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Gangelin, Paul; Hanson, Earl; Gregory, Horace (ed.) / The Wisconsin literary magazine
Volume XXI, Number 4 (January 1922)

E. P. H.
[Editorial]



./f~cia zin e
Publication of the Students of the University of Wisconsin
Volume XXI                Madison, January, 1922             Number 4
CONTENTS
Page
Editorial ......E.....        E. P. H.
La Nuit ............. Gaston d'Arleqin.
Ramifications of the Wisconsin Mind ........
... ;      ......... Antony and Cleopatra....
One-Tenth Cat ......... Elizabeth Katz ....
Sonnet ............ Walter K. Schwinn ....
Aftermath ............... Cheryl Mohr....
Don Juan? .............. Earl Hanson ....
The Man in the Moon ....   . Lloyd George....
Concerning Humanized Intellects ..........
.................... Earl Hanson ...
Design with Motive in Black ..............
.................. Pennell Crosby....
Psycho-analysis ...... Gwendolyn Jones....
Apud Inferos ........ Gaston d'Arlequin ....
My Landlady ............ Aileen Casey ....
Semiramis ............ S. G. Weinbaum....
April ............ Margaret Emmerling....
Impressions of H. L. Mencken .............
................ Alfred Galpin, Jr ....
Gamin ................. Mildred S. Hill....
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own motto long enough to adjust affairs to suit the
taste of the faculty and the Board of Regents. No
doubt they believe the whole affair to be a matter of
life and death for their organization. And any rant-
ing at the faculty and the Regents would be equally
futile, for it is a well-known and justly celebrated fact
that these two bodies must look to the State Legisla-
ture for appropriations and that it is a matter of bread
and butter to keep the University from becoming what
is commonly known as a "hotbed of disloyalty."
The ranting should be directed at state control of
thought in institutions of learning or at our national
conception of patriotism.
For the International Club we have nothing but
laughter. It is a pretty motto they have: "Above all
nations is humanity," but on close examination just a
bit too radical.
TROUBLES OF THE COSMOPOLITES. The row in
the Interna-
tional Club, in which an attempt is being made to
oust all Socialist members, has not been settled at the
present writing. One hears reports after almost every
meeting of the club which verge on the ridiculous and
the unbelievable and which are highly amusing in their
colorful details.
But to those who have not been at the University
long enough to have lost their power of serious and in-
dependent meditation or those who have had the
strength of character to retain this admirable faculty
in spite of the years spent here, the affair has its serious
side.
One could rant for hours at the "narrow-minded-
ness" of the club and be perfectly justified in the rant-
ing. But the causes of the affair lie deeper than that.
No doubt the officers of the club believe that they are
reading a hand-writing on the wall concerning all
organizations here at our institution of free thought
which are even tinged with radicalism, and forget their
EDITORS
PAUL GANGELIN
EARL HANSON
HORACE GREGORY
MARGARET EMMERLING
LLOYD GEORGE
PPMF.T T CRn0RRY
Crenv
LA NUIT
GASTON D'ARLEQUIN.
Silently above the whispering cedars
Drifts the moon across the sapphire heavens,
And a quiet veil of mist lies dreaming
Where the trembling waters kiss the shore.
Sighing breezes murmur in the darkness,
Scented with the honey of the flowers,
And my mouth still seeks the soft caresses
Of the streaming of your raven hair.
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