'AOE FOUR TlH E MCHCAN T) A 'Ili "7TTI n hA I,- AA- - - s- - - - -- - - - - - -r cam e. u a. k- DJU Y~., U 1013IL IQ~, i9:7-.3 Published every morning except Monay; during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwisencredited in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the posto..ce at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- toaster General. Subscription by carrier, $4:00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- hoard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 224. I and contented," a cardinal first move must be the establishment of a sound and equitable pension en- dowment. Until this is done it is certain that no one will be attract- ed here from Harvard or Cornell, and it is not unlikely that these in- stitutions will further gut our staff. We feel that President Ruthven's desire to build a strong faculty is the soundest possible policy, and tot this end we would hasten the an- nouncement of pensions on which professors can retire without hav- ing to give up their homes and al- ter their standards of living. About Books . "0 CITY, CITIES!" O City, Cities! by Larsson, Payson and York City, $2.50. R. Ellsworth Clarke, New t EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ELLIS B. MERRY i I (_ Reviewed by R. E. McCracken Any interpretation of romantic literature points to an understand- ing of the author's personality. The introspection of romanticism al- lows this insight, for we catch the writer at an intense moment of ex- perience. This idea may be of fan- cy, revelrie, pathos, or humor, and poetry, particularly lyric, is more susceptible to expressing this emo- tional state than any other kind. The recent volume, "O City, Ci- ties!" of R. Ellsworth Larsson is romantic in all meaning of the word, and as such the faults of that tendency are inherent. He has held a prism to his eyes, this poet, and has written down for us the im- ages he sees through the glass. Editorial CommentI i Music And Drama 40 o! A PLEA FOR STRINDBERG Easter and Other Plays by Aug- ust Strindberg; Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, N. Y. C.; (Review copy by courtesy of the Print and Book Shop). This is the first publication of the Anglo-Swedish Foundation, made possible by the grand gesture of Bernard Shaw in refusing the forty odd thousand dollars of the Nobe! prize and suggesting that itabe used to promote a knowledge and ap- preciation of the literature and art of Sweden in Great Britain. Jona- than Cape is handling this impor- tant series in England and will dis- tribute in America through the New York branch. The choice of a new edition ofj Strindberg's plays for the first work of the series is fortunate. Amer- ica hardly has an adequate per- spective on the Swedish arch-sub- jectivist. It has heard amusing rumors of a Swedish madman who hated all women ferociously and married three or four of the wretched things to prove it. Ac- tors, directors, and readers think Strindberg depressing, extreme, very ugly. Their minds are hardly contemporary. Strindberg's art, though thirty or forty years old. is. Editor................. .... George C., Tilley City Editor................Pierce Rosenberg News Editor ..........George E. Simons Sports Editor ........Edward B. Warner, Jr. Women's Editor...........Marjorie Foilmer Telegraph Editor...........George Stauter Music and Drama..... ,... William 3. Gorman Literary Editor.........Lawrence R. 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Musselwhite Eleanor Walkinshaw Dorothea Waterman Night Editor - Charles Kaufman SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1929W MICHIGAN'S PENSIONS Following Harvard's lead, Cornell has gotten under way a fund out of which will be supplemented the pensions paid to retired professors by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Since the Carnegie collapse and retrench- ment of last spring, at which time the foundation's administrators found it necessary almost to halve their promises to pay, the univer- sities which were to benefit have been faced with the problem of making their own supplementary provision for faithful servants past the age of usefulness. Harvard's trustees, with a repu- tation for doing consistently right by the faculty, were the first to the. rescue with an announcement last June of a handsome pension en- dowment. Last Thursday the Cor- nell Alumni corporation announced a gift of $200,000 toward a pension fund, conditional on the raising of another $800,000. The cause is so worthy and so necessary to the fu- ture of the teaching profession that there can be little fear that Cor- nell's million-dollar endowment will not go over the top. Michigan has been a little slower to take this vital step. An able committee was appointed last spring by the Regents, but it has as yet produced no recommenda- 1 tions or given Michigan's faculty definite expectations of anything more than a good steel worker'sE pension. The problem, of course,1 demands careful study, but wex would urge as strongly as possible an immediate and generous reme- dy for the terrifying uncertainty which now confronts those who are approaching the retirement age. 1 President Ruthven's platform re-2 cognizes that "the effectiveness of' the University may be said to bet determined by the men which com- pose its faculties .... that admin- istrators who fully appreciate the f ENTERTAINMENT PLUS 1 One of the chief advantages in attending large educational insti- tutions is the constant opportunity to hear and know the world's great- est artists, scientists, thinkers, and doers in all fields. These men and women of note can be attracted to universities of size and fame like Michigan's by the appeal of car- rying their accomplishments and inspiration to the intellectually vig- orous youth of the nation. There is the added and very real advan- tage that on a large scale the thing can be done within the financial means of the traditionally impe- cunious student. In this field of extra-curricular activity Michigan has her Univer- sity lectures, Choral Union, May Festival, and Oratorical association. Again this year they all offer rich and glittering programs of the fin- est possible entertainment. 0 EDUCATION EXAMINES ITSELF (Christian Science Monitor) Whether the small college or the large university offers the greater advantages has long been to Amer- ican youths one of their hardest nuts to crack when planning for their higher education. In choos- ing the one, the student had to for- go the special advantages of the other. Significant trends, however, have lately come to light, showing that ways are being worked out so that a student may enjoy the com- bined benefits of both. In Clare- mont, Calif., a system of colleges is being established under a plan that keeps each within a reasonably small enrollment, so that both the institution and the student may maintain and develop their respec- tive individualities, and so that students and professors may have the close contacts which they so much value, and at the same time enjoy the total facilities of all the colleges. Of a somewhat different form, yet accomplishing much the same results, are opportunities offered by certain colleges which have affiliat- ed with Columbia and by those which have federated into what is known as Western Reserve Univer- sity. Working from the other di- rection-that is, dividing instead of combining-splitting the overgrown college or university into small units, so that contacts between students and teachers may be rich- er and more frequent, is the House Plan at Harvard. These trends may be interpreted in another way. Mass education, which has even been strenuously attacked in its factory like form, was not brought into existence by intention; few intelligent educa- tors of today have attempted its de- fense; and now, except as it may be qualified by small-unit methods, it seems to present little that is ideal. On the other hand, the large university has contributed a breadth of training and experience, and has caused facilities to be brought together on such an un- limited scale as to have won an un- disputed place. The isolated small college holds forth in diminishing glory. While still supreme in one kind of educa- tion, its scope is too limited to meet all the complex demands of this modern era of reaching out, of co- operation and of co-ordination of; all available means. It may be said; therefore, that mass education and1 the education of the isolated small college have left their pedestals and each recognizing the other, are ap- proaching each other on a common mission, that of combining and ad-; justing their heretofore separated advantages. Frequent, human and friendly contact must be possible between professor and student if scholarly attainment is to be. both sane and secure. Youth may not literally sit! on a log with its teacher, but, if a boy can have an occasional stroll across the campus with his pro- fessor, or chat as friend to friend1 Bruxelles: a night in midwinter-and wind that screams along the boule- vards like shattered women fleeing a bombarded town a X 34 / R F 1 r i c i i N Ll There is also self-assured feeling getting the best in service and quality Is the result of every garment be- ing carefully handled in the best of modern means. Bruges: Here the middle ages stumbled and were lost You can save 15 % by using the season and the worm can scrawl a dry sarcasm on the walls and all these cities we have sown The picture is of nostalgia, and though distorted we accept it with- out caring a whit. It is received for its own sake with no why and !wherefor. Who cares if there is absence of technique? A quiet hour with pictures-an autonomy all one's own-a forgetting of facts: this the verse offers, and it is all. The beauty of the word is some- thing that escapes most of us. We are too prosaic. We restrain emo- tion until the nerve is deadened. But Mr. Larsson stirs up our fires,. and we are left quivering as after symphony. He has placed his words on the page in such arrangement as to demand music, and the form entirely suits the nostalgia of sub- ject. Each line (and they are short) presents an image; the lines flow one after another in a quiet- ness which resembles the style of the later George Moore. This po- etry is song: what a relief from the poets who will ever be associat- ed with library stacks! Mr. Larsson is a minor poet. However, he is intensely engaging and worthy of reading. The ex- perience is narrow and perhaps he does not "know enough." For the most part, he is not even impres- sionist, and merely capable of ex- citing mood. In this way he stands only at the very beginning of cre- ation, even though he is romanti- cist. * * * MORE DEWEY PHILOSOPHY In his new book, "The Quest of Certainty," John Dewey is said to give the most complete develop- ment he has yet made of his ex- perimental theory of thinking and knowledge. This development, while containing the foundations of an experimental logical method, is not written from the point of view of technical logic. It begins with the causes which historically started philosophy on the track of placing purely theoretical knowledge on a level superior to that which in- volves practical doing and making. The discussion then shows how the scientific revolution begun in the seventeenth century and log- ically brought to a climax in the new physics of recent yeais re- quires a radically different concep- tion of thinking, knowing, and their relation to doing. The book concludes with a discussion on the bearing of this change upon the future of philosophy, religion, and the social sciences generally hold- ing that the tendency is to unite science and human well-being in a new form of scientific humanism based on the interaction of the- ory and practice, understanding, and action. "The Quest of Certainty" is based on the Gifford Lectures, given by Professor Dewey at the University of Edinburgh in the spring of 1929. He is the third lecturer from the, United States, the others being James and Royce, on the Gifford; Foundation, doubtless the most' distinguished lectureship in the world. WEEK'S BEST SELLERS Fiction: "A Farewell to Arms," J by Ernest Hemingway; "Hans The trouble is that this strenu- ous, nervous spirit has revolution- ised some of the pet conceptions of the aesthetic of the theatre. Strindberg absolutely insisted on revealing the antimonies of his soul. They were so violent that many of the conventions and for- mulas the theatre had been long in constructing proved useless to him. He had trouble with the con- ventional view of tragedy. Noble and naked absolutes grimly face to face with ultimate resolution of their difficulties was all right when the heroes were kings and queens allowed to make vigorous and vic- ious decisions. The tragedy Strind - berg wanted to write was a tragedy of people who seldom are given the opportunity to make decisions.l Strindbergh views life as essential- ly stable, believing that the con- flict between duty to the social compact and duty to oneself can seldom be so disengaged as to jus- tify the great gestures of the old tragic tradition. "There are dis- harmonies in life that cannot be resolved" is his view. To see and then to understand- this is the only conceivable modern sense of the purgation that Aristotle spoke of. Theatre-goers that still seek the tragedians to eke out a plea- sant emotional experience for them somehow call Strindberg's "Dance of Death" depressing. That is a dead adjective for an archaic re- action and should not be injected into dramatic criticism of natur- alistic plays. Strindberg gives them an approach to his work in his own words: "My pleasure lies in understanding something." "The Dance of Death" is proba- bly the great tragedy of the mod- ern era. There is no liberating ac- tion, no appeasement of the heart. Life is pictured as a hideous strug- gle in a setting of diabolical fero- city. He pictures the terrible struggle of sex-the Captain yield- ing unrefiectively to his vindictive impulses and Alice trying to find moral tags to justify her hatred. There is passion and horror in this mutual hatred. Husband and wife restrict and cling to each other, trying to enforce agreements and concessions, trying to establish su- periority by smashing the integri- ty of character. Each is at once a tyrant and a slave. They shift and waver in attitudes but know too much of life to rise to the point of willing in grand gestures. So they die in their inextricable bonds. The tragedy has the great note of the universal in the con- crete; and the intellectual under- standing of this compensates for the lack of the emotional home-run that the Aristotelian concept for tragedy demands. But more interesting to the stu- dent is Strindberg's extraordinary influence in the realm of experi- ment. "The Ghost Sonata" and, "The Dream Play," included in this volume, leap from their historical context and establish the drama- turgy of the future. Strindberg succeeded in interpreting reality in the medium of unreality. "The Ghost Sonata" is not reducible to some quick statement about its meaning. It has the confusion of a dream; but also its urgent logic. The play is disordered but slips from one certainty to another in a mysterious mode of progression like to music's. One feels the rough intimacy of the details and the force of Strindberg's theatrical in- stinct. 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