11 I'1 F;; i UPHOIDS SPIRIT s ARTICLE IN LAST be guessed he has exposed the naked truth to the chilly air of public opin- ion. DANGER es and look over our it Equipment ag your valuables are dividual box behind yr Si111 AxT.- I I k' Editor, The Michigan Daily: Since the faculty has broken into print on account of the recent article1 In Smart Set, which assumes to polish down our shins with sandpaper, Ii hope The Daily will find space to pub-j lish another expression of opinion, in order that it may be evident that those expressed so far are not the only ones that have an adherent among the1 "mud-heads" who, for a small sum of coin of the realm, assume to in- struct the youthful prodigies of this "quasi-eucational" institution. If a hunt is being organized to hang on the faculty barn .door the hide of "Mencken's jackal," I, for one, raise my voice to protest that I do not run with the hounds and that I have no desire to deprive G. D. E. of life, or of the liberty of expressing his opinion. w pr st m pc pi of fe th w p9 ci h N of h h d si ti Pleads For Liberality However that may be, certainly we, ho assume to direct the intellectual 'ocesses of the young people of the ate of Michigan, cannot adopt the ethods of Prussia in dealing with opular thought; we cannot attempt ress censorship or the suppression f free speech. If our waysare per- ct, no criticism can do us harm, and he more attention is directed to our ork, the more highly shall be we ap- reciated; if, however, we are ineffi- ent, perverted or vicious, the public as a right to be informed of our ondition. In any case the strictures d G. D. E. will cause no fear in the eart of anyone strong in the sense of is devotion to duty, conscious that ay by day, he does his best for-the tudents in his classes. Personally, I have never found that he use of abusive language to one ho differs in opinion, is conducive o a conviction of the correctness of ny own assertions. I hardly believe hat anyone who holds a place, on The Daily is a jackal of anyone, and I ancy that one who arouses such a empest in a great university during his undergraduate course will have (Continued on page eight) B USINESS LEADERSH mental training and abilit of business principles a application to business life. Ir undergraduate work, which eh( foundation, it will be well to o bility of special training which apprenticeship in the business w The Babson Institute offers a course of one or two years-wh damental principles of business them in the conduct of comi laboratory methods the stud taught the principles of Exei which have built many of Ar cerns. Babson Institute is con pose of aiding young men, % positions of responsibility and positions' ably and with cred i ANICS BANK W3( South State Street (NickelsArcade) 0 ,,_-. i j rL. ;,i ;.... '-a I;.i . Answers Communication .. An open letter of February 22 de- to mands that G. D. E. produce some m ideal, some plan of reorganization~'of t the University of Michigan before he D venture to utter a syllable of criti- f cism of the institution. 'Let me callh attention to the fact that here is em- ployed that variant of the non sequi- tur popularly known as ilecebrae sci- orun. The classic example of this form of fallacious argument is the re- mark made to the foreigner who piques our susceptible patriotism by suggesting that any improvement in Anerican institutions is possible, that the sidewalks might be of concrete instead of tar and mud, that the mor- als of the movies might be improved, or that olive stones might be omitted from the soup: "Go back to Poland if you don't like the country that is feed- ing you." This is no doubt the con- ventional form of argument in Zion City, the Kentucky legislature and other aggregations of flat-earth scien- tists, but that a state university with catholic ideals, the broad and liberal culture that is associated with , the educational center of a great political division, should produce the flower of illogical thought, is quite incompre- hensible. - Babson Ins Department 350Wellesley Tie. ig" bows and scarves ft silks, in a variety unusual colourings. p,, St. SL. _.- i I 1VNvQuestions Instructors I dare say even the instructors of the history department would not for- mulate ex cathedra the general prin- ciple that it is necessary to suggest some more efficient or more aesthetic form of rattlesnake before you kill the serpent that lies in your path and threatens to bite you. I cannot see that the situation is different here; if there are abuses in the University, if there exist conditions or institutions that are wrong or harmful, I do not believe it is necessary for a student to offer a better abuse, a better con- dition or institution, before he ven- tures to utter a protest against, the presen one. If thereis graft, incom- petence or ignorance here, it is the privilege, it is the duty, of any self- respecting and public-spirited person, be he student or be he janitor, to ex- press his disapproval. Do the instruc- tors in history 'imagine that the Puri-a tans of their admiration met in solemn conglave to formulate a°better Stamp Act before they opened their mouths in criticism of the existing abuses of the British oppressors? Did our revo- lutionary ancestors have a better government worked out before they drove out the representatives of the tyrant overseas? As to the merits of G. D. E.'s criti- cism, I am unable to give an opinion, because I have only the plaintiff's declaration, a d the plea filed by the defendant coAsists of only vitupera- tions and is obviously bad on demur- rer. From G. D. E.'s writing I fancy he is a clever young man who is more than a superflicial observer, and from the reaction he has secured, it might ' GLAD CLOTHES for Spring! B LITHE, buoyant-in harmony with the joyousness and viva- city of Youth are the clothes the college girl wears in class and on the campus. And a place of distinction is reserved in her wardrobe for the creations of the House of Youth. The advance , Spring creations are being featured byri the leading stores. 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