Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 15, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 15, 1970 Robert By LARRY RUSS sciencea Robert Bly (who will be this destructi year's Writer in Residence, Feb. of us a a confront 19-March 3) is "a hero of our co t times." He has met the dilemma ciay. of living in this time and place Bly liv with an inspiring energy and houses o humanity. sota wit (If he has not had the fame It is a la of, say, Ginsberg, it is because' solitude, fame is most often a coinci- and box dence of sorts. Ginsberg h a s else, wit probably become famous less above 10 from the quality of his work -10 in than because the media h a s the Bly' found f this his homosexuality, only he drug-taking, and nudity make ever he good sensationalistic copy.) alone, i A central dilemma of the in- to it, a dividual. in our time is that urs, o. of the artist, or any man, being What faced 'with the need for soli- comes ou tude and peace of mind and Bly's fir with .the demands upon 1 con- Snowy poetry and prose Bly: Meeting of body and soul and sanity of a violent, ve environment. M o s t re basically unable to either solitude or so- ves in a cluster of farm- on the plains of Minne- ;h his wife and children. and of great silence and of vast plains of corn elder trees and little th temperatures well 00 in summer, well below winter. Somewhere on s land is a shack that can find. Often, when- feels the need to be he'll say he'sgoing out nd won't be seen for )r days. he finds in his solitude ut in poems like those in rst book, Silence in the Fields. The voice is stripped of ornament and pseudo-poetic archaisms, t h e imagery of a depth and original- ity unmatched in contemporary poetry in English. The poems have the most intimate relation- ship with the world around them. But Bly is by no means some kind of monk or pastoral re- cluse. It was Bly who founded the Writers Against the Vietnam War and organized the now- famous Poetry Readings Against the War. He has been prominent in Resistance, organizing a n d leading benefit readings a 11 around the country. In 1967, when Bly was given the National Book Award f o r Poetry (for The Light Around the Body), he criticized even his own publisher for not taking a more definite stand against the war, and concluded the speech by handing over his $1,000 prize MUSic A Jani By JIM PETERS There are too many things to say. An evening's performance is supposed to give one some idea of the quality of the group performing, some idea of the group's approach to their ma- terial; but, last night at Hill Aud. the Canadian Opera Com- pany offered more questions than answers. I cannot say that their pro- duction of Rossini's The Barber of Seville was a complete dis- aster, and yet the grape-munch- ing cronies who inhabit La Scala would have booed them off-the stage. The basic question is one of defining "opera." Is it some classic form of theatre which requires and is benefitted, by continual up-dating and slick packaging? Or is the jewel- box music of Rossini with its bel canto flourishes the essence? The answer is obviously a com- bination of both, but last night's Barber was so severely divided -- like Barber' along these lines, that it barely succeeded being anything. The English lyrics became burdensome only in spots, and I have seldom heard so fluent a translation from a major opera troupe; and yet, such words as "subsidy" do not belong on a 18th century stage. The attitudes of the singers best expressed the dichotomy I felt between the operatic tra- dition and the "playing it for laughs" approach. Of the three principals, only Cornelius Opth- of's Figaro could be considered musically-inspired; his voice is free and smooth, but his heavy- handed acting drained all fresh- ness from the character. John Arab as Count Almaviva never got beyond singing to the audience; he is a lyrical tenor, but his poor annunciation placed a strained vagueness on most of what he sang. Shiela Piercey has good coloratura range; but in recitatives her timbre was often irritatingly harsh and, slipping, into arias, her vocal acrobatics seemed forced. In comparison, those of the cast who preferred to punch-up the script with laughs struck me as being more at-ease. Peter Milne's Dr. Bartolo was exag- gerated to absurdity, and it worked. His ranges in Act II, his "umbrella" scene, and even the subtle visage of cuckcold which he wore provided a great part of emphathy which was missing in the principles' roles. Conductor John Fenwick's orchestra played well; sounding like a music box in the over- ture, they emphasized the light- ness of the score without. the lilting sentimentality which can drown it. Fenwick's hand was strong, but never oppresive, and ensemble remained reasonably tight. Mechanically jumping through Herman Geiger - Torel's gym- nastic stage direction, the sing- ers sang and the comics clown- ed. And it, was as if neither group cared what the other was up to. This quizzical production did, however, definitely prove the uselessness of Hill Aud. as a place of theatre productions; with a smaller audience and a less vacuous stage, a definitive interpretation, whether good or bad, might have resulted. The opinion this time is up to the listeners. If you came to be amused at slap-stick hu- mor, the Canadian company's antics were jovial. But if it hap- pened to have mattered to you that Barber is opera, you pro- bably walked out before t h e overwhelming applause began. to Mike Kempton of Resistance, saying: "I counsel you not to enter the United States Army, and I ask you to use this money I am giving you to find and counsel other young men, urging them to defy the draft authorities - not not to destroy their sipirt- ual lives by participating in this war." In his political poetry (most of which is in Light Around the Body. Bly does not respond to the destructive world by letting himself become desensitized in defense. A Bly political poem is truly subversive. "Counting Small-Boned Bodies" is an excel- lent example. The poem does not stand outside in its armor, pointing at the alien enemy; that is how rhetoric is made, and fails. Bly's poem crawls in- side the Pentagon, inside the mind that wants to simplify, de- humanize, and possess, and shows us what things look like from inside the walls: Let's count the bodies over again. If only we could make the bodies smaller, The size of skulls, We could make a whole plain white with skulls in the moonlight! in being absolutely sure of no feminine offense with MY OWN. Hygienic beodorant Spray for the outer vaginal area. Available also in clesintowele J If only we could make the bodies smaller, Maybe we could get A whole year's kill in front of us on a desk! If only we could make the bodies smaller, We could fit A body into a finger-ring, for a keepsake forever. The imagination, which is the faculty of spiritual intimacy with the beings of our selves and others selves, is a true guerrilla. In addition, Bly has had a tremendous freshening e f f e c t on American poetry as a trans- lator, editor, and critic. Through his marvelous translating, his essays, and his magazine, The Sixties, (as well as his o w n poetry), Bly has spearheaded what has come to be called the New Imagination, bringing a rich surreal imagination in t o American poetry. He has insist- ed on the importance of the non- rational, called for a more na- tural diction, for greater poli- tical concern, and for a greater concern with things of the world beyond the narrow bounds of egotistical man. Bly is a man attempting not to lose the wholeness of life, not to split into an outer and an in- ner fragment and then lose the inner half, as most people have. He knows, and shows "us -he knows, that the man who throws over his deep solitude and be- comes totally embroiled in strug- gles with the public world, soon has nothing new to bring to his contact with others, burns out his energy without renewing its source. On the other hand, he knows the insanity of trying to ignore the world outside, which w Ill work upon us in most serious ways even if we try to ignore it. And, more important, the in- timacy with experience t h a t comes from his solitude makes it impossible for him to remain inactive in the face of the im- mense cruelty and suffering of other beings. Robert Bly's courage a ri d compassion shine through what- ever he does. It is the shining of "the light around the body" where body and soul, the in- ner and outer worlds, know they are One and holy. COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN WHO ARE INTERESTED IN A CHALLENGE... For the 20th year, the Vita Craft Corp. is selecting full-time summer sales help for the Michigan area. Car necessary . Experience helpful but not needed as complete training is given. OPPORTUNITY FOR ABOVE AVERAGE EARNINGS, SCHOLAR- SHIPS AND VALUABLE EXPERIENCE. INTERVIEWS TO BE HELD IN ROOM 3529, STUDENT ACTIVI- TIES BLDG., AT 4:00 P.M. AND 8:00 P.M. SHARP ON TUES DAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1970. Interviews on Campus F FRIDAY-FEB. 20 (2-5 p.m.) OVERNIGHT CAMP COUNSELORS MALE AND FEMALE some camping experience required. Counselors with specific skills, particularly in the following areas: SWIMMING, GOLF, NATURE and CAMPFIRE, DRA- MATICS, and RELIGIOUS LEADERSHIP (JEWISH) BEGINNING OUR 41st SEASON CAMP SAGINAW OXFORD, PENNSYLVANIA less than 1 12 hours drive from Philadelphia Summer Placement Services, 212 S.A.B. 1 14 4' NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATiON - I I NOW PLAYING NATIONAL ®ENERAL. CORPFOOAT R H A RAFTAINN FOX EASTERN THEATRESiMLn 37 NO. MAPLE RD.'7694130 TIMES Mon.-Fri. 7:10 and 9:05 I I ", DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 Day Calendar Trombone Choir: School of Music Re- cital Hall,' 2:30 p.m. Music for a Quiet Sunday Afternoon: Metro Kozak, violinist, Ballroom, Mich. Union, 3:00 p.m. International Center Film: Sweden: Trouble in Paradise, International Center, 7:30 p.m. Degree Recital: Kurt Carpenter, piano (Honors Recital), School of Mu- sic 'Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16 Alpha Chapter, Phi Beta K a p p a Lecture:: John E. Bardach, School of Nat. Resources, "Affluence and Efflu- ents" Rackham Amph. (4th fl.), 8:00 p.m. Placement Service; GENERAL DIVISION4 3200 S.A.B. Interviews at General Division, week of Jan. '23-27: Make appts. and get info, at 3200 SAB, or call 763-1363. John Hancock Mutual Life Union Carbide, Linda Division Iran Nat. Manufacturing Company Nat. Center for Health Statistics Mead Johnson ~Office of Education p.m. Counselors specializing in tennis, golf, fencing and scuba. Vita Craft Corporation, Oakland Pk., Kansas, 4 and 8 p.m. Summer and part time work, good pay. Feb. 18:1 Camp Lynnwood, Va., coed, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Openings for cabin couns., in- structors for swimming, canoeing, ten- nis, riflery, riding, gymnastics. Camp Mataponi, Maine, girls, open- ings in waterfront, land sports, arts & crafts, and dance. Interviewing 9:00 - 1:30 p.m. Feb. 19: Detroit Edison, 9 atm.-5 p.m. Stu- dents who have completed Jr. year in Soc., Communic.," Indust. Educ., psych, math, econ, data processing. Feb. 20: Mohawk Airlines Utica, N.Y., 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Mgt. Dev. Program open to students who have completed 'soph. year or more. I DUSTIN HOM~AN MIA FARROW JOHN AND MY s rmnum I "One of the year's most pleasant 8th movie experiences.' "'The Reivers' fills one with a joyous sense of life and laugh- ter. A 'arvelous time is had by all."-New York Magazine. Steve McQueen "The Reivers -Time Week DAVIDACKLES Elektra "I heard everything from Recording Jelly Roll Morton to>« . Artist Kurt Weill and Charles Ives in his piano"-Vil- loge Voice FINAL sTheater rather than just NIGHT song .., revelation ::v .:},. . , ,y{.>: w: . :>, : .: :;:;: through entertainment ::Doors Open If that sounds too -- . 8 P.M. strong, you haven't heard David yet"-Cash Box $2.00 Caterpillar Tractor Xerox Wisconsin Bureaurof Personnel I_ Detroit Civil Service aim Allstate Insurance Eventually: "VIVA MAX" Bureau of the Budget Campbell Soup Irwin Mgt. I .?) )a~ ) })G C ) G U.S. M. School of Publ. Health, pro- gram in Health Planning, MA. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE LADY SHOW WIGS 212 SAB, Lower Level L DYGVE'I VA SH W VIR~L I Interviews at SPS, week f Feb. 16: Camp Maplehurst, Mich. Coed, 1-5 20-30" LONG $129-$149 REMEMBER !!! achine-made or hab'd-tied stretch wigs from $39-$89. You can eat at Choice of colors, first cutting and styling free., DELI 5-Day delivery on any hairpiece ordered if not in stock. HOUSE 24-hr. styling and setting.r every Sunday La Viva Wig Salon 109 E. LIBERTY THE HOUSE 7 1429 HILL Hueys Birthay arty Chili OUfILD Feb. 14, 15, Sat., Sun. THE 400 BLOWS, +r* Dir. FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT, 1958 Jean Pierre Leaud stars in this Truffaut masterpiece. Sensitive story of a young boy in France. "One of the most beautiful films that l have ever seen" " Akira Kurosawa 7& 9 7cArchitecture 662-88775cAuditorium ANNUAL GUILD HOUSE MID-WINTER RETREAT Saturday, February 21, 12 Noon to Sunday, 5 P.M. at the U. of M. FRESH AIR CAMP THEME: "Life Styles in Transition" Some rationale, (student reflection), for informal search in a retreat setting on the Theme: . . . after the seeming futility of all types of political in- volvement, . . disenchantment with various attempts at types of com- munity living, .. . questioning the basic concept of the Nuclear Family, of A monogamy... WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? Informal talk sessions with outstanding U of M Faculty: Prof. Anatol Rapoport, Prof. Robert Sklar, and others, with emphasis on lifestyle. tb~~lr%^^D AbkjnA1TNADD DC~A TIn, (tikrnn i 3 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM SUNDAY FEB. 15 ONE APPEARANCE ONLY Author: The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test The Pumphouse Gang The Kandy-Colored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby Tickets $1.25 1st Floor Union COMING THURSDAY, FEB. 19 JOHN BIGGERS, Black Artist We demand that Huey P. Newton, Minister of Defense of the Black Panther Party, be set free immediately. Profits from this benefit will be given to the Black Panther Party and will be used fense fund. SUNDAY -Union Ballroom - 7:30 for Huey's de- |I {. 0