Sec. Two, Page Eight T HE MICH IGAN DA ILY Monday, February, 11, 1951 Musical Contest on Friendly SidE By J. CORSEY DALLAHAN Charlie Spivak a n d Johnny Long alternately filled the giant I-M Building - usually echoing from referee's whistles - with strains of the nation's most danceable dance music during the 1953 J-Hop. The 2,000 males present softly yodeled dance tunes, accompanied by Johnny's violin or Charlie's trumpet, into the ears of half clad dates. THE ATTITUDE of the band this year could be termed "apa- thetical" if compared with the slug-fest of Freddie Martin and Ray McKinley at the 1952 J-Hop. Observers credited the missing belligerency between Charlie and Johnny as being due to the lack of "war psychosis" among the band members. After a sterling rendition of "Tell Me Why" by Johnny, there was a noted excitement among the band members. For a time some observers Joyfully believed that the musicians might be taking to dope, but they soon realized that they were only hurrying through the number so they could eat a peppermint lozenges-a gift of the J-Hop committee. According to Daily -pollsters working at the dance, the singers were a disappointment to more than 100 per cent of the males at- ending the shindig. Although the information secured was rath- er confused, itappears that the males believed the singers' dresses were not cut quite low enough to give proper range to their voices. One music critic remarked that "those girls should study Dag- mar's special method of breath control. It does wonders for the voice." ABOUT 11:47 p.m. Charlie was forced off the stand by two stu- dents from Florida. It seems both were standing directly in front of the bandstand, observing the mu- sic makers and non-chantly suck- ing lemons. After blowing several "clinkers" and drooling all over his only clean shirt, Charlie won the admiration of the crowd by throwing his trumpet into the nearest basketball hoop. JOHNNY LONG A national institution-. the button - down collar GLORIFIED IN Van. 1/Jov en Si rii CHARLIE SPIVAK The reed section played several The departing comment of numbers with their instruments band leaders upon receiving b inserted inside megaphones. The fide check amounting to appro effect was- such a soft tone that mately $6,000 was only & " it could hardly be heard. Some mtl 600wsol dancers explained the mega hum, another day, another d phones as a cover for dirty fin- lar. gernails. In a personal interview between dance sets, Charlie expressed his opinion on the Iranian oil situa- . tion as "inflamable." Because Charlie only talks in hop langu- F age, his special interpreter ex , plained the trumpet man's feel- i ings. It seems that all the valve oil for Charlie's trumpet is shipped t ' 5 from the Iranian area. As a re- 5X. sult of Premier Mossadegh's ac- tion, Charlie has been cut off4;>'t{" without a drop. Johnny was also having trouble w a,' '}{w} with his fiddle. "The fumes of Hiram Walker have a rather odd ' effect on my instrument," he re- marked. Showing no signs of be- ing unstrung by the situation,£{ '.{< Johnny declared he would have to "take such fiddle playing on the '." chin." For casual smartness and downright comfort, the button-down collar shirt has no rival. Here it is in an oxford cloth of rugged texture. Cool, easy- going, typically American in feeling... typically Van Boven in its fine single needle tailoring. from $495 R t i " r PanFovw *XXFORD CLOTHES DOBBS HATS BRBERRY COATS ANN ARBOR DETROIT