PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMIBER 29, 1949. ______________________________________________________________________________ I BusAd Graduates Find Master's Degrees Pay Off Fmployers of business adminis- tration graduates apparently are willing to pay a premium for the extra year of college training which a Master's degree entails according to statistics released by TIE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS is with us in hairstyles to fit your personality and holiday needs -- for you alone!! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State the School of Business Adminis- tration. According to a class by class salary surbvey the median start- ing salary for 1948 recipients of this degree was $260 per month while that of 1948 Bachelor's de- gree holders was $235. THE HIGHEST median month- ly salary, $1,250, was that report- ed by the class of '29. Since only graduate level courses were offered by the school until 1942, all the mem- bers of these three classes held Waster's degrees. Of the 2,024 students who have completed work toward a degree since the school was opened in 1926, 823 or 41 per cent answered the survey questionnaire. Qvr 'r'-' REQCQRD Classical". By AL SILVER APPARENTLY on his way to a one-man Beethoven cycle for Colum- bia, Bruno Walter offers a new waxing of the Ninth Symphony, with the New York Philharmonic, the Westminister Ch'oir and four alleged soloists (Album 900, LP SL 156). A super-fine recording job is wasted on the Philharmonic's tones, which range from tinny to nasal. We find both Allegro and Scherzo overblown and loose, while the semi-unperformable finale degenerates into a disorganized, ding-dong decibel contest between orchestra and chorus. That the chorus usually triumphs is not all to the bad, con- sidering the Philharmonic's occasionally wretched outpourings. High spot of the set is Walter's genuinely eloquent Adagio, but his orchestra remains stubbornly undistinguished throughout. Among the soloists, only the bass, Mack Harrell, approaches com- petence, but his jealous colleagues take revenge by out-shrieking him at every opportunity granted them by Beethoven-and at some that aren't. With the warning that our opinion of Walter's Chorale seems to be a minority one, we suggest the aging but venerated Weingartner- Vienna performance (Columbia 227), and add our voice to the many demanding that RCA Victor condescend to release a Ninth by its greatest interpreter-Arturo Toscanini. M OZART'S wonderful Piano Concerto No. 21 is the subject of an LP effort by Robert Casadesus, with Munch leading the New York Philharmonic. An above-average recording is matched by generally fine play- ing on the part of soloist and orchestra strings; it is kinder to pass in mournful silence over the fumbling efforts of the Philharmonic's winds. Recommended especially is Casadesus' excellent presenta- tion of the lovely second movement. But in no sense is the current version comparable to a superb Schnabel-Sargent job for HMV and domestic Victor. Schnabel's finely controlled poetry and the sensitive support of the London Philhar- monic-than which there is none wiser in the ways of Mozart--make this set the choice for those willing to sacrifice the mechanical advan- tages of LP for musical considerations. * * *I * AT HOME in a familiar item, Koussevitsky and the Boston Sym- phony provide the finest Tchaikovsky Fourth obtainable. With their traditional polish and incomparable tones, the Bean-town boys follow the leader through an obviously virtuoso performance, avoiding most of the usual temptations to exaggerate. Recording is faithful, but tending slightly to the over-ponderous. * * J" * By JOHN OSMUSSEN EVER SINCE 1933, Charlie Barnet has been recording the kind of music that the public wants to hear; but his latest records show something more than just a realization of the people's choice. Over The Rainbow backed by Pan Americana (Capital, 57-744) indicate that the 'Mad Mab' may be directing the top band in the country today. Rainbow is altogether too much to listen to in one sitting; the striking (uncredited) arrangement is filled with interest for the musi- ally educated and should keep even the unpracticed ear perked for the full three minutes. Barnet's band is very well balanced and gets a tre- mendous sound from smooth ensemble work and excellent color con- trast in the arrangement. Pan is a mediocre tune of South America vintage. The rhythm and overall picture painted by the band are not unlike the Gillespiean Manteca. University students remaining in Ann Arbor over the Thanksgiv- ing holidays did not fare as well as University of Illinois stay-at- schools, who were offered free turkey dinners by a campus res- taurant in Champaign. The restaurant proprietor made 400 turkey meals available at no cost to hungry student consumers. "I know how miserable it is to be away from home on a holiday," he explained. "Maybe this will ease that feeling." The dinners were eagerly de- voured by the students, who added the proprietor to their list of things to be thankful for. Local students received news of the free dinners with incredulity, later replaced by a sour view of the Ann Arbor scene. One disgruntled student gave vent to indignant feelings by send- ing the Daily a clipping of the Ill- inois incident on which he scrib- bled "It can't happen here." lOLl D.AY" IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE: Illinois Students Get Turkey MealsFree for Thanksgiving pre.ient-i 4 { THE GIFT AT WHICH . . . . -- NEW ctj -10? ~ r . \ . - ,, ,, r f._ .c\ The World Leader in Portable Radios! r' ti ( ' , v' j ,___, ell 00,0 i HOUSE SLIPPERS . . . fo~r . . . CHRISTMAS 'GIFTS A pair of comfortable good-looking house slippers can be a most acceptable gift. We carry a very complete assortment of practically every kind available. $3995 plus batteries "Tip-Top" Dial - biggest ever in a portable s New 'Tip-Top" Dial and Wavemagnet! Swing the lid up-there's the dial, actu- ally above the set, for tip-top tuning ease! Wavemagnet inside the lid tips up, too- formaximum "signal-catching"efficiency. You get tip-top reception anywhere-on the porch, at picnics, in any room! ' Moderately priced. unike tne LGiiespiean Man1tecatU. $250 to 50ENDERLY is a new tune that needs lyrics in the worst way. Les e i Ri Tneex- SBrown'srendition (Columbia 38616) is done with a choir of voices Tip op wavemagnet* Has Zetoneitth powerful p volume. And -extra-sensitiv quisite tone wit pwruvomend but no words; this seems to give the band a psuedo bigness of sound the cabinet is built like a skyscraper, that appears clumsy in parts. We contend that Brown has one of the1 fully enclosed to protect dial and grille. best trombone sections in the business, and he shows it off to good ad- "Flexo-Grip"handlesnuggles down when vantage on this side. The flipover, Where Are You?, may be misleading - not in use. Set comes in smart ebony or as it is not the now-popular tune by the same name. Ray Kellogg is in two-tone blue-grey plastic. Only8x5M DOWNTOWN BETWEEN THE DiME STORES" the driver's seat on the vocal, and, although he sounds comfortableOx11% inches. Nothing else likeit.Come backed by the choir, he lacks the feeling and emotion to put across a Close lid-set's off. in-see and hear the proof! --__song like this. Both sides are excellent dance numbers. *Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. Crop Record PJhnsonComnn r Michigan's production, of corn, wheat, oats, barley and rye aggre- TE GENERAL ELECTRIC STORE % gated 3,600,000 tons last year, the e Pfrlargest in the history of the state. 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