THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, la5a A -tvw IMO% "M PA GE F U- --w EOr"R'S NOTrEI By GENE HARTWIG Daily Managing Editor FROM ALL reports the driving ban is here to stay. And what's more, the order has gone out from the Administration that it is going to be enforced. Enforcement these days means something quite different from what it meant a year ago when chances of the ban's removal appeared more likely. No more weekend enforcement by rcunty sheriff's deputies whose authority to stop student-driven automobiles to check per- mits has been finally denied. The modern enforcemet ,ills for o, full- ^im cc. ty officer work ingfor the IrU iersity taking down the license numbers of "suspect" cars as they are driven by their student own- ers on the streets of Ann Arbor. The numbers are then pinned to a name in the issuing state's license bureau and the names sent to the Of- fice of Student Affairs to be checked. If the student is found to have no permit or has been guilty of violating the permit, .he is called to the Office of Student Affairs or for a second offense to Joint Judic I e penalties are levied. The neat thing about the renewed enfo";e- ment is the clever gi-ick the Umver ty has come up with to trap the "Laeg.V" stude. driv er. Parallels between thi s vce '. e fully set but very unfair speed-traps are all too obvious. Enforcement is not the only bad aspect of this foolish and outmoded regulation. Because exceptions are granted under the regulation allowing certain categories of students to have cars on campus, a premium is being placed on the student's ability to lie successfully and so secure the coveted permit. The honest stu- dent who may have just as much need but who doesn't meet the requirements doesn't stand a chance. By maintaining a regulation as unnatural as the prohibition amendment, the University is in fact fostering an unhealthy attitude of deception on the part of its student body. In addition administrators who recognize the foolishness of the regulation are forced to administer it simply because someone in the upper administration of the University is so outdated in his thinking as to consider the rule workable. It has been two years now since Student Legislature sent its brief recommending modi- fication of the driving ban to the Board of Regents. At that time Regent Vera Baits com- mended the Legislature for a well-written set of alternatives contained in the brief. Never- theless for the past two years the 'corm enct- able alternatives" have been gathering dust with little prospect of ever getthrg efo:e I'e Fegents Lor consideration. Insteadan e ia silence and an unofficial tightening up on the enforcement of the rule. Today the University is the only school in the Big Ten with a general driving restriction. Mi- chigan State introduced a new system of regis- tering student automobiles this fall and from- reports the system has been working out well to maintain a check on who has and who does- n't have a car. Granted that there are problems of parking and public relations with the city to consider, nevertheless the time has come for the Univer- sity to begin to take some action toward a more realistic policy in this area. The president should name a committee of students, faculty, and University and City ad- ministrators to sit down charged with the res- ponsibility to come up with some answer to the student driving problem. Such a bold approach would be a refreshing change from a policy of sneaking around in a patrol car taking down students' license numbers. * * * * FINAL PASSAGE of the Student Activities Center by the Regents at their January meeting is long-awaited and very welcome news to more than a hundred student groups on campus. When completed the modern $1,700,000 building will provide office, meeting space and large workshop areas for most campus organ- izations. Last month's Regental action culminated more than a year of planning by various stu- dent committees with the assistance of Uni- versity authorities. Approval of the Activities Center together with the recent approval of the new student government are encourag- ing signs that the University is willing to recognize the more significant role students can play in campus affairs. * * * * N VOTING to establish a senior college of the University at Flint the Board of Re- gents may have set a precedent that will pro- vide part of the answer to expanding educa- tional needs in the state in the next several decades. President Hatcher indicated at the pres conference following the Regents' meeting that the University might consider similar ex- pansion elsewhere if conditions are as favor- able as those found at Flint. The arrangement with Flint Junior College will provide that the college supply all of the physical facilities and maintenance while the faculty for the junior and senior year will be supplied by the Uni- versity. Graduates will receive a degree from the University at Flint. With school enrollments mushrooming throughout the state the Flint idea looks like a co:c one to help ease the burden on the Tiverity here. Gargoyle, Parodies New Yorker THE NOUVEAURICHE. GARG- OYLE'S Parody of THE NEW YORKER. REVIEWING college-humor ma- gazines may well seem to de- serve a place high-up (or far down) on any list of strictly use- less pursuits, but that, I think, is a superficial view. There is no reason why the members of a col- lege community who are interest- ed, for whatever reason, in under- graduate inventiveness should not expect to find it displayed in the humor magazine quite as clearly as in the school's more solemn publications. Sometimes, I know, and in some places, the college humor maga- zine becomes a monstrously feeble collection of syndicated jokes, bad- ly drawn cartoons, and letter- press whose only recognizable aim seems to be to get away with as much as possible in the way of thinly-veiled obscenity. But that does not describe recent issues of Gargoyle, and the current num- ber, a cover-to-cover parody of The New Yorker, makes is plain that some of the best literary tal- ent on campus has contributed to it. THE TITLE seems to me not completely successful, but the cover-design was inevitable, ex- cept that the butterfly on which Eustace B. Tilley has for so long now been fixing, each spring, his monocled gaze, has undergone a startling metamorphosis. Then, beginning with a page of "Goings on about Town," and a couple of pages of "Talk of the Town," the regular New Yorker departments and features follow in their accustomed order, and are mostly quite delightful. Of the three parody stories, "Pretty Mouth and Bald My Head," which represents a grafting of . Henry's "Gift of the Magi" on to all the J. D. Salinger you've ever read, makes the strongest initial impact, but "Big Bore in West- chester" is an equally successful parody of a kind of story-low- toned, unemphatic treatment of minor crises in suburban married life-that gave the parodist few- er obvious angles to work on. The "Profile" ("This is the first of nineteen articles on the Brooks brothers") might have been bet- ter, but the Television column is fine, and so is the "Books" page -"Vlasics and Commercials" - on which a critic who bears a not wholly fortuitous resemblance to Edmund Wilson harks back to the moment in the Twenties, in Green- wich Village, when he "first be- came acquainted with the writ- ings of the Vlasic Finer Foods Co.," through having the label on a bottle of Vlasics Sweet Gherkins thrust on his attention. My own favorite item in the issue is the "Letter from Thaenraelgh," but to analyze its rare beauty would take more space than I have here. Both in its cartoons-most of the New Yorker regulars come in for their share of attention-and in its articles and features, the is- sue meets the chief tests of suc- cessful parody. It is good-natured, it presents a recognizable but subtly exagger- ated simulacrum of the original, and to the amusement value which derives from our being able to recognizerthe original beneath the travesty, it adds what is no less essential: the power to be amus- ing, in a hundred incidental ways, in its own right. Of course it is a mistake to be too serious in >ur analysis of humor, but from that it does not follow that successful humor does not deserve to be tak- en seriously: it is rarer than you think. -Herbert Barrows Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigar under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig ......Managing Editor Dorothy Myers.............City Editor Jon Sobeloff ........Editorial Director Pat Roeiofs ......Associate City Editor Becky Conrad .........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart .......Associate Editor Dave Livingston ........Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin ... Assoc. Sports Editor warren Wertheimer ..Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz . Women's Editor Janet Smith Associate Wnn.en's Editor John Hirtzel......Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak. ......Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bil Wise .. Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski Finance Manager Telephoin NO 2324-1 Beloved Enemy s 4tvov *Y 70. t F' 1I_ -, *. CI~j~tJG I PE> r - ' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN z TODAY AND TOMORROW- Evacuation of Is lands illInsure Cease Fire By WALTER LIPPMANN THE EVACUATION of the Tachens has now begun, and if it is suc- cessful, which we need not doubt, the position will be stronger and safer than it was before. A great deal has been said and written about how important it is to hold positions of strength. The Tachens were not a position of strength. They were a military and political liability. They could not be defended except at the risk of a general war which no one in his senses would undertake for such unimportant territory. The Chinese Nationalists troops on them had nothing useful to do, and they were in a military trap-like the French at Dienbienphu. Had they been lost, instead of being evacuated, Chiang would have made the same military error as the French made when they locked up a garrison at Dien- bienphu, locked it up in an outpost of no decisive importance which arent, Guardian or Spouse' - OnceShntd.Be Enough APPROXIMATELY fifteen University is well versed tistics of its charges. times over, the in the vital sta- On file in various campus offices, duplicated far more often than is necessaiy, are quickly- tcrawied notes on the n caral stat s, ,etizen- shi and places o' birth e hits 1.:; 0 ,stu- dents. Railroad tickets, o , Uch Ie i. or n:a- tion is originally written, are soon perforated and sent off to their destinations, only to lie dormant, for the most part, for the remainder Hof the year. While the memory of tedious minutes devot- ed to the tickets still lingers sharply in stu- dent minds, it might be well to consider that the tickets are almost as valueless as they are troublesome. FROM HIGH administrative officials to be- g mning freshmen, nobody's very sentiLental about the tickets. They've bee ca d a neces- sary evil, but the evil light be at least par- tially alleviated. Other institutions seem to have hit upon more efficient means of gathering needed sta- tistics on their students, and the University might seriously consider some of their methods. In some cases, for instance, each fact is writ- ten out only once, on one all-inclusive card, with photostatic copies made for filing else- where. Another possibility, also reducing the tick- ets to one card, would distribute the informa- tion when different departments need it by having a staff of typists copy the information as many times as it's needed. AS THE CAMPUS population expands, stor- age space for the repetitious information will be limited to a minimum. Arrangements might also be made for student information to be on file at just one University locale, with the information there available to other of- fices whenever necessary-but not occupying valuable space in the other departments. The railroad ticket problem is as perennial as that of women's hours or the driving ban, but much more simply solved. The hurdle of changing a major part of the registration pro- cedure would be complex, but benefits would, ultimately, outweigh the difficulty. -Jane Howard could not be defended. The story in Indo-China might well have been different from what it is to- day if a policy of evacuation from indefensible outposts to concentra- ted strong points had been carried out. THESE CONSIDERATIONS ap- ply to the other off shore is- lands, and the sound American policy would be to follow up what is being done in the Tachens by doing the same thing in Quemoy and Matsu. This is the surest way to carry out the policy which the President laid down in his mes- sage to Congress. The policy is to keep Formosa and the Pescadores out of unfriendly hands, and to bring about a cease fire in the For- mosa Strait. There is one way by which at present Formosa can be defended. That is by American military power. But there are two ways in which the policy of the cease fire can be put into effect. The one-which we have been at- tempting-is to negotiate a cease fire with Peking. If they would agree to it, they would tacitly as- sent not to attack Formosa and we-so it is generally understood -would in return bring about either the neutralization or the evacuation of the off shore is- lands. This way of arriving at a cease fire has been rebuffed angrily by Chou En-lai. We ought not to be surprised. It was wishful think- ing to suppose that the Chinese government, which has won the civil war on the mainland, would appear as a non-member before the Security Council in which Chi- na is represented by a faction that is no longer on the Chinese main- land. It was no less wishful to sup- pose that the Red Chinese would publicly sign a cease fire which meant that they had renounced the right to complete the defeat of Chiang and to recover by force the island of Formosa. It is most improbable that the cease fire can be obtained by pub- lic agreement either in the UN or in any other kind of conference. THERE IS, however, another way to bring about the cease fire for which the United States national policy calls. It can be done by direct American action, and it does not depend upon the negotiation of an agreement with Peking. This is to do in Quemoy and Matsu what we are doing in the Tachens-to evacuate them not as the result of a bargain but as a strategic measure to liquidate a position of weakness, and to fall back on Formosa, which is a gen- uine position of strength. Once that is done, there will be in fact, whatever Peking may or not agree to, a practical cease fire in the Formosa Strait. Pin-prick bombing and shooting and raid- ing, which the Nationalists do from these off shore islands, will stop. There will be a hundred miles of blue water between Red China, our fictitious interests, and we shall have the moral and political support of our allies. I T WILL be said by some that to exacuate the islands is ap- peasement. " But if we are talking about appeasement and about prestige, which is the firmer Am- erican policy; to sell these islands for a cease fire, treating them as pawns in a bargain, or to get rid of them as military and political and legal liabilities, and to take a stand on a line-that of Formosa and the Pescadores-which is a defensible legal line, a defensible strategical line, which is a sound political line in that it has the support of our allies? I think it is more dignified to evacuate the is- lands for our own reasons than to sell them to obtain the benefits of a truce. We can have the bene- fits of the truce without bargain- ing and by our own voluntary ac- tion. THERE IS only one considerable doubt about this policy. It is whether Chiang can be induced to agree to it without demoralizing his army and his officialdom. There is no denying that that could happen. But we have to re- member that if it is going to hap- pen because of the evacuation of the off shore islands, it is going to happen anyway. For the Ad- ministration has taken the fun- damental decision not to support a war for the conquest of the mainland. It cannot be sound po- licy to use Quemoy and Matsu as a way of allowing the Formosan Chinese to deceive themselves in- to thinking that the Administra- tion does not mean what it says. It cannot be sound policy to use these islands as bait to the For- mosan Chinese, as a way of caus- ing them to keep on thinking that the United States can be pushed, pulled, ensnarled and entangled into the kind of war that the Uni- ted States has decided not to wage. We cannot go on forever, or for long, sacrificing the national in- terests of the United States to our fears and to our guesses of what will and what will not happen to the morale of Chiang's regime. If our true interest is to evacuate the off shore islands and to stand on the legal line of Formosa and the Pescadores, then we owe it to the people of this country to follow our true interests, refusing to let high policy be controlled by the internal politics of the Formosa regime. (Copyright, 1955, N.Y. Her. Trib., Inc.) Aid for Atoms T HE ATOMIC ENERGY Com- mission, recognizing that none of the 100-odd firms studying the economics of nuclear power in the United States is willing to bear the full cost of experimental develop- ment ,has finally decided to offer them ssam i tsne. The Daily' Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University2 of Michigan for which the Michigan1 Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m.1 the day preceding publication (be-s fore 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1955 Vol. LXV, No. 83 Noticesj Law School Admission Test: Applica- tion blanks for the Feb. 19 administra- tion of the Law School Admission Test are still available at 110 Rackham Building. Application banks are due1 in Princeton, N.J. not later than Feb. 9. Sophomore and Freshmen Women: Martha Cook Building is receiving ap- plications for Sept., 1955. There will be space for 40 sophomores and 20 fresh- men who will then be juniors and sophomores respectively. Anyone inter- ested phone 23225 any we'ek day between 8:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Outstanding ap- plication blanks should come in at once. The Danforth Foundation, an educa- tional trust fund in St. Louis, Mo., in- vites applications for its 1955 Graduate Fellowships from college senior men and .recent graduates preparing for a career in college teaching and who are planning to enter graduate school in Sept., 1955, for their first year of gradu- ate study. The maximum annual grant for single Fellows is $1800, for married Fellows, $2400. All applications must be completed by Feb. 15. For further in- formation, see Prof. W. J. Schlatter, School of Business Administration. The Ford Foundation Behavioral Sci- ences Division is again offering Fellow- ships for the first year of graduate study to selected Seniors who wish to pursue graduate studies in psychology, sociolo- gy, or anthropology, but who as under- graduates have concentrated in fields other than these. The University of Michigan may nominate 4 qualified sen- iors for this award. I the current year it is estimated that approximately twenty-five awards of $1800 each will be made to successful candidates applying from the 59 institutions participating in this program. For information and ap- plications, students should come to the Office of the Graduate School. Teaching Positions - Hawaii. There are over 125 vacancies, Elementary level, in the Public Schools of Haiaii for the 1955-56 school year. Salary on a 12 month basis with AB degree begins at $3000. Further information on these po- sitions and vacancies ir Secondary In- dustrial Arts and Band can be obtained by contacting the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Nor- mandy 3-1511, Ext. 489. Teaching Positions-Turkey - Greece - Lebanon. Applications are now being received by the Near East College Asso- ciation for various positions in the American Schools and Colleges in the. above areas. All applicants must be single and appointments are made for a three year term. Further information can be obtained by contacting the Bu- reau of Appointments, 3528 Administra- tion Bldg., Normandy 3-1511, Ext. 489. TEACHER PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Thurs., Feb. 10- Inkster, Michigan- Teacher Needs: Early and Later Ele- mentary. Fri., Feb. 11-. Long Beach, California- Teacher Needs: Elementary and Sec- ondary-all fields. There will be a Gen- eral Meeting at 4:00 P.M. Fri. in Room 4051, Administration Building for all those interested in receiving information about the Long Beach Public Schools. Colored slides will be shown. Those peo- ple having personal interviews with the representatives from Long Beach are also urged to attend this meeting. Tues., Feb. 15- North Muskegon, Michigan- Teacher Needs: Elementary, English, Mathematicsrand Science, Elementary Music and Art. Battle Creek, Michigan- Teacher Needs: Elementary, English, Social Studies and Mathematics. Wed., Feb. 16- Flint, Michigan- Teacher Need. Wed., Feb. 16, Thurs., Feb. 17 and Fri., Feb.18-- Portland, Oregon- Representatives from the Portland, Oregon Public Schools will be in this vicinity interviewing all elementary and secondary candidates interested in teaching in Portland, Oregon. For mor information contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments. For appointments contact, Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin- istration Building, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Sports and Dance Instruction-Woln- en Students. womenstudents who have completed their physical education re- quirement may sign as electives on Tues. and Wed., Feb. 8 and 9 from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00m. in Barbour Gymna- sium. Instruction is available in figure skating, swimming, diving, modern dance, riding and fencing. Any veteran who expects to receive education and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill) at the University of Michigan for the FIRST TIME must report to Room 555 of the Administration Building with tuition receipt between 8:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Feb. 10 or 11 if he has no already done so. Women Students-The trampoline in Barbour Gymnasium will be available to women students every Wed. at 4:10 p.m. beginning Feb. 9. Several Laurel Harper Seeley Scholar- ships are being announced by the Alum- ni Association of the University of Michigan for the academic year 1955- 56. These awards are in the amount of $200 each and are open to both graduate and ,mdergraduate women. The awards are made on the basis of scholarship, contribution to University life and fi- nancial need. Application may be made through the Alumnae Council Office in the Michigan League Building. Applications must be filed before April 1. Awards will be an- nounced by April 30. Office, Michigan Legue, Ann Arbor, Michigan. All applications must be filed by April 1. Award will be announced by April 30. SUMMER PLACEMENT Camp Tanuga, Kalkaska, Michigan, will interview in Room 3G of the Mich- igan Union, Thurs., Feb. 17, from 8:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. They need camp coun- selors, craft counselors, a doctor and a nurse. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 2614, Room 3528, Administration Building. Student Organizations planning to be active during the second semester must register in the Office of Student Affairs not later than Feb. 26. Forms for reg-. istration have been mailed to the ex- ecutive officer of organizations regis- tered for the first semester. Additional forms my be secured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration. For procedures and regulations re- lating to student organizations, refer to University Regulations Concerning Student Affairs, Conduct, and Disci- pline available in the Office of Student Affairs . Social Events sponsored by student organizations at which both men and women are to be present must be reg- istered in the Office of Student Affairs, and are subject to approval by the Dean of Men. Application forms and a copy of regulations goyrning these events may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Requests for approvl must be submitted to that office no later than noon of the Mon. before the event is scheduled. A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulletin on Thurs. of each week. In planning social programs for the semester, social chairmen will want to keep in mind the action of the Com- mittee on Student Affairs which re- quires tht the calendar be kept clear of student sponsored activities for the seven days prior to a final examination period. Final examinations for the prsent semester begin May 30. For the spring term the calendar will be closed beginning May 23. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School. Thurs., Feb. 10- The Rand Corp., Santa Monica, Calif. -All degrees in Math. and Physics, and in combination with Engrg. for Re- search and Development. U.S. citizens only. Fri., Feb. 11- Standard Oil C. (Indiana Dv.) Whiting, Ind.-B.S. & M.S. In Chem. E. for Technical Service Work, and PhD in Chem E for Research. Mon., Feb. 14- Naval Air, Material Center-Phip., Pa., Turbine Test Station - Trenton, N.J., Development Center - Johnsville Pa-B.S. & M.S. in Aero., Elect., Mech. E., and Engrg. Physics, for Research, Devel., and Design. Dow Corning Corp., Midland, Mich.- All levels of Elect., Maintenance, & Chem. E. for Product Engrg., Construc- tion, Maintenance, Product Develop- ment & Technical Services, Pilot Plant, Etc. Mechanical Handling Systems, Inc.- Detroit, Mich.-B.S. In Ind. & Mech. E. for Sales Engrg., Design, Research and Production Engrg. U.S. Govt., Army Ordnance, Detroit Arsenal, Detroit, Mich.-B.S. in Mech., Elect., Metal., and Chem. E. for+ Sum mer and Regular Research & Devel. Gulf Oil Co., Gulf Research & Devel. Co., Pittsburgh, Penn.-Al levels of Elect., Mech., Chem. E., E Physics, Chem., Physics, Geological mjors and Geophysics majors for Summer and Regular Research & Devel. Calif. Institute of Tech., Jet Propul- sion Lab., Pasadena, Calif.-All levels of Aero., Elect., and Mech. E. for Re- search & Devel. Nat'l Steel Corp., Great Lakes Steel -Detroit, Mich., Weirton Steel Co. - Weirton, W. Va.-B.S. in Mech., Metal., Elect., & Chem. E. for Production and Devel. Standard Oil Co., Creole Petroleum Co., New York and Venezuela, S. A.- B.S. & M.S. in Elect., Mech., Chem. E., and Physics for Oil Production and Re- fining. Single men only. Tues., Feb. 1S- Dayton Power & Light Co., Dayton, Ohio-B.S. in Civil, Elect., Mech. E. for Engrg. Training Plan. Aluminum Co. of America, Pittsburgh Penn.-All levels of Civil, Elect., Ind., Mech., Metal., Chem. E., Engrg. Physics, Engrg. Mech. for Production, Devel., Re- search, and Sales. TheJeff rey Manufacturing Co., Co- lumbus, Ohio-B.S. & M.S. in Mech. E~, and BusAd majors for Sales, Engrg. for Production, Research Engrg. U.S. Govt., Naval Research Lab., Washington 25, D.C.-Al levels of Elect., Mech.,rMetal., and Nuclear E., Physics, & Engrg. Mechanics, for Research. United Aircraft Corp., Research Dept., East Hartford, Conn.-B.S. & M.S. in Chem. E. and all levels of Aero. and Mech. E. for Research. Farnworth Electronics Co. (Div. -of I.T.&.T.), Fort Wayne, Ind.-All levels in Elect., Mech., Ind., Physics, Chemis- try, and MAth. for Research, Devel., Design, Manufacturing. Pillsbury Mills, Inc. - Minneapolis, Minn.-B.S. & M.S. in Ind., M4ech., and Chem. E. for Research and Devel., Pro- duction Training, and Ind. Engrg. Tues. & Wed., Feb. 15 & 16-- Trane Co., LaCrosse, Wisc.-B.S. & M.S. in Aero., Civil, Elect., Chem. E., Engrg. Mechanics, azid all levels in Mech. E. for Sales Management, Sales Engrg., Research, Product Design, & Devel., Ind. Engrg. Wed., Feb. 16- The Fluor Corporation Ltd., Los An- geles, Calif.-B.S. & M.S. degrees in Mech., Elec., Chem., & Civil (Structural) for Engineering, Construction, & Manu- facturing. B. F. Goodrich Company, Akron, Ohio -B.S. & M.S. degrees in Chem., Mech., Elec., Civil, & Ind. E.; also Chemists and Physicists for Production, Research General Engineering. B.F. Goodrich Chemical Company, Avon Lake, Ohio-B.S. & M.S. degrees primririly in Chem. E., but also Chem- ists & Mech. E. for Production, Chemical Development, Sales Dev. Beech Aircraft Corporation, Wichita, Kansas-B.S. & M.S. degrees in Aero. & Mech. E. for Design, Aerodynamic, Structural, Mechanical & Weight Engi- neering. Inland Steel Co., Indiana Harbor Works, East Chicago, Ind.-oll levels ofaMetal. and Chem. E., B.S. & M.S. in Math., Physics, Civil, Elect., Ind., Mech., Engrg. Mechanics for Research & Devel., Quality Control, Profuction, Technical Services, Project & Design, Plant & , . A MUSIC REVIEW Lyra1ende ssohn e Harold Haugh, tenor, with Charles Fisher at the piano. Program: Die Schoene Muellerin, by Franz Schubert. ONE HEARS a great deal about the Lieder Style, as if there were only one way to in- terpret the songs of Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and Wolf. I don't know how ortho- dox or orrect Harold Haugh's performance of Die Sch bene Muellerin was, but he sang these marvellously straightforward and melodious songs with spirit, imagination, and obvious rel- ish of his task. He tended to project many of he songs with a somew_at .icd style -and with the awareness 'ht he was re- citing a stony, one with well-def ini c .aracters and moods, and with a touch of pntho at the erd. M. Ta uh cq)T,_ht tb ,'v1 r o l the mm fmm the stud cw+.,1 7r ,n songs were a bit rough vocally, as compared to the clarity of tone in most of the others. Als in Stanley Kimes' recital last semester, Mr. Fisher again proved to be a sympathetic and capable accompanist. His playing was crisp, relaxed, and excellently controlled dynamical- ly. In a couple of the songs it seemed that the melodic content of the accompaniments could have been brought out more expressively, but there was no serious fault to find. There are nearly always a great many notes in Shubert's piano parts, and they often do not lie easily un- der the hand. It was good to hear them'played as smoothly and skillfully as they were by Mr. Fisher. To hear the entire Schoene Muellerin cycle is to :ut. at the lyrical genius of Schubert. It toid 1.ot have been any effort for him to write music, else he could not have been so amazingly prolific a composer. With this reali- zation, and remembering that his critical facul- ,y let i m do 7n at times, it is really remark- ..