PAGE TEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1925 _ _ 1 -1 Students to As the Chilean climate is ratherI temperate we do not wear raccoon coats. Therefore, we have no colleges.{ However, we have students, who at- tend the secondary schools and the University. The licea or secondary school is a six year condensation of the American High School and Col- lege, with the virtues of these and none of their defects, but with many defects of their own. The University is the ensemble of the professional schools, the ateneum, the aula, the laboratory. Six years seem enough to learn the humanities, acquire the habit of smoking and deserving a Bachelor's degree, if we bear in mind that the State (practically all of our education is furnished gratuitously by the State, that is, by ourselves) does not bother to teach us the subleties of advertising nor the intricacies of hore-back riding. One a Rostonia-nI nlAv roved to , I 1 1 a i' , ,, ' a, de Estudiantes was destroyed by the potential Fascisti of Santiago, and the "cops" did their job by imprisoning the Rescue the young idealists. A fortnight he New later there was a saint and martyr inT the students' calendar: Gomez Rojas, ------- had died in jail. The poor fellow had gentine writer and an apcstle of Latin become insane; his jailers, with that; Americanism as opposed to Monroism, peculiar insight that is the privilege By3E. C M. had spent many hours at the club of justice, decided that he was just Prohibition is a great question everyl talking with the members--many of playing and feigning madness: so one seems to agree. This article is whcm were his fello'v writers - r they used to throw ice water on him. not about prohibition. It is about the the Great War, the Monroe Doctrine, 'They say he died reciting fragments I thirst that is supposed to seize the The Latin American League of Na-of the Divine Comedy. vernal freshman somewhat above the tions, the Symbolists Poets, the art of With a dead hero leading them, the tonsils and propel him through four Picasso. He had written at the foot "students and workers constituted a years of "intellectual activity." It of his picture: "La America Latinakn says to him, supposedly: "Consider political block, heldla, convention, and para los Latino-Americanos." So the a ew months afterward made pos- the little book-worn how he lives and opinions were divided. But every- sible the election of a progressive finds meat and di ink in the dry, dusty body agreed upon one thing; namely, candidate as president of the republic, tones of profound learning. Go thou not to subscribe to the theory of some who incorporated in his program the and 0do likewise." American extremists, that Latin reforms for which Gomez Rojas had I And does he? Robert Cooley An-I America should be for the Americans. 1 fought and died. The new president 1ell, of the sociology de, artment, has , But this unwillingness to be sub- was tremendously popular; like Mary i1found that he does not. As every-t servient to the great republic of the Pickford in America, he became body knows, this discovery was nub- north was not an expression of na- Chile's sweetheart. During his ad- lisped in Dr. Angell's now famous tionalism, nor a misdirected complex ministration the old boundary dispute ; "Ieport on lelhods of Increasing the of national weakness. Those young was put in the hands of an impartial intellectual Interest of Students at men were voicing the pride of their foreign arbiter who, by the way, is the University of Michigan," which Spanish blood, and their personal in- soon to make his decision.. Six was made at the request of our late adaptibility to a civilization alien in months ago, however, the president President Burton and the deans. its methods and ideals. of the people having become en- 4The fact is, the incoming freshmanI This Club de Estudiantes was the tangled with questionable elements- is not so thirsty as he was once sus- center of our activities. Everybody through fate rather than through pected of being. could belong to it, including members malice or incapacity-was ordered by One of Dr. Angell's recommenda- of the labor unions. The latter did a. military Junta to retire "voluntari- tions, and one which is receiving no not have to pay any fees; they were ly" from office. His own friends small support concerns a methods to welcomed as honorary members. failed him, the masses remained apa- "whet", as it were, the thirst of the There was no secrecy about any- thetic. The traditional Chilean good freshman by giving him a wee taste thing. On the contrary, frankness sense in matters political restrained of each of the sweets in store. More and onenness was the prerequisite for those who wept over his departure precisely, he suggests initiatory cour- admission-perhaps the sole requisite. from starting a civil war. Chile gave sos based on the ideas of those now What at first was Intended as a social the military directorate a. sporting presented atChicago. Amherst, Co- center soon developed into a cultural chance to make good. In the several lumbia, Rutgers, Dartmouth, Leland and political nucleus. months that ensued the whole country was quiet, intent upon preserving i navy and most of the army realized Firs cane te ievitbk~magaine their democratic institutions even at learned and literary, then the Peoples their emocrat st s t it was in senate to destroy a long un- leanedsta ieteworkingmen opsan the cost of pride. But the resigned broken tradition of constitutional life, U ti e ftSa- population found a secret relief in the andI thet miit d o e g tiago were asked to join. The after- attitude assumed by the students of ;r th itaky goerme. ta, math of the Great War with its chal- the University of Santiago, who would er with its "fake" government Junta lenging. economic issues affected the not compromise and improvised fierce was obliged to resign, and Alessandri teaching of the People's University. the exiled reformer, was instantly re- Opposition to this free school of phi- of the soldier-statesmen. A former called. Now he is on his way home, losophy and social sciences began to president of the Students' Federation and things look again normal in arise in official circles. The result reChSilSd. was that students and workers were was exiled fom the coutr ; Ite ( dran cose toeterther iterst leading members were illtreated or! (Copyright 1924, by C. S. Haight.) anrh m threatened. Public opinion gi aduallv and ideals being menaced by a coni responded to the students protest mon enemy. Industrial conflicts it had done five years before, an:ij Read th Want Ads came to be discussed in the Student's fLI5Cr T tLIA-l;A1X+.1 0 Cmenimittee G, of the American As- sociation of University Professor has rgone into the matter deeply in their' v ThirstBulletin 10. After a study of all of the courses now offered or contem- plated and an unusually thorough in- Ivestigtion into the needs of the case, Stanford, Missouri, Princeton, Wil- the committee reported itself in favorI I;, c ,I, T, I;- . 1 -~n., f n r moP nn f h attn o h cance of the material, within each field, which the course cannot ex- amone. Such treatment instead of giving a 'false sense of omniscience' would give a due sense of intellectual humility; and instead of 'taking the edge off the adventure of learning' would whet the eagerness for such ad i i r f i 7 IlIl )i II , I" I lams , Johns Iopkis and Antioch. or a course on te e na ure of t Although each of these courses or world and man." Like the others, theIventure." r sets of courses varies in detail they course would be general, even ad- usually include at least one semester mittedly superficial, and planned to James Boyd's first novel, "Drums," prerequisite for all freshman in all cover a great deal of ground. I%1ublished by Scribner's March 27th, schools and colleges of the University. Speaking of the idea, the committee has been (declared by two eminent The courses are invariably a general says: "The committee believes that a Hnie of letters to be the best novel survey or some sort designed to pres- general acquaintance with the mod- ever written on the period of the Am- ent briefly many of the interesting facts ern view of the world and man-with erican Revolution. Mr. Boyd has had and fields of knowledge and to give the modern view, that is, of "the the interest of John Galsworthy for the freshman a complete, if thin, chemical materials and the physical several years. When Mr. Galsworthy background into which to fit his out- forces that constitute living and non- was last in America he met Mr. Boyd standing interests. He gets a highly living things, the earth and its as- at Southern Pines, N.C.,-and declared condensed and reduced picture of the tronomical relations, the evolution of him a writer of exceptional promise whole thing, with, however all things plants and animals, and the physical, Two other Boyds appear on the in their correct proportion and rela- intellectual and social evolution of Scribner spring list: r homas Boyd, tion. There are thus two definite man-alone affords the perspective author of "Through the Wheat," who benefits looked for from this course. Which is indispensable for the proper continues his war studies in "Points Dr. Angell describes some of the 1 organization o, acquired knowledge of Honor," and Ernest Boyd who con- courses as follows: Ifor the full developnnt of the de_ triiutes "Studies from Ten Litera- "The 'Introduction to Contemporary sire to receive and contribute ad- tures. Civilization' at Columbia, first given vancement to knowledge. Such a per- in 1919-1920 is the best know course spective constitutes the ideal point of of this type. It has been duplicated departure for the entire intellectual at Rutgers. However, the same ideas enterprise of the undergraduate." ; has been adopted in different forms It has been widely objected that and under different names by severalj the sunerficiality of such a course \WThen other institutions. Amherst has been would be harmful rather than bene- giving a. general course in "Social and ficial to the student. Speaking of this, Economic Institutions' for nine years; the committee says: all freshmen at Dartmouth take two "It will be intellectually supejiwial initiatory courses, one entitled "Evolu- if the instructor gives the impression tion' and the other 'problems of Citi- I that his swift survey conveys all that zenship'; Leland Stanford and Mis- is worth knowing about each portion N ight souri also have courses similar to the of the field; it will not be intellec- latter; Princeton gives one called'Ilis- tually superficial if the instructor torical Int'roduction to Politics aid slakes it clear that he is touching the! Economics', and Yale, one in the evo- surface of each portion of the fieldr lution of social institutions."- and suggests something of the signifi- A uTr1 me the superiority of Protestantism by stating that in this country all presidents (including bank presi.- dents) have been Protestants. I tim- idly remarked that. in Rome, all the cardinals and even the Pope are Cath- olics. Since that day I appreciate better the education we receive in Chile, the way we do things, the way we live, and Mie. Even our defects appear to nre in a new light, as the inevitable shadow of our assets. The Bostonian lady made me realize that the only intelligent criticism is that which aims at understanding, particu- larly that which seems absurd at fiistl sight.1 So I will begin by pleading guilty. Yes, we have no dormitories, no chapel, no class in elocution. But, oh° the warmth of the boarding house in1 San Diego St., the inviting old face of{ the Church of Saint Francis, standing1 red and simple opposite the flower market! Of course in elocution forI us, we are too busy struggling to bec articulate. Yes, I plead guilty. We have no banners, no pins. We have no college spirit. We are too busy U A iUVAI - 9:3 t 4;00, 4:00 to 9r34 i i i I working out the salvation of our club; more than one strike was plan souls. ned out in its nicely decorated room In Latin countries there d'e students A young poet-known in moderni: and students. The variety known to circles all over South America, m the novelist are those who are not triculated in two or three depa'r studying any longer. They frequent ments of the University, but who wz the libraries and auditoriums, and go too busy to attend classes as he ha to the cafes at night. Without them to earn his daily bread by working many books would not be read, many an artisan-a young poet by the nan lecturers would address empty seats, of Gomez Rojas (we never kne and there would be no student night whether this was his real name or life. High priests of youth, these stu- pseudonym) was the most effecti' dents who are not studying never ' bond between students and worker graduate, never settle down, never He was a great orator and a man c look down upon the younger genera- action. This latter asset cost hi tion. Occasionally there arises from ;his freedom, and finally his life, b among them a good writer, an original cause for some time after the Gre; artist, or a tribune of the people. In War to be a man of action in Chil periods of conflict and maladjustment implied being an I. d. W. And ti the students who do not study may poor Gomez Rojas did not even kno even furnish the leader, the martyr, what these three fatal letters meant the hero. That is why, in a complete But certain things have an unusu, picture of Latin American student spell, if they are grouped in three'; life, special attention must be paid to . like the three K's, the Three Grace this variety of students. Particularly ' and the Big Three. so in connection with Chile, since one One night, at a general assembl, of them brought about a students' the old boundary dispute betwee consciousness, by finding expression Chile and a sister trepublic was di to their disquietude, leading them in- cussed, apropos of much newspape to action, and dying in jail. talk to the effect that a new war wa We used to meet in the Club de imminent as the only way out. Th Estudiantes, a. nice men's club, where students, after a heated discussion, rc someone was always playing the piano solved to oppose any idea of war an in the hall, glancing over European sent to their fellow students on th reviews, reading proofs for the stu-- ( other side of the boundary a messag dents' monthly, treating a friend at of fraternal love, requesting them t the counter. In the best room of the repudiate any attempt to engage th house one could see photographs of !twocountries in an orgy of blood an well-known people, friends of the club renewed hatred. The workers of var --Anna Pavlowa, Maria Guerrero, the ious sections of the country joine Spanish actress, Anatole France, Man- their University friends in the caus uel Ugarte. The latter, leading Ar- of peace. A few days later the Clu Ist a- a- ,wf at v P-. :at1 al linany ma [e itseit so plain that ui:, I MILK, CREAM, BAKED GOODS COLD MEATS Comfplete Stock of Groceries College Grocery i16 E. WilliamiPhone &86-J just think of the manly <0suppers you have eat- en at the larmony Cafeteria and then bring the rest of tile gang alongv with you. "Where the Best Food is Served." OWN Paint Now--- * Payater ---ten months to pday Paint your home now. Pay later. Get the advantage of the new business .plan of the Sherwin-Williams Company, the world's largest paint and varnish makers. Keep your property in first class condi- tion all the time with no financial strain at all. You enjoy the new paint on the house as you go along-pay for it as you go along, too. Very simple arrangement-no trouble at all -no red tape. If you delight in having your house look second to none in the street and well protected at the same time, come to this store and we will give you details. Or if you prefer, phone us and we'll come to you. This store is known as "PAINT hEADQUARTERS." We have the famous Sherwin-Williams HIousehold Painting Guide that tells the correct finish for each surface. Our business is to help home lovers to STOP MISTAKES IN PA I NTIN Come in and get a free copy of the S-W Painting Guide. PaintHeadquarters ii +%/ ;i/. "i",/"./'".D' , .4" E".oC": 'w '"I/". .0. /". '.e '.s "'. r " '"« ',rC ". ~.rf . ". ;GP: + l + ""u "" "« '", w . t" °""' ,r "./.I 'J .I"10: +' ./% The Lure oPtCte Disguise it as we may, the fact remains that a pretty woman's beauty is enhanced oy the wearing of becoming clothes. Even a plain woman looks well if properly gowned. Charming clothes give the wearer a feeling of confidence in any environment. Never have styles been so becoming to the average woman as this spring. Not since the war have prices been so reasonable. In our shop you'll find the latest New York models WIthin a week from their appearance on Fifth Avenue, and you'll find prices lower than elsewhere in the city, or in Detroit, for garments of quality. Sport Coats, $19.75 to $65 Dress Wraps, $39.50 to $100 I 207 East Liberty ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI I 0 'd I IUN 1f1i1ll il 1I1 0lttil l t11 H lil ItGi illItlitH iitI E#44 IH i 11 t111t1t :{IH _ v First of All - FOR EASTER A Wrap! * I -E ASTER and new clothes! Somehow the two are always associated together, aren'ta they? And naturally enough, for Easter isf primarily a time of rejoicing-and what more con- ducive to a happy frame of mind than lovely new apparel? First of all then, the Wrap! Great is its importance, for is it not the first thing which greets the eye in Easter's fashion parade? 1=i U- Ensemble Suits Silk Gowns, , $29.50 to $100 $19.75 to $95 THE MILLS COMPANY 118 Main Street The Shop of Satisfaction ,P IA1 Q' QUIALITY. 00, E&io /CPI ".;! J0APSOI1 C! C',1 r , . Ua .. The Out-door Season is Here To enjoy it, you will need some outdoor goods, such as baseballs from 25c to $2.00. Indoor balls, 50c to $2.00. Tennis balls, fielders' gloves, catchers' gloves, baseball bats, 25c to $1.50. Golf balls, 50c and 75c. Target Rifles, Air Rifles and Shot Guns. Boy Scout Equipment. Few nickel plated ball-bearing roller skates, $2.25. Scooters, $2.50 to $7.50. Velocipedes from $4.25 to $21.00. Blue Streak Express Wagons from $3.50 to $9.50. 4' QUALITY.O - i i