... ..... - ~ - p4 MP- , !L ; . :. - Page Eighteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, May 26, 1957, Sunday, May 26, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .- J t I x. .. : .. A Letter From Moscow (Continued from Page 10) students whose names were to be compiled by the Komsomol. At the same time the secretaries of the University-Komsomol were se- verely criticized for "lacking con- tacts with the students, and grave errors in ideological work." This was the first time in the history of the Moscow University that the administration was forced to discontinue lectures, since the lecturers proved unable to an- swer questions arising in the dis- cussions. The students considered phis a victory over Komsomol. Contrary to the expectations of the Komsomol secretaries, who had counted on a subsiding of the discussion, they continued in the clubs and students quarters. THE subsequent discussion pro- duced the slogan of the "so- cialist revolution against the pseudo-socialist state." L e n i n himself created the ideological basis for this, and has given a de- tailed description of the methods and tactics of this struggle. Par- ticularly the students of Russian nationality adopted this slogan because they considered it a method to retain the unity of the state. The members of other na- tionalities, however, continued to adhere to the tenet of different paths toward socialism, in this conflict the traditional differences between the Russians other nationalities are strongly apparent. and the becoming It appears as if, in the long run, the preservation of socialism will only be possible if the slogan of a "socialist revolution against the pseudo-socialist state" is some- how realized. The formula of dif- ferent paths toward socialism, even though coined by the present Soviet leaders, would initiate a development not leading to a so- cialist renaissance, but only to the appearance of autonomous, possibly even sovereign groupings, whose nationalist chauvinism could break up the unified state structure, and would consequently lead to a deterioration of its so- cialist institutions. The importance which the Komsomol attributes to the Uni- versity discussion caused the spreading of such discussions to other places. In the middle of De- cember the Komsomol activists of the Moscow military district con- vened to deal with similar occur- rences within the garrisons. A resolution adopted at this con- ference said, among other things: "In various party meetin'gs in re- cent times demagogic elements from the ranks of youth have transgressed the borderline of in-' ner party democracy, have mis- used the right to criticize, and di- rected massive, mostly unjustified attacks against local and Central party officials, against. the party leadership, and against the sys- tem, itself. These attacks carried forward under superrevolutionary slogans produced even reaction- ary and counterrevolutionary threats." IN THE middle of December, we were informed in Moscow about the events at the Leningrad insti- tutions of higher learning. In line with the old revolutionary tradi- tions of Leningrad, the students there went considerably further than we. They regularly publish a mimeographed students' paper called "goluboi buton"-The Blue Bud - which is controlled neither by the faculty nor the Komsomol, and which deals with problems of contemporary Marxism, artistic creation, and related topics. That no action was taken against the editors of this publi- cation despite the fact that they were sharply attacked by the Len- ingrad Komsomol made a great impression in Moscow. The paper is still being published, and many of its articles are copied by hand here in Moscow, and furnish the basis for new discussions. The latest measure against these trends was directed against the students from'the Baltic coun- tries, who were told at the end of December that they cannot con- Ii :__-- - _ jON 0 tO r a--------"" THE FASHIONABLE TAG JEWELRY tinue their studies at the Mos- cow Lomonossov University. The explanation was that the univer- sities in the Baltic countries also have been affected by the general wave of discussions, and that .the discussions were almost exclusive- ly concentrated on the "different paths toward -socialism," and would consequently lead to na- tionalist, anti-Russian, and bour- geois-separatist ideas, WE KNOW that lively discus- sions are also under way in Kiev, Kharkov, Sverdlovsk, Novo- sibirsk, and even in Central Asia, in Tashkent. They are centering on the same alternatives which arose in Moscow, either the estab- lishment of a genuine socialist re- ality, if necessary by revolutionary means - this idea is chiefly pro- pagated by the Russians - or the implementation of different paths toward socialism, which is chiefly supported by the members of non- Russian nationalities who point out that such a development was even approved, not only by the decisions of the twentieth Party Congress, but is already being practiced. The comments of the Komsom- ol, and its often hasty measures, make it clear to the individual groups that they are not alone, and that almost the entire Soviet youth is participating in the new wave of discussions. This is un-. doubtedly one of the most signi- ficant political movements since the death of Stalin. It is also noteworthy that it was not ini- tiated by the ruling forces, not "from above," but spontaneously from within the socialist camp it- self. It will probably also be solved within the socialist camp. It can be promoted from above but scarcely prevented. 1 I I I i i I j 1 I1 I 1II [I1 II I yx I a tM I II I I A aaia"wethart" II MARILYN -SHOP 529 E.ALiberty 1 I FITZGEIAL (Continued from Page 9) was, just .as we would presume, underwriting. While Scott Fitzgerald, to be sure, had all his life a youthful, a sort of freshman-like outlook on things, he was still veryimuch a serious artist. He conceived his as novels, and not as vehicles for actors and actresses. But coinci- dentally, he was on to something in his last, unfinished book, The Last Tycoon. He had hit on a pop- ular theme-behind the scenes in the life of a Hollywood demi-god -and was one of the first people to give it a thorough treatment. But the author did not live to finish this work, and now we shall never know if it was to have been his greatest work. The theme has been treated successfully many times since; so, in a way, we may say that Fitzgerald was bypassed even when it came to writing a novel about, an inherently popular industry. Let us then, for the time being, say that Scott Fitzgerald's contribution rests in the pages of his novels and short stories alone. For, until such time as TV and the movies become more re- fined, he won't quite fit there. WHAT the work of F. Scott Fitz- gerald should achieve today is a wide reading 'audience among college students. For he was a real college boy-long beyond his col- lege years-and he wrote much that is a reflection of his- days at Princeton. Fitzgerald never graduated from Princeton, and that fact hurt him deeply. He was not a diligent student; but it was the truth that he did get sick late in the fall of his senior year and left school for home and a rest. But he always wanted to make it clear that he was not bounced out of Princeton for bad grades. in a poignant phrase in a letter to Ernest Hemingway, Scott stressed this when he wrote, "You can't flunk out in November." Scott Fitzgerald wrote a lot that will be meaningful for the present generation of college students. Some titles: This Side of Paradise, a novel; thestories. The Diamond As Big As the Ritz, The Offshore Pirate and-- well - most of the stories In Flappers and Philoso. phers." The college student ought to become familiar with Fitzgerald's life. For the time being, Arthur Mizener's The Far Side of Para- dise, Fitzgerald's biography, will suffice for a detailed description of the author's career. Also he should see. Budd Schulberg's The Disenchanted for a close-up, first- hand account of how Fitzgerald, the slipping novelist, seemed to a young man fresh out of Dart- mouth (Schulberg). Above all he should read This Side of Paradise (1920), which was the college boy's Bible in the Twenties-a youthful, undisciplined, affected, spirited, and (for its time) rather shocking picture of the youth of the sensi- tive Fitzgerald-figure, Amory Blaine. AND if his imaginat'on and sym- pathies are stirred, he will trace the author's life through The Beautiful and Damned (1922), see the maturing of his gifts in The Great Gasby (1925), the sprawling overflow of artistry of Tender Is the Night (1934), and the serene, economical craftsman- ship evident in the existing seven chapters of The Last Tycoon (1941) and the accompanying he might also read his short stories. Fitzgerald will talk to members of the present college generation if they will listen to him. He was a lot like them, And, above all, these are the years in their life when he should first be read F. Scott Fitzgerald's life, in its entirety, makes a certain state- ment. And though these exact words are not to be found in his work (although, ironically, their truth tormented him), he would surely have endorsed them: "The older a man gets, the more inclined he is to accept some one else's basic facts of life. The time to live and create a concept of life for yourself is when youa are young.'. come more famous than a smata- dor. But such occurrences are outside the general run of things-freak incidents that belong to the ec- centricities of Spanish tempera- ment, not to the bullring. ON A bullfight Sunday in Mad- rid when six brave bulls, are offered up for the general edifica- tion of the public, it is almost a, foregone conclusion that by sun- down there will be meat from six brave bulls for the general bene- fit of the poor. And if a bull proves himself to be a coward and unacceptable for performance in the, ring, he meets 'his death shamefully-off-stage instead of in open combat, but death all the same. For death is the foundation of the spectacle. This is the basis of the art, the reason for th peculiar intensity that accompanies that art, When the hot Mediterranean sun beats down on the gaudy fig- ure performing with the untamed beast, it is the ancient laws of tra- gedy that are set in-motion-and something deeper than sporting blood is required from the specta- tor. If it has been a good fight-the bull brave, the matador courage- ous, the kill honorable-then the power of the spectacle is its own See Cover Picture justification. There is a certain profound feeling in the bullfight that leaves the spectator deeply emotionally affected - a feeling unlike anything found in the sporting world. COURSE, for every fine per- formance there are the dozens of second-rate exhibitions that go from inferior to deplorable. There Miss Durchslag, presently em- ployed in her home city, Chicago, graduated from the University with a major in English in June, 1956. During the 1955-56 school year, she served as The Daily's first Magazine Editor. She re- turns to the college newspaper scene with an article on American attitudes toward the bullfight, culled partially from her travels in Europe last summer. are a thousand variable factors that make it impossible for even the most competent of matadors to turn out a satisfactory after- noon every time he appears. Furthermore, competence is not enough. The bullfight reaches emotional heights only when the matador too feels the power of the drama in which he is acting. The bullfighter at his best delivers himself "body and soul to the pure joy of fighting," in the words of matador Juan Belmonte. Today . the consistently good writers on bullfighting are still the English. A fine example of re- cent vintage is John Marks' To the Bullfight, published in 1953, which is more modest than Hemingway's epic, 'but also more coherent. This is not to say that the Americans do not make their ap- pearance on the scene. Barnaby Conrad, who now operates a sa- loon in San Francisco, is the au- thor of the very interesting La Fiesta Brava, a sort of primer of the trade, with excellent photo- graphs. Conrad has also written the novel, The Matador, and other. bullfight miscellany. Tom Lea's book The Brave Bulls, a best seller of a few years back, is American Attitudes Toward the Popular Spanish Sport Of Death Are Undergoing Quite a Radical Ch( CONTENTS k" "s '.4 iff .Y another fictionalized version of what goes on in bullfighting. The most recent American note of Spain and its particulars is Ri- chard Wright's Pagan Spain, an individual type of travelogue that maintains its individuality in the bullring. IN SHORT, indications are that Americans may be closer to the Iberian peninsula than they think. As Spain becomes included in the standard tourist circuit, and it is rapidly advancing in that direc- tion, the public attitude should be- come radically different. "Bull fever," as the English call the attraction of the ring, is dif- g C C E I BULLFIGHTTINGPage 2 TRANQUILIZERS Page 4' ART MUSEUM Page 6 EUGENE O'NEILL Page 8 SCOTT FITZGERALD -Page 9 MOSCOW LETTER Page THE MOSAIC ART Page, DETROIT AREA STUDY -Page, JOURNALISM FELLOWS Page SAILING Page 10 11 12 14 15 "/ Y 1:.w : ::: ."... a y " .. .... V.. {1 {1.VY.".".. "...y "tA,,, : 1" ".} "{Y N.}:J. }'Y. ' f: :4:.':!:;C}'.ti:}.^..}:is''.ic} :. .'.: i: t ;:?.'r: f .", ?.%' Sl:'i ":' i}:4 I MAGAZINE EDITOR: Tommy Morrison MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHER: John Hirtzel MAGAZINE ARTIST: John Weichsel PICTURE .CREDITS-Cover: Bullfight photograph courtesy Boersma Travel Service; Page 2: Photograph by Harding Williams; Page 5: Cartoon courtesy The New Yorker Magazine; Pages 6 and 7: Photographs courtesy the Museum of Art; Page 8: Photograph courtesy Ronald Muchnick; Page 10:4 Photograph courtesy Associated Press Newsphotos; Pages 12 and 13: Daily photographs by Richard Gaskill Page 14: Daily photographs by Charles Curtiss; Page 15,: Photographs courtesy International Yacht Sales; Page 16: Photograph courtesy Associated Press Newsphotos; Page 17: Daily photograph by Richard Gaskill (Area Study). We find that coming into the Graduation gift buy- ing season that we are able to offer a few selected bar- gains for those Moms and Dads who are thinking aloy their junior grads. 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