TIE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1951 ographies E U' Regent indidates (Continued from Page 7) was governor of Michigan in 12. An engineer, he was ga's state highway corn-~ ncr before winning the gov -,.. hip. He received his engi- .g degree from the Univer- : a 1921. r leaving the governor's of- tie has been a .consufting er with offices in Detroit ok time out from this job re as land director of Bavaria F e U.S. Army in 1948-49 and id commissioner of Bavaria e State Department in 1949 home is in Birmingham. 1 * * * OK 4 '4. A mocrat Wheaton L. Strom, an naba attorney, will run fo' ion to the Board of Regents he first time tomorrow. has been, active in University ini affairs as well as other affairs in the Upper Pen- a, having served as chairman' he Upper Peninsula alumni ciation. He is how president ie Escanaba chamber of com- °e. sides this, Strom is president he Escanaba Kiwanis club,, has been an extension service trer. veteran of World War II, he ved his law degree from the 'ersity in 1936. He is a mem-' of Sigma Chi. SPANISH DANCER * * * * High-Schoolers Will See. Hispanic Pageant, Plaly n M I Leland I. Doan, of Midland, is running for his first term as a member of the Board of Regents In this sprtng's election. Doan, a Republican, has been president of the Dow Chemical Co since April, 1949. He began rorking for Dow in 1918, and Worked his way through various positions in the sales department before being chosen for the com- pany's presidency. During World War II, he was .n advisor to various War Produc- ion Board committees, and is now : member-/of the Chemical Advi- .ory committee of the Munitions Board. A student at the University from 3913 to 1916, Doan has been active In the Phoenix Project. He is a nember of Sigma Chi. Technic on Sale The Technic will be on sale in the engineering arch until Tues- lay. Does your gide havea crus on you? r * : .:. . 4 not iU it's 4 f Le Gant* Sta-Up-iop g"You'll be hugged , i s never squeezed in Wae's StaUp-Top, the gidle thats 3-Way-Sized" to fit like a dream! You choose your .correct length, your correct hip size, and the control you want. Stu-Up-Top gives you that comfy A full schedule of activities is planned for more than 800 Michi- gan high school students of Span- ish, who will attend the Hispanic (' TV Shows'' ChinaHistory The University Television hour will continue its broadcasting to- day with an outline of the history of China at 1 p.m. over WWJ-TV. The program was not 'telecast last week due to Easter Sunday programs. History instructor John Hall and Gaston Sigur of the Center for Japanese Studies will trace the history of China on Telecourse Four, "Lands and Peoples of the Far East." Color in the home will be the lesson offered on "The Home and Contemporary Living-Interior De- sign," Telecourse Five, by Prof. Catherine Heller of the College of Architecture and Design, Pageant being given in conjunc- tion with the Spanish play, "Dona Hormiga," Tuesday and Wednes- day. The pageant is being held in celebration of the thirtieth year of Spanish productions on campus and is initiating a tradition which will be continued in future years. On the agenda for the after- noons are exhibits of fine arts, literature and crafts of Spain and South America. 'Phe visiting stu- dents will also have an opportun- ity to visit the romance languages laboratory. Prof. Percival Price, University Carillonneur, will set the proper atmosphere by playing a recital of Spanish music Tuesday afternoon. A musical revue and variety show will be presented both even- ings in the union ballroom. Fea- tured will be the Andalusian "Fan- danguillo" by Miss Anne Marie ' efendini and an Afro-Antillian poetry recitation with drum ac- companiment by Jose Ortiz and Carlos Soares of the romance languages department. Sad but Not Bad: Auden's Latest Poems NONES, By W. H. Auden (Random House). IT'S A LITTLE SAD, but not bad. It must have been in 1940 when I first read Auden in the exciting New Anthology of Modern Poetry issued by the Modern Library. All through the war years the last lines of his "Get There If You Can and See The Land You Once Were Proud to Own" kept echoing in my head: "If we really want to live, we'd better start at once to try; If we don' , it doesn't matter, but we'd tter start to die." And it is something of a shock to reread the biographical sketch of Auden in that book: "consistently been a radical; done Journalistic service for the Spanish Loyalist and Chinese causes." It is not, of course, front-page- N.Y. - Times - Book - Review - news that Auden has grown in- creasingly religious with the years. Nevertheless it is a little sad to find him, at 44, with so little of his old social fervor remaining. His themes are mostly restricted to religious ones these days, usually interwoven with The Larger His- torical View, and his irony, once startlingly bitter, is blunted now with Weltschmerz. BUT HE IS STILL one of the finest, and certainly the wittiest, poets writing today. His range of tone in this new volume is remark- able as ever. No one else can en- compass the scale from "Lou is telling Ann what Molly Said to Mark behind her back; Jack likes Jil who worships George Who has the hots for Jack." 1 in "The Love Feast" to S..- his land is not the sweet home that it looks, Nor its peace the historical calm of a site Where something was settled once and for all" from "In Praise of Limestone," a longish, conversational poem fluc- tuating between reflections and di- rect, dramatized statements, leav- ing one with the horrible feelig that even stone, after all else has dissolved, will dissolve too, and is dissolving at the very moment of reading. Within the limits set for them by the poet, most of the pieces in the collection are wonderfully sat- isfying experiences. After the first reading the reader is usually aware of what Auden is after; and the poet pursues it relentlessly. At times, however, he tends to run,' slightly, at the mouth, as in the longest and most unsuccessful poem in the book, "Memorial for1 the City," an attempt to evaluate the socio-mythological significance' of the city's historical development. THE RELIGIOUS poems are the most successful, and the best of' these is the title-poem. The titler refers to the fifth canonical hour, or 3 p.m., when Christ wa killed. The poem is about Good Friday, and much more. Shifting back and forth between the actual event and' the present-day observance of it, "Nones" achieves, in seven stanzas evidently representing the seven canonical hours, a purgative effect amounting to a state of grace. The' simple use of animal imagery in1 the last stanza is cleanly beauti- ful. It is noteworthy that many of these new poems are concerned with animals, and that two or three express a preference for ani- mal existence not unlike Whit- man's "I think I could turn and live with animals." This is not the dnly result of Auden's Americani- zation. He has caught the Ameri- can idiom as none of our native poets have done, with the possible exception of Kenneth Fearing, whose latest work is reminiscent of Auden's in tone if not in style and form. University people will particular- ly enjoy "Under Which Lyre-a Reactionary Tract for the Times" which has more quotable lines per sqare stanza than anything you an buy nowadays. I can't resist passing a few lines of it on, al- though I'm running out of space. He is speaking of GI's on campus: "They stroll or run And nerves that never flinched at slaughter it Lost 'Masterpiece' Resurrected THE LARGE VIEW-Believed to be the world's largest religious oil paiiting, Jan Styka's "Cruci- fixion" is now on display after half a century of obscurity in a special $1,500,000 building just completed in Hollywood, Calif. The canvas, 45 feet high and 195 feet long, is a panoramic view of the ancient walled city of Jerusalem. The director of Forest Lawn cemetery where the just-di- covered masterpiece is on display said that he believes the painting will "help the world solve some of the problems of peace." i i FROM HERE TO ETERNITY, by James Jones (Scribnors). FAR TOO much has been said and will be said about the use of four-letter words in James Jones' big first novel, From Here to Eternity. We must, I believe, face the unfortunate fact that such low-denominator language is an established' part of our mod- ern literature. Perhaps it is the price of wide-spread literacy. It is unfortunate, however, simply because it will keep many readers from fully appreciating this truly remarkable novel. Many modern writers have been impressed with man's essential loneliness. Many have portrayed mans struggle for individuality in an increasingly mechanized and trade-marked society. Nowhere have these seemingly paradoxical themes been more vividly and in- telligently treated than in From Here to Eternity. This is the story of Pvt. Robert E. Lee Prewitt of the United States Army stationed in Hawaii in the years immediately preceding Pearl Harbor. Prewitt is a thoughtful but uneducated man who wants to be a good soldier, a 30-year man, but who wants also to preserve the right to control his own ac- tions apart from his job. He is not given to breaking the rules of the army, but he stubbornly com- bats the corrupt and ruthless so. cial istructure which exists within the framework of the army regs. Good soldier though he is, he is inevitably doomed because he will not compromise his individual in- tegrity and play the cheap politics of success. 'a EDITED BY COWLEY: Stories: Another Phase, Of F. S. Fitzgerald Saga ,, A. ft. Jones Novel: Man Against 'The System' . As featured hi leading fashion, publications, ' k ! ;. ' S, 1i1;; r " .v , ,: f 4It~.4u THE STORIES OF F. SCOTT FITZGERALD, a selection of 28 stories with an introduction by Malcolm Cowley (Scribners). IT WAS PERHAPS decided from the time Scott Fitzgerald was a spoiled young kid in St. Paul that he would be a legend some- day. And it can be said, too, that he was conscious of the fact every time he wrote something. If he had not been, it is doubtful that New Magazine Begins Career DIAMETER, magazine of the arts, published by Diameter, Inc., Brooklyn, N.Y. 'IT HAS BEEN only a short time since the ultra-chic magazine of Fleur Cowles "discontinued" publication, and there are those who blame the feminine influence for the sundry oddments and flap- doodles that contributed so hand- somely to the fall of "Flair." Un- daunted (and unaffected) by this unfortunate example, Sally Wor- oner and Lorraine I4othbard have begun publication of a little mag- azine, of which they are sole edi- tors and officers. Conceive of all art as enclosed within a circle; draw a line through the center, and rotate this line-"It meets all points of view. It encounters all aspects of art. It is a straight line that cannot de- viate for censorship of any kind." Thus say the editors of "Diameter," whose first number appears this month, and if they can attain their admirably stated ideals, the mag- azine will be well worth the sub- scription price. * * 4'. Since the editors are unable to pay contributors, there is a fair chance that they will fulfill their promise to feature little-known artists. Still, this issue includes "Song" by E. E. Cummings, and reproductions of two oil paintings by Robert Gwarthmey, "Children Dancing" and "Field Flowers." These are perhaps the best of this month's offerings. Two other contributors deserve small orchids-Nuala, for "Seagull Epiphany" (pencil and water- color), and I. Rice Pereira, for "Transverse Parallels" (corrugat- ed glass and gesso panel). The re- maining contributions are repre- sentative of what is being done by our contemporaries tn literature and the plastic arts, varying in quality from good to indifferent. If for no other reason, however, "Diameter" is noteworthy for -the excellent work of Lester Beall, the designer. From cover to cover, the magazine is tastefully gotten up, artistic but not arty. Some who de- mand an obvious function of spe- cial significance from everything on the page will not take kindly to seemingly superfluous dots and lines, or to a few nages of uneven his tragic life would seem half- so real and near to us today as it does. For Scott Fitzgerald is a self-made legend, built from the bright strokes of his own pen, woven intimately into the highly colored emotional fabric of his fiction. This book of stories-according to Cowley, his best-runs the course of his life. In it, there is something of every kind-from the fantasies of a young, enthusi- astic man, to the short one-pagers of the grumbling, disillusioned; "Pat Hobby." None of them, ex-' cept possibly "Babylon Revisited," are so mature and perceptive as Fitzgerald's later novels, but taken together,, they give an excellent picture of his maturation. Mal- colm Cowley's sympathetic biogra- phic prologues to each section of the book, as well as his introduc- tion, provide the necessary back- ground. * * * FITZGERALD has been criti- cized for writing purely with an eye toward putting a gloss on life.' But when he wrote about moon- light and roses, as he often did, they were real, and the roses weren't withering \away at the roots because of some broad social injustice. When he wrote about such things they were just as real to him as garbage cans are to Farrell. And for a moment we believe him: indeed, when Fitzgerald in "Winter Dreams" gazes at "the great white bulk of the Mortimer Joneses' house, somnolent, gorge- ous, drenched with the splendor of the damp moonlight," we see it in the same way. He allows us to pleasantly callow and sentimental for a moment;' then, ever so subtly, without changing the tone of his voice, he infuses the whole glowing pic- ture with a sort of melancholy, an air of disillusionment. Instead of dimming the colors, or making them tinseley and brilliant, he deepens them by placing them on a firmer foundation. * * * IN HIS BEST stories, there is a distinct air of unreality, as if a thin film had been cast across the world. The things that happen are not probable, perhaps, and the characters are invariably hand- some and beautiful ("He was cri- tical about women. A single de- fect-a thick ankle, a hoarse voice, a glass eye-was enough to make utterly indifferent. And here for the first time he was be- side a girl who seemed to him the incarnation of physical per- fection."), but that must be the setting. Only if everything is im- maculate on the outside can inner weaknesses be clearly delineated. Kafka dealt with the inner man abstracted from his world; Fitz- gerald changed the world into a pure sweet jelly. Naive College Picture Found In New Novel A MATTER OF MORAL by Joseph Gies (Harper). THIS NOVEL, by a former pook editor of The Daily, is about a crisis in freedom of expression at s"a large Midwestern univer- sity." As a novel it is not very successful and its chief and per- haps only interest lies in the thinly-veiled references to per- sons, places and events connected with the University. Mr. Gies, taking full, advantage of the perogatives of poetic li- cense, has jumbled buildings and names around a bit, but to the Ann Arbor reader, Gies' College Park is a pretty familia'r place. Moreover, just so the reader will continue to feel at home, Gies makes certain that all of his char- acters are familiar sorts too. There is the brilliant young his- tory professor with a liberal poli- tical outlook and an interest in the department secretary, a crafty dean of students and a swarm of other stereotyped campus charac- ters including students, two homo- sexuals and a number of profes- sors. * * * Mr. Gies is fascinated by the hackneyed affiliated - independ- ent split and he really goes to town with it. The fraternity men wear tweed jackets and are apoli- tical. The independents can't af- ford ties and attend anti-fascist rallies. Sorority women have vacu- ous faces and are easy conquests. Independent women pass out lib-, eral literature and allow only an occasional moist kiss. The author has also allowed himself to so far forget his own student days that he can no longer remember how he and his contem- poraries must have talked. His dialogue reads like the first ver- sion of an entry in a high school fiction contest and the naivete of characters he is trying to pass off as college students is preposter- ous. .* * * A good deal of the story is con- cerned with the coming of age of Philip Slidell, a student who hopes to be managing editor of the stu- dent newspaper, and Prof. Town- send the young historian who hopes to be department chairman. Neither succeed. Nor are they allowed the martyrdom which generally is such a consolation to those of unrecognized merit since they have both previously jeopar- dized their moral positions. Pre- sumably at the end they are both sadder but wiser boys. * * * From the particular viewpoint of this reviewer, however, the most annoying thing about the book is the description of the student newspaper. Lest anyone get the wrong impression of student newspapers in general and The Daily in particular, let it be known that student journalism is not conducted in the haphazard me- thod Mr. Gies suggests, and if the present senior editors of The Daily thought that any of their THE FOCAL point bf this strug- gle is Prewitt's ability as a boxer. He is a good welterweight but will not box for his company because he simply doesn't like to box. Since boxing is the principal activity of this peace-time army, his refus- al brings persecution from officers akid men alike. He continues his struggle for personal freedom, though not always with perfect stoicism, and dies ironically when he finds that he cannot run away from the system which seems bent on his destruction. A number of other well-realized characters fill out this struggle in the ranks, chief among whom is Sgt. Warden, whose understanding of Prewitt and himself causes him You could kill and kill and kill. He would not become a Disciple of the Word. And these were the Army, too. It was not true that all men killed the things they loved. What was true was that all things killed the men who loved them. Which, after all, was as it should be. -James Jones in FROM HERE TO ETERNITY. to hate the private and admire him at the same time. The love affairs of these two men, 'Warden with his captain's wife and Pre- witt with a prostitute, are drawn with acute subtlety. But the army panorama is only the microcosm. The book plays for higher stakes than See Here, Private Hargrove. Prewitt, War- den and the rest are soldiers, but first of all they are men. That is the book's greatest achievement, the portrayal of an intensely hu- man struggle in the carefully doc- umented setting of army life. In achieving this, rugged, 29-year-old Jones has shown remarkable re- straint and subtlety. He never bludgeons the reader with his theme, but watches it grow step by step out of n 'imposing col- lection of individual scenes. * * * PERHAPS out of the book's 86P pages, a number of minor deletions could be made from the wealth of army detail with good effect. But Jones is precision itself in cap- turing the brush of personality on personality' in the dialogue of his t major figures. Conversations like those between Warden and Karen Holmes crackle with reality. And if Jones' use of language (unorthodox syntax and infre- quent use of the apostroph~e is . sometimes confusing, this is a minor flaw in a book which pre- sents an account of the Pearl Har- bor attack with much of the hu- .4'. 1. y}. :, . A A. ~an ALL OCCASION SUIT " ' : :: 4xSr1 / ,~;';:: II lr.r ,, /distinguished for superb tailoring and smart styl- Ing. Fashioned in rayon tropiccil suiting -a marvelous fabric that withstands wrinkles and, .wears like fine worsted. Ws just the Spring thru Summer suit for your