liszt and Balakirew, all of them decadent compositions. An enthusiastic audience was rewarded by several encores. The Corporation Man is as deep as a washbasin. He thinks the way However, when all is said and done, one cannot his peers think, because to do helP but admire Mr. Kentner's persuasive playing otherwise would invite sure disas- in the few but immensely pleasing passages where ter and ostracization. In David he did seem lo penetrate into the depths of Mozart Riesman's trems, he is excesive- . - . T 4U . . ... " ucLuiuviii. xu iiiusc passages ne snowea Him self to be an artist; I wish that could be said of his entire recital. patio - not the lawn - of that red brick house in Westchester or Stamford. Next year's concert series was announced: The Eglcvski-Hayden Ballet Group; the Ralph Th Awful Truth ly "other-directed." Whose fault is this? His, or the Corporations? Neither is wholly at fault, but both are guilty. The guilt of the Cor poration lies in its lack of willing- nP.SS in lllow nnv m nn tn ont ny think as an independent indivi- Iluntr ChraIe; CIara May Turner' Mezzo-Soprano; dual ... if such an animal exists and the plttsburg Symphony Orchestra under the any more. The fault of the in- bat0n of William Steinburg, Anton Kuerti will be dividual lies in his unwillingess to the young piano soloist with the orchestra. take part in society as a respon- ' ' ; sible. thinking man - he is so " wrapped up in his selfish and ele mental desires to lead what he pictures as the "good life" that he does not bother with the mind, ;tnd consequently the soul rots too. Business is here to stay, and the businessman right along with it. But it is not fulfilling its role in the development of man as a be- . . ing which creates and thinks. The ly ohJrcho"s to coarse play that you human mind is used as a rote, 7m! """)' are based on "common df- subsidiary instrument which is use- but your objections to a play I find ful only within prescribed limits. are nothing but "prudery." When the business world realizes that man is capable of doing great things by himself and of being more constructive when allowed to let his mind do the things it was supposed to do - think, create, and ,- my f)jflce strictly because I am a "dis imagine business will be fulfill- ci jdinarian but you run your office strict ing its obligations to mankind, and ' because you are n "sadist." will be a great deal more than a line of tables in an empty room, 0ur competitor's company is slow on de a neon sign glowing on a wet Hveiies because of a "bottleneck " but our night, a typewriter clicking away company is slow on deliveries because of "a into the night - it will be a com- few little snags we're straightening out." pesite of individuals striving as in dividuals and as groups to better f, attorney "knows all the ins and outs" both the Corporation and the ways but my opponent's attorney is a "slippery of man. character." Their nr,'ion has a "network of spies" but our nation takes "security measures." 1 it If