THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1922 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15 1922 . THE MICHIGAN DAILY An Interview With Rober--t Bordenl ,. _...w . r ,. r . _. . . _ _ Y y ,u~uae.,~muuuuUUhhIh~h~fl~hhI~II~ihII~lUEIRII5WU211,41~ 7' u THROUGH THlE OPE~RA ]LAS&E ~M S UI!I!IUI I -Z $g 5 oa IE~IfiaiEaI I- , o 3 ' '.. : .. '= ? s s aas as sxrasoa+=a a..r: soA = _. .- .- } (By W. Bernard Butler) Yes, I admit it, I was disappointed with the effect of Sir Robert Borden's lecture on "Political Development and .Relations Among the English Speak- ing Peoples," particularly because I had met Sir Robert the afternoon be- fore he talked and because I had read his manuscript. It is not my purpose to criticize or even, necessarily, to admire, but to tell you of another side of Borden of which his lecture gave but the vaguest hint. * * * Sir.Robert looked at me intently all' the while T was being introduced, with analysis in the eyes that pierced un- .sder his shaggy eyebrows. "I am very .glad to meet you, young man," he said as he genially squeezed my hand in his big grip. I saw at once that he wasn't at all a talkative man, in fact I doubted very much whether I could get him to talk at all. My memory is still hazy about the first details, but a few minutes brought us to the car in which we were 'to go for a drive with Professor Trueblood. He and I rode in the rear seat. I hardly knew how to approach him. He is a massive man, who sits leaning forward as though in anticipation of something he is about to do. He looks straight ahead .most of the time, with eyes almost concealed in thought,- and with an attitude suggesting great po- tential energy. His observation is darting, giving the impression that de*- tails do not distract, but that there is one purpose uppermost in the mind. Ferry field was the first object of our attention. Sir Robert seemed rather reluctant. to explore the place to any extent, but was much impressed by the stadium, the diamond, the new field house project, and the extent of the field itself. We got into a conversation about campus activities seeming to go be- yond their functions as student enter- prises. He agreed that many activi- ties, such as football, considering theI AFT . R 230 crowds drawn and the money involved, t I was unable to collect them together and. The Daily with its complex or- Iand.,put them back, so I, tucked them ganization and its great demand on under my arm and saw Sir Robert time and energy, were from some 'in the rear corridor of the auditorium. standpoints, out of place. He glared a little at the wet type- Conversation didn't flourish while written sheets which I had tried to we drove to Hill Auditorium. This conceal from his view. I. wilted some- building struck him at once, espec- what but he very gracefully, relieved Tally when he was ushered onto the me by offering, to give me the- pianu- stage. Sir Robert did talk a. little then script to keep if I liked. about other places in which he had !iMforning saw me with him in a last spoken, particularly about the new attempt to interview. The weight of, Canadian House of Commons. the lecture had been lifted and we After going to the center of .the cam- talked ,until shortly before train time. pus, being guided through the Library . "We were speaking of your most and Memorial Hall, and visiting the impressive experience," I queried, President's office, he began to remark sabout the burialofnthe unknown sol- upon the extent to which University .dier at Arlington Cemetery." building was being done and to which ."That was the most impressive cere- the University had expanded. many I ever witnessed," was the'.re-. While we were going through Uni- ply, "but my experiences in France versity hall, two men selling Orator- have made the deepest impression of ical Aasociat-on tickets rushed up to all." Borden told me of his first trip Borden and tried to sell him a course to France, in 1915, of his experiences ticket so that he might hear' the lec- at the front, luncheons with General ture of the evening and those of the French, Marshall Foch, and many whole season as well. All of us smiled other war celebrities. He described and said nothing. After leaving the the suffering and optimism .in the 43 President's office, we found the same Canadian hospitals which he !visited boys there with the tickets. Borden in France and in Fngland, and the walked up to one of them and shook sadness which overwhelmed him when his hand warmly. Professor True- he saw from the hill, the hollow at blood introduced Sir Robert to the' Ypres where more than 100,000 men other. Bath, boys crimsoned and tried had been killed. to make some .reply.. I questioned him about the troops When I left him at the Union, I was whiph , Can4a ,furnished. ,We sent disappointed, although I had secured over more than 500,000, about 400,000 his manuscript for the evening's lec- by enlistment," he replied. The other ture. I was to see him after the lec- 100,000 were marshalled through con- ture,.however, and the next morning scription, which measure was fathered before he took the train. i 'was not by Sir Robert Borden himself. He sure whether he was always noncom- spoke of the electric effect which the mittal or whether he was thinking passage of this measure had on the about the evening's lecture. .Canadian fighters in France. It Evening, after he had spoken, found seemed to give them new spirit, he me hurrying around Hill Aditi said. In fact, on Nov. 10, when nearly in the rain, with an envelope con- everyone felt the armistice was about in nhesmin, iptaneelypecon.to be signed, the Canadians wanted, taming his manuscript under my arm. to keep on going. In spite of orders, -Somehow some other papers. I had inthey did take much land on that day, the envelope slipped out to scatter so much that the artillery was un- themstelves all over the immediate ,able to keep up. vicinity. People rushed to my aid in Inspeaking about the end of the picking them up, -but what a mud- smeared lot they were! In my haste EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS __ I TU ERNOON AND EVENING GOWNS j S. GRACE VAN SCHICK OU can stu 0 Nickels Arcade Phone 795,4W agood wht War, Borden stressed the great po- tential force which the entrance of the United States brought into play, but more' particularly this idea which he expressed once 'before: "It was my privilege to take part in the Peace Conference at Paris and in the Washington Conference of last year. From each of these conferences I returned with the belief, which has grown firmer and firmer with reflec- tion, that upon the public opinion of the nation rests the one hope for the future peace of the world." When Professor . Trueblood drove away I saw the last of Sir Robert Bor- den. He impressed me as a man of dynamic force. and immediate action, but very non-committal. In fact, he told other reporters that he gave noth-- ing for publication. Sir Robert has probably through long years of ex- perience found that it is best not to commit himself on many things. As he, drove away, the last thought he left with me lingered: "Man's control over forces formerly unknown and undreamed of has made every nation the neighbor of every other. Upon the paths of the ocean and through the highways of the air, communication and intercourse be- come more and more intimate, and .in- cessant. The nations ,sit at each other's thresholds; thus it is..impos- sible for any people to ,disinterest or disengage itself from the welfare of every other, and upon each there is a new and. increased responsibility for the. preservation of peace and for .the salvation of the world from the un- speakable and overwhelming horrors of another war. Especially upon the great English-speaking c o m m o n- wealths, who together exercise an un- equalled power and influence' in world affairs, that constant and searching responsibility does unmistakably rest Upon its acceptance and fulfillment must depend the judgment that will be recorded in the pages of history as to their worth, their service, and per- haps their ultimate des-tiy." dy better after lesome meal. - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - "THE :KIp GAME" "The Skin Game," which played last Monday at the Whitney theater was another glaring case of play ruination and' mutilation by poor acting. Mr. Herbert Bunston as Hillchrist, and Miss Audrey Cameron as.Jill were convincing and sincere in their inter- pretations of the respective charac- ters. Mr. Walter McEwan, Jr., wh o played the role of Rolf, and the ma- jority of the lesser lights were very good. As for the remaining members of the cast little can be said in praise,. and much can be said in condemna- tion. When will actors realize that the af- fected mannerisms 'of heroic drama bear no weight when transplanted to the modern stage? Shouting and con- tinual storming might still serve some purpose in an institute for the deaf, but it was blotted out of the actor's handbook when open air theatres passed out of vogue. Gazing at the proscenium arch may signify grief and remorse. But whatl would an actress . do if 'she had no proscenium to stare at? This may be good technique. We cannot offer anyf suggestions on this point as our hand-, book fails us in this respect. The play as conceived by John Gals- worthy is veryadmirable indeed. We do not mean that it is perfect. It has some very pronounced faults. The first act is a maze of cumbersome ex- position that fails to explain anything or start the action until after thirty minutes of playing time. In a vague and boring manner the characters are dragged in-and out, and then, within the last ten minutes of the act, the play really begins. The first scene of the second .act is an auction scene, very well done, but of little value. It establishes the characters more clearly, but employs' fifteen minutes to present what could be given in a few speeches or lines. The theme is very noble indeed; hu- manism pitted against commercialism. Hillchrist is determined to keep his estates from the hands of the mercen- ary Hornblower, no matter what the cost may be. He gets some informa- tion that involves the honor of Horn- blower's daughter-in-law. Influenced by his wife, Hillchrist gives out the scandal, retains his property, but brings tragedy and ruin into the Horn- blower fold.m seen on the stage. He is almost an' artist!' Whitney, can't you arrange another1 play or two by Mr. O'Neill? G. D.,E. "THE HAIRY APE" "The Hairy Ajpe" -the most recentt work by the first playwright of today, has been in Detroit within the last month. This lat- est drama, which was offered at the. Garrick last week, is inferior to "Thej Emperor Jones" as a dramatic psycho-1 logical study. I believe, and it ob-. viously does not fall into the class of regular drama, as does his "Anna Christie.", I really doubt if more than a score of persons in Tuesday nigkt's audi-; ence thoroughly understood what O'- Neill was driving at. I confess to. not being in that select twenty. "The' Hairy Ape" is a story of Yank, a stoker on an ocean liner, an inarticu- late beast who gropes vainly for an explanation of himself and the world. Through eight scenes, he struggles, and at the end he finds "he doesn't belong." The conflict represented to me a growth from the bestial to the primi- tive mind of man. It is a dramatized, humanized version of evolution many aeons after . the general movement. While an animal in all but outward appearances, a supreme specimen of a beast, Yank Is satisfied; he belongs to what he does not know. Then he catches a glimpse of a superior, re-1 fined being, and he tries vainly to reason it out. Yank wants revenge for this woman's curiosity, her look- ing at him as she would at a "hairy ape," and he tries to articulate this 1 hate, to think it out. This stirring of ,his mind weakens his physical power, but at the end, he almost has a mind, a feeble one indeed, but one which in the rocess of development will prove superior to brute strength. Yank's strength has been lost by the evolu- tion; his transformation has declassed him, for he has neither the power of a brute nor the superior mentality of a man. But he does have a beginning. Such 'is whatI make out of ,'TheHairy. Dramatically I believe that "Tlie Hairy Ape" marks adistinct decline. It is a return to the soliloquy of Shakespeare with a few clashes and a few symbols to redeem it-partially from a recitation. The play may perhaps note a new sort of drama, that of a mind clash- ing with its environment, but it is not what one ordinarily conceives the drama to be-a conflict of persons or of minds. The result in "The Hairy Ape" is a. virtual monologue,-dramatic. it is true, but is not Browning's "The Last Duchess".dramatic but yet nota play? It is much the same type of. play as "The Emperor Jones," but in the latter O'Neillhas objectifiedhis material mor.e by use of fantasy in the crap shooting, convict, slave-hold, and sacrificial scenes. For this rea- so 1. think "The Hairy Ape" an in- ferior play to. O'Neill's other works, but I do believe O'Neill has evidenced a great poetic power and a keener and more penetrating intellect. S. W. T. Once in a lifetime a genius is born; so goes an old proverb. The laurels of the present three score and ten go to Adrian Beecham, seventeen year old son of -Sir -Thomas Beecham,, the greatest. savant of British native xurs- ic. A4rian -Beecham :h pleted an operatic verf Merchant of Venice" i pronounce astonishingly; and free from those mist which naturally would b the first effort of a young. The opera is sch most immediate producti Eugene O'Neill's "Ann: to be produced at the O in Paris this winter. .We ing what the French I think of this study of a for a woman who had cc streets. How will the Fr react toward it? Will chology appreciate the gles of the seafarer as t cation of such a marriag they interest themselves stly of-the influence o those who follow it-or back and plush? Four other plays of j thorship are to be prod Odeon theater in order th nation may learn some present state of ,the pla in the tjnited States. I Christie" there are "The another O'Neill play, Wi "The Great Divide," chell's' "The New Yorl "Kindling", by Carles I r ARfl S(LYfRsgI Hh "4. Class and club Pins Special Designs ad Estimates Cheerfiully Given Schianderer 6&,Seyfied Jewelers 113 E. Libery St. , ,: I ;j .h , wm LEO L. NIEDZIELSKI. COME TO TUTTLE'S LlUNCH OOR 0M 338 Maynard St. Just South of Majestic 11 -'3- \ .'tI~rr\. Appearance Counts- 1k 2" USE- EC/ For ladies and Gentlemen A .aid F^'o -Ge, Get Started Now Easy to Apply "THE EMPEROR JONES" I The Whitney Theatre is to be con- gratulated for the start it has made' this year in offering good plays. "The,, Skin Game" certainly exceeds any- thing given last year with the possible 1 exception of "The White Headed Boy," and "Emperor Jones" is vastly su- perior to anything offered at the Whit- ney for over three years. "The Wo- man in Bronze" may have been second rate and "Lightning"-which is yet to come-may be considerably underl "Emperor Jones" but they are both1 better than the plays to which we have V been accustomed. I wish to deal very briefly with "Emperor Jones;" very briefly for anyI extensive praise of this play would beI rather superfluous. Eugene O'Neill is the only first-rate playwright Ameri- ca has ever produced and this play is ' certainly one of his best. However, I wish, for the benefit of some of the fuddled morons who saw the play, to explain that the "visions"- seen by Jones were indicative of re- turning primitiveness rather than of' what was going on in the negro's mind. He had- never seen a slave- market, nor a slave-ship and hence he could not visualize them, could not. conceive them. It was a quick retro- gression which had to be handled with~ a-great deal of delicacy, and though Mr. O'Neill departed sadly from real- I ism his play did not suffer. He chose, after all, the best possible exposi-I tion. "Emperor Jones" is, without excep tion, the best play. I have seen for at least five years, possibly it is the bst I have ever seen at any time. It- af- fords me great glee to say also that the negro who plays the .role of Jones is the most capable actor I have ever T H WVTHAT do you demand of a bank? Depend- ability, of course; but almost any reputa- ble bank can give you this. Efficient service, to be sure; but that is a funda- mental requisite of any modern business. Here is the vital difference. The ordinary bank can assure you safety for your money, and a certain degree of service. We offer you dependability and service coupled with a courtesy that makes de'aling here a pleasure. Let us prove our slogan "The Bank of Friendly Service." E VI DIF.FERENCE T A L and be uellgroomed YOU WANT BETTER COFFEE? --- then make it electrically and right at the table too. 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