PAGE six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER Z4, I954 New Theatrical Plans Drama GroupReveals With Sidney Howard's ingenious comedy, "The Late Christopher Bean," the Wayne University The- atre will open its 1954-55 season Oct. 8. Scheduled ,for performances on Oct. 8 through 16, the play was first produced in New York in 1932 and was an instant success. It is based on a French piece by Rene Fauchois with the story adapted to a New England setting. Pulitzer Prize Winner Howard's play documents the confusion resulting from the dis- covery that a village doctor's fam- ily has some old masterpieces hid- den in the garage and attic. Art critics swarm over the premises, injecting discord and hilarity into the surroundings. A Pulitzer Prize winner, Howard has written numerous plays which have won acclaim for their author. "The Silver Cord" and "They Knew What They Wanted" are among his major successes. Presented from Nov. 5 through 13, the second production of the Wayne University Theatre will be Gabrielle Colette's "Gigi." This is the play which was made into a hit French movie. On Broadway, the play introduced last year's Academy Award winning actress, Audrey Hepburn, to American aud- iences. Shakespearean Play For its annual Shakespearean production, the theatre will pre- sent "The Taming of the Shrew." The long-popular farce will be pre- sented on Dec. 3, 4, 9, 10, and 11. Plays to be given next year in- clude Aristophanes' classic "Lysis- trata" and George Bernard Shaw's "The Man of Destiny." Both come- dies debunk popular notions, the first romantic heroes and the sec- ond Napoleon. Later next spring, a modern operatic version of the Greek trag- and Cocteau, and Richardson and Berney's "Dark of the Moon" will be presented. The theatre will also produce a special Children's play, "The Sev- en League Boots," which will tour Detroit and surrounding communi- ties under the sponsorship of the Parent Teachers Association. Robert Davis, To Give Show Robert Davis' films, "Iceland, Capri of the North," will be pre- sented at 3:00 p.m., Nov. 14 in Pantengill Auditorium of the Ann Arbor High School. The World Travel and Adven- ture Series films include shots of Reykjavik, Iceland's capital city, as well as scenes at the famous Icelandic hot water springs. Tickets, priced at $1, may be purchased at the door. Future pro- grams will include film trips to Mexico, Columbia, Italy, and Africa. French Art An exhibition of French prints is now on view at the Detroit In- stitute of Arts. The display, which runs through Dec. 31, includes 175 prints in all mediums which critics have call- ed "the best to be assembled in nearly 50 years." Included in the exhibition are all of the important French 20th century artists who have worked in graphic arts- Reknowned To Give Cot By DAVID KAPLAN For almost 70 years the Amster- dam Concertgebouw Orchestra, which will appear here on Wednes- day, has been a mecca for noted conductors, composers and solo- ists. The long list begins with Edvard Grieg, at whose request the or- chestra made a tour of Norway. When the orchestra was only ten years old, Grieg exclaimed, "Nev- er have I heard a better perform- ance.", Vincent D'Indy, Arthur Nikisch and Richard Strauss appeared on its podium before the turn of the century. In 1899, Strauss dedicated his tone poem "Ein Heldenleben" to the Concertgebouw. Personally Conducted Works In the early years of the 20th century, Gustav Mahler, Claude De- bussy, Maurice Ravel, Paul Hinde- mith and Sir Edward Elgar per- sonally conducted a large portion of their works. Guest conductors at various times have included Karl Muck, Pierre Monteux, Bruno Walter, Eu- gene Ormandy and Leopold Sto- kowski. Founded in 1888, the Concertge- bouw has had only three major conductors. William Kes directed it for the first seven years of its existence and was followed by Wil- liam Mengelberg, who held the ba- ton from 1895 to 1945. Edward Van Beinum, the pres- ent conductor, assumed his posi- tion in 1945 after being with the orchestra since 1932. The 100-man symphony is regularly conducted by Van Beinum and Rafael Kube- lik, who will alternate in appear- ing with the organization in the United States. Local Concerts In their home recital hall in Amsterdam, .t h e Concertgebouw gives 45 subscription and 42 popu- lar concerts. They perform three times weekly to an audience es- timated at 200,000 during their win- ter season series. Outside the capital, the orches- tra gives concerts in The Hague, Rotterdam, Utrecht and Arnheim. The annual Palm-Sunday perform- ance of the "Mattheus-Passion" combines the talents of the orches- tra and the "Toonkunst," the Am- sterdam Vocal Society. Every year the orchestra per- forms a Beethoven Cycle, includ- ing performances of all the sym- phonies and overtures, and occa- sionally the "Missa Solemnis." Their first American tour start- ed Oct. 12 and will continue I Orchestra ncert Here A Time to Love and a Time to Die by Erich Maria Remarque, translated from the German by Denver Findley. Harcourt, Brace and Company, 378 p. In this novel Remarque, using the framework of Germany just beginning to realize defeat in World War II and the love story of a private on furlough, attempts to solve the problems of individual responsibility in mass action-the guilt of the soldier acting under orders-and the validity of private happiness in generalmisery. On leave from the crumbling Russian front, Ernst Graeber re- turns to Werden. Instead of the settled familiarity he had looked forward to, he finds another front: his home in rubbles, his family gone, landmarks of his childhood reduced to a. maze of scrap and bomb craters. Despairing, Graeber can "no longer feel appropriate panic, re- volt, a cry of existence for flight," but only "a tugging, cold, imper- sonal dread." He wanders around the city searching for his parents and "something to hold fast to." Love Like Tree He finds Elisabeth. In his love for her, he can feel a second life, "warmer, more colorful and easier than his own, without boundaries and without past, wholly present and without any shadow of guilt." They create a microcosmos in the blasted city rather like the tree they see brought into forced bloom by heat from a burning building. Yet, they marry and seem to have .some sort of chance for a normal life in spite of the war. There is a disturbing emphasis by Remarque on the idea that if they could just live for the sake of life as a tree all the disturbing problems would dissolve away. In the meantime, Graeber con- WAR NOVEL: Remarque Book Reviewed tinues prodding his fitful con- science. Looking for answers, he visits his old teacher Pohlman, now fired for his liberal views and living in a hut in the rubble. An obvious mouthpiece for Remarque, he helps Graeber muse on guilt, makes a few thematic statements and when no longer needed, is heroicly hauled off by the Ges- ta~po. Function of Pohlman While perhaps Pohlman is meant to bring to life his own abstrac- tions, he is too much an abstrac- tion himself (kindness - toler- ance - knowledge) to really act in the story. "You must believe. In God and what is good in man." "When one despairs for a time of his own coutry, he must believe in the world." At the end of his three-week fur- lough, Graeber returns to Russia, although he realizes he is only fighting to enable the state he hates to prolong its existence. Back on the battlefield, his certainty in his love and happiness with Elisa- beth seems to exaporate. "He had wanted to put up a light in order to find his way back, but he had put it up before the house was built. He had placed it in a ruin; it did not adorn it, it only made it more desolate." Real Ruin The real ruin seems to be in the essential weakness of Graeber, not in his answer. The only positive act he can perform, the shooting of an S. S. sadist and the freeing of four Russian farmers, is blunt- ed by being done in a moment of semi-hysteria, without delibera- tion. Shot by the fleeing Russians with his own gun, in death he finds peace. But the peace he winds seems only that of escape from a problem he, and probably Remarque, is unable to solve. The characterizations of a few party officials, devotees and sold- iers are sharp and apt. But, Elisa- beth herself is the tawny, pas- sionate, fine-spirited abstraction of femininity always turning up in the works of male novelists; and another heroic character, Jo- sef, is a grim cardboard Jew, stemnunflinching and unreal. War Scenes For the most part, considering his material, Remarque escapes the infatuation with scenes of vio- lence, mangled limbs flying, black- ened scorched flesh, and ripped intestines, that overload so many war novels. In the sex scenes, though, Re- marque sometimes lapses into a type of intoxicated rhetoric like the following. "He drew her down to him and the tree was suddenly there, very big, the tree that reach- ed for the red sky and its blossoms seemed very close, and it was the linden tree and then the earth, and it arched and became field and sky and Elisabeth." This is a meaningless projection, Graeber staring over her shoulder, at all- encompossing trees. It's neither accurate nor poetic. On the whole, the novel is best when dealing with the reactions of its characters to each other, the sense of loss and confusion, of despair which permeated Ger- many. When Remarque attempts to solve his theme with his mater- ial, he not only fails to make any sort of a positive statement, but. leaves the reader dissatisfied with, the curiously blurred ending, they hero dying in unfounded peace, staring at a flower which repre- sents it. -Marge Piercy EDUARD VAN BEINUM through Dec. 3. Van Beinum and the orchestra will travel 5,800 miles in the 54-day tour, giving 44 con- certs. In 1946, t h e Concertgebouw toured Sweden and Denmark to thank those countries for their contributions to the Netherlands during the famine the previous winter. Edinburgh Appearances The orchestra has appeared twice at the Edinburgh Music Fes- tival, in 1949 and 1952, and in 1953 they performed in Germany and Switzerland. The Swiss tour was made as a token of gratitude for the aid of the Swiss people during the North Sea floods in 1953, with proceeds of the tour going to victims of the flood. Wednesday's performance in Hill Auditorium will be the second in a four-stop program planned for Michigan. The Concertgebouw will appear in Detroit on Tuesday and after their local performance will play in East Lansing and Grand Rapids. Their program here will in- clude : Beethoven's "Symphony No. 4," Debussy's "L'Apres-Midi d'un Faune," Escher's "Musique pour l'esprit en deuil" and Stravinsky's. "Firebird Suite." Tickets are available at the of- fices of the University Musical So- ciety in Burton Tower. I I Artist To Give Guest Concert Detroit Music Festival To Feature Organist Italy's leading organist, Fernan- do Germani, will perform as guest soloist in the Fifth Annual Fall Music Festival in Detroit. With performances at 8:15 p.m. on Oct. 24, 25, and 26, the festival will be held at St. John's Episcopal Church, Woodward and Vernor Highway. Germani, who is often termed the "wizard of the organ," has performed over 300 times in this country since his American debut in 1928. His sensational career is considered an example of Italy's "current renaissance in the arts." Child Prodigy As a child prodigy, Germani be- gan piano at three, composing at eight, and became a church or- ganist in his early teens. At the age of 25, he took a position as department head at the Curtis In- stitute of Music in Philadelphia. The 48-year-old organist has per- formed in many churches through- out the world. In 1947 he played the complete organ works of Bach, Franck, and Reger in Rome's mag- nificent St. Ignatius Church. Sanc- tioned by Pope Pius XII, this "first-time" in Italian organ his- tory was a great success. Germani is the author of a com- plete "Organ Method" in several volumes whichhasrecently been translated into English. In addi- tion, he has a great many pub- lished compositions and record- ings. American Tour Only on tour in the United States, Germani makes his home in Rome, where he lives with his wife and three children. The festival's musical director, August Maekelberghe, will conduct the Oct. 24 program in varied works for choir, organ and string combinations. The Oct. 25 pro- gram will feature Germani in an all-Bach performance. Included on the final program, Oct. 26, will be the premier of Maekelberghe's new Impromptu-Etude. By The Associated Press Republicans have called up their biggest campaign gun-President Eisenhower-in an effort to blast what appears to be a Democratic trend in the making. Returning from a two-month vacation in Denver, the President stopped off in Indianapolis to sound the call that will be key- noted again and again before Elec- tion Day, just a week from Tues- day: Elect a GOP Congress to con- tinue enactment of the adminis- tration program. Republican candidates for House and Senate were saying, "A vote for me is a vote for Ike," regard- less of their individual voting re- cords in support of the President's program. Last week's Democratic landslide in the Alaska territorial legislative elections added one more straw against Republicans. The Alaskan territorial vote his been a baro- meter of statewide voting trends for 20 years. GOP Loss in Maine Last month, Democrats won the governorship of Maine and cut Re- publicansstrength 12 perecent in what has been considered the backbone of GOP territory. Democrats worked hard to capi- talize on Defense Secretary Wil- son's remarks about jobless work- ers and dogs, particularly in areas where unemployment was a prob- lem. The outlook for Republicans on retaining control of the House and Senate is dim on the basis of sta- tistics from previous off-year elec- tions. Not since 1934 when Democrats picked up nine seats has the con- trolling party gained in an off- year election. Since 1922 the ruling party has lost an average of 45 House seats in mid-term elections and four Senate seats. Small Margin in House In the House, Republicans now have a margin of four seats; in the Senate a margin of three. Of the 37 Senate seats at stake, 22 are held by Democrats and 15 by Republicans. Maine has al- ready re-elected Republican Mar- garet Chase Smith. Eleven of the 37 seats are in the Democratic South. Six appear to be in Republican territory-two each in New Hampshire and Ne- braska and one each in South Da- kota and Kansas. The balance of power thus rests in the remaining 20 states which are closely contested. Democratic Chances Good If the Democrats should win in 14 of these races-and they ap- pear to be running strong-they would pick up three seats in the Senate-enough to reorganize it as I the majority party. 9, PRESIDENT SPARKS FIGHT: GOP Candidates Seek Votes To Support Ike's Program 1' FI t I~i Due to circumstances beyond our control, the Brunch and Supper Club Previously scheduled for today have been cancelled Supper Club Will Resume Next Week ', HILLEL FOUNDATION 1:1f 'V:?. lace-etched satin brocade low pointed square neck, a border trio of pert satin string tied bows call attention to the dolt waisted PERSONALIZED R CHRISTMAS CARDS Order EARLY! 14 companies represented OVERBECK a BOOKSTORE 1216 South U. Ph. 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