PAGE TWOV THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1924 M ! I .rNr i. r rnr i i iwm i in wu r . ..w r.. ,. I fMir ain auwamie OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SUMMER SESSION Published every morning except Monday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Press. The As- sociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not - otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published here. in. Entered at the postoffice, Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $z.5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Communications, if signed as evidence of good faith, will be published in The Summer Daily at the discretion of the Editor. Un- signed communications will receive no con- sideration. The signature may be omitted in publication if desired by the writer. The Summer Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in tke communica- tions. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR ROBERT G. RAMSAY News Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield Chairman of the Editorial Board.. ................Andrew E. Propper City Editor.................Verena Moran Night Editor...............John W. Conrad NightrEditor..........Frederick K. Sparrow Telegraph Editor........... Leslie G. Bennets Womens' Editor.............Gwendolyn Dew STAFF MEMBERS Margaret Wrentmore Francis O'Melia Louise Barley Marion Walker Rosalea Spaulding Leonard A. Keller Virginia Bales Saul lHertz Hans Wickland David Bramble BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 96o BUSINESS MANAGER CLAYTON C. PURDY Advertising Manager.......Iliel M. Rockwell Copywriting Manager...Noble D. Travis Circulation Manager.......Lauren C. Haight Publication Manager........C. Wells Christie Account Manager .............. Byron Parker 1' I F r-._. De . I BO . N t . ..: I Text Books and Supplies SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1924 Night Editor-ROBT. S. MANSFIELD PRE31ATURE DEPARTURE It was Thomas Huxley who observ- ed that the higher the state of civ- ilization, the more completely do the actions of one member of the social body influence all the rest and the less possible is it for any one man to do a wrong thing without interfer- ing, more or less, with the well-be- ing of all his fellow citizens. The complete truth of this state- ment is brought out strongly in any University lecture. Gathered togeth- er under one roof, the students are there supposedly for one common purpose-that of learning. Freedom under such conditions must necessar- ily be limited. Recently, complaints have been registered that students at times have taken the liberty of leav- ing lectures before the end of the hour The number of students who in- dulge in this practice are, of course, in the vast minority. But, just as a single stone may ruffle the smooth- ness of a placed pond, so too, the premature departure of a single stu- dent will cause an unavoidable dis- turbance that is in every case unex- cusable, unnecessary and downright rude. In this regard, attention is called to the following facts. The word lec- ture is apt to arouse within a student the recollection of some very unin- teresting class hours which he spent itslening to the words of a professor in a course which bored him - a course in the election of which he showed the poor vision of a lazy man looking for a "pipe" or to which, strive as he might, he could not pos- sibly adapt his mind. This interpret- ation of the word in contemplating the summer lecture program would be a misfortune. The lecture program is one feature of which the Summer session may be justly proud. Fur- thermore, it is etiquette at the Uni- versity, and common politness every- where, never to leave a lecture until it is over. Such action is unfair to the lecturer, and to the rest of the audience. Perhaps the most valuabel result of all education is the ability to ex- ercise self-control, the ability to make yourself do the things you have to do, when they ought to be done, and whether they are pleasing to the mood of the moment or not. It is the fIrst lesson that ought to be learned at school for it is the most important part of a man's training which is re- quired in the world. It is probably the first lesson that is taught and the last lesson that is learned. The prac- tice of premature departure from lec- tures is without excuse. If you're there, stick; if you can't stick, stay away. HANDSHAKE PSYCHOLOGY Even though some may be unwill- ing to admit that character can be logically judged from a man's hand- shake, the fact remains that in every day life the magnitude of one's traits1 Is constantly judged through thatc ARIEL. THE LIFE OF SHELLY. By Andre Maurois. Translated by Ella D'Arcy. Published by D. Apple- ton and Co. $2.50. (Reviewed by Dorothy Wall) Maurois has not burdened us with another Shelleyan apologia. He has given us something unique, the life of Shelley in the form of a novel. He has taken naked facts for his ma- terial and with a dominant literary instinct, has shaped them into a de- lightful story. He has been very care- ful in choosing and coloring his ef- fects, in creating a brilliant atmos- phere for his central figure. How freely he has blended fiction into his narrative is quite beside the point. He does not pretend to strict bio- graphy.- Maurois has done the thing with] exquisite detachment. He stands al- most pitilessly aloof from the mov- ing drama. Occasionally it is too much for him and a flash of satire indicates illimitable contempt for a world that outlawed Shelley. Yet he is too much a worlding to lose him- self for more than a moment. He keeps a hovering comic touch, a tend- er sparkling irony and sometimes he reaches the high water mark of de- scriptive prose. His interest in his subject is purely creative. He cares nothing for Shel- ley's genius. He makes only the rarest incidental allusions to his poet- ry and never uses it for interpreta- tion. But if he ignores the poet he is fascinated by the man. The per- sonality of Shelley illuminates every page, intensely alive, burning up his energies of brain and body, plunging madly into life. When the waters grew too stormy "he had his aerial re- fuges and once safely shut therein the lugubrious tragedies of his life seemed absurd nightmares." His cir- cumstances were fairly sordid, detail by petty detail, yet Maurois has tri- umphantly brought out his indomita- ble spiritual force. Against a back- ground of commonplaces Shelley stands in distinctive nobility. The other characters are grouped around him, an amazing parade of women, Godwan, Hogg, and others. One has a sickening sense of their utter in- feriority. Byron stalks through the last half of the book, demonaic but charming. Maurois used him con- stantly and effectively as a foil for Shelley. The contrast was too obvi- .ous a value to forego, but he car- ries it, I think, to the point of in- justice. The book ends on a note of tragic futility. You are conscious of Shel- ley as an idealist combating a very real world, buffeted by the stress, but never able to understand life as it actually is. It leaves an aftermath of sadness and of wonder. RECOMPENSE, by Robert Keable. Published by Putnam. $2.00. (Reviewed by Robert S. Mansfield) A sequel always leaves me with a feeling of resentment. The characters have been brought to some sort of sat- isfactory situation by the first book, and the sequel of necessity plunges them into new situations and circum- stances which are foreign to the orig- inal and to the people themselves. "Simon Called Peter" was a note- worthy book. Mr. Keable made of it a plot of strength and a moral dis-j sertation of no small value. In "Re- compense," he has attempted to go farther on a similar theme, and has made a work of little real value. The scene shifts from France to Africa and to England with ease and rapid- ity, the characters trailing along in nondescript procession, shifting from one attitude toward life to another, and being quite humanly indecisive. The effect of the "berg" of South Af- rica upon Peter is really well demon- strated, being, I believe, the only outstanding portion of the work. Mr. Keable is advanced in his views of moral standards. The plan which he gives to Dr. Sampson is worthy of a 20th century Jules Verne of the moralist school. Impracticable, high- ly improbable outside of the mind of a dreamer, the plan is not one which the reader woul accept from a phy- sician of the calibre which Keable has made Sampson. The saving of the character from entire'impossibility is his fear at putting his plan into per- sonal operation. Peter continues throughout the book the same admirable character, torn between love and the duty to the church which he was in "Simon Called Peter." The strength of the man is brought out in his hatred for the "Rough Diamond" South African trader, Stenhouse, and in his unques- tioning friendship for his native serv- ant. His final act in the book is rath- er a surprise, and something of a dis- appointment. Julie is the same vivacious woman of the earlier work. Mr. Keable has not lost track of his personalities in the time that intervened between the two writings. She has the same steady level head, the same indifference to public opinion, and has grown more mature only in her more serious view of marriage and its accompaniments which she neverthless avoids. Aside from the fact that it is a sequel, and as such cannot compare favorably with its only medium of comparison, the first book, "Recom- pense" is an interesting enough work. It moves in an advanced atmosphere, to be sure, and there are few who would like to place themselves in the position of- any of the characters, but it has a plot, and an involved one, which holds the interest if it does not convince. GRAHAM'S 1' ----I I Immmmib, Read The Daily "Classified" Columns "Classified" Columns miles per hour. They lead simple, plain lives, because they've found these small-town men and women, that happiness doesn't consist in scan- .dal and filth and metropolitan world- liness. And that's a secret of life the cities have yet to uncover. In real life things don't always come out right; in reel life they gen- erally do. Try Classified ads for big Results. FOR QUALITY PRINTING SEE Sum hrB.tter i pressions 711 N. University Ave. Up-stairs PHONE 296-R Across from the Campus I rr - - ! VALUES OF INTEREST Are You in the Market to Buy? 1-S. Division St.-6 rooms and bath; new furnace; garage; excel- lent condition; attic. Built 1916. Owner will sell for $8,000, $1,500 down, or will trade for 8 or 9 room house near campus. 2-Forest Ave.-S rooms and bath; hot water heat; garage; beau- tiful trees and shrubbery. Owner leaving town and must sell at an early date. Price reduced to $9,500. This is a good income property. 3-Olivia Ave.-S rooms and bath, near new Lincoln School, street car line, and Burns Park; lot 50x132; finish is ivory and grey, oak floors; garage; complete laundry. Price is $13,500, $1,000 or more down, bal- ance on Land Contract. These terms should be attractive to the person requiring a beautiful home with only the minimum down payment. Call MR. NEWTON With CHARLES L. BROOKS Realtor 215 First Nat'l Bank Bldg. Phones 315-3552-2446 I' i Both Stores 1 1 - - - - I I Q Attractive Study Lamps Sturdy metal-based affairs with metal or green glass shades. Throw the light's rays exactly where needed. Il- lustrated is a Buss, a lamp adjustable to any position, a lamp that will clamp or hang anywhere. $2. The Detroit Edison Company Main at William Telephone 2300 means. The average college man meets at least two new individuals each day during his stay at the Uni- versity and the sincerity with which he accents these introductions is in no small measure reflected in the handshake. It is the impression gained through the momentary contact of a first hand- shake which often forms the only im- pression of a new acquaintance, and upon the character of this depends the future of a companionship which may or may not develop into a perm- anent part of one's life. Either the handshake is strong and impressive, urging both parties on to closer friend- ship or it is weak and flimsy, causing a feeling of indifference. It either rubs the right way or it rubs the wrong way. Accordingly the handshake will bear watching. A district court of Montana made a decision that congress cannot reg- ulate the amount of liquor prescribed by physicians for illness. hat seems reasonable enough, since there is nothing more variable than individual capacities. EDITORIAL COMMENT IN DEFENSE OF HICKVILLE (The Columbia Missourian) Since Sinclair Lewis described Gop- her Prairie in "Main Street" the Am- erican small town has come in for more than its share of critical atten- tion. Learned critics on the metro- politan dailies went to war over the virtues and stupidities of the little town. And the question isn't settled yet. "The small town is provincial," say the city master-minds, as if they were pronouncing a vast and horrible judg- ment. Of course it's provincial; its people are interested in those pro- vincial traits of honesty and virtue and friendliness. Their world-outlook may be a bit limited, but they haven't forgotten the meaning of sympathy and love and human kindness. Their laughter is hearty and earnest when the village loafer sits in the fly-pa- per at the corner grocery and their tears are genuine when Jim Brown loses his golden-haired baby. Some of the people of Gopher Pra- irie and Hickville and PJumpkin Cen- ter might not negotiate a six-course dinner with social precision, They might speak more accurately of crops than of dadaism. They don't break into sensational publicity often. They have their little faults to be sure, but their lives are sane and well-ordered. They are wise, too, with a wisdom grown of generations spent in austere righteousness, learning humility, righteousness and faith. They move a bit more slowly than in the cities, for contentment doesn't depend upon (1 r b I 19I . a. ,-- a %6 l ' I .y . f h i In were brag. to do the olden days when maidens coy and timid, a man could The best thing for the male sex now is to keep quiet. What's become of Railroad Jack, the memory expert? Soap-box or- atory is, at present, a neglected art on the campus. First it was wheat that went up. Now it is corn. Oats also show signs of soaring. The farmers are happy. i - What-a diffrence Just a few cents make I" FATIMA