Y I x 7 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 6, 1955 Sunday. November 6 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR THE SHEER LOVE OF MUSIC The Finishing Touch A string quartet cornppseriscusses the particular drama and ir n iacy of chamber music By PROF. ROSS LEE FINNEY ments; it is a much more intimate Composer in Residence expression and it demands real participation from the listener. CHAMBER music is a curious The symphony sweeps us along on phenomenon in our day. It an irresistible stream of sound and seems such an anachronism when even if we haven't really listened one considers how commercialism to a note that was played we can dominates the artistic scene. How hardly escape the feeling of drama can the string quartet survive in in the experience. In this respect a society that demands streamlin- the symphony is a little like a ed entertainment? novel that may be read for the But chamber music not only thrills of the plot alone, with all survives; it thrives. It is one of the subtleties of character ignored. the few areas where commercial Chamber music is like poetry de- groups hold very little edge over manding attention to the subtle- local groups. The Budapest String ties and the nuances. Quartet is rightly admired but at- Time is somehow different in a tempts to give it a glamour rating string quartet. It permits more are not very successful. People leisure. The human experience of say "of course their performance time becomes more important than was perfect, but--" and it is the the everlasting tick-tock of the "but" that counts. Somehow the clock. One can be lost within the intimacy and the devotion of the experience of time and not driven local group means more to people., by it. The experience is exciting and in an environment like ours and meaningful but not theatri- where we can have both polish and cal. individuality we feel very fortun- ate and loyal. LOVE to look at the young A string quartet is not just a people who come to the con- symphony written for four instruc See CHAMBER, Page 17 DAILY PHOTOS BY JOHN HIRTZEL Clothes make the man, as the saying goes, but jewelry is the finishing touch. Manufactur- ers, have recently turned their attention full force to the men's jewelry market, with the result that a fine selection of cuff links and tie clips as well as studs, key chains, etc., is avail- able. Pictured on this page are samples from Ann Arbor coun- ters. ANN ARBOR, a community where chamber groups flourish quietly in the living room, has its own string quartet. The Stanley Quartet is in its sixth year of public concerts. Super-accurate readings- "Fast as light!" Afwrg u Light Meter This professional light meter gives direct setting data instantly, accurately --and with no figuring. You just set film speed, point, set arrow and read the cor- rect f-stop and shutter speed. 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ONLY $795 PURCHASE CAMERA SHOP 1116 South University "Purchase from Purchase" --Daily-John Hirtzel -Daily-John Hirtzel GOLD CUFF LINKS GOLD & BLACK WITH BLACK INLAY WITH CREST Devotion To Her Art (Continued from Page 11) has unfortunately not been tapped for world market release, but she wanted a public before which present plans are to distribute she could express herself-so she Indian products in this country. became a professional artist. - "In those days," she said, "re- j'ADAM Rajam first came to the spectable girls didn't go on the United States in 1947 and lec- stage. They only performed in tured across the country after vis- private. I was the first member iting her son. She returned to of an important family to become India and signed a contract for a 'professional artist." six pictures, Madam Rajam lives in a small W ITH a background of over 70 private room in Ann Arbor. Pre-' films, hundreds of stage ap- viously she had an apartment, but pearances including Shakespear- found she couldn't clean it. "You can roles, and years of teaching, should see me with a broom," she she has always found her greatest said, "I'm just incompetent. I satisfaction in dancing, believe this is a good education, "You dance from within. You but I am happiest when I am create beauty. I don't ask my i dancing or teaching." pupils to believe in a diety, but The latter Madam Rajam has they must pray to something done for years. "I started because higher to help them express them- I was worried that I might beceome selves. crippled or something. If I could If you only worry about exter- teach, I felt I would always be nals you are not an artist. It near to my love." doesn't matter how you look- Watching her prepare her pu- it's the beauty you create. When pils for the accompanying pictures, you do that, the public must ac- this love becomes readily appar- cept you." ent. She adjusts their costumes, A number of years ago she talk- counts for them in native dialect ed with Anna Pavlovd, the famed -always instructing them in the Russian ballerina: "I told her delicate stances and hand move- that ballet might be beautiful on ments. the outside-but it could express nothing of what was within. "WHERE I will go in the future "That was why I gave ballet I do not know," she said. up. I 'needed something spiritual "But I will always dance and teach for expression. I was going to -it doesn't matter where. I will work with Pavlova's Indian unit, teach in a kitchen or bathroom if' but the artist caught pneumonia necessary. I love my art." that winter and died." The devotion she displays for Since then, the dancer has done dance is only equaled by the de- a great deal of Indian film work. votion her pupils have for her- The Indian picture industry, ac- the devotion of a student for a tually one of the World's largest, great artist-teacher. --Daily-Esther Goudsmit HANSOME ARRAY OF GEORG JENSEN JEWELRY BILL MACFARLAND, captain of th with a number of finishing touches- robe at one time. A closer view of so PROF. GILBERT ROSS, FIRST VIOLINIST OF THE STANLEY QUARTET e5 A~~kes (s-C2 3rrz~L7 NEW argus 75 Portrait Camera Kit' Takes big beautiful close-ups l Takes pictures at regular distances) Here in one camera kit is everything you need for taking portrait close-ups-or for pictures at all regular distances. Vsing the regular lens of the Argus 75 you can shoot snap- shots from 7Y ft. to infinity. Then simply by slipping the portrait lens over the regular lens, you're ready to take real portraits of your children, family, friends. 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