'PAGE SIX' THE "MICHIGAN DAILY SUND.AY, S.MPTEMBER 30, 1923 Books and Wrters ±iH 1 I a"......s.N.Y.""...AS.sia.s"s.a..n.s.....""".N"s.""".".f"ist....a"..................... ."...."............. "s.." .. I'',. SHOUTED it very mildly. The trul FROM GREY TOWERS age is free from gr errors." Consider, for GREY TOWERS, A Campus Novel expression, "their- Aonymous. Coviel.eGee Co. faces" When to break 19211. $2.00 added a spineless. story This is a book which should not phisticated dialogue, an have been written, yet which once tendency to call names written cannotbe ignored. Most lit- save Grey Towers. T 'erary works for whose production obituary i written the there is no adequate and legitimate Reviewed by Lis excuse, meet with the indifference they deserve; but Grey -Towers is destined for a time to survive its faults and A PICTURE GAL even to command attention. OF THE JUDGE The reason for the book's present THE JUDG popularity is plain. Muckraking, for By Rebecca Wevi Dora the past twenty years America's favor- Miss West first appea ite indoor sporthas been raised even izow ithahe to an art by the anonymous author erary horion with her of Grey Towers. We knowwlhat to thes,'ncrity ofs a you expect the minute we read in the luridobe sincerit ].ayd blars, Ost~tliig xposf' Shnoble first attempt, anc blurbs, "A startling expos4e' "e p-a developing skill in st: tears the mask from the rotten fe-jlacks insight, but show tures of our university life," and the and almost adoration like. We areiot disappointed. With authord a bitterness and spleen which (what "Every mother is a it ever-brave ethical catch-words the tences the children fo publishers may vent) are entirely per-- sonal,. she ptces mud at all. the w 11a known.professors of theUniversity of Chicago, and. then, to-give us our money's worth, daubs a few of the struggling young instructors-and their wives. All the characters in Grey Towers, it seems,-except the sainted heroine, Joan Burroughs,- daily fracture the ten commandments andd Mrs. Post's Laws of Behavior. The author appears In doubt which. trans ession is he more serious. At any rate, she is resolved to let no fault, however small, escape portrayal and censure. She 'has analyzed the academic mindat Grey Towers and found it full of conceit, jealousy, meanness. She would convince us W e that zeal in research is discouraged; that students are regarded only as machines; that all the men on thej be CCofl faculty are at heart the .blackestof rakes, restrained only by base fear; in short, that the institution is rotten mentally and morally, We behold stu- i dents avid for knowledge groping helplessly while their professors bick- er with each other and make after each others' wives. Woeful scene of- gloom and: desolation, relieved only by the idealistic Joan, who at the last is herself. forced to succumb. to the MOST powers of evil. An impressive-pic- ture, certainly, if we can forget one BENE important fact: that the world per- versely: refuses to divide 4nto two re- LIKE gions, blackest black and whitest I white. The indictment sfar too gen-THE era: some of the professors must es- cape the Stygian fumes. And then, there is Joan. I own to an ineradicable suspicion that she is what used to be quaintly called a per- fectibilist; the modern term for which isprig. She is a combination of Cora Harris, who proudly avers in the satevepost that she read Horace for self-improvement at the age of thir- teen, and of Dr. Stuart Sherman, with his rant about the glorious destiny of the Mid-Western University. Ob- viously any modern Joan of Arc who prances forth on a milk-white steed to lead the forces of Idealism, is riding for a fall. Joan, in whom it requires no great astuteness to perceive the intrepid author, gets just what is con- ing to her. The other characters are "created." Try to malfe any of them walk the streets of a real city and he would collapse. The author's co-eds are even J more sleazy. Her society lads are at- tenuated Fitzgerald and diluted Doro- thy Speare. Than which there is no niore damning indictment. Undoubtedly there is need for a ai novel of this kind, a novel whic shall satirize the numerous faults of our educational system's; but it should not be as childishly personal, as shoddilyI written, as Grey Towers Not the most favorable critic can discirn In - all the two hundred fifty pages one just description, one happy image, one Bitty phrase That is: ineed, pitipg . WHEN YOU THINK OF A GOOD STEAK DINNER THINK OF Besimer'a s. WEST HURON STREET ACROSS FROM D. U. R. STATION WE'VE BEEN SERVING THE BEST FOR YEARS r the sinsof op in - like to ae acquainteid now you better, 'I N IIVE,1S1 TY* OF THE OLD STUDENTS KNOW US, SO FOR THE. FIT OF THE NEW STUDENTS AT MICIGAN, WE'D TO SAY THAT YOU'LL FIND OUR "PALACE" ONE OF EST PLACES IN ANN ARBOR TO GET azs - Sundaes -1 Drinks- Candy -Tobacco Lunches 1 r ALWAYS OPEN. 7 I.USE THE PHONE, LEAVE YOUR BOOKS HERE, - WE WANT YOU TO ALWAYS FEEL AT HOME. f 1 One Block East - of Engineering Arch