Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGA'LINE Wednesday, January 15, 1958 Pae outen HEMIHIANDALYMAAZNEWeneda, anar 1, 95 Sailor's Life r (Cs,,ised fros Page 5) 1 sailor. Becoming an officer entails Slater's Pay. ing. Or the paradox of the Finnish fireman who found it necessary to trade in a new 70 dollar watch for one with numbers instead of dots because, "I get confused when I want to tell the time." Yet his paintings are hanging in bars and shipping halls in many great lakes ports. To other sailors, these things are commonplace - a subject for laughing discussion but seldom a basis for personal evaluation. T IS A strange and fascinating world, and isolated, because the sailor doesn't fit into any other climate. Many books have been written about ships and sailors, but seldom, if ever, is there one written about sailors off their ships. The ordinary seaman couldn't live a normal life on land because he would not be able to understand what makes its society tick. He wouldn't fit into the scheme of its living pattern. Any job he took would not satisfy him because he is used to holding a job on his own merits and Coast Guard specifica- tions. He wouldn't understand a seniority system based on time spent on a job, nor could he accept the idea of being tied to a job by the need for good references and a clean record. T HE SEAMAN wouldn't under- stand our institutions; for example, the church. Essentially, lie has no religion as society ac- cepts the word. A man who has no place to go can almost have no faith because his life is static. Hope and faith are meaningless words to him. And he would find it a waste of time to meet once a week on Sunday, because he is not interested in social gatherings where people can talk about the past week's events and search the congregation for new hats. He can find the same thing on his level at the shipping hall. Ship's officers are practically a breed apart from the ordinary knowledge comparable to that which a doctor must have for his profession. In both cases men are dealing with instruments of a fragile nature. A ship is a delicate mechanism and being able to guide it safely from harbor to harbor requires the utmost skill and judgment. Officers, along with their occupational qualifications usually have the self-discipline seldom seen in the ordinary sea- man. Someday, all sailors think, they will "get off these damn scows" and settle down on land. But that day will not arrive. By the time many of them have quit sailing, they are too old or too perman- ently drunk' to find anything but cheap flops and hard curbstones on land. And if they could come off with money in their pockets and something constructive to do with it, they wouldn't find their dream complete, for they would have to blend into a society which is alien to them. JOSEPH (Continued from Page 12) read Nostromo" strikes one as curi- ous, particularly when one recalls that Conrad himself-and he was a better critic than he supposed- rated the book highly. Nostromo is a very difficult book, not quite like any other Conrad novel, but it seems to me to be one of the two or three best things he wrote. Professor Haugh's critical ap- proach does not allow him to wan- der far from the twelve books themselves. Joseph Conrad: Dis- covery in Design will have accomp- lished a very useful and salutory function if it brings the attention of readers to specific titles in the Conrad canon. Conrad himself wrote, "The reader will go on read- ing if the book pleases him and critic will go on criticizing 'with that faculty of detachment born Jazz Handbook (Continued from Pa e 13) ed the position of Detroit as a ma- more competent today than in jor jazz center of the country. Not 1926 (if indeed the quotations had only has Detroit produced a num- any meaning at the time it was ber of fine musicians, but it has made) and overlooks the fact that long been known for the fact that jazz and classical compositions new trends in popular music and are entirely different types of in jazz first appear here. music with very different require- Probably the most important ments. contributions to the field of jazz made in this book are Ulanov's LIKE MUST people who write on contributions to the field of jazz jazz, Ulanov divides all jazz and the place of jazz as a form into a number of very definite schools. This is unfortunate, be-INTEFLDocrtise cause it eliminates many excellent N THE FIELD of criticism, he musicians who do not fit in care- attempts to describe the import- fully outlined categories. Jazz, by ance of having sufficient back- its very nature, is not capable of ground to be able to compare new- being precisely defined and as with old. He also emphasizes the result, any classification of this role of emotions in judging jazz. sort is ambiguous. It would be far . ' the borderline between bettr fr amguoIt oepldean emotions and intellect barely bettr fr an author texplain exists, at least as far as the trends in jazz as a function knowing response to an art ts time rather than to say, "Thisis concerned, even to an art. jazz." that, like jazz seems so much Even so, Ulanov has done a far of the time to be largely di- better classification than~ most. rected at the emotions. For one thing, he has acknowledg- Jazz is an emotional form of music, and purely intellectual criticism of it is not fair or com- plete. Ulanov feels that jazz should not be classified as minor art perhaps from a sense of infinite along with "the arts of Faience, littleness and which is yet the petit point, etched glass or bag- only faculty that seems to assimi- pipe music." It is music that has late man to the immortal gods." some significance besides salat- APPROACHED with that sense ing the musical desires of the men- of detachment, Conrad's work tally feeble. Jazz can be compared has rewarded Professor Haugh to some degree as a form of po- with a book that will assist read- etry or chamber music which is ers in charting their own reading most suitable for saying certain voyages of discovery. The fact that things and should be recognized as new readers will discover or old such. readers find confirmed Mencken The most significant point about summed up; and Mencken had a jazz is this: At its best what it way of giving praise just as he communicates cannot be commu- damned - without reservation: nicated in any other way; to those "There was something (about Con- who know it well there is such rad) almost suggesting the vast- a thing as the jazz experience, one ness of a natural phenomenon. He which is entirely different from transcended all the rules. There any other form of music. have been, perhaps, greater novel- This is the important quality of ists, but I believe that he was in- jazz and the quality by which it comparably the greatest artist who should be judged and placed in ever wrote a novel." the world of the arts. 4 i SPECIA COTT( DRESS L PURCHASE! )N SHIRTWAIST ES -10.98 vorite roll-sleeve class- waister with button-to- ull-skirt ease. . .now at re-season price! smart checks, or patterns in ' \ astels or dark shades. to 16#, sportswear , a ~ \'t I J your fa ic shirty waist, f a low p stripes, pretty p sizes 10