PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1913 Book Burning "Can't Have You Breaking Out" BOOKS S AID the turtle to the owl: "How dast you to have a book? Prince John is moughty touchy about anybody 'cept HIM knowin' how to read. Natheless, here it be! Phoo-it's blank! What you mean nathe- less? Aha! Bein' as it's dangerous.to got books, I writes 'em as I needs em'-THERE! This one says that Robin Hood aint no duke. You is a honest to goodness varlet, Gran'ma. What's you up to, varlet? Setting fire to the book I writ-Prince John pays me two dollars for every one I burns. Soun's like you must be in the money. No--I gotta work night and day. Prince John fines me two dollars fer ever' one I writes. It keeps me busy as a beaver. Writin' 'em an' burning' em, writin' em an' burnin' 'em. Whoosh-the book-keepin' alone is a full time job. Who owes who? Who owes what? Always a argumint. I jes' writ some- thin' called the "Merchant of Venice." Think I'll sign a fancy name-how's Shakespeare sound? Jes' like Shaksper. Hard to spell anyways - I'l' make it: Francis Bacon. Easier to real an' all. Burnin' up should save a lot of argumint some day. It'll save me two dollars right now." * * * * A whimsical cheer for Mr. Kelly. Unfortunately not even Walt Kelly can save us from a lot of argument. The world has been arguing about book burning-liter- al and figurative-for centuries. Whether the Arab conquerers of Alexan- dria in Egypt in 642 A.D. shoveled the books of the famous libraries into the furnaces of the public baths is one of the disputed points in history. Book burning was an idea cooked up by the Chinese according to one authority. The Ts'in Emperor Shi Hwang-ti, third century B.C. is said to have ordered con- fiscation and burning of all the works of philosophers before him and all works dealing with the past. Life magazine wryly editorialized a few weeks ago: "On May 12, just after the 20th Anniversary of the Nazi book burning, the New York Daily Worker carried a remi- niscent story of how the Nazis had 'looted' libraries and carried truckloads of literature listed as un-German. 'The Hitler hoodlums reached far into the past and even gathered in the 1905 pac- ifist novel "Lay Down Your Arms," for Which Bertha von Suttner Won the Nobel Prize.' "In Communist East Germany, last No- vember," Life continued, "The Institute for Matters Relating to Libraries issued a direc- tive. It listed for removal from library shelves all books 'of open pacifist tendencies and those injurious to the training of our children for active defense."'" "Guess the title of one book," asked the Life editor. "Lay Down Your Arms. Other Commie castouts from East Germany's public shelves were Erich Remarque's "All Quiet on the Western Front" and Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos, both of which had been booted out by the Nazis 20 years earlier. Book burners of the world, unite," shouted the editorial's finale. If the bookburners of the world heed the cry-unite for bigger and better holocausts, the goosesteppers and the East German cen- sors will find themselves in the company of such self-righteous non-thinkers as one or two United States senators, assorted U.S. in- formation center officials, the San Antonio Minute Women an countless librarians the world over. Such subleties as placing Marx and Lillian Hellman authored books on backroom shelves and requiring notes from instructors before copies of the Communist Manifesto are released to university students doing re- search work are common practice. Outright bonfires in information centers are not marshmallow roasts. Three or four paragraphs in a commence- ment address at Dartmouth College by Pres- ident Eisenhower in which he urged the graduates that they not become "book burn- ers" were seized upon by the press and given full play. These few paragraphs were chosen for attention for two reasons. They were almost the only meaty statements in an ad- lib, kind of easy going commencement-type speech. Secondly, they were an outcry against disease which is spreading like bu- bonic plague. There is no logic comprehensible in ap- propriating funds to purchase Communist propaganda to line the shelves of U.S. In- formation center libraries. These Centers are set up to make information on the U.S. available in foreign countries. But wholesale removal of books on chess or gardening by men and women who have been silent before investigation com- mittees is sheer outrage. As for keeping Communist literature on shelves marked "restricted" or "classified" here in our own counrty, we are flouting a basic premise. The bliss brought on by ignorance is a vacuum. The more we know about commu- nism, Communism and the other taboo isms, the better equipped we will be to form ju- dicious opinions. "That it (censorship) will be primely to the discouragement of all learning, and the stop of Truth, not only by disexercising and, blunting our abilities in what we know al- ready, but by hindring and cropping the discovery that might bee yet further made both in religious and civill Wisdome," quoth Milton. -Gayle Greene RAMEY, by Jack Farris, J. B. Lippin- cott Co., $3.00, and DENHAM PROPER, by Alfred Slote, G. B. Putnam and Sons, $3.50. KITH HOPWOOD award time just past, it seems fitting and proper to report on what happens to the winners of the sub- stantial literary prizes given here every spring; at least to report on what has hap- pened to two of them, Jack Farris and Al- fred Slote, both of whom have had first novels published recently, Slote's by Put- nam in March and Farris' in May by Lip- pincott. These two books are part of a sud- den flow from the printers of novels by Hop- wood winners, which somewhat makes up for the long drought award-recipients have been experiencing in finding publishers. Contrary to prevalent belief, a Hopwood prize is no automatic guarantee of publica- tion. Both "Ramey" and "Denham Proper" have rated the honor by their many sub- stantial qualities. Grouping the two novels in one review may seem incongruous, since in theme, the books appear quite different. "Ramey" is the story of the son of a hill preacher, told with a rapt pastoral feeling for the mater- ial. "Denham Proper," on the other hand, deals with the rather tenuous social system of a small town and its inhabitants. In the Farris novel, the hero is a country boy in his early teens; in the Slote book, the pro- tagonist is a middle-aged man with social standing and. a family. These, however, are superficial differ- ences. Both books are constructed dra- matically and consider a human being at a crisis of experience. Both offer the protagonist a certain moral choice, and in making the choice, both men, perhaps significantly, attain a victory over them- selves, thus reaffirming a central confi- dence in man's ability to see his way through, to find a reconciliation; and to grow through the discovery. Both Farris and Slote express themselves without convolutions of style, but directly and with no little force. This is particularly refreshing since the native settings of both novels commonly lend themselves to ex- treme treatments, the ultra-poetic tenden- cies of the folk story and the ultra-sophis- ticated inclinations of the society novel being well known. The relative straight- forwardness of the characters in both of these books have instear permitted the wri- ter to approach his material with an un- abashedness that might have seemed "slick" had the authors been less honest. The ir- resistible humanity, the flair for the people of the place, make the concerns of the char- acters in both novels serious and touching things. * S * THE MINOR FAULTS of the novels are not flaws of creation so much as flaws of conception. In "Ramey," a more careful foreshadowing of the tragedy might have strengthened the book. The fiber of the pastoral joys could have been richer for a few earlier contrasts; and evil when it comes ira. relatively palpable thing-all black, too simple perhaps, too unprepared. The understanding that Ramey finds comes consequently without the full effect a more perfect structure would have given the book. At that, Ramey, the boy, is such a fine kid, his personality manages to weld the book's larger purposes. The rural des- criptions, particularly that of the coon hunt, are vividly created, crisp and bril- liant expositional writing. The dialogue and narrative is steeped in the rural idiom, well handled by the author throughout. The theme of Slote's "Denham Proper," according to the author, is "the passing down of spiritual debts from one generation to another: making your son responsible for your mistakes as you were responsible for your father's; the inheritance of unfulfilled dreams, roads not taken, happiness not gained. It is particularly the story of one man's discovery of his debt to himself and how he paid it." * * * TO ACCOMPLISH this, Slote follows Ro- r bert Denham Manning through a few important days at the autumnal equinox of his life. In looking back and forward, Slote focuses on a man resigning. It it, however, not a resignation of despair, but one of un- derstanding and a kind of contentment. The novel shrewdly perceives the relationships between parents and children with humor and with mature seriousness. Its resolution is particularly suitable and among the best things in the book. Somewhat overconstructed, the book edges toward stageplay mechanics at times. This cramps a few of the char- acters who, one suspects, might have been worth more than the author was able to give to them. In other words, somewhat too much attention is paid to machinery, not enough to the people who provide the climate in which the well-developed the- sis is realized. But what a good pair of first novels they rk * - D-B DAILYOFFICAL BULETI MATrERi OF FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP DISTORTING history seems to acutest danger in Japan; a cer I RECORDS '1 THIS IS an omnibus review of a number of recent Columbia releases, and as in all such reviews the comments are frequent- ly brief and necessarily unqualified. Among these recordings are orchestral, chamber, and vocal works by Bach, Beethoven, Ber- lioz, Schubert and others. Let's begin with the orchestral music. Herbert von Karajan and the Vienna Phil- harmonic give us three items from the standard repertoire: Beethoven's Eighth and Ninth Symphonies, and Schubert's Seventh Symphony (in C Major). These are stan- dard performances with the characteristic Viennese idiosyncracies: moderate tempi, balanced sound, and occasional sentimental- ization. My Viennese friends assure me that only the Viennese have the proper attitudes to Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert and Brahms, and that I've been spoiled by a surfeit of Toscanini. Perhaps and maybe. Incidental- ly, there is some fine singing in the Beetho- ven Ninth by Julius Patzak and Hans Hot- ter. Berlioz's exciting and beautiful Romeo and Juliet Symphony is well played by Dimitri Mitropoulos and The Philharmon- ic Symphony of New York. The only fault with this performance is an occasional loss of control: Mitropoulos sometimes con- fuses passion and hysteria. Labor Justice THE DICTUM that it is up to labor to clean its own house has sometimes been offered as an excuse for doing nothing when scandals have pointed to labor culpability in racketeering. Now, however, a union pro- poses that something tangible be done to as- sure labor of a clean house. Alexander Rose and Marx Lewis, top officers of the United Hatters and Millinery Workers Union, have obtained the support of their organization to the creation by the American Federation of Labor of a bureau "whose one function shall be the receipt and investigation of complaints of racketeering and other evil doings in labor organizations." They believe that labor's own department of justice would be able to prod affiliates which fail to dis- cipline wrongdoers or pursue malefactors. We do not know whether this plan is feasible as it stands or whether it would require modification. We feel sure, however, Among the chamber works are Beetho- ven's last violin and piano sonata (opus 96) played by Szigeti and Horszowski, Schubert's Rondo Brilliant (played by Szigeti and Car- lo Bussotti on the reverse of the Beethoven), and Schubert's Trio in E Flat played by Serkin and Adolf and Herman Busch. Szigeti plays with his usual fine, rather dry, but always expressive tone; Horszowski is a superb partner. The Schubert Trio, long and rich in melody, is rendered with grace and power; this is full-bodied Schubert in the great line of the C Major Quintet and the G Major Quartet. Claudia Muzio had one of the most extra- ordinary voices of her time; it was distin- guished in nearly every quality which makes a great voice: range, power, flexibility, and expressive control. Columbia has transcribed a number of her 78 records to an LP disc; this Muzio Song Recital is a rather hetero- generous collection: Reger, Debussy, Delibes, Pergolesi, and some undistinguished songs by Italian composers unknown to me. Yet despite the frequent triviality of what she sings and the age of the recordings, Muzio remains impressive. Elizabeth Schwarzkopf sings Mozart's motet, Exsultate Jubilate, and a group of Mozart arias and songs on a single LP. Schwarzkopf has a high, light voice (rem- iniscent of Elizabeth Schumann) which she handles with delicacy and clarity; in the motet, which is really a vocal concer- to, she exploits the instrumental quality of her voice in a remarkable way. Two other vocalists remain to be consid- ered: Aksel Schiotz and Jennie Tourel. Des- pite his recent illness Schiotz gives fine per- formances of Beethoven's moving song cy- cle An Die Ferne Geliebte and Bach's can- tata Meine Seele Ruhmt and Preist. In the Beethoven Schiotz is accompanied by Mie- czyslaw Horszowski; in the Bach by mem- bers of the Perpignan Festival group. With this same group, conducted by Pablo Casals, Jennie Tourel sings arias by Bach and Mo- zart. Mozart's superb concert aria Ch'io mi acordi di te is performed with fire and fi- nesse by Miss Tourel; unfortunately the rec- orded sound is muffled. On the reverse of Miss Tourel's recital, Pablo Casals and Ru- dolf Serkin impeccably perform Beethoven's Variations on a Theme from Handel's 'Judas Maccabaeus.' This Beethoven scarcely plumbs the depths, but it is nevertheless de- niĀ£'htfimusicnil as scl +ymtnofe Lyrmnt+.e+ The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan 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 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceeding publication (be- fore 11 a.nt. on Saturday). WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24. 1953 Vol. LXIII, No. 168 Notices PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS The Addison-Wesley Publishing Co-' pany, Inc., of Cambridge, Mass., will have two representatives at the Bureau of Appointments on Wed. and Thurs., June 24 and 25. to talk with young men, either June or August graduates, who would be interested in entering the book publishing business with their firm as a field representative to cover the southern states. PERSONNEL REQUESTS The B. F. Goodrich Chemical Com- pany in Louisville/ Ky., is looking for Chemical Engineers, Chemists, and a Mechanical Engineer. Men who will graduate in August may apply as well as those who havereceived their degree. The California Public Utilities Com- mission is offering opportunities for em- ployment to engineers who have at least two years' experience in the field of operation of utilities. The U.S. Civil Service Commission urgently needsmenrto fill positions of Patrol Inspector (Trainee) in the Im- migration and Naturatza'tion Service. The Merit System Council of New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico, has an- nounced examination dates for posi- tions in the New Mexico Dept. of Pub- lic Health as Senior Bacteriologist- Se- rologist, Senior Assistant Bacteriolo- gist-Serologist, and Junior Bacteriolo- gist-Serologist. Graduates with majors in science or chemistry may apply. Carbide & Carbon Chemicals Co. in Oak Ridge, 'Penn., has a number of openings for men in the field of Bus. Ad. or Accounting for a training pro- gram in the General Office Manager's office. These men should eventually be placed in supervisory positions in the Manufacturing Office Divisions of the firm's Atomic Energy installations in Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Paducah, Ken- tucky. For appointments, applications, and additional information about these and other openings, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Season tickets for the Department of Speech summer plays are available at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office dai- ly from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. The sum- mer play schedule includes THE MAD- WOMAN OF CHAILLOT, July 1-4; KNICKERBOCKER HOLIDAY, July 8- 11; THE COUNTRY GIRL, July 22-25; PYGMALION, July 29-August 1; and THE TALES OF HOFFMANN, produced with the School of Music, August 6, 7, 8, and 10. Season tickets are $6.00- $4.74-$3.25. Tickets for individual per- formances go on sale June 29. All per- formances are at 8:00 p.m. Lectures Professor Phillips Bradley of the Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs of Syracuse University will speak before the Social Science Workshop at two o'clock, Room 429 MH, on Thursday and Friday, June 25 and 26. His topic on Thursday will be "The Use of the Newspaper in Teaching So- cial Studies." On Friday he will dis- cuss "Teaching Labor-Management Re- lations in Social Studies Classes." vis- itors will be welcome. Thursday, June 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Au- ditorium B, Angell Hall, Professor Fang- Kue Li of the Department of Linguis- tics, University of Washington, will speak on "Chinese Phonology, Old and New." Thursday, June 25, at 4:15 p.m., in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Milton Can- iff, Cartoonist, will speak on Art and the Comic Strip. Academic Noticesj Sports and Dance InstructionI for Women All women students are invited to participate in sports and dance classes offeredby therDepartment of Physical Education for Women. There are openings in: Archery; Badminton, Modern Dance; Golf; Posture, Figure and Carriage; Swimming and Tennis. Register in Barbour Gymnasium, Office 15. There is no charge for use of equip- ment. Doctoral Examination for Sanoh Dharmgrongartama, Education; thesis: "Proposals for Reorganizing the Cur- riculum of the Secondary Schools of Thailand," Thursday, June 25, 4015 Uni- versity High School, at 3:15 p.m. Chair- man S. E. Dimond. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: There will be an organization meeting Thurs. June 25, at 12:00 noon in 3020 Angell Hall. Meeting to arrange Mathematics Seminars Wednesday. June 24, at 4:00 p.m. in room 3011 Angell Hal. Events Toda y The first of the regular Wednesday luncheons sponsored by the Summer Linguistic Program will be today at 12:10 p.m., in the second floor dining room of the Michigan League. La p'tite Causette: First meeting to- day from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. in the wing if the north room of the Michigan Union cafeteria. All students and fac- ulty members interested to speak or to learn informally to speak French are cordially invited to join "La p'tite caus- ette. Exhibitions Museum of Art. Museum collections. General Library. Best sellers of the twentieth century. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Gill- man Collection of Antiquities of Pales- tinc. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit. Modern Mexican village ceramics. Michigan Building,rotunda exhibit. Modern Mexican village ceramics. . Michigan Historical Collections. Mich- igan, year-round vacation land. Cements Library. The good, the bad, the popular. Law Library. Elizabeth II and her empire. Architecture Building. Lithographs by students of the College of Architecture and Design. Coming Events Summer Session French Club. There will be a meeting of a French Club every Thursday evening during the first seven weeks of the Summer Ses- sion. The first meeting will take place Thursday, June 25, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan League: Organization of the club; election of officers; French songs; a social hour; an informal talk in French on France of today by Pro- fessor Charles E. Koella. Director of the club. All students and Faculty peo- ple interested in speaking or in learn- ing to speak French and in singing French songs are cordially invited to join. Sailing Club. The University of Mich- igan Sailing Club will hold its open meeting Thursday, June 25, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3 S of the Michigan Union. Plans for the summer program will be discussed. Anyone interested in sailing is invited to attend. Re- freshments will be served. Classical Studies Coffee Hour. All students of the department, and oth- ers who are interested, are invited to a I Coffee Hour on Thursday, June 25, at 4:15 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. S.R.A. Lunch and Discussion, Thurs- day, 12:15 noon at Lane Hall. Dr. Saveg Shafaq, visiting professor from Iran in Near astern Studies, will be speaker. Topic: "The United Nations Through the Eyes of the Middle East." Call res- ervations to 3-1511 Ext. 281. International Punch Hour, Friday 4:45 to 6 p.m., sponsored by the Office of the Protestant Counselor to Foreign Students and Lane Hall. All students welcome. Motion Picture, auspices of the SL Cinema Guild. W. Somerset Maugham's Quartet. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m., Architec- ture Auditorium, Thursday, June 25. be the most popular indoor sport of our era. Few episodes of recent history have been more sported with by the distorters than the Korean war. The best way to celebrate the truce is to set down a few of the more signi- ficant facts that are currently ig- nored or unknown. In the first place, this long, bit- ter, bloody, ugly, disappointing war has in fact achieved the main purpose which the American gov- ernment had in view, when our troops were ordered to join the South Koreans just three years ago. After the French Revolution, the Abbe Sieyes, an important po- litical figure of those days, was asked what he had done while the guillotine ruled Paris and the terror had France in its grip. "Dear Madame," he told his ques- tioner, "I survived." In the same manner, in the darkest days of the last war, Winston Churchill told a man who grumbled that Britain had nothing to gain by the fighting. "You seem to forget that survival can be an end in itself." The motive of the American response to the Korean aggres- sion was similarly unambitious. The question that was debated at the famous Blair House meeting was not what we might gainby entering the war on the side of the South Koreans, but what we would lose by not entering it. The losses we might expect from inaction were set forth in a famous memorandum prepared by George F. Kennan the day after the Communists crossed the 38th parallel, and presented at the Blair House meeting by Dean G. Acheson. The prospective losses in the Far East alone were appalling enough. An early collapse of the resistance to the Communists in Indo-China: The eventual absorption of Siam, Malaya and Burma into the So- viet Empire; the probable tri- umph of the Hukbalahap move- ment in the Philippines; the Boo mers and Boomerangs AS SOON AS Harold Stassen was appointed Director for Mutual Security, he selected fifty- six "evaluators" to look into the Mutual Security Program in the field. Most of them, for a change, were businessmen, and only a very few ever had had anything to do with foreign aid or foreign policy before. They were schedul- ed for two days of briefing in Washington, and some of them couldn't make that because. of directors' meetings. Then they set off to evaluate what the gov- ernment had been doing in the foreign-aid business. In charge of the expedition was Clarence Fran- cis, Chairman of the Board of General Foods. One of the ideas back of this project was that these men would come home booming the Mutual Security program, helping get across to their communities how important it is. But just as the Administra- tion was deciding to build up the Mutual Security Agency as the clearinghouse for all aid programs, Clarence Francis, as chief evaluator, brought out a report recommending that most of Stassen's job be "liquidated." Just as the Administration was hoping the Italian elections would come out all right for the Center coalition of Premier De Gasperi, its evaluator for Italy, Mr. Crawford, told therSenate Foreign Relations Committee that none of the aid ever given by the United States to Italy "will make any permanent im- provement." The only thing he found worth praising was the fact that De Gasperi had streng- thened the national police. There are plenty of troubles in Italy, for no way has yet been found for the U.S., by giving aid, to make in anotherhcountry the structural changes that the wel- tain invasion of Formosa-these were the obvious and easily pre- dictable Far Eastern consequences of letting the Kremlin get away with its Korean attack. By the same token, any such showing of American weakness would have had the most wide- spread and uncontainable reper- cussions in the Middle East and Europe. All the weaker nations would have adopted a policy of scuttle-and-run. All the soft sit- uations, as in the Middle East, would have come apart. The most strategic positions in the free world would have been lost to the Soviets. And we should have been left with no choice but the choice that faced the British after Mu- nich-the choice between making the best terms we could with a more powerful enemy, or fighting a war of despair on the worst terms imaginable. Such were the enormous priz- es the Kremlin hoped to garner, by showing its own power and our weakness in Korea. Such were the disastrous consequen- ces which have now been avoid- ed. Avoidance of disasters on this scale must certainly be considered a worthy object, even for so painful and discouraging a venture as the Korean war has been. In this sense, indeed, the war has been successful, Many have argued, of course, that we should have set ourselves a bolder goal than the mere avoidance of disasters. They have maintained that once we had en- tered the Korean war, we should have gone on to impose a reason able Far Eastern settlement by force of arms. Certainly no one can say that a simple cease-fire in Korea, and a general return to the status quo ante, is a reason- able Far Eastern settlement. Most of those who have so ar- gued have been flagrantly dishon- est, refusing to admit the heavy costs and risks of their policy. But there have been entirely hon- est men among those calling for bolder actions, such as Sen. Wil- liam Knowland and Adm. Arthur Radford. The other side in the debate about the Korean war has attacked these men, as they have attacked Sen. Robert A. Taft, for "sabotaging" the truce negotia- tions by voicing inflammatory views. This is almost certainly as silly as the denunciations of the Kor- ean war as a "useless" war. The leaders in the Kremlin and at Peking are hard-headed men, af- ter all. They must have been greatly impressed by the fact that a large, influential and rapidly growing group of Americans was demanding stronger action in the Far East. The Soviet and Chinese policy-makers must have been aware tha ta continuation of the bloody stalemate in Korea would involve very great risks for them. The prospect that the Know- and - Radford - Taft viewpoint might soon become a majority American viewpoint, was prob- ably the major influence in get- ting the Communists to give way on the issue of the prisoners. It is worth remembering that it can be helpful to sound tough in a negotiation. It is also worth re- membering that it is dangerous to look weak at any time. The im- mediate cause of the Korean war, beyond any doubt, was the Tru- man-Johnson disarmament pro- gram of 1949-50. The spectacle of American disarmament was the great temptation, that led the Kremlin into the Korean gamble. It is only to be hoped that a new American disarmament program will not produce another chal- lenge from the Kremlin, which will have to be met at infinitely greater and more terrible cost. (Copyright, 1953; N.Y. Her. Trib., Inc.) p tC. tI MYt t l p ,I r, 1 1. Ld, fare of the people demands. But aid-through the Allied Commis- sion, then the United Nations Re- lief and Rehabilitation Adminis- tration, and then the Marshall.- Plan-certainly has caused "per- SixtyThird Year manent improvement" of very Edited and managed by students of large dimensions, as the merest the University of Michigan under the glance at the indices of produc- 1 authority of the Board in Control of tion will show . . . Student Publications. The Italian Government could:, hardly contain itself when it Editorial Staff learned about Mr. Crawford's tes- Harland Britz.........Managing Editor timony. Small wonder he didn't Dick Lewis. ......... Sports Editor Becky Conrad...........,Night Editor learn anything, a Rome spokes- Gayle Greene.............Night Editor man said bitterly, since he had no Pat Roelofs......,.....Night Editor contacts with the Italian Govern- Fran Sheldon..............Night Editor ment and refused to talk to any Italians. Business Staff Iaans. Bob Miller ............Business Manager No government program, cer- Dick Alstrom...,..Circulation Manager tainly not Mutual Security, should Dick Nvberg.. ........Finance Manager I I On Matt MAN IS a noble animal, splendid in ashes, and pompous in the grave, solemnizing nativities and deaths with equal lustre, not omit- ting ceremonies of bravery, in the infamy of his nature. -Sir Thomas Browne . * ., I =i