-I T RE MICHICAN 0AIL.'Y' THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~= I Published every morning except Monday during the University year ir the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- 'ublication of all news dispatches credited to it or pot otherwise eredited in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, a second lass .matter. Special rate of postage grantea by Third Assistant Postmaster General. Subscription by carrier, $400; b mail, $4.5'3 Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, K:-higan. 1'hcnes : Editorial, 4025; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephono 4925 AANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L. TOBIN City Editor ....................................Carl Forsythe krIdstorlat lrector ..............................ea n Conner, Jr. News Editor .... ............................David M. Nichol Oport Editor.................................Sheldon o. Fullerton Women's Editor............................Margaret M. Thompson "asistant News Editor................... . .... .Robert L Pierce Vraak B. Gilbreth Roland A. Coodian Karl elffert NIGHT EDITORS J. Culen Kennedy JameI nlgs Jerry E. liosenthal George A. stauter Wilbur J. Myers Pari Jouea Stanley W. Arnhcim Lawson E. Becker Edward C. Campbell C. Williams Carpent Thomas Connellan Samuel G. Ellis Dorothy 3rocknat Miriam Carvera Beatrice Collins Louise Crandall Elsie Feldman Prudence Foster Sports Assistants John W. Thomas REPORTERS Fred A. Lluber Normani Kraft Roland Martin ter lhenry Meyer Albert H. Newman E. Jerome Pettit Georgia Geisnman Mice Giibert Martha Littleton Elizabeth Long Frances Mechester Elizabeth Mann John S. Townsend Charles A. sanford John W. Pritchard Joseph Itenihan C. hart Schaaf Brackley Shaw Parker R. Snyder G. R. Winters Margaret O'Brien Hillary Rard4~i Dorothy Rundell Elma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhama famed wit and playwright. It is highly probable bo estimates are subject to a certain amount of exagge ation and prejudice. Over and above the exchange of personalities an the intimate picture of the late nineteenth center and present day England, for which the book w live as has Boswell's "Johnson," it is an arresting sincere and frank discussion of Bernard Shaw. Harr is a serious biographer in spite of his hatred of deta Though impatient to ;get at fundamentals, he tel at some length of Shaw's early environment and boy hood struggles. But this is only for a better under standing of the later Shaw. Harris understands th enigmatic man, who has obscured his real self unde a cloak of joking and frivolity, as few of Shaw's con temporaries have succeeded in knowing him. Whi deploring Shaw's notorious shams and inconsisten cies, Hargis is appreciative of him as a man and a a clear headed, courageous thinker. He consider that Shaw failed miserably to live his theories, how ever, or even to pursue them at critical momen when they would be most effective: (for instanc Shaw the socialist and pacifist did not condem England's attitude in the Great War, and alway favored armed defense for England, a patent incon sistency). Harris is convinced Shaw will live longer as personality than as a.playwright or social thinke He discusses.Shawian dramas sanely, if with marke prejudice against their lack of passion and emotion It is in their respective emotional lives that Harr builds up the most striking contrast between himse and Shaw. In doing so the biographer makes himse the more vivid, intense personality of the two, berat ing Shaw for his cold and unsympathetic nature. H continually refers to Shaw as a purist and a prud and thinks his plays definitely limited by this quality The Shawian-Harrisian epistlatory onslaught have perhaps the gareatest appeal to the reader Shaw's letters are witty, and characteristic of him The preface letters, in which Shaw first' refused Harris permission to write his biography, and ended up by sending him quantities of material though stil insisting he did not authorize the book, is indicativ Of 'what Harris terms Shaw's "coyness". Interesting also is Harris' counter to Shaw's public charge tha he was a ruffian. Harris says of this incident later "I didn't know then he was paying me the homag the serf ,pays his hero . . . . he, too, is a ruffian, bu of an inferior strain." B. W., JOB: The Story of a Simple Man, by Joseph Roth. (The Viking Press) $2.50. Translated by Dordthy Thompson. (Review Copy Courtesy, of Wahrs Book Store.) th ampu ad contributors a ry confining theinse words if possib. ill municatio ws iill name. of, ron in l c regarded as is cueSt. Letters p nosruel as eat 11. opinion of The D: Is y- r- To The Editor: BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 s Opinion re asked to be brief, Ives to less than 300 le. Anonymous com- be disregarded. The nicants will, however, confidential, upon re- ublishedl should not be presing the editorial )A il. ML it CHARLES T. Kline NORRIS P. JOHNSON .... . . . .. . . . ..Business Manager. ........................Assistant Manager Department Managers Advertising...... ......................Vernon Bishop Advertising C o tractsi ............................h rry I. Begley; Advertising Service.................................yron C. Vedder Publications ...................................William T. Brown Accoents.s...s. ................... . .. Richard Stratemeir Women' $usiness Manager .......1o...........Ann W. Verner Orvil Aronson Gilbert E. Bursley Allen Clark Robert Finn Donna Becker Martha Jane Ousel Genevieve Field Maxine Fischgrund Ann Gallmeyer Mary Harriman Assistants Join 1 r Artlhur F. Kohn -J arnc.4Lowe Anne Harsha Katharine Jackson Dorothy Layin Virginia Mcqomb Carolin .Mosher Helen Olsen Graf ton W. Shart Jmi alo A. Johnston II Do> Lyon Bernard H. Good May Seefrled Minnie Seng Helen Spencer Kathryn Stork Clare Unger Mary Elizabeth Watts NIGHT EDITOR-KARL SEIFFERT TUESDAY, DECEMBER -15, 1931 Michigan Leads, The Field Again TWO Michigan students have been awarded Rhodes Scholarships, tenable at the University of Oxford and which may be held for three years. The significant fact to be treated here is that of twelve candidates selected from the district of which Michigan is grouped, and which embraces six states, the University was given two of the four selections. The two students are Samuel H. Beer, a senior in thee Literary College, and George C. Tilley, a sophomore in the Law School. In competition with the universities and col- leges of Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky, Michigan has been ranked foremost. The remaining two .scholarships were alloted to a Yale junior, representing the State 'of Illinois, and to an Oberlin College (Ohio) graduate. No representatives then were chosen from such schools as the Universities of Chicago, Illinois, Wisconsin, .or Indiana. The latest selections give to Michigan four Rhodes Scholars in three years. Two are now studying at Oxford. Under the former system of choosing Rhodes scholars, Michigan would only have had one selec- tion. The new system, which tends more to giving scholarships to those deserving them rather than one to each school, insures against mediocre talent. It is a pleasure to see that Michigan is able to send such fine representatives as to obtain both places. The University has every reason to believe that the educational facilities of the institution are being utilized. Furthermore, it is an indication of the high scholarship which s maintained in the various colleges. Mr. Beer and Mr. Tilley, both former Daily men, are to be congratulated. A Rhodes Scholarship is the highest honor that can be given for scholastic achievement. A-Review By John W. Pritchard This book was selected by the Book of the Month Club, for November. It was a happy choice. A sym- phony in dull, continuous grief, "Job" is a straight- forward, compelling work. Mendel Singer was a Jewish Bible teacher, living in a tiny Russian village, with his wife, Deborah, and three children. "They had no gold to weigh, and no bank-notes to count. Nevertheless his life flowed along 'like a poor little brook between bare banks.... He had nothing to regret, and he coveted nothing. He loved the woman, his wife, and took rdelight in her flesh. His two small sons, Jonas and Shemariah, he beat when they were disobedient, but the youngest, his daughter Miriam, he was constantly caressing. . A young gazelle." Then, from all the Jews in Zuchnow, misfortune singled him out. His wife bore him a son, an epilep- tic idiot. His two elder sons, being strong healthy and not blessed by some deformity, were conscripted into the army ten years later; still his youngest,. Menuchim, could say no word except "Mama." ; In order not to enter the army, his son Shemariah de- serted to America. His daughter commenced to go with Cossacks. To save Miriam from ruin, the family went to America to join Shemariah, who,.under the name of Sam, had prospered. But -Menuchim must be left behind, and the thought of tlat poor, stupid waif, the son whom he had deserted, was td haunt Mendel for many years to come. So Mendel Singer droned out his weary life, sens- ing that he was being tested by God as his Biblical prototype had been, and wondering what sin he had committed to deserve his crushing deal of tribula- tion. Only once, toward the very end, did this humble man doubt God's justice, and then his faith was suddenly recreated by an event that can be 'described only as a miracle. Although 'the book might be termed an epic of impressionism, it is thoroughly leavened by the in- tensely physical aspect of Mendel's life. Mendel, in his progression, from mild but vigorous youth to despairing old age, stands out, from the pages in a vivid manner. One hears the tact of the skirts of his caftan against his high leather boots, as he strides rapidly through the village streets. One feels the vibrations of his voice and the swaying of his body as he chants his prayers, the meaning of whose words he has long since forgotten; pure supplications; passing from his heart directly to heaven without recognition by his mind. Roth does not play with niceties, nor smooth over his meanings with polite words. He has stripped his story bare of superficialities, and shown us the naked soul of a Russian Jew. If there be technical errors, they pass unnoticed. "Job" is a great book. A FACT A DAY. Silkworm eggs have been transported successfully from Chosen to Manchuria, Sewing machines for unemployed women have been supplied by the city-county relief committee in Oklahoma City. us' In last Friday's Daily appeared a letter signed M. S. M. which des- l- cribed the behavior of students at le a moving picture show. One of the - actors, as M. S. M. relates the inci- s dent, remarked that his college - education had proved of little value, v having fitted him for nothing. This s remark was greeted with applause, 'e which M. S. M. interpreted, correct- n ly, I think, as an expression of the s students' contempt for the process 1 which they are themselves under- going. Such an attitude occasioned a M. S. M. some distress and nt a '{ little surprise. M. S. M. should not have been n. surprised. Being at the cinema is show, which many students attend f frequentlyand regularly, and ha- ing, for the time being at least, abandoned and neglected the op- e portunities offered by the Univer- ' sity, it was natural that they should s applaud the statement that those opportunities were worthless. Will- ing to justify themselves, as human beings are wont to be, they took d kindly to the spoken condemnation of what their own actions con 1 demned. g It seems to me moreover that t when a brief remnark is so sharply , noted as 'to occasion general ap- e plause, that remark, as M. S. M. e will believe, must have called out tithe expression of a sincere and gen- eral conviction. It is this belief which gives rise to the distress, but perhaps M. S. M. should not on this account have been distressed. If any great number of students are waking up to the fact that they are wasting time and money in go- ing to college, the awakening, how-- ever rude, is not altogether to be deplored. If one has no wish to be- come a scholar, particularly if he has neither the wish nor the cap- acity, what will it profit him to go L to school? It seems to me that the profits of schooling, doubtful even at best, as I willingly -grant, will come only to those who give more time to study than their teachers suggest, who go beyond lesson as- 'signments into the real problems >f their subjects, and who are cap- able and desirous of growth. Per- haps our college students realize - that, being unprepared to app re- ciate college courses, and unwill- ing to work at them, what is os- tensibly an education will prove fruitless. For certainly it will. Sincerely as I have written these lines, I suspect that my readers, if I have any, will not take me ser- iously. The profits of an educa- tion, as I have assigned them, are to be gained only by such work as is done in advanced courses, con- ducted as graduate work is handled. No one, either among students or faculty, expects such work in fresh- man and sophomore courses in the literary and engineering schools. It seems to me accordingly that such beginning or general courses are mostly mishandled. The diffiulty is this. Teachers :n the University tend to offer an unlimited opportunity without any coercion. This is the traditional function of a University, a system 'anded down from the time when i university was a community of -scholars. A community of scholars ,ertainly our undergraduate uni- iersity is not. Yet we depend, for >ne thing, t some extent upon lec- tures, not having as Bertrand Rus- sell says, accommodated ourselves to the invention of printing. I think ye should learn something from l he elementary schools about the ,onduct of freshman and sopho- nore courses. Definite work should >e regularly assigned, a n d we should make the student immedi- k itely aware whether or not that -cork is properly done. He should never get to the middle of a course ;ithout having mastered the first material in it. Frequent and effec- Ave tests must be properly graded ind returned. We must be able and willing to tell a boy without passion or contempt that he is fail- ing. We must be able to tell him this right early in the course. We should have the support of the ad- ministration in removing hopeless cases before they have completely cumbered our ground. Nothing is to be accomplished by any system, however respectable or. beautiful, which ignores its own purpose and the nature of its own material Part of the misfits, fail- ures and dissatisfactions in college BOOKS I (GEAT iMEN OF ENGLAND -E~RNAJRD SIAW: By Frank Harris. Simon & Schuster, New Yerk, 1931. $4.00. I A Review By Barbara Wright Fran ui&arrs' study of Shaw (for it is not a bio- graphy in the accepted sense!, is equally a picture of Frank Harris. With true Shawian modesty Mr. Har- ris makes the -vivid contrast between himself and Shaw, especially on those issues that involve his most ardent prejudices. He introduces himself ' on every appropriate occasion, but these intrusions, techni- cally at fault, are delightful and a decided asset of the book. Self expression and a tenacious egotism are second nature to Harris, as they are to Bernard Shaw: this essential likeness is the difference of the two men at once promises a book interesting for this clash of personalities alone. If Shaw stood on the shoulders of Shakespeare in measuring his own height, as he is herein accused of doing, Harris' retal- iation is to stand over Shaw and judge him, in a sense patronize him, on the scale of the higher stand- ard of Harris. This is not an injustice to Harris; it is rather a tribute to his perspicacity that he adopt the tricks of his biography in estimating him. A modern inclined railway has been Bahia, a "two-story" city partly at ..sea partly and a plateau 200 feet higher. opened in level and Nearly 90 per cent of Paraguay's total imports pass through the port of Asuncion. Exportation of live alpacas from Peru has been I