PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1923 ------------ i.- -- .... .... i .. 7 _ ~IpI OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF TIlE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 1 Published every morning except Monday durirg the University year by the Board i C(mtrol of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial will bind the people of the world to- getber into a far closer union than the Lague of Nations has attempted to do. That is idealism toobut, when dealing in idealism, one may as well go as far as possible. THE AMERICAN TASTE INTER.- ' PRETEDI I e 0 1 -L TOATED ROLL2 WELCH SCHAUSPIEL ? Mr. Jason Cowles, The Michigan Daily. I 6 1 G i a a ti t b d i Association" n._"American audiences are the best I My Dear Jason. The Associated Press is exclusively en- concert audiences in the world." This ditledctoesthe usetdt oi tfor orrepublicationofalnw dpathes eited toit or not otherwi comes from the lips of Madame Ame- I note that you have been revising credited in this paper and the local newo pub- lita Calli-Curci. And it seems that some of the old favorites of late. Why fished therein. ,sm fteodfvrtso ae h she, who has sung all over Europe stop with Charles Mills Gayley? I Enterel at the posloffce at Ann Arbor, and America, ought to know. And M4ichigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $3.5o; by mail, doubtless many will be greatly sur- have a perfectly good suggestion for $4.O' e: A prised to hear it, those who have the emendation of W. S. Gilbert. it Offcecs: Ann Arbor Press Buildinganay-d ind na 1 1r e . Phons: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, 96o. Sigied comImunications, not exceelin 300 dsO will he vuhblished in Tile Daly at the discretion of the Editor. Upon reqrest, the iderliity of communicants will be re- garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Tcleplhones, 2414 and 176-M MANAGINO EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAHUE News 1 ditor..............Julian E. Mack City Editor...................Harry -iLey Editorial Board Chairman....R. C. Moriarty Night Ed-tors E H. Aies' A. B. Connable R. A. Iilington T. E. F-iske Harry C. Clark J. G. Garlinghouse P.: M. Wagner S ots Editor............Ralph N. Byers Women's Fditcr...........Winona Iibbard Telegrarph Editor....... ......... R. B. Tarr Sunday Magazine Editor......F. L. Tilden Music Editor... ...........Ruth A Nowell Assistant City Editor. Kenneth C. Kellar Editorial Board Paul Einstein l2. G. Baetcke Marion Baflow N. Berkmin Helen I rOwn lkrnad'te Co G, . xvDavis l . srld I h'licl f',C. Fingerl T. P. lenry Dgrothy 'Kam Toseph Kruger Flirabe+h Tie R. R. McGreg Robert Ramsay Andrew Propper Assistants e, J. McGinnis Mansfield E. C. Mack Verena Moran te Regina Reichimann S. A,. Smith h W.11. Stoneman e 3t. R. Stow K. I;. Styer in N. R. Thal S. B. Tremble herman W. J. Walmtour or, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE HI. FAVROT Advertising .................E. L. Dunne Advertising.............Perry M. Hayden Advert sing +... ..........C. Pudy Adver ising.................... W. Roesser Advertising .... ........W. K. Schere Acounts ................ C. W. Christie Circulation .... ......Jno. Haskin Publication...............Lawrence Pierce Assistants Bennic Caplan Harold A. Marks John Conlin Byron Parker Alinm B. Crouch 5. A. Roinson Louis . IDetr . M. Rockwell roseph J. .Finn I1. E. Rose r )avid A. Fox Will Weise Lauren Haiht C. V. White ,' R .IHawkinson R. C. Winter Edw. ID. loedemaker FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1923 Night Editor--RAY BILLINGTON SOLVING THE PEACE PROBLEM The reasonable and invaluable in- terpretation given to the existing peace treaty by Count Albert Appon- yi, who lectured in the Natural Science auditorium Wednesday night, was an expression of a beautiful idealism.- Count Apponyi blames the powers that framed the treaty for the one-sided dictation of the pact, for the excess- ively large reparations which were asked, and for the general endanger- ng of world peace. The general re- duction of armaments in the defeated countries is, he claims, a direct cause for another war and, he points out, the division of the conquered coun- tries is a direct blow at democratic government which should be based on self determination. Finally he places the responsibility for straightening out the tangle on some impartal pow- er and suggests for this position of trust, the United States. Several of the points brought out in Count Apponyi's lecture are sound and practicable. It is the duty of the United States to aid in establishing a firm foundation for world peace but, at the same time, it is not to be ex- pected that, however much the Unit- ed States might enter into world pol- itics, her voice would be of more in- fluence than the voices of the several great powers who are already in the struggle. Nations are composed of human ingredients and it would cer- tainly be a far step toward a perfect civilization if a victorious nation would refrain from taking advantage of its defeated sister. The amount of the reparations may have been ex- cessive, but, comparing the value of the damages asked with those asked in past wars, they do not seem to be too great. Germany who has been the loudest of the protestants against the reparations has imported more cotton in the last year than any other European nation, even including Great Britain, and her copper market in this country is again assuming the big proportions that it readhed before the war. It is plainly evident that her the rear of European culture. But viz.: mind you, she says "concert audi- There are people on the campus( ences", meaning that they appreciate so low down upon the scale-f concerts more than do the Europeans. They never would be missed;r That appreciation is a cultivated we've got 'em on the list- 1 thing. We have known that we are They don't stand in with us at c literally and proverbially behind, and all; we just ring up "no we' have struggled to make it up. We sale"- are not unambitious in that line. We've got 'em on the list andr But we are not equal in musicai they never will be missed? knowledge or in musical achievement There's the guy that thinks yourf to Europe. Europe has had that back office is a pretty place to park of her for centuries. It is born into And hangs around from dewy every new member of the race, while morn until it's getting dark; t America has been growing away from And the one who won't removet such influences. America is not yet his hat from his cephalict inherently musical. 'bone, But, on the other hand, says Mad- And the fish who reads your ame Gallic-Curci, only the European letters and who listens whilet knows and appreciates the opera and you phone;t its possibilites. He wants the color Now folks, you, know a guy liket and dramatic effects, and orchestral that oughtn't to exist;I smashes that are found in opera. The He never would be missed, oh,I quieter subtleties do not appeal. He he never would be missed! t is more flamboyantly emotional. He Yours for freedom of does not want his art so intimate. His speech (if not of the1 is a disinterested cultural view, press) % It all resolves into the fact that -OKo.* Madame Galli-Curci finds more of THE KEY TO TILI4Y BRYAN'SI sympathy and intimacy in the Ameri- EVOLUTION can concert audiences. For the same (The resemblance of the name Tilly reason she likes the best and most Bryan to that of a well-known pub- typical of American music. America licist is merely fortuitous. Mr. Bryan looks for a personality, a feeling .of is a fictitious character, but repre- friendship in a musician, which is ,to! sentative of a group of people who be gained only in concert recitals. drive autonobiles, use the telephone, Americans go not only for the music, own radio sets and play golf, yetc as does Europe, but for all of mood have never caught up on the patentl or appeal that can be gained from the facts of evolution.) artist and the music together. Our forbears used to climb in trees( A IACK I OUR COLLEGES Ana -ang by tailsnamidthe breezeI Living among college men irings Ad wear a skin of shaggy hairt one to the conclusion that there is And lead a life absolved from e a vital something lackng in our ed- care. ucational system. The colleges are bending their en- Now Bryan does not think with ergies primarily to giving their stu- glee dents knowledge, and still more know- A low-down Monkey is the Key ledg. The colleges are making out To his exalted personage. of their students able doctors, en- And endless chatt'ring persiflage. gineers, chemists, lawyers, dentists; but no one has undertaken the task Yes, Bryan thinks he's living drit, of making "men" out of their students And made of matter quite' inert, at the same time. Our educators and But Tilly is not made of clay, the general public seem to have em- For his ancestors used' to bray. braced the hazy notion that if suffi- cient facts and technical'- training So Bryan lives in ecstacy: were stuffed into our youth, then ly He thinks he knows his pedigree, some strange unknown method they But Tilly is not made of clay, would inevitably become .vkluable, For his ancestors dined on hay. righteous, and publi-spirited citi- zens. On this one point I say with glee But has this hazy notion any real I'm sure a Donkey is the Key basis i fact? After all, is there any To that exalted personage E necessary relation between knowledge And endless braying persiflage. and morality, right-doing, or whatev-' ery one pleases to call it? It is true So Bryan never has evolved: that education does give one an in- His evolution's not yet solved. creased ability to distinguish bet(een Soon Tilly's bray will die away, the right and the wrong, to discern But Evolution's here to stay.- the good from the evil, but it does ARISTOPHANES. not necessarily provide one with the incentive and the will to follow the Mr. Aristophanes: We observe that good and the right. Because one sees you call for light caps at' several what is just and right, does it follow points in your manuscript. It is the that one will do what is just and one great sorrow of our life that we right? have not that variety of type at our In whose sphere does it lie to pro- disposal. We are very sorry; and vide the necessary incentive and will? have circumvented the difficulty to the How shall it be done?, Can and ought best of, our ability. it be done? Are questions demanding * * * solution before this vital lack in our If You Mate Vulgarity, Stop Here- educational, system can be remedied. Spitoons, Spitoons, Gay, festive spitoons- Spitoons with a past, Spitoons with a future, EDITORIAL COMMENT GOVEIRNOR ALLEN TO (4OVERNORI PINCHO'T (The Boston Evening Transcript) Governor Allen of Kansas talks like a real governor. "If," he says, "I were the governor of Pennsylvania and 1300 bootleggers of Philadelphia had sent me word that they did not in- tend to obey the law of Pennsylvania, the next morning Philadelphia would be awakened by the reveille of a sol- dier's bugle and that night she'd go to bed at soldier's taps and every saloon would wear a padlock." This means' merely that if there is successful re-1 sistance to the civil law, the gover- nor of a State, as the chief officer of law enforcement, is empowered to call the State's military forces to his aid and is justified in doing so. In' other words, neither Pennsylvania' nor any other State which has legis- lation providing for the enforcement! of prohibition laws is warranted in "passing the buck" on to the Federal authority. There could not be a bet- ter answer to Governor Pinchot's at- tempt to blame President Coolidge for the failure of prohibition enforcement In Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania-Pinchot doctrine is very d'fferent from the Kansas doc- trine. It confesses helplessness en the part of the State. Kensas has had prohibition for forty-two years. Her people believe in it. They are en- forcing it, and have no disposition to "lie down" on, the national authority., If Pennsylvan'a, having also a prohi- bition law of its own, cannot enforce it, the fact is an indication that the people of Pennsylvania-have on their statute books a law that they really, do not want. IS THE INTEREST GONE (The Penn State Collegian) To the Editor: A good many years ago Penn State came into the possession of an Alma Mater. Since then it has been an old and cherished custom to s'ng thatl Alma Mater at the close of every ath- letic event. When the final whistle has blown and the teams have given their college yells, the students as of one accord, arise, take off their hats and sing those four, old verses. In the early days, when this insti- tution was an infant, and everyone at- tending these games was directly int terested in the games as a faculty member or as a student, not a soul atirre from his place till th las ed leisure hours. We've got to work to keep going." * * * h ave ALL WZK---4ATINELS K WED.and S-T. The SELWYNS present in association with Ad tlh Kleuter ML AS "Ju~iei", (ADI AN-ANN ARBOR BIUS LINE Central ,Tine (Slow Time) Leave Chamber of Commerce Week Days Sundays 6:45 a. m. 6:45 a.m. 12:45 P. m. 6:45 P. m. 4'45 P.I.. JAS. H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor Phone 926-M Adrian, Mich. gv.T"rre +'sn ... _.,, ,.s:_ , r . _. .. Ica. .-T.n "wn Mrvaia: n..+ris ++.,,,.,.a.oa wham asplay That should he one of the fe'v things that a college education ought to teach-how to spend leisure hours. Education should arouse intellectual curiosity and the intoelectually cur- iou s person is never at loss for work that, is both prolitaole and entertain- ing. Diily classified for real results. ,_-.R ........... : . HAT #1pi Al FROMtrit t FACTORY FOR QUALITY. Our Prices Can't Be Beat In Detroit or Anywhere Else FOR STYLES The college man will always find the correct thing waiting for him. sIave a Dollar or More at Our We nanui~iclatrebatsand o al kSto fceaig urebckg .... MARTIN'S HAND LAUNDRY For Stidents Only First C Ha s ndia Wo'k PR1ONE 17194 Third Year in An nArbor TYPEWmVTER S O RGood ;M attf zs Reasonable rices Hamilton0 But;s Sure a l meJanufileture hais .-ad 'do all kinds of: cleaning and reblocking (if I hats at low prices for high cbiss work. FACTORY HAT STORE i P('K A RD lS6E T --1 -Were D. IT. R. 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