SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1925 Alva THE MICHIGAN DAILY '!'ACE 3uJiC THE MICHICAN flAT! .Y 1~A f~ P~T i 1 ,a 1.. ,L. ] .: 1 W. ,1 I Wandervogel---Saviors of Germany? Some Facts Regarding the German Youth Movement To Which Nation's Leaders Look for Future. Iy laul V. I1uscull "The downfall of western civiliza- tion can be prevented only by the birth in the rising generation of new spiri- 2 iial and vital forces." Thus writes t r. F. W. Foerster, one of the lea,,d- ing critics and sponsors of the Wan- devogel-members of the German Youth Movement. Every time the continuity of civiliz- ed progress is in jeopardy it is the youth of the world who are called upon to bolster it up. If they choose to evade the responsibility allotted one of the higher walks of life,, throughout Germany. In other con- tinental nations kindred organizationsI have gained ground conmpatable to that of the German unit. They are peoplin Ig Europe with their followersf and establishing a tremendous fore (for good With this great Uipetus the Ger- miany of 1925 is not, as many wonlid believe, a nation' of blood-sucking hbu- lies who wouldl conquer and subject the worldl if they could but get a with a powerful hand, they have ef- fected a great change in the studentI attitude toward drinking and drunken- ness in the great German university towns. In o doing, they have accom-! plished something which even the nowerful force of law has been unable t to do in the United States. The in- considerate attitude adopted by theiri troops toward women during the war, and which was carried back from foreign territories into the German homes themselves has been largely mitigated through the influence of the younger generation. Recalling the picture; which depicted the German character asserting itself in the invad- ed territories, it is horrifying to imagine the condition Germany would he in today if such a code had been allowed to continue. With the ex- tensive movement on the part of the! young people of the country, however, to reclaim the ground lost in two or three generations of moral and intel- lectual decadence, the trend is chang- ing. RADIO PAGE? In the first issue of the Fea- ture Section in the fall of 1924 a radio page was run, consist- ing chiefly of a summary of ra- ("o programs for the coming week. The page was discon- I tinned owing to the slight sup-1 port which it received on the campus.1 Recent requests from several radio fans on the campus has brought the question of the popularity of such a page to the fore again. In an effort to give the campus such material as the majority of students wish, The . Daily is asking those who de- sire a radio page in the Feature Section to fill in and send to the( Sunday Editor at the Press. Building the coupon printed be-; low. I would like to see a radio I page started in the Feature I E Section of The Daily. In ad- 1 dition to programs, I should like ! to see the following suggestions l employed in filling the page: Name.........-.... Class .. -. -.- I- - - - Churches Congregatlonti Church Services at the Congregational church will be held at 19:45 o'clock a state. In Germany we find the "ris- ing generation" already emerged from this languid condition which caused a great people to sink into the back-. ground. Now assuming the role of educator it steps to the fore and is; directing the progrees of a nation, in- spired as it were, by a new spirit of brotherhood. The powerful force which the Wandervogel wields in shaping Germany has set her on the path which will lead to a rebirth of the real national pride that for many years maintained its culture as an en- viable one. The new pride, like the old one that it revives, will step out into the world at large and, unless im- peded by the conceit of other nations, will set western civilization in new security. I I_ _ this morning when Mr. Jump will Trinity Methodist Church and Direc- tpreach on the subject, "Can We Res- tor of the Wesley foundation at U-- cue The Man In The Cave?" At 5:30 bana, Illinois, has been asked to speak o'clock students will meet in the to the combined student's Bible Class- church parlors to go to the Baptist es. An interesting program has been church for supper and the Union planned for the meeting of the Wes- meeting. Following the meeting, leyan Guild, which will be followed students will attend the University by open house in Wesley hall where service in Hill auditorium. At 3 light refreshments will be served. Dr. o'clock Barrie's "Little Minister" fea- Baker will be the speaker at the Uni- turing Betty Compson will be shown versity services in Hill auditorium. at the motion picture service. The, regular weekly open house and social Unitarian Church hour will be held Wednesday from 4 to 6 o'clock. The morning worship wuill . hed at 10:45 o'clock. The title of tr 5: mon will be "Tasks of the Chuch" St. Andrew's Episcopal Church ; and the service has been de gn t-7 Holy Communion at 8 o'clock will a young peoples service. Dr. Pres n be followed by Church school. The Slosson, Miss Nancy iah, and Ev : morning sermon will be delivered by ett Folson will be in ,:arg-. The Reverend S. S. Marquis of St. Jo- evening Fireside gathering v ii bo seph's Church, Detroit. The adult held as usual. confirmation class will be held at 3 - o'clock in Harris hall. Reverend Mar-j First Presbyterihr fr-eh quis will speak again at the Student ;The for the norn service. 'y ill be "Is Sincerity r Cof C .Tsr tn a Tes T.''ruth?" Siud- nt tiiscu 'ou First Methodist Episcopal Church , ;lt i held at noon. The Ycru "Doubting Our Doubts" will be the 1 ;h-' s meeting, following th. s. pastor's subject for the morning ser- hour, will be lead by Tom i;s, ' mon. Dr. James C. Baker, pastor of (tcntinued on Page Fifteeu) 2 to them it is their nrivilege to gI grast on its resources. True there down to ruin amidst a carnival of are ho wol use Gucma cou- dpleasures and self-satisfaction, It i; : a who wouldl pursue such a. cou'rse plesurs ad slf-atifacion Ita.bay n-rich there are in plenty even in no new duty which falls unon the t he . ued Ses. he inflen e of rising generation" of Dr. Foerster's h ulnite fvr States. The influence of statement, but under the existing cir- .a.ultite of virile suportersati mitigted eeling of worldi cumtstances its- recurrence at 0,1Smaa r h aioa eln fwrd time is of great import.ecr c tt doination, which although severely im isof great iwort.yI sha i en by the loss of the war, didl With the great world war only in. not ttnd to disappear at once. Nor the recent past, tim world ])oilit a '! is Gerimamy a nation subrneoged in accusing finger at the Prussian war- Gmn ain umfe n accusing ge athe rusgiano masth 1 reactions of pacifists and inter- lord whose avarice drragged the mos~tnationalists. It would seem almost' firmly established of nations from impcsible fur the stern and scorn- their regular pursuit of social and in- ful generation which disseminatedI tellectual achievements to the des- doctrines of "Deutchland Uber Allies" truction of the battle-fields. With the to deteriorate to such a state; but war now over, all will concede that it without the restraining influence of a has given civilization a far greater clear thinking element, such a result' set-back than any other series of wouli not have been impossible from events, no matter how broad an ex the chaos which followed on the heelsI panse of years it occupied. In this of defeat. The existing national pride precarious position, what is the worlIl of the country today consists in a to do? This is the query that Ger- reverence for the tradition assembled man youth has asked itself, and in in its literature, art, civic progress, response to the higher idealism that and the development of the social adways ran counter to the imperialis- ideal. x tic and militaristic forces under the; Empire they answered with the or- The rebirth of Germany lies in a genuine striving for the essence of ganization of the German Youthi tenuit. st f"a to nat oe' Movement. Iife. It.is not a "back to nature" movement, but consists in hiinging Originating in a small group of the problems aid situations of the university students as early as 190)4,!present into accord with the natural the idea of the present movement was conditions and oualifications of a real conceived to counteract the increas- l as opposed to a sham, existence. Al- ing tendency toward dleterioration 'i ough their tramking expeditions. t which reached its climax in A ugust which contrary to the common notion of 1914. In their ardent desire to arh t eh o ea ti t mep ro sn establish a spiritual renaissance inl are ot he o ieand , mimhtleadrthe1 V eranof thelmovement firmly 01)-passing observer to consider Wander- stages the ULTR entafismlylp- vogel as disciples of Thoreau they are posed the KULTUR ideal so well per-; far' from being such. Tpheir extended sonified in William T1, and met with ramblings ,re not prompted by a no little discomfiture under the rigid -dterminatio to appreciate natural .diministration of the law. Theyformis ad beauty, but byrat(desireto sught refuge from the domineering reak away from the restricting bonds nationalism of Bismark and his more which are a part of the very lifenof ' ambitious successors in the ideals of those conmunities as yet unchanged t y the early 19th century intellects of by this feeling of dissatisfaction whichi r;< Germany, and revolting against the the Wandervogel feel toward the na- d(estructive philosophies of atheists, tional deterioration of Germay. It ist Smaterialists, and cynics, turned} to the not the mxagnificent landscape :Pr lbirdt inspirations afforded by Goethe, ferd- life of the W noods that constituta their er, and Rlegel. cnver-ation on such jaunts, but 1 From the first it was a spontaneous rather discussions of the social, in- upheavalofenreian idaitc telcaal n comc aal oenergetic and idealistic ehiectual, anl economIc problem' 0 youth, demonstrated by an inevitable with which they must cope intelli- breaking through of ethical and re- 1 gently if the approaching catastrophe ligious impulses. Developing from an is to be averted. .y~ insignificant local group twenty years That they are moving in the right: ago, the Wandervogel are two million direction is apparent from their f in number, including leaders in every achievements. Combatting immorality U +u:>:e a - At the outset the activities of the Wandervogel were branded as com- munistic and, classified by many tritics as "one more sneciesi of socialistic doctrine". With the perspective thata is afforded in looking back over the decade which has elapsed since the organization began to gather real momentum it. is auparent that there are no such tnedencies, either hidden, i or on the surface. Where the radical elements have proposed international- ism or pacifism through some other channel, the leaders of Germany's youth movement have preached the doetrine of "understanding" between the nations of the world. In attempt- ing to do this, they have dispatched representatives of their organization to other countries that they might gain a first hand knowledge of the basic ideals, not only moral, but co- notuic and social, and return home fully capable of presenting them to their compatriots in an understanding way. And while political factions at- tempt to manipulate the internal af- fairs of the nation, the Wandervogel are installing a new code of .ethics into the political aspect of the repub- lie, most apparent in the progress and cooperation which Berlin officials have effected in their more recent re- lations with other countries. To feel that the Dawes plan would have been received by the masses of this de- pressed country with anything less than a great demonstration of opposi- tion without the aid of stabilizing factors, of which the Youth Move- inea I is an imnortant unit, is to as- { sume that no matter what the Allies had proposed,. Germany would have ? nodded in unanimous resignation to it evitable consequence of defeat. The activities of certain movements in this country which consider them- selves closely allied in purpose to the Wandervogel and other continental "youth movements" afford an interestr ing example of the manner in which different groups. may follow a single motive and produce definitely opposed, effects. The single instance of the Student Volunteer Movement, which like the German organization is very far reaching, is sufficient to prove the point. Here the snontaniety and full- ness of enthusiasm which warmly comimend the Wapdervogel to those who, although not actually members of that organization, fuel themselves definitely a part of the movement, is absent. Based on self-conscious mo- tives and assuming a feeling respon- sibility for the future of the world, members of the Student Volunteer Move-r'enlt constituto themselves as a missionary body to preach the neces- fity of walking; "'in the wav of the Lord." Their sphere of activity falls, ahoxt when it comes to advancing methods fc': encouraging ther fol- lowers to walk this nath. Intellectual inertia is preached against by the pedagogue, but it takes the insight of an educator to find the C means of extricating youth from such ui IT COSTS MORE-Eventually your parents must pay the cost of laundering PLUS the cost of transportation. IT IS INCONVENIENT-Why carry your laundry half a mile, then wait a week or ten days to get it back? Is this a privilege worth paying for? You can get one day service here. THE QUALITY OF OUR WORK IS UNSURPASSED- Nowhere will you find a more modern factory, using soft water entirely. We nkc a specialty of giving every piece personal care--and the result is justified. It is all a part of the priceless art of pleas,* others. Can't we please youi too. 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