Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturdav. Aaril 12_ 1969 1 PaeToTEMCIA AL Scitirclrm, Ariril 1~ 1Qi~Q F Ensian By PHIL S. STEIN meml T h e 1 9 6 9 Michiganensian sixth opens hopefully and encour- rollm agingly with the great smile of vali a nice looking girl on the cover, able! and a picture of a spontaneous seen: group-dance on the Diag last tutic spring on the frontispiece. But has by the time the reader makes it A( through, the' organizations pic- cons tures (You know, the standard ing shots of Daily editors looking bega pensive and UAC officers look- the ing official) and the fraternity- ling sorority section, the quality es- ily . tablished early has all but dis- of a appeared. mor Interesting things, these year- fore, books. What makes the Engin- peop eering Council worth two full the pages-with pictures of only O five members-is beyond me. begi And why over 100 pages are de- Diag voted to a Greek system with a it th '69: For the abership of less than one- h of the total University en- rent seems to make the dity of yearbooks question- But, if you disregard this ningly inbred glut of insti- onal boredom, the 'Ensian done all right. ctually, this year's staff put iderable effort into further- the process of revision that an last year. The heart of book-that section chronic- life at the Big U-is primar- a relaxed photographic tour year in Ann Arbor. It is e event-oriented than be- but mostly celebrates the le in events, rather than events themselves, rganized as a chronology, nning with last summer's g Art Fair (the captions call his; actually, the fair takes place on South University), the book encapsulates the year into a 142-page picture journal. It is ordered on chronological lines, rather than topical standards; thus, we first see the football team in September, pass through the SDS disruption of Presi- dent Fleming's State of the University speech, and return to the football team at a game played two weeks later. It snow- ed during first semester finals time at the UGLI; the SGC store opened in the basketball sea- son. The relations of time are underscored by the order of the pictures. It's good to see, too, that year- boks are more and more becom- ing visual rather than verbal; copy is kept to a minimum. More should have been deleted, though, because the 'Ensian 0 mindles staff's writers aren't nearly the pros the photographers are. On page 110, the captions say Den- nis Stewart is shooting, and Dan Fife is making a running jump shot; had the copywriter looked more closely at the pic- ture, he might have realized that Stewart is passing, and Fife is attempting an under- hand lay-up. Similarly, the bold student who raced nude down the steps of the Union to flash the "V" sign behind Police Chief Krasny during the Dionysus in 69 brouhaha is identified in the caption as "Student protester." Very enlightening. S t a n le y Kauffman and Arthur Rubin- stein have their names mis- spelled. And is Wayne Morse really known for his studies in interpersonal relationships? The graphics staff has gen- erally done well in the experi- ments. All except the sports pages are fine examples .of un- cluttered layout, where enough white space is provided to am- ply set off each picture. Several interesting photo reproduction techniques are applied, and the color shots - although still tinted by printer's-plant blue - brighten the book up suitably, nicely matching the orange and pink cover scheme. My choices for best pictures in the book reflect some of the photographers' a e s t h e t i c in- sights and journalistically inter- pretive eyes. Andy Sacks' inspir- ed color shot of Timothy Leary being blessed by a mystic splat- ter of godly hues is tops; Photo Editor Thomas R. Copi's cover picture shows the same insight for a fine portrait that he dis- plays in the picture of his boss, Editor Sue Schultz, on page 367. Other especially good pictures ' s eye are Larry Robins' "colorless col- or" view of the NationalBallet; Richard Lee's of writer-in-resi- dence Je r r y Kosinski; and Copi's aforementioned glimpse of the nude spirit from the Dionysus affair. Actually, t h e only photographic pitfalls a r e suffered when some of the more radical reproductive techniques make some pictures almost ill- egible, when the color is so washed that color is pointless. You can have fun by pre- tending that the whole book - not just the 144 pages of front section to which I devote my re- view - represent, in any way, life at the University. But, as the editors of The Daily say, I guess s t u d e n t publications should only be representative of the people who choose to staff them. Which means we can cut the crap when someone pulls a coup and wrests control of the book f r o m the Greek groups which pay for those big pictures in back. Or, which might also mean we can grin and bear it and realize that we aren't ask- ing the yearbook to be relevant - that it should be attractive is all that matters. U SUNDAY NIGHT AVEHICLE of Ann Arbor -PRESENTS- APRIL 13 THE FANTASTIC ROTARY HCONNECTION AN EXPANDING EXPERIENCE SHOW -including- LIGHTS DANCING r THE SOUL REMAINS AND HEAD (Continuous performance from 9 P.M.) ALL TICKETS $2.75 AT THE DOOR l --ALIVE ENTERTAINMENT-- 639 S. MAIN at MQSLEY I poetry and prose Wright: Touchi g a poet's love F p . By LARRY RUSS James Wright gave a poetry reading at the UGLI yesterday. If you missed it I feel extremely sorry for you. He is one of those very, very few who c write about the deepest grip s and joys. His sound is masterful and his imagination is on the fron tier. His first book, The Green Wall, which won the Yale Younger Poets Award, was very much one of those tidy little, bloodless boxes of the 50's (though better than most)- rhymes like the ping of an egg- timer on schedule, fossilized syntax, etc. His next book. Saint Judas, was moving away from that type of cubicle, deal- ing with more terrible subjects -more natural but still bogged. Then, after having stopped writing in disgust with his work, he began translating some mod- ern poets like Trakl. An ex- plosion followed, a miracle: The Branch Will Not Break. Written in beautiful free verse, finding a natural voice, wielding a deep and terrible imagination, it is a wonderful book. Sometimes Wright seeis like a great hawk, making pow- erful circles, swoops, gliding on a strong wind, watching the world with old, wise, penetrating eyes. And sometimes he seems like a small, furry animal who watches the world, unseen, to whom everything is very close, very important, full of wonder. Listen to this lovely sound from "In Fear of Harvests": The nostrils of slow horses Breathe evenly, And the brown bees drag their ' high garlands, Heavily, Toward hives of snow. And \Fhat mature joy in this poem, .' The Jewel" (quoted in full): There is this cave In the air behind my body IAAMUN Chat nobody is going to touch: A cloister, a silence Closing around a blossom of fire. When I stand upright in the wind, My pones turn to dark emeralds. In "Branch" there is one of the best American political po ems, "Eisenhower's Visit to Franco, 1959," and there is the amazing poem about America, "Autumn Begins in Martin's Ferry, Ohio." The latter cap- tures so much of America in just 12 amazing lines, without com- mon and facile condemnation or simplistic melancholy. It is a compassionate and penetrating poem, showing the men who talk about America as if it were not the miserable place that it is for them, "dreaming of heroes;" the America, "suicidally beau- tiful," with its people attaining moments of beauty in their piti- ful, suicidal rush to be prettiest, most successful, and most popu- lar. In his n e w book, Shall We Gather at the River, he has, in some ways, advanced even fur- ther. We havesan even greater sense of honesty, of reality in his voice, an even greater sense of a man really speaking to us. He is even more powerful in giv- ing' us the terrors, the deepest sorrows of our lives. Some of the poems a r e almost unbearably moving. The 1 a s t one in the book, "To the Muses," is a ter- rible and beautiful poem - the sorrow so deep and honest, the voice so real. When so many poets, partic- ularly the younger ones, are content with poems t h a t are safe, tribal, competent, flippant, Wright has those two rare and most important qualities: cour- age, and spiritual strength and maturity. When he reads you could almost touch his love and tremendous compassion. I have a very deep love for his poetry. POTPOURRI INTERNATIONAL VARIETY SHOW Music ... Dancing ... Refreshments APRIL 12 9 P.M. NEWMAN CENTER 330 Thompson Admission: $1.00-Members $1.25-Non-Members LADIES ADMITTED FREE DIAL 8-6416 3rd HIT WEEK . i 0 4-l T1bI10 "CONSTITUTES MORE OF AN EXPERIENCETHAN A SHOW!' --Time Maga:ine f r-- SEE WHAT THE BEST ANN ARBOR FILMMAKERS ARE UP TO 8/SUPER-8 FILM FESTIVAL APRIL 11-a12-13 with Cash Awards, Films, Gift Certificates, Fame FRI.-SAT.: AUD. A SUN.: CANTERBURY ANGELL, 11:00 P.M. HOUSE, 7:30 P.M. TO ENTER YOUR FILM, CALL 769-5625 r In to an attempt enliven Ann Arbor first annual OZONE Festival Sat., nite - April 12 8:30 P.M. at Avehicle 639 S. Main St. (behind Berry's Appliance store) I Eu"n "rmnv STARRING Commander Cody & The Lost Planet Airmen STARRING The Original Charging Rhinocerous of Soul Admission-$1.25 at the door Costumes would be nice . . . again!. SATURDAY and SUNDAY dir. Ingmar Bergman Swedish 1952 Berg man's most erotic film "The most hautiful film of the I Ae ANN ARBOR Featuring the PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA at all concerts THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor RICHARD TUCKER, Tenor Program "Classical" Symphony...............................Prokofieff Concert aria and Recitative, K. 431, "Misero! a sogno! o son desto" ................................Mozart Recitative and aria, "Sound an Alarm," from "Judas Maccabeus" .............Handel "Iberia". ........................................Debussy "0 Paradiso" from "L' Africaine" ......................Meyerbeer "No! pazzo son! guardate' from "Manon Lescaut".............Puccini MR. TUCKER Symphonic Poem, "Pines of Rome" ................... .... Respighi FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 8:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION HANS RICHTER-HAASER, Pianist JOANNA SIMON, Mezzo-soprano Program Psalm 150,"Op. 5 ............ .......... ,. Ginastera UNIVERSITY CHORAL UN1ON Aria from "Bomarzo"...... .. Ginastera JOANNA SIMON "Fern Hill'.................. ................. John Corigliano (to text by Dylan Thomas) JOANNA SIMON Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 1C1 .............Chopin HANS RICHTER-HAASER.......Coi SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor Program Overture to "Die Meistersinger" ...... ................. . Wagner Symphony No. 3 ..................................Charles Ives Symphony No. 1 (with "Blumine") ........................Mahler 101 T Jo nsn 11 SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION MARIA STADER, Sporano JOHN McCOLLUM, Tenor JOANNA SIMON, Mezzo-soprano WILLIS PATTERSON, Bass ZARA NELSOVA, Cellist Program Mass in A-flat, No. 5........... ......................Schubert UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION and SOLOISTS Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra . ..................... Elgar ZARA NELSOVA SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor REGINE CRESPIN,,Soprano F4 John McCollum I I .. .:.. iil K-