4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1921 The Iconoclast Vindicates "Co-eds" (By J. E. R.)I After firing a withering broadsideI into the organizations of the campus a few weeks ago, the "Iconoclast" lapsed into silence for a time, but has again come forward with an inter- view in support of co-education as it exists at Michigan. In speaking of this much-discussed question the "Iconoclast" waxed bel- ligerent with all the bravery of a knight of old defending the weaker sex. "Since the very inauguration of the co-educational system, it has been the custom of rhetoric "1" students and other buffleheads to make fun of the 'co-eds.' More; jocundity often turns to downright bitterness and often enough to scandal," he said. "These calumniators say that the majority of 'co-eds' are thick-headed. Well, so are the men, but let us speak from a comparative standpoint. "Further, it is pointed out that the 'co-eds' have no school spirit, but I have not yet met one who hasn't at least ten times as much as a large number of men with whom I am ac- quainted. "If school spirit is the measure of a student, the men far more than the women are the ones to be the butt of jibe and sarcasm. Of course, the girls are not so blatant, so excessively babyish, so cheap and disgusting in their display of school spirit," said the Iconoclast pausing to glance at two male students parading down the street in their knickers. "Apparently," continued the speaker after he had steadied his nerve with a few drags on a cigarette, "according to the vaunted standards of this one- hundred-per-cent Michigan fervor, the ideal student would be a boatswain's mate with lungs like a blast furnace and a voice like a fog horn. And if he came down with laryngitis he would be disloyal. "If the students are tobe measured by their marks the men are simply out of it. If you doubt this make a visit to the registrar's office. Of course marks are not any real criterion of ability or brain power. Marks are only a part of a little medal system conceived and put into effectby some brilliant pundit who wished to stir up the infants. Some day, perhaps, if dreams are ever to bedrealized, there will be gold and red and blue stars for the bluebooks covers. "Aside from marks I find that only in the scientific departments are the men ahead of the women. In my opin- ion, three of the five best writers on the campus are women. In all my lang- uage, history, fine arts, oratory, rhe- toric, and even mathematics classes the brightest pe'rson in each class has, without exception, been a woman. In six scientific classes the men have had the edge, but nevertheless there were few stupid women therein and many stupid men." "Certainly the women are far more artistically sound than men. They talk far more intelligently of Raphael, Velasquez, Rubens, Reynolds, Rodin; they are more alive to color values. They read more of Hauptmrann, Che- kov, Strindberg, Ibsen, Hamsun, Brandes, Flaubert, Benavente, Hardy, Dreiser. In music, for one man who can talk other than idiotically about Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Wagner, Investigation has proved the truth Atlantic Monthly" is no longer in Bach, there are at least five girls. of the Iconoclast's statements. "The (Continued on Page 7) REG. U.S.PAT. OFF. O.O.S. Co. SHOES M WINOW nrd. w I :F B V TiY Y ,. a o wr MAL REPUTATION is the product of your good will, which we cannot buy or sell. The reputa- tion for value freely given to Dorothy Dodd shoes is freely shared with every woman who wears them The faultless-fitting, beautifully finished, I correctly styled models for the new season reflect your ideal of what shoes ought to he. d owe