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Page 29 text:
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The second-story at 209 Washington Street houses what some people consider the center of all art in Ann Arbor the Arts Theater Club. Intent on expressing a new art form, the theater-in-the-round, these young artists have found themselves limited by slender funds and an even smaller amount of space. Regardless of the handicaps, they have come through their second year; they have estab- lished a legitimate place for the professional theater in a university community; and they have not been afraid to present the experimental. This interest in the experimental perhaps characterizes Arts Theater more than anything else: Stein, Brecht and Restor- ation comedy some of them American premiers - - have been seen. Drama is not the only pas- time for the arty set. Student writers are publishing, of course, in Generation, the campus outlet, and also in the Partisan Review, in New Story and in Poetry; important novels and important poetry is coming from the Hopwood foundation. Important music is being written; important art is being shown.
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Page 30 text:
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The creative mind at Michigan finds many outlets: there is the music of Edward Chuda- coff and the paintings of John Goodyear and Hal Macintosh. There is the fiction of Bill Wiegand and Saul Gottlieb and the dance and poetry of Anne Stevenson. Because several years ago it was thought necessary to provide an agency to hold all art together, the Inter Arts Union was established. With this union, nebulous as it must be, art came to be looked upon as less a bastard-son of a liberal education and more as the ultimate aim Friday night at the Bull Ring on the Left Bank of the Huron might start with Sartre and end with Slosson (Prof.), or it might start with Klee and end at Rice ' s. Philosophy and beer, a little night music perhaps from the juke box, a little talk. Campus Dixieland fans had all the chance they wanted to enjoy the more liberal arts. Bob Leopold ' s combo, the only strictly Dixie group on campus, played at informal jam sessions and during inter- mission at the larger dances.
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