Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 21, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November21, 1969 -poetry and prose I I - I iniuulLPIPIJEIli The new Generation: A credit to allusion Io~ By BETSY SMITH When student writing is al- lusive, it is at its best in the current Generation. The poems which merely hint at states of being, whether they are spare or heavily weighted with imag- ery, succeed most completely in moving the reader into the cre- ator's world. Konstantinos Lar- das' "Encounters" is a case in point. There is only one word, "adoringly," which concretely indicates the poet's attitude to- ward the flowers. In the rest of the poem, the flowers speak and invite the reader to participate in the poet's experience. Other- wise, the poet enters only on the same level as the flowels: "mine, eyes, my, mind, mine, heart;" he is of the poem, and compre- hrended within its fabric. It is difficult to establish this level of coherent being in prose, where the writer wishes always to communicate as well as com- prehend his vision. 'here are moments of exaltation in the prose as well, but these succeed at the expense of the total piece. In D. W. Rajecki's "The Ani- mals of Lac du Chien" the mol- luse's agony is best understated. . . ..a nearby fish flicked, and a tiny piece of quartz was waft- ed into t h e mollusc's left bi- valve." A general tendency to over - write and over - explain mars this piece, as the author- ial interventions irritate the reader in W. C. Steere's "Yours, From Ike and Me." The story is not the reader's precisely be- cause Steere is so constantly promising it to him ("Now, ah . . Reader, just slide in a lit- tle closer please". A lesson is to be learned from Masud Zavarzadeh's "Initia- tion," and Michael Roberts' "White Chapel Cemetery," the lesson of lyricism. "Initiation" is quietly dramatic, a medita- tion which can be read again and again with increasing de- light at t h e slight variations within the unvarying lines. something switches under the door of the large room the short man concentrates measures the distance between the footstool and the floor with his eyes When the bell rings the poem has prepared for that Zen-like isolation and unity. The read- er has been permitted to enter the room and d a n c e in the blank, intellectual rhythms of NHIK performs The NHK Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Hiroyuki Iwaki, will giveta concert at the University in the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25. The concert in.Hill Aud., spon- sored by the University Musical Society, will be the Japanese or- chestra's first Ann Arbor appear- ance. The program will be "Bugaku" by Mayuzumi; Concerto for Vio- lin and Orchestra by Khachuatu- iian with Yoshio Unno as soloist, and Symphony No. 5 by Tchaikov sky. The orchestra, which has been acclaimed in England, France. Switzerland, the Soviet Union, and other countries, made its first visit to America in 1960. It was heard in Washington and New York that year, and in 1966 performed in Los Angeles and San Francisco on its way to South America. - U <>7 '~ 7,. N~~' N '-7-' ''7 7< 7 7'Z -< ---'4' :., 7< 7' 4 ~, 7 7 4'7 .~-.< < --4 N 4- 7<2i ------ -"C'.'"' 7 '77' ' ," 7777' ~4" 4 o d a d m ALICE'S RESTAURANT !"You Can't (heal An Honest Man" W. C. FIELDS 8 & 10P.M. 50c ALICE LLOYD HALL -i I 'Ii TWIN FEATURES HELD OVER 4mm DIAL 8-6416 dSSiC Metro-Godwyn-Mayer presents The John Frankenheiner-Edward Lewis Production starring Burt Lancaster Deborah Kerr The Gypsy M ths a.W.Gene Hackman" Scott WilonW mW Ndom Screenplay By William Hanley Based on a Story By James Drought Executive Producer Edward Lewis Produced By Hal Landers and Bobby Roberts Directed by John Frankenheimer - Metrocolor uMs SEE IT SOON AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! "HAVE A BALL, BABY" - "Putney Swope" "Downey is ahead of every other film r ..AND... COLORWDeLuxe t, "'Stolen Kisses' is a movie I'll cherish for a very long time. One of Truffaut's best-strong, sweet, explosively funny. Delphine Seyrig seduces Leaud in one of the most erotic, nonsex scenes I've ever seen in a movie." satirist aroun ing, nothing ready to try.' d in the amount of dar- - sacred comedy he is I- --Wolf, Cue Magazine DL 710167 Andres Segovia, far and away the master of the classical guitar. "The Unique Art of Andres Segovia" offers a new program of wide-ranging selections. A magnificent treat. THAT DOG ON WHEELS IS COMING Putney-6:30 Sneak--8:00 Putney-108:00 Putney-1 1:30 DOC, INCREDIBLE NEW EXCITEMENT ON DECCA RECORDS AND TIAPES.. The School of Music and Department of Art November 21,22, 24, and 25 8:00 P.M. Conductor: Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert s."MENDELSSOHN THEATRE OE +All Tickets $3.00 Information 764-6118 Box Office open: 12:30-5:00 P.M. Nov. 17-20 12:30-8:00 P.M. Nov. 21, 22, 24 and 25 (in English) GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE CINEMA H Presents 'PUTNEY SWOPE" I The Truth and Soul Movie FIFPTH F Dr'UMy I l1:1mi1 5 =6EatWA;JlIa1.IF LA 11 T . I