CONCERTS '1 d under the directions of Strauss music festival at Eisenach, 21, 1890, and met with the en- stic reception which - it has al- since received. Strauss' indebt- to Wagner and Liszt is appar- broughout the work, but there >.present much that is beyond the product of originality and "Progra m" Translated :ander Ritter, an intimate of Strauss, has written the am" of the tone poem, which to F. Apthorp has translated as Seise / the Sense family, are ites of ii .eat follows for the program book of the Boston Symphony orchestra: "In the necessitous little room, dimly lighted by only a candle-end, lies the sick man on his bed. But just now he has wrestled despairingly with -death. Now he has sunk ex- hausted into sleep, and thou hearest only the soft ticking of the' clock on the wall of the room whose awful silence gives a foreboding of the near- ness of death. Over the sick man's pale features plays a sad smile. Dreams he, on the boundary of life, ox the golden time of childhood? "But Death does not long grant, sleep and dreams to his victims.. Cruelly he shakes him awake and the fight begins afresh. Will to live, and the power of Death! What frightful wrestling! Neither bears off the vic- tory and all istsilent once more. Sunk back tired of battle,, sleep-, less, as in fever-frenzy, the sick man now sees his life pass before his inner eye, trait for trait and scene by scene. First the morning red of childhood shining bright in pure inno- cence. Then the youth's saucier playing and trying his strength-till he ripens to the man's fight, and now burns with hot lust after the higher prizes of life. The one high purpose [tchat has led him through life was to shape all he transfigured into a still. more transfigured form.aCold and sneering, the w orld sets. barrier upon barrier in the way of his achieve- ment. If he thinks himself near his goal, a 'Halt' thunders in his ear. 'Make the barrier thy stirrup! Ever higher and onward go!' And so he pushes forward, so he climbs, desists not from his sacred purpose. What he has ever sought with his heart's deepest yearning, he still seeks in his death-sweat, Seek-alas! and finds never. Whether he comprehends it more clearly or that it grows upon him more gradually he can yet never exhaust it sannot complete it in spirit. Then clangs the last stroke of Death's iron hammer, breaks the earrthly body in twain, covers the eye with the night of death. "But the heavenly spaces sound mightily to greet him what he yearn- ingly sought for here, deliverance from the world, transfiguration of the w"orld." Strauss' place in the musical Pan- theon is difficult to assign. He has devout admirers who insist that he is a towering genius anid areformer on the same plane as W'agner. His num- erous enemies refuse to concede that he has more than extraordinary tech- nical cleverness, and denounce his many harmonic innovations and what they call his overwrought, sesational style. After all has been said, how- ever, Strauss remains the most spon- taneous and effective composer who has essayed orchestral music since the death of Wagner, Brahms and Tschai- Ikowsky. l+R l - SENIOR ENSINEERS PLAN ANNUAL "STEP" MAY 1 SPECIAL FAVORS TO MARK FOR- MAL DABCE IN UNION DINING HALL While the Freshmen ate frolicing in the ballroom of the Union May 12, the senior engineers will hold their '22E annual step in the dining room. of the same building. The commit- tee in charge of the affair reports that 130 tickets have been sold to date and that there are 20 remaining to be sold to the campus. s Bottles of perfume with sterling silver cases with the initials '22E, en- graved on. them 'will be given to the ladies as' favors. The chaperones 'for the dance, Dean Wm. H. Butts and Mrs. Butts, Prof. Alfred H. Lovell and Mrs, Lovell, and Prof. Horace W. Ki'ng and DMrs. King have already been invited. The dance will last from 9 to 1 o'clock and will be a summer formal. No stags will be admitted. George Rogers' orchestra has been obtained to furnish the music. Those desing to obtain tickets, which will cost $6, may do so by telephoning E. S. Bradley, '22E, chairman of the committee in charge. The suggestion has been made that all students desirous of spending less money buy meal ucicets at the Arcade Cafeteria. They'll save 8 to 10 per cent.-Adv. Coming "ToI'abli Last Ti n Tom YOUR LAST CH ANCE TONIGHT TO SEE THE PICTURE THAT HAS Al ANN ARBOR TALKING An intriguing romance of Yanktee Pep and Spanish I "FATHER t - 100 per elimination of cent. other Never produces "that help, instead of an ob- , the training table of . college in this country' Niagara Falls, N. Y. ROBERT Z. LEONARD .presents THE DRAMA OF A GIRL WHO DARED EXPOSE HER BEAUTY IN THE MOST NOTORIOUS RE- SORT IN SPAIN. REGULAR PRICES I.A DED- p PERCY AND FERDIE S IOWING MA TIN EE: EVENING: " FROM SOUP TO :00 - :0 7:00ll - x~ 2i/y. :0 Featuring 'SID SMITH uA IA LATENT NE W11 - COMING!C )RDINARY JESSE L LASKY - PRESENTS SON RGDOLP$ VAETN aaamound cuie NQ SU",AY - SPECIAL SCORE FRIDAY - SATURDAY i,. May Festival Visitors Engage Roonll Although the May Festival will not begin Yor two weeks, practically all the rooms available in Ann Arbor have been engaged for the four days of its duration. While a few of the hotels still have some rooms that have not been taken, the Union is completely sold out. Students who have investigated de- clare that there is a variety of foods served at the Arcade Cafeteria un- equalled anywhere else in town.-Adv. :'; II I s Theatre 5-6 HIAN UNION I, i ' fli~ 'day, May ARE FOR THE GENERAL PUBLIC, AS WELL AS FOR MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY ES REPERTOIRE COMPANY PRESENT , r L :; , '// . n. * .ray ~ S wf r a t t he SleenW le", tilrPictreslkP eret :. 13th CHAIR" By BAYARD VEIRIN. of Thrills and Conedy. A Play that has Stood the Test for Four yrs. The Best Drama olf Its Kind Ever Written. E1 PRODUCTION EXACTLY AS PRESENTED IN NEW BOSTON, CHICAGO, PHILADELPHIA, ETC. 'S IN "MIMES" PRODUCTIONS ALL CHARAC- RS ARE PLAYED BY MEN STUDENTS ,S NOW - Send check and self-addressed stamped envelope. SEATS RESERVED -PRICE $1.00. SEATING CAPACITY LIMITED TO 500 Straight from the protecting walls of a convent she came - into a world of trick- ery and deceit. And when they discovered her in a rotter's room at midnight- even her sweetheart believed her a thief. Then came th, breath-taking climax and the amazing revelaton that set things right. The star who always pleases, in a love drama of thrills and charm. A picture for the whole family to see. Added- " FA L SE A LA R M" A Riot of COMING SUNDAY ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY THURSDAY, MAY 4, AT 10:00 A. M. ___NT E RODOLPH L "BEYOND VALENTINO' THE ROCKS"5 VA LENTINOSTORY BY ELINOR GLYN THE MOST GORGEOUS LOVE DRAMA . GL( STUDENT THEATRE IN AMERICA N1TS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT