THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY TI3tT SDAY, JULY 17, 1930 aI1 i1, THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1930 Q;4r tutr 'Published every morning except Mond,.y dui iigthe Univesity Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titd to the use for republication of all -ews dispatches credited to it or not otherwise creitsed in th paper and the local news pub-isbed herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $i.So; by mail, $2.00. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. .EDITOI-L STAFF Telephou-e 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GURNEY WILLIAMS 1Elitorial Director .......Howard F. Shout City l;ditor............ Harold Warren, Jr. Womnren's Editor... ......Dorothy Magee cand Drama Editor...William J. Gormane Boo!s Editor.......... Russell E. McCracken Sports Editor...... .....Morris Targe, Night Editors Denton Kunze Howard F. Shout Powers Moulton Harold Warren, Jr. I TRotlr ' " Ahbout RBooks ANN M UNCING THE PROSE OF OUR LATEST ELIZABETH MADOX ROBERTS WThe Time of Man, 1926. With'tomorrow's edition the first My Heart and My Flesh, 1927. chapter of the latest novel to come The Great Meadow, 1930. from the versatile pen of the Doc-; Elizabeth Madox Roberts has at- tors Whoofie will make it's appear- i tracted much attention among the ance to the reading public, and on younger contemporaries. She be- succeeding days this breathless tale longs to that interesting group of of life, glamour, romance, life, op- post-war writers of the University of ~of Chicago. She is a native ofj lum-smoking, red-blooded Ameri- 'Kentucky, and uses it as a back- cans, and life will spin out its fas- 'ground in all of her novels. Born cinating spell to enthrall an hun- "near Springfield, Kentucky, which dred readers. (The Daily has only is now her permanent home, she 43 paid subscribers - statistical s decendant of pioneers who came in the train of Boone in the 177'0's. note, EDITOR). I'm not talking The Great Meadow, a saga of the .bout subscribers, I saii readers. settlement of her country, has for Each day our readers will be able characters members of her own to follow the handsome hero, the family, has for incidents tales; wraith-like heroine, through the Miss Roberts heard from her swashbuckling mazes of this intre- grandmother. She is steeped in the pid adventure which WILL BEGIN legend, the habits, the peculiarities OO SERIAL FORM in this column of the people she has come in con- TOMORROW' tact with in Kentucky. She has WATCH FOR IT taken all this over into her books,! And now a wo: d of introduction and has shown better than any to some of the principle characters one else writing tody the vigorous of this charming old story of beauty of dialect. Indeed Mr. quaint rural life in Old New Zea- Glenway Wescott is wont to com- land, with especial reference to the 'pare her work with dialect to that Australian wombat, the opaki, the of John M. Synge. duckbill, and the cassowary. I It is In this respect that Miss SUMMER UD I r by Adams Helen Carrm Bruce Manley Assistants Cornelius H. Bertha Sher M. Beukema Clayman Quraishi . ; 'a I i , i ; ! , ! BUSINESS STAFF Telephcne 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER GEOI GE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Worboys Harry S. Benjamin Circulation Manager......... Bernard Larson Secretary..................Ann W. Verner Aisistants N Available Joyce DavidsonI Lelia M. Kidd Dorothy Dunlap Night Editor-Denton Kunze THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1930 WHAT IS A SCHOOL BOARD'S 3USINESS? Roberts scores her greatest success as a writer-in her use of dialect. There is a romantic harmony in the language she uses, a delight in its contortions, that, no matter how hard you try, cannot be found in the work of our conscious ex- ploiters of the primitive style. There is a genuineness in Miss Roberts' prose that seems to be I Nw Dr. Burt L. Shurly, newly-elected Here are Lewdia and Marasch- ase ino IGlamp, sisters by a step-moth- on a head of the Detroit school board, in er-step-father marriage, charm- the his inaugural address condemned ing young debutantes just about ing prohibition for most of the prob- to-step out into the gay mad whirl time lems concerning the youth of the of social life in Baltimore's carni- You nation. "A solution to the prohi- valistic m i d - s e a s o n. Lewdia shap bition question must come quickly," }lamp has an overwhelming in- fine he remarked, "if we are to prevent terest in outdoor subjects. A camp- does it from undermining the characters fire girl from the time she was ;'he of our young people. The spectacle able to spill anything in the kit- that of a nation evading the Volstead chen, her beautiful Louis Dix mor Act is . teaching them all habits of boudoir is filled and nearly creep- wor snooping and sneaking." This state- ing off with countless varieties of late ment created something of a furore small wild life. On her dresser rugg in the meeting in which it was giv- she keeps a jar with three newts But en, and was followed by an assem- in it, and by her bedside is a rab- any bly of the board, acting as a com- bit hutch. Moths and butterflies The mittee of the whole, at which a of a dozen different species flutter ful resolution was passed condemning about the room or hang upon the Y Doctor Shurly's declaration and walls, impaled upon steel needles. in, stating that: "We hereby declare Lewdia is preparing herself for a She we do not believe it is the best or Nature Study teacher in the Wil- tist proper policy for any member of lemette (Ill.) public schools. {ov this board to use his position in a Maraschino, on the other hand, ies board meeting to expound his per- is the typical -social butterfly, mor sonal views on controversial ques- hatching out each season with a her tions that are not the business of fresh set of wings, every scale The; the Board of Education." thereon intact, and setting out at leav The issue that is obviously raised once for the glow of the nearest Whe by this disagreement is: What is a flame. Pretty Maraschino, as we Ber school board's business? Is it con- look at her picture, we are temp- pac fined to routine matters of admin- ted to shake our head just the out istration, or does it deal with all wee-est bit and wonder. Things put the policies and politics of the com- can not always continue thus, psyc munity and all the conditions Maraschino. Fles. found therein which may affect the The popUlation of the schools? It seems pure to us, even taking into account the spirt dangers of controversy and dispute, er t that the best interests of the sys- noti tom and the pupils are cared for Tho only when the administrators rep- hov resenting the people understand stori exactly what the schools are try Miss ing to do for the children and hod spii these efforts may be protected.h soO Doctor Shurly has pointed out no dire effects resulting from the pro- Here is bewitching Maraschino stam hibition amendment, Pd, while we swung through the dreamy laby- of I feel th-t there is much to be said Inth of the Serpentine on the nat for 'he amendment, the efficacy of arms of dashing young Harlow tion his remarks cannot be overlooked. Crustacea Blutch, III, scion and acti Those c'oze'y connected with the heir to the Blutch millions in divi schools in large cities have report- Blutch's Bust-or-Lay Pure Farina dam ed that there is a general tendency Hen Feed-"Fifty years the World's that among the young people there to Leading Egg-Maker". B laugh at the law and to uphold any It is about this intriguing ti- the violation of it as a deed of hero- angle of the rich( adventuresome, erts' ism. In fact, the child who has the vibrant young souls that the six usua courage to break a rule of his ex- Brothers Whoofle in collaboration read istence is very often the child with have written their finest story in I of v. the greatest ability and initiative, their characteristically vigorous ed a and should, if possible, be guided style. to r away from such spectacles as were I A Word About the Author. over pointed out in the inaugural ad- The opening installment will be this dress, so that he may apply his written by that superb master of 'Miss valuable energy in more beneficial the Malayan dialects, Fpsch Whoo- She ways. fle, eldest of this famous fraternal true Such a matter as the above seems sextette which has blazed a name ques very properly to come within the of fame and glory round the world The scope of the school board's duties. and once over it including the Boo It is not a question of politics pure Scandinavian and Croatian. Prior' wild and simple; it is a question of the to writing this skilful opening to gsop influence of politics in the schools. the talean introduction which has time If that influence is deemed harm- brought gasps of amazement from ful, cognizance of it should be tak- the leading rhetorical authorities en by the proper authorities. It is of the white races, Flpsch Whoofle M easy to see that this dicta might spent five years in Patagonia col- "dis be extended to include a great lecting material for his monumen- "Th many other questions, for example, tal task, three years in Sulphur ed l the censorship of literature, the Springs, Colo., a year and a half is w controlling of the kinds of movies on a precarious rock in the La- of t to be produced, the efficiency of chine rapids, and ten months in Ipubl police departments, in fact, any- Sing Sing. The story, however, will had thing which has or may have an have nothing to do with "The sinc influence on the pupils. All this is Criminal Code", current offering of in t nt from theirs. You can read and on page after page under sway of the rhythm, delight- in the choice of words, at s forgetting content almost. feel that she is ever present, )ing, rounding her words to meanings. Mr. Henry Canby not like this as it is found in Great Meadow because he feels there Miss Roberts has been e civilized than in her previous ks. And it is true that in the I t C.AM"PVS SALE r book she has lost some of the gedness of The Time of Man. the books are not different in essentials, only degree makes 4 Time of Man a more delight- experience. ou meet a flaw in the novelist her delineation of character. is no psychologist, nor drama- in any sense of the word. Her els are idylls rather than stor- of character or action. She is e interested in how she tells story than in its content. re is no struggle when Diony es her father, nor any conflict n she decides to return to k. Ellen forgives her husband, ks up the furniture, and sets with him for a new home with- a question. She fails so as a hologist in My Heart and My h that many of the scenes in odosia's hellish struggle are melodrama. There is some it-a faith in the human pow- o rise above evil, spoken very ceably in the character of mas Hall,-some spirit that ers above the people in her Ies like a kind of destiny. It is Roberts hovering there, her it, her faith. She reasons phil- ?hically that the 'future holds uncertainties, and she has nped this point of view upon all them. This outside influence urally has an effect of distor- on the characters and on the on. The people are dreamy in- duals, drawly and slow, and nably optimistic, so much so it frets you at times. ut this does not keep you in least from enjoying Miss Rob- work. Indeed she is an un- lI experience. It is good to a book again with the point j iew that life is orderly arrang- and worked out. Good always ead somebody who is jubilant the use of words. Though is really the only grasp that Roberts has on an audience. is a delightful writer of if- literature. You cannot help tioning deeply her symbol in Great Meadow, the symbol of ne as never being lost in the erness, the symbol of her phil- hy. For you know that some- es, yes often, people are lost. R. E. M. aristan Chapman, who was covered" when her first novel, e Happy Mountain", was select-i ast year by the Literary Guild, orking on a biography, the Life he Duc de Morny. Neither her ishers nor her friends have I any word of Mrs. Chapman t she set out with her husband heir house-car "Namad" for the rns- - .n w. cwn.nri...wt vaA. C Per ,Copy All Students' Names, Ad.- dresses and Telephone Numb ers In Addition, A New Fea- ture This Year- A C omplete Faculty Dire c tory