"AGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY IN 'THE WORLD OF BOOKS SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 1936 DeKRUIF Pleads For Distribution Of Science's Fruits To All Public WHY KEEP THEM ALIVE?. By Pau de Kruif. New York; Harcourt & Brace. 1936. $3.00. By DR. JOHN V. FOPEANO (Instructor in Public Health) FOR two hundred thousand dollar a year tuberculosis could be prac- tically wiped out of Detroit within ten years. This would save Detroi over a million dollars a year. It is impossible to get the two hundred thousand to invest in this way. If as many as 60 per cent of the chil- dren of pre-school age were immu- nized against diphtheria that dreaded disease would soon disappear; yet there were 60,000 cases and 6,000 deaths from diphtheria in the United States in 1934. The budgets of Health Departments must be cut to balance the budget. Rheumatic fever seldom has a disastrous aftermath if its vic- tims have been properly nourished, carefully nursed, and given the ad- vantage of the warm sunshine of the Caribbean or possibly other south- ern climates. Yet thousands of chil- dren are dying of rheumatic heart disease. There is no money for the proper treatment of. many of these children. If Negroes live in decent houses, and are adequately nourished and re- ceive medical care comparable to that furnished white people, their death rate is very little higher than that among the whites, yet Negro children continue to die at a rate three to five times as great as white children. Poverty is the answer. Many local and national surveys have revealed thousands of under- nourished children. If the number has not increased during the depres- sion it is still too great - yet the gov- ernment is urging restriction in the production of milk and food stuffs of all sorts. These facts and many others have forced Paul de Kruif to become ad- mittedly hysterical. T h r o u g h o u t "Why Keep Them Alive" he repeat- edly pictures on one hand the inno- cent victims of infectious diseases, of malnutrition, of indecent housing, of ignorance, not only dying in thou- sands but existing in abject misery, and on the other hand, the fruits of science which could reduce dis- ease, and produce plenty for all if given the money to do so. There must be something very wrong with a system that thus keeps the workers from consuming what they are capable of producing in abundance. Such a system cannot and Will not be tolerated by an informed populace and it is the author's mis- sion to disperse the ignorance. The author seems to have been careful to make no specific recom- mendations but he is certain about certain fundamentals. Science is the common property of everyone and its benefits are not to be restricted to the Haves. Those in control of money and credit are blind, calloused, and vicious to insist upon continued suf- fering in a land of plenty for the sake of a paper balance in their myopic scheme of bookkeeping. How the system can be changed he does not say but he warns those in authority that it had better be changed-and that in the not too distant future - or the newly-awak- ened populace will install its own leaders, whom De Kruif does not trust enough to follow at present. The book will be criticized for be- ing emotional, incendiary, hysterical, communistic - for lacking perspec- tive. After all it is possible and necessary for most people to derive comfort and tolerable complacency from a study of the accomplishments of the past twenty-five years in the reduction of infant mortality, the increase in life expectancy, and the general improvement of living con- ditions until they are now considered the highest in the world. We are slow to believe that further progress is dependent upon a completely new technique. When the value of water purification was demonstrated, the credit became available for the con- struction of purification plants. When De Kruif, and others of like convic- Shakespeare Scholar Contributes BENTLEY SDespotism Flouted In Novel Of Caesar Important Work To Criticism NHAT HAPPENS IN HAMLET by J. Dover Wilson. tl By DR. PAUL MUESCHKE (Of the English Dept.) WHAT HAPPENS IN HAMLET i probably one of the most im- ortant works on Shakespeare to ap- )ear within the last decade. J. Dov- -r Wilson is a refreshing and or- iginal critic, an eclectic in the fines t sense of the word. He achieves a re- mnarkable synthesis of the interpreta- tive insight of a G. Wilson Knight the sympathetic appreciation of Shakespeare of the romantic critics with the fullness of knowledge of the historical skeptics. For the past few t ears, Dover Wilson has been editing Ie plays of Shakespeare in the new Cambridge edition. He utilizes his ninute knowledge of the text to in- 'erpret the plays in the light of Shakespeare's time and the tradi- tions and customs of the Elizabethan stage, but, unlike the "debunkers" and the skeptics, he never loses sight of the enduring and ageless values of zreative dramatic art. In What Happens In Hamlet, Wil- son is concerned with the imagina- tive re-creation of Hamlet as Shake- peare conceived it. Whatever indi- vidual differences of opinion may be excited by his views in the minds of other critics, there can be no doubt that his contribution to our under- standing of the play as a whole and his illuminating interpretations of many hitherto obscure or controver- sial incidents in it merit the respect of all students of Shakespeare. He succeeds in throwing entirely new light on some of the most baffling scenes in the play, particularly upon the "Mousetrap" scene and the duel between Hamlet and Laertes. Twenty years ago Wilson first be- came intrigued by the problem of the dumb-show in the play within the play scene in Hamlet. After years of interrupted study and cogitation, he felt that he had found the solu- tion not only to the problem which fascinated him but also to a host of related questions which had been variously answered by Shakespearean scholars for three hundred years. In his ingenious reconstruction of the play scene, Wilson is led to the con- clusion that the King, Queen, and Polonius never actually saw the dumb-show because they were at the moment earnestly occupied in conver- sation about Hamlet who had given them much food for anxiety in his tion demonstrate over and over with- out emotional fanfare, the human value of the newer scientific discov- eries, they will perhaps find sup- port from those controlling credit. The present generation lacks com- plete faith in the rapidly changing edicts of science. In 1890 workers in tuberculosis predicted that tuber- culosis would be wiped out by the new science of bacteriology and tu- berculin. Now these same workers admit they were wrong. Every year some new discovery contradicts or makes obsolete the discovery of the year before. The present generation is likewise suspicious of do-gooders. They are looked upon as emotionally malad- justed, or grafters. De Kruif properly sees the task as an enormous project in public edu- cation. There is a great need for in- terpretation of science. Figures must be dramatized and the introduction of some emotionalism is permissible. In this volume the emoting is a bit overdone. His emotional outburst leaves one without any sense of di- rection. When he concludes hs appeal with a rehash of the now hackneyed story of the Dionne Quin- tuplets he detracts very definitely from the effectiveness of his argu- ment. It is very doubtful that the au- thor's challenge to protect the lives of our children will be accepted soon in a state whose popular governor recently stated in discussing the care of afflicted and crippled children, "The people are looking for ways toj save money, not new ways to spend it. That's the kind of government they will continue to get." y comments just preceding the entrance of the actors. Up to now, it has al- ways been taken for granted that the King did of course see the dumb- s show and it has been necessary to -assume that he did not grasp its sig- nificance until the presentation of - the spoken play proper made it all too - clear. Whatever doubts we may still t retain regarding Wilson's interpreta- tion, much of the textual evidence he . cites in confirmation admirably sup- ports his point of view. The role of f Hamlet throughout the scene, if un- derstood in this way, is made clear, and his comments, many of which have been hitherto regarded as the inexplicable ravings of a pretended madman, are given new meaning. The play scene, thus interpreted, clears up many controversial episodes and F speeches and reveals Hamlet him- self as the intellectual giant he is, subtle, ingenious, imaginative, cour- ageous. But Wilson's method of discussion frequently leaves much to be desired. The fault of the book lies chiefly in its organization. He conceives of the play-scene as the center of his problem and with that as a sort of focus sends his analysis spinning in concentric circles until it includes the play as a whole. The result is that he would like to discuss everything at once, all the problems being so inti- mately and necessarily related to one another, but being prevented by the exigencies of time and space, he must needs obey the laws of consecutive discussion. He cannot quite succeed, however, and he is always beginning the discussion of a particular point and then abruptly postponing it for several sections while he digresses to treat something else which is urgent- ly pressing for his attention at the moment. In the course of his argu- ment on several disputed questions, the Shakespeare student may feel that Wilson is confusing insight with ingenuity. Like all Shakespeare en- thusiasts with a theory to defend, he is sometimes guilty of letting his facility of conjecture outrun his scientific devotion to scholarly ob- jectivity. But in these days when Shakespeare scholarship is so fre- quently the pedantic trepanning of a great mind by a host of little ones, it is a joy to read a man of Wilson's stature whose erudition has not been gained at the sacrifice of his own im- aginative insight of the artistic in- tegrity of Shakespeare's genius. New Books Are Added To Hopwood Library Eleven new books have been added to the library of the Hopwood Room, located on the third floor of Angell Hall, which is open to all students enrolled in a composition or journal- istic course. The books include Maxwell Ander- son's Winterset, This Modern Poetry by Babette Deutsch, Poems by C. Day Lewis, The Best Poems of 1936, se- lected by Thomas Moult, Henry Wil- liamson's Salar the Salmon Tangled Hair, poems translated from the works of Akiko Yosano by Shio Sa- kanishi, George Santayana's The Last Pur- itan, Grace Lumpkin's To Make M Bread, W. Saroyan's Inhale and Ex- hale, Helen Jerome's dramatization of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, and Libel, by Edward Wooll. March Book Forecast PUBLIC SPEECH by Archibald MacLeish. Farrar & Rinehart. $1.00. ARCTIC ADVENTURE by Peter Freuchen. Farrar & Rinehart. $3.50. OSCAR WILDE DISCOVERS AMERICA by Lewis and Smith. Harcourt Brace. $3.75. SHAKESPEARE by J. Middleton Murry. Harcourt Brace. $3.50. GOLDEN PEACOCK by Gertrude Atherton. Houghton Mifflin. $2.50. PUNCH'S PROGRESS by Norman Brown. Macmillan. $2.00. FREEDOM, FAREWELL! By Phyllis Bentley. MacMillan. $2.50. By THEODORE HORNBERGER (Of the English Dept.) "Democracy," says Julius Caesar, in this novel by Miss Bentley, "in- evitably means delay and confusion. Despotism, on the other hand, has an unpleasant sound, but it is a much more practical form of government to live under. For it is easier to find a single able and well-meaning man than many. Most men are fools." But, answers Servilia, Caesar's mis- tress, and the most admirable char- acter in the book, "as long as a tree lives, it may grow fine and tall, even though slowly and with many twist- ings. But you want to stretch it to twice its length at once, by force. When you have finished, the tree may be dead. This conflict, with Servilia's liberalr middle-ground conception of govern- ment evidently the more admired by the author, is the thesis of Freedom, Farewell! Not only did Caesar's ends fail to justify his means, in Miss Bentley's opinion, but in the very process of achieving those ends the able and well-intentioned man was hardened, blinded, inevitably turned towards the paths which led to his own destruction. One reads this novel with present- day problems constantly in mind. In fact, Miss Bentley prefaces the book with a quotation from Mommsen to she effect that today should learn from yesterday, not because the par- -iculars are alike, but because the fundamental forces are likely to be he same. And, with a novelist's technique, she displays the funda- mental forces: Crassus the greedy, Pompey the ambitious, Cato the blunt, Cicero the egocentric, Mark Anthony the sensual, and all the rest of the colorful figures of the last days of the Roman Republic. What one learns is, however, de- bateable. Miss Bentley makes her people come alive; of that there is no doubt. She convinces one that human emotions and human in- capacities are not much different to- day from what they were in the first century B. C. But she does not, it seems to me, convince one that the swing from democracy to dictator- ship could have been stopped then, orb could have been stopped in modern Italy or Germany, by anything with-I in the control of those individuals who read novels. One is very likely to put down Freedom, Farewell! With quite as helpless an attitude towards the time-spirit or what seem to be vast economic forces as he had when he began it. For Cato the Younger, honest man that he was and acknowl- edged by Caesar as his only con- queror, is not the hero of the novel. Miss Bentley makes clear her be- As Brutus remarked, this is to "make one's principles wait upon opportuni- ty," and Caesar's career is doubtless an illustration of that rather dis- heartening truism. Unfortunately for Miss Bentley's case, she reveals no principles for which any conceivable numbers in a democracy might be willing to die. She says that politi- cal freedom must come from the people themselves, that it cannot be given them by any superior. She sug- gests that human selfishness is a prime cause of the decadence of po- litical institutions. She presents the tragedy to human values which comes with centering all hope of order on brute force. But she does not indi- cate any methods by which an indi- vidual who would believe in a liberal democracy can counteract the strength of other individuals who be- lieve that most men are fools, to be swayed or commanded or bought or killed as opportunity demands. In short, if one tries to follow Miss Bentley's lead and apply the general analogy of the fall of the Republic to the present day, one is forced to ad- mit that both the outright com- munists and the outright fascists have a somewhat better case than sticklers for retention of democratic institutions, like Cato the Younger. No less than Sinclair Lewis, however, Miss Bentley believes that there are worse things than delay and con- fusion and the impracticality of dem- ocracy. New Frost Volume Of interest to Ain Arbor is the publication of a new Robert Frost volume, scheduled for April 20. The verses, thirty-eight in number, will be titled A Further Range. When You Think of PRINTING Call 7900 RAMSAY-KERN. Inc. PRINTERS 205-206 First Nat'l Bk. Bldg. PHYLLIS BENTLEY lief that Caesar was at heart de- sirous of justice and good govern- ment, and on the side of the com- mon people as against privilege. But he was Brutus, forced to work, as he told in the conditions life offers. BOOKS C URRENT And Worth Your While ROBERT COOLEY ANGELL - The Family Encounters the Depression $1.50 PAUL DeKRUIF - Why Keep Them Alive.................... 3.00 H. G. WELLS - Man Who Could Work Miracles 1.35 MYERS & NEWTON - The Hoover Administration 3.50 EMIL LUDWIG - Defenders of Democracy ...3.00 JAMES STOKLEY ---Stars and Telescopes 3.00 JULIA ALTROCCHI -Snow Covered Wagon .. 2.50 HILAIRE BELLOC - Battle Grounds of Syria and Palestine 4.00 HOWARD HAGGARD -- The Anatomy of Personality 3.00 EVALYN McLEAN - Father Struck It Rich 3.00 MARGERY LANE - Faith, Hope and No Charity . 2.50 JOHN GUNTHER - Inside Europe .... 3.50 MAX BORN - The Restless Universe .. .. 2.50 KAGAWA - A Grain of Wheat .... . ... 1.00 E. M. DELAFIELD -Faster! Faster! 2.50 MARY HARRIS - I Knew Them in Prison.3.00 RICHARD BEAKER -Here Lies a Most Beautiful Lady 2.5O J. MATTHEWS - Guinea Pigs No More.2.00 NEGLEY FARSON - The Way of a Transgressor .. . 3.00 G. R. HEYER - The Organism of the Mind ... 3.50 at WAHR'S BOOKSTORES Main Street, Opposite Courthouse 316 State Street m I. I - The Second /Annual ASSEMBLY BALL I JOHNNY HAMP sunday dinner at the hut is really an event sunday menu chfiled fruit cup tomato juice homemade chicken noodle soup roast young vermont tom turkey dinner ..........65c breaded veal tenderloin steak dinner ............50c boiled swift's premium club sirloin steak dinner. . . .65c grilled sizzling lean pork chops dinner ...........55c grilled small tenderloin steak dinner .............55c grilled new york sirloin steak fresh mushrooms. . . .60c rost nrim rihs of ctepr beef ntl i i.e flc and s Orchestra The League Tickets $3.00 Friday, March 13 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. I 1 i