mpAGEFQOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1930 Published every morning except Monday Suring 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 otherwise credited in thie paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan,easgsecond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 22214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 SMANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY City Editor Frank E. Cooper News Editor ...............Gurney Williams Editorial Director...........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor........... .. Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor.......Mary L. Behymer Music andDrama..........William J. Gorman Assistant News Editor.....Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor. I eorge A. Stauter NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Carl S.Forsythe Richard L. Tobin David M. Nichol Harold O. Warren Sports Assistants Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy. Robert Townsend Reporters Walter S. Baer, Jr. Wilbur J. Myers Ir~ving J. Blumberg Robert L. Pierce Donald 0,Boudeman Sher M. Qurashi George T. Callison C. Richard Racine Thomas M. Cooley Jerry E. Rosenthai George Fisk George Rubenstein Yernard W. Freund (barley A. Sanford Morton Frank Marl Seiffert Saul Friedberg Robert F. Sbaw Frank B. Gilbreth Edwin M. Smith Jack Goldsmith George A. Stauter Rolan dGoodman Alfred R. Tapert William H. Harris Tobn S. Townsend James H. Inglis 1obert D. Townsend Denton C. Kunze Max H. Weinberg Powers Moulton Joseph F. Zias Lynne Adams Betty Clark Elsie Feldman Elizabeth Gribble Pmily G. Grimes Elsie M. Hoff meyi j ean Levy orothy Magee Mary McCall Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Jean' Rosenthal Cecilia Shriver Frances Stewart er Anne Margaret Tobin Margaret Tihopson Claire Trussell Barbara Wright BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER T. HOLLISTER MABLEY Assistant Manager KASPER H. HALVERSON Department Managers Advertising.................Charles T. Kline Advertising ............. Thomas M. Davis Advertising ............Willam XW. Warboys Service ................... Norris . Johnson Publication............Robert W. Williamson Circulation..............Marvin S. Kobacker Accouns...................Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary ............Mary . genan Assistants Thomas E. Hastings Byron V. Vedder Harry R. Begley Erle Kightlinger William Brown Richard Stratemeier Richard H. Hiller Abe Kirshenbaum Vernon Bishop Noel D. Turner William W. Davis Aubrey L. Swinton R. Fred Schaefer Wesley C. Geisler Joseph Gardner Alfred S. Remsen Ann Verner Laura Codling northea Waterman Ethel Constas Alice MCully Anna Goldberg Dorothy Blooingarden Virginia McComb Dorothy Laylin Joan Wiese osephine Convisser Mary Watts erAice Glaser Marian Atran Hortense Gooding Sylvia Miller SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1930 Night Editor-RICHARD L. TOBIN THE HARVARD OF THE WEST Following the Purdue-Michigan football game, a writer on the "Ex- ponent", daily university paper at Lafayette, told of his impressions of Michigan and Ann Arbor in a feature article which appeared on the day after the game. He called Michigan the "Harvard of the west" and was quite shocked with the eastern atmosphere which he found at the University. "They have," he said, "a peppy, semi-sophisticate body of stud- ents, professing to be attending the Harvard of the Middle-west. Dress- ed about as many college students are dressed, they assume a calm in- difference which they believe in keeping with the Harvard idea." We are glad to hear that some- one realizes that Michigan isn't, after all, a tydical rah-rah middle- western university with "frats" and close-cropped hair and Harold Teen clothes. We pride ourselves on being ourselves, and not the col- lege type which pervades many of our contemporary middle-western institutions who seem to think that they must act like collegiate movie actors in order to be distinguished from those who don't go away to college. But why did Michigan give the Exponent's feature writer an im- pression of borrowed Harvardism? There are several reasons. Perhaps he saw at Michigana quieter, less high-schoolish sort than he had seen before. Perhaps he realized that here, at least, other things than football and big stadia count for something. It is possible that he saw a more conservative eastern group of students mixed pleasantly with a mid-western jollity than any other group he ever met. Per- haps he was impressed by the "haphazard manner of the campus buildings" which he described so accurately in the Exponent. Michigan isn't the Harvard of the west by any means. Michigan is just eastern enough, however, to but it doesn't take long to combine t h e s e qualities into something which even other Big Ten universi- ties notice as unique. The Exponent is right, after all. We ARE the Harvard of the middle- west because we're part eastern and part western and the result is a very pleasant combination. The Exponent, whether it knew it or1 not, gave Michigan quite a compi-i ment the other day.t THE HONOR SYSTEM3 Perhaps many of the students of the University are wondering what happened to the proposed honor system for the literary college, fol- lowing the vote taken on the sub-t ject last spring. The balloting onf the question, arbitrarily made an issue in the All-campus elections, was to determine the amount of sentiment favoring or disaproving its adoption in the literary college. A committee, composed of repre-; sentatives from the Student coun- cil, supervising the elections, and certain faculty men interested in; the question, was to draw up a plan and submit it to the Administrative board for approval, in the event the theory of the honor system was favored. Although the idea was approved by a four to one vote by those vot- ing on the subject, we congratulate the council for shelving the ques- tion, which at best, could not be very successful, and treating it as a dead issue. Granting the existing evils under the proctor system and the need for improvement and reform of pres- ent conditions, we feel that an honor plan would prove a miserable failure if attempted in the literary college. It has neither aroused the students in its favor nor has it re- ceived a representative view-point of the literary undergraduates, since only one-fifth of the school participated in the elections last spring. The number of votes which repudiated the theory of the sys- tem, together with the proportion- ate increase which would result from the total enrollment, fur- nishes conclusive proof that the purpose of such a plan if at- tempted would be defeated. Supporters of the system, includ- ing many prominent faculty men who enthusiastically and sincerely favor the plan, point to the success it has enjoyed in the engineering college, when advocating its adop- tion for the literary college. Such a viewpoint does not consider the wide variance in the component parts of the relative schools, not the size of enrollments in each. For the most part the students of the former are in college for a definite purpose hence are more serious in their scholastic outlook than is the average undergraduate in the lit- erary school. Unless some plan which gathers its impetus from the student body itself, and not through forced or unnatural development by a cam- pus organization, is devised to sat- isfactorily meet the needs of the literary colege, we feel that the question of the honor system should be a thing of the past. INSPECTION BARRIERS At the June reunions held last summer, many alumni were heard to complain that among the newer buildings upon the campus which they had wanted to inspect, the In- tramural Building was the only one they were not able to gain acess to Although assured that it would be open for their convenience, it was constantly locked up because "the care-taker wasn't around - at the ball game or someplace." Next week-end Michigan will wel- come thousands of alumni for the annual homecoming game. Many of' them come from Detroit, and are in constant touch with the campus. But by far the majority come from points distantly located, and this is their one chance of the year to re- new old friendships, and to become' acquainted with the latest develop- ments in the line of new buildings and policies of the University. Michigan alumni are, and always h a v e been,tan extremely loyal group, interested in their a 1 m a mater and eager to help work with the faculty and students, a distinc- tion of which few other schools may boast. Friday" and Saturday of this week will be the time for the stu- dents and faculty to welcome them back to the campus and entertain them during their stay. We sin- cerely hope that every effort will be made to make their stay here as pleasant as possible, so that they will go home with a feeling that they are really welcome on the# camnus. several years after their? 0ASTD pp L x; KEEP THE SEAL (By Disassociated Mess.) ANN ARBOR, October 19. - The Rolls Vigilance Committee, consist- ing of Elmer Gantry and Dan Bax- ter, today opened a vigorous cam- paign to keep students from walk- ing on the library seal. A recom- mendation to President Ruthven was drawn up to rope off the seal and post guards around. Both members of the Board stated that a sub-committee would standton the seal all day long to keep stud- ents from stepping on it. (On the seal, you poor fish.) An extra bulle-' tin will be issued at a later date. * * = Yes, boys and girls, that is the story that was given a nine column 210-point headline in the New York Times yesterday. WE ARE OUT TO WIN this year. I must apologize for Dan's statements' yesterday, but he hadn't drawn up the report yet, so he merely tem- porized by printing libel and un- truth about yours truly. BEWARE This constitutes a warning to those who insist on violat- ing the Rolls rule that students should walk around the library seal. Tomorrow afternoon the Vigilance will be posted (X marks the spot) and interview -all persons who walk on the seal, in an effort to determine a remedy for this nefarious practice. (Incidentally I hope that those interviewed will have quicker come-backs than those we talked with last year. We had to make up all the funny answers. After all, we have to fill the column.) Dear Elmer: I am disappointed. Didn't you notice in Thursday's Daily that the Hut suggests for dinner tonite- seventy-five cents? I suppose for zoup. L. COMEDY IN THE NOVEL CONFESSIONS OF ZENO: byItalo Svevo: published by Alfred Knopf, $3.00. ---- A Review Scott Buhanan has defined the logical genesis of comic forms as a matter of the burlesque of serious intellectual patterns. "Some formal pattern is invented, such as Greek tragedy, and a great deal of ima- gination and thought is poured into the mold. It becomes classic. rhen a substitution is madegwhich xplosively breaks through the form. The Greek satyr play and comedy illustrate the result. New wine is poured into old bottles and there is laughter when the bottles break." This theoretic definition admir- ably explains the world-wide suc- cess that the novel of a successful Trieste merchant (encouraged to writing by James Joyce) has won. The most subtly worked creation of this generation has been the novel of introspection, the novel based on an assumption of the inadequacy of the spoken word or the event to communicate the complexity of a character's feeling. Undoubtedly in- fluenced by the appearance and prominence of psychoanalysis, no- velists came to be worried about the depth and width of the 'soul under the surface.' The stream-of- consciousness was a technical re- flection of this interest. This tend- ency found critical statement in various essays of Virginia Woolf. It has found its creative realiza- tion inlthe work of the best writers of the day: in Mrs. Woolf, James Joyce, and in Proust. Despite the differences, there is an intellectual pattern common to,their work. In their judgment of the interest of one of two worlds, or one of two ways to live, they all agree. "Confessions of Zeno" explodes this intellectual pattern. "It is a substitution w h i c h explosively breaks through this form." Super- ficially, Svevo's novel is a burlesque of psychoanalysis. Actually it is a comic exploitation of the intro- spective form in the novel, which has been the hard creative work of a generation of artists. The re- sult is comedy. So great comedy that, despite the clumsiness in the autobiographical technique, it is undoubtedly a novel of perman- ence. Zeno, a rich, lazy clown with a sense of irony and a diseased habit of self-analysis and self-justifica- tion, is plunged into a world of grotesque events. His father, dying, arises from his bed, vigorously slaps Zeno's face, returns to bed and dies. Zeno, during a seance, proposes to each one of three sis- ters, beginning with the loveliest; the ugliest accepts. Such events take place because Zeno is consistently and outrage- ously maladjusted. A neurotic. Ah, but a happy neurotic. Happy be- cause busy analyzing his com- plexes. All sensible decision and action is stifled by the length of time it takes Zeno's mind to reach psychoanalytic platitudes. B u t meanwhile he has ben enjoying the process. When there is no event to create a maelstrom in his sensi- bility, Zeno indulges in introspec- tion merely as compensation for the dullness of life. There is no crude malice in Svevo's drawing of this character. Indeed it is caricature by an artist who enjoys his work. Svevo seems to take considerable delight in his personal capacity for psychological insight: a quality which Zeno re- flects. The character proves to be a profoundly comic conception: an adequate object or focus for all the rich variety of Svevo's mind. JACQUES MARITAIN A Note I About Books i I I, i t ',I I i i 'i 'i I I f '? ENTERTAINMENT OF THE YEAR SIX OF THE WORLD'S MOST NOTED FIGURES OF TODAY ADMIRAL Richard E. Byrd "Conqueror of the North and South Pole" MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1930 William Hard University ofC yOratorical Association THE OUTSTANDING UNIVERSITY ;i. "Foremost Washington Correspondent" THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1930 ** * Well 'ell, you see it's this way. We were invited out Thursday and didn't have to pay for our meal. For your vigilance you are awarded a copper-plated rumble seat, with Chinese handles and a pair of braces. * * * Willie writes in and suggests a Klean-the-Kampus week, to be de- voted to -picking up stray co-eds, babies, and cigarette butts and de- posit them in the receptacles pro- vided for such rubbish by the B & G boys. The first article fits in nicely with our Michigan-for-Men campaign, Willie, but at present the wear-corduroy-pants-and-go- around-in-shirtsleeves campaign is taking up a great deal of our time, especially since the sun came out yesterday. We'll take up the sug- gestion later. * * * Dear Elmer: What is to be done about the B. M. O. C. whose footsteps have been seen lately on the campus lately? I'll bet he has all the fickle gabs (typographical er- ror) saying-"Oh how divinely, supinely tall!?!" He is really a big man. His stride measures about 15 feet, which would put his eyes about level with the top floor of Mosher Hall! (What a break - Elmer.) He should be reported to the Flint State-cops-corps-copse - corpse or the R. O. T. C., or some other similar benevolent association. Profusely Yours Willie Ross. o *.* I Willie, your patriotic self-sacri- flee is commendable. But we al- ready put the B & G boys *vise to the situation, and they are combing out Mosher-Jordan right now. We suspect that he is hiding in the tar barrels around alumni mem- orial hall in order to save money on chewing gum. But you win the b o y - scout-patrol-leader-be-pre- pared award for the week. * *. * . Somebody sent in a letter with what they thought was the long- est word in the woild. We offer antidisestablishmentarianistically. * * C BULLETIN Carveth Wells, Env i t ff iI Ij i hjjl j ' I f I. +' , , "The Man Who Makes Facts Fascinating .Truth Sound Like a Lie" and the THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1931 Grand Duchess Marie OF RUSSIA "Second Cousin to King George of England" THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1931 CO UNT . .,7- 1 Felix Von Luckner Longmans, Green and Co. have announced for publication Jacqlus Maritain's first book "An Introduc- tion to Philosophy." This is Mari- tin's third book to be translated: the other three being Three Re- formers, Prayer and Intelligence, Art and Scholasticism. T. S. Eliot has called Maritainj "the most conspicuous figure and probably the most powerful force in contemporary French philosophy." Maritain's has been the leader of the Neo-Thomist movement in France. The novelty of his position has been his refusal to think of Thomism as an escape from the modern worlds and its problems. He does not think of himself as i "The Famous Sea-Devil and Germany's Outstanding Hero" TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1931 Gilbnadsert K ChLestertr GonnLs "England's Supreme literary Genius" I; DATE TO BE ANNOUNCED Y }r ' Elmer: Saw a fellow come out of the main library when it was raining. He deliberately took off the slicker he had on and put it around the RESERVED SEATS FOR ENTIRE SERIES I I