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Page 22 text:
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THE TOWER LIGHT Do Something ! Live! Feel! Suffer! Face the corners! Meet retorters! N Do something! Be! Are you hiding? No! You can't. Life is fleeting! Hurry! Meet it! Get in front, Be pushed around, Have something happen- Don't be a coward- Don't look forward- Take time now. Grasp your chances. Love-have romances, You won't be sorry- E'en though your smile is And your eyes are full. Thank the heavens You've been doing. You have dreams- Memories linger and You'll soon find You are glad You've been free- You've been jostled- You've been hustled About. And yet, forced You know, you've been in it! You've lived! So, do something! M. M., Soplo. 2. 9l After the Storm Lit. Digest 1of23f19o9, from Troy Time: The farmer drives his plough In a soil that's stiff and tough, His horse is lame as hough And has a wheezing cough. -16
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Page 21 text:
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THE TOWER LIGHT jingoists that war is inevitable, one may consider himself unusually lucky that he can find mental relaxation or fortitude in any walk of life. How shall we free our cooped up, our restrained emotions? How may we relieve our gnawing hearts? Were I extremely pious I would turn to my God, but what can I, who am a sinner, do. What did the people of old do? What can you do? I believe I have found my way out. No. I need not fight. I need not engulf my emotions within me. I love music. I love art. I love dance and movement. Can these help me out of my difficulties? Yes, they can and they do. But the drama is the outlet through which I maintain mental and physical fitness. The following is the first in- stallment of a series of articles which will be presented in the hope that you too will find that needed something through the appreciation of and participation in the drama. The drama is the world's most ancient art. In man's earliest days, he worshipped his deities by music and dancing. A little later came man's earliest attempts at poetry and we nnd the beginnings of panto- mime. But man was still dissatisfied, he felt the urge of something still stronger, so he introduced prose into the ceremony. Of course this is not the aesthetic drama as most of us see it today, but is that upon which the modern drama is built. Even before man learned to speak, he accomplished the art of act- ing. In order to communicate with his neighbor, he used gestures 5 and even until the present day, we still find that in the lowest classes of savages nearly everything is expressed through pantomime and sign language. The element of magic played an important role in the portrayal of the earliest drama, which came in the form of ceremonies and religious rites. If rain was needed, the warriors danced to appease the spirits. To make a buffalo hunt successful, one needed but to disguise himself as such and go into his dance. When a warrior wished to annihilate an enemy he had but to make an image of his adversary and destroy it, htm in the belief that he had done away with his tormentor. These are the first elements of acting or imitation. Primarily they were religious, for to primitive man, magic was a divine process and to invoke magic was to appeal to the gods. This was very practical, for it aimed at im- mediate results. Man is born with the sense of rhythm. Only in civilized man is the sense of rhythm deficient. CNow, fellows, you have an excuse for your awkward dancingj Civilized man writes prose but the savage is limi- ted to verse. The savage man knew how to give vent to his emotions. Do you? I. COHEN, Fourth Year Senior. 15
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Page 23 text:
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THE TOWER LIG-HT The housewife kneads her dough In a handy wooden trough, And bakes it through and through Until it's done enough. The swing hangs from the bough, The wind dies to a sough, The rocks are lined with chough, All seated on the Clough The sportsman swings his shough In waters of the lough, That late were high and rough, But now are just a slough. Q.i The Dinosaur Behold the mighty dinosaur, Famous in prehistoric lore, Not only for his weight and strength But for his intellectual length. You will observe by these remains The creature had two sets of brains- One in his head Cthe usual placeD, The other at his spinal base. Thus he could reason a priori As well as a osteriorig No problem bjothered him a bit: He made both head and tail of it. So wise was he, so wise and solemn, Each thought filled just a spinal column If one brain found the pressure strong, It passed a few ideas along, If something slipped his forward mind 'Twas rescued by the one behindg And if in error he was caught, He had a saving afterthoughtg As he thought twice before he spoke He had no judgments to revoke, For he could think without congestion, Upon both sides of every question. Oh, gaze upon this model beast, Defunct ten million years at least. Anonymous 17'
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