PAUt_4 LIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MACCH 25, 192 J(IHA0NES JENSEN; REALISIIS ART- LEO l)IIJTRISTItN 'enticst to Lee "itliar who plays the (Coninud fom age ne) (Cotined fontPag Thee) Coninud fom Pge ive pat of the Chief of Police. is art, (Cniue rn Pg Is) (otiudtac Ie he) (CniOn en Pg e disguise as the Prefect, in the see- conesoation. To thcnae, of course, tenmpted to do ths, but in doing so£ (as sol actress she was so nupes ,.t anti third act is wel done. The We may only hope' that the present' they have passed their goal., S tarting sie that already I have orgoten hes}lic sb omen nes n n whose philosophy is dynaic, evolu-1 with a desire to deit life, Ithey have nasse) might le pertectly ast it a tha handles it with excellent taste. n- tionary (if you wil), little damage gradually narrowed doswu until now ,minor mio part yet t hardly tink hat lsdeed it is one of the fitest its of they consider no iterature realistic' ready to play eads. She has that veay characerization I have seen in a long wilt ho done; hut any whso long to unless it deals with the more soriid, affected nmanner that one finds so ot-itie. gloss over what ttey consider a de- the grosser astets of life. They have en in the sttr-over-night tpa. The{ There is not msch to ciiicize tor grading truth had est keep away ecome psychopathic specialists, deal-, rest of the cast, athought they make is there very mutcitoa praise, save fromo"fire and ice." Needless to say, luig to a great degree in antrnalities. no outstanding luntders of any ac"e itiricstein himsel. I would recoi- J:.tvoe's conceptiotn is ij' loftier; No prolbletm is "real" to thems unie's count, are hardly worthy of te ttte,end te lay to atyone, even ty1 there is something matuiring in msan's it is the result of bewildering com- tey receive inth~e adanc" notces cla'est fried, withntele sligtest constant atte-mpt to create a more plexe, unless it is a stsdy in a- Already I have etile' n ,rci c i f Ieiation; ad to ce tat has nearly perfect Gust and 'a tmore nearly' normal pyhtology. stein's renarkable mannser of poartras thdtt pertnt fsen true tniverse. Nor is the admission Tpeeraitif savr toen lg the ideal oas. Yet I colitid Iditrihteiss I wo~ld auvise that he Thee ralits f tis erymodrnlysay truttifully that hels efalte,. agofor Iis type is rapidly disappear- that ltsa sexttal urge has not always sttool, sus writers as Theoduore"Age knows no naster antI Dttchltgranm out stage anal the memory. beent as carefully restraitted as our ad- Dreisesr, Sherwood Anderson, D. H. stitt to me, is slotsl" hit surety Ifal' of hims will always e a happy one. vacastscieuty detmands, particularly Lasesnce, and ohers, lhave atparent-!ing ricitu to it. Twit years go I saw-_________ dis'gracefal, Alt these renmarks ~ea ly forgottens that Itere is snottier site !Ibist;in th e pe ptaysand 'alr--dy ts Dnl heNstaa tBezl h ptiatitdes t(o iny tiats of calture; un- to life. In their search fr Ithose highs- shows sgnss of dcline It ts noticed! cPdrmeo fBazlwh ftortuneately, Americatis have for 00 strotng, sensuous, attd horrily sexy issssesit~insltht e first-act swhtere hi' admiired tTastluuser" verg, muchl lotteeats dottinated by tnarrow and creatures whirls go to make up the sie s h le trwtcthsosc' ieadWge ocnpa ucatuctedwrter, tat lsy ae aitchtaraters inthleir novels.Ithese saenod T'es aiik ash adolletttwtooi stI tunthycatdawritersoftartitis relat-:,swr a a i o teiwkdRc~u anrt ops ftocie. auhrso orlibrl st ave ecomnebltitd to the fat that a wie, Notlonget dosshi' 'Sei ite th t siesdramta -.wich couatldl be produced ti d'very large tuner of us are nt ar-1its'eueolit igorsf ;+ b ito de Janeieo. Wgerwo was tiatlynot catlesmcpvnsent tosward t' 'e oly y o; ti 1 5'enot itan'i os cha~tti'e te itloe ithIta cerain iawdecutr nntadtht-itane adtlti7eycs acitls utsc etsualta alue onyto'elyots paset , ticS' stat1eido frtwihhv Ar eri. i hec Dins tnt Iu' 'C. 'stI.,a.kyefi1rohsvitlt level-_ t t s.ln a geat sstiir of u atl . ri it li f f,:tt.o Tisa stnd Isoli". t. i n stttsttetasti 'st sic' ures eofitet-Iofriutute.rithat ass i.t110 ainsht lnta is te, sell ordes'edsita niioe or lss lcc Isiid '''c''ai iiU ta 'ii.tel it I i''ts.iabii i .. lrex Istly ;d'>r ttaht ies Lt.its Italicthat in ir ' F fe, bt,1isg an;1'i's','I e- nst.and hle wirked atilit caosT.i1yn pstill ,i'lssi'i'golii . FitI ' -citI i' t tts tno i bytosi a ii' 'ili ittt 'ttl ae1ita tin KL; o the Unit ~ ~ e 'l ths, anttillite t'- ailiiis'r ate II ' sholdi ilt tc,' cussfritis ' i '','o..:tta ' ' tpesis;andeilsnsesit wass a', eseli i dicayic ie truly sepesnatsiveaof life as 5 pnqfhi . e, of''the eie' .1' ztiiusi, l tn.ic'nsat'ii 3f, it wsSat,;soetoortreiiyar g sartedlthaigs,;rasd snit'the is~tcrtit isitid. tti'ti r iaa'twhdid wllsor' iwts c''niosC itice t " I 1imptosible' ste' ily-litr ductiontofatesonis, amssss's tie, P. aS,'5 iIti'si atit.l 1 t tif;,(ota toe rltat.Is. c' suit to aiddlforce ts themo tsion., -aa- C'rtainty no betelera ict itnJensea c P - - "' - - - - ~ ' - ciuldl havebaen chtoses. ic x- emsplifes the chict't qualities of S tndintsvfan literature, and ye't antong the most cosmopolitan andy universal of contemporary authorsif The culture world awaits with eager- ness the publication of the remaining9, four parts of "the Long Journey, . they are at all cmparable to "Fire t and Ice", Jenen's position as a mas- ter of world-wide i prominence is as sured. 5 ___________ FROST AND UNTEI{MEYEII (Continued from Page One) "Portrait of a Machine", and the one he poached from Hr. Frost "The Ilos- tile Hills". in spite of the fact that Hr. Frost considered "Thse Lost Jeru- salenm" one of the best, I intetsd to- quoa one that h enjityad ore, "Cooun- Icy school-room". "Turn to page ten in your Arithtme- tics." Rstle of yellow- Iages like a snake Ansong old leaves. The small boy tries to nake , His tmind go through its jumbhled ag 'nuji.' \~/ Bu'.t how can ie lay hands on eght Q<< ' ofmesrik.x -2- l4o ~ 'a'1p When mountains fill the window and a lake Nudges his dream, when autumn and e> \ the ache 1 Of color, noon and numbers meet and" mix?r Puzzled, he ask the tree-topesu bhss the sun Covers his desk with blots and yelloww scrawls. " A woodchuck mocks him. If he had a gutO Last year he rought down two o them... The walls Dissolve. Vague thoughts, emus him, one by one. As numberless and nameless as thett calls. ; ulp ADVENTURES ABIOARD SHIP L6 NJiitw (Continued from Page Seven) a less of artifiefality that bjection "My, I'm glad to see you! 1 suppose tubogtalths odlo~iga might be waived for the sakeofas complete picture of a human being ta clothes w~hile you were East" Unfortunately he is at many pointsYo'ewoghee ouhthm hee1byalfm ctes i quite obviously engaged in writing a V4Yu11rn heeIbuh hm hr u l o ycohsa beokb, Greenwood and Kilgore's." The story itself had great poasi- bilittes-a new crew and a drunkenNO captain, a mysterious cargo crossing It through thse grey seas of winter. ' The spigshwn of Suits andN "The Ground Sweell" is really wtorths spinIswn reading, hut only for entertintment Tocat sno"omlt of a very trans-lont elaracter; it an- Greenwood & KilgoreVI' pears to beo the product of a weather- w"Sae tetpvrCak heaten old salt or a ya-lg cllege boyri ot for Expertence. 1, at least, vase~ qufto taken in by the air of realityItmmA given life ahoard this freighter. itt