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March 25, 1923 - Image 5

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SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE FV
'BROOM' AND 'OTHERS'
"The old expressions are with us CHARLES T. ANDREWS. abiload. Who of us will labor more
always, And there are always others
With such an epigram serving bot S e*zealously than these artists, to make
as an inspiration and as a hint of its Since in your hearing words are prose, and pictorial art, both here and our world and the future more as
reason for being, the poetry magazine mute, which to my senses are we would like them to be?
called "Others' wA founded, in New a shout.
York, seven or eight years ogo. It, A piece incomparably more here- fill llillllIfillIIIfillIi 1111111111I1{{I ll#111 tiltt
founder and editor was an American atical in form and equally meaningful,
founeandditopa as ra nmerican Is offered by another of the Others.
poet, and its pages were thrown open j.. For Pros e t v B r d_
to the eriters of the so-railed n Walter C'onrad Arensberg - "Shady For P r spective B id es
veree. Two anthologies of this char- Hill" being the former home of Char-
acteristi, verse were subsequently les Eliot Norton. DIAM ONDS
collected by the editor, and to them FOR "SHADY HILL," CAMBRIDGE
was given the same name, "Others." MASS S iP nu d
. M -S.' Set in Platinum and White GCold
The magazine flourished for a year A drink into home use indicates early-
or two, aod then suspended publica- Italian. Otherwise e t We carry a carefully selected tock of fin lcose tones and
tion. When, however, a few years"the elment of how Cee
later an unnamed patron, acting kep insides. Nothing has now.". beautiful hand made mountings in platinum and white gold.
through IarollI A. Loch, donated But after the carpet whose usury Con
$105,000 to inaugirate a similar jour eat thirds? AGENTS FOR
nal of more universal scope, it was the Blunders are belted in cousins. Useebld
doughty founder and former editor of what listens on Sunday, and catchy Genuine Traub Orange Blossom Wedding Rngs
"Others", Alfred Kreymboeg, who was elms 'wli oxidize pillows. Any needY
chosen i sponsor anI dIrect the new s original In absenceYour Inspection Is Invite
enterprise. The clothes are on the parlor. They
Thus it was that "Broom", announe- are acted by buttons. To extract
ed as an international magazine of the' the meet, invert as if to the light.
arts, was founded in Rome, Italy, registering the first position at halirtA._j
about sighteen months ago, Its (15- IThe passage is in time,
cdlared purpose was to establish and As at the end of an equation of two £ J -A
develop a medium of exchange be-- to green, NE W EKLEaZ
tween American and European ar- which have the butters of extra broken
ists, and no qualifying regard was to I on badges biting a needle to partners STATE STREET
be had for any particular "isms" or if only tE bridge is fluent IlllliluIIIIII iilliimfiiuii IiIIItiI1tIllttttliiHlltt1IIItH1#NtiltifNIflttiEiMt
schools. In character, the magazine let it tot nice.
was to exert an extreme catholicity INTERFERE IN ORDER TO MORror
towards showing the present age inj a ,sHie upon a time PIECE OF
its manifold expression. It was the MY MInd you do not
conviction of the founders of "Broom"" Eccentricity, daring, and frank ho-
that the America of the present and tility toward many long-cherished
the 'lt g'eneration was more than eIdals and traditions, Cham'eterie
worthy of Europe's attention. much - though not all-- of the new 'ESTABLISHED 190 i
The name, "Broom," I have been as- 5verse, the new story-telling, the new
cured has no special signideance- un- pictorial art. To many, these exhibi-
less this fact itself be significant. tions are jarring, exasperating, mad-
"Broom" is no longer palalished in dening. Yet it is obvious that pro-
Rome, but in Berlin. The contnts of gress must bring changes, and people
the magazine are not limited to poetry, who condemn hastily, no doubt do so
but include both prose end graphic at a certain risk to their own pro-
art. The subjects and style of its gress.,'
written pieces and illustrations ar Kreymborg and his "Others" badea a
extraordinry. They are the "new" frank welcome to the new verse in
thing, in each department; or else lb America, and "Broom" is doing like-
uncrthodox, either of the present or sise now, in the fields of poetry,
the past, which are believed to have
M erit. 11311 il #Itllll1I1lllll ll
"Broom" , ana "Others", thoughdis - Should possess individuality and charm. It
connected enterprises, have a direct T ne Stage should make your friends exclaim, "How
relation . 'Tiit11oneer r a zine of--i
new verse, having dlint, lives irei a illll;Imlllmlmllilmml1mIumn ululI1li becoming-where did you get it?" Here you
Jurnal.ce oth1c'Ia .nl irepre~ntic will find just such gowns selected with trained
the ideas and labors of the same sense of your requirements. Here you'll find
founder and director. Kreymcbor,
however, professes the greater pride saleswomen to assist you in your selection-
in the latt r, for the reason that seva-
oral of the well known Americanpoets I] saleawomen with years of experience, and a
of toay were discovered through this refined aste developed by constant contact
magazime. jit tnt atylt cenlers of the country. Not
The names of some of the frmerw' l e h t
contributors t "Others" will be re-!- urging y yu to buy, not trying to sell you any-
cognized. One of them, T. S,. Eliot,
was winner of the Dial prize of $2,000 o thing that is at hand, but giving expert as-
in 1922. His book of poems, "The tee, aistance in your selection that you may be
waste Land," has cawased a great deall
of controversy as to its merits. satisfied and return again and again.
Another was Wallace Stevens,
whom Harriet Monroe, editor of A Review by Leslie C. Wharton
"Poetry", is said to regardt today as Leo Ditrichstein, who recently play-
the greatest of all great poets. A ed a week at tho Garrick theatre, De- Our gown showing this spring is a really
book of Steven's verse is now in pro- troit, has at last one of the most suit-.
cess of coaposition. There were oc- able vehicles to come his way since remarkable one. All the new silks are rep-
casional contributions from Carl "The Great Lover." It suits him not resented, and the styles you meet on Fifth
Sandburg, and Kreymborg himself, of only to show his ability as one of our
course, was likewise a contributor. greatest stage lovers butt as an artist. Avenue, New York, are shown a few days
Ditrichsteim is one of those few hav-
Marianne Moore, another, is especi- in" the inornyr
ally interesting at this time as William inei gift of carrying an o later here. Whether your purse is lean or
Butler Yeats' latest American fav- whole waithhinfon the period of the full you'll find what you want for afternoon,
orit. Hr vrse thughnoteas toIIIwhole play,
rite, Her verse, though not easy to He is an unusual and distinct type, street or evening wear and always moderately
read, is never neo-sensual. Its oh- an interpreter of melodrama who
scurity often gives it charm. If you stands alone. Indeed he is "Ditrich- priced.
dispute the fitness of Mr. Yeats's stein .. the great American actor."
favor, read this: "The Purple Mask" a "period" play

dealing with the times just after Louis
TO BE LIKED BY YOU WOULD BE the Sixteenth was guillotined. It is
A CALAMITY the story of a group of Royalists who
"Attack is more piquant than con- are intent solely on the restoration of T
cord," but wshen the king sluiing the aftermath of the l T fle M ills co m-pan y
You tell me frankly that you would I evolution. Napoleon who has just I
like to feel 1 returned from Egypt is their bitterAIN ST.
l oenemy and it is against him that they 118MAINST.
My flesh beneath -yisr feet, Ihave to work.
I'm all abroad. I can but put; This famous "Committee of Three"
my wapo up nd ow t yo. ;The Shopf of Satisfaction
my weapon up and bow to you. that we hear so much of, announce
Cesticulation-it is half the language; that the cast is of 'all star' caliber . . .
Let unsheathed gesticulation be the that I cannot understand. The young
steel lady who plays opposite Ditrichstein
Your courtesyniust meet, (Continued on Page Eight)

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