(Continued from Page Seven) to draw his own conclusions. I only wish to remind him that our P. T. 0. E.'s who favor "Sleep little frog, in my lap so soft," are going into our high. schools to teach English poetry! I dare not estimate what the results of' a test to actual T. O. E.'s might be. But if, sometime in the far future, my little Mary comes home to me re- citing, "Sleep little frog, in my lap so soft," I shall burn the school building, hang the teacher, blow up the school board, and put the child under the tutelage of Dinah. __ Sports Wear - ExPertly Tailored ~ Norfolk Sport Suits -i TAL Fl l i i If r; j 4xI SUNDAY MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR,. MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1923 One Hundred Per Cent Educatio AT THE FIRST NIGHT (Continued from Page Twd) t ac The Grouch: Escaping it, you mean. Haberdashery, The Professor: It is a large choru$ F t .avery large chorus. The Young Man: They-sure have got = r the pep. That gang's the frog's JV*L a eyebrows when it comes to makin' i racket, all right, all right. - The Student Critic: Racket indeed! - - The chorus sang with kaleidoscopic ArthurF itarquara/ brilliance, and closed with concert in a gorgeous burst of exaltation. 6o8 ast Liberty - Their work is marked by . . . The Grouch: . . . by no melody and - much noise. That march from the "Queen of Sheba" was horrible. illilltlllillillillllilliilillilillilllilliilllifHHululligl They didn't sing, they yelled . .__ _ and were proud of it.f Edgar Guest (from a little pedestal): = Each and every one of us should take pride in their achievements. We = !- should gory in their song, the i beautiful song of our own friends .--- and neighbors. The exotic Mr. Gig- c:;:4:: = 1i was wonderful indeed; but it is "~ i - the glow of home ties that must -..r...' . .. a forever count. -. The Grouch: Who let you in? - The Young Lady: Mr. Guest! How .... - .:,s perfectly heavenly! ."._r:"- .." The Professor: We welcome Mr. ..-.-.""-- Guest. He is a poet, a true poet .-- of rhyme and rhythm. - The Young ,Man: Say, who's this - Holst, anyway? You know who I I mean-the guy with specs that led . the orchestra for a while. - The Professor's Wife: He is one of. the famous musicians of England. -" 'They say his "Hymn to Jesus"- -. caused a sensation in London. And ---. his picture has been in all the pa- - pers., I thought everyone knew o him. - The Young Man: Yes mam, but I've -,a been busy with the o bus, 'n every-a-r= thing. irr The Student Critic: Mr. Holst unde- - niably made a strong impression. I think I must say so in my article. The Grouch: You do, do you? Howk generous! .t* The Professor: I do not think Mr. Hoist's compositions will be very successful on \Fecords. We have none, have we, my dear? - The Professor's W~ife: Of course not. There are none. s The Grouch: And probably there will be none. Holst is too big a man to, 2- f i 's - take well on phonograph. records- at least until he lands some fancy 1- -job, with a big salary, and ir well paid press agent. He's a real mu- , t:I., .. t ff '} ,r £a .;Ii I . _ty ::1.. :n;.:.r:. . .4 - ... . . sician. ..that Beni Mora suite . . . -/ - Ug! t was- hor - ,.a .". a The Young LadyUgh!- I - air- ble, ghastly -".f .t k . The Grouch: It was good. To me it seemed the best music. o-f the. even- - ...:.:. . : ing. There were brains in i-- a brains, and poetry, and colors,- a . .c" ....;.... -- painted by a strong man. There are copper skies, bright sands, wi-id A NEW SHIRT FOR SPORT WEAR - THE PARKER - dancers, scarlet horsemen scarlet horsemen that ride like the wind a Low Neckband and the Finest of Oxford Cloth $3.5 and cut gashes of red across the hard yellow sands.. .I SPORT BELTS NOR OLKS The Professor: Waiter- WAITER!! LINI&N KNICFRSHTS.a The Young Lady: He's crazy. Oh my! GOLF ,,, CAPS- - The Student Critic: He's talking free Verse! Put him out! e. The Young Man: Outcha go! Beat it! The Professor: Now we may dine in roi peace. Edgar Guest: True worth lies in the - things at hand, STATE STREET And Good is scattered throughout the land... OVER CALKINS. The Grouch (outside):. . . bright skies, hard winds ... red and pur- ple winds:. . singing purple songs 1. toa great man. ., ,.11lillltittittillt1ti1111lilll11"liliillirl11!1i1i11,I.~1is3ltlili~11siltil6li A Comparison of Methods ~. .-., ~ is a ma t 7 9 j 1 i .vnen fuoreigner comes to our un- sudent' - T versity directly from a high school of the students' ccncern. 'I the Old World, he usually finds him- -:is wholly free to express self several years ahead of his Amer- home training to offer incentive to the Compare such a preparation with that furthermore he need not ican classmates. More than this, he child at school. I may say, then, that of our high schools that thrust such definitely outlined course finds that his cla-.mates are but poor- I European institutions gain time, be- naive students into our midst-stu- exception of the situati ly prepared university work. The cause they are able to separate their dents ignorant of their own native ! professicnal school such foreigner ,_,ually gets twelve years of students ; and those preparing for! language, wholly unacquainted with , ing or medicine, where r training before entering a university college are usually from families that English literature, and having no con- tcry work is necessary) and so .does the American, but the offer the invaluable background of ception of modern scientific ideas. And may never quite repeat latter finds it necessary to turn his fathers and mothers who themselves yet the American boys are no less ing a lifetime of lecturin: university into - asort of advanced are trained in the arts and sciences. brilliant than the foreigner; they what he thinks worthy high school. Further than this, we find that the simply have never been' offered a sin- and, as he is continually The first question that comes to instructors in these European high gle thing to think about. No wonder problems and arriving mind is this: How do the secondary schools are all men of rich background that we lose time when we must spend conclusions, he naturall3 schc--ls of the Old World manage to tin scholarly training. In the United1 almost the whole four years of college thing different to offer ea gain two or -more years on us in the States our high school teachers are in imbuing the student with a think- Compare this situation v work antecedent to x that of college? paid almost as poorly as university ing urge. some of our Amei'ican co On examination we find that a stu- instructors, and the result is, that we The foreign university is also quite the professor may be foi dent in the foreign school may elect have inefficient, unskilled, and for the different from that of our country. .the -same subject in the s either- to attend a "Peoples'" school most part, teachers with no kind of Here a professor is a "hired" individ- several decades. In this and pay no tuition, or may elect thel vision at all-not to be-qualified either ual who may be dismissed without tion, either the subject college preparatory school and pay a las narrow-minded or broad-minded warning; but there a professor is one' or the professor lose his certain' tuition. This, of course, im- but simply as no-minded. With such who has proved his ability and his browsing continually in n mediately separates the people into a condition we can readily understand worth, and is expected to teach things fo greater truths; in ax two classes according to their ability how the European high school, always as he sees them; and he is appointed process is deadly both to to pay for an education. Evidently, furnishing the best of teachers (who practically for life. He is expected to fered and to the profess those of the poorer classes would, not by the way are better paid, compara- teach truths as they appear to be truths change can there be progr acquire higher education. On the tively, than American teachers of like to him, and not as they please or dis- through continual evalui other hand, those pupils entering the rank) can gair much time on us. please the administrative authorities meanings of changes can schools demanding tuition would be Again, the European high school is cconnected with the business side of t _ted: the direction of ht from the families having wealth, so- a true preparatory school, for a grad- the institution. An example may be and the actual proof of -p: cial "breeding", and enough training uate may leave an .institution for the given of a certain foreign professor- Education then is the to offer the children a proper incent- pursuit of a particular profession and a professor of economics-who wrote of European schools; wh ive for taking. the most advantage of not be encumbered by the left-over an article in which he denied the di- ma-isn characterizes our the educational facilities. This, of preparatory subjects that our college vinity of Jesus. This was an infringe- We have a rigid system course, works very well in an undem- people must face. A European stu- ment of the blasphemy laws of the ion whereby throughout ccratic country-Sweden, for instance, dent who enters an Engineering country; so the professor was jailed must. oversee everything with its- socialistic governing body- school is already prepared by studies for several months. His return to dent-his subjects for stui but could not apply in the United in several foreign languages (some- his chair at the university was not for reading, his ideas, his States where we will- not permit such times as many as nine years study of questioned-in fact, no cne thought morals, sanitation, habit differentiation according to a person's one of them); he knows: his native of getting up a movement to oust the: indeed, we have Deans wealth. Even if such. were the case, language quite as well as his teachers prefcssor for poisoning the minds of and Deans of Women wi tho division would not be practicable from the standpcint of rhetoric and the youth. - Students in universities salaries to look after th n the United States, for here wealth mechanics of writing, and he has been are supposedly so developed as to or sadly ignorant studen lnd ill-breeding often go hand in introduced to the literature of his have minds of their swn, and if they A foreigner convulses Pand, and- there would be no special ccunty and to modern scientific ideas. are led away by some queer ideas ofi (Continued oi Page Dostoevesky Prophet and Futurist Just what place is Russia to dc cupy in the new scheme of things+ international When we consider ;ito CARL GEHRING - VLC is~ Lmrtnin t~o he, n kitf~nfr vmluTnI vlvc Pinuo, the times, the present insecurity of ruler in European politics. Let the the powers that be, due 1to the ray-' rest look to their laurels and guard ages of the ,war,. and more particular- them." Burton Holmes .,after his now ly- the social and economic revoution historic tour through Russia in 1901, so recently accomplished in that great makes similar observations; colored land of the Muscovite, the question particularly by a _- personal meeting! assumes a more than. trifling impor- with Tolstoi. tance. We have all become so aecus- Yet this eminent lecturer. might tomed toy consider London as the,-cen- also be linted up-on the side of some ter of our little universe, that - to cciologists, who claim Russia is to- some of -'our more or-ess staid con- tally unprepared to assume the role temporaries, a substitution for the of. leader in world affairs. The ab- English capital as the . focal poin ject raisery Holmes found in the lit- of modern civilization seems almost, ti Russian villages hardly siggested unthinkable. Yet, to these same cawI- the homes of world leaders, in the, ual observers, did the recent Russian'near future at any rate. The -peoplel revolution seem at all imminent in - are so backward -they have not eveni the days:preceding and just following come to the- point of using -interest. the start of the war? That was why the. Jews, who con- The question of a Slavic power as trolled most of the country's finances, the future leading light in world af-: and charged interest rates, were so fairs might seem a bit fantastic, and hated. Agricultural conditions ar'e yet uponi examination of a few funda- still on a par with those prevalent In mental-facts is not altogether unlike England centuries ago. Such igno- W.- Only consider the recent revolu- I rance existed that the people stillt zo egammpe, ijoszevsxy urme aa Punishment." There we have a novel distinctly futuristic. It is a most ap-, propriate successor to the work of the same title, by the eminent Italian, Beccaria. The difference lies in the attitude toward crime Beccaria wrote' in a period when the punishment of the criminal was- a matter of strict- redress- of society against the offender.? ,z Dostoevsky, writing at a much later. time and as- the possible exponent of a new era to come, representing a nation just coming into its own na- tional-consciousness, just realizing its might- inworld ' affairs, takes a cor- responding different attitude:in his. ideas of dealing with offenders I I find this. Russian -novel not set much a story of a certain criminal and his ultimate punishment, as a ster-' ling presentation of a social evil which has steadily run its course unimpeded, in spite of all preventative measures of a harrassed society In the -face of .this the -treatise- of Beccaria can hard ly be considered for more than its historic worth The -ideas expounded have failed-obviously new ones must be attempted. Along comes Ilostoev- sky, representative of a different age, nation and race, and offers entirely fenders, with the idea of against further transgre personal element was n ered. Once convicted, t was practically lost. TI crime might be committee ditions justifiable in the criminal seems never t curred to the early autt f In. the Dostoevsky woi observe one Raskalnikov, this type of person Havi ed a most reprehensible fiable in his own -eyes, a fine bit of. psychologic such as takes place in th criminal. The man 'is a ii type, a student, well ve arts. Yet, could thd law bim, it would deal with h Ewould with the most com er. He would probably prison just as hard an the worst type of crimi This sort of thing Dost cut against. He seeks the fact that what is app r~ase of one offender wil' with-another. The ind: each person must be a iustice administered-: tion. Its sponsors claim for it a dis. tinct advance in government. Why should we not Abe ruled from the bot- tom up, after having the reverse con- dition 'all these years, with such ter- rible results? Was it not considered a great advance,. when in 17.89 theI French revolution crystallized the dis- placement of the feudal lords by the- bourgeoisie? Then why not consider' the newest development as another, milestone along the path of progress? W. J. Henderson remarks most pro- phetically, "Look out for the Musco". gathered in-groups to heart the vil- lage reader do their favorite authors. Future world leaders, these! But, then, are-they, nt'tltiinkers?' There' is an element of leadership, after all., In the realm of philosophy and thought the Slavs hold out' in ever 'increasing strength. Tolstoi, Tnr-f 7=genieff, Dostoevsky, Artsybasheff and Andreyev have offered to the world' things of astounding worth, thei rth and self-acclamation of a new race. They attack every field of thought, and with convincing argument. Take, is, of eourse; is-a n an way. of looking t 1 new- cures for an old problem as yet unsolved. It' is- simply the battle of" the new against the old, and past history seems to point to an inevitable result; ThIe new will displace the old, as before. Early criminologists directed stern] repressive measures- against all- ofdj Another poin: erefore wort] it the first iminal by pa '(Continued