';PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1931 SUNDAY. 3ANIYARY 25. 1931 Published every morning except Monday 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 otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published+ herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage. granted by Third Assistant Post- nma.ter General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY FRANK E. COOPER, City Editor New$ Editor............ .Gurney Williams Editorial Director ..........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor .............. Joseph A. Russell Women's Editor...........Mary L. Behymer Music, Drama, Books........Wi . m. (Jorman Assistant City Editor....... Harold O. Warren Assistant News Editor......Charles R. Sprowl Telegraph Editor...........George A. Stautel Copy EditorI..................W. F. Pypet NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger Carl S. Forsythe David M. Nichol John D. Reindel Richard L. Tobin Harold O. Warren machines and are willing to leave the election, nominating, voting, counting of ballots and induction into office, entirely in the hands of the original promoters, knowing full well that the latest crop of proteges would excel their prede- cessors only in puerility or thin air. The interaction and dove-tailing of these attitudes - student and political - are as neat a reductio ad absurdum as has come to ma- turity in many a day. The second point concerning the Student council is much more obvi- ous and timely. Recently these Washtenaw and State street scions of aggressive and brainy, if some- what desperate, leadership caused a motion to be read into the min- utes of their meetings calling for a committee "to draw up a new form of constitution for the Stu- dent council." It is understood, in- ferentially, that this committee is expected to submit a constitutional revision designed to extend the powers and functions of the coun- cil beyond those already possessed. This action must stand for all time as a classic of pretension and mis- directed aspiration. It is ludicrous and absurd for a passel of such futile disciples of leadership thus to hanker after broader avenues through which they may display their aptitude for horseplay and passes in the air. As previously re- marked, if such a notion were not so replete with humor, it would be a piece of outrageous knavery. . What the Student council must do if it expects to justify itself, is to begin an earnest undertaking toward living up to the demands and possibilities of its p r e s e n t powers. Since it has signally failed in the past, it has an open field ahead of it. It needs leadership, not constitutional revision. Until it shows an inclination for action and feels a real chafing under the 'rigors' of the present constitution, this action will smack chiefly of an enterprise begun merely to occupy the attention of the council mem- bers at their otherwise sterile meet- ings. SPORTS ASSISTANTS Sheldon C. Fullerton J. Cullen Kennedy Robert Townsend REPORTERS I About Books .E. Bush homas M. Cooley Morton Frank Saul Friedberg Frank B. Gilbreth Jack Goldsmith Roland Goodman Morton Helper Edgar Hornik James Johnson .can Jones Denton C. Kunze Powers Moulton Eileen Blunt Elsie Feldman Ruth Gallmeyer Emily G. Grimes yan L ev Rorotny Magee. Wilbur J. Meyers Brainard W. N ies Robert.sL. Pierce Richard Racine TheodorT . Rose Jerry ERosenthal Charles A. Sanford Karl Seiffert Robert F. Shaw Edwin M. Smith George A. Stauter John W. Thomas John S. Townsend Mary McCall Margaret O'Brien Eleanor Rairdon Anne MargaretTobin Margaret Thompson Ciaire Trussellr BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 T. HOLLISTER MABLEY, Business Manager KAsER H. HALVERSON, Assistant Manager DEPARTMENT MANAGERS Advertising........ .....Charles T. Kline Advertising............. Thomas M. Davis Advertising ............William W. Warboys Service........ ..Norris J. Johnson Publication............Robert W. Williamson Circulation ..............Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts... ........Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary...........Mary J. Kenan Assistants Harry R. Beglev Vernon Bishop William Brown Robert Callahan William W. Davis Richard H. Hiller Miles Hoisington Ann W. Verner Marian Atran Helen Bailey Tu sephine Convissei Uaxine Fishgrund Dorothy LeMire Dorothy Laylin Erle Kightlinger Don W. Lyon William Morgan Richard Stratemeier Keith Tyler Noel D. Turner Byron C. Vedder Sylvia Miller Ilelen Olsen Mildred Postal Marjorie Rough Mary E. Watts Johanna Wiese INDIA'S MARTYRED PRISONERS.- SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1931 Night Editor--RICHARD L. TOBIN A CLINICAL NOTE. For the amusement and informa- tion of The Daily's readers, and as a corollary to the editorial which follows, the following extract from the present Student council consti- tution, representing the aims of that body, is published herewith: "One. To provide an effective means of communication between the undergraduate body and the university authorities. Two. To interpret and maintain Vl ichigan's traditions and customs. Three. To exercise a general su- pervision over student activities, organizations, traditions, customs, conduct, and Four. To crystallize and make more effective the sanest of under- graduate opinions and Five. To do the aforesaid all for the good of Michigan." THE STUDENT COUNCIL LEGACY The muddle of campus organiza- tions appears to need further clari- fication, especially upon two issues primarily affecting the Student council. The first point is the rela- tion of politics to the council. For' some time it has been obvious that this blighted instrument of student government has been a self-per- petuating agency. The members of a given year, acting through the air-tight machine of the nominat- ing committee, designate their suc- Cessors of the following year. The ;nominations are made for the sake of appeasing party factions, putting forth men who can swing the elec- tion through political backers, and worse yet, foisting personal friends upon the campus. The upshot is rife with evils: the council is not genuinely representative, the mem- bers are not chosen for leadership, intelligence nor courage, but sud- denly find themselves in the posi- tion of campus 'leaders' who must, they surmise, be concerned with student affairs regardless of their equipment for dealing with them; in short, the result is a council whose complexion is tinctured by an outfit of political legacies ac- complishing their tasks by bellow- ing and taking steps in the dark. The leader of the Indian Nation- alists, Mahatma Gandhi, is to be given his freedom, according to dis- patches from the Asian sub-conti- ent. As the head of the extremist movement for continuance of the civil disobedience campaign, Gand- hi's liberation, under the terms of the agreement reached at the round-table conference in London,' seems assured. Imprisonment fol- lowed his arrest last May, a month after he had led a group of Na- tionalist volunteers from Allahabad (to the sea at Dandhi, where they made salt in defiance of British law.j At the conclusion of the London conference, Premier Ramsay Mac- Donald stated that, upon restora- tion of civil order, amnesty would be granted the 50,000 or more poli- tical prisoners. It appears that Great Britain is losing no time in I carrying out this provision. But the problem confronting the British government is one upon the solu- tion of which rests India's immedi- ate welfare: how to avoid the mani- festations of the Nationalists which would be certain to greet him when he is liberated. It is evident that the Nationalists, who, upon receiv- ing the terms of Mr. MacDonald's plan, refused to discontinue the disobedience campaign, will assem- ble by the hundreds of thousands, eager to touch his garment. Unless a more radical plan is adopted which holds a greater appeal for the extremists, Great Britain will find itself facing the same problem it did a few months ago- the de- mand for IMMEDIATE guarantee of dominion status, with responsi- ble self-government. Campus Opinion Contributors aie asked to be brief, confining thensehes to less that. 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 he construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. To the Editor: I was pleased to read that the Round Table club is investigating the possibilities of establishing a co-operative book store for Michi- gan students. Along with the ma- jority of my fellow students I was a member of the Harvard Co-oper- ative society, an institution which supplied not only books, but all lines of student supplies and serv- ices. We sometimes heard the objec- tion that the co-operative society asked the same prices as the other A TREATISE ON LOVE. THE GENTLE LIBERTINE by Co- lette: Published by Farrar and Rinehart: New York, 1931: Price $2.50. Review copy courtesy of Slater's Book Store. The world owes a debt to Collette. She would collect from us the heri- tage also which Maupassant and Balzac left her. They have taken woman from the pedestal on which mnedievalism set her, and placed in II her stead love itself, which is a thoroughly justified anthropomor- phism. Sanely, calmly, with the. fullness of a medical textbook, she has written on love in the peculiar (for us) French manner. The result is a sort of uninhibiting, a healthy justification of a logical psycholo- gy. But when sane critics allow themselves to be led into panegyrics of praise through what is evident- ly a hasty judgment and a miscon- ception, it is time to call halt. Col- lette is a delightful writer, light, fairy-like, witty, even wise in her own manner, but to call her great is sheer nonsense. And to judge by current literary conditions, it is a strangely popular nonsense. Not so strange however as it seems. For one is liable to be overly grateful to such sanity as Collette has in such abundance, to such a ruthless and at the same time delightful debunking of all the witless sigh- ing which our authors are in the habit of indulging over sensual, phenomenon which can easily be explained the Collette way. (And there would be no better place than this to air a dislike of the young, nervous "pure young man" "rud- derless" aspirants)._ In mentioning Maupassant and Balzac, it should be mentioned cer- tainly that Collette cannot be said to possess the width of emotive power, and the broadness of expe- rience which they possessed. Hers is possibly a more scientific talent. "The Gentle Libertine" is the story of a well-bred woman, who after outgrowing a feverish and ro- mantic adolescence, finds herself dissatisfied with her husband, and takes lover after lover in a vain search for the ecstasy she desires. She finds it only after she has mix- ed tenderness with desire and come back to the love of her husband. * * * "The Gentle Libertine" is not as good a book as "Claudine at School." That is perhaps the only way it can be measured. Bewilderment would be the only result of an at- tempt to value it in the ordinary traditions of the novel. For it is evident that it lacks greatly in fun- dementals. Characters, while sharply and deftly delineated, are not whole. Emotions and experi- ence are viewed, as has already been stated, in what is perhaps a narrow scientific manner. On this basis "The Gentle Libertine" would be a bad book. Its interest and real delight can be explained then only as that which the technique of the purely adventure or detective story would hold if written on the really unusual subject of love (most nov- els while treating love, do not treat everything else on this basis), or as something inherent in Collette which cannot be measured as yet. In either case definiteness can be secured only on the basis of Col- lette's abilities as manifested in her other works. "Claudine at School" is better because it is more purely Collette. It is lighter and wittier, dealing with intricate relationships, rather than attempting to deal with basic emotions seriously. Then too in not compassing as great a time as 'The Gentle Libertine" it is less affected by the lack of a more complete dealing with emo- tional fundamentals. It covers a greater variety of life in less time of living, so to speak. S. S. F. Screen Reflections THE CURRENT CINEMA ... AH ! Michigan. Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., pri- vately known as Joan Crawford, re- turns to town in a melodrama adapted from Bayard Veiller's "?Within the Law" ... and rather suc- cinctly t i t l ed, "Paid." That is, save for a mere half dollar at the Liberty S t r e e t box-Office. j Advance reports' give it numerous: stars and what. not. However, the facts show that one Robert Arm- tOLN CzAFORD X_ strong has the male lead, while the supporting cast includes Marie Pre- vost and John Miljan. Direction is by Sam Wood, and charges are C. O.D. __ _ __ CROSLEY AMRAD BOSCH f SHOP 1 For Rent Apartments FOREST PLAZA - Ann A r b o r' s finest residental apartment. Furnished or unfurnished. 1 to five room arrangements. C o m p 1 e t e hotel service. Garage in connection. Eve. 22927. Also a number of fine fur.. n is h e d and unfurnished houses. Brooks-Newton Inc. "The l1 omne of Phone E n er i n.q 4191 Majestic. Marion Davies crashes through with her first hit since "Marianne" in the current picturization at the Majestic of the Belasco stage pro- :uction, "The Bachelor Father."' The censors must have witnessed a silent version, or perhaps their movietone went conveniently hay- wire in several spots. Be that as it may, the usual in- tellectual student audience took considerable delight in this more or less English-locale comedy. The story concerned itself with the re- union by an aged British nobleman of three grown-up children by as many different mothers-Sir Basil, as such was his name, regretting the wild-oat sowing of his younger days. Marion Davies proves to be the American offspring, the other two coming from Ireland and Italy. The reunion starts off rather disastrous- ly, but is gradually smoothed over to the gratification of Sir Basil. An unexpected denouement fol- lowed by a race against time cli- maxes the picture. Miss Davies is more satisfactory than might be expected in the starring role, although the part and story are extremely promising to begin with. C. Aubrey Smith, the Sir Basil of the stage production, gives a perfect characterization of the tempestuous father. Most prom- nent among the remaining players are Ralph Forbes, fair e n o u g h though seemingly slightly miscast as the nobleman's young attorney, and Guinn Williams, pleasing as the American aviator. Robert Z. Leonard, also credited with "Marianne," handled the meg- aphone capably. Situations are well-handled, and the humorous episodes follow naturally without straining the plot. On the whole, good B+ enter- tainment. Wuerth. Bang! Bang! and Double Bang! Heah comes Johnny Mack Brown, Alabammy's old quarterback, carry- ing a gun instead of a football as the famous Billy the Kid. This film, of the same name, had a Detroit showing on the new wide Realife screen-but the third dimensional effect sought for was sadly missing. All of which has little to do with its local downtown showing at the Wuerth. In addition to Brown in the title role, Wallace Beery enacts the sheriff, and Kay Johnson pro- vides the feminine attraction. Com- edy is furnished by Karl Dane and Roscoe Aits, the latter the screen's most accomplished st-st-st-stutter- er. The production, the locale of which is laid in New Mexico terri- tory, had the supposed benefit of King Vidor's direction. Detroit. Clara Bow (the name sounds familiar) stars at the Fisher in what may possibly be her last pic- ture, for Pa r a- '~mount, at any rate. It is titled "No Limit" and is mainly concerned w i t h gambling, which recalls her previous but not as revealing front page escapade in a Nevada house of chance. The film dis- plays more seri- CLARAOW ous d ramaticl ability on the part of the auburn- haired (???) star, although Stuart Erwin as her extremely vapid sweetheart walks off with the act- Pu0 99. 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