SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1923 " A higher concept of art. Can a The question iss man stand at so great a distance from journey is endless, w his fellows as to mould them?"-F. The answer is: "Ev Nietzsche, from "The Will to Power," vol. 2. iTagore), from "Thou SOMEHOW its th with everyone- a customer, al customer. at Tuttle's Lunch R 338 Maynard St. South of M Rlt~ae r~xu SENIORS Only Three More Days for Your Ensian Photograph. PHONE 598 121 E. W Lamp prices are cut low in this sale! Table lamps go. So do boudoir lamps and adjustable reading lamps. All have metal bases. Shades are of metal, parchment, or decorated glass. Regu- larly $3 to $39. Every price has been cut fully 20 to 25 per cent. A great sale! The Detroit Edison om Tan e Main at William Telephone N0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THR asked: "If life'sTA fter there is its goal?"T le ea erywhere"-R3.A 1923 GRADUATE tght Relics." "Then this brown man conducted Jurgen to an open glen, at the heart of the forest. "'Merlin dared not come himself, because,' observed the brown man, 'Merlin is wise. But you are a poet. So you will presently forget e same that which you are about to see, or at worst you will tell pleasant lies about it, particularly to yourself.' - once "'I do not know about that,' says Jurgen, 'but I am willing to taste any drink once. What are you about to show me?' ways a "'All,' the brown man answered. "So it was near evening when they came out of the glen. It was dark now, for a storm had risen. The brown man was smiling, and Jurgen was in a flutter. 'It is not true, Jurgen protested. 'What you have shown me is a pack of nonsense. It is the degraded lunacy of a so-called Realist. It is sorcery and pure childishness and abominable blasphemy. It is, in a word, something I do not choose to believe. You ought to be oom ashamed of yourself!' ajestic "'Even so, you do believe me, Jurgen.' "'Facts! sanity! reason!' Jurgen raged: 'why, but what nonsense you are talking! Were there abit of truth in your silly puppetry this world of time and space and consciousness would be a bubble, a bubble which contained the sun and moon and the high stars, and still was but a bubble of fermenting swill. I must go cleanse my mind of all this foulness. You would have me believe that men, that all men who have ever lived or shall ever live herafter, that even I am of no im- portance! Why, there would be no justice in any such arrangement, no justice anywhere!' "'Slay me, then!' says Jurgen, with shut eyes, for he did not at all like the appearance of things. 'Yes, you can kill me if you choose, but it is beyond your power to make me believe that there is no justice anywhere, and that I am unimportant. For I would have you know I am a monstrous clever fellow. As for you, your are either a delusion or a degraded Realist. But whatever you are, you have lied to me, and I know that you have lied, and I will not believe in the insignifi- cance of Jurgen.' "Chillingly came the whisper of the brown man: 'Poor fool! 0 shuddering, stiff-necked fool! and have you not just seen that which you may not ever quite forget?' "'None the less, I think there is something in me which will en- dure. I am fettered by cowardice, I am enfeebled by disastrous mem- ories; and I am maimed by old follies. Still, I seem to detect in my- self something which is permanent and rather fine. Underneath every- thing, and in spite of everything, I really do seem to detect that some- thing. What role that something is to enact after the death of my body, and upon what stage, I cannot guess. When fortune knocks I shall open the door. Meanwhile I tell you candidly, you brown man, there is something in Jurgen far too admirable for any intelligent arr, biter ever-to fsing into the dustheap. I am, if nothing else, a monstrous clever fellow, and I think I shall endure, somehow. Yes, cap in hand goes through the land, as the saying is: and I believe I can contrive some trick to cheat oblivion when the need arises,' says Jurgen, trem- bling, and gulping, and with his eyes shut tight, but even so, with his ASHINGTON m'nd quite made up about it. "'Now but before a fool's opinion of himself,' the brown man cried, 'the Gods are powerless. Oh, yes. and envious, too!'" During the four years that I spent on the campus, I frequently came across persons, curious to me at the time, who casually interrupted me in the midst of recitations of campus descriptions and events by remarking that they too had gone to Michigan, and thereafter generally changed the subject, or at any rate let it go with a few polite questions concerning pro- fessors whom they happened to remember. I could never understand this lethargic lack of interest in so vital a life-interest as one's alma mater. I do now. Several weeks ago I returned to Ann Arbor for a brief visit. I walked about the campus, which seemed disillusioningly sodden and shabby. I admit that November is a bad month in this part of the country, and that I had but recently come from the fall glory of Maryland and a few glimpses of delightfully homogeneous campuses in the East. Nevertheless that only accounts in part for the utter depression that overwhelmed me at sight of this campus. I went to several classes, and observed two things. One was a stifling odor composed of two parts cosmetics and one part stale cigarette smoke. 'he other was an alarming vacuity on the faces of everyone present, in- cluding the professors. The latter may be excused for this on the grounds of partal asphyxiation. Absolutely the only sign of intelligence in any of these blank faces was a fixed expression of self-interest, and even that was apathetic. Words cannot convey the depressing effect of thousands of blank, untouched faces moving importantly about these two square blocks. There is no other conclusion to be drawn than that the college campus is a community of adolescent adults. I recalled the tempest in a teapot that filled in the gap in student in- terest between the football season and spring activities, last year . . . the Sunday Magazine affair, The Tempest, The Magpie, and all the rest. Right- ecusly indignant conservatives whose delicate sensibilities had been vio- lated! Righteously indgnant student "thinkers" whose styles were being cramped! Everyone on both sides privately enjoying all the publicity he was gathering unto himself! All that . . . all blah, as some of us knew at the time and most of us took a year to find out. And commencement came along and we all put on our little mortarboards and oozed down to Ferry Field to listen to the amplifier and wonder what it was all about. Of course, there were those who were sincere and earnest and very much concerned with all this controversy. There was something poignant- ly pathet'c about them. There was, for instance, the professor's wife who was sincere enough to make the :Magpie an anonymous sheet so that she might not be accused of seeking notoriety, and later found that she was (fiontinued on Page Four) A