7H . . l' 1 1 r-i I C_ r 1 L _ __ _ _ _ __ _. w .. _. ~ .. . ,ercy Marks' New Novel Smac ks of ood Old Siwash COLLEIATE NOVEL SS ____________________ '-5-- by John Knott 'STUDENT-WRITTEN Satirical Cover Jacket Found on Pigskin t f Ik JSy' t4 t A~ 444k M1 . , 1v qq4 m .X4 r 44 tR .4. 14 4j 'ke4 4.,A" 4ti' i L.11U~tuu11IN 11. QUi OF STUDENT M:IND Ever since the days of Ernest Hemyng's Jack Harkaway and his adventures at Oxford, which filled- two volumes with an account of the most glorious and beatific life that ' existed at Oxford, consisting main- ly of drinking, playing practical jokes on tutors, falling in love, rowing for the dark blue against, Cambridge, and escaping arrest, the romantic college novel has taken Its place in the lists as a sort of pardonable literary blasphemy.r More recently, about 10 years ago, the novels of the the late George Fitch appeared, portraying the American college with his books about "dear old Siwash." Either One Or the Other. These were all quite amusing,. and people read them and smiled and said, "Well, well, college must! like that, and boys will be boys." The queer outcome of all this early! bosh that was so picturesquely viv- ified in the leaves of these earlyW college books is that the tradition in modified form seems to cling about the efforts of modern writ- ers as well. If they are not sicken-' ingly sentimental, they are grotes- quely sophisticated and distortedf in another direction.; In no college,-- novel within the limits of my own did it like a gentleman, was roman- the best logical course for him toI experience has a novelist success- tic nevertheless. follow iin his struggle for existence.1 fully attempted an analysis of the Bill Royce came to college with This is all pretty dry football student mind. There has been no none of the illusions of the youth- patter, like the kind Ralph Henry attempt to intellecualize student ful Hugh Carver of Plastic Age re- Barbour wrote, badly written and impulse and action. The working of nown. He was older than most of tritle conceived. the student mind is always his classmates and came to school Of course he meets the girl and shrouded behind a romantic veil to get an education. He had played they fall in love. The girl breaks that either covers a multitude of football because he liked the game off her engagement because, she sins or blinds the reader with a and because it had, ever since he says, she divines the same lack of tinsel effect of right-doing, honor, graduated from high school, paid spirit in Bill's love for her as in pure living, and a lone burning de- I him well. But he had no desire to his football playing. It's all very sire-to die for the old school. Or do his damndest for dear old Ral- sad. She won't marry him because if it is not romanticized thus, it is eigh, he had no desire to break a he doesn't know how to play. characterized in a fashion so warp- leg for her, he had no desire to Then, ah, then comes the big ed and brutal that all college men win or die for her. The,Allota sudden he feels are considered beasts who seek out innocent young co-eds for their "Why All the Fuss?" urge to do big things for alma He quits the squad in his sopho- mater. The divine spark flashes prey, read Nietzsche with a dire! purpose, and flunk out of school in more year becatise he can't stand brightly, and he becomes the tra- the sentiment the other members ditional and quite unimpressive disgrace. of the team seems to work up about !raging maniac of the gridiron, the And Then Came Percy Marks. a game. To him it is just that, a idol of the college, and, most of all, Percy Marks a few years ago put game which he enjoys. But to them the man of his sweetheart's dreams. forth on the market his much read it is a life or death matter that Now trash like this is not far re- Plastic Age. It failed just where they take with all the seriousness moved from the Jack Harkaway all the preceding novels of that of an international war, stories. Of course there was not type failed. It over-romanticized The college is in an uproar over the oh-so-grave problem of paid college life, college students. col- his refusal to play and he frankly athletes at the Oxford of Jack lee professors, college athletics, connot understand it. He justifies Harkaway, but his life was glazed and college work. his position thus: with much the same romantic shel- In his newest novel, The Unwill- And the Girl!" lac. And Mark's, style, I dare say, ing God, which was born first in The upshot of the matter is that is not much better than Hemyig's. that dank maternity hospital of i the athletic department gets him a It is curt and iturnalistic, and full American wit, College Humor, he job. He receives twenty-five dollars 'of the illusive phrasing and bad foists on his public that rather a week for doing "janitor" work. novel technique he should have anamolous character, the romantic His duties consist in winding a been warning his classes against football hero, the unwilling hero clock-an eight-day clock, at that. when he taught English at Dart- who, -though he played for money He accepts the job laconically as mouth. {i M ARNIQRr IS FOOTBALL JUST ' Too COMMERCIAL? Mr. Ferguson's novel of college life is quite the antithesis of Percy Marks' The Unwilling God. Mr. Fer-' guson's footballer is not the quiet,; cultured bruiser that galloped over the gridiron with Apollo-like grace. He is on the contrary,a boor, a brute,I and quite the all-round curmudgeon as well as the triple threat man. He is not, however, the hero of the story. He is one of the many dirty villains. The hero of the piece is Horace Ethelmore Dickey, president ofs Martha Sumner University, and about him Ferguson weaves his, satire on administration in the modern college. Poor Dickey is a narrow, well-meaning soul whom everyone dupes without his know- ledge. The Board of Chancellors who run the University are willing to sacrifice anything for new build- ings and a winning football team, and Dickey, more by bewildered ne- cessity than by his own volition, falls in with their ideal. He meets opposition in every turn. Sensible faculty men, stu- dents and student publications, and within his own family.{ Caricature of Charles Ferguson (,\ The University of Michigan Play books, published by George Wahr and sold exclusively at the Wahr Bookstore in Ann Arbor, are worth any one's while to own. They con- tain the five winning student-com- posed plays submitted in the one- act play contest conducted last 'year. The plays are valuable not only for the merit each individual play may have but as an indication of the quality of creative work on the campus. The volume itself is beau- tifully bound in a grey packet with a back binding of black. The work is carefully edited by Professor Kenneth T. Rowe, of the rhetoric department, whose classes in play writing contributed all the win- ping \plays, though the competition was open to any ptudent on the campus. Professor Louis Strauss, head of the English department has writ- ten a long, intelligent introduction to the work, outlining the history of play writing and production ac- tivities on the campus. The plays include The Joiners, by Arthur Hinckley; Passion's Pro- gress, by R. Leslie Askren; My Man. by Joh°Knott SELAYS OBITEN PLAYS OBTAINABLE o' vaa a.aIUa i i, & YCl, His desire for fame for the college by Jerome F. McCarthy, and Out- completely unsets his equilibrium.-f side This Room, by Dorothy Ack- It becomes an almost maddening ob- erman. The fifth play, by Helen session with him. He allows the foot- i Adler, was a puppet show and was ball team to be paid, hushes over: _never produced, as the others were, wild parties, and paws his self re-'detakoffclte wid arie, ndpas issef Ie mission is one up on Mr. Marks,; per co-ed, o un dumb ath- due to lack of facilities. spect to get a new stadium and the ,pr , a Don Juan, inherited estate of a half crazy mil- 'whose works are inadvertently so. lete, or a Galahad. There is no University of Michigan: Recent- lionaire. In connection with the Of course, Mr. Ferguson is a bad mention of the brilliant few or the ly the Carnegie Foundation charged latter, he allows the ruining of his writer and his picture of the stu- vast majority that range in bet- the University of Michigan with re- daughter by the star football, player dents is as distorted in the opposite ween. cruiting and paying its athletes. to be kept a jealous secret rather direction as Mr. Marks' is the ro- These charges have been denied by than raise a scand atthe collegec But it is all good fun and lose his own job for firing the i u ti a UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.-A Wilfred B. Shaw, director of alumni football hero. and sensible student intellect con- million dollar hall of arts, the gift relations and T. Hawley Tapping, Mr. Ferguson admits that his ceived in the mind of the college of Max Epstein, philanthropist Nid general secretary of the Alumni as- work is a satire, and in that ad- novels. Either the student is a flap- manufacturer, is to be erected here ( sociation. r t rf E ~1 f I ) , it , f ; , +_pr't , lour "Rommm- I'1* S ca tIod TO THE t. ; t x x a r t t ; ;,r . H ~ - Mw' MICHIGAN DAILY Do Not Walt Until too Late Going to B e Stopped 4 42 If you want you r Photographs in plenty of before Christmas time Friday Mu4**krnIn9 I° Get a receipt at the Michiganensin office in the Press Building Then-Make an appointnient with your photographer. Spedding D ma4 1 nE I ~m All unpaid Subscriptions will be stopped November 1st and billed accordingly. Be sure that yours will not be one. All unpaid subscriptions are now $4.50-be sure that you mail your check today. A--L4a ." Press Building Maynard Street III _