PAGE FOUh THE MICHIGA\IN DAILY ''' T}n IAY. MARCH 26. 'I030r TV AT ,;jidraa ,.y a aa aauv a . Ilrl ll R PVhlisbhd every morning except Monday during ine Tniversity year by the Board inI Cont ol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Assoqiation. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled! to the: use for renpublication of all news dis- 1 simultaneous with the beginning of the Althing, was during medie- val times the last stand of the North European freeman against the oligarchic advances of aristo- c racy. Under the Althing, the prosper- itv of Iceland hashPen huilt nn PASTED RL WELL, IT'S ALRL TOASTED. About Books) A HUMANIST MASTERPIECE. The undersigned, who have been very much interested in the recent 6 atches credited to it or not otherwiser e u dij n It was long after sundown last writings of the Humanist School of tn this paper and the local news published uni'nw it enjoys an annual I. - . hernein- revenue of $13,500,000, which works iterary Criticism and who desire Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, out at about $100 a month for eyed Daily staff tabulated the last to study the Humanist principles Micbigan, as second class atter. Special rate every man, woman, and child in vote and staggered home. in practice, would be glad to know of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- eveof aacontemporary workd of art waster General. the country. There is no army or of a contemporary work of art Sbscriptionby carrier, .o; by m navy to support, and a good deal of They tell me that on the strength I either produced by an Americanj Seseet.Ann Arbor Press Building, May- the state revenue goes to the main- of the probable outcome of the poll Humanist or encouraged and ap- Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. tenance of a modern system of a local laundry man has bought a proved by one EDITORIAL STAFFIschools. The number of illiterates brewery. If anythig other than (Signed) R. P. Blackmur, Louise! ETloA 4925 stalk comes of all this voting, it I Bogan Slater Brown, Kenneth looks as though this gent will, in Burke, John Chamberlin, Malcom M AGING E TOR Those who join with gloomy spite of this change of occupation, Cowley, Hart Crane, Edward Dahl- Dean Ing e in pessimistically pro- still be cleanng up. berg, Babette Deutsch, Herbert S. Ed.citorial Chairman.......... Ceorce C. Tilleyr ea ng*n esiisialypr-Gorman, C. Hartley Gratton, Hen-~ City Editor...............Pierce Po'senherg claiming democracy the worst of! *D * S r an, C. ofrey T Hen- News Editor.............Donald J. ine I all governmental systems would do SIDELIGHTS. ry Hazlitt Geoffrey T. Hellman Sort E ditor.......Edward ,. WarnerJr. 1 to consider pragmatically the The prim co-eds who voted Granville Hicks, Raymond Holden, Wocmen's Editor............Marjorie Follmer , wellt osdrprgaialIh Telegraph Editor.........Cassam A. Wilson'success of the Iceladi Alth. strictly dry . . . The pretty co-eds Mathew Josephson, Joseph Wood Music and Dra7a.......WilliamJ. bhorhyans s otIcndice thei who drink "frequently" but who Krutch, T. S. Mathews, F. O. Math- Literary Editor.........Lawrence R. Klein before they continue to voice theirwolntgvthinae...Te iseIahrn Ptr, hlp Night Editors--Editorial :oard Membersratn thoyclvr uswovtea Assistt ty ldtor .. .Robert J. Feld ran ranting theory. veryd,' veyive r gntms wh vo.te Putn, IJthneroe Ranso, Bur-ps Frank E. Cooper Henry J. Merry Ivery, verygnd Putnam, Jahn Crowe Ransom, Bur- William C. Gentry Robert L. Sloes twice . . . The original people who I ton Rascoe, John Riddell, Paul Charles R. Ka~ffian Walter W. Wilda Gurney Williams brushed the snow from their coats Rosenfeld, Isidor Schneider, Gil- Reporters 1 Campus Opinion and said, "It's a bad day for the bert Seldes, Genevieve Taggard, Morris Alexander. Bruce J Manley Contributors are asked to he brief, drys." . . . The original people who Allen Tate, Mark Van Doren, John Bertram lA~kwith Lester May Helen arc Mt rtgaret Ylix confining themselves to less than 300 said, "They ought to empty this Wheelwright, Edmund Wilson, axelaer David M. Nichol wore s of possible. Anonymous corm- Maxwell hauer illim Pagemunhcations will be disregard(( ].The box-it's stuffed." . . . People who Stark Young. Howard H. Peckham names of communicants will, however, i wrote little notes on the ballots . ..(The New Republic for March 26, Allan H. Berkman buh irc e regarded as confidential, upon re- Arthur J. Bernstein Victor Rabinowitz quest. Letters published should not be People who wrote nothing on the 1930). S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel construed as expressing the editorial ballots . . . The picture on page 1 t Thomas M. Cooley Jeannie Roberts t opinion of The Daily. Hfelen Domine ,oseph A. Russell yesterday showing a night editor, All of which means that if Hu- Margaret Eckels 1oseph Ruwtch the City editor, and a reporter of manism can stand firm against Catherine Perrin Ralph R. Sachis ) BLIND CRITISISM. Carl F. Forsythe Cecelia Shriver the Daily; a ballot box, a desk, and this concerted and most formid- Sheldon C. Fullerton Charles R. Sprowl I Ruth Gallmeyer Adsit Stewartr To the Editor: -oh, yes, to be sure-(let me look able attack, which includes the Ruth Geddes S. Cad well Swanson gi)-rsdn uhe!focso h ain h e e Ginevra Ginn Jane ThayerI One possibly should never become again)--President Ruthven! forces of The Nation, The New Re- Tack Goldsmith Margaret Thompson ..* public, Plain Talk, The Saturday M sGres ird L. Toin dignant; one, however, cannot While tending the ballot box at Review, and the better part of The Mar aret Harris Eliabeth Valentine help becoming disgusted on read- the Hospital I discovered a fertile American Mercury, it deserves its can Levy y . Lionel WillensJ ing the letter of March 21 on the field for cigarette butt snipers. In kind fate. ussell E. McCracken Barhara Wright Gabrilowitsch review, the corridor on the second floor , The note, of course, was designed Dorothy Magee Vivian ZimitGarlwtcreiwThnoeofousasdigd Blindness to the written words there are four metal jars filled to invoke a reply from the human- BUSINESS STAFF tdwith sand in which lecture-bound ists pointing out their work of art, Telephone 21214 hY. students dunk their smokes. You'll or their approved work of art. This BUSINESS MANAGER irrelevant emotive remarks, de- find all the brands there and some done, the enemy camp can proceed, A. J. JORDAN, JR. cided inaccuracy, plus a cheap of them are nearly whole. . . Don't in the several periodicals mention- Assistant Manager 1slurring aspersion, make this letter snipe the ones with initials on 'em. ed, to tear said work into little bits, ALEX K. SCHERER quite characteristic of the many * } thereby in one feel swoop destroy- .EcitMy vote stated that I drank fre- ing the bulwark of the humanist Department Managers pernicious letters that have been d tiT- i uentl an j to rov it I en- fU 1ik~4IkO. NoUU;0SUMMER NORTHWESTERN SESSION UNIVERSITY ',By the shore of Lake Michigan" High scholarship standards- Beautiful location -- Moderate climate - Unusual opportunities for recreation-Organized trips and excursions. Liberal Arts Graduate School Schoolof Education June 23-August 16 School of Commerce' School ofJournalism School of Music *Jn 3Ags School ofSpeech I June 23-August t School of Law June 23-August 23 The School of Education Wide Range of Courses. Courses sjle- ciallydesigned for Superintendents, Prin- cipals, Supervisors, Deans, Advisers, and Teachers in HighS chools, Elementary Schools and Teachers of Special Subjects. Faculty. Regular Staff supplemented by members of Faculties of other Univer- sities and distinguished Public School Teachers and Administrators. Graduate Work. Special attention given to the needs of Graduate students and experienced teachers, supervisors, and administrators._____ For bulletin, address The Director of the Summer Session 133 University Hall, Evanston, 111. Hark To His Master's Voice! Saying GOTo UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE For Everything Musical LowP~r Pr;ces: TERMS To Suit. Play While You Pay. Radios:- Majestic, Victor, Crosloy WPianos- Baldwin, Kohler & Campbell Orchestral Instruments Victor, Columbia, Brunswick Records w .7- jj At OK e5 AStOP ASK THOMAS HINSHAW, Mgr. 601 East William Street Phone 7515 READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! .r Advertising............T. Hollister Mabley Advertising........... Kasper It. iHalverson Advertising...........herwood A. Upton Service...........George' A. Spater Circulation.........J. Vernor Davis Accounts.......... ....lohn R. Rose Publications..........George R. Hamilton Business Secretary-Mary Chase Assistants Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobackier "ames E. Cartwright Lawrence Lucey Robert Crawford Thomas Muir Harry B. Culver George R. Patterson Thomas M. Davis Charles Sanford Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton { ~ames Hloffer' Joseph Van Riper Norris Johnson Robert Williamson Charles Kline Wibam R. Worboy Dorothy Bloomgardner Alice McCully Laura Codling Sylvia itl ilier Agnes Davis Helen F. MuIsselwhite Bernice Glaser Eleanor Walkinshaw Piotense Gooding iorotea Waterman WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1930 NIGHT EDITOR-HENRY MERRY tquety, umiwuwp uv t 1 ort icat ons. published on the subject of 'criti- closed this photo: Won't some one please come for- cism.' This particular letter be-! 7 ward with a suggestion? comes quite the satire of all such --,THEo--BE letters when one notices that the d ITHE BOHEST - .TO BE BOUGHT. i I I ,! ,I f . EDUCATION FOR ALL. Aggressive campaigns of educa- tion are being waged in thirty-five states by President Hoover's Na- tional Committe' on Illiteracy and twenty-six of these states have al- ready appointed sub-committees to concentrate on teaching as many of their citizens as possible how to read and write. The initial ex- penses of this national committee, which is outside of the government, have been provided by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and the Julius Rosenwald fund. The theory upon wich the com- mittee is working is that the edu- cational resources of 48 rich and powerful states should be able to carry education to all the people and thus stamp out an unhappy evil so utterly incongruous with America's purported high civiliza- ation. Widespread illiteracy would invalidate our entire system of representative government.. The need for such a campaign as the one now being carried on has long been apparent. The numerous drives which have been conducted in recent years to"cure this social ill and that economic weakness have all been worthwhile projects, but this war against illiteracy is undoubtedly the most fundamen- tally important from the stand- point of the° entire nation. If the Hoover Committee can reduce ig- norance it will go far toward wip- ing an ugly blot from America's 'scutcheon. 1,000 YEARS OF DEMOCRACY. Seventy years before Leif Eric- son,, a native of Iceland, discovered the mainland of North America, a parliamentary form of government, the Althing, had been established in his fatherland. In June of this year, Iceland will; celebrate the one thousandth anni- versary of this parliament, the old- est and the longest enduring in the world's history. All the leading 7 1 i i , i . E '{ ij 1 I I ,{ << i II I r I writer was not even present at the Sc tIt is going to be slightly embar- On ca he.rassing "to whoop it up for the In- On cannot help feelng that lander between now and the time when such a person sees anything / / it coes out next Monday because with a frame around it, disap- . I myself have modestly contribut- proved of, they immediately see ed a little article on Humanism red; neither can one believe that which Mr. Harold Courlander, the ( such a person actually is capable **editor, has kindly consented to of appreciating so outstanding and Dimwit Dora says there couldn't print in a most unwarranted pro- so "AUTHORITATIVE" (if I may have been any cheating at the minent position. However, I shall be permitted to quote the black polls. "Thousands of students didn't strive :not to let that little soft type which Mr. Gorman felt the even vote once" maintains she, "so soaping blind me in judging the re- j need of for those who miss ordin- how could they have voted twice?" mainder of the printed matter. ary print) a conductor as Ossip.*. * . . . For some time past I have been Gabrilowitsch. I make this state- Ardee Bee says that part about examining the literary magazines ment from the knowledge that one! finances confused him; he didn't of various colleges in this country cannot evaluate a man justly with- know whether to mark it frequent- and in addition two from the Brit- out knowing him in his entirety. ly or occasionally. ish Isles. It can honestly be said One immediately thinks of Beeth-* * that the Inlander, dating it, of oven and the utter blindness, or NOTICE. course, from its most recent rene- possibly dishonesty, of the pre- Frosh, '33, writes me that he is, sceriee and including the material Thayer biographers, in their at- somewhat indignant that The that is to go into the forthcoming tempt to see him in all of his be- Daily didn't mention the tremen- issue, simply outdoes any of these ' havior as a bric-a-brac God on a dous success of the Frosh Frolic. others. And it does this in a num- pedestal. So sterile a conception! "The Daily seems to have forgot- ber of ways. Its appearance and And so with T. H. McE., conceiving ten,' says he, disgustedly, "that makeup are neater, more profes- Gabrilowitsch as impeccable - in- there was a party last Friday sional, and more adaptable to the capable of wrong ; I can't help night." So for the benefit of those material contained. It reviews thinking from this adjective that who may be interested, Frosh '33 more important books and reviews T. H. McE. conceives Gabrilowitsch wants me to tell- you all that the them more intelligently. Its poetry as an emasculated pedestal warm- band was great and the party was is furthest from the typical bad er. Which is precisely what Gab- a huge success and all that. Isn't college, poetry. Its next issue will rilowitsch isn't; the man has mas- that just dandy? illustrate its almost surprising culinity. awareness of contemporory trends To anyone who read Mr. Gor- SILLY PASTIME. in literature, metaphysics, ethics, man's criticism with noraml vision, Someone has just sent me a' and criticism. it will be recalled that Mr. Gor- chain letter, purported to have All this throws a favorable man became mainly interested in been started in Flanders fields. My light on its editor. But back of it Gabrilowitsch's apparent restric- punishment for not sending copies all there is the splendid coopera- tion of himself to certain select to three friends, the letter states, j tion that has been given by certain classics of the 19th century. These will be bad luck or something. I members of the rhetoric depart- limitations are obvious (his pro- would make more than 4,000 copies ment. These people, by reason of grams) whether they were observ- by printing the letter here but I'm! their sympathy with student cre- ed in N. Y. or not (Paul Rosenfeld not sure it would reach three ative power and the invaluable ser- notes the same limitation). In fact friends, so I'm sorry to say I'm the vice they have given in discrimin- that interesteing observation and weak links in that chain. ating criticism, have done more its interpretation was the basis of: than any one else, even more than Mr. Gorman's column the following SURE WE HAVEN'T. the careful editing and judging of day. Dear Joe: While visiting a few Mr. Courlander, to place Inlander Accordingly why T. H. McE. has patients in the Ohio State insane! within the time of publication of to refer to Gabrilowitschs ability asylum last week one of them grab- only two issues clearly first in the as a concert pianist when the bed a Daily out of my pocket, leaf- field of campus literary magazines. article on hand deals with his pro- ed through the pages frantically The next issue will really -be a gram is quite incomprehensible ex- until he came to the Rolls column Humanism number. Mr. William cept as an emotive attempt at and then looked at me with tears Gorman's article on Walter Lipp- transference of ability. In refer- in his eyes. "Please, please, doc- man and Humanism is ever so ence to th3 tremendous enthusiast- tor," he sobbed, "when you see Joe much more impressive and finely ic receptions received in N. Y. and again will you tell him that oysters critical than my own ,and much also to the "careful reading of don't sunburn, no doubt?" more readable. Aside from these scores of music reviews" that T. H. Yours, ain't it? two essays on Humanism will be a McE. talks about may I refer him Fish Chassis. short story by Miss Elizabeth to the unanimous 'panning' given * * Smith, whom people remember as by the N. Y. critics (Henderson, Yes, and besides, no, have we? the author of Wives-in-law, which! Downs, Thompson, etc.) of his pro- * * *.won the one-act play contest, and gram of Jan. 28. Not that such a THE LATTER, I BELIEVE. A Day's Work which, I might add, poor display of conducting on that Dear Joe: They're right, by jove, should have won it. occasion necessarily lessens one Ann Arbor's rainy season is about From off the campus will be fea- oppreciation of Gabrilowitsch, due again. And we feel only ad- tured Dr. Guy B. Johnson of the I 4 i i i I i t 't f l i I I APRIL ISSUE INLANDER APPEARS NEXT WEEK WATCH THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR ANNOUNCEMENT OF THISMONTH'S FEATURES mow y : , ' ,ii 1 i j , x; I7 1 ] r } i$I I I { rather it gives one an opportunity miration for the B. & G. boys who: University of North Carolina, who to more fully comprehend the man, have built all those drainage canals will contribute some Gullah stories and so to better evaluate him (in to alleviate the spring floods from which he gathered on St. Helena my case making me more appreci- our alluvial plain. Question: Will! Island. Poetry will be contributed ative), in the same way that one's we boys be permitted to stroll down by E. Merrill Root, who is to be I