PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1922 Mediaeval Minds and Modern Persecution (By Delbert Clark) large ideas, broad issues, and which In view of the outstanding success of suit to the genius of Marconi. With Three or four years ago in an evil takes the alternate course of petty the experiment, there should be no such an invention it is possible to de- hour some minus-minded individual persecution and silly, totally destruc- question about its continuation as e, light thousands of music lovers, coined the word "flapper." We first tive criticism. permanent institution. Michigan broadcasting music from symphony saw it on the screen in a moving should be able to offer culture as well orchestras and other such reputable picture show, when some fond but Robert Frost has gone, leaving be- as business administration. organizations, whereas what the suf- anxious mother exclaimed, "Mary hind him warm friends and sincere fering public actually gets is a by- Jane, are you trying to look like a admirers. As a poet individual ideas A local theater has installed an in- product comparable only to the first flapper?" Everyone thought it was of him differ-as schools of verse dif- strument of torture in the form of a hideous offerings of the phonograph funny, and everyone laughed-then. fer. As a man there is no difference radiophone on the roof, well out of companies, years ago. But alas, how is the glory departed! of opinion. Robert Frost is a man-to reach of the outraged passersby. It Well-meaning but misguided persons be remembered, a man of whose has a large amplifier, and makes day Today marks the end of the open took the word up, made it their own, friendship anyone should be justly and night hideous with convention- season on freshman girls. Silenced rolled it under their tongues, and spat proud. alized sound from the Detroit broad- are the sounds of light-hearted but it forth at every opportunity, or in- So far his place has not been filled. casting stations. Some of the atroci- determined revelry, as the last pledge opportunity, as might chance to be The gift which financed his year of ties committed through the medium is ushered into the fold, and the stu- the case. It has become an abomina- residence in Ann Arbor was only for of a highly respectable invention such dent body settles back to its studies tion, a burden in the land, like the a year, and no one has duplicated it. as the wireless telephone are an in- with a long-drawn sigh. biblical grasshopper. No one, not even the Sporting editor, who was consulted just before I commenced writing this, seems to know where the word originated, or what its root meaning is, but all too many of us would give much to know where it is going to terminate its inglorious ca- reer, and we would like to be invitedACCESSORIES to the funeral. Never in all the world, or at least in the past 22 years, has a word been made to serve so many uncalled-for ends. Ministers of the gospel use it ationos from the pulpit; sociologists and social reformers give it a sinister significance-making it an abstraction, a blanket expression which covers , Sm art Gloves suultituae of sinners (female); news- paper headline writers let it roll offG ma- their carbon pencils in an orgy ofGoves may represent a smal expenditure, but their millionle eitbeaatuse they 9hink A portance in the smart wardrobe is unquestioned. They of nothing better to do. And the end assist in upholding one's reputation for being well dressed seems to be not yet.,g -and come in sufficient variety to satisfy every one. All of which leads up to a mightyy yNl question, expressed in one vast sigh ewy arrived are imported gloves in the two-clasp style. echoed by millions of thinking people They come in black with contrasting embroidering in -Why? Wh ythe petty persecution C5 white, in white with black embroidering and in tan with that the word in all its silly meaningswg typifies? Our whole congregation of white embroidering. We are able to offer these gloves reformers seem to have run amuck, at a remarkably low price--$1.50. and now are engaged in a wild, in- ordinate dance, hurling "flapper" like confetti a every unmarried woman who does not suit their fancy. And Silk Hose the rest of us have become so ac- customed to allowingomnelsto H e dour thkng us thateone elsonose are among the necessary items of one's wardrobe in the dance, forgetting for the occa- and yet they may be among the attractive things. The w' sion that dancing is against our prin- careful shopper makes an effort to obtain hose that are ciples. at once good looking and economical and this special It is all so cheap, so. narrow, soa4t ' short ovision! Twenty years ago if sale of pure thread silk hose will be a pleasing feature to a young man and young woman sat shoppers. These hose have lisle garter tops, silk lisle feet together on apark bench or a sorority divan in the evening and talked in and are full fashioned. They come in black, African low tones, all the nice old ladies brown, cordovan, sand, and otter and are priced $1.59. trilled "Now romantic!" Today if the same thing happens all the not- nice old ladies--the nice ones are elsewhere minding their own business Fall N eckw ear -hiss "Shocking!" and cast suspicious glances. A good many of us are r The final touch of femininity on the most tailored cos- coming to believe that about two- .tum lies in cris thirds of the moral laxness that ismp, white neckwear - intrm collars and found is due in large measure to this cuffs that are not only becoming to the wearer, but mark very attitude of suspicion, this lack h of confidence on the part of an army her as dainty and well groomed. Peter Pan collars and of militant fogies whose own indiscre- cuffs for cloth frocks, lacy affairs for silk ones, trig sets tions the haze of years has largely for suits, or ruchings and frills in profusion - all types enveloped. We are suffering as a nation from of neckwear that lend a touch of "finesse" to the Autumn an epidemic of censorship. Every- costumes - are ready here to assist you - and they are thing is censored Each of us lacks - proper judgment to administer his moderately priced. own private affairs in an upright man- ner, so the rest of us proceed to tell him in one way or another how it H and-Bags should be done. We cannot rest un- less we are passing judgment on the It's the little things that count - and hand-bags add the length of some girl's skirt, or the ab- breviated condition of her hair, or final distinctive touch. What a pleasure it is to select anything else about her that happens a new hand-bag from this extensive collection - whether to incur our displeasure. If we are to believe a iarge group one wants a flat tailored purse or an exqlsite mesh bag. of our estimable citizens, our modern Every imaginable kind is included in the newest of leath- womanhood is in the last stages of degeneracy, and we ought all to get any purses o patent eather, equipped with large busy and tell the poor things about mirrors and fittings are here as well as ohter styles that it. As a matter of fact, the average charmingly reflect both fashion and service in their taste- intelligent girl of today is by far the superior of her male contemporary. fum surface and fittings. She thinl~s more sanely, more con- structively, and on the whole she 3 leads a more respectable life. This obviousjy does not apply to an in- significant minority such as has been found in every past age, and will be found to the end of time. There is always such a class, but its existence never has . and never will justify wholesale condemnation of the entire sex. Such unthinking, if not actually malicious denunciation is the mark of a type of mind too small to include