PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY-6, 1924 S ROBERT BARTRON HENDERSON APOLOGIA. and- is doubled up with age College dramatics, above all else, even as the thorn trees are should stanJ for experimentation--a among the rocks where he is climb- feature too often over-looked. It can, ing"- in all fairness I believe, be laid to the falls asleep at the crucial moment, credit of Comedy Club that during ;while the Young Man, Cuchulain, son the last few years it has maintained of Sualtam- such a policy fairly consistently in its "with gold on head and feet monthly programs. Two years :ago it and glittering in his coat; presented Bernard Shaw's "Arms and who is of those crazy for the shed- the Man," last year Edna St. Vincent ding of men's blood, Millay's "Two Slatterns and a King". and for the love of vomen"-- and Strindberg's "The Stranger" (a is distracted by the purely physical prohibited play six years ago), and beauty of The Hawk, and the Old this season, Eugene -O'Neil's "The Man wakes to find that the rocks are Dreamy Kid," as well as Franz lItol- wet and that the water has once nar's "The Key" and William Butler again "plashed and gone." In a fit Yeats' "At the Hawk's Well," which of anger and disgust he begs the are to be performed this Thursday Young Man to return to his land and it had the usual high ceiling of Ital- ian buildings-and seats for about 350. The auditorium gradually filled up-for we were early after all-the show late. Half the audi- ence was adult, the people all ap- pearing to be of the better class, iany English, men and wonen as well as children. The audience soon became impatient and there was a great pounding and stamping and some hissing. "There was an orchestra, which we could hear tuning up, well con- cealed from sight. The stage was lare for the theatre, and the cur- tain a conical one-representing a (Continued on Page Sever) ii' 2 evening in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. Neither of the plays on the present program have been produced before! in America, a circumstance which in# itself jeopardizes the attempt at the outset, and makes the undertaking both challenging and ambitious and terrifying. "The Ivey" is difficult only in that it requires subtle, distinctive acting. It tells a slight, sophisticated story of Vienese morality in the chtty oh- tuse manner that has made its author famous the world over. Two women, in short, fall to words over their hus- bands and their polite indiscretions, their honor and their duplicity. "You know, my dear," one of them says as the curtain falls, "nothing matters save what is seen by your friends. "At the hawk's Well" is far more complicated, and, frankly, without a careful explanation seems quite mean- ingless. Like a symphony its weird imagery requires constant repetition for complete appreciation. It is an Irish dance drama patterned after the technique of the Japanese No play, and to further complicate the inter- national relations, utilizes a form of the Greek chorus and music composed by the ultra-modern Frenchman. Ed- mond Dulac. The story, briefly, deals with man's eternal desire for immortality as sym- bolized by the waters of a hidden spring that is gone before it scarce has flown. The Old Man of the play- "who has been watching by this well thiese fifty years, F. L. Tilden..............Editor Donald E. L. Snyder......Books Normand Lockwood......Music Robert Bartron Henderson... Gordon Wier. ..........Art Lisle Rose, Italsey Davidson, ? Newell Bebout, Samuel Moore, Jr., Maxwell Nowles, Philip Wag-! ner, Dorothy Sanders. The Sunday Magazine solicits manuscripts from all persons af- filiated with the University. Man- uscripts must be typewritten, triple spaced and written on one side only,. The Sunday Magazine acknowl edges The American Secular Un- ion review service for "The Un- official Observer" department. It is the policy of this naga ine to publish articles of opinion by both stude os daculty members froii the judgmenst of the ieditor,tieenti les are of intrinsic value and interest This does not mean thJat manuseripts Rolicited or voluntarilY offeredlare necessaritv in accred with editorial opinion eitiisr in preiipie or form. be content but- "to sit by an old hearth and on naught to set heart but children and dogs on the floor." Of course, the youth relieving the in- evitable tragedy of the younger gen- oration, will hear nothing of it, and as the curtain falls it is plain he, too. is doomed to the misery and bitter disappointment of the senile old s Obviously it is easy to look upon such a philosophy as ridiculous and improbable if approached in an un- responsive mood. On the other hand. the play contains infinite possibilities tot abstract beauty if presented be- fore a considerate and sympathetic audience. As Sheldon Cheney has put it. "'At the Hawk's Well' is a new dramatic form that takes cognizance of the psychology of the subconscious and offers the same compelling qual- ity for the imagination that sound realism has for the judgment." Of course, it is equally easy to pic- ture the almost impossible task con- fronting the director. Here is a play that requires not only skillful acting but specialized dancing as well, and necessitates above all else a precise fusion of music, rhythm, and the spoken word. It would almost seem that failure of a single factor would mean the failure of the whole, yet a.ainst this, there is the happy pros- pect of significant success. "At the Hawk e tell," you cal see, is an ad- . nt ure' A LWIE'.R FROM ROME p but ir at the"s i tt' -'V'etIWii'.iit" about - t tow it arili tt 'etn italy :nter- - t i r rinett's I ithakin" the 'li-cti-u ertyilia C ' - t t._1 ( 5'a". 5 ti. ( . _i r-3 a3': i s : a ndiln ht e S:arin Italy. of rl;.. ol) ays, :_ l -,it'rc-s"10 teeC'-''ateT-I--ea SS .p to . As { r :o tu right there, w t '-des t go that eay. 'We tiss , th sec- and was terrilly sICe ii coming, but we had starce etearl and the tickets were already in our pock- ets. Soon, nwever, it began to rain--to pour-and as there was re- pairing to be done on the track, out we all had to tumble. Imagine us: hurrying along near the walls where it was dry, fallowing our leader. The streets were so narrow and the buildings so high that the dry place was fairly wide, but the sud in the road was slippery and etten dtiet so that we were sadly irty' ee we finally got to the little theatre. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ORGANIZED 1863 You will find Our service courteous s and pleasing in every way OLDEST BANK IN ANN ARBOR - MAIN STREET AT HURON Let's remoant your DIAMOND And make it look ike this one. Prices from $7.50 to $20 All Diamond Setting dune in our own shop SGRAN ERER & SEYFREID PREPARE for- The'.e iuans A cold winter and a nice juicy steak dinner today at BES IM E'S We've been ser ving the best for years till sat seem 'little' to me-for -