PAGE rorn ""HE MITCHIGAN DAILY ATTVn A-V -A It"'V %4A I t"It nT~IW M-IC1TIT:A VCAN fl C'1..tlY: ' t aa .ra , M & a yiTFIhm-1V. x v-1 a w Loa ±a!z&U I Attitudes and Actions HRE IRPORT on alleged discrimination in athletics at the University, recently submitted to the Student Legislature, rep- resents a distinct advance in understand- ing of the problem of racial differences over the hortatory method of attacking discrimination. Mr. Brieske evidences a realization that athletics is only part of the total picture, and makes clear that the absence of Negro stars in some sports may be due to more complex and deep-lying factors than dis- crimination by a coach. The report is not clear, however, for two reasons besides the nature of the problem itself. First, are the theories advanced in the report Mr. Brieske's or Mr. Crisler's, and on what evidence are they based? Parts of the report are misleading: Mr. Brieske thinks that young Negro baseball players often prefer to play semi-pro or pro ball instead of coming to college. Is this be- cause they are not offered the financial Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. inducements necessary to make it possible? Analysis of causes must be pursued further than just the distance necessary to clear the University of Michigan of any respon- sibility. Second, Mr. Brieske is concerned with two matters, although perhaps he doesn't realize it. The position of athletics in col- lege life is still a problem at Michigan, as elsewhere; and racial discrimination exists throughout society in the minds and ac- tions of people. not merely in rules laid down by this or that University authority. In regard to athletics, there are two op- posing views, that of the Hutchins de-em- phasize school, and that of the "rah-rah Siwash" school, as well as varying shades of opinion in between. The position of the athletically ambitious college student is difficult at Michigan, for, with enormous facilities and outstanding player-material available to the coaches, many a better- than-fair athlete is passed by. This fact applies to Negroes as well as to any other racial or economic group. In regard to racial discrimination, Mr. Brieske is naive. Although he says in his report that "To find all the answers would require the co-ordination and cooperation of economists, psychologists, sociologists and anthropologists," his concluding recommen- dation that the athletic department pub- licize the fact that there is no discrimina- tion by the athletic department betrays an unwillingness.to modify social evolution. The only way the Student Legislature can effectively combat discrimination is on a campus-wide basis. It is not in the rules and regulations which govern men, but in their attitudes and actions that discrimina- tion on account of the color of a man's skin or the shape of his nose has its roots. --Phil Dawson I.-________ _____ NIGHT EDITOR: DICK MALOY ON WORLD AFFAIRS: *Invisble' Reds By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER SHE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT should understand that whether Carl Aldo Mar- zani is a dues-paying member of the Com- munist Party is beside the point. The real issue is whether lie has consciously pro- moted communist or pro-Soviet aims. The Communist Party is - obviously - not a political party but a world-wide con- spiracy. Some of it is visible, most of it is underground. In order to remain hidden, the Party long ago arranged for three dif- ferent sort of "comrades"; 1) avowed, dues- paying members; 2) secret dues-paying members; 3) unofficial "friends" who, by remaining formally outside the party, can promote its aims unhampered by embar- rassing membership ties. Outside Russia, it is the invisible and unofficial "comrades" who serve Moscow best - as the Canadian espionage trials demonstrated. I know this because on one occasion, a highly placed Soviet official tried to con- vert me. Since he may not be dead, I shall keep back details which might identify him. I am, however, ready to swear that the following represents the substance of BOOKS our conversation. Comrade X began excellent lunch at an ant. Over the coffee Comrade X: You against Hitler. We you for some time. by inviting me to an inconspicuous restaur- he opened up. are doing good work have been observing E.A.M.: Honored, I'm sure. X: Your weakness is, you are not a Marxist and do not quite understand Hit- lerism. Only Karl Marx is the key to un- derstanding of the contemporary world. Have you studied Marx? E.A.M.: Pretty thoroughly. I was not converted. Probably I need a touch of divine grace - as for other religions. X: Seriously, why don't you join us? E.A.M.: Who's us - the Soviet Govern- ment? X: The Communist Party. E.A.M.: What good would I be to you if I gave up my present job and moved to Moscow? X: Who said anything about moving to Moscow? We would want you to re- main just where you are. E.A.M.: Interesting but hardly practical. My present boss is a pretty liberal fellow. But if I announced that I had joined the Communist Party, he might be narrow- minded enough to suggest I look for another job. X: Why tell him? Some of our best friends find it convenient to keep their friendship for us dark. E.A.M. (after a pause): I see. Yes, I sup- pose I might be useful. But it's no good because I don't believe in Marx. X: You could be sure of twice your pre- sent income - whatever it is. E.A.M.: If I ever become converted to communism, you won't have to hire me, But it's interesting to see how you people work. X: I hope you will say nothing about our conversation. E.A.M.: Well, I won't promise that. But you've been square with me and I won't let you down. X: Thank you very much. I never saw Comrade X again. He re- turned to Moscow shortly after. That was nearly fifteen years ago. Since then Russia has helped Hitler, quarreled with Hitler, fought Hitler, helped beat Hit- ler -- and then turned on its "capitalist" allies. The pattern hasn't changed. Some of the Party's "friends" still find it con- venient to keep their friendship dark. These "friends," within and without the Party, are the real danger. There are plenty of them here. (Copyright 1947, Press Alliance, Inc.) It has become clear that better education to meet the demands of the post-war world requires Federal support. This is true in the field of general education. where the Isabel Bolton, DO I WAKE OR SLEEP. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1946, 202 pages, $2.50. THE AMERICAN NOVEL has a peculiar and uncanny ideal behind it. Writers be- lieve that if it deals with the ordinary, the commonplace, the trivial with an intensity and searching realism, that it will expose the universal. They probe and turn the hu- man being, explore and photograph it, in a thousand poses and attitudes; cast it here and there, bring it to crisis and allow it ex- cruciating choice. Then, often as not, they leave it where they picked it up. They ap- proach the universal, but through narrowing the lens, often portray the inconsequential. We do not reread American novels. One encounter with The Wing and the Dove, with U. S. A., seems to be enough. With few ex- ceptions (Moby Dick is one) we cast our novels aside and rush on to resume the searchfor a tangible experience. We seek to identify ourselves with the universal, and find that nothing our novelists provide is worth the identification. Isabel Bolton in her novel Do I Wake or Sleep, attempts to break through the mold in which our writers are cast. Her book searches to the base of the problem and uncovers the vacuum behind the feverish writers produc- tion-line in this country. She has one of her characters say, "American novels were, she thought, so full of a kind of feverish protest-how could she put it? A morbid, an almost neurotic determination to lay the raw nerve bare-something even a little sadis- tic perhaps, as though those novelists had suffered so acutely themselves that they weren't going to let you off a jot or tittle of the agony; there was always this protest -the surface realism so sharp, so unadul- terated. But for the inner, the spiritual realism, did Percy find it in anything like the same degree in which it was to be dis- covered in Europe? It was almost as though the American artist stopped short of handling it-as though he actually balked at handling it, believing very likely that if he continued to rail away on super- ficial, on environmental levels long and loud enough he might, perhaps, sometime have a new, a more perfected creature in his hands," With this much understanding, however, Miss Bolton seems to miss the inner realism herself. Her book, as many others, devotes itself to the trivial, the searching, the prob- ing that she decries. She'has the ability to undertake the universal, but has limited her- self by her own choice of incident and char- acter, She deals with a day in the lives of three sensitive people-three unusual and complex people-who are attempting to re- solve problems and reach an understanding with themselves. She seems to believe that this resolution has been reached when she concludes the book, but, the problems have been delayed, turned to one side and the change is only one of focus, not of view. With the ability Miss Bolton obviously has, her books should more and more closely ap- proach the ideal that she realizes is neces- sary for the artist. This is a first novel, and a most remarkable one, because it struggles to break a pattern. In the future Miss Bol- ton's work should become large enough to command the reader, to force him to reread for that growing understanding that she knows a great novel must command. -J. M. Culbert *a1i* * . (ceieriI Library List ,,, The City Editor's SCRATCH PAD ELSEWHERE in today's Daily you will fird one of the reaons why this city of fine homes and higher learning is still, to a degree, Jim Crow Ann Arbor, despite last year's action whereby discrimination against Negroes in local restaurants was ended. Negro citizens cannot get haircuts in 22 of Ann Arbor's 26 barber shops. That is the bald fact revealed by a Daily survey. And what is the reason? The proprietors who follow this illegal discrimination policy say they do so because business is business. "Our customers would object," they say. And that's that. The result is segregation here in the North, not so bad as the separate waiting rooms and separate sections on trains, buses, etc., in the South, but segre- gation all the same. The barbers are undoubtedly right. Cut- ting hair is not such a wide-open commer- cial field that barbers can afford to ignore customers' whims. So that puts the question squarely up to the "customers"-to you and to me. It is noteworthy that The Daily survey un- covered nothing new; it is merely a re- minder of a situation you and I have taken for granted for so long that we've forgotten about it. Nor, of course, did the survey reveal anything that is confined to Ann Arbor alone. Just how many times in your home town have you seen a Negro served in a bar- ber shop that was also patronized by whites? Whether you live in Detroit, New York, Chi- cago or anywhere else, your answer will probably be: "Not very often-if at all." So actually it's not just Jim Crow Ann Arbor, but Jim Crow U.S.A. The situation isn't something that can be ignored;+ it isn't something that we can hide. Twelve million U.S. Negroes aren't impervious to insults; and foreigners know perfectly well what is going on here. A Russian journalist, Ilya Ehrenburg, had this to say about America's treatment of its Negro minority. As reported by Harper's Magazine, he wrote in Izvestia as follows: "It would seem that in this country of diverse races united by patriotism, national equality would prevail, However, America, which never knew feudalism, has established a racial hierarchy. The aristocracy are the English, Scotch, and Irish, After them come the Scandinavians and Germans, then the French and Slavs; much lower are the Ital- ians, even lower still are the Jews and the Chinese; lower still the Puerto Ricans, and finally, at the bottom of the scale, the Negroes..' "Natives of New York like to emphasize the liberalism of the North-'Our grand- fathers fought against slavery.' In any Southern town, on the other hand, you may see a monument to the soldiers of the Southern Army. This is a monument to the vanquished, because in the 'war which shook America, the Southerners were defeated. However, it seemed to me more than once that these were monuments, not to the van- quished, but to the victors; since the South not only preserved the principles of slavery but was able, in some degree, to inject them into the North." Here is a Russian Communist lecturing us on equality for nationalities and races. For a long time we have been lecturing the Rus- sians on freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, et al. We and the Russians can learn a lesson from each other. And so, fellow "customers," it's all up to us, whether we're going to remain Jim Crow U.S.A. or go on to something better. But at any rate, let's have a good look at The Daily survey-and at ourselves. MATTER OF FACT: Stassen Speaks Out By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON, May 24-Harold Stassen has laid it on the line. He has come right out - bang! - with what a great many people have known but what no poli- tician of real stature has dared to say. Stassen has said, in effect, that if the western way of life is to survive, the United States must revert to something close to a peacetime form of lend-lease. Moreover he has chosen the traditionally isolationist state of Iowa for what promises to be an ex- ceedingly interesting experiment in Ameri- can politics; telling the people the truth. This unusual step may well be motivated by two glum political facts with which Stas- sen is now confronted. One is the condition, of the Stassen political organization. The other is his standing in the public opinion polls. It is evident that Stassen has embarked on a daring political gamble. There can be little doubt that a desperate economic and political emergency is forming up in Europe and elsewhere. And Stassen, by speaking out now, may some months hence be remembered as the politician who first had the audacity to tell the unpleasant truth. It is a strange, and interesting, political experiment. (Copyright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on te day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). SUNDAY, MAY 25, 1947 VOL LVII, No. 167 Notices Automobile Regulation, Final Examination Period: The follow- ing schedule will govern the lifting of the Automobile Regulation for students in the various schools and colleges of the University. Excep- tions will not be made for indi- viduals who complete their work in advance of the last day of class examinations, and all students enrolled in the following depart- ments will be required to adhere strictly to this schedule. The Reg- ulation will go back into effect on the first day of the Summer Ses- sion. Law School: Freshman class, 6 p.m., Fri., June 6; Junior class, 12 noon, Fri., June 6; Senior class, 12 noon, Thurs., June 5. Medical School: Freshman and Sophomore classes, 12 noon, Thurs., June 12; Junior class, 5 p.m., Fri., June 13. Dental School: Freshman class, 12 noon, Fri., June 6; Sophomore class, 12 noon, Sat., June 7; Se- nior class, 10 a.m., Fri., June 6; Hygienists, First Year, 12 noon, Sat., June 7; Hygienists, Second Year, 12 noon, Thurs., June 5. All other classes in all other schools and colleges: 5 p.m., Thurs. June 12. Office of Student Affairs Automobile Regulation, Summer Session: During the Summer Ses- sion, the University Automobile Regulation will not apply to stu- dents in the following classifica- tions: (1) Those who in the preceding academic year are engaged in pro- fessional pursuits; e.g.. teachers, lawyers, physicians, dentists, nur-' es; (2) Those who are 26 years of age or over; (3) Those who have a faculty ranking of Teaching Fellow or its equivalent. Students not in the above groups may secure permission to drive cars (a) provided the use of a car is essential to a student's re- maining in residence, or (b) for participation in outdoor sports such as golf, tennis, swimming. etc. Permission will be granted only upon application, and blanks will be available starting Monday, June 9, Rm. 2, University Hall. Office of Student Affairs Library Hours: For the conveni- ence of students, Library service will be offered on Memorial Day in: (a) The General Library, 8 a.m.-10 p.m., (b) Angell Hall Study Hall, Mathematics-Economics Li- brary, Engineering Library, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Other Divisional Libraries con- nected with the General Library will be closed. Regular schedules will be resumed on Sat., May 31. Sunday service will be provided on June 1 and June 8. * * * The General Library will be closed to readers from Wed., June 11, to Wed., June 18. The lower corridor will be open to visitors on Thursday, Friday, and Satur- day, June 12-14. No admittance will be given on Mn. and Tues., June 16 and 17. Service will be re- sumed on June 18 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Divisional Libraries will be open between Wed., June 11, and Sat., June 21, on short schedules. State- ments concerning hours of opening will be found on bulletin boards of these libraries. Engineering Seniors who gradu- ate in June or in August, meet Wed., May 28, 4 p.m., Rm. 348, W. Engineering Bldg. Business Administration stu- dents who expect to enroll for the Summer Session or the Fall Sem- ester should have their programs approved by faculty advisors be- tween May 26 and June 7. Hours and rooms of advisors are posted on school bulletin boards. All stu- dents in other schools and colleges who have been accepted for trans- fer to Business Administration for summer or fall should likewise have their programs approved. Election materials and informa- tion may be obtained in Rm. 108, Tappan Hall. School of Business Administra- tion: Applications for admission to summer session or fall semester should be submitted at once. Ap- plication forms are available at Rm. 108, Tappan Hall. Graduate Students in Educa- tion: A part-time teaching fellow- ship is available to a qualified teacher of high school Biology in the University High School for the school year 1947-48, Applicants may confer with Francis D. Curtis, (dial 2-0282) Seniors in Architecture turn in class dues (75c) to John Bickel before Friday, May 30. Seniors in Design turn in class dues (75c) to Carolyn Cummins before Friday, May 30. Recommendations for Depart- mental Honors: Teaching depart- ments wishing to recommend ten- tative June graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Edu- cation for departmental honors should recommend such students in a letter sent to the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall, by noon of June 13. Departmental honors will be recorded on the students' permanent records but will not appear in the Commence- ment program. June Graduates: College of Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health: Students are advised not to re- quest grades of I or X in June. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your instructor to report the make-up grade not later than noon, June 16, 1947. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Union Life Memberships for :hose who have attended the Uni- versity for eight civilian semesters are ready and may be obtained at the UniondBusiness Office, Mon- day to Friday, May 26-30, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. IHillel Dormitory still has vacan- cies for the summer session. All those interested may obtain an ap- plication blank at the Hillel Foun- dation. Bureau of Appointments & Oc- cupational Information, 201 Ma- son Hall. Office Ilours: 9-12, 2-4. TEACHER PLACEMENT: Burbank, California, has vacan- cies in kindergarten and first grade for capable teachers with at least AB degrees. Good rooms but no apartments available at present. Anyone interested in having their credentials sent should call at the Bureau of Ap- pointments at once. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Edwin G. Beck, Botany: thesis: "Some Studies on the Solidago Gall Caused by Eurosta Solidaginis Fitch," Mon., May 26, 2 p.m., Rm. 1139, Natural Science Bldg. Chair- man, C. D. LaRue. Doctoral Examination for Louis Gordon, Chemistry; thesis: "The Precipitation of the Hydrous Ox- ides of Tin and Thorium from Homogeneous Solution by the Hy- drolysis of Non-Ionizable Com- pounds," Mon., May 26, 2 p.m., East Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Chairman, H. H. Willard. Doctoral Examination for Hsing Chih Tien, Geography; thesis: "China's Grand Canal: A Study of Cultural Landscape," Mon., May 26, 2 p.m., Rm. 9, Angell Hall. Chairman, R. B. Hall. Doctoral Examination for George Richard Rumney, Geography; the- sis: "Settlement of the Nipissing Passageway," Tues., May 27, 4 p.m., Rm. 9, Angell Hall. Chair- man, S. D. Dodge. Doctoral Examination for Earl Wesley Thomas, Romance Lan- guages and Literature; thesis: "The Pronunciation of the Portu- guese of Central Minas Gerais," Tues., May 27, 4 p.m., East Council Room, Rackham Bldg. Chairman, E. B. Ham and F. M. Thompson, History 12, Lecture Section II: Final examination on Wed., June 4, 2-5 p.m. Leslie's and Slosson's sections will meet in Rm. C, Haven Hall; all others in Waterman Gymnasium. Comprehensive Examinations in Music Education for candidates for the master's degree will be given in Rm. 708, Tower, Mon., May 26, 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Chemistry Colloquium: Mon., May 26, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 303, Chem- istry Bldg. Mr. L. R. Perkins and Louis Gordon will discuss their original "Research in Analytical Chemistry." (Continued on Page 6) EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints EVERY letter to the editor (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we re- mind our readers that the views ex- pressed in Iciters are those of the writers only. Letters o more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. Negro Discrimination To the Editor: LAST FALL a local barber shop prominently displayed pictures of outstanding Michigan football players. Those of three Negro players - Bob Mann, Lennie Ford, and Gene Derricotte - were con- spicuous by their absence. When questioned, Mr. Dascola, propriet- or, said there had been some "mis- take," and that he did not believe in discrimination. The players in question were called in, had their pictures taken (to be used next year), and given free ones as a gesture of friendship. Later, I went into this shop to get Dascola's attitude toward cut- ting a Negro's hair. I was told I couldn't get a hair cut because the customers object (most of the customers are students); because the Ann Arbor Barbers' Associa- tion had agreed not to serve Ne- groes (this is contrary to the Michigan Civil Rights Law); be- cause Negroes have a peculiar grade of hair and they (the bar- bers) just couldn't cut it. After about five months of try- ing to work out a peaceful solu- tion without law suits, it was suggested that a group represent- ing students meet with the bar- bers in an effort to iron out the difficulties. I was sent by Mr. Dascola to see Joe Kneiper, presi- dent of the Barbers' Association, in hopes of arranging a meeting. Kneiper told me, "All of our meet- ings are private and we don't want any outsiders. If I were you, I'd go to the colored shops." When asked if he knew he was violating the law he replied, "We've got health laws to protect us." Then I was "ushered" out of the shop and told not to come back. Three more weeks of behind the scenes bickering and a meeting was arranged, over Kneiper's ob- jections, for May 15. This was abruptly cancelled by the barbers last week with the announce- ment that no such meeting will ever be held. Yes, this is Ann Arbor, home of the world reknowned Univer- sity of Michigan, where all men are supposedly free and equal. Where the principles of the demo- cratic way of life are taught and promulgated in class rooms, and yet denied within the very shadow of those centers of learning in a barber shop around the corner. Why 'am I bitter? Why am I not interested in preserving the "American Way of Life?" Because to me, for 24 years, the "Ameri- can way of life" has been one long, continuous series of miser- ies, degradations, disappointments, and heartaches. No, I am not a Communist, nor do I believe Com- munism a solution ,to the prob- lem. But I, like thousands of other Negroes, have seriously consider- ed the benefits to be gained from association with such a group. How long I shall continue to rea- lize that alliance with Commun- ism does my cause more harm than good, I do not know. The University administration, the student body, the citizens of Ann Arbor are on the spot. What are they willing to do to make democracy what the books say it is? Shall thousands of dissatis- fied citizens be driven into the ranks of Communism, or will America wake up before it is too late? -Carrol Little, President Interracial Association Drama Review To the Editor: MRS. CULBERT'S review of Robert True's In, Spite of Heaven leaves one with the im- pression that the play which was, in her words, "enthusiastically received by a full house" did not merit the enthusiasm granted it. It is, of course, true that In Spite of Heaven is not a professionally-, expect that of it, I think. It lacks polished piece. One ought not clarity- of characterization on some respects, particularly in the char- acter of Armande, who also suf- fered in the presentation because of an unhappy bit of casting. We cannot tell whether Armande is meant to be in the comic spirit of Moliere's best heroines (which she is not), nor, from moment to moment, whether we are to hate her or be amused by her. She is too malicious to be acceptable later in the play as a reformed wife. She is, in at least one mo- ment on the action, despicable. But it needs to be said that the play is not without positive mer- its. It has moments of real dig- nity in scenes involving Moliere DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letteri to de litor and Catherine. Moliere and Made- leine; and some of the scenes with the Count, while over-mannered, are genuinely amusing. There is a pretty clear sense of dramatic construction -- something which the student playwright always finds hard to learn. And the dia- logue has in it turns and ponts which are, at their best, very good indeed. Play Production is to be com- plimented upon the production. If the college or university theatre has any contribution to make to playwriting - and I would say that it undeniably has - then col- lege and university production groups must continue to give en- couragement to the young play- wrights who are trying, and try- ing honestly, to learn their trade. Mr. True has learned a good deal. Such a production as this will en- able him, as nothing else can, to learn more. No apologies need be offered, in any score, for the time and effort which have been ex- pended in making In Spite of Heaven a creditable production, While The Daily reviewer chose to be nothing but caustic, it was good to see that many in the audi- ence at the Lydia Mendelssohn viewed the play in the spirit in which it was given, and had a good time. -Wallace A. Bacon Jazz Arguement To the Editor: RE Mr. Raphael's statements in day's Daily. Mr. Raphael's connection with The Daily would seem to make him the oracle of the Hot Record Society. Since he hasn't attended a business meet- ing or record session since the very beginning of the semester, I can't see where he can constitute himself an authority on what oc- curs. To my way of thinking, the best way to learn about the organization would be to inter- view its president, especially since his views are not so biased. Mr. Raphael's contention that the Ancient, Honorable, Benevo- lent, and Protective Order of Mouldy Figs I'm a charter mem- ber) holds that no good jazz.was produced after 1929 - is as ridic- ulous as it is prejudiced. This modernist - fundamentalist feud has as much significance as the one between Messrs. Allen and Benny, and is just as silly. The main benefits derived from it are, two. First, it's a wonderful excuse for a friendly argument, and. sec- ond, it supports men who yell "Fascist!" at the fundamentalists and whose standards for musical criticism are "prestige, earnings, and success." Ah there, Metro- nom'e! I like to look at the argument this way. Be-bop is based on the same fundamental harmonic con- ceptions as modern European clas- sical music. Witness "Ebony Con- certo" by Stravinsky out of Her- man. New Orleans follows simp- ler, more conventional chords and progressions, those used in older classical music. No one can be blamed for preferring Beethoven to Shostakovich. By the same line of reasoning, I don't think I can be blamed for preferring Arm- strong and Bechet to Gillespie and Parker. To my mind the value of music doesn't vary directly with the lack of logic of its melodic (?) line, or the number of notes per second. Because I don't like be-bop I'll argue with its standard-bearers, but for the Lord's sake, no vio- lence! -Robert Wernick, Treasurer, U. of M. Hot Record Society £ieipzrQL7i a Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students o the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Paul Harsha..........Managing Editor Clayton Dickey...........City Editor Milton Freudenheim..Editorial Director Mary Brush.......... Associate Editor Ann Kutz........... Associate Editor Clyde Recht .......... Associate Editor Jack Martin............ Sports Editor Archie Parsons..Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk.............Women's Editor Lois Kelso .. Associate Women's Editor Joan De Carvajal... Research Assistant Member Associated Collegiate Press, BARNABY Business Staff Robert E. Potter .... General Janet Cork.........Business Nancy Helnmick ... Advertising Managel Managex Manmager Listen, son .. I did NOT chase outr imoanarv faIirv I was oilinq my qun to, - - - - - - - - - --r. waIt s his wordonninto.mane. --- . ' rte. __.--____ _ syu=_emcOL, i I III I I I{1 I - __________ _________________________________________________