'U' Athletics (Continued from Page 3) it believed the sport had become too much like a business. The University also has not slipped to the extent of the Uni- versity of Southern California which was placed on probation by the NCAA in 1959 for a recruiting violation. Michigan rather stands almost in the center-a solid aca- demic institution that can main- tain an impressive athletic tradi- tion continuing for over a century. U NFORTUNATELY the public and some of the state's news- papers fail to recognize this bal- ance, demanding either one or the other sides of the spectrum. Uni- versity students should be the ones 0u sa d n m--rc n P e hnssulldeem= ulsianding American Poet to educate the public to the merit u oiin of our position. If Michigan recruits athletes, (Continued from Page o4) of "For Sale" and the almost gro- patient, father of a sick small tae aable to mee themedus- HERE is "Dunbarton," a poem tesque, yet loving, memory of daughter. These poems are radi- tso e standards in the same way of how Lowell accompanied his "Sailing Home from Rapallo," ant; in every sense they illuminate was attracted here by themUniver- grandfather on "yearly autumn Lowell's elegy for his mother who life and enrich art. sity's science curriculum. get-aways from Boston / to the died in Italy and whose body he Lowell is, indeed, a poet at the If the University has a losing family graveyard in Dunbarton" brought home to bury. top of his powers, whose work ful- football team, it is perhaps be- where they "raked leaves from our Some of the final poems tell of fills and still holds promise. Sel- cause men who would have made dead forebears. / defied the dank Lowell's adult life-as a conscien- dom do endorsements express a+. the winning difference went toweather / with 'dragon' bonfires " tious objector of War II, sentenced reader's convictions; Eli z a b e t h d erent schools when they failed There is "Grandparents," a to the same federal jail where Czar Bishop, herself a fine poet, writes must maintain moving piece of reminiscence too Lepke of Murder. Inc., had "... his on the dust - jacket of Robert anchored to the reality of place to little segregated cell full / of Lowell's "Life Studies" what seems Education and athletics are not be sentimental. There is "Com- things forbidden the common precisely 'right: "Somehow or constantly at opposition but can mander Lowell," a portrait of his man: / a portable radio, a dresser, other, by fair means or foul, and complement one - another. Only father, and "Terminal Days at two toy American / flags tied to- in the middle of our worst century when movements are made into Beverly Farms;" there is the gether with a ribbon of Easter so far, we have produced a mag- extremes does friction result, heartbreaking loneliness and ache palm;"-as a husband, a mental nificent poet." r 07 BASIC SHIRTS FOR YEAR 'ROUND WEAR VILLAGIE R A. THE "DITCHDIGGER" ... ROLL SLEEVE, BUTTON-DOWN COLLAR IN A FINE DRIP-DRY COTTON. B. LONG SLEEVE, YARN-DYE $ 95 OXFORD CLOTH SHIRT . . TAILORED C, TO PERFECTION. C. OXFORD CLOTH, ROLL SLEEVE, "McMULLEN" COLLAR ... ALL IN SIZES 10 to 16. /l\ fI " , i%' The/A ILYNShO re 529-531 E. Liberty Michigan Theatre Bldg. SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1959 Page Fifteen SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1959 Page Fifteern