-.- --- ,: ; r t{, 'y: 4 4'.-94.£' s EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1922 WRITE TERRQ1) Italy stand three parties, reay to as- continue the work in the field of Bib- ing discussion of differences between sume power just as soon as the Fas- lical scholarship which was commenc- Njtd and South European literature. (Continued from Page One) cisti government begins to wchken. ed with the publication of Freer Bibli- It sounds suspiciously like notes for a powerful-- have had, in the course of The Communists, the Socialists, and cal manuscripts, the originals of I completer study to come. Louis Bau- their expanslon, to make a good many the Catholic Workers' party are each which form the well-known and pre- ry, writing under the heading of The- promisessto the very Italian workers watching for their chance. cious Freer collection, housed in the atre, upholds the thesis that American woms they were combating. On the Some pretty turnover may be looked Freer Gallery of Art in Washington. drama lies in the direction of "The other hand, the merchants and manu- for in Italy before long. And no Ital- It will be many years before the schol- Old Homestead," "The First Year," and faeturers who supported the Fascists ian political turnover is peaceful. An ;astic work and publication made pos- "The Old Soak." A particularly sym- are expecting their reward in the ordinary Italian election generally sible by the University's great collec- pathetic consideration of John Free- form. of legislation favoring them. It brings as many casualties as a good Lion will be finished. rm's "Portrait of George Moore" is remains to be seen how the Black- sized battle in a small war. And te {remarkable among the book reviews. shirts will be able to satisy both next election, when it comes, will be ! AMONG THE MAGAZINES Co. sides and remain in power. more than ordinary. Professor Parker was told by many -T(Continued from page two) Books Received people of the middle classes, while in THE MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION younger generation's "exaltation of Italy, that after having broken up thel the lawless and the"illegal." And he The Critical Vame, by John Macy power of the Communists there was (Continued from page five) . touches a sympathetic note when he (Boni & Liveright). $2.00. really no more excuse for the exist- out of the country. In making his speaks of what little comment it is once of the Fascisti. They have a -ay out of Abyssinia he stopped in possible for any of Matthews' essaysramping on Life by Harry Kemp. hard road ahead of them. No power the tiny ancient hamlet of Arus, lo- to elicit. For "where there are no (Boni & Liveright). $3.00. that has builded on violence can be a cated near Addis Abeba, the capital ideas there can be no discussion." Pushcart at the Curb, by John dos lasting power. Now that they are in city. He stayed with a very old priest, S, C. Passos. (Doran). power, the Fascisti will themselves named Cabut, who lived alone in a THE FREEMAN for November 22 The Seex'ct Glory, by Arthur Machen. have to insist on a stricter and more nmiserable little hut. This old priest, permits itself to become more heated (Knopf). $:.50. honest interpretation of the meaning though he did not know his age, than customary when it sneaks of our Dcwn the River, by Roscoe Brink. of "law and order". They will have to urbther frme detrutiv ac thought himself to be about 120 yearsI deep, (lark, and unofficial policy of (Henry 1-oit & Co.) $1.90. to curb their former destructive ac- old. From a musty corner of his hut I imperialism. "Mr. Hughes is no doubt Command, by William McFee. (Dou- tivities in order to be able to carry on he brought forth many curious things right" say the editors in Current Com- bleday, Page.) $1.90. the functions of government. And which he had gathered. Among them mcnt, "when he says that 'we do not just as soon as they remove their iron were these two manuscripts, and he covet anY territory anywhere on God's from the neck of Italian labor, the gave them to his guest on his depart- broad earth'; if we did, we should cer- EDITORIAL STAFF Communists will come back into ure for America. tainly go out and take it." The Delbert Clark, Editor power.. Safely arrived, the Armenian en- editors are righteous and almost Donald Coney, Literary Editor At best, the position of the Fascisti deavored to find someone in New York Leaccckian in their satiric arraign- Leo L. Niedzielski, Dramatic is precarious. The only possibility I competent to read them, and was re- ment of Lord Curzon's moral indigna- Editor they have of remaining in power is ferred by the librarian to scholars at tion against the Turks. "Strange as Max Ewing, Music Editor through the very real personal influ- Columbia University, where no one it may seem, this backward, sullen William M. Randall, Exchange ence of their leader, Mussolini. could be found at the time who was people actually shows a disposition to Editor Mussolini is an ex-Socialist who had able to determine the language in run its own country!" One more sa- Bethany Lovell, Staff Artist repudiated the Socialist principles at ,which they were written. I tirib shaft. Speaking of Paxton Hib- . James House, Jr., Caricaturist the outbreak of the war. As editor He then came to Detroit, and ben's article in the Times on Russia's Virginia Vaughn Tryon of one of the most influential Italian through an Armenian friend, who is surprising return to normalcy: "Mr. I W. Bernard Butler newspapers, he bears much of the re- I somewhat of a scholar, the manu- Hibben visited a gambling house con- Saul Carson sponsibility for Italy's participation scripts were brought to the attention ducted on the blue sky order and as John P. Dawson in the war, and for the moulding of 'of the University. Their true char- he left the place he was bespoken by Howard A. Donahue Italian public opinion immediately acter was immediately recognized and two women nationalized after the Jane Ellingson afterwards. His personal following is they were promptly added to the col- fashion tacitly condoned in the most M. A. Klaver the greatest of any Italian of the lection of Biblical manuscripts in the advanced Christian civilizations." An Helen G. Lynch present time. And, so far, he has Library. article on the Republican slump in Hortense O. Miller been able to retain the confidence of ! The value of the collection of manu- the recent election and the impending Dorian G. Sayder t he Italian bourgeoisie and some of the scripts as a whole, to the University, fall of Mr. Harding (appositely en- Regular staff meetings will be p-toletariat. But he has, as yet done is great. The possession of it has add- titled "The Funeral March of a Mar- held at five o'clock every Mon- nothing along the line of reconstruc- ed more than almost any other one ionette") is in the best Freeman Vein. day. Attendance of all Maga- tion. His promises are those of a thing to its standing in lines of schol- Its refinement of irony suggests a fe- zine writers on these meetings is liberal, with an eye for the wishes of I astic research. Their acquisition will male touch on the editorial typewriter. Imperative. Capital. In the political offing of make it possible for the University to Edwin Muir continues his enlighten- I SUNDAY MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR, MICHIG AN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1922 HATS FOR THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS Now is not too soon to think about your holiday many social gatherings that take place aound Chistmas- wardrobe be replenished now and in tip-top condition for the holidays. / -w wearing apparel. The time demand that your when you arrive home terials. Especially do rices at which we offer he benefits of unbroken VELVET HATS AT MATERIAL (Saul Carson) What has taken place in Italy? T question is asked by all who h watched the recent phenomenal ris power of the Fascisti, and the assui tion of the Italian premiership by t organization's young leader, Mus lini. One year ago, according to P fessor DeWitt H. Parker who was Italy at the time, the Fascisti w quite apparently a minority party. day they are at the head of the g ernment. Several weeks ago, the F cisti cohorts made their triumphal try into Rome led by their own 9 orals and heroes. A year ago t were forced to postpone their cony tion which was to have met in R( on account of the refusal on the p of the Italian railroad workers to low them entrance into that city. To understand the nature of wave that swept the Fascisti into p er, one must first see what the nat is of the organization itself; what its aims, its beliefs and its method procedure; and, lastly, who are 7' M:I'' rl" and what class of society they represent. Prcfessor Parker had the opport ity to come into contact with memb of the Fascisti in various parts of aly. In general they are from middle strata of society. The g majority are young men-am whom are many ex-soldiers-com from the families of the. great mi class of Italian merchants, profess al men and the better paid worker the industries. The Fascisti party is a party strife and warfare. It was born sh ly after the armistice, and brough light by the renegade Socialist, Be Mussolini, whose alarm over spread of Communist ideas in I prompted him to bring together der one banner all those who s one hundred per cent for a Gre Italy in the fullest meaning of term. In 1920 the Italian metallu cal workers, after a long and bi struggle with their employers fc higher living standard, seized plants themselves and attempted run them under Communistic pri pies. Sabotage on the part of Ca throughout Italy, failure to obtain raw materials necessary for the ca ing on of production, and others disturbing factors caused this exp ment to collapse. But the wor had made a start toward Commun and Capital felt the need of a tector. The Italian government not strong enough to fight openly Communist and Socialist forces. ( ital turned to Mussolini and his 1 for aid. And In November, 1924, Fascisti party was baptized in blood of the Socialists whom they tled for the first time in Bol "This" (I am quoting The Nat "was the beginning of the declin Italian bolshevism and the rise of Fascisti". Their growth from that time on slow but quite steady. The gov ment openly connived at their ac ties and, probably, gave them all secret aid at its command. Whil first they had no definite prog but the suppression of the Com ists and the glorification of Italy, gradgally evolved "ideals" and larged their program until they stand for a definite trend in Ita politics. That trend is toward thing that helps to intensify nata ism and to develop in Italy a p that will insure Capital adequate tection from the Communist wor of Italy. In order for a party of this kin grow .effective, its leaders ha build up a sentimental mysti which wduld be sufficient, to unify hordes that crowded-and were ed to crowd-toward its banner.1 'his ave e to mp- hat ;so- 'ro- in ere To- ov- as- en- en- hey 'en- me part, al- the ow- ure arec I of its do un- ers It- the reat ong ring ddle ion- s in r of ort- t to nito the taly un- -t f~>tN t Y a r r.f 2ff '76 ## Terror in lace - We are now displaying stunning models in we recommend our small hats of Slipper Satin. these hats are so low as to be unbelievable. sclini turned to the tradi cient Rome and to much formalism for that purp ganized his Fascisti int( cohors and legions mo those of ancient Rome.' were organized into suppc societies-athough each ier of- the societies alwa black shirt and other d insignia. They were swo: ice for Italy "with a sx with a deep mysticism, 1 unshakable faith, domin inflexible will. . -. conscic burden of a terrible mis the great mother of all ( to strengthen and purify For these purposes, t were organized-into "acti serve" forces. Some dis also made between the I the military branches of zation. But that differe the main, artificial as all ed to one branch were al cally members of the oti Nowhere in their prog Fascisti mention that it duty to combat Socialisr was their chief work, am formed it well. Professo lates of meeting a young a train who was very prow ing to that party. When the purposes of the Fasc did not speak of the de formation of "a formidab based on purity and absc and of all the other hi but meaningless abstrac Mussolini concocted for b His reply was frank and 1 was to tell of the Fascisti. to kill the bolsheviks". sor Parker was glad that er gone in for whiskers a ties. all ma The p Every morning, accord ater fessor Parker, the news that fe g that ied stories of the murde fitterposed Communists and S )ttr a the Fascisti. Shops thro te a sold, and advertised ope the clubs which were used as to (these black-shirted princ nci- It was "la terreur", open pital 'sinterference by the gove th B ' ela ivin. P etronsFascisti roamed in wild rry ~ ,.'~1.4 I bands, killing, pillaging: such Wherever the workers b kers Repirnted from "A Reviwer s Note, long before their superzealousness home of their own, of ism, book" in the Freeman for November carries them into such absurdities ples", these homes were pro- 15. that the collective common sense and the Fascisti. Municip was One of the most amusing spectacles collective humour of the people spon'= there were many sue r the presented by this age of high eccen- taneously rise up against them and elected Socialist ormCom Cap- tricity, is that of a magistrate sitting laugh them off their little stage. ernments, were stormed b tricityis tat f a agisrat siting ics of destruction, the la band solemnly upon the question whether If I were a magistrate, which Godedofcial ereimpriso the " he "Satyricon" of Petronius Arbiter! forbid! and had to deal with th edadFsit lcdi , is fit for general circulation. Somehow "Satyricon", I should hand down an It was civil war, with bat- this performance seems to me pecu- opinon such as I can somehow imag w capitalists - dressed in gna. hiarly to epitomize and embody the ine Gaynor handing down in his days shirts - on the offensive ie of1 great general movement to extend the on the bench-Gaynor, great man that Occasionally the goz standards of morality to cover and he was, in his evotion to Don Quixote send troops to quell a ri the control the practice of the arts. Such and Benvenuto Cellini! I should rule peace where the fightini was a movement, if given a free run, al- j that the "Satyricon" was not inter- heavy as to endanger was ways manages to wind itself up in esting and therefore could not do any the government troops ge ern- some especially conspicuous and ex- harm; and hence that it might be aged to enforce peace b tiv- quisite absurdity like this, always freely published, because no one would shoot down the side op l at manages to make itself openly and bother his head about it for any Fascisti. Business men grat manifestly ridiculous; and thus it is length of time. The "Satyricon" real- contributed to the funds nun- that we get a respite from its hector- ly is a pretty tedious business, and its cisti, and the job of cle they ings and are preserved from its worst so-called pornography is dullest of from the pestiferous bo en- consequences. Because it always does all. If the youth of the land, which done -quite thoroughly. I work out that way, it never seemed to the morality-monger is always 'moat es the workers who syml alian me worth opposing; or rather, I gratuitously trying to protect, is al- the Communists were fo any- should say, opposition never seemed ready so far gone as to be endangered up arms against themo aal- the best or most effective way to de by the "Satyricon," there is not death. Mussolini and his ower feat it. There is something in the enough salvage in it to make the sup- dreds" completely swept pro- saying that the best way to nullify a pression of the book worth while; communists and Socalii rkers bad law is to enforce it; and simi-, and I should set this forth explicitly feet. And now. they are larly the best way with those in my judicial decision. I should also of the government. Id to who wish to purify and norallie our fully exonerate Mr. Cabell's "Jurgen" How long a party thi d to 'practice of the arts, or who wish to and Mr. Joyce's "Ulysses", on pre- power after a campaign cism regulate and supervise our practice of cisely the same grounds, and let them and rapine can last, is p y the t e individual life, is simply to let go forth as the free merchandise of The Fascisti leaders -- fore- them do it, or even surreptitiously to any publisher who wished to put them not the only one, althou rat an1 encrew them It is never on the market. (Continued on Page An early inspection is desirable in order to reap ti assortments. REDUCTIONS Emma B. Fogerty's SPECIALTY HAT SHOP 117 EAST LIBERTY STREET I i's- Y ijz;u a-mu. GiLuvtkia6u L11Gu1. it, io iic YCi.