THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, M AY 1, 1938 MUMFOR THE CULTURE OF CITIES, by Lewis Tumford, Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York, $5. By ELLIOTT MARANISS Mr. Mumford has accomplished much more than a discussion of cities a8d city culture. In depicting thel fall and transformation of the c.:: ?s of history, he'has portrayed vh emotion the general miscarriage ar d defeat of civilized efforts to co- orcdinate essential human values with t .e physical structures of communall li He has written an analysis of. t.e fundamentals of men's organized1 14ie which may prove as important fcr the new biotechnic regime which. h sees replacing the present preda- tory and parasitic modes of life, as t1- formulations of Da Vinci, Galileo, Newton, Marx and Darwin are for, t' mechanistic order Accomplishes Monumental Work - InPortrayalOfHistoryOf City.. . peared. Characteristically, he again Western Civilization since the fif- presents a multitudinous array of teenth century; Mr. Mumford finds facts, but the significant meanings that mechanical integration and so- he has clothed them with impressie- cial disruption have gone on side by ly reminds us of our connection with! side. Our capacity for effective phys- them. ical organization has enormously in- I The city, as Mumford views it, is creased, but our efforts to create an both a natural product, and, along harmonious counterpoise to these ex- with language "man's greatestwrkternal linkages have failed, mainly because of rampant, exploitive econ- of art." It is a natural center for omies. The rising, bourgeoisie shat- the transmission of goods, a focal tered the caste system of feudalism, point for the economic activity of the and there ensued the baroque city, countryside, and on that basis it be- "symbol of wealth and power." InX comes "the point of maximum con- time the kings and palaces passed centration for the culture and power away, and a "purely individualistic1 of a community," a place where ideas industrialism" built the mammothc as well as goods are circulated, where cities of the nineteenth century, cha- alternative modes of life are present- otic, inorganic, an "agglomeration ofY ed and the dead hand of custom is the unrelated," a "savagely deter- lifted. a "time-binding creation pre- lorated environment" wherein men serving the past in its institutions compensate. for biological inferiorityI and architecture" and yet also a "dy- by addiction to "the poison of vi- namic nucleus of change" facing the carious vitality.", future. I The megalopolitan city, as perhaps Humanity is the keynote of Mum-. the paramount feature of modern civ- ford's book: cities and .^ultures are iliaztion, is not merely the result ofs judged in the light of the human the original social disruption by ex-s values they have realized or sacri- ploitation, but also the accumulationa fied. The medieval town is the rar- of the physical and social effects of est approach which man has y,:t made that disruption: ravaged landscapes, to an exercise of the city's ideal func- disorderly urban districts, pockets of tion while the modern industrial 4disease, patches of blight, mile upon megalopolis represents the furthest , mile of standardized slums. Yet Mum-a departure. ford, equally familiar . with thea Looking back over the course of I Utopias of idealists and the militantlyp ___________________________ scientific social creeds, has concluded _ that the first line of attack against Megalopolis is in Megalopolis. If the 'ascist Ted"ta asust 'rendcity is the foremost expression of the Trend{'dominant forces in fny human cul- Lb .iture there can be no escaping to the mrnerican Liberties ivory towers or any fleeing to the countryside. There is something that can be As in his previous book, Technics a,"'Civilization, a masterly and ir any-sided evaluation of the ma- c!:ne, Mumford has drawn on his' unusual knowledge in many fields, a: ., science, sociology and philosophy, tk create a synthesis. The Culture of: C4ies, however, is infused with a w :mth that should satisfactorily a: wer the charges that there is Sc ,ething machine-like in his work.! Te occasional neologism* which dot- te:I his former books have disap- Seldes Pictures F Threatening A Y ,U CAN'T DO THAT. By George ti-fascist and pro-democratic litera- Seldss. Modern Age Books. 50 ture. More than that, his book takes1 :ents. on the character of a Great Americanc By STOWELL EDWARDS Manual for the defense of our libertyI and security, a guide book for a broadf When a steeled and fearless report- democratic front of Americans. or like George Seldes, with exper- Seldes' choice of Abraham Lincoln's r ie. ces in Fascist Italy and a vast fa- great prophesy is in itself an indica-t m .iarity with the operations of Hit- tion of this ace reporter's clear per-t le ysm, writes a book to prove that ception of the trend in American life. Am.erica is being robbed of its liberty Lincoln said, "I see in the near futurer one. can be sure that he is getting the a crisis approaching that unnerves me truth, written forcefully and inde- and causes me to tremble for the safe- c perdeptly. Especially when he ad- ty of my country . . . dq ues anew, and imposing list of facts "Corporations have been enthroned, and direct statements 'to prove his an era of corruption in high places' ca e does it become abundantly clear will follow, and the money power oft that the machinations of big business the country will endeavor to pro- a> directed at making a mere scrap of long its reign by working upon the p :er of the Bill of Rights. Not too prejudices of the people until the startling is the fact that the mighty wealth is aggregated in a few hands, n groups of capital interests, most vo- and the Republic is destroyed."i cSferous in their avowed allegiance to the Constitution, are the most active and powerful in efforts to undermine vny dear sections of the historical document. The interests of big busi-_ ne ss are unswervingly intent on trad- ing the American peopl's liberties SERVAMUS-FJDEH for the fascist pattern. MARICHAND Divided into four sections, this val- uable handbook for all who are inter- ested in actively maintaining our constitutional liberties reports the most hoirible of the offenses against the Bill of Rights in addition to the most ordinary decencies of human lifu . In the second section Seldes nwmes names. The perpetrators and ex cutors of these criminal deeds are big business and its conglomeration of super-patriots, "goon" squads armed to the teeth, crackpot economic and ,FU R Y A social theorists, and newspapers and public officials in their direct em- ployment. Clever chapter titles are a fine in- dication of the wealth of vital infor- mation in this book which due to its low price is within the reach of mil- lions of people. Here are a few:. Law-C m l t I less Enforcers of the Law, When Blood Is Their Argument, Chamber of Com- CLEAN ED mercial Patriots, The Press versus' The People, The Fascist Pattern: Men, GLAZED/ The Fascist Pattern: Guns, and The STORED Fascist Pattern: Money. In these last three chapters Seldes I NSU RED makes the freshest and hby far the, most significant contributions to an- Pay Nex CAPS and C N Repairing, remodeling FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS at reasonable prices at Low Suini Place Your Order NOW Also Also - SPECIALS This Week Only Phone 7040 for 1000 Smart Summer MIAMI TIES A 75c value ....45c each MANHATTAN SHIRTS All Styles ... $2.00 up MARCHAN SOX, a 55c value 39c pr. Charley's 607 East Liberty MEN'S WEAR~ 1319 So. Univ. done about Megalopolis. The hope lies in the fact that this is a world of change; nothing is permanent, es- pecially not, Mumford holds, the frozen images of barbaric power with which fascism now confronts us. If nothing endures except life, the way to build new cities, to get cities in the finer sense, we need a new kind of civilization. On this postulate-dy- namic change of the bases of society hangs Mr. Mumford's elaboration of cities as centers of natural regions, of a complementary diffusion and centralization that comes out of real cultural needs, of a "humanity-cen- tered" society. PROF. KNUDSON IN CHICAGO Prof. C. A. Knudson of the depart- ment of romance languages is spend- ng this week-end in Chicago, 4 DE'S c ULT Protection t Fall skillfully executed mer Prices 3onded Service DE FURS Tel. 7040 TT71rr-~r-N~r' jthe processes of heredity, written with ___ IT1.h LJLI-\..N1J the characteristic lucidity of the Hal- HFILDANE dane literary style, he then progresses on this factual basis to a maore inter- Discussion Of Practical! :sting and vital discussion of eugenics Eugenics Proves 'and the race problem. Valuable He stresses the difficulty of bear-L ing out any contention of race su- HEREDITY AND POLITICS, J.B.S. periority because of the lack of any, l Haldane, 1938, W. W. Norton and environmental constant that will per- ' rAll early spring Co.. New York City. $2.50. mit a legitimate comparison. Less I, reserved concerning the Nazi concept \ hats at half price. By DENNIS FLANAGAN j of Nordic and "Aryan" dominance, he J.B.S. Haldane, probable best refers to it thus: "The pure NordicBla kn known among England's li~ometrists ( race of the past is at worst a myth, B aC , n vy, w ne, and geneticists, has made at least a at best a deduction from inadequate .A br xr partial step toward a crystallization evidence." He is at his bitter, sardonic =nd rOL+J. . and consolidation of his series of best when he comments on the "eu- genic" theory of Major Eric Suchs-... ALL HEADIZES lectures and theses in a field too,sel- land, of the German Air Force: dom entered by ordinary research that "the eugenic effect of air war- workers: the relation of the study of 1 fare is apparent for the following heredity to the forces behind the reasons: (1) bombing will be concen- genesis of man and the races of man. trated on regions where the popula- Though written for lay consumption, tion is densest, poorest, and hence I "Hats That Are Different" Heredity and Politics cannot be most undesirable eugenically; (2) classed as a science popularization of during air raids thieves. will tend to 227 South State Street Phone 2-1416 the Logan Clendening type, but rath- come out, as well as anti-Fascists and er as a careful and scholarly effort other genetically undesirable ele- to acquaint the layman with the ments intending to foment disorder; simple mechanics of a natural system (3) genetically inferior people will so frequently abused by eugenicists manifest previously latent nervous and fake theoreticians. and mental diseases, and thus be less Here he discusses principally the likely to reproduce their kind . . . I EW RO CKS O F immediate problems of geneticists, cannot find this paper at all hu- notably the sterilization of defectives morous because I have seen its prin- and the theories of race superiority ciples applied by German airmen to M PO RTED IRISH LIN EN and differences. Devoting the first the improvement of the Spanish part of his book to an explanation of race." *44 r4 rtiher otOF HOLLYWOOD WHAT wonderful memories Styles that have all the glamour awaken in this magic word - - - of the movie queens, with new ; 4MO HER! Fashion details that you'll see worn Remember your Mother with a by your favorite picture stars this GreeigCard - -especially pre- season. Smart new sleeves, slim lines, swinging skirts, and singing, pared for this nationally recog- .l'ltn r fcolorfulpatterns.They're made of nized day for Mothers. It will genuine imported Irish please her. Linen, in tuneful new MAY ER-SCHAIRER COMPANY pin .Eight styles in al. 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