4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, JANUAY 8,1922 r - is supposedly a typical southern ne- To end the discussion you have hope some good friend of yours will, r gro. In asking for a parody on the asked for a Providential favor, one to by dashing water into your face, or Editor, The Sunday Magazine: play, I might suggest that you, Mr. G. be enacted at the expense of the DoDo any other means, waken you, for you D. E., write it yourself. No one seems society. In not knowing what this or- are a sufferer of sleeping sickness and Whenever I read an article such as better fitted to coin humorous phrases ganization is you have again obviated do not know it. David M. Grant, the one written by a G. D. E., criticis- sha you and I am sore, shot heing the your ignorance, and as for hoping that ----_ nthenwrittenbyerGss E.,himiesnypoor guesser that you are, your work all the characters fall through the trap Footnote: Because of shortage of ing lhe November issue of Whimsies,'would be superb. door, I might suggest that I sincerely (Continued on Page 8) I cannot sit placidly by and say to myself, "I don't believe it," but must give vent to my thoughts in writing. 1 Someone has said that when one has a desire to write something of this sortj he should write it and then, having completely satisfied himself, lock it up for a period of at least seven years so 6 as not to contaminate or disturb the rest of the world. Such, however, is not my intention, and if I complete this article without any decided over- flow of passion, I shall submit it for publication. In the first place Mr. G. D. E. ap- pears to be afraid of his own pen and mind, and skulking behind a phrase made in the fore part of his article non-condemnation of the publication, he proceeds to write a lie in every word of what he has to say. Me makes this statement and then, either boldly or unwittingly, directly proceeds to 2 contradict it. for what person under) the sili would care to read a copy of Whimsies after reading this criticism by G. D. E.? Oh, to be sure, the cur- ion., but the majority of persons would either regard it as so much junk on which time was not made to o , be wasted, or open its pages for a good laugh at the humor of a serious for hours, and you are attempt that had resolved into fail- still comfortable in faul. ure. And those seeking amusement less-filting Dorothy Dodd would more than likely find it, for one, generally finds that for which he looks. footwear. The insincerity in the style used by Mr. G. D. E. goes to prove that he didn't give a tinker's damn for what the publication might suffer as a re- sult of his article, and it is to this, as well as the lack of merit in the whole thing that I take offense. The force humor in allusions to "the whiskersY ol a Lincoln penny" struck me asj I//I-f VJ y women pathetic, and again I ask why a more UO SO prefer subtle, or at least a more serious form was not employed. Such stuff as he Dorothy Dodd styles? has written can certainly be nothing other than a condemnation of Whim- sae., for if it is as worthless as heb would have us believe, its presence on Simply oecauseo tec arm and the campus would surely not be missed. ease they give ; and b cause they The crowning glory of the contri- bution of Mr. G. D. E. comes in his are uteutmost value inmoderately lengthy criticism of the work of Lyn- don Babcock. Trere his ignorance of - priced footwear. everything is so profoundly displayed I that I stand aghast wondering if he thinks the whole world, like himself, For ourself, tis wise to begin your new is asleep. In the first place he intI-yy f r mates that films on the whole are worthless, and with him many people season s shopping whee Doothy Dodd agree. But as for myself, and I do nothseans soppIn thereaD oothy lDod belive that I am without support, they soes are sod. In tis way you will e seem to cast a shadow that will some day be a mighty instrument in the sure of style with economy. progress of the social world. The main thing I would have him know - though, is this, that nearly all pictures,! ' good, mediocre, and bad, enjoy a short i life in the greater cities, and soon 4 come to be booked to the towns of 3000. The humor displayed by him in his ironical treatment of the publication was good. I admit that he is a come dian, and the zenith of laughter-pro- ducing statements came when he said, "I know the South, and know that this sort of a negro would be given a chance." The fact is, Mr. G. D. E., that you DON'T know the South and the very utterance of your statements prove decisively this fact. (See footnote) G. D. E. goes on offering a correc- tion for a work of which he has voiced his abhorrence. A remedy so oad- missable and incongruous that it rings like a bell of the author's total ignor- BEG. U.S.AoFF. D-D S.c. ance on the subject. If he knew the South he would know that the typical southern negro is not morose. He should be able to at least have guessed that much in his guess work, and Jim