r PGE OUR ~- - THE I HI AN- DAILY kxt r 7.r cn a VPII VSV%*7 x VWV in '4^A4 H EIT.A"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __'_' W E D N E D A r , F E B R U A R Y 1 $ , 1 9 3 1 f Published every morning except Monday during the U:tiversity 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 otherwise credited n this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, M14higan, as second class matter. Special rate of posta a agranted by Third Assistant Post- niacter (eneral. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by -nail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY FRANK E. COOPER, City Editor News, Editor ..............Gurney Williams Editorial Director.........Walter '. Wilds Sports Editor ............. Joseph A. Russell W~cmen's Editor..........Mary L. IBehymer Music. Drama, Books.........rWin.j Gorman Assistant City Editor....... Harold C. Warren Assistant News Editor. Charles R. Sprow Telegraph Editor.........George A. Stauter Copy Editor ................. Win. F. Pypef NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Carl S. Forsythe Richard L. Tobin David M. Nichol Harold O. Warre4 SPORTS ASSISTANTS Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy Robert Townsend REPORTERS I operation this fall. Yale will there- by meet Harvard and Princeton on a l t e r n a t e years, Princeton will schedule one of its two leading rivals, and so on. This system will give any super-heated rivalry a c h a n c e to cool between game spasms. In other words, the "Big Three" intend to prevent a perma- nent schism which would mean the downfall of a traditional eastern prestige which decades have built up. The only trouble with the new athletic system which has been in- stalled is that this extra game ne- cessitates running the season be- yond Thanksgiving. This may, how- ever, be remedied with the prog- ression of the rotation plan into further channels of accord between the two warring factions. It is cer- tainly relieving, however, to see that such progress has been made toward mending the break whichI was, in the first place, unwarranted even on the face of circumstances controlled largely by the emotion of several football crescendos. Campus Opinion Contributors ai- asked to be brief, confining themseh es to less thai. 300 words if possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. MUSIC AND DRAMA 11 TONIGHT: In Orchestra Hall, De- troit, beginning at 8:30, Mary Wig- man famous German dancer and pedagogue, will give the only mid. Western recital in her very signifi - cant tour of America. COMEDY CLUB TO PRODUCE "THE STRAIT-JACKET." About Books HECTIC PATHOLOGY A JEW IN LOVE: by Ben Hecht: Covici-Friede, New York: Review of Slater's Book Store. The press seems to have satisfied itself that Ben Hecht is just force- fully raiiing at himself in a novel the validity of which lies only in DR. SCHURZ DENTIST Formerly ofMte St. is now lo- cated at 606 1first Nat'l. Bank Bldg. PHONE 6335 P E N S A N D P E N C I L S Ali makes and all prices A Red Arrow Place 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 PAPER OF ALL KINDS l :, : i is '..j is L- i ::~.. ", .. jjjj: jj '' .:r, .. .. A Preview by Prof. R. W. Cowden fits accurate reporting of a patho-I I I I I SOUTH UNIVERSITY HALF BLOCK EAST OF CAMPUS PHONE 4744 .E. Bush rhomas M. Cooley Morton Frank Saul Friedberg Frank B. Gilbreth Jack Goldsmith oland Goodman Morton Helper Edgar Hornik JamenJohnson Bryan Jones Denton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Eileen Blunt Elsie Feldman Ruth Gallmeyer Emily G. Grimes Jrean Levy_ DOrotny Magee Wilbur J. Meyers Brainard W. Nies Robert L. Pierce Richard Racine Theodore T. Rose Jerry E. Rosenthal Charles A. Sanford Karl Seiffert Robert F. Shaw Edwin M. Smith George A. Stauter John W. Thomas john S. Townsend Mary McCall IVIargaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Thompson Claire Trussell BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 T. HOLLISTER MABLEY, Business Manage' KASPER H. HALVERSON, Assistant Manager AderisngDEPARTMENT MANAGERS AdvertisingC.. Carles T. Kline Advertising.............. .Thomas M. Davis Advertising............William W. Warboys Service...................Norris J.Johnson Publication . ........... Robert W. William~son Circulation..............Marvin S. Kobackr Accounts................onas S. Muir Business Secretary.. ........Mary J. Kenats Assistants Harry R. Begley Vernon Bishop William Brown Roert Callahan William WV. Davis Richard H. Hiller Miles Hoisington Ann W. Verner Marian Atran Helen Bailey sehineConvlssei Maine Fish rund Dorothy LeMire Dorothy Laylin Erle Kightlinger Don W. Lyon William Morgan Richard Stratemeier Keith Tyrer Noel D. Turner Byron C. Vedder Sylvia Miller Helen Olsen Mildred Postal Marjorie Rough Mary E. Watts JTohanna Wiese WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18,: 1931 Night Editor-JOHN D. REINDEL THE TABLES TURNED. Probably Gerald P. Nye, radical Republican senator from North Da-I kota, won't be so vociferous in hisl somewhat idiotic exposes of cam- paign expenditures of other sena- tors when the present investigation of his own expenses is all cleared up. Senator Nye provided the news- papers and. magazines with quite a bit of copy during the summer of 1930 with his very detailed detec-, tive work on campaign expendi- tOres and was quite vehement in his attacks on those candidates who were apparently foolishly wasting the taxpayers' money. Now, how- ever, his would-be victims are hav- ing a nice hearty laugh over his, plight which seems to be just the' same as theirs if not worse. Lately, it has come to light that "Snoopy," as he is so fondly called by his contemporaries, has spent" not a little of the oppressed tax- payers' money himself. Numerous trips to the middle west last sum- mer, many of which reached sur- prisingly high costs for such short daunts, not to mention a yacht tript to Florida which went under the hear of official business, have con- tributed to this sum. Nye has defended himself, ratherk lamely, to say the least, by sayingX that the more than $100,000 whicht he has spent in the last year hasc all been under the authority of thei government and that it was all le-. gitimate. We take his excuses fors what, they1 are worth but feel surev that when all the detective workt has cleared away, this certain gen- tleman will not be so diligent andf conscientious in his attacks on oth- ers, that is, if he makes any at all.t HARVARD AND PRINCETON Several weeks ago news dispatch- i es from the East told of the chance i of a renewal of athletic relation- i ships between Harvard and Prince- i ton Universities after five years ofo strained feeling following severalfh "rough" football games and slurring t t remarks by both student bodies be- t tween 1921 and 1926. The final t break came when the Harvard i Lampoon published a cover con- a cerning two pigs in a sty, with a f catchy sub-title, "Come, brother, d FOOTBALL On the subject of football numer- ous articles have appeared. In the following I have endeavored to give. resumes of some of the most inter- esting ones. According to the Nation of De- cember 5, 1928, only 10 per cent of the students of Yale attended a football rally for the Yale-Harvard game in 1928. In that connection the question is asked whether un- dergraduates are beginning to rea- lize the unimportance of being ear- nest about a football victory. Kick- ing a football has nothing to do with the Yale spirit. The Great God Football is the title of an article in Harper's Mag- azine of November, 1928: As the most sports-loving nation in the world we have no use for the los- ers. The teams are a rough and ready lot who do not allow lectures and study to interfere with foot- ball. Nevertheless they get their degrees ... Judging from the space given to football in the newspapers and the crowds of 80,000 or more one is justified in concluding that football is the King of American' Sports and our national religion. The stadia have become the modern, Mecca. To what extent even a I teacher of religion may be carriedI away by the football craze may be seen from the following: "The only-' true religiousspirit to be discerned among large bodies of undergradu- ates today is in the football stadia. One of the deepest spiritual experi- ences I ever had was one Saturday afternoon a few years ago in the? Harvard Stadium. It is just that spirit which transforms football from a form of athletics to a re- ligion, which our universities mustf diffuse through wider channels." (Dean Willard Sperry of the Har- vard Theological School). Connect-n ed with football there is a com- plete hierarchy of officials, some ofr whom have their nest well feath- ered. Man's natural hunger for rit-e ual also finds its place here: pepr meetings, band music, f o o t b a 11 songs, undergraduates swarming across the campus in the dark, etc.e On the Game Day the bands parader to the field in uniform with their. drum majors, the freshmanbring- ing up the rear. Each year adds some new marvel of display to ther traditional rites. The f r e n z i e d shouts form part of the perform-f ance. Of course football is a good business for the town. Result: foot-V ball has become a first-class octo- pus which is strangling many of i the legitimate pursuits of the edu-i cational institutions. The following l is by the late President Wilson:b "The side shows are so numerous,a so diverting, so important if youa will-that they have swallowed uph the circus, and those who performb in the main tent must often whistle f for their audience, discouraged and t humiliated." The greatest objection 1 to football is that it cultivates in s the undergraduate a sense of false w values-makes him think that sham a is as good as substance. Football C is an hysterical appeal to the emo- s ions. Far from being fun, football b s a very serious sport. This is what one of the players is reported as having said: "We've been told about he courage and the carefree atti- g ude of men going into battle in r he Great War, but this Yale gameH s so important we can't even smile Z a, week beforehand." What makes o ootball what it is is also largely c ue to the attitude of the alumni t Comedy Club is to be congratu- lated for having chosen as its next production Professor John Brumm's play, The Strait-Jacket. At last the oldest dramatic organization on the campus is taking a step toward the encouragement of the playwrights in our midst. We shall approach the ideal conditions for those in- terested in the drama here at Mich- igan only when the playwrights, the actors, and the producers are working together in the same or- ganization. In the coming produc- tion the serious efforts of Comedy Club are being turned to the sup- port of a serious effort to write a play. The Strait-Jacket was written for the National Drama-League Play- writing Contest. In the national contest it was given first place by one of the three judges and second by the other two. The play was not produced by the League because the writer refused to modify the tragic finale. He did not wish to tamper with what seemed to him to be an inevitable denouement merely to satisfy a sentimental taste. The play will be presented by Comedy Club in its original form. Professor Brumm has written a play of unusual merit. The dra- matic forces have been clothed in just characterizations with con- vincing attitudes, and the action moves forward easily and surely to an ending that while not foreseen is in retrospect the logical one. Many unsuccessful attempts have been made to bend the college en- vironment to the needs of fiction and drama but the problem of the tragic fate of Professor Peter Snell- ing, who does not fit easily into the academic mold, arises naturally, al- most inevitably, out of the normal conditions of university life. It is not often that he who wishes to write about a play can turn to the creator of it for an answer to his questions. When I asked Pro- fessor Brumm as to his intention in writing this play, he answered as follows: "In The Strait-Jacket I have attempted a sympathetic study of a thwarted personality of1 a superior sort. The 'strait-jacket' is a symbol of the adverse biologi- cal traits and social and cultural influences that may defeat a highlyI sensitive and intelligent person.1 Personality is a compound of phys-1 ical traits, mentality, and emotion- al attitudes as conditioned by a1 social environment. Viewed in a1 vacuum, an individual might be1 measured by his physique, mentali- ty, emotions, feelings, volitions, and ' temperament, without reference to his social environment. But the moment the individual is studied inp his group relationships, he had as many 'selves' as there are persons who react upon him. A person pos- sesses as many kinds of behavior reactions as there are different kinds of people who have it in their power to influence him. It is thef easy possibility for tragic conflict here that I have tried to objectify in my play."i Clearly The Strait-Jacket is a se-s rious play. Anent tragedy, I am reminded of Sybil Thorndike's brief' foreword in the little volume ofa Prize Plays of "John O' London'sp Weekly" Competition. I quote:E "'The heart of the British Publica is sound, the British Public likesR to laugh.' . . . Certainly we like to i laugh; as a nation we enjoy thef best of all laughs - the laugh T against ourselves-but that is only i a half of our nature. The other B half of the 'sound heart' wants to I be stirred to its depths-to pity-to I feel-even intolerably to feel." And s this is true of all Publics, British e r other, because to wish "to be F tirred to the depths" is all one with the desire always to be fully b aware of oneself. Not to have this v desire is as Pater says, ". . . on this s hort day of frost and sun, to sleep d before evening." In ORGAN RECITAL Palmer Christian, University or- o anist, will appear in his weekly u ecital at 4:15 this afternoon in wu [ill Auditorium in place of William at euch whose appearance as guest B rganist has been postponed be- w ause of illness. The program for R his afternoon follows: fo logic case history (exaggerated but not very complicated dementia pre- cox the New Republic suggests). Meanwhile printings of the novel continue. There have been eight1 so far. The material of the novel is cur- ious and promising. Jo Boshere, New York millionaire, had passed through a "pathologic Jew-consci- ous" adolescence which early rotted all possible ideals and left him a blatant egoist to whom "the woes of humanity are no more than someone else's belly-ache." In one of his more eloquent moments he (says "The true progress of man in our keeping.. We develop ourselves ... we sensitize ourselves more and more ... all we do is to feel and more... all we do is to feel and analyze our feelings." The novel . .. ., is taken up with his attempts to "bosherize" (impose, or rather im- print, his ego on) several people; and finally with his tremendously complex effort to "create a love in Tillie (a dancer) she herself found impossible to evolve." The Bosher- ian tragedy is that Tillie, for some pretty sound and rather nasty sex- ual reasons has "a soul, gentle and acquiescent to a deceptive degree, but yet of that stubborn texture which clings to itself." Tillie, whom he is trying to bosherize turns out to be a greater sexual liar than he is, despite his insanely civilised ac- tor-sensibility which is especially adept in affecting the emotions of love. After two hundred sinewy analytic pages he finds that all along she has been inextricably at- tached to a cheap, silly Hollywood director with a Puritan conscience. The perception of his magnificent failure nearly drives him mad. As the New York Times suggests, Proust's Swann in Love lurks be- hind these pages of Hecht's Bos- here has, in his own fashion, an enormous sensibility; at least he has a potentiality for almost every type of reaction to a given situa- tion or a given person. It is by this very potentiality that he is vic- timized. He is a great actor gone mad in the torture of playing roles, cheating and tormenting himself with dishonesties. He is a typical Proustian character engaged in the weighty attept to capture his ego, to know it. He is so much less sig- nificant, and thus merely of patho- logic interest, because, unlike a Proustian charactor, he has no in- tegrity about the search, because his "pathologic Jew-consciousness" forces him into terrible dishonesty about himself. In Hecht's words. "Boshere was too nimbly trained in transforming fact into more palatable unfact, in editing events, in cheating himself of all honest knowledge of what and who he was." The character has interest (the flyleaf asks us to recall Stendhal's Sorel). And Hecht knows the char- acter in a very vital sense (it be- ing probably an amalgam of him- self and his friend Bodenheim . But unfortunately he hates Bos- here, hates him with that malicious and quite complete hatred borne probably of sneaking admiration. Because of this hatred he tunes his analysis of Boshere to the rather oathsome note of his sexual prom- scuity and dishonesty; so that the feminine reviewer in the Herald Tribune is almost justified in call- ng the novel "grotesquely nasty." By confining his discussion of his , leading character to treatment of his sex-life and ignoring the per- sistence of his attitudes in other equally fundamental contexts, Hecht writes a savage caricature. Thus the novel becomes badly balanced, and is very violently, ner- vously written. At any rate on strictly literary premises, it doesn't leserve very much attention. But America produces so many iovels that it is in badly need of writers capable of writing good >nes. Ben Hecht has so much gen- tine talent both of sensitivity and writing that in the light of past achievements {Erik Born, Count 3ruga, and even The Front Page vhich some will remember Lennox Zobinson praised as an American olk-play} that his admirers, I Dial 22194 303 S. State riiililititiittititliiittiiitiiiidttiitiiiti iiitiCiitlltitillililtliilllllt>fiililiit1i11i 11i1tittlU If~ r I 1 + I AWN Y r. M I ... You will get more out M an U . ... of your University ca- .. reer if you are able to type your own notes, themes and theses. Your . . notes will be much full- = men ban ° ' er if you take them in 't+ yt that our banking shorthand. Hundreds of Michigan students have S learned typewriting and rooms- especially our branch office, shorthand at Hamilton w E Business College. Many conveniently located at Nickels' have used it to earn .. 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