THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1924 ;"woo- OBSERVER (Continued from Page Seven) metropolis; not only because it is the country's rail center, but because it contains the most extensive accommo- dations for "tramps" of any city. West Madison Street, South Clark, South State . . . these are the "home towns" of thousands of migrant la- borers who come to Chicago for the winters because it is the cheapest city in the United States for the man with little money. And it is to Chicago- that the men come when they are in their luck and need medical treat- ment, or charity, or both . . . Chicago is not the bum's paradise- there is no such place-but certain- ly is his haven . . . Perhaps it is right that a sociologic book, one designed to analyse things rather than portray them, that the color of the bo's life should be mini- mized. But the Observer wonders- suppose Mr. Anderson had coupled his technical knowledge with the bril- liant pictures of Ben Reitman, or had opened a few chapters with bits from Carl Sandburg's poems-Would he not have achieved a truer picture? FOUR POEMS (Continued from Page One) below you- red green blue black yellow ad Iviolet. . . Then-just before you hid behind the western hills you yawned and vomited a aiess of colors across the sky. O Mister Sun don't you like our colors? or did the stench of our world1 turn your stomach?I Which? why? FREEDOM one week before we were married We sat in my red canoe. while Moonbeams frolicked upon the ever-changing surface of the dancing River as it gurled and sang on its journey toward the open sea- Do you remember? when the world was sleeping and the Moon skipped among the clouds like a Satyr whirling over the soft fields of spring- Do you remember? oughly practical, absolutely self-con-, fident, and in the end quite cynical- all as Shaw himself would have de- sired her. And finally, there is the Pirandello play, which as far as I am personally concerned was the most brain-storm- ing production I have ever seen: it almost made you think too much. Here was a man who pretends to all his friends -thatthe is erazy and then latter admits that his insanity has really been a sham. For twelve years, it is true, following an accident with his horse, he was without his reason, but after it returned to him he has ben content to let the world be well- lost. Why should he return to his ordinary life with all its pettiness when as a king in history he can live a course already decreed for him? Which is to be preferred, he asks,- thej life of a lunatic, who can order every-I one at his beck and call, or so-called sanity dominated by rigid social codes? It is all a puzzle but in actual per- formance one gained a sense of pro-j found truth and an even profounder problem and surely, above everything, a very- profound "point."; Freud writes that he wishes some man could popularize the essentials of psy- choanlysis as Corners has popularized the facts of rejuvenation. "I hope the book has such success that our friend, who has performed such high service for science, may have the means to continue his work," adds the dis- tinguished psychoanalyst. A notable feature of Mr. Corners' book is that it reports Steinach's discoveries in Stein- ach's own words. j:. A l< SUNDAY MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR, MICHIOAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 9, 1924 Freud Writes About Rejuvenation "We had nothing more in common Dr. Sigmund Freud, the famous psy- than the memory of a short-lived hap- chologist, has written from Vienna in piness, and I can tell you that that enthusiasm over George F. Corners' kind of common memories separates book, Rejuvenation: How Steinach people rather than unites them."- Makes People - Young (Seltzer). ("The Mate," Schnitzler.) We Hear From Our Chicago Correspondent Has Good Time; Wishes We Were There _ ., a Chicago-sur-Lac, February, 1924. r March, 1924. I have long had in mind this com- munique from the world's literarya center, but events deterred, and now as the season closes I will attempt to satisfy the longings of you inhabitants of the outlands. with bits of gossip current in, the most sacred ruelles.j As I became retrospective, but one, thing I regret- that our divine Mary played Salome in Detroit. I cannot bring myself to attribute the perform: ance to the liberality and esprit of the Detroiters.. The opera is taboo in Chicago, and in Chicago: "L'Art-c'est moi." The only explanation is that the Michigan-dwellers were ignorant of the nature of the work. Like Paris' ability of the Drake became oppres- a bull forbidding students orgies at sive. Barcin suggested the Entertain- De Briles. He was hastening to Ike ers, but I was not equal to several Bloom's where he had a conference hours of Boston Store perfume, cory- with Harold Bell Wright. While f bantic mulattos, ogling octoroons, and was motoring later I saw them sit- naughty Nordics, we compromised on ting on Lorado Taft's Fountain of the Stables where the is self-styled Time in Washington Park. Hecht was atmosphere as the devil, where the perched on St. Paul's head and. waiters dance, and where the or- Wright was on Aphrodite's knee-they chestra does not play for Victor rec- were engaged in a heated argument ords. Barcin consumed a flask of on the aesthetic theory of St. Thomas. Bordeaux Extraordinaire and when I Aquinas as evidenced in Getting reproached him began to quote: "Haette Gott mich anders gewollt, - Er haette mich anders gebaut." Gertie's Garter. On my way home I stopped at Les- chin's to view an exhibition of Chi- nese hosiery, and at Capper & Cap- ner's to urchase amP Pa ff T le p uu tas some ear muus. i When I left he was quoting Verlaine was late when I arrived home, so I to a pretty young creation from Wil- dined lightly on partridge and an- mette. In hyrd d THREE QUARTER C 0 A TS V A Famous New York modiste, lunching at the Ritz in. a tube-like three quarter length Coat of navy blue charmeen embroidered in Oriental coloring and pattern completed with a collar of squirrel, is believed to have set the present vogue for coats! are favored. For sports, Mah Jongg, Hy-Lo and plaid -zcoies, after which I picked up a of the old world Chicago is the only Jevnes displayed an excellent col- volume of Tessin le Marevilly - La graceful. adept of debauchery in lection of sketches by Felician Rops Vierge Accablee. One line: "Qu'im- America. She jealously guards her in January. One chef d'oeuvre con- !Porte leur passe farouche s'ils ont su laurels-nemo me impune lacessit. If sisted of three straight lines and was faire un tel bien" struck me with such Detroit was shocked Chicago still re- labeled "Pessimism in Despair." I force that I went immediately to bed. tains it. was overwhelmed by its intensity. I beg to remain Amelita G-C. has deserted us with I met Ben Hecht today in the Old Im painfully vague promises of return Dutch Room of the Tip-Top Inn. He Votre tres humble, tres obeissant, - was downcast because the President et tres fidele serviteur, nextseason.. my God! must we jour- ney to New York next winter for "An- of Northeastern University had issued! Ezra Demi-Livre. nie Laurie! In the meantime the city is still governed by the laissez-voler policy- Ne the subway is as much as ever an Notes On New York ethereal thing - the Illinois Central continues to darken our magic sky- line-pennies are coaxed from school WARD ALLEN HOWE children-school boards betake them- selves and their households to St. Probably the best short description color shifts and varies with almost Moritz and Chamonix -- the Temple of New York is that by William magical speed. .Building is completed -- God is in Showalter who labeled it "the cosmo- What is it about New York that at- Clark street - at the College Inn polls of civilization-the metropolis of tracts this ever increasing legion of Semitic reverly holds sway under the mankind." Ward Price, a well known writers? What do they find in it to tantalizing baton of Isham Jones - English writer, on a first visit to the spur their pens onward The ob- North t U~~~~~~Lnited| States in 1920 said in an inter- prterpn owr.Teo- Northwestern University co-eds areUnt&Saein12sidnanner vious answer is that it is the magni- view for the New- York Times that s selling lone-quarter piece bathing suits NwYr s" iyo eidrn tude, the complexity and the shifting to- swell the fund for the rehabilitation kaleidoscopic scenes of the city's of demoralzed professors-Mrs. Pot- daily life that constitute its most pow- gates it looks like a racial museum, ter Palmer XIV appeared at Onwent- with English labels-an international erful attraction and help to make it sia in jaguar-skin hosiery. one of the most fascinating cities in patchwork with an Anglo-Saxon tewrd Col th priatc But yet another star .in our crown! fringe." But whatever descriptive the world. Could the peripatetic Duse--delle belle mani-gave atmo- phrases critical writers may apply to Caliph larun Al Rashid have seen New York he would have encountered sphere . to the Auditorium. For six it, none will deny New York's import-Nig k that far outrivaled those of .-dollars I sat in the thirty-seventh ance as a world center in industry, ightisveBagdad.iA careful and row. Of the play, Ibsen's "Spettri," I finance and the arts. - ~observant person who. will persistent- cannot speak._ But I saw her hands! As a field for writers New York is ly roam the streets and by-ways of I dined last night at the Drake with especially famous. It has been fic- New York with arrectis auribus and; a young composer, Barcin Tavanez, a tionized again and again. Few auth- eyes wide open can not fail to secure I protege of Schoenberg. He is a rhyth-j ors, seemingly,- can resist the temp- material and impressions that will be mic maniac. Unlike Schoenberg and tation to lay at least one scene of their of very definite help to any literary Varese who are inspired by the charm-l productions within the limits of that ambitions that he may have. Opin- ing dissonance of a traffic cop's entrancing city by the Hudson. And ions vary as to the relative merits of whistle, an auto klaxon, or a steam the results of their efforts have notvarious sections of the city with re- crane, he haunts La Salle Station, the always been of a very accurate nature. spect to their literary, inspirational Armitage avenue car barn, and the Ernest Harvier, writing in the New and atmospheric qualities. A neces- Congress Street Elevated for his elan. York Times, tells of a young girl from sarily limited and brief discussion of After listening an entire week forWilkesbarre, Pa,, who lost her way the more prominent places of interest q on the Bowery and asked a policeman and locales that are often used in Unique, sounds to emanate from the: construction work on the Edgewater for directions, stories of New York life will help to Beach Annex, he returned barren to "Don't you know anything about bear out the assertion that the metro- Bec Annex, he reud n to New York?" asked the officer. polis is a very prolific hunting ground his' studio with the resolution to con-t fne himself to railroads. His playing No more than one of the writers for writers. extensive of New York fiction stories," answered First, consider lower Manhattan, ear. One can actually smellteni the young girl sadly. that Is the region below Fulton, The Stretthe old dead line beyond which harmony. As he played for me his The tendency among writers, espec- Street, h Apres-Midi % d'Enfer, an odor of ially those who gain their knowledge: no crook could go without pain of a'maranth and asphodel pervaded the of the city through the newspapers arrest. It is a region' of surpassing and films, is to overdraw and o interest, historical as well as pres- salon. Every sound f.rom, the screech-;epaie ai hc nsm ent-day, for it is here that the city ing air brakes: to the locomotive bell, emphasize, a habit which In some en-afr. sheeta h iy ai brakdced, to theslocoortersel cases has reached to gross exaggeraf- irst came into being as an insignifi- was reproduced, visions of porters ion. It is no easy matter to present cant little fur-trading post. From and conductors tripping with cadence a true picture of New York life cr P.attery Park is obt-ined a superb, step in some enchanted garden be- even a segment of it. The city is If of the harbor ,its waters plowed tween dawn and sunrise.- - constantly changing. Old lornities pi from every port in the Our dinner completed, the respect- are transforedaver mm ts I w:m.+.-..- A Y)..-. -- G r Four Poe LEO NIEDZILSK DEATH Say, Death, *why do you beckon? 'Tis useless l tell you-stop! awhile yet. , . awhil You have hounded me eve my eyes opened to the lig of day, and :the rattle of your disjointe . is ever in, my ears - Stop! Stop! I will not befriend you, you bastard son of Sin-- No! leave me to drink with Life and Pleasure Leave me to know and befriend them Leave me to woo and wed them Leave me to their mercies and graces... to their false names and painted faces. and then-some day, when all this shall cloy me like hemlock and lethal wine I will call you back and we shall go spinning down through infinity and chaos in tight .embrace But not yet--not yet! WAITING-FOR WHA years ago You asked me to wait. the years are gone, thundering down the empty halls of the dull remembered and now I fold my thin dead hands over my sunken breasts and stare understandingl at the cobwebs and dust on the faded walls of my life, yet- And I wished I too could be free. . . but You only laughed softly and pressed my hand whispering Next Week We will be Married- Do you remember? i DRESS SPORTS COSTUMES I sit here waiting. You asked me to wait. A SUNSET 0 Mister Sun You need not burn my teo and throw your prickly be at my eyes to make me kn how much you hate this world of ours. No Mister Sun You need not torture me so cruelly to make me understand- PLAYS (Continued from Page Two) Such a conclusion, you can see, is the only possible one for an artist, but then again the average audiences appreciate anything but art, and so they raise the usual cry-the madden- ing, persistent cry--that the theater' is "to entertain, and not to draw one through a knot-hole!" ks for "Saint Joan," nearly every-" one is agreed that it is one of the dis-_ tinctive landmarks in our literature; in every way a really great play, And as for Winifred Lenihan's portrayal of the leading role it is quite impossible to understand how anyone could de- sire a more complete interpretation- that is, considering Shaw's philosophy aa. a. basis. She Is intellectual, thor- Coats that illustrate the vogue for twill are straight and slim, and collared with short-haired summer furs or braid trimmed. They may be chosen in tare, high shades or navy. Moderately priced at $65. Coats with short swinging capes forming the sleeves have a swag- ger air; striped material and. the thick napped fabrics, or bodly plaided like a certain coat in black and white are priced up from $25.00. Coats, sleek and slim, may be chosen in seven-eights length with a 'matching dress under- neath. Such a costume may have a fur collar softly match- ing or be braid trimmed. The coat is lined with canton, priced $150.00. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ I 'S. I knew It aeons ago. only yesterday Mister Sun I saw you crawl up out of the east rubbing your sleepy red ey (I felt sorry for you) But you were soon awake. You stalked majestically across the blue expanse of Drinking in the colors - of the worlds that twirh d about in a