_____________________________ ~ - - - -- - - ~- -~ Tho Really Wants A New Cositution The Dark Houses-Creao off Donald Hall Examines the Human" Condition in His New Boo By DAVID TARII THERE IS, at times, a strange affinity between o p p o s i n g forces. Take, for instance, poli- tics -- Michigan politics to be exact. One of the strangest mixtures of political and special interest groups in many years has result- ed this fall from the proposed call- ing of a convention to revise Michigan's 50-year-old constitu- tion. The issue has drawn togeth- er groups and individuals that David Tarr, magazine edi/or of The- Michi, arI) il , ~iwrr /he 11w NI ich a al y, examines the role /olifial and /ressure grou ps hate //ayed in ihe issue ofer re icing Mui higan's con- s/ilrr/jn. normally cannot agree on the time of day. For many years now students of government have been lament- ing the sd'rry condition of Michi- gan's constitution, a document written, they say, for an era when the horse and buggy could still outdistance the automobile. THIS TUESDAY Michigan vot- ers will have the opportunity to decide if the constitution will be revised. A proposal to call a constitutional convention to re- vise or amend the state's basic document will be on the ballot. If the vote is yes, a convention will be called to rework the con- stitution which will then be sub- mitted to the voters for approval. It is almost impossible to find anybody who claims the constitu- tion does not need some sort of revision. But the chances of a favorable vote Tuesday are, to say the least, slim; there is little ac- tive campaigning for the issue, and almost no one seriously be- lieves it will pass. The reasons for the issue being quietly ignored in the election campaign are simple, but they involve a curious mixture of po- litical partisans. AGREEMENT there is on the need for a new constitution. Agreement there is not on how to achieve this. The problem centers partly on the method of selecting delegates to a constitutional convention were one to be approved by the voters. It also focuses partly on the desire of rural interest groups to keep the strong position they now hold in the state government vis-a-vis urban interests groups. As a result, urging a no vote next Tuesday are such un-likely partners in crime as the Demo- cratic Party, the Michigan Farm Bureau, the AFL-CIO, and the Michigan Townships Association. ; Equally unenthusiastic about a constitutional convention is a sec- tion of the Republican Party, com- posed largely of state senators, that fought vigorously but unsuc- cessfully at the state GOP con- vention to defeat a resolution put- ting their party on record as urg- ing a yes vote on the issue. Lined up with the Republican Party, which has seen few of its candidates campaign strongly for the convention, are the Michi- gan Municipal League, the Michi- gan Congress of Parent-Teachers,; the United Church Women of Michigan, the Michigan Federa-; tion of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, the American As-; sociation of University Women,; the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Michigan Educa- tion Association and the League of Women Voters of Michigan. T OTHERside of the spec- trum - the groups opposing; the calling of a convention - has a more interesting tale to tell, however. As one observer put it, certain Democrats are fond of telling par- tisan audiences how their party has been "dragging the Republi- can Party, kicking and scream- ing, into the 20th Century." Now these Republicans are quietly smiling back at the Demo- crats for being left in the dust of governmental reforms wondering how the opposition will explain its objections to constitutional im- provement. For the Democrats, it's all very simple. The present constitution requires that any convention called to write a substitute must STATE CAPITOL-Michigan's 50-year-old constitution may be rewritten if voters approve this Tuesday the calling of a constitu- tional convention. The capitol building includes executive and Saffell and Bush clothing and furnishings are planned especially for men in the University world, who are aiming high, and to whom a commanding appearance, is an ally. legislative offices. be composed of three delegates chosen from each of the state's senatorial districts. The Democrats claim that the Senate districts have been gerry- mandered so that most of them are predominately rural in char- acter. As a result conservative and rural interests would dominate a convention, thereby b l o c k i n g many if not all the reforms more liberal individuals and urban in- terest groups think are needed. If the delegates were elected on a partisan basis, the Democrats charge, the Republicans, who now have a 23-11 majority in the Senate, would completely dom- inate the convention. IT SHOULD be added that Demo- crats said they favored the idea of a constitutional convention, but could not "in good conscience" advise a yes vote. The AFL-CIO passed a resolution last February saying it favors the constitutional convention "if and only if the delegates are selected on the basis of equality so that each citizen's vote counts the same in selecting delegates." So far, so good: the Democrats and the AFL-CIO long have been bedfellows. But also under the sheets with these two groups are the Michigan Farm Bureau and the Michigan Townships Associa- tion, neither having been noted in the past for cooperation with Democrats or labor. Both the Farm Bureau and the Townships Association have urged a no vote on the issue next Tues- day. The Bureau, which has a mem- bership of 71,454 farm families and has been a powerful voice in shaping state government policies since its formation in 1919, says it believes gradual amendment is a "more intelligent way of deal- ing with constitutional change than to subnilt to the voters an entirely new document." The iBureau said its opposition to a convention will be a contin- uing thing. BUT THE more basic objections of the Bureau can be found in statements it made when asked if "minority rights" in the constitu- tion might be endangered by re- vision. "Obviously, the elements of se- curity and the safeguards em- bodied in our present constitution See POLITICS, pale 9 By NELSON S. BO THE DARK HOUSES. By Donald Hall. Viking Press, 1958. $3. As THE SECOND published vol- ume of poetry by Donald Hall, Who is now Assistant Professor of English at this University, The Dark Houses is a surprisingly uni- fled book. Such a total kind of unity rare- ly occurs in the works of the mod- ern poets even though such vol- umes are unified by the poet's per- sonality. Theirs is not the same kind of exploration of idea from many views and directions, the reason being partially that the majority of the modern poets have not been able to establish a per- vasive system of ethics, or values rather, from which they could draw and around which, they cen- ter. This centering is a personal thing, the ultimate result of a cer- tain way of life, requiring both courage and a particular temper of mind. The poetry of this vol- ume is the demonstration. THE RATHER slim volume is di- vided into two sections which are inextricably bound together yet are opposites of each other. The first part contains the poems rejecting a materialistic way of life and its resulting paucity of inner space. The second deals with men themselves, and is the depiction of the human condition in humanistic terms. It is the first division which prepares the way for the second. The poem which begins the book and from which the title comes, is a criticism of people who live without personal inner freedom, without greater love than for the material and status quo. For example, "the cars as lon'g as hayricks," and the "trips to Rome" become symbols of mater- ial affluence and against this, there is the juxtaposition of the idea that this is a form of dying. The "dark houses harden into sleep." At one point in the poem, after describin; the life of the people he speaks of, he steps out of his role as poet to make a bold, blunt statement that "this love is jail, the other sets us free." Although it seems out of place and is not particularly a fine line, we can pass over it with little noticenpar- ticularly considering the sincerity of the poem and the poet. WNHILE THE VIEWS are becom- ing quite safe in poetry, none- the-less, he is one of very few in the recent generation of poets who is sincerely interested in deal- ing with problems of this sort in poetry. His forceful statement of his position is unusual among the poets of his decade and s ucli frankness has become somewhat pass6 and at times embarassing to the present generation of rather blas6 and sophisticated readers. To doubt that Mr. Hall believes this kind of concern with values and with the forceful and blunt com- munication of them is the func- tion of poetry is to assume that he is not aware of what he does. Such an assumption is not justified in view of his awareness of the prob- lems' of poetry. Therefore, it seems clear that the didactic nature of the poetry is deliberate, and with- in this purpose he is quite suc- cessful. HOWEVER, there is a school of thought which accepts the dic- tum that "poetry should not mean but be," to quote one of its well known exponents. The difficulty is that some things, the things which lie in the imaginative world cannot al- ways be communicated by point- 1 Nelson Howe graduated from the University in 19J7 receiving a _BA in English. He is now workinsg toward a BS in design. . *..and they walk less image or sheer sound. Even this exponent has not accepted his own statement at-face value. The fact of the matter seems to be that poems do mean and the problem for the critic and the reader becomes a problem of de- termining the line between non- poetic preaching and p o e t i c preaching. One reason this particular poem is not entirely satisfying seems to be that the poem is primarily ob- jective description and in the very middle, naked and alone, there is one bald moral statement, a moral judgement. Until then, the poet stands behind his description and after this he slips back behind description to end the poem. The sudden step out of context is not under discussion but it applies to the work of the whole volume. ANOTHER POEM from this sec- tion which is more consistent but less interesting in its tech- nique is "The Foundation of American Industry" which begins: In the Ford plant at Ypsilanti men named for their fathers work at steel. It is a criticism of another as- pect of the modern concern for the 'common good' and the 'stan- dard of living' and it goes on to deal with an America of assembly lines "where generators m o v e quickly on belts, a thousand an hour," where men "go home to their Fords . . . or watch TV and work toward payday." When they walk home they walk on sidewalks marked W P A 38 their old men made them, and they walk on their fathers. While neither of the poems cited are the best in the volume, they do show a marked trend toward the more textured and complex kind of poetry. This poem just quoted is one of the most straight-forward and di- rect of them all and certainly one of the more powerful ones in terms of initial impact, due in part to its simplicity and in part to the almost eptgramatic ending. It is true that the issue is one of our age but the method of handling it is new and refreshing. WHILE MR. HALL still uses his rapier sharp wit in this vol- ume, he tempers it carefully to the poem and theme and when he does slip the metaphorical dag- ger in, it is without a smile. These poems of wit are not so much in evidence as they were in his earlier Exiles and Marriages. While he perceives more than what appears to the eye, he tem- pers it with a sly and almost un- seen wink. It is true that not all of the poems are marked by this but it does apply to most of them. However, the general tone has become more serious and more subtle and at the same time, the balance has shifted to a poetry on their fathers." a satisfying solution to the poem and detracts considerably from what is essentially a very fine work. If we look again, we find there is a reason. Because Mr. Hall so violently rejects the materialism which characterizes so much of this country's population and so thoroughly inhibits the growth of other values, he suffers a slight and forgivable lapsus linguae only because he has felt that his posi- tion is important. As he says in a later poem, "wastage of life will create the implication of death which means that you must tell your love while you reveal your hate." This is not only the justification of the poem See our nihty display SAFFELL BUSH 310 SOUTH STATE For over a Quarter Century For the finest in everything musical .. . University Music House, Inc. 'The Classic Blue SkJillfully shaped of fine, full- black-navy Coventry Adams blazer is noted for i f or every campus and cc - Detailed with lapped seams, ho center vent, and plain poc Available in Cambridge grey. Sizes Regulars, Longs, Shorts, Extra Longs. 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