PGE Sb THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDA'Y, OCTO$IER 7 1923 ...................................................... ."............ . ............ America," he says, "the European pro- it escaped the threat it received to- cedure could not well be followed. wards its British system during the Thus, first describing Harvard as it Revolutionary war, only to have a appeared in the form of a "Resident transition take place from within some J -~ I Government," he next explains how time later. The colleges of William . Writers tives. Frank strives for Music over FOR GENTLEMEN the angular wall of Words. Previous- WITH NORTH ly attributed definitions throw ou DEVONSHIRE strong batter walls of reason against the grouping of vowels, consonants HATS and syllables in an effort to express oneself solely through rhythm and THE LEFT LEG, by T. F. Powys. Al. sound combinations. fred Knopf, 1928. And yet in Holiday he comes so Three tragi-comedies of Dorset vi- near to actually achieving the goal lage life by a brilliant new English for which I believe he has set out, writer. Such is the way Alfred A. that I will before long forgive him Knopf is wont to announce one of his City Block and must congratulate his Fall 1923 publications. And well his publishers for furnishing. him the chosen words these are, too, except material encouragement to proceed that he is not a "new" writer. with his work The first story (there are three), -Reviewed by Robert Locke. which gives the name to the volume is, I believe, of the greatest worth. By this I mean, simply, that it was ABSENTEE LAND- the one I most enjoyed; that and LORDS AND COLLEGESI n'othing more. T. F. Powys, the a- thor has aimed at a synthesis of Dor- TORYISM 1N- THE AERWAN C L. setvillage life, By mixing in the inI LEE GVENME-T, by Jboha E. gdinshe has attempted to develop, Krkparick. I- ' the spirit of the Dorset peasants dom- inated by Farmer and Rector, in the Numerous books and papers have material, by passions and illiteracy, been written on American Universities in the spiritual. And, ht his first, his and methods of government, within people are a bit nearer the stratum them. None, however, to my knowl- occupied by the farmhand and small edge, have been written as simply, as land-owner of our Mid-West, which concisely, and in as effectively a man- brings it more within my scope of ap- ner as that by Professor John E, Kirk- preciation, than are the other two, patrick of the department of Political Hester Dominy and Abraham Men,1 Science at the University of Michigan respectively, in "Toryism in the American College Plot is of the utmost unimportance Government." Appearing as merely a in Powys' method. Time elapses. paper arranged in pamphlet form, the Men come and go. People are born subject is treated in a highly compre- and die. And in the latter two stories hensive and elucidating fashion. Mr. conditions and events run on the same Kirkpatrick does not delve into the tenor at- the end as they did in the political system existing today in the beginning. university, and allow himself to be- Reactions of the various characters, come entangled within its meshes. He and there are many in each story, to takes the situation by hand and holds unimportant events, are strung to- easily perceptible. Following the con- gether on the path of one or two of tiguity of time and importance, he ac- the more important ones. They give quaints us in is-easy si nfer with-the the surface of a boiling pot-contin- exact governinental sysem of our im- ually showing new bubbles, only to portant universities, explaining first be displaced by others, until finally the character of -the transition from the last few bubbles viscously burst the English to the American type as the pot boils- dry. The result is a T -i h design of circles made by the non- The American.Universitles have suf- evaporating residue. An intellectual- fered the most of all "British Institu- ly pleasing design, one encompassing tions" planted on--this sfi,'he states Dorset humanity - at least that of in his opening lines. "In Britain, as Powys' Dorset. In Europe generally, the university is -Reviewed by Robert Locke. regarded as an automonous, self gov- erning institution, subject only to the authority of the state. In the United A SYMPHONY IN States the university is subject to an WORDoutside government which is respon- sible only-if indeed it be-to the HOLIDAY, by Waldo Frank. Beni & states,"--and "custom does require that Liveright, 1923. the property of the college be vested Persistently on the same track, in a non-residential body" which Waldo Frank again attempts to snatch shall be also the government of the the function of music and convey it college or university with words. To paraphrase a popular The non-residential body, the board paradox one might say that he tries of trustees, he goes on to show, have to 'Croon it with words,' In his lat- slowly become composed of commer- est book, Holiday, Frank has capital-. cial and capitalistic classes while the ized on the negro chant. professional element as a governing It is a story concerning a southern body have reached practical elimina- white girl and a tall nigger boy. The tion. "Thus there was developed a story, almost insignificant in plot, is governing class for the American col- a vehicle for purveyance of moods, lege and university which shows most both of the individual and the mob, of the Tory traits." The 'voodoo drunk' or religious hys- This is indeed a gross deficiency in teria of the negroes, their spirit of the practice of the present college suppressed revolt and the uncomfort- system of government. The faculty, able consciousness of the nigger pres- the very factor that would know the ence on the minds of the whites all needs of the institution are forced to serve as background moods to moods stand by and allow those who have of the individual characters. probably spent four, five or seven An unfulfilled, impossible love af- years In a college some ten or fifteen fair leads to an attempted suicide and years back, work out a 'system and the lynching of the nigger boy, set of rules for the school. It is as But the chief interest to me lies in placing a man as commander over a his experiment with form. Always at vessel which has seamen upon it far least verging on the poetic form, he more experienced and far better able often breaks into chant. At timesj to guide it. The author then proceeds I am convinced by him, at other times to de i thisamthod has reps I am left cold and unresponsive, Itdescribe how this mnethod has crept Itudymteprhatcold a epnse into the United States "in the several study the parts that awaken my sleep- institutions," and how lately, people ing appreciation, but fail to find a anstining," alize te yuaton nucleus of reason or logic in his con- are beginning to realize the situation struction. Yet there is a delicately whe are gradually entering the mood insidious quality to his song whic where they will desire te change to sneaks in through an apparently ada- the European type, mant wall of prejudice, which was Dealing first with the formation of thrown up within me by his last the earliest colleges known in Europe, book, City block. he shows how the guild plan "fur- I believe that Frank wallows in the nished a ready and convenient model." wrong element. Literature and Mu- Harvard comes as the first of his next sic have distinct functions, even category. "In the primitive, sparsely though they do share common mo settled, and poor communities of . . * .* ~- I nthE you are always anxious o' look your bes. Then it is that the details of dressbe- come doubly important. In SMITH SMART SHOES - - you find anematabbe tim- ness; their appearance wins instant approval. Better still, the first i assres art Withtmg Scviceorevery detail of construction 'is completed with the utmost care ... .. ......... ..- GROSS and DIETZEL 117 EAST WASHINGTON ST. wtMM EE" I. DT After Theatre, -Classes o Sodal A n rb 's F es Con echen-'ry LUNCHES SODAS CANDIES: A Luxurious Rendezvous for Discriminating People Drop in any time 212 South Main Street ,sfaaiYNlif.YYaffa......Ni f fli....fffYYaYilYaafN"NAifiiA....a{aafiaifffafaAiiaNNlifaaYlYaiflsRal.LailYal lYfifliaislf allMaaiiM.