PERILS OF REVOLUTION AND REACTION TOLD BY OR. E. T. DEVINE Two Great World Diseases and Their Cause Sociologist’s Topic At Assembly Evils of revolution and reaction formed the subject of Dr. Edmund Thomas DeVine of New York at the first assembly of the year, this morn ing. Dr. DeVine, who is a prominent authority on social subjects, was a lecturer in sociology in the Univer sity of Oregon summer school in Prot land last^ summer. He is editor of the Survey of New York and was formerly professor of sociology in Co lumbia University. Two world diseases, said Dr. De Vine, are the revolutionary spirit and the reactionary spirit, and the antidote for them is reconstruction. The au dacity of revolution inspires admir ation. One revolutionary spirit re volts against law and order; this is a disease and prevents forward move ment and is purposeless. That spirit which inspired the American Revolu tion is entirely different. The Eng lish have never before been able to account for that, but since the world war, said Dr. DeVine, they shy that the revolutionists were English gen tlemen supported by colonials against a German king supported by Hessians, and of course the English gentlemen won. Revolution All Over World Revolution is epidemic over all the world, and it cannot leave our laws and civilization untouched, declared the speaker. France is suffering as a result of this spirit, England has seen the financial center of the world transferred from London to Wall street as her offering to civilization. We have a responsibility to civiliza tion and the future of the world that no other nation has. There are indications everywhere, j continued Dr. DeVine, that this spirit of revolution and unrest is over the entire country as the natural result; of the war, of taxes, of physical and, mental injuries, of the high cost of living, and also of the failure to rat ify the peace treaty. The reactionary spirit, he said, is I opposed to everything new and ex-! perimental, no matter how good it j may be. Reactionists are against ad-> vance of any kind, and will put up j with known injustices and obselete! political programs rather than change. ; They are the'“business as usual” peo ple, and are the most dangerous to I the country; they wil not go forward. I Two Extremes Allied These two diseases, said Dr. Devine, are opposite and yet related Both may be the same in some ways, but the true reactionary spirit is different We must line up against this thing. We must h