PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY.--- -,FEBRUARY.-- a21. 989 PAGE TWO TilE MiCHiGAN DAILY WFflNF~flAV FFURTTAPV 91 1O~R w Tu.vts a.r k7u17ti* A'Xzt"&UV4'&1.LJ. klq 1.700 poetry and prose 'Generation' Moves Toward Literary Vein By EDMUND CREETH Dept. of English The current issue of "Gen- -tation" is generously given over to literature,, some of which is first-class, almost none of which for once could be called cliquish or dull. There are but three drawings, pleas- antly decorative, and, in con- nection with one of the es- says, some photographs of Pi- casso's great steel head (surely it is of a mandrill!) in the plaza of the Civic Center in Chicago. The result confirms my opinion that "Generation" should abandon the inter-arts idea and be our local literary magazine. A pervasive theme of the is- sue is that of tradition and change, and it is beautifully stated in the first and finest of the stories, Joyce Winslow's "Benjamen Burning." Cleanly told, with its rich resources al- ways under control, this long, story rises steadily from the touchingly amusing to a climax that is something else. The narrator's style remains un- affected, even when it picks up some Jewish syntax from the Brooklyn neighborhood of the characters or, more riskily, edges toward stream of con- sciousness in moments of ex- citement. The story has both charm and power and would grace any magazine. At some opposite pole lies "Faces in Water" by Peggy Brawce, very murky, very soap- opera, very odd indeed. With- out apparent motivation and in a style well abreast of the Victorian era, the chief char- acter. Melissa, unexpectedly hauls cff and delivers a mono- logue unmatched since Coi- rad's unwinded narrator Mar. low - but to a more obscure purpose. Ultimately the very "shadow of the lake," what- ever that may be, iC "deluded I do not pretend to understand the cryotic ending but fear the wort The remaining fiction, Wil- liam Du Charmes' "Colo ml Hell aid Farewell." is modern even unto harshness. Told skillfully from the point of view of an incomprehending boy taken to church school be- fore his colonel father leaves for Viet Nam, the story is marred only by cleverness. To- ward the end the tenses begin to wobble in a way that I sup- pose is intended to signify something but that is only an- noying. First-class among the poets of the issue is one new to me but obviously highly accom- plished in the art, Prof. John Kolars, of the geography de- partment. By comparison one has to damn the single poems by Judy Stonehill, Michael Leimer, and Michael Madigan with faint praise and say that they cre promising. Kolars has the virtues of simplicity and effor'Tess technique - if I may quote unfairly from his own iem riscence of Roethke qs teacher includes in the maga- zine, of "structure, rhythm, meter, rhyme." Of the six poems I like "Jack O'Lantern" best, which sinks in slowly but deeply. (Unhappily the second line appears to be misprinted. "And in the child unmasked" scans wrongly and doesn't make sense. Certainly the -line should read: "And the child unmasked.") The issue is rounded out by two stimulatihg essays and an irreverent South American fable, the latter attributed to Jan Geasler. Martin Zimmer- man's illustrated essay on the Chicago Picasso seeks to arrive at a more adequate view of such a controversial piece than that of either academician or pragmatic layman. Ronald Ro- senblatt supplies a very well written account of an experi- mental film that I have not seen, "Chappaqua," though his attack on the Engl sh novel in the second oaragraph seems a bit gratuitous. Manifestly ,here is editorial judgment at work these days In the editorial offices of "Gen- eration," and faculty and stu- dents both should take the op- portunity to submit their work (by March 1) to be considered for the final i sue, even thon- n there is still no (ecrresponding eviaence of the existence of a d:rtionary or a proofreader in those same offices. I am pre- pared to supply a list of a doz-i en misspellings, and typos in Miss Winslow's fine story alone ("versus" for "verses"! "shep- arded" for "shepherded"! "ge- filite" for "gefilte"! etc., etc.). A magazine of any pretensions to distinction owes better serv- ice to its authors. TON IGHT CAMILLE starring GRETA GARBO 7:00 & 9:05 P.M. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM CALL 662-8871 -..NOW ONLY 75c The Dramatic Arts Center OF ANN ARBOR PRESENTS COMMANDER CODY AND THE LOST PLANET AIRMEN AND GALACTIC TWIST QUEENS CONCERT * PARTY * GALA * BASH * ETC. THIS WEDNESDAY NITE, 8:30 P.M. 50c HIP GROOVERS ONLY!!!!!! " Mahier's 9th To Be Aired By JENNY STILLER Beethoven, Bruckner, Schubert ,and Mahler died after completing their, ninth symphonies. Mahler, who postdated the other three composers, knew- about the curse and tried to avoid it, but he. died soon afterward- anyway. Nonetheless, Mahler's Ninth, which the University Symphony will perform tomorrow under the direction of Josef Blatt, proved to be one of the greatest and least-, performed of the Viennese mas- ter's works. Tomorrow's performance of the 70-minute symphony will be the first ever given in Ann Arbor, and, to his knowledge, the first in Michigan, Blatt said.I Blatt sees Mahler as "a rather tragic figure tormented by his quest for perfection." In the com- poser's later years, Blatt said, "he' was obsessed with the thought of death." And with good reason. Bruno Walter, one of his favorite pupils, recalled a moment during a re- hearsal of "Lohengrin" in 1904 when Mahler suddenly "stopped, motionless and deathly pale, hand pressed to his heart. I presume that at that moment he had, for the first time, felt the insufficien- cy of his heart." Mahler's heart condition was a serious one. Aware that he was dying, the composer tried to avoid writing the "cursed" Ninth Sym- phony which would, he felt, shortly precede his death. In order to put-off producing a "Ninth Symphony," therefore, Mahler named the symphony which followed his Eighth "Das Lied von der, Erde." This "Sym- phony in Songs," .considered by many to be Mahler's masterpiece, was based on poems by Li Po and centers around the theme of life and death. IWhen Mahler finally did begin his Ninth Symphony, he started work on his Tenth at the same time. The Ninth was completed first, in 1909, preceding the com- poser's death by two years. True to the "curse," it proved to be his last symphony, for the Tenth was never completed.. Mahler, called by many the greatest conductor of his time, never even rehearsed his Ninth Symphony. Instead, his pupil Bruno Walter directed the pre- miere performance in Vienna in 1912. Despite the fact that. all of his own works were symphonic, Mah- ler's conducting reputation was made during his years as the di- rector of the Vienna Court Opera (now the Vienna State Opera). When he left Vienna in 1905, he spent some time traveling around Europe as a guest conductor be- fore coming to New York to as- sume the directorship of that city's newly-formed Philharmon- ic. Besides Walter, conductors George Szell and Otto Klemperer were among his pupils. byMahler's Ninth is an extreme- lcomplex work calling for a large but not unusual orchestra. "It is a very beautiful but very difficult piece," Blatt said, "one calling for real understandnig on the part of a conductor." Blatt was awarded the Mahler Medal of the Bruckner Society after a performance of the Sec- ond Symphony in 1958. "The Ninth is a large work, as were most of Mahler's sympho- nies," Blatt explained. "He was a philosopher-composer, for whom, music was not just form, but had a content. For a completely in- strumental piece, such as this one, the content, of course, can only be guessed." The .Ninth Symphony seems to express "a sense of farewell - especially in the first and last movements," Blatt continued. "The second movement seems to be a kind of bizarre dance of life, alternating between the lovely and earthy, and the grotesque." The third movement, a "Ron- do Burlesk," consists of a number of fugues, Blatt said. "It seems to be a statement of artistry, of art- ists' endeavor." Blatt said he thought that may- be one reason that the Nirth Symphony is performed so infre- quently is "because of the death resignation in it." At any rate, he added, the composer seems to have become popular only in re- cent years. "During his life he was very much attacked and hated by the profeesional mediocrities among the singers and instrumentaliscs," Blatt said. "Of course, he was loved by the really great artists. He never spared himself or any- body else, whether he was com- posing or conducting." Tomorrow's concert at Hill Aud. will begin at 8:30 p.m. Admission is free. TONIGHT at 7-9 P.M. DIAL 8-6416 PPESENTS National Theatre of Canada SHAKESPEARE'S "A MdumrNight's Dram with DOUGLAS RAIN MARTHA HENRY as Bottom as Titania Directed by JOHN HIRSCH Designed by LESLIE HURRY .... SOLE U.S. ENGAGEMENT! April 1-6 Mendelssohn Theatre 1:00-3:05 -5;00 - 7:05 - 9:10 frak sinatra is ton f rome 2a~ I SEATS NOW ON SALE at PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Theatre PRICES Mon., Tues., Wed & Thurs. Eves., Sat. Mat.: Orch.: $5.50, 4.50, Bak. $5.OC, 4.00, 3.00. Fri. & Sat. Eve: Orch.: $6.00, 5.0C, Balc.: $5.50, 4.50, 3.50 Thursday Matinee: Orch.: $5.00, 4.00; Balc.: $4.50, 3.50,2.50 4 TOMORROW 1 WINNER INCLUDING 7 ACADEMY * BEST Picture * AWAD *BEST Screen Play * AWARD * BEST Cinema NOMNINATIONS ITography * I 14 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor I IA induding * BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR BEST ACTRESS * BEST SUPPORT- ING ACTOR (2) BEST SUPPORT- ING ACTRESS CADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS * BEST ACTRESS * -Anne Bancroft- * BEST ACTOR f -Dustin Hoffman- - BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS * -Katharine Ross- BEST DIRECTOR * -Mike Nichols- w EYE, n METROCOLOR aid FRANSCOPE Wed.. Sat., Sun. 1-3-5-7-9 Mon., Tues., Thur., Fri., 7-9 MATT HELM'S BIGGEST AND BOLDEST! JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN I XVAFJ:ZI&H lEIrrv IPXVIB IDIJIXALA7A' Co-STARR IN G M ICHAEL J. POLIA 0DGEN E HAC:'' S ELE PARSONS Wit t W N h id OE T8E TN 4" ise C , . nre el s rML L I + A r.-U ~ w m _..c . ._ ®... 8" ,?I '* i ..- This is Benjamin. He's a little worried about his future. II I I I