THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1980 THtUMRMCIA AL ENSAJL ,13 Published every morning except Mondy during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscript;-% by carrier, $1.so; by mail, $2.00.I Offices: P Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, M4iki~an. EDITORIAL STAFF- Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR GURNEY WILLIAMS Editorial Director..........Howard F.Shout City Editor............ Harold Warren, Jr. Women's Editor ........Dorothy Magee Music and Drama Editor .. William J. Gorman Books Editor.......... Russell E. McCracken Sports Editor...............Morris Targer Night Editors Powers Moulton Howard F. Shout Harold Warren, Jr. Assistants Helen Carrm Cornelius Buekema Denton Kunze William, Mahey Bruce Manley Roberta Reed Sher M. Quraishi BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER GEORGE A. SPATER Assistant Business Managers William R. Worboys Harry S. Benjamin Circulation Manager;.........Bernard Larson Secretary..................Ann W. Verner Assistants. STEDRLLMusic and Drama WHAT THE WEL THE BRAHMS B FLAT DRESSEDWOMAN CONCERTO SHALL WEAR BRAHMS Concerto No. 2 in B flat: Pursuantto ourp I Op. 83 for piano and orchestra: generalpolicy played by Arthur Rubinstein and of up-to-the-minute news about the London Symphony 'Orchestra every current happening of the under Albert Coates: Victor Mas- civilized and semi-civilized hemi- terpiece Album No. 80. heres, including Arkans One recalls one of Olin Downes' herewith offer our annual Paris letter, forwarded by our Official most enthusiastic reviews in the Foreign Correspondent who was New York Times last spring. The accidentally held up by a traffic occasion was the appearance in jam of colliding taxis for an hour New York of Arthur Schnabel with' before one of the leading fashion Koussevitsky and the Boston Sym- houses of Paris whilst on his way phony Orchestra. In speaking of, to see .the latest edition of les Fol- Schnabel's performance of the iese. Vulgaires Little Red Riding Brahms' second concerto, Downes Hood in Toyland. The following became amazingly assertive. From notes and sketches are a resume a man generally so reticent, even of the situation among the dress- non-committal, about his personal mpakers as seen during our corre- tastes, the outburst seems signif- g, icant. spondent's delay., ,Downes' conclusion was that, un- der such circumstances as he had PARIS, July4-What will un- heard it (that is, played by Schna- doubtedly prove an innovation bel and Koussevitsky who had with American women is the use worked together in the Boston of a mirror when dressing the Brahms Festival the week before), hair, a practice which has become "this concerto dwarfs nearly every quite the thing in the better cir- other work of its kind". "This cles in le monde dore- (the 400). score", he added, "embodies all The accompanying illustration of what is best and most distin- shows how the mirror has become guished in Brahms at the climax an indispensable in milady's bou- of his creative. power: not only is doir among the discriminating, it a great concerto, it is one of Brahms' greatest symphonies." Even in such difficult circum- stances as this recording allows (a good piano performance from Ru- binstein but an amazingly poor performance from Coates' orches- tra and the inevitable difficulties of getting a big work onto a rec- ord) one can see reasons for Downes' enthusiasm and almost agree with his conclusions. It is a much bigger and more important work than the violin concerto. It is associated more clearly than that work with One of the principle considera- ! Brahms' effort to be an inclusive tions in assembling the summer composer: a composer who records wardrobe is to obtain an ensemble, all the details of his articulation. The first requisite of the ensemble After all, the epigramic crystal- is the skirt. The skirt may be lisation in the violin concerto worn With the afternoon jewelry I (that makes for immediate pleas- or the evening wrap and is au fait ure in and acceptance of the at- on all occasions. Below is the il- titudes there) was not typical lustration of the skirt when! worn Brahms, however enjoyable. at golf. Skirts are being shown in Brahms in this piano concerto, swiss alpenstock's cloth, drawn- as in all the more important works work, and asbestos with piped bor- is quite as interested in the process ders. of personal organization (as a sep- arate experience in itself) as he is PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS We have all makes. Remington, Royals, III i-( Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 Among the Best and at- Reasonable Prices ' j FREEMAN'S DINING ROOM Clean, cool and with - excellent service. Only one block north from Hill Auditorium. l 1 1 ttu1 uutt141111112 1t n it llti 1 GRUEN WATCHES DIAMONDS HALL E R'S Jewelers State Street at Liberty WATCH REPAIRING FINE JEWELRY A LAKE AND RIVER OUTING Come to Detroit and treat your family to a grand one-day excursion on the luxurious Str. Put-In-Bay to PUT-IN-BAY ISLAND In Lake Erie. Detroit's popular pleasure park. .Free music and dancing in the ship's big ballroom. Four hours at Put-In-Bay to enjoy the bathing beach, the new golf course, and all outdoor sports. Picnic in the grove, dance,explorethe caves and enjoy the view from the top of Perry's monument. i Joyce Davidson Dorothy Dunlap Lelia M. Kidd Night Editor - HAROLD WARREN WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1930 THE SECOND PANAMA CANAL Anouncement has recently been made by the Canadian government of the opening in September of the new Welland Ship Canal connect- ing Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. This colossal engineering project has been under way for sixteen years, and has been completed at a cost of approximately=$122,000- 000. Scores of lives have been lost in the work of construction. The new canal is comparable, according to engineers, with the Panama Canal, both in economic importance and as a great work of engineering. It will enable ships .fully laden, to pass from one end of the great lakes--to the oth- er without delay; and it is esti- mated that the tonnage of freight that will pass through the locks will be greater than that entering and leaving any three of the great sea-ports of the world. Perhaps more significant than anything else, however, is the spir- it in which the canal has been promoted and constructed by our brethren across the border. Al- though there was a minority fac- tion in Canadian politics which ar- gued against the carrying through of the project on the grounds that commercial and economic benefits to be derived from it would be as great, or greater, for the United States as for Canada, the majority of the statesmen and citizens of the Dominion favored its comple- tion, and, after insuring this, went further to guarantee the use of the canal to all nationalities free of charge. The obvious generosity of this' move, and the spirit of neighbor- liness with which it was made, are an added assurance to the people of this country that Canada de-, sires nothing more than to cooper- ate with us. for mutual advantage. The strategic position of the canal, its long-felt need, and the vast scale on which it has been con-. structed, make certain that it will soon establish itself as one of the most important of international. trade arteries. The United States would do well to return Canada's1 gesture by promoting as rapidly as posible the St. Lawrence waterway, project, which would complete the{ Lake Superior-to-the-sea, continu- ous water route. ic' y , E ,_ i Another variation of the skirt motif may be seen in the following sketch. Just where the skirt of-! ficially ends and the blouse, an- other requisite to every ensemble, begins will probably remain a mat- ter of considerable doubt through- out the summer. There is rumor afloat however, that with the com- ing season, the blouse will either disappear, entirely supplant the skirt, or remain exactly as it is at present. ib * BuBu in the crystallised attitudes that 1result. It is a romantic interest in the process of experience (which comes to be almost identical with personality). The profundity of Brahms' personality made him pretty nearly the major roman- tic. The themes have that long span of apperception and richness of implication that makes their com- prehension a breath-taking exper- ience. There is considerable cryp- tic comment by the composer on his own experience, subtly distrib- uted through the intricate tex- ture. The point is that the com- poser's effort here is of a major sort. And yet there is none of the clumsiness and heavy-handedness undeniably characteristic of the symphonies, similarly major ef- forts. There is a striking balance between solo instrument and or- chestra that no other concerto has achieved. Brahms was always unwilling to submit to the domi- nance of the virtuoso. Here he has most successfully denied and subordinated it. Nearly all the entrances of the piano gain sig- j nifance by reference to their or- chestral preparation or orchestral setting. The more salient details of expression are divided and bal- anced among piano and orchestra with almost infallible taste. The piano is used, rather than exploit- ed. The work does, as a concerto "dwarf every other of its kind" and certainly it is "one of Brahms' greatest symphonies." Arthur Rubinstein is the pianist who contributed regularly to those amazing midnight musicales at Muriel Drapier's "Edith Grove". His playing here is very accept- able. He has the necessary vig- our for this type of music: the ex- hilirating urgency of spirit (one might almost call it argumentative approach) correct for both Brahms and Beethoven. His tone is cor- rectly equable: there are no inten- tional lovelinesses that would be unique and personal but diverting. And in all his animation he never foreswears, clarity of outline. The work of Coates and his or- chestra is, as I have suggested, miserable. There are unaccount- able physical flaws in the orches- tra and from the conductor an un- necessarily humble subordination to the pianist and a lack of pene- tration into the score. Yet, as I hope I have made clear, . Q lill end $ fora le bo fa *dozen assorted styles AMERICAN PENCIL CO., P- ..NJ. Makers of UNIQUE Thin Lead Colored Pencils-20 colors-$tOOper doe. ASHLEY & DUSTIN STEAMER LINE Foot of First Street Detroit, Michigan _ 1 f SUBSCRIBE to the Summer Michigan Daily Send it home for Call .2-1214 or Come to the office on Maynard Street 1 Perry Monument Drive to Detroit and enjoy the DANCING MOONLIGHTS Leave Detroit; 8:45 p.m. Return, 11:30 p. m. Wednesday,Thrdy Saturday. Sunday and Holidays, Str. Put-In-Bay leaves foot of First St., Detroit, daily al 9 a. m.,, returning at 8 p. in., except Fridays, 10:15 p. in. Fare' $1.00 round trip, weekdays; $1.50 Sundays and Holidays. Steamer runs through to Cedar Point and Sandusky daily. Lowest rate to Cleveland via Put-In-Bay or Cedar Point. Perfect dining room and lunch counter service. CEDAR POINT On Fridays after July 4, a special excursion is given to Cedar Point. Fare, $1.75 round trip; chil- dren half- fare. A stay of three hours is permitted to enjoy the great bathing beach, boardwalk and the thousand -and-one attractions of this Lido of America. On other days a stay of one hour is allowed. Write for Folder SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE Such was the versatility of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, that it wouldJ be difficult to say which of the! manifold activities of mankind suf- fered the greatest loss by his death recently at the age of 71. England will mourn sincerely the passing of this man; but his fame is more' than national. The whole world will pause for a moment to note with a feeling of regret the loss- of one of its favorites. It is unfortunate, perhaps, that the world will remember him more as the creator of a vivid character of fiction than as the progenitor ofE the existence of the occult or the. defender of Britain's part in the, South African war. The endeavors -nc 'ai~ +% rn v a~w The Shah of Persia cables in the following little epic which goes straight' to our heart. It bears the, poignant title: HEARTBREAK I used to consider my room- mate A decent sort of guy; We've been through plenty to- gether, My room-mate and I. Buteverything is over, He did me the worst of dirt, He knew that I had a date to- night, And he sneaked out wearing our shirt. * * * Well, isn't life just like that now. Come again,, your Majesty, you hv p nn idia. hn vo~ lit. le A rt ost serious to a man are seldom,! av ,nu wea o y YU~r e o14CC1 ewed with the same seriousness i helped us get swimming when we' the world. But it is enough that wanted to. has brought to many the enter- * * * inment and adventure of reading Now how about the rest of you' s books. Let his name be in- who are weary and heavy laden? ribed on the rolls of history at r Let's hear you vent your spleens ast as one who made life more now and then. Remember the aw- Across from the Majestic N L A dh {t 'I I