PAGE F'o'uR TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 12. c l p 9 tiri ig n tti 1 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board int Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Assciciation. The Associated Press is exclusively Cn- 4 titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-' master (Ceneral. Subscription by carrier. $3.50; by mail,. .$4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; busi- ness, g6o. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-"3 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP 1't. WAGNER Editor.............John G. Garlinghouse News Editor."...........Robert G. Ramsay City Editor........... Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. Davis Harold A. Moore Thomas P. Henry Fredk. F. Sarrow, Jr. Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Ihal Sports Editor........William H. Stoneman Sunday Editor...........Rooert S. Mansfield Women's Editor ........ ..... Vernea Moran Music and rama......obert B. Henderson Telegraph Editor......William J. Walthour Assistants Louise Barley Helene S. Ramsay Marion Barlow Regina Reiehmanin Leslie S. Bennets Marie Reed Smith Cady Jr. Edmarie Schrauder Willard B. rosby Frederick H. Shillito Valentine L. Davies C. Arthur Stevens tAmes W. Fernamberg Marjory Sweet oseph O. Gartner Herman Wise tanning iouseworth Eugene H. Gutekunst Elizabeth S. Kennedy Robert T.. DeVore Elizabeth Liebermann Stanley C. Crighton Winfield H. Line Leonard C. Hall ' C rE. Ohlnacher Thomas V. Koykka Wiiliam C. Pattersont Lillias K. WVagner BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960- BUSINESS MAyAGER WM. D. ROE SER Advertising....E. L. Dunne Advertising.....................-J. J. Finn Advertising..................1. A. Marks Advertising.................H. M. Rockwell Accounts....................Byron Parker Circulation.................R. C. Winter Publication .................... John Conlin Assistants P. W. Arnold W. L. Mullins W. F. Ardussi K. F. Mast Gordon Burris H. L. Newmann F. Dentz Thomas Olmstead Philip Deitz 3.1). Ryan David Fox N. Rosenzweig Norman Freehling Mar aretaSandberg tar cr . i... 1 Shbenf ld Just as college and university men the country over resented the insults CAMPUS OPINION heaped upon them in connection with Anonymous communications will be ; 1u S C t o o r i.t disregarded. The names of communi- the notorious trial i Chicago this *ants will, however, be regarded as AND summer, so the youth of the nation confidential upon request. will resent the implication that the ED R A M A western crime is a manifestation of AN ORATORICAL BLUNDER its general moral degeneration. It may To the Editor: be true that in every class of young After congratulating the winning THIS AFTERNOON: 'layton Ham- men and women there are found those team of the Twenty-Eighth Annual iton le*ctures on "The Od Comedy" whose conduct is disgraceful, at any Series of debate between Northwest- in the Natural Science auditorium at rate unbecoming; but it is equally ern and Michigan Friday evening, may 4:15 o'clock.Q true that this has always been so. I wish to remind the last speaker for The youth of today is just as virile, the rebuttal as to his statement. "Ja- THE iIBALCHICH CHORUS just as fine, as ever. Our elders are pan need not go to the Philippine A review, by Robert Ramsay. too prone to forget the indiscretions Islands. She has enough of Man- Russia and things Russian now have of their own youth to recognize that churia,' Korea, Formosa ,etc." Al- their vogue. America which once' even though they may not have known though the influence of our sister na- worshipped the rising sun of Italy, in of the moral degeneracy of certain of lion is commonly said to be great, turn to give way to an almost insane their compatriots it existed just the Manchuria, today, is still under the adoration of the glory of German mu- same. The only diference between soeC i sic, now expends all of its native in- same Th ony diferncebet E sovereignity of the Republic of China! tensity upon the Russian, with such this and other generations is the I I is a ser'ious bltunder on part of I pono the Russhang ith smaco amount of publicity given to its mis thetsaid speaker in an intercollegia ervor that anything whih sm lgaethe rugged dignity of that nation is takes. debate, discussing international rela- hailed with clamonous and insistent tions, however "less capable" they applause. IDEALISM AND THE PRESS are, to make a verbal concession of We are hearing more and more from Members of the American Society j the territory of a friendly republic. that strange land. Rimsky-Korsa- of Newspaper Editors meeting in Y. M. Chang. koff and Tschaikowsky are taking the Washington last week were charged j place of Beethoven on the musical! by President Coolidge with the preser tnrcgrams, and the people who once y o As eicanideaishthrohAN HERETIC SPEAS bowed in reverence to the serene ma- vation of American idealism through ITo the Editor: jesty of German music, now look to; the great press which they represent. When I noticed the title to your the strange, harsh melodies of the In the course of his address the Presi- editorial, A Twentieth Century Heresy, Steppes of Russia as the represent- dent became responsible for state I having always believed The Daily ative music of the day. To some Rtis- ments to the effect that "America i Editor representative of collegiate sia is a nation of mystery. whose a nation of idealists" and that " pr re etiing colete jonroudest product is a man with a deep progressive thinking, I expected to chief ideal of the American people is r abe naSS voice. a voiwe with resonance and didealism."in o te n thorough denunca- intensity, like the glory of an organ; tien of the ousting of Bishop Brown to others it is a land of a music bar- Speaking of the United States afterfi from the Episcopal church. Imagine ,arius, uncoutlhi, gaudy as the costumes the manner of Einstein the country my amazement and dismay when I that rover their stalwart frames, amu- and its people may be considered, with read: "The grievance of the Episco- sic as robust and r-egged as the hardyi some degree of truth, to be compara - ipal Church against Bishop Brown lives of the peasants. tively idealistic among the nations of seems to be a real one, and the result The Kibalchich choir which s,ng the world. But in the eyes of the of the trial is not only none too harsh last n'ght. was gre'ted with almost journalistic visionary, her press still but fully to be expected." And then insane delight by an audience who looms up as an untamed monster with t o seemed to find each succeeeding se- l as a substantiation of this absurd lection more barbarous and uncouth statement such phrases as: He de- than the first: an audience who gave but a persisting stagnation of ideals nies the existence of God; the divinity themselves completely away by thwir; and their practice. and earthly existence of Christ . ." wild enthusiasm over the arrangement Thousands of metropolitan news- The only thing more pathetic-than of the song of the Volga Boatman. papers pour forth from their man- that his peers, belonging to a past their applause' at this auspicious junc.- strous presses every hour of every generation and seeped in nineteenth ture obviously springing from the fact day sheets literally reeking in crime, . that it was the only piece they knew filth, and degradation of the com- century thought, should conemn him d recognizeri as a famous bit. But munity of the nation, and of theis that one possessed of a twentieth An Arbor wh'ch has been taught the century education should concur in infnite beauties of the song of the world. Through fewer hours of the that condemnation, and likewise mis- Volga rivermen, by Feodor Chaliapn a and inless r in official . . 11, 111l!11. ". 1./1./ "./l1./? ""/S"1JJJ, "ll.Il./11.I"JYJ1,/.I. "d1. /.I"1~1,df, ~. . « . .d./"' °', '"l1. '. ".I". ". , "d~ BLUE BOOKS rw I' ALL SIZES /. oonoce 4' (Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk) { v".d,. l./".J.1.. ..r I"./' /.. ', +./. "1. .00./..I./././.,I4 ./.!.E",.6+":I",. ~./.A.r/,I"..!".+ A. ". o.. 0.0 V-0,4.0 24-Hour Service ITowv Is the Timne to Have your pen troubles taken care of, Rider's Pen Shop the place where real pen maker's service is found. Exams will soon be here. Be prepared and know that you are all set. This service costs little, it means much to you. F ,0 P C n S ISkilled RepairingI SLEEP ANY WHERE BUT E A T AT R E X'S T HE CL U®L.UN CH 712 Arbor Streot Near State tend Packard Ste. Not Whe.her You Shall But Which Company NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL Phone 807-M i W. E. Hamaker r. N. aoense uay ar in M'6e ivuis, vtc understand him. i not lik'ely to vcept it from the F.rJoso . H. Sincl representatives of the press in smaller According to his own statement hand of a lesser tutor, and though the Louis W. Kramer municipalities distribute their prod- Bishop Brown believes both in the ex- voices blended in beautiful harmony. ucts soiled by the meddling fingers of istence of God and in the divinity and and the deep bass voices rang out the business interests of the com- y their vibrating splendor, it lacked the ________________________________- earthly existence of Christ. He be- atoiaieam niiultuh munity or ruled by the overhanging Nee..a . xit oti h authoritative and individual tolich. TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1925 munitt or rul by theyraing lieves that God exists not i the pants There is much that can be admired _____ __________threat of financial ruin if they fail to bdce omo awt tm court the pleasure of these interests. with stom- in a choir, and much to he praised in Nigght Editor-THOS. P. HENRY, JR. ach, liver and bowels, but as' a great the Kibalchich group: it would le And the great idealistic press of universal reality. His God is not a pleasant to say something of the war- IDDEN "STARS"America excuses itself with the plea God upon which Episcopalians nave a velous balance in such an organiza- that it is printing only "what the peo, in ftertn fultterfn In the mind of the average fresh-tt s rmonopoly, but the combination of all tion, of their tone of quality, their fine man in the University, the starath want!j the immutable natural laws, the con- gradations ,the ease with which they The President specifically referred pass from full to mez voices, the lete is a demi-god of some sort, an to what he fatteringly called the rul sumation and symbolization of the object for worship, a never-to-be-at- to which the editors were probably unity of the entire universe. God is glories in the splendid individuality tained ideal. Unless in his prepara Imost devoted; namely: "that the not apart from the universe but an of an artist, who regards the human tory school days, the embryo college editorial and the business policies of inseparable part of it. His Christ is voice as the most magnificent of in- man has indulged in athletic competi- a much greater divinity than a mere struments it is a travesty to speak of the paper are to be conducted by miracle begiyc tion and has been sought after by .m c got shadow; he is the true a symphony of human voices, for a maycleesa ta"strictly separate compartmients." If!sypowihtse many colleges as "team''material, its. divinity of man. He is the highest symphony, with its emphasis upon the never occurs to him that he might this were so in a majority of instances spiritual state to which a man can repression of the individual to the the editors might have felt sincerely i. unity of the whole is a mistaken idea. possibly be in the same general class Thse;nHeinsjmicaiperfection.Suchac posibl complimented but, unfortunately, such. .. The symphony which aims at perfec- with the athlete in possessing latent a statement cannot truthfully be said, state is divinity, and therefore Christ tion of unity. ensemble, tone, dies be- possibilities as a competitor in some papers uninfluenced in their news and is divine and the son of man. Only at cause of that very perfection. college sport. c eI riluce their nws and one point does Bishop Brown disagree, * * * editorial policies still compose a piti- and that is as regards the Trinity and THE FACULTY CONCERT There are today i te the ful minority in spite of codes aid is entirely unnecessary to a concep- A review, by Robert Henderson. ethics, in spite of state and national many men who would make good ath- esscins f te andetational tion of God. All the forms and stories Mrs. Okkelberg introduced the B + letes and who would be benefited asoctons, fore the - o f the Bible, says Bishop Brown, are flat Concerto of Bortkiewicz Sunday physically by a tryout for a Varsityhesedeseainspitof the re- true not as literal things but as afternoon at the Faculty Concert, as ariy peated allegations of editors and pub- ! y blcl o o . I re o h team. They hesitate, however, to test symbolical of God. In order for the far as I know, for the first time in ta.Teheiaehoeettelushers to the contrary. ;inaymnt their prowess, failing to realize that The only great daily paper irdinary an to grasp religion it must Ann Arbor. Evidently the composer every one of their "heroes" has once Theny grea daily pae n tebe symbolized; the Bible furnishes is largely inclined toward the mod- been an amateur. country wich as any aue fr this symbolization. ernist wing of contemporary music, Of no single sport is this more true boasting of its ideals, any actual proof If such a belief is heresy then it is not so much to the Dadaist disson- than of track. Michigan always has thits ptting into te the impossible for a thinking man to be ances of the Parisian decadents as to a sufficiency of stars, but lacks in tng atxae m y otaed abts otherwise. Perhaps this belief is not the primitive Russians with their and approximnatedl by other editors numbers-a big factor in a dual meet. and eitorial writers, is The Christian the Episcopalian religion, it is re- weird, sensous elan. The piece, be-, The coaches need the physical support Science Monitor whose existence is ligion, lam a Jew but fervently agree yond question, is a significant compo- of the many men here who would made possible only by the support Of with Bishop Brown in his conception sition, filled with a moving, rapid,i make the team if only they would take of the divinity of Christ. I do not re- voluptuous fire that grips the audi- maete emifol he oldtk.the religious organization whose name ; gretthtlehsbe xeldfo the trouble to try . Those who have m thet that he has been expelled from once and sweeps them along to its it bears. In its columns, crime has th psoa been successful in intramural com- absolutely no place; on its editorial t Episcopal sect. I would almost shrill climaxes. i\gore than this, the petition-the many thousands we read page, there is absolute fearlessness wish that all Priests, Pastors, and work, not definitely difficult, is un- about in the papers-should form the Rabbis, such as he, be expelled from usually grateful to the soloist. alou n heppes-hul fr teand leadership. To it alone might ap their sc ota h nucleus of this new material. propriately be ascribed the favorite thasi sect so that they may form the Mrs. Okkelberg in her interpreta- There is ,of course, one good reason s n " F hWh m basisof the true universal religion. It tion brought out every specific possi- I why there are not more men out for to Read" might hasten the epoch, which must bility and shading in the piece. For- track. As a major sport it has not W t I come, wherein to be religious one need merly, she has seemed rather cold, Whenra majority of te aily papers be neither Christian or Mohammedan, even a stiffly reserved pianist, smack- sadn towihbseball, ae fAeiacnpitt scennw Catholic or Protestant, Jew or Gen- ing of the academy and a nieti-onome; ball, and especially football have at' columns, to similarly fearless editorial Gtl we Ptesawt, be orlgen- Sndayfafternoonmyowevermsteodim- tained. This perhaps is partly the sI tile; when there will be no religions Sunday afternoon, however, she di- fapult of the Athletic association but i ages, or, if you wish, to real idealism but religion. If Bishop Brown is a. played a vieve and spirit in her play- is mostly due to lack of student sup- policy, then, and only then, will the heretic may I have the privilege of ing that made her seem a very real port. The track team, as much o American Society of Newspaper Edi- calling myself a heretic; may we all artist. There was a grandeur, a bom- ore than any other, deserves andbecome heretics tors be worthy of the charge of keep-become heretics; may the word con- bast in her fortissimo passages, and a must get the active and passive sup- ngnate a belief that there is no God but ringing clarity in the softer moments. port of the University if Mive s the great universal truth; no sect but The rhythm moved in majestic cycles, to maintain her position in this The Spanish government puts pleas- the bond of righteousness. the melodies glowed and whined with branch of competition. So-callea Jrc and excitement into gainIng the J. A. A., '26. a barbaric, Oriental passion. "star" athletes are indeed to be com financial s~pport of its people by con- It seems strange that so talented a mended, but they are usually phan- ducting lotteries. But then, the United A PUFF OR TWO soloist, a musician so astonishingly1 toms of the imagination. Every Mich- States could hardly expect to put such To the Editor: brilliant and precise-and the en- igan man has hidden potentialities in a policy into effect with a hard-head- May I make public a serious state thusiasm is literally not exaggerated some direction. More than likely ed business man like Coolidge as of affairs? A young matron with a -should be so generally disregarded. there are many who have meteoric, atj president. two-year old daughter is in danger of Mrs. Okkelberg has no business play- any rate adequate, athletic careers in j(losing all of her "womanly charms." ing with amateur orchestras; she is store for them. Washington landlords have assailed E Her husband, a graduate assistant, too beautiful an artist to have her Coolidge on the grounds that he is spends from twelve to fifteen hours i work marred by the errors of hopeful THE "JAZZ ERA" championing a "communistic meas- per day in his laboratory, leaving her but rather hopeless students-above At regular intervals, the nation is ure" in the Reed housing bill. Yes, with many lonely evenings to be oc- all, by the mistakes of the wood-wind horrified by a crime of some sort, the one can always turn to that argument cupied. They have little to go on, and ! and brass sections. Her place is with latest instance of which is the slay- even against the Child Labor amend- she must stay with the child. How to the larger orchestras, the Detroit ing of a California woman by her ment.break the monotony of this existence Symphony for example ,and were it daughter, who is designated an ex-becomes a real problem. It is true not for the homely truth of prophetsj ample of the "jazz era." Granting the A London dispatch announces that that onQ can always find companion- in their own lands she would receive fact that the crime is revolting, an the leek is no longer the national ship in books but the puff of a good the recognition she deserves. example of moral degradation of the emblem of Wales but has been dis- cigarette would make such friends Miss Lorraine Parke, harpist, and wrs'csor. it is rata~ifiiin tat$- *r nnor. ',,-iby1.....i .thb~A r.Afnlil A ,-r zoofmore like' humns.' And ni n lnt ,. ,lt.iA the Unive'rsity v wnnhonv orches~tra1 Order Your J-Hop House Party Flowers Now. COUSINS &HALL GI I E. UNIVERSITY AVE. Phone 115 Ferns, Plants, Corsages, Bouquets, Baskets. I L! A, FOR EVERY WOMAN Comfort and Relief From the sting and irritation caused by the coibintion of iy winds and hard water, which bring such discomfort in so many ways. 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