-U---- -w ~ -~ -4 .. - - -qw v t + - 4 1 11 MEN"= I ---v- " -IV ! .f t . J .. . ! . ... v t. t . . wr. -wR, .n. J Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sundav.February24.1957 Sunnv Febhruorv 24, 195i7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY . , .. .. . . w. .. " ".. " .. " yawl fMY' V ~ M ' w.r t, " y / " .w)UFJUUY, I ULPI U-JI )f 4- If I Patterns CONTENTS PARACHUTING-Fear and nausea characterize man's reactions to an activity that was never meant to be'. Page 3. THE MUSIC LAYMAN - A review of Vincent Sheean's new book, "First and Last Love." Page 4. THE ART OF COIN COLLECTING-An explan- ation of and look at the fever that overcomes these dilettantes. Page 5. COFFEE AT THE UNION-From the day alumi- num and formica took over, a new campus type has been evolving. Page 6. FACULTY ART - Our reporter visits a recent showing of faculty creativity at Rackham. Page 7. I LIVE IN A DORM-A first-hand, eye-witness account as 'mass of that modern phenomenon known living.' Page 8. PHOTOGRAPHER JOHN HIRTZEL CAPTURES A CAMPUS SCENE THAT IS USUALLY UNNOTICED Read Daily Class ifieds THE EMOTIONAL PROBLEM-Mental medicine men are giving their advice to worried students who pursue them with rare avidity. Page 9. MODERN POETRY-Reviews of two new books that promise to enliven the current literary scene. Page 10. SUPPLEMENT EDITOR-Ernest Theodossin SUPPLEMENT PHOTOGRAPHERS- Norman Jacobs, Charles Curtiss, John Hirtzel and Richard Gaskill PICTURE CREDITS-Page 1: top, Daily photo- graph by Richard Gaskill; bottom, Daily photo- graph by Norman Jacobs; Page 3: courtesy United States Army; Page 6: Daily photographs by Charles Curtiss; Page 7: Daily photographs by Richard Gaskill; Page 9: courtesy fine arts department; Page 11. CHUTS.. (Continued from Page 3) orients himself in relation to the other troopers in the air, guiding or "slipping" his chute away from them by manipulating one or more of the four heavy web "risers" ex- tending from his body harness up from the shoulders and connect- ing with the 28 nylon lines in turn fastened onto the silk can- opy. NOT UNTIL he is about 200 feet above earth does the jumper have any sensation of falling. His only sense while in the air is floating. As objects on the ground Science: Numismatics (Continued from Page ,5) in very limited quantities. The unique position held by commem- oratives in United States coinage is due mainly to the fact these coins are the only type of Ameri- can money with real historical significance. This historical feature often creates interest among people who would have little interest in num ismatics. Gold pieces are extremely difficult to acquire because deal- ers do not purchase gold coins on a bullion basis and this has creat- ed a market for only the very finest gold coins. ONCE A PERSON learns the basic characteristics of a coin he can easily judge its worth as a collector's item. Some coins, while worth little in themselves, can be valuable as parts of a complete collection. For example; there are 89 Lincoln cents from 1909 to 1940, and while only 14 of these coins are worth consid- erably more than face value, even the common varieties are in de- mand to complete the collection. When less than one million 1931-S cents were struck, specu- lators bought up this coin and good specimens are now rarely found in circulation. The 1931-S is the last "rare' cent struck in the Lincoln variety. Towards the close of World War II the Phila- delphia mint alone was turning out over one billion cents a year. Lately great interest has built up in the collection of "proof sets," a proof specimen from penny to half-dollar, which can be purchased from the Philadel- phia mint for two and one half times the face value. Proof sets of 1936 sell for more than one hundred dollars, and some 1950 sets have already been sold for fifty to fifty-five dollars. # It was more than a quarter Century ago that Saffell & Bush originated the style and quality of lead- begin to take shape, however, and become increasingly discernible in size, the jumper realizes he is ap- proaching the ground. It appears to rush up to him. Preparing to land, theatrooper lets his legs go limp so that when he hits, he will crumple up and ease into the ground rather than stiffly slamming into it. He also reaches high up onto the four risers and pulls himself up on them to get maximum lift from the chute at the moment of landing. Landing from a parachute jump has been compared with the ef- fect of jumping from a second story window, moving roughly 22 miles an hour. This may vary depending upon the temperature, moisture, and wind conditions but only a -well-conditioned and well- trained man can handle it without out hurting himself. The relief the paratrooper gets when he hits the ground is mixed with pure exultation that he made it. All his nervous energy seems drained out and the extreme tenseness disappears. Here he first MOORE, BOOTH: Two Volumes Of Poetry notices the cotton dryness of his mouth, his covering of sweat (no matter how cold it may be) and the urgent desire to urinate. O NCE ON THE GROUND, the trooper has one last action to perform, "spilling" his chute. Only on perfectly windless days, a rare phenomenon for which the para- trooper fervently prays, will the parachute deflate of its own ac- cord. Usually, it falls to the ground but stays inflated like a huge round sail. This can cause trouble if the ground wind is strong enough and the paratrooper not sufficiently alert. A stiff breeze will catch the silk, drag the sol- dier across the ground, and can be the source of either slight or major injury. Death has been known to re- sult from dragging. In a light wind, the chute can be spilled by the trooper laying where he has landed and hauling in on one of the risers and a set of shrould lines until he can grab some silk. In a faster wind, he must scramb- le to his feet and run around the blown up canopy, turning it out of the wind and dumping the air. The paratrooper then rolls up his chute, shoves it into a kit bag, swings it over his shoulder and trudges off the drop zone. From thetie dhe stood in the door of the aircraft until he spill- ed his chute, less than two min- utes have elapsed. W HY DOES a man jump out of airplanes? Paratroopers ask this of themselves every time they strap on a chute. But no one has yet been able to satisfactorily answer the question. Men usually volunteer for air- borne duty out of a sense of ad- 'venture, the attraction of the glamour of an airborne unit, the chance to be in an elite, volunteer unit instead of a company of draftees, and possibly to earn some extra money. Paratroopers receive additional pay, labelled "incen- tive" pay by the Army, but refer- red to as "hazard" or "jump" pay by the troops. This might explain why the prospective trooper joins. But it doesn't explain why he stays, once having made a few jumps. One reason is his training. Intensive and highly disciplinary, parachute training indoctrinates the soldier not to think but to react when jumping. P aler pred selv inst it C this brea fide abli W inna mee trol thir ing a s acco D will jum jum an I No a n he d mus Ir 'tuni ture para cha mas and ows," there are still grosbeaks and hen pheasants and a "rebel drum, mer" still calls. Prices have changed by two hundred, "Vege- tables are high," Lexington is houses sprawled on desert-dusty streets with fer- tile names. The arrogant inherit lust, but Thoreau's Walden is still there, if only halfway his: "a sum- the eastern bank. . . Even today, the poet tells his correspondent, who traveled far in Concord, . . . All poets climb back Eden's hill within their own backyard. Woods and pond were your recovery of the crop that's possible, a harvest of good words grown from the land that brings the whole world home. I cultivate a different orchard, pruning under the sound of probable war. The culvitation of an orchard has both a natural and a human way of needing to go on; the poem is praise for the recognition of this need and for the human worth, even promise, that this recog- nition holds. M R. BOOTH'S poetry points a way out of the whimpering world of quivering voices into a land that if not flowing with milk and honey and, if punctuated by' screaming jets, is at least a place of recognition. He has taken a careful, long look at the worst and tells Thoreau, With rabits, too, we share un- certain lives; not quiet or desperate, we meas- ure man byhow he lives and what he most believes ... the good, the brave, are no more a majority than when you walked this far spring shore. This sounds Mr. Booth's calmer, firmer resolve; he is no closet poet, no giddy dreamer, but a man thinking and feeling deeply. He expresses carefully m ea su r ed praise for the life he finds it pos- sible to labor into existence and love for its meaning: At home beneath both oak and jet, praising what I halfway understand I walk this good March morn- ing out to say my strange love in a distant land. r- :ti; vlr":,S:tier+?;. 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