,1TNDAY, MAY 6, 1923 SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1923 THE MICHIGAN E -1grateful. Not worldly enough to cul- of his own, he should seize the oc- Chres Vildrac. The best poem is 'Mt ltthe Zaijers of a lion, heyet casion to shine at the expense of- the "Helen" by H. D. authors whom he is supposed to be _;understands those wvho would lionize atoswo ei upsdt e ByN B - Taous he c ould lynde criticizing." I wonder if Mr. Dell has BOOKS REICEIVEDy 'hin. Though he could acta los des - a grudge against some critics. Prob- .Intrusions, Beatrice Kean Seymour. Gerhart Hauptmann, in the April pisno one, e is aaoss ably he has. It is fashionable among Alfred Knopf. issue of The Dial, begins the story of self-conscious hero worshipper.' No i eative Itrite sh on w.e Wit- Mirrlr s of s I creative writers noel, you "know. Wit-' Mirrors of Moscow, Louis srait. "The yHeretic of Soana", an eccentric doubt he could be made to feel more nss the Bokman's Mail. Thomas Seltzer. hermit goatherd who dwelt on the comfortable If some honest students A Line of Gowf of Two, Bert Les- top f te Als. ~autman's amewould say wht they. really think of The little appreciation of Josephine ALn fGw fTo etLs sop of the Alps. Hauptmann's name shis poetry a Peabody's "The Piper" by Abbie Far- ton Taylor. Alfred Knopf. should be suflicient advertisement for for'well Brown is a good recommenda- Lady Into Fox, David Garnett. Al- any story. In the same issue is an The first essay in the Bookmanf tion for those who have not ead the fred Knopf. exceptional dialogue between "Smith May Is by Floyd Dell. it ischatty and American classic in poetic drama. Life of Christ, Papinni. Harcourt, and Jones", in the progress of which suggestive and is entitled "Criticism JCr s e m z Brace & Co. the two men attempt arson, and fin- and Bad Manners." Of the literary aJoseph Conrad!is gven maazne; all oe il,3 th oter I tel hecritic hie writes: "It is, of course, an sp ace again. Praise Conrad! This[ ally one kill ; the other. Istell the- ipi upon Ia po duev w time the critic is Grant Overton. Yes. A review of modern music will ap- wants to write novels of his own to read the article: anything about Con- pear in the Sunday Magazine for May pause I believe it needs a red flag to put him at a desk before a pile of oth- rad is all right.j 13. This will serve as-a preliminary warn of violence ahead. "A Wedding er people's novels and ask him to criti- It isn't feasible to mention every- to the thirtieth 5a; Festival. The Feast" by Manual Kromoff is written cize them. No wonder he is often im- thing in the Bookman, nor is it worth three distinct phases that led up to in the same sort of dark nood. patient; and no wonder, either, that while, but there is an article on book j the music question of today and its By far the most enlightening arti- lacking as yet the opportunity to make illustration by Robert Cortes Holliday,- outstanding figures will be discussed cle in the volume is the Hungarian himself known to the public by novels-id a Malcolm Cowley criticism of at length Letter by Bela Balaz, for it justifies-- in a fascinating style the statement that "history, and especially the cul- tural history of a small people is more T significant, more illustrative, than that H ED ND AI of a large people."P FA In this issue also is the first of a PERFECT DAY. series of articles summarizing thej present status of the arts. It is en - titled "The Progress of Painting b After the stroll, drive or Thomas Craven." Of the poetry I rec- ommend Maxwell Bodenheim's "Desho a cadent Cry" as a splendid definition si elA C L of an artist. The other verse is Dud top things off to ley Podre's "Marigold Pendulum" and Natalie Clifford Barney's "To Trave perecton. or Not to Travel" which is justifies only if the reader has much spare time. Kindly excuse the wash drawingE "Lucretia" which is pasted in as a frontispiece.172 4S U N I VER S I TYw' THE FREEMAN (May 2): Per- r laps Austria has been unjustly ma- ligned for precipitating the great war. The rumor that she instigated the murder of her Archduke Ferdinand may be false. Herman Lutz in an en- grossing article, "The Serbian 'Black I Hand'", gives references in great Once you try, its abundance to documents which tend to prove that the plot was hatched ir adf to go b. Belgrade and that the assassins re ceived help from Serbian officials. In the same number of "The Free- man." Mr. Bertrand Russell begins an essay on "The Sources of' Power" it ; which he aims to show that the great --_-___ powers (military and economic). which are exercised within the State are ultimately reducible to mental power. "If this is true," he says o "both military and economic powe could he indefinitely modified by the operation of mental power." His firs ° installment promises an intellectua treat. Two other articles worth reading in this Freeman are Theedore M ay nard's evaluation of Hilaire Belloc and Lewis Mumford's essay entitiec "Ex Libris" which tells a nice con trast between William James and George Santayana. Santayana re- G ceives special recognition this month Government statistics show that over 60 of the business failures in since he also appears in the Bookman asttenyears were due to insufficient capital. Interesting and important. his "Life of Reason" being chosen a "The Book of the Month." "T k h th."It merely shows that the majority of young men that start out in business SCPRIBNER'S for. May opens with! some charming letters taken front =for themselves haven't enough preparation for the task; for surely the saving correspondence between George Mere- dith and Alice Meynell. These tw = of adequate capital is as much a part of careful prepayation as is technical personalities are romantic ones to find - together. ;-.knowledge'. THE -30KMAN Probably -the most interesting thingto the camrpus; This bank can teach you the first lessons in the great school of Thrift. will be "The Literary Spotlight" which this month is turned upon 'ter tat you must learn or always by the sound advice Robert Frost. Now don't believe that Afa Mr. Frost really looks like the cai- actual, knowledge gained in years of banking service. cature of him which accompanies the -" article: fortunately he does not. He, the poet, more closely resembles the figure jNch we see under the spot- light itSelf. "If Mr. Frost," we arer told "had lived in classical Italy or = Greece, he would probably have tend-: AD ed sheep." Concerning Mr. Frost's n Arbor1Sav1gs an sojourn in Ann Arbor the article says: .: - "On the campus of a great western . university he is ill at ease, though The Bank of Friendly Service tisteplc ofti agiie =RESOURCES $5,600,00 Two OFFICES publish articles of op1^iiou by bath ' = stuidents c-nd Ifacuilt tu tbes i.i thfe judgenrt uof theeditor, the'se nrti -"" c?es n rcof intrinsicvalue and itere'st. 71Iis does riot tea;i that-. ~jmoiwc: irs- fl iuion either in (1pC)ri Vtpl or of. - ---° JINGOISM j ment, then we merely have the time worn battle being fought all over again between the embryonic and the of Rodin, Monticelli and others are fossiliferous. real -revelatiofns of his microscopic in- The absurdities which abound when sight. little men find themselves occupying Works of a somewhat lesser degree. places of importance are self-evident. emanate from the pan of his friend LeGallienne intimated as much in his and colleague, H. L. Mencken. This indictment of the possibility of such author is not possessed of the finer a work as the Songs of Solomon com- sensibilities so apparent in the works ing from anything but the highest in- of Huneker, yet he cannot be gain- spiration. But as democracy seeming- said on that score. Where the latter ly insists upon raising the common- was the true artist, a reviewer and place, not only in the eyes of the mob, critic this country may hold up for but, worse still, in its own self-con- comparison with any European prod- sciousness, we must expect the great uct, Mencken is more of the philoso- to be utterly discredited. It is a sim- Vher. I find his grandiloquent nes- pie socialogical process, unable to simism full of innate charm and per- compete with or even to get the high-' meated with deep feeling. He may er point of view of intellectual aristoc- well take his place beside such men as racy, the rabble naturally insists one D reiser, Robert Frost and others aS the weakness, unreality and invalidity being representative of modern Ameri- of the beautiful. Hence Browning, ca in her higher literatary ashects. Dickens, Thackeray and Tennyson are held up for ridicule, being considered s in thea ofivirl o 1l t t ~old fashioned. Yes, old fashioned pos- ist in the field of criticis m a"n'- sibly, but basic nevertheless being the *int uinhalo . e - - very steps in aline of progression to T-Alits ard nlavwrizhfc certain rn._ that which exists today. It is not ex- sons who assume they have ine lof' ij pected that this idea will prove a nte t na"a +t 'frPli-"A Thq tlo popular one with the Browns and do and do and do. offering identie1 I[Smiths, but it is the truth. U h tuh . Well Pressed means Well Well .dressed anen ta'tk. care to- keep their cloth Nothing so restores th'at.look of newness- to -a s cleaned-and presssed by Dettling. Give him a -trial that "Well Pressed means Well Dressed." SUITS - -SUIT' PRESSED 50 CENTS CLEANED ANE $1.50 D E TTLING "The Faultless Tailor" 1121 S. University RI4 II' n1,-tforn And t+- ain . succeeding work. Before 1 n hoti'1 writer and works render themsel-"p- t'11-niph ip-ent. nd cUianpOV i'- terly from the literary horizon. Sneak-, ifn? in terms athletic, thov ren'inro n- of a tract man nos-esaed of inst o- 1-z THe man ro inthe short ras1'. -vt fir long distance r-nine h' i-- simply out of the question. EigmeJ O'Neill is great .because he is ii- a familiar with drawing room eti-1 rmtte as he is at a rlial in notter's1 field. The monotony of Sinelair- Lewis'1 two recent works. Main Street a n Babbitt, is monotony of two entirely! different sorts, and as Lewis know,' life in all its phases he -handles both 1 types well. In the former we ha-e l Moreover, it is high time for us to get our very best fibre to the fore. If anything is to be discredited at all, discredit the commonplace. Art is after all the one surviving element, by which the achievement of races is always measured. By that we have concrete knowledge of the intellect- ual capabilities of various peoples. We know nothing of the exploits of busi- nessmen of the ages past. We know rich and poor existed, it is true, b'ut that is all. Nor do we know the names of the remarkable athletes who performed in the magnificent Olympic Games, but we do know that Myron left us, in his Discobolus the statue of one of them. Yet even here we know not the name of his model, a An Electric Drye for Your Hair The easiest, quickest way DRIES the hair completely in few brief moments with a stead current of cool or well warmed ai Should be a permanent fixture i every sorority house. $25 Good for lifetime service Detroit Edison the dull gray routine of village lite perfect specimen of masculine devel- in America's great Northwest. In the opment. fete race may die, but its latter it is the monotony of business s lifeas ivedby he aerae midleart lives on forever, a silver token of las cien. But the saler typde, achievement. Preserve it, therefore. lsa ciinzen. ,ut the smaller types' If the mediocre is entering definitely with, little to offer but one phase of I lifeor to, un ot enirey. Ftz-into our art, then there is something life or two, run out entirely. Fitz- radically wrong with the core of the gerald gave, us the story of the flap-' people. This the white an had bet- per and he has been doing it ever ter take to heart, and soon, or he will since. T-echt writes books. "Ach sI shortly be treading in the footsteps of schrecklich." Still others concern the older civilizations, the Greek, the themselves solely with inebriate types.,t ortCatonh e e with factory life or the farm. These Roman, or the Carthaginian. peoule never are, antI never become, significant. Eliminate background, WAGNER and achievement is impossible. That; (Continued -from Page Three) is the krnn iinon whi.h s man' bril- 1 Company Main at William Telepli s Le roc upo wjias lay ai liant but short-sighted intellects come' to grief. s A splendid cross-section of what isa going on in the field of modern Amer-' ican literature might be obtained by, examining conditions at any of ourc great universities. This is much more true today than it was five years ago.r The reason for this no doubt lies in1 the same causes that account for thet "revolt from the village" phenomenont existent among our- men of letters. Anc extreme self-consciousness is appar- ent since the war, and whether this is good or not may only be determinedt later. The conditions are too new, and, we live entirely too close to them toc obtain the proper judgmenti whicht only the future can draw. But the chaos which results is apparent to thet dullest observer.. We hear much about bloody redl young upstarts who, denying all the antecedents of a great past, use the works, of John Ruskin as a cuspidorc stool. Obviously we expect such indi- viduals to be the spitting type. Dot they not represent mediocrity infused with a little learning, transformed into humorous, raging fools? Still others" of the same category come forth with "Art! Bah!" Yea, be careful 0 you muses, whom you would1 educate, or there will be a reckoning!1 I verily do not believe in the oppres- sion of the masses, but don't let us1 have a literal "Fool in Christ." Yet, on the other hand, we have, quite the opposite extremes apparent.': The, existence of professors who stopped learning back in 1850. and are :positively unable to appreciate the work of great modern writers, is no more excusable than is the entry <<: ol~t King Ccumio place into- the delld-of art. Grantinig our youtng r-adi1- cals .,.are in -their infanlcy of deve 'lo p-3 for making up melodies. You havei only to listen to children inventing songs to learn that it is wholly natur- al to have an irregular beat or incon- stant rhythm and a changing key and of course, the rhythm and key changes constantly in Wagner. If we were to examine our musical minds we would find stray ends of all kinds of melodies running through them. We would even find that cer- tain situations or certain objects would call up definite melodies. So with Wagner's operas, there are numerous melodic fragments at work all the time, and certain ideas, certain situa- tions in the play will bring back some of the melodies. It really doesn't mat- ter whether you are able to place the melodies, or label them, or nudge your, neighbor to whisper, "That's the 'Wal- halla' motif." All that matters is that you submit to the pervading element, beautiful sound. Sometime or other you mu~st have' originatedca pretty melody, ad then tried to recall You wvill remember that you never could get it exactly like it vas the first time; it changes with repetition unless you write it down., Wagner's melodies are like that; they seem always to be chang- ing. 'Walter in the "Meistersinger" tries to sing a song in several verses, but each verse is a little different than the one before. Hans Sachs says that ' the older p~eople won't like that (he means, the straight-backed people), but he has to admit that it is beauti- ful. He, says the older_ people want nielodliesq they can remtemiber. analfhat Walter's mnelody, is too elusive; "Bt 'it is b~eautifunl," hle finally- confesses. and we must come to thl same con- clu sio n regardaing tVa ner. Abd)ut W %agner's techiniquethr'i a g-oo~ld dal to Ihe satidl,hiut 1l Onit watto spew: aabont it. ;Musical a THERE IS SOM ETH ING ING IN A ..DELICIOUS STEAK DINNI Come 'down and let us one of our wonderful rlllec After tasting one you w a regular customer. Besimer's W . Huron St. across from Interurba kg L,