THE SUBnM ER MICMGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1930 THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1930 Iff WIR umwr Published every morning except Monday during the Univerity Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoflice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $sSo; by mail, ~$2.00. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephoa* 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GURNEY WILLIAMS Street,! Editorial Director........ Howard F. Shout City Editor............ Harold Warren Jr. Women's Editor...........Dorothy Magee Music and Drama Editor. .. William J. Gormnan Books EditorE.........Russell E. McCracken Sports Editor ..............Morris Targer Night Editors Denton Kunae Howard F. Shout Powers Moulton Harold Warren. Jr. About Books ANDRE GIDE An Article! French critics (among them Jacques Riviere and Albert Thib- audet) assured us that Gide is the deepest influence in contemporary French literature. Kenneth Burke in a splendid article in the June Bookman has contributed what is perhaps the only suggestive inter- pretation of Gide. In the article he reaches from the examination of Thomas Mann and Andre Gide a negative attitude, or temporary ac- ceptance of the present chaos of values, that has extraordinary in-I terest quite apart from its valid- ity with reference to either of those men. Of Gide he says in my summary the following: Gide's work is char- acterized by experimentalism, vac- illation, a distrust of all systematis- atiodn in the realm of value and a consequent attempt to humanise the state of doubt (which is clear- ly the most common experience of the contemporary mind): that is, an art purposely confining itself to the problematical as a correc- tive for the too facile assertion of various Certainties, such as the one with "the deceptive allurement ofj tradition" (i.e. Humanism). I It is a strikingly ingenious inter- pretation of Gide. It seems to fit his important novel, The Counter- feiters, admirably. For there, sure- ly, is an unresolved' intricacy of values: a set of males and females, each savouring some elegant per- version: with never an implied Judgment of the author. But it seems quite less valid in the light of The Immoralist, Gide's first novel recently published by Knopf, Gide's defences of sexual inversion, and the exquisite delightj with which he details in his auto-' Dorothy Adams Helen Carrm Bruce Manley Assistants Cornelius H. Bertha Sher M. Constance M. Wethy BUSINESS STAFF Telephone .2214 BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE A. SPATER Beukema Clayman Quraishi OAVE D D SPONSORING TNEWER LITERATI Dear Doctor Pffle: Your column is terrible, if you'll excuse my French. It needs ton-1 Ing up, and that right smart, if it isn't to die of inanition. I am in- closing a bit of tonic for a starter; but take warning, don't try to pass it off for your own, for any such at- tempt will be prosecuted; and if you think we can't prosecute, come hear us some time chasing the li- brary cowboys around the stacks. Yours & %,,(neat, eh wot?) LONG SUFFERING READER. And with this modest little greet- ing Long Suffering Reader intro- duces the following, entitled: FOR OF SUCH ARE THE KING- DOM OF HEAVEN I might have been a parson With God in my heart, Or I might have been a lawyer With my hair in a part; I might have been a parvenu Or an aristocrat; Or have worn a brown derby And become a Democrat; I might have been a pauper, A prince or a king; But I passed them all up And I'm not one thing. I have no vine And my fig tree died; My house needs painting And it's small inside; But I loaf on the sunny Side of the barn; I'm not a single thing, And I don't give a darn. Well, Eddie Guest, we're mighty glad to welcome your critical acu- men and literary abilities-such as they may be-to this column. And you forgot to mention "the poet" when cataloguing all the things you weren't, didn't you? Any time you write anything, let us have it; our column can't run a steady diet I of humor, no matter how excellent may be, for the public just can't ab- sorb all of it. PUBLIC OPINION Anonysous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential -as well as spelling and general orthography-upon request. Let- ters published should not be construed as expressing much of anything in par. ticular. II Assistant Business ManagersI William R. Worboys Harry S. Benjamin Circulation Manager......... Bernard Larson Secretary ......... .. Ann W. Verner A.;sistants ) Joyce Davidson Lelia M. Kidd Dorothy Dunlap THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1930_ Night Editor-Powers Moulton THE SCIENTIST ON LIFE Thomas A. Edison has submitte to a questioning by newspapermer and his answers have been strict n ly scientific ones. All of them wer measured out in terms of per cen proportion, cause and effect. Non of them dealt with the problem presented from a spiritual or emo tional viewpoint. This is undoubt edly explained by the fact that Mr Edison's work has always been sci entific, and has never involvedE great deal of contact with th world outside of his home and hi laboratory. For example, the great invento. placed special emphasis on th benefits of prohibition and the evil of the use of achoholic liquors. I theory, he is right in both matters but he has failed to take into ac count the human element. Ther seems to be something innate i mankind which causes it to wan to "whoopee" occasionally, to droi Its inhibitions and dignities, and t revert to the natural, or the primi- tive, or whatever you wish to cal It. And the colossal, eternall grinding machinery of this mass production age makes such relie seem all the more desirable. Mr Edison's seemingly unqualified en dorsement of the machine age doe not take into account its deaden- Ing influence. He would take away the means of relaxation, in his scientific way, and yet favor the factory-like existence that makes telaxation so imperative. Certain- Jy mass production has increased leisure, and certainly there exists a problem as to what to do with it Mr. Edison says the average in- dividual will make a wise use of his leisure "if he shuns whiskey" Surely the learned scientist would include over-eating, late parties, tobacco, undue excitement, gamb- ling, and breaking the ten com- mandments in his rules for the wise use of leisure. It has also discovered in the questioning that the inventor con- sidered six hours of sleep amply sufficient for man. Surely, as a great scieqtist, he cannot be recommending this for all individ- uals. Different types of work, dif- terent physical make-ups must re- quire different amounts of sleep. When interrogated as to what portion of success was due to hard work, the reply was "ninety per cent". Of course, in this connec- tion we meet with an age-old con- troversy: What is success? If it is contentment, no work at all achieves it for some; if it is mater- ial prosperity, the ninety per cent estimation is probably accurate, al- though among a certain class of the inhabitants of the globe, it is also unnecessary here, and finally, #f it is fame, the goal is often achieved without too great an ef- fort through press agents and trickery. No,-humanity is too varied, too individual to make such wholesale treatment logical. The learned in- ventor must have been unduly in- fluenced by mass-production en- thusiasts to show so little regard for the other elements of existence. is t iwosiho vAr- intifi in e biography his trip to Alergia wit t, Lord Alfred Douglas and Osca e Wilde. s In The Immoralist, Michel i - awakened by a near-experience o - death from the somnolence of a . contented Calvinism and his stu- - dies in archaeology (which means a if one knows Gide's "symbolism" e that he has not tended to his sex- S ual orientation) to the delights o sensation. His intellectuality seenm r now utterly futile to him. The so- e lution is the utter affirmation of s the senses. Returning to Nor- n mandy he pushes beyond good and , evil into the fields at night where - he cavorts with the coarsest help e on his farm. The wife who had n nursed him falls ill with tubercu- t iocis. Though he always envelops p her with tender pledges of affec- o tion, Michel gradually takes her - from village to village; kills her l Though professing grief, he finds y consolation in an Arab boy. - The outline of the story should f not be unfamiliar to American readers. We have seen the meet- - ing of two human bodies given the s significance of a gravitational shift of two unhinged stars before. y Puritans finding resolution in ut- ter paganism are familiar charac- ters, almost types, in contempo- rary literature. Anderson and Law- rence have dissipated the contem- porary problem with just such sex myths. Gide is similar. (The bodies are of the same sex but we can label that "continental"). In addition, he has surrounded his story with all the fin-de-siecle glamour of the cult of sin (the Arthur Symons ver- sion of Baudelaire, the early Huys- mans, the nasty elegance of Wilde etc.) By a masterly use of insinua- tion and a superb finish to his prose that gives the illusion of sincere precision in analysis and disguises the distortion of the nov- el's contours, Gide has almost suc- ceeded in "making Michel's whole conduct legitimate". Actually, a character that is no more than a "case" (Gide's own personal case indeed) is being seductively urged on the reader. I can see in this novel none of the studied experimental vacillation that Burke admires in Gide. But grather an outspoken admiration for his character, the immoralist. The whole texture of the book has a testamental accent. There is the same urging, seductive, prophetic spirit one finds so obnoxious, be- cause so distorting, in Anderson and Lawrence. The point I am making is that Gide's work does not represent, as Burke indicates, an important mind hesitant about accepting outworn certainties with a conse- quent experimental approach to values; but rather the subtly dog- matic exploitation of a "case". In this light, one thinks of Riviere's remark that "Gide's work is always confessional" and Gide's definition of art as "the exageration of an h r OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE W O R LD ;p Sirs, Before this mater dies down en- 3tirely, may I say, the Engineers are a bunch of ignorant hicks; the Lits are just a lot of big sissies; the Medics and the Dents are nothing but embryonic butchers. r Vituperative Grad .1 Gentlemen: We dare you to print this. STUDENTS. Are we going to stand for the twaddle that's been printed in this column any longer? NO. What did Detroit do? What ought Chicago do? Why doesn't New York do something? Vote for the recall of The Doc- tors Whoofle. They are the biggest hams that ever struck the writing trade. Down with their banalities. This column has been so rank that even the linotype men have gone home sic' after printing the stuff. What do your mothers think of this? What do your brothers, sis- ters, father-in-laws think of this? What do your wives think? . . . Well, let's not bother about what they think. Let's get down to brass tacks. HOW ABOUT A RECALL? The Faithful. * * * . NOTE-When our services are no longer required, we shall gladly re- turn to the Metropolitan Museum of Art from which we were loaned for the summer with such extreme reluctance. The Doctors Whoofle. And now that the -Doctors have left their, his, or its column three inches short, may we present ROLLS ROTOGRAVURE SECTION STAPLE ARTICLE FREQUENTLY FOUND IN CAMPUS THEATRES .. THE DOCTORS RIGHT AT THIS TIME, WE SHOULDN'T WONDER /f f - ,>$ Impro'ving transmission Speeding up servics Reducing rates Encouraging the long distance habit J An interesting example of organization is the development of long distance telephone business. Men and women of the Bell System made this service worthy, and the public has recognized this by its greatly in- creased usage. The Bell Laboratories improved the quality of sound transmission by modifying existing apparatus and designing new. Western Elec- tric manufactured the necessary equipment of the highest standards. Operating telephone companies, working with the American Tele- phone and Telegraph Company, shortened the time for completing calls and reduced the rates. In all a coordinated work, bringing to- gether many and varied activities, and typical of the way in which telephone service is constantly being made a better tool for the nation's needs. BELL SYSTEM ad nation-wide system of inter-connecting tlephones C,)a ti P. --. .. ,