Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Wednesday, January 15, 1958 -s's WIale you relax between exams, we hope you will visit us, and browse for your pleasure. JOHN LEIDY Phone NO 8-6779 * 601 East Liberty Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Wednesday, January 15, 1958 - - roooo 0 y d tw Ba ha pri to th in En a cla on ve fer up un ad ha Ta sm alj re per of Al op an loc th Jir ha an, en en ne an Ac fri ch w of at H cu Al mi J fu ho ha op cee th sor He pa ha us hu re th sh er aucceaafu JIMMY PORTER: )ITH SILVERMAN T'STAN ING British Kenneth Haigh and,^ ire currently starred on o a play which prom- ; a lasting statement on century youth. Look ager, by John Osborne, created a storm of ap- rgland, and has begun R ane of contraversy in States. The entire play ashabby room in the ilands. Jimmy Porter, nan of the working > has been educated in smaller provincial uni- as married Alison Red- mg lady of the English le classes. Having been 1 as a journalist, an man, etc., etc., Jimmy elped by friend Hugh mother in starting a shop. ids have grown apart, h Jimmy never tires of including lengthy and rantings on the evils class in general and particular. As the play m is ironing and Jimmy riend Cliff, a fellow heir house, are reading and bickering. Cliff the most recent of iends, all of whom he ;articularly dear to him lison, with whom he numerous suspiciously conversations. Cliff, s, acts both as a referee Photograph by Friedman- zer in the marriage. In Courtesy Mr. Sol Jr Helena, a childhood Kenneth Haigh and Mary Ure in a scene from "Look lison's, moves into this in Anger," at the Lyceum Theatre in New York. domestic household, ig for a job and a room case. One of the most significant tempers, you were already L. t appears tobe hatecaesinfcn tepryuwealad ight for Jimmy and things about Look Back in Anger road to fame. Of course, tl er time is largely oc- is that it gives new blood to real- down on the wage scale th h her deep concern for ism. This is an age so dedicated laborers were, and the m alth and welfare. The to the cause of realism that it has tasteful their work, the a f crisis occurs when annointed a sort of high priest teresting they;were to the hes off to Mrs. Tanner's whoe titles are variously "the The world of literatu moe and Alison rushea s ,,a drama was in serious da dummy and Daddy to man on the street," "a very or- becoming a second Library sy's baby. Act Three dinary guy" and "the average gress record collection, I he same cozy scene ex- man." So, for the past decade and given over solely to docu Helena is now behind even beyond, far too many play- the fact that the struggle; g board. It is some wrights, authors and script writers ordinary guy are struggle- er. Minutes later, Ali- have surrendered themselves, body know. The chief contributo crawling back to Jimmy. and soul, to the ritual of repro- library, was and is the a fit of remorse,, de- ducing, verbatim if possible, the snobbery which holds tl *n and Jimmy are un- life of the most "ordinary guys" little guys are the best. .t permanently reunited they have met. True began to lose Hidden under the banne rtain comes down, its essential meaning and became realism were a multitude synonymous with real and real ary sins. It would be pie Y would seem to end, became synonymous with average this were all past tense; it and facilely, with the which, in turn, came to mean It seems that the American errealistic touch; the something like lowest common de- having lost the Aristotliar nd wife are unhappily nominator. The upshot of all this ing of truth and/or imit only because, since was that, if you could produce a life, looks first and fores out in this world, they dialogue that might have been a its own concept of reality ne accustomed to mis- tape recording of two manual it has managed to squee niraculously, is not the laborers discussing their wives' (Continued on Next P I 'acob son Back on the he lower hese two ore dis- sore in- public. re and nger of of Con- but one menting s of the r we all r to this inverse hat the r of this of liter- asant if it is not. n public, mean- ation of most for and, if ze that age) Polaroid H IGHL AN D E R An i CAMERA %//o/ 80. DEsiNsrD for the snapshot photographer, the Highlander is the "baby" of PoLAsom Land CAMERAS. It's so light and compact, it'll fit in a pocket or purse. It's so easy to operate, women use it with pleasure. It's versatile-will take pictures indoors or outdoors, in rain or shine, dim or bright light. 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WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT 510 East Willioms NO 3-5540 Around corner from Student Publications