PAVE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1923 ... --- TrheC Ccess. Regarding the writing of them, aiwpuse are not particular. Precise rhe torical rules, for the most part, can and ego to the devil. This does not mean that the manuscripts will be unac- :iter-a-toor ceptable, should there be, by any Lchance. a decently developed style. The editors of The Sunday Maga- The chief things are originality and zine are of the opinion that, notwith- veracity to some phase of life. And standing the various campus pubIlca- this, of course, includes everything tions which print short stories, essays, elfrom the romantic fairy tale to the vignettes and verse by students, there most naturalistic treatment of a remains a definite need for a chance theme. The two are, after all, closer at literary-expression hereabouts. The to each other than is popularly sup- only campus publications giving op- posed. portunity-for this are The Sunday With such a scope, it is doubtful if Magazine, Chimes and Whimsies, many will be pleased. Adherence to though the latter is not strictly a a particular policy regarding the type University venture, which is sufficient of material published goes far towards reason that it should be better than building up a regular and reliable it has been. clientele of readers. Fortunately, we Chimes, with its best foot foremost, are not particularly concerned with as is avowedly not concerned with tend readingpublic. If we had been, the encies in the direction of artistic lit- Sunday Magazine probably would erary exression. It substantiates have been scrapped some time ago. that by going in for the sort of thing There' is little to fear from. any of which "will do the campus good' and this. If the stories do come in, and by calling itself "the magazine of if they are passable, the ain of this campus opinion", thereby tomplinent- mezzo-editorial will have been ac- ing the campps and making a dubious't inplished. If they do come in and impliestion regarding itself. are bad, they can probably be pub- Whimsies, for the most part, is a lished safely with the thought that fine example of the precipitate of the they are not as bad as nearly 80% of rhetoric department. Generally, it is the stuff now appearing on the campuso a characteristic. and regretable psale,in print, and iff none does come in, pink ad slightly top-heavy. It suf- as was the case several years :ago : fers from being terrifically conscious when this same thing was attempted, of its Mission-a sort of literary Sun- we shall be content to aImitls that ithe day night concert by the Salvation outlet for whatever liitracy expres- Army. sion as tle campus posseses is uore The' Sunday Magazine, like the oth- than adequate, esufeels the lack of material to draw from. There is a distasteful hetro-E geneity about the whole thing result- Ca ing rom raher mnssccesfu ss (Choniissied froni Page One) ing from a rather unsuccessful at- But leaving facetious . speculation, tempt to present a field unlimited by ye are faced by the facto themselves. the campus boundaries. To lift from The first thng that strike us is the the University Catalogue, it tries to deal with "Literature, Science and f'tility of such misdirected efforts as ,, . .the wsould-be cleansers o, the world Arts" in as intelligent manner asthbave wiade. Doean ot possible. Of policy, standards, cru- Do we not have "Madame Sovary, "Jurgen", "Fleu du Mal", sades and war-cries it is lacking en- "Sirner", "The Genius" and numer- cepting those which can be implied eus other books which have been bit from the above. torly attacked, at our disposal? After Obviously, all that the pubhcations the court decree on Jurgen, succes- of an institution can ever hope to be sive'editions ticked from the presses is only a reflection of the individaloflipuisesafstsscnd temperaments composingltht institu- tion. In this the entire list of pub- from a clock. The promptest of buy- lications, with the possible exception era failed to get earlier editions than list ninth or tentc of The .Daily proper, is commonly ofhDaly. proer is couoonlyhre This obstreperous morality-howling handicapped For sout reason there is as futile in regard to the drama as attention to literary things inmthe it is in connection with literature. attntin t; ltearythigs n teThe box office receipts of "Aphro- larger Eastern Universities and col- Ite", "The ei V i and "he leges than there is here at present. Fool" bear witness to its effectiveness Nevertheless, we feel, with our gaze towards the success of those very pro- turned steadfastly on The Ultimate ductions against which it is directed. Good and The Shinng Light that there In New York at this very moment the must be somewhere, some sort of writ- manager of "Artists and Models" is ing that is, for one reason or another, seeking a larger theatre in which to not contributed to any of the above give the presentation, simply because mentioned publications. the theatre-going crowdshave become We cherish no expansive delusions too bulky -for the present accommoda- concerning tie stories we intend to tions. The increase in the size of the run. It is unfortunate but Wholly nat- houses which have witnessed "Artists ural that the majority of themwill be and Models" was brought about be- quite bad, a smaller proportion me- cauge thepolice adveried the on- diocre, and if; withirfi a year-wer.- picuous absence of apparel in the ceive one or two good contributions, s show, somethingththemngr our chortles will be heard for a con- tould stever have dared to do. siderable distance. We would hesitate to question the The stories must be about 100 worthiness of the objects which these words, original, based on some inte- splenetic attacks of our Comstockian ligible idea and be true to satfi fund progeny have in view, yet the fact re-a apinta qaliie oflif.-Tha i, al'mains that true Art -will live regard- and yet we look forward to little suc- less of opposition while pornography perishes quickly if it is ignored. Mor- ality is not cheated by judicial deci- F. L. Tilden............Editor sions. Nine tenths of our intellect- Donald E. L. Snyder.....Books ually stagnant population would not Robert Bartron........ ..Drama be jarred from their Saturday Evening Normand Lockwood...... Music Post complacency by a mere book or Robert Bartron Henderson... play, no matter how evolutionary such Dramai a book or play might be. Our moral Lisle Rose, Halsey Davidson, guardians fail to realize this and con- Newell Bebout, Samuel Moore, tinue to waste their own energy and Jr. other peoples endurance -by cavilling The Sunday Magazine solicits against an isaginary monster. If manuscripts from all persons af- thsey create a Frankenstein may he not filiated with the University. Man- be expected to behave in the tradi- uscripts must be typewritten, tional manner? Their case is not triple spaced and written on one moral, it is psychopathic. side only. * * Huneker's opinion is a-propos. "If The Sunday Magazine acknowl all the evil books that have seen the edges The American Secular Un- light of publication had wrought te ion review service for "The Un- evil predicted of them the earth would official Observer" department.* be an apomination. In reality we dis- _cuss with varying shades of enthu- siasm such frank literature-and aft- er the hullabaloo of the moral bell- boys has ceased the book is quietly It is this peliep of Sis Imaain5 t forgotten on the shelf. Flaubert once publish articles of opinion by both student and' faculty membecs if, in wrote of the vast fund off indifforence the judgment of the editor, these arti- possessed by society. Dramas, books. cle, are of intrinsice svluzxd interes.t This does not meIn that manuscripts pictures, statues have never ruined seiicited r reoluntrily offered are our over-moral world. The day for necessarily in accord ,with editovia ss opion either in principle or form. tsick things-if there ever was a day- '.t .nueCh a o iaga Tfoee) illusion N. L MANGOUNY By Avedik Issahaekan A Leaf from the Armenian Literature Fortunate is the man who has an illusion, because the world becomes for him a home, a sweet home. Fortunate is the man who is deceived by a beautiful lie, because the real world is bitter and cruel and the will of men is evil and unjust. And finally, fortunate is the man who has a dream, because it is that dream that spreads its flowery gardens amid deserts of snakes and t rs. There was a ard wo was a less 's tc'mp He plodded iro m'l'sto, islag telin old stories of good and noble deeds. ie revealed in ihsmb'e cottages is vision of just future, now cnigteeing for while the hearts of the youing with the love cf justice, now -areusing thle slum'beri" conscience of -stilyhearted en. Andthsus he eared his bread and btter, whichis every man's daily due. One Autmn day a he "as going fztem one village to another, a dense fog obscsre-- erro pat ira'ndho '.st his ray y the brshes. Te darkzn"ss o nih ni e on, and tle north «_1,:r1b w fareIv (Cmtinned on Fzce Seven) ae Buy Your Christmas Diamond Now. Use Our Christ Crs-Gift weekly PAYMENT URCHASE . I _ LAN We also sell Watches, Clocks, and Jewelry on this plan SCHLANDERER & SEYFRIED JEWtLERS 34SMAIN Never Forget That Our Grill is a'Tradition at Michigan La" TiURON STRET ACROSS FROM D. U. R. STATION WE'VE BEEN SERVING THE BEST FOR YEARS