PAGE Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1924 SUNDAY, MARC1 2, 1924 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,. :... .. .:.. S. -- . -a -- a a II wl 001 'PLAY5. adthe ROBERT.' ,* 1 ~R w ." -,. a THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK. ORGANIZED 1863 You will find Our service courteous and pleasing in every way OLDEST BANK IN ANN ARBOR MAIN STREET AT HURON THE BAR SINSTER (Continued from Page One) will not turn out a dashing, princely chap, who can smoke cigarettes grace- fully and wear a tuxedo with savior faire? Because I am looking at the man whose arms the delicate annd1 fragile infant is blissfully sleeping. THE BABY A baby boy was born next door to- day. I think it should be explained to him that he has arrived into a very ill-fashioned world; that he will be expected to choose some life-long task which he will probably loathe; that he has has born into him certain in- stincts that he must repress.or he will be carted off to the gallows; that het will be expected to attend banquetsI and perhaps give speeches, that he isI going to -be spanked for reasons hea will never understand; that he is go- ing some day to bump his head and give it an awful bang; that he will one day have the mumps and thel tooth-ache; that after all these trials, he will fall ill and die for all his pains.4 Then he should be given his choice3 whether he will stick it or not: he should be given a fair chance to quit while the quitting is good. I often feel indignant with the world on this account. I should like to say: "Plague take it, I never asked to come to this circus anyway. My ticket was bought when I was too young to know any better." By Jove, I can hear the brat yelling already. lIe has probably managed to choke on his thumb. or. swallow a button-hook. Well-all. I can say is, he'd best get used to it. on my knees to recov him. "Heavens," I thou a career that can be of a soup plate. Tw and this man. wou Three and he would Four and he would 1 street corner. A de the swing of a door on the floor. I shivr I was not a waiter. the man served the t I managed to slip a d him before leaving. ! "Oedipus Rex" and its marriage of To Mrs. Grundy: other and son, with "Medea" and her insatiable thirst for revenge, with the It is to be expected, as it has been "Choephoroe" and Orestes' terrible' and always will be, that in a period of reguital for the murder of his father. remarkable dramatic vigor there All of them, from the first to the last. should be certain critics, generally of Arefhe i t eyfrmto tbeast, are heaped-with every form of beasti- the professorial type., who consistent- lymal what they term nte . im- ality, yet for sheer passionate virility ly lamen iwot the em"te m- they are unequaled. raItendencies" of the contempor- The same is equally true of a host of ary drama. It is perfectly obvious, of , "n course, to almost everyone that theeays-Othello,', " American theater is entering- or is:{ fear, a'."A Winter's Tale, Hamlet,'t iand "Romeo-and Juliet," to give only a about to enter into a period of distinct f rennaissance, probably the greatest few. Obviously the purely immoral in its history and possibly among the eleents do not constitute their tmeasure of greatness, but they repre- sent the freedom of an age that could is equally obvious and rather proudly ,produce - tremendously vital and nat- admitted--for it is one of the majorI earmarks of any rejuvenation-that ural works of art. This cannot mean, this movement is thoroughly unham- on the other hand, that such a period pered and immoral... of restraint as the nineteenth century did' not also produce great master- All this, naturally, is quite as it ;.pieces-for genius always survives should be. America, through her 'c ntemporary restrictions--but think strategic financial status gained from Vhow much' greater its Tennysons and the past war, is now in a position to; Thackerys and even its Brownings command not only the monetary but would have been if they were as un- art world as well. In New York today fettered as the Flauberts and Gautiers' we have the theater's greatest artists, across the channel. from Duse and Reinhardt to Stanis- - And finally there is our modern lavsky and Copeau, assembled to gain draima, which has created such vile our disdained but necessary dollars. and beautiful examples as "The These personalities are teaching us, Power of Darkness, "Night.Lodging," the best of the classical and modern and "The Creditors" Ibsen used to be technique, so that subconsciously, shocking in "Ghosts" and "The Doll's whether we will it or .not, we are House" and the super-sensual "Peter building a foundation on which the {,Gynt," only to be overruled by the cli- future American dramatist may create matic vulgarity of Wedekind and a superb,"structure. The finished re-1Andreyev. suit may be a greater Moscow Art So the list goes: it is next to the Theater or another Theater du Vieux impoSs belitoeit asinedtt t Comblier, but at least it is certain that sle tho find a bsingle dramatist of note ,who, had not built his fame it will produce a truly American dra-1 around this note. Even Shaw-who matic literature-American, you un always chooses to play a trick only. derstand, in the national -sense that once-repeats this factor constantly, the Abbey Theater is Irish. in "The Philander," "Mrs. Warren's To expect such a result,. however, Profession," "Heartbreak House," and from Victorian restraint and happy with an admirable satiric twist in nicety is both impossible and rjdicul- "Man and Superman." ous, as the annals of all great litera- .-:This is quite natural, evidently ,be- ture prove only too easily. From the cause. it seems so basic and funda- beginning, sublimity of thought has mental, so--elemental through the fact always arisen from the primitive and that- the earthly supports all else. the carnal, from the immoral if you Whether this carnal and unmoral can think of the word aside from ii- 4tyle masks itself in the primitive legitimacy. treatment of Synge and Masefield or in To begin at the beginning, of course, the hyper-sophistication of Schnitzler means to start with the greatest of all and Molnar, it carries the same uni- dramas, the Greek tragedies, with versal..appeal-it is the single com-# (j I :... n nl~r ii I~r . wl~ ww nn-i l1 Our Customers come back COngenal work for college graduates, In deciding upon one's life-work there is one very important consideration every far-seeing man. will make. He will select a field where the edu-. cation gained through his college career will not' be wasted. An ideal future is offered by the Fire, Marine and Casualty Insurance business. Insurance is close to the interests of every busi- ness. It is close to the interests of the officials of every business. It. is a matter -which will bring you into immediate contact with big men and big affairs. The Insurance Company of North America is, a national, historical institution -founded in 1792--with over a century and a quarter of well, earned prestige. Conservative policies and de- pendable service have been responsible for the growth and for the constructive activities of the Company in the development of the entire insurance profession. Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA and the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America .mire srcia rvr .,,.o inue orptIre CONTEMPORARY MOMENTS As I read this noble work which has moved me so deeply that it.has almost renewed art within my soul, I wonder, wonder about the author. He must be alive and breathing this very n4nute. Is he perhaps smoking a black sigar or cleaning his fingernails or cata- loging his stamp collection or quar- reling with the cook, or brushing his E teeth, or only snoring blissfully in bed? He lives on another continent and the difference in time makes- the last more probable. THE WAITER The other evening I dined rather in- discretely, at an expensive restaurant were the waiters were as formal 'and distant as so many arch-dukes I felt very much afraid of them, particularly as I had thehonor and responsibility of a young lady's company. I must take care not to hurt their feelings, I thought. All of a sudden, one of the most princely of them dropped a -plate of soup on the floor. His haughty man- ner was gone-he blushed, stammered and his lips trembled with emotion. Looking at me guiltily, he murmured: "fir hg~nt idn th in fir aa P LAYS (Continued fron and powerful trag Christie" and "The H paring a production o 'All.Gods Chilluns G dealing :with the ma woman to a negro-- way, which is destine if there ever was on The danger of t course, is only too o stant possibility of c straw, and of buildin any- one element is t great drama. The fa over, that from this s tive, which is calle want of a broader te orous and power a, and almost without e of such sophisticati only trite and unimp And when it is all sai so childfully obvious remains -that the gentlemen everywhei Mr. Sherman, Mr. F contest this very id the meantime the d selves are proving t lw 1 -1 Tuttle's Lunch Room 1388 Maynard St. South of Majestic --I- - - _v C. A-* After the Show-- - For a nice quiet place-where you can can get a delicious bite to eat-why not try us? Afternoon Teas 2:30 to 5 Our place is delightful for dinner parties. Ring 951- W andlet us-tell you about it. POLLY LITTLE TEA SHOPPE On Thayer, Just Back o f H i lI Auditorium .....s.... i. F. L. Tilden...........Editor Donald E. L. Snyder.....Books Normand Lockwood......Music Robert Bartron Henderson... .....................Drama Gordon Wier............Art Lisle Rose, Halsey Davidson, + Newell Bebout, Samuel Moore, I Jr., Maxwell Nowles, Philip Wag-"If ner, Dorothy Sanders. I Tha Sunday Magazine solicits manuscripts from all persons af- filiated with the University. Man- uscripts must be typewritten, triple spaced and written on one side only. * s * * The Sunday Magazine acknowl edges The American Secular Un- Jon review service for "The Un- official Observer" department. *# 1' mon chord of every art. To return to the American theater. which at present is the New York sea- son, we have the point admirably il- lustrated. At the head of the list, of course, there is the perenial "Rain," a vigorous melodrama concerning the seduction of a missionary by the com- monest of prostitutes, a play that promises to enjoy a run of some three years in New York alone, nearly equal- ling the popular "Lightin'," another tremendously successful tale of a hopeless drunkard. In like vein such folk dramas as "White Cargo" and. Percy Mackaye's "This Fine-Pretty World" have created consistent inter- est. Then, there is Max Reinhardt's magnificent production of "The Mir- acle," a story centering around the seven sinful years of a Nun after her desertion from the convent, and at another theater Pirandello's fascinat- ing cycle of neurotic plays are being presented. And to complete the list there is the prolific Eugene O'Neil, without a question the greatest Ameri- can dramatist, who after such crass (Continued on Page Seven) Good Food is always the essence of our ;menu. Fraternities and sororifies and different campus groups often enjoy the quality and quiet atu A Good Place to Have Your Group Dinners r pract yeveryformOfuranceexcept lfe.zr, aven Loneu lat in ve y of service.' them. I smiled sympathetically and tried __Ito look helpful without getting down THE IRONIC (Continued fron ~'il~ll~luhlIIHtllhINHlI HlHuRuHIIu:I, I i Il I~ IllIIIntIunIohIIInuuIInllui n - boy, should have con ly decent bits of ve Humanist, mentally t { offers a timid sugges the Holy Spirit tempt advantage and insp __ __ __breast the purity of and parts of Childe I _':student, sans even a ancy, gladly agrees. wur * I e " "IThe all-A lad, of I4.iftIWf '1 "forgiven, for he is - doomed to struggle a -jistence on twenty-ei -. -lars a year, instead is sure to please you. T IfI cmotadecry comfort and decency with a "gentleman's = The really sad pa 1 21 0 I affair, however, is th i U N'I 1S I TY wof the University o StopinimeanyMost of them are, ed by their studie again some poor lad from Economics an Spanish, which lead I thousand a year, an to pass his life in p turn for the consol Order yo Sunday Matthew Arnold or course, such a pe W uvalues argues in the e 4e a m . gthem an inherer Cream now.V * de v it is the Ironic Hi wildeliverit befOre save men from the that this earth may -i r happier place to liv S This is the Ironic sionand on the cam meat is the alert y+ fool enough to go afi ly the class is not - keep the Humanist some time to come, cast out by the very - pathises with and s "No hero to me is Y - =easy shedding of hi ~ , his fame; my hero : death, can win prais e6P61611111111111111111f1111lIOIIIItHftlHtitlHtli{Iilti11 1!ll iiM~i1 ~iIIH~i HiMHiHi11itHiE~i11in Martial.) Across from D. U. R. Depot 'S It u the Policy of this magazine to Iblish articles of opinion by both ,uden's and fac-ty members if, in 4e judgment of the editor, these a8ti- Ies are of intrinsic t'alue and interest. his does not mean that manuscripts 'licited or voluntarily offered r'e We've Been Serving they Best for Years