TIM SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1930 a THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILYWEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1930 0 R V Published every morning except Mond y during the U niversity 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 cre-dite:d in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $x.5o; by mail, $2.00. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GURNEY WILLIAMS Editorial Director........ Howard F. Shout Citv Editor............ Harold Warren, Jr. Womnen's Editor .......Emily Grimes ?Music and Drama Editor ... William J. Gorman B3ookcs Editor.......... Russell E. McCracken Sports Lditor................ Morris Targer Night Editors Powers Moulton Howard F. Shout Harold Warren, Jr. Assistants Helen Carrm Dorothy Magee Richard Hurley Sher M. Quraishi! BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 212x4 BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Worboys Harry S. Benjamin Circulation' iManager.....Bernard Larson Secretary ..................Anni W. Verner Issue Editor-POWERS MOULTON WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1930 MORE THAN HEROISM Trans-oceanic and trans-conti- nental flying has been so frequent during, the past few years that it is small wonder that the public is losing something of its interest in it. Certainly the value of the flights with various kinds of air machines has been overlooked or ignored in the excitement of feting and cele- brating these heroes of the air. Recently Charles Kingsford- Smith, an Australian, completed a circumnavigation of the globe in his tri-motored monoplane, The Southern Cross. Recently, also, Commander Byrd returned from his exploration of the Antarctic completed with the aid of airplanes. Aside from the love of adventure, which undoubtedly led these men into these dangerous enterprises, there was in the mind of each a definite desire to further the scien- tific progress' of man. How soon will it be safe for every man to circumnavigated the world? It's a tri-motored plane the most effi-. cient heavier-than-air craft for long filights? What does the Ant- arctic hold that is of value to man- kind? Is the West-East crossing of the Atlantic possible? These and many other questions were answer- ed either in whole or in part by their exploits. The explorers and the experi- mnenters lead the way in the devel- opment of civilization. Do we re- cognize them for this service, or do we see only their steadfastness and high courage in hazardous under- taking?} HANDLE WITH CARE As has been the custom during the short-session, the regulations of student automobiles will be much less stringent and restrictive Music and Drama TONIGHT: In the Mendelssohn Theatre beginning promptly at 8:15, the Michigan Repertory Play-1 ers presnt Philip Barry's smart comedy "Holiday." THE REPERTORY PLAYERS PRESENT "HOLIDAY" The Michigan Repertory Players9 begin their second season of pro- viding important summer session entertainment tonight with a per- formance of Philip Barry's popular comedy Holiday. Performances will,, continue this week, as every week through the summer session, from Wednesday through Saturday. The company is offering a special sea- son-ticket arrangement to its pa- trons which makes its seven at- tractive offerings only slightly more expensive than seven movies. The list of plays from which sev- en will be finally chosen include such undeniably acceptable dra- mas as O'Neill's Pulitzer Prize winner Beyond The Horizon, Mar- tin Flavin's success of this year The Criminal Code which almost' won the Pulitzer prize and has been secured for amateur production on- ly by special permission of the au- thor, Ferne Molnar's Lilliom one of the Theatre Guild's greatest suc- cesses, ancd4 the famous contem- porary French farce Doctor Knock by Jules Romains. The production of plays of this calibre, under the increased facil- ities of the department this sum- mer, promises a valuable as well as entertaining series. PHILIP BARRY'S HOLIDAY C A talented ex-student of the Har- 'yard Workshop, Philip Barry has been offering a success each year for the last five years to the Broad- way stage. Recently he has de- serted the much bepraised"whim- sy" of his earlier writing for the more orthodox (and certainly more difficult) comedy of man- ners. The change is fortunate. The mere fact of the furor over his lat- est play, Hotel Universe, produced by the Theatre Guild, illustrates his acknowledged i mpo0rt ance among the younger American dra- matists. Three years ago in Paris Bound Barry brought his critical spirit to bear on the sanctity of the mar- riage vow for physcial honesty. It was good sharp writing, enthusi- astically received. Arthur Hopkins gave Holiday a fine production two years ago and itto, was acclaimed. It hasn'tI the thematic accentuation of Par- is Bound. It doesn't project a prob- lem-a, handle to turn the play over for inspection after the per- formance. Its theme-about the way to live-is implicit in the lives of the characters. Consequently, Holiday is- less a problem play and more the comedy of manners, that is, a better play. Johnny Case, a young fellow who has "worked his way up", gets in- volved in the rich but still money- making Seton household through an engagement with Julia, the eld- er daughter. His one dream is to "live freely" - which the very American Setons promptly inter- pret as "loafing"'. Being perfectly frank, he insists on clarifying his attitude but only meets with mis- CHARACTER NOVEL OF STEPHEN HUDSON i. A True Story by Stephen Hudson, Alfred A. Knopf, New York; Price $3.50. Stephen Hudson is the pen-name of a very important English novel- ist whose identity is carefully with- held. He has only been an acquain- tance to a quite narrow circle of readers. For it is a fact that writ- ers interested in character study over and above all else sacrifice hope of a large audience. You can not over-emphasize the devotion that Mr. Hudson pays to character portrayal in his writings. He has been publishing books for the past ten or twelve years that are re- garded as long character sketches, as incomplete novels. In a note to A True Story, Mr. Hudson says: "The material of this novel was contained in four vol- umes which have appeared sepa- rately under different titles and in effect constitute studies for the p resent complete work. The author has here reconstructed and reknit) the salient elements in their final form." If the note suggests that here is contained something else besides the author's predominant character interest, as was display- ed in the earlier works, the sug- gestion is wrong. For Mr. Hudson places character as the hub of his novel. The main interest is an in- terest in the development of Rich- ard Kurt. You see him as a child,, youth, older man, see him subject- ively and obj ectively. The author allows no method of examining character escape. He uses various styles and various methods of an- alysis to gain his end. You view Kurt from every possible conceiv- able angle. When you close the book you know him through and through. And if there is anything about the note which suggests that A True Story should be considered a novel and the earlier works not this suggestion is also wrong. Only Iin degree is A True Story different from the earlier books. It is but more completely a novel of char- acter than they. To attain this completeness Mr. Hudson brought between the covers of his book a bigger experience. He portrays the life character of his hero. This means is somewhat reminiscent of the eighteenth century novelists' technique. But the treatment is entirely modemn. Though the all- life-in-a-day method of portray- ing character is quite attractive to contemporary novelists interested in character study, it has inevit- able drawbacks avoided in the old- er method. (It is the historical me- thod of the novel, though in drama the all-life-in-a-day scheme goes back to the classical unity of time of Aristotle). On the face of the thing is is obvious that all life can- not happen in any one day, and that the artist who attempts the method must jimmie his materials to fit the confines of the time al- lowed. The other method has an advantage, especially in the novel of character, an advantage of rep- itition. Very effectively does Mr. Hudson impress us in A True Story of Richard Kurt's weakness by pil- ing up and up, incident on incident showing the same. And, in the "cradle to grave" plan Mr. Hudson (escapes the "inaction" of such a character novelist as Virginia; Woolf. That the book is a history, a "story" of Richard Kurt's life at the outset gives it a sense of ac- tion. Not that Mr. Hudson has action of prime place in his novel, his devotion to character has al- ready been underscored. The point' is that he has showed how charac- ten and action are both possible. Probably he has carried out what Mrs. Woolf's definition of the nov- el implies-that character neces- sarily means action. A True Story is surely one of the important books of our time. Only a few of the angles of approach have been stated in this review. Styles and incidents, a multiplicity of them, have been turned over to the development of character, the one character - Richard Kurt. Naive, sophisticated, reportorial styles are used. The action is all within character, though attract- ive enough to hold such people as read only for the "stony". If there is such thing as the novel form, you will find it in this book of Mr. Hud- son. It is an individual form, a form dictated by the subject. In working out a novel of significance, the method of Mr. Hudson is ad- mirable-to allow the character to "About Books 1-1 11i, . I SUMMER DAILYV- SUBSCRIPTION______________________ $1.5. -Among the Best -and at=-- ~Reasonable Prices = ENGINEERS AND ARCHITECTS MATERIALS FREE AN'SSTATIONERY, FOUNTAIN PENS, LOOSE LEAF BOOKS FREE AN'STYPEWRITING AND POUND PAPERS - COLLEGE PENNANTS AND JEWELRY DINING . 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This action is taken, un-,l the daughter of her father to doubtedly, as a mark of respect for have security and well-to-do-ness the large number of older students as her demands of marriage. who are coming to the campus to Johnny gets tutored during his study in the professional schools.; engagement period, being dubbed However, it furnishes, at the u-mrcn en thoroughly u-mrcn en same time, an opportunity for the3 while, dominating t hi e family! students to show to what extent ! scenes, is Linda, the younger dau-I they deserve a modification of the 'ghter, actually the spiritual dup- ban.If tose ttedingthe um-licate, in the other sex, of Johnny. men session can show some degree The strwelupbwenhea-I of intelligence and cane in their ,etorywej u e tweehny nhiar handling of automobiles, the ad- determination in his attitude. He ministration will be justified in ex -fnalreizshwmpsbehs tending the modification to includeenamntoJuiisThfnl studntsin he rofssinalscholscurtain clearly implies that a lit- at other times of the year.I tle later two children of light, de-' ______________termined to live freely, and to love life, will be sailing abroad. Julia For sale: plane that laughs at 'is left to find a husband who will an ocean. So reads the advertise- give her security. ment for the plane in which Kings- The little family world is seen ford-Smith girdled the globe. We with delicacy and exactness: never rememaber several of them that once pushed or vulgarized into theI laughed at the ocean and got their glare and obviousness of the usual mouths full of water. popular family comedy. Linda andI ____ __ Johnny are wits: fine banter andj loquaciousness delights the ear and Two girls recently lost positions subtly and evasively expresses f eel- in a Zion City, Ill. factory because ing. Barry's writing has style: the they were caught chewing gum. only American counterpart of Noel They'll have to find a new way to Coward or Somerset Maugham in stick to the job.l England. The characterization in the smaller parts is pointed and 0 !brilliant-the part written for and Double parking not to be toler-r played by Donald Ogden Stewart ated is the anouncement of Ann' being especially so. Arbor's police chief, not even off An experienced cast has been as- the main street. And that's justI sembled for Holiday which prom- +t.a P wa v wwve at~ lwa7vs liked to park, I ises to be a fine opener for the Large Typewriters $25.00 up L. C. Smith Underwood Royal Remington Woodstock, etc. e~rcnes o~men oc(jn We buy, rent, repair all makes at considerate prices. Our Service Department is considered one of the best in the country. sell, exchange, clean, Portable Typewriters $20.00 up Corona Royal Underwood Remington Barr Typewriter Papers andSupisIGLD Suppliesm CORRESPONDENCE. 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