THE 3UM[MER MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY,. ;MY 20$, Mo T H E S U M E RYM CwIG A D AIL S A I V R ) A YWU L Y 2 193 SlI unutin . Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of -Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled toethe 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, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $t.so; by mail, $2.00. Offices: Press 'Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. . EDITORIAL STAFF Telephoae 49S MANAGING EDITOR GURNEY WILLIAMS Editorial Director......... Howard F. Shout' City Editor........... Harold Warren Jr. Women's Editor............Dorothy Ragee Music and Drama Editor... William J. Gorman Books Editor.......... Russell E. McCracken Sports Editor........... .Morris Targer Night Editors Denton Kunze Howard F. Shout Powers Moulton Harold Warren, Jr. Dorothy Adams Helen Carrm Bruce Manley Assistants Cornelius H. Bertha Sher M. Beukema Clayman Quraishi BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Wrboys Harry S. Benjamin Circulation Manager........ Bernard Larson Secretary.............Ann W. Verner Assistants TOASTED ROLL UNBIASED, THE BIG JAM. When this affair of those hor-I rid Engineers first came before the1 public eye, we glanced briefly overf the letters that were pouring in t and merely said complacently tox ourselves- BOYS WILL BE BOYS-if givenl only half a chance, but of course, with all these modern psycholo- gists working on our young. in ex- periznental kindergartens and out-. door play-schools these days, par-; ents are darned lucky to get back, in the spring anything even faint- ly resembling what they sent off to school in the fall. . But back to this other matter which originally involved the En- gine students and the Lits but has1 managed to bring in the bally old Lawyers and will probably get around to the Foresters and the Dents in due season-we certainly were mighty glad to hear from high-minded T. H. G., "woman; graduate student", and all her fine ideals in yesterday's Campus Opinion.. You know, up until this letter came, we weren't just sure; whether women graduated from this school or just plain went and married out of the class room. Anyway, here's one that's a grad and proud of the Lawyers, too. Not that the Engineers aren't gentlemen, you understand. Oh no! Remember that "former" ac- quaintance of Miss T. G. H.-the one that had his views printed (and all very gentlemanly views, too, you may be sure-each one taken head on and showing a fine dis- play of (pearly white teeth gleam- ing out at you from a ruddy coun- tenance, bronzed by the sun, cop- pered by the rain, brassed by the old Engineering School itself.) You remember him, all right. Well, wasn't he an Engineer and a gen- tleman- I guess so! And the "highest type" of one too-the kind that picks up your handkerchief for the sixth time and still says, "Pardon me, but did you drop this? And he was necessarily a gentle- man else T. G. H. would never have had him for a friend. That's why she wanted to express her "appre- ciation" for him. Nowadays, find- ing a gentleman is really a great rarity, as anybody can tell you just as well as T. G. H. * * * THIS GREAT OPPORTUNITY-- while it lasts-send to Rolls Column Gentlemen ONLY department for free sample copy of "How They Made Me a Gentleman-in 4 sim- ple lessons". SUMMER STUDENTS -Get Your Copy Now. * * * About Books Joyce Davidson Lelia M. Kidd Dorothy Dunlap Night Editor-Howard F. Shout SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1930 COURTESY NEEDED Two evidences of discourtesy on' the campus have been called to our attention. Since both are os- tensibly, mere matters of careless- ness, it has been thought more fit- ting to suggest a change rather. than to attempt more drastic methods of dealing with offenders. The first affair concerns the lack of attention and courtesy shown by members of the audience to the visiting lecturers. Whispering and talking sometimes continues long after the. lecture has begun, and some individuals insist on entering late or leaving early. These of- fenses are especially bothersome in the Natural Science auditorium where the acoustics make talking, rattling chair-arms, and walking particularly loud and noticeable. If there is any probability of an early departure, it is suggested that the lecture be not attended or a seat near the door taken. Whis- pering, while the speaker is in the middle of his discourse, is abso- lutely inexcusable in people of uni- versity age.F The other is that of parking in a manner wasteful of space in the University parking lots. The driv- er of each car entering these grounds is directed by an attend- ant to a parking place. If these directions are disobeyed, or are heeded only partially, the result- ing loss of room makes it difficult to accomodate as many cars as necessary. This latter point might be ex- tended, to include parking any- where near the campus. The large number of automobiles permitted the students in the Summer Ses- sion makes parking more of a problem at this time of the year than at any other. City and Uni- versity regulations should be care- fully heeded, and as little space taken up by the parked car as possible. This is a reasonable re- quest involving no more effort or trouble than the present custom. THE RED MENACE AGAIN ' The furore that is being raised over the alleged secret activities of the Soviet bids fair to assume larg-' er and larger proportions as the' senate investigation continues. The same hue and cry has been raised so often in America by politicians bent on establishing their cam- paigns, that it will not be surpris- ing if the public fails to show im- mediate interest in the instant af- fair. However, the disclosures being made certainly seem to indi- cate that the Soviet have been pro- moting some sort of scheme tof spread Soviet propaganda in this 1 "BURROW UNDERGROUND" I --ELINOR WYLIE When Elinor Wylie died suddenly two years ag, the world lost one of its great contemporaries. And yet Mrs. Wylie was not essentially a modern poet;. nor was her meth- od of solving the puzzle of life par- ticularly original. She was a class- icist in the forms of her poetry, in her way of living also. She was a scorner of the ground, shunned "the polutted flock", hated dem- ocracy with its rabble, crowding, its public demonstrations. She had the snobbishness of . intellectual sup- eriority-the only kind justifiable. A philosopher of escape then. Her way of flight is somewhat suggest- ive of Shelley's. And it is only a change in terminology that makes Shelley's escape to the "heights of the imagination" different from Mrs. Wylie's plumbing of the "depths of the inner conscious- ness". But Mrs. Wylie was also at- tracted by the metaphysicians, Donne and Webster. The orderli- ness of her retreat shows remin- escence of their thought. Mrs. Wylie's fame rests upon four books of verse and four novels. She had immediate recognition in 1921 when Nets to Catch the Wind, a collection of poems, was publish- ed. In reviewing the book Mr. Untermeyer (maybe I should lie and say it was Mr. Brown or Smith or anything, Loue is so frightful- ly unpopular these days) Mr. Un- termeyer said the poems were "the brilliance of a moonlight corus- cating on a plain of ice." This is a very acceptable metaphor. ] catches with exactitude not only the essence of these poems, but al- so the dnes that were to follow. Moonlight sparkling on ice is aus- tere and pitiless, it is sifted light- fine shaded greys, it is impersonal, masked. Indeed one could hardly find a better metaphor. Mrs. Wy- lie was a stern and proud creature. She was aloof in her consideration of the world. Like Shilloh she was an immortal come down from Olympus to bless mortal lives. She used human emotions as subject for her writings but without sym- pathy. She hid behind general ex- pressions; her language showed ab- stract percision. Personalities did not count, she was interested in ideas. And in all, like moonlight on ice, hers is a very unreal pic- ture. Its impersonality, its deli- cate shading, its aloofness makes it thus. The reality of life is in- dividual, not always is it delicate, it may be sentimental. In escap- ing into her inner consciousness, a into a world ordered to suit her taste with marvelous walls so thick that "dead nor living may shake its strength", she has produced because of her deliberate effort to be objective and impersonal, a very unnatural art product. She is a glorious romantic like the Shelley whom she worshipped. But I have said Mrs. Wylie was classic in the forms of her poetry. This is the influence of the meta- physicians. Though she escaped the "common hsrd" in her thought and living, escaped earthly rules and orders, in the forms that she expressed herself she was very con- ventional. She realized perhaps that though an Olympian she was writing for "earthly creatures." Her poems are pregnant with a wealth of carefully chosen words. She was an admiramle technician. The forms are thoughtfully devis- ed, her metre has a balanced grace. The sound effects in many cases are nothing short of marvelous (for example, the short poem, "Velvet Shoes", the one beginning -"Let us walk in the white snow In a soundless space"). Hers is 'a very unnatural way, but if gone seriously is most mag- nificant. If 'the furniture of the earth is in the path, and you break it, so much the worse for the earth. To be proud, to keep com- mon men at distance. To be un- touched, to refuse fondling and gentimentalizing. To live in se- clusion in an apartment somewhere on Manhattan as she did, burrow- ing into her inner self-It is prob- ably the secret of great poets, the philosophy she has given us. -If you would keep your soul From spotted sight and sound Live like the velvet mole Go burrow underground. In terms of the imagination, the view is as old as the hills; it is the same view that she presents mod- ernly-escape, if you would save yourself, escape to your inner day. R.E.M. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, D.D., Min- ister; Rev. Samuel J. Harrison, B.D., Associate Minister; Mr. Jack Luther, in charge of Student Activities for the Summer. 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. Subject: "The Reasonableness of Christianity." Speaker: Bishop Frederick D. Leete, of Omaha. 12Z:00 M.-Discussion Group for Students at Wesley Hall. Leader: Prof. W. C. Rufus. 5:30 P. M.-Wesleyan Guild Devo. tional Meeting at Wesley Hall. Leader: Mr. Roy Burroughs. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron Street East R. Edwards Sayles, Minister 9:45 A. M.--Church School. 9:45 A. M.-Class for Students. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon by Mr. Sayles on "LIFE'S PARADOX." ST. PAUL'S LUTHERN CHURCH (Mo. Synod) Third and West Liberty C. A. Brauer, Pastor Sunday, July 27 9:00 A. M.-Sunday School. 9:00 A. M.-Divine Service in Ger- man. PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS We have all makes. Remington, Royals, Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60 O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 .. . t ___ GRUEN WATCHES DIAMONDS Jewelers State Street at Liberty WATCH REPAIRING FINE JBWULRY 11:45 ing A. M.-Sunday school follow. the morning service. 7:30 P. M.-Wednesday testimonial meeting. evening 10:15 A. Sermon: PHIRA." M.-Morning Worship. "ANANIAS and SAP. ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division and Catherine Streets Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector Rev. Thomas L. Harris, Assistant 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. 11:00 A. M.-Morning Prayer; ser- mon by Rev. Mr. Harris. I A FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENCE 409 South Division 10:30 A. M.-Regular morning serve- ice. Sermon topic: "TRUTH." {1 The Reading Room, 10 and 11 State- SavingsBank Building is open daily from 12 to 5 o'clock, except Sundays and legal holidays. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson, Minister 9:30 A. M.-Church School 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Dr. Homer M. Noble, Howell, Mich: 5:30 P. M.-Social Hour for Young People. 6:30 P. M.--Young People's ing,-. . Meet: ....I 1_ t. ... 1. .1 Cool Summer 11 Frock~s ... 16975"' However, T. G. H. seemed to us to be a little slighting when she said. the quarrel was like "children fighting over ABC blocks."' It was over this "little wife", Miss T. G. H.-if you'll stop to reflect, and we'd advise you to watch out how you refer to her or you'll be getting the graduates into this mess, too. And then you'll have the grads as well as the Engines and Laws be- coming "a practical joke", which won't be news, certainly but which is best left unsaid. "And how could we get along without our lawyers?" We'd like to try it once, that gang of thieves. They argued us out of demanding restitution for paying one of their laundry' bills last fall, and we haven't got over it yet. But, now that both sides have said about everything possible and printable, we suggest we take T. G. H.'s suggestion and all join hands into one big family and be friends again. After all, we are all sons of dear old Michigan, aren't we, and loyal to the Regents? Still, if that won't do, and we're afraid it won't, in the words of our lengthy Miss T. G. H. "what do' alumni and friends think" of all, this? We want your. opinions, friends (the alumni can't think, of course; that's why they're alumni).; Just write us briefly and simply (we know you will) your opinions in this matter and we will place' them directly into our waste-bas-s ket. Short Sleeves . .. Sleeveless Jackets .. Dresses With I These Warm Days Make It Necessary For Everyone to Have Several Summer Dresses Here is a superb collection of the daintiest and coolest summer frocks! All are of the new sIks and all set a new standard of styles. Just the type of prints you have admired in the smartest new dresses lovely daytime dresses in soft flat crepes. Dance and evening frocks of beau- tiful gossamer chiffons in large floral patterns in the new ankle length. Monotone or duotone effects on dark or pastel grounds. Smartly em- broidered crepes and chiffons. Clever sport frocks with matching or contrasting jackets in shantung, A dress for every need! i SUMMER HATS In White or Paste Shades k' + ! - "_ -- ...+ . i.: r~i a: - .. I_ L S .: 1 wntry. If the investigating committee Lii establish for a certainty that ie Soviet have been conducting a ation-wide system of propaganda America, the government will be illy justified in cutting off all >mmercial as well as 4political re- tions with that republic, despite ie fact that it may mean a huge ss to the industries of -the coun- y. The protection of the stand- ds and ideals of the government e more important than commer- al prosperity, and this method ould insure the barring out of Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential-as well as spelling and general or- thography - upon request. Let- ters published should not be construed as expressing much of anything in particular. We have several letters here, one from Gazelle, one from a grad student (not T. G. H.), and just hundreds and hundreds of our ad- mirers in every corner and quarter of the globe-our admirers never r t f $2.95 $5.OO One of these lovely hats would be a comple- ment to the most charming summer dress! Smart felt berets in many styles for the sport outfits . . . or narrow brimmed felts if you, choose . . . Shallow crowned panamas or wide brimmed felts for dainty chiffons. You will' find a hat for each of your summer outfits in this selection! 4 N tomorrow; providing the Books edi- tor doesn't take a terrible burst of speed and finish the last chapter of his book by noon, in which case you'll haveto have an intellectual do4-