THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY : I Bait* P { 4 SUNDAY FEATURE SECTION ublished every Sunday as a supplement to regular news section of The Michigan ly. ontributions must be in the hands of the or by Wednesday previous to the date of red publication. 11 communications dr contributions must igned as an indication of good faith, iday Editor....Joseph A. Bernstein Assistants Jkon I. Dakin Thomas H. Adams W. W. Ottaway Byron Darnton rary Editor..........Stewart T. Beach stres...................Edwin R. Miess SIDLITZ POWDERS ____By E.B. W. _ _ _ FECTIVITIS ie most unmanageable of all parts speech is the adjective. Many, ters and speakers seem to have gotten that there are three degrees omparison. With them there is no dation, no light and shadow. Every is Alpine, every valley Tartarean; ry virtue is god-like, every fault a my; every breeze a tempest, every lehill a mountain. Praise or blame gars their vocabulary." When all men are giants, there are giants; where all is emphatic in le, there is. no emphasis."-William thews. In heaven an angel is nobody in tlcular"-G. B. Shaw. He wrote at the top of his voice."- ar Wilde. 'here excerpts tell the story of a ge part of the writing and talking today-especially in America. A nd manner, flamboyant rhythm, p-box emphasis, plysyllabic ges- es, have so infected us that mod- tion becomes by contrast , the )ngest emphasis. onviction sometimes fumes and ts; sincerity has been known to ead-eagle-particularly in oratory. t there is nothing quite so reassur- and persuasive, in ordinary speech writing, as a certain reserve, a ain quiet power. 'he voice of prejudice is loud; the ce,of reason, quiet. . B.-We want credit for our high rage in running this, for it cer- ly gives us a dirty, if well-earned II' FOR DEAN BURSLEY .ecently a Flushing boy, charged h some sort of misconduct, was sen- ced by the judge to three months' d reading in the public library. t imagine the virtue of Ann Arbor, nstead of being sent home to a k's disgrace and a three months' , We were really puished by a re- red 90-day visit in the center of campus; particularly if the male 1 female co-eds were isolated in t fine new trysting place of ours. re apologize for this picture of the ary as a place of punishment, but fear that idea is all too prevalent mg the brethren. 1SIDEBRING FUTURE HISTORY re see in the Manchester Guardian t one of the readers of H. G. Wells, tlines of History," a man who is architect of a huge, new build- on the Strand, wants to make the i of the Wells of 5000 A .D. easier proposes to put in the ferro-con- o foundation of his building a ie casket containing vital informa- for the future historian. is an interesting question as to .t should be put in this sarcopha- And it is all the more interest- to consider what we in Ann Arbor ild stow away for the class of 4998, e were to be alloted space in one he new sbuildings that President ton is getting for us. Would itke Fresh Pot I the "heavy" history, the salient its would probably be provided for. think how those people-then ved to the perfect 'economic man" ould chortle over a Freshman pot, 1y labelled. And how they would e in wonder at a pair of magnums Paul Roget-even now almost ex- t in this country. Wouldn't they am as to a Mecca to see a picture ur late secretary of war or to read e of the writing that Mencken has e--at the top of 'his voice? Andj iye them something tovpuzzle over, night pack in a couple of reels of k Sennett's work or a copy of the ,oyle. Publicity Interesting iother point of interest would be llection of the publicity which the ersity has enjoyed during the last nonths. This would tend to coun- teract the hallowed veneration in which they would undoubtedly hold these poineer years of Michigan's ex- istence. Our humaness would be proven. Thus we could go on compiling a great mass of information which would enable the Mr. Shaw of that date to expand theypresent history of the University to at least ten volumes.. We suggest that a committee and a sub-committee be immediately ap- pointed to delve into this question. NATIVE AFRICAN GIRLS STUDY GOWN DESIGNING IN LONDOlt Several native African girls have come .to London to study dressmaking. They say the girls in Africa who wish to be gowned fashionably have to waitl too long for consignments of feminine wearing apparel to arrive from Eu- rope. Hence they are preparing them- selves to meet the need for modistes in Africa. "ADAMLESS EDEN" PLANNED FOR LONDON WORKING GIRLS What is described as an " Adamless Eden" is -about to be opened here in the form of a small park where Lon- don working girls may rest and medi- tate undisturbed by young men. The plan briginated with the Metro- politan Public Gardens association which is seeking to obtain for the pur- pose four acres of waste land near Hyde Park. , REMAINS OF PREHISTORIC ELEPHANT FOUND IN FRANCE Paris.-Parts of the fossilized re- mains of a prehistoric elephant, said by experts to be many thousands of years old, have been found in the clay of a tile works at Chagny, near Cha- lons-sur-Saone. This is believed to be the first instance in which such re- mains have been found in Europe. It is thought probable that when the search is concluded the skeleton will be fairly complete. There is still Hope For That 'Wild Collegian' (By J. E. M.) Hope is held out for "these wild college youths," by the Reverend Wil- liom L. De Vries, Ph. D., canon of Washington Episcopal cathedral, who spent several days last week in Ann Arbor as a part of a year's survey of student life among the larger educa- tional institutions of the United States and Canada. Just For Excitement "While I find more drinking at the colleges just now than I have ever Iknown before, I find less drunkenness than in the old days. The present-day youth drinks only to gratify a certain desire for excitement that can be sat- isfied in that manner better than in any other," says Dr. De Vdies. "I be- lieve that there is less immortality among university students than among the average young people.' Hope of Nation "The Middle Western college youth is the hope of the nation. I find more of idealism and character among this group than among any other that I have come in contact with. While the young man in the East goes to college because it is 'the thing to do,' the one who attends a university it this part1 of the country does so with a sound purpose-either to learn how to make . a better living, or to learn better to live. "Do not underrate cultural'educa- tion. Unless a man must specialize in order to earn his living,,.that edu- cation which gives him the broadest outlook and promotes the highest ideals is the best." Use Classified advertising and sell. your miscellaneous articles.-Adv. Have you lost anything that you, prize very highly? The Classified columns of The Michigan Daily are always ready to serve vou.-Adv. CRITIC CONSID90 O [NWIERS (Continued from Page One) He may picture a piteous spectacle, but he does not suggest pity; he does not consciously draw at the tear ducts. Of course, he cannot always be im- partial. Even de Maupassant occa- sionally lost his judicial temper. Does Not Analyze God The modern does not analyze God; he avoids conclusions as to eternity. He may present the reactions of his characters to redigion, but he confess- es his own ignorance, and makes no pretense. In the sum, it may be said that the modern tries to be honest. It iw pathetic that in Amer'/a we have been unwilling to give this man his place, despite the fact that in Eu- rope he is about the only type of writer who has counted for over a half century. Thisobstinacy, due to Puritanism and the arbitary "saving of souls," has been teribly to America's cost. Be- cause we are just getting started it may be long before we evolve an Ibsen or a Conrad or a Hauptmann, or a Hardy. But in the mean'time let us not be blind to what is happening. I dis- like to offer a "system," but neverthe- less, I suggest a careful study of such European writers as have won the Nobel Peace Prize in Literature. For instance, one finds that the Americans iost like Bjornson, Haupt- mann, and Knut Hamsun, are Dreisey, Edgar Lee Masters, Sherwood Ander- son, and Willa Cather, and not such1 writers as William Allen White and Winston Churchill (the one running to tears, and the other to sugar): I do not feel that I have done jus-I tice to the subject, and probably many think that I am incompetent, which is probably true. I shall see if I can produce more expert testimony. TODAY AND TOMORROW * v In a hew. and d jer r ~ent W~stem 60 n Lookoudf kid Here's a wide oean Western picture ta will make you Q e and g story of u nan~ lea sy inbath eionr' awhole tot oe~.* his right to oEDY A OLDWYN COMEDY ... ::. 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