THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRI I U TARY 28, 1954 JOHN CROWE RANSOM: Literary Light Brightens Campus * * * * By RICHARD KING John Crowe Ransom, who has been lecturing -nd visiting on cam- pus for the last few days, is a lead- ing American literary critic. Lest you be frightened by this fact and begin conjuring up vis- ions of a tall, gaunt, unkempt and arrogant man throwing ,stones at Shakespeare, it should also be men- tioned that he is a pleasantly gra- cious and modest human being. Further, despite his unassuming pink-face, and white-haired gen- iality, he is a brilliant man. His sixty-four year career is a cata- logue of literary innovation, ex- ploration and success. HAVING graduated from Van- derbilt University and studied three yearsas a Rhodes Scholar, Ransom returned to Nashville, Tenn., in 1914 where he became a leading figure among a group of young poets. Calling themselves "The Fugitives," the poets pub- lished their own work in a maga- zine of that name. What they were fugitives from, Ransom said yes- terday, was never determined. Their poems were widely read and appreciated and. Ransom's still occupy a prominent place in modern poetry. They are ac- corded the (perhaps dubious) honor of being included in mostj contemporary anthologies. j "After four years," he said, "we had very nearly worn each other out in discussion and mutual study and had the good sense to dis- solve before we went into debt or had a serious quarrel." AFTER THE dissolution, Ran- som became interested in literary criticism and has spent his mature years in this field. And it is as a critic that his reputation as an explorer and innovator has been made. He took a new, and what is -Daily-Al Reid JOHN CROWE RANSON, POET AND CRITIC still considered radical, approach to literature. It was essentially a revolt from the traditional scholastic criticism, which em- phasized the historical content of the poem and the importance of the poets personality and life and their influence on the work. Ransom insisted, and does to- day, that the critic's prime inter- est should be on the poem as an object of art, an end in itself re- gardless of the time and circum- stances under which it was written. Above all, he insisted that the critic should be lively and inter- esting; observing that, although much of traditional criticism might be sound, it makes pretty dull and unimaginative reading. * * * HE BECAME a proponent of "close reading"-an intense study of the metaphors, philosophic par- adoxes and ironies and metaphysi- cal implications of each poem. It is a line by line, word by word ex- amination and has proved im- mensely rewarding to nearly all students of literature. Soon after Ransom began pub- lishing his work, other members of the old Nashville circle took to criticism also. These included Cleanth Brooks and Allen Tate, who wrote in much the same vein as Raisom. Soon the critics became known as the "Southern School" or "new" critics and Ransom is considered the founder. When Ransom became a pro- fessor at Kenyon College, Ohio, in 1937, he founded, and still edits, the "Kenyon Review," mouthpiece for the new criticism. More recent- ly, he organized what is now the' Indiana School of Letters. Held during the summer, leading critics from arpund the country and from every sc ool of thought teach and attend classes in literature. TYPICAL of Ransom's explora- tory approach was his lecture Tuesday entitled "Why Critics Do Not Go Mad." Though he didn't pay much attention to his subject, he attracted a large audience and told them about a new idea on the importance of meter which he has been kicking around recently. (He later explained that crit- ics probably don't go mad be- cause, before they do, they usu- ally get mad at each other and work off enough steam in this way to keep them from tipping over completely.) In rough form, here is his new idea: Meter is by nature something of a Platonic esence: it is the form, or closest mathematical expres- sion, of music. As a platonic es- sence, it symbolizes the best single expression of man's highest-re- ligious-aspirations. Thus when meter is applied to verbal expres- sion, by its nature it gives the thought a certain authority it would not otherwise have. This, Ransom candidly admits, is only a relatively undeveloped idea and it might be wrong. But it is a new idea which appears to have some validity and, he main- tains, it is worthy of exploration. Dutch Student Writes on U Newspapers of the Netherlands recently carried a series of articles written by a student of the Uni- versity's journalism department. Anthony Brouwers, a Dutch stu- dent whose year-long course of study at the University is being sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, submitted the stories on life at an American university to his hometown student newspaper. Ensian Deadline Tomorrow is the last day 'Ensians may be purchased for $5.50; Saturday the price rises to $6. Since the yearbooks must be ordered from the printers to- morrow, Neale Traves, '52, 'En- sian Business Manager, em- phasized that if 'Ensians are not bought now, they might not be available when the publica- tion comes out in May. Stockwell To Abolish Pet Peeve . Stockwell Hall has finally solved its "lounge problem"-or so the residents hope.- The house council decided that the lounge be patrolled in an at- tempt to eliminate the problem of petting in the lounge. A special committee of students elected by the residents of the dormitory will do the patrolling. THE DECISION came as a re- sult of a public opinion poll con- ducted in Stockwell last week by the house council lounge commit- tee. Residents were given a choice of several solutions to the problem on a multiple choice questionnaire. Sixty-five per cent of the women filled out the ques- tionnaires. Decisive majorities voted in favor of the measures later passed by the council. Seventy- six per cent of the women vot- ing supported patrolling the lounge. Sixty-nine per cent fa- vored student patrollers, while thirty per cent preferred the patrolling to be done by the house directors. The remaining group had no opinion. Residents were given the choice of the following penalties for loungeloffenders: social proba- tion, closing the lounge to the of- fender for a specified time, clos- ing the lounge altogether for a specified time and posting the names of the offenders. Social probation and forbidding the use of the lounge to the offender tied as preferred penalties. A special section of the poll, providing for the establishment of a "visitors' room" (a "visitors' room" being defined as one in which residents could take great aunts and grandmothers), was thrown out because it was mis- understood, according to Gret- chen Ross, '54, lounge committee chairman.I Union To Sponsor' Detroit Play Trip The Union will sponsor a stu- dent trip to Detroit on March 7 to see T. S. Eliot's "The Cocktail Party," staffman Bill Stason, '53, announced yesterday. Tickets for the Union bus trip will be sold between 3 and 5 p.m. today through Friday in the Un- ion lobby. The price, which in- cludes a ticket and round trip fare, is $3.50. Series of College Teaching Forums To Start Tomorrow Now the teachers are being taught. ' The first of a series of five1 forums on college and university teaching will be held tomorrow from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. SPONSORED BY the Commit- tee on College Relations, the for- ums are designed "to stimulate Fellowships Granted by U' The executive board of the School of Graduate Studies an- nounced yesterday 18 summer re- search fellowships awarded to members of the University fac- ulty. Fellowships were awarded to the following: Harry Bergholz and Prof. Francis A. Brown of the German department; Prof. Gerald S. Blum of the psychology de- partment; Prof. Arthur J. Carr, Prof. Marvin Felheim and Prof. Henry V. S. Ogden of the English department; and Prof. Frank Grace and Daniel S. McHargue of the political science department. Other -faculty members receiv- ing awards were Nelson G. Hairs- ton of the zoology department; Prof. Phillip S. Jones and Prof. Maxwell 0. Reade of the mathe- matics department; Lawrence B. Keddle of the romance language department: Christain S. Ron- destvedt, Jr. of the chemistry de- partment; Erich E. Steiner of the botany department; Prof. Daniel B. Suits of the economics depart- ment; and Stanley P. Wyatt, Jr. of the astronomy department. The other two fellowships went to members of the Medical School faculty: Prof. Alexander Barry, and Prof. E. Edward Evans. interest among graduate students preparing for teaching and to stimulate instructors and faculty to do a better job of teaching," according to chairman of the for- ums, Prof. Algo D. Henderson of the education school. The committee attempted to' bring together a group of fac- ulty who are generally recog- nized as being superior teachers to discuss problems and phases of instruction, Prof. Henderson said. This week's panel will include Prof. Francis X. Braun of ' the German department, Prof. Sidney Fine of the history department, Prof. Clayton, Hill of the indus- trial relations department, Prof. Hazel M. Losh of the astronomy department and Prof. Walter Sad- ler of the civil engineering de- partment. They will discuss "What Makes Good College Teaching?" Questions to be 'dealt with in- clude "How do you plan a course?", "How do you guage whe- ther your teaching is meaning- ful?", "How do you define the ob- jectives of a course?" The participating faculty mem- bers were chosen after consulta- tion with the deans of the various school and the president of Stu- dent Legislature who made an in- formal study of student opinion. MSC Game Ticket Sale EndsToday Tickets for the Wolverine Club- sponsored trip to Lansing for the Michigan-Michigan State hockey game will be on sale for the last time from 1 to 4:30 p.m. today in the Administration Bldg. The price, which includes a round-trip to Lansing by bus and admission to the game, is $2.90. WASHINdTON -(P)- Fifteen' Eisenhower-for-President leaders from 11 Southern states organized here yesterday and said the South is ready to go Republican in No-. vember if the GOP nominee is Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. "The South is today ready, for the first time in history," a joint statement said, "to give a majority of its 128 electoral votes to a Re- publican nominee for President- if that man be Eisenhower." * * * THE STATEMENT referred to a region where Senator Taft of Ohio has mustered strong support for the Presidential nomination in the past. Without mentioning Taft's 1952 Southern effort by name, the Eisenhower group said: "Old guard die-hard leaders in the North are striving in every way to dominate the Re- publican party machinery in the South. The people of the South are determined to throw off this old guard Republican yoke just as they are determined to strike off the fetters of Trumanism." Coincident with the Eisenhower meeting, David S. Ingalls, a Taft 'campaign manager, issued a state- ment taking exception to one by Senator Lodge (R-Mass.), na- tional director of the Eisenhower campaign, that the General's con- vention' delegate strength is "on the upsurge" in the Midwest. "If there is any upsurge, it has probably been the best kept secret of the campaign," Ingalls said. Lodge had pointed to Iowa; Illi- nois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri and South Dakota as states where he said there is "rapidly develop- ing strength" for the General. Forecasting a "landslide victory," he estimated that Republicans would gain eight or nine new Senate seats and 50 to 60 In the House, giving the GOP control of both houses. Ingallschallenged what he said was Lodge's claim that Eisenhower would aid Republicans in winning Congres control. He said a Novem- ber. poll of House Republicans showed Taft leading Eisenhower 71 to 54 and on Feb. 10 a second poll showed Taft widening his lead to 81 to 37. *4 Churchill's Disclosures1 Hit Laborites LONDON -(A)-- Parliamentary observers generally agreed yester- day that Labor Party unity suf- fered a damaging blow from Win- ston Churchill's disclosures in for- eign policy debate. According to this view, Chur- chill did more than successfully defend the Korean record of his Conservative government in the House of Commons Tuesday. In time, the wounds Churchill inflicted conceivably could help promote an open break between the leader of Labor's left wing, Aneurin Bevan, and the leaders of the moderate faction, Clement Attlee and Herbert Morrison. Con- servative strategy was clear: REPUBLICANS CONFIDENT: Southern Group Set To Back Eisenhower U' To Study Army BuVin Procedures TRY AGAIN: Huber House Compromise Foreseen in Near Future V A study of the effectiveness of the present system of Army mili- tary vehicle purchases will be conducted by the School of Bus- iness Administration for the Mu- nitions Board of the Defense De- partment. Prof. Merwin H. Waterman of the School of Business Adminis. tration will direct the project which is known officially as the Tank - Automotive Procurement. Study. Under present procedure, which' has been in effect since April, 1948, the Army purchases all types of motor vehicles for all services. Object of the study will be to determine just how well the plan is working out. Procurement operations will be studied at Army, Navy, and Mar- ine headquarters in Washington, at the ir Material Command at Wright Field in Dayton, 0., at the Ordnance Tank-Automotive Cen- ter in Detroit, and at several of the Ordnance Districts through-+ out the country. Freshmen To Get HopwoodAwards Presentation of awards to win-' ners of the Avery A. Hopwood+ writing contest for freshmen will be made at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Marvin Felheim of the English department will be the principal speaker. According to Prof. Roy Cowden of the English department, about 50 manuscripts were judged, a total less than last year's. Prizes of $50, $30, and $20 will be awarded in the essay, fiction and poetry divisions of the con- test. SL Wing To Meet The newly formed Administra- tive Wing of Student Legislature will meet at 3:30 p.m. today in the Union. The meeting is open to all stu- dents interested in learning about student government activities. Office Equipment Co. 215 E. Liberty St. Phone 2-1213 UNUSUAL Gifts and Novelties The great "Huber House Com- promise" is in sight. After several weeks of bickering over an assessment to raise funds for social and business funds, which ended in a fiasco, a new money-raising project is underway. Last weekend, a petition was cir- Refusals Snag Detroit Inquiry (Continued from Page I) hearings will be closely scrutinized for potential contempt citation, observers saw little chance of such noves in the light of current in- terpretation of what evidence con- stitutes "self-incrimination." "A witness may refuse to answer any question which might be a 'link in a chain of evidence' that would serve for an indictment, ac- cording to the Supreme Court," Prof. Kauper asserted. As long as this 'broad interpre- tatin persists or until Congress grants complete immunity to wit- nesses at such hearings (in which case witnesses would face almost automatic contempt charges if they refused) Congressional in- quiries will have lots of bark but almost no bite. culated to call a special house meeting. At this meeting, a new assessment was to be discussed pending a vote last night. f THE MEETING came and went Monday night without a quorum. In order to bring the assess- ment question to a house vote, another special meeting must be called, and obstacles to postpone this meeting have inadvertently arisen. House president Jerry Strauch. '54, is reportedly resigning from his position. If this be the case, the money problem will hang fire until another meeting is called to introduce the candidates for his office and an election is held. The assessment question will then fall into the new president's lap. However, if current sentiment remains, the assessment seems as- sured of success. Fifty signatures were needed on the petition to call a house meeting on the matter, and 77 were obtained. Of the men contacted to sign, only ten refused. The last assessment proposal, calling for $2.25 from each man, was rejected on the grounds of being unconstitutional. At present, the house treasury contains only 44 dollars, and house social functions face possible ex- tinction unless the, new assess- ment is adopted. If Labor's surface appearance of unity is ever shattered, the Laborites might wander in A political wilderness for years be- fore they could hope to gain of- fice again. 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