BELIEVE in rhymes and strict forms," X. J. Kennedy declared. He also believes in Yeats, who is. "for my money, the great poet of our time," that poetry should be difficult, and that William Carlos' Williams was right when he said that "you don't publish until you can say it differently from any- one else." Kennedy, a poet (Doubleday will publish his first volume in August, and he has appeared in numerous journals and magazines) and an instructor in the English depart- ment, said there is a "serious crisis" in contemporary writing, due to the emergence and oppo- sition of "two warring camps- the academic and the beat. Poets, in recent years, have been flocking to the universities in unprece- dented numbers,m a phenomenon which has provoked much com- ment, the major objection con- stituted in a fear that this will result in a peculiarly academic poetry. "This appalls me personally," he said, and cited two "awful evils" of the growing tendency. FIRST, the approach of Robert Bly, editor of The Sixties (a journal which, logically enough, used to be called The Fifties) is particularly dangerous. "Bly him- In Writing - Two Warring Camps self is trying to pattern his poetry after the best of continental poetry; he admires those who've gone through surrealism, and puts an emphasis on dream images," Kennedy explained. "His pitch is that rhyme is ut- terly worn out, that poetry must seek concrete images." Describing Bly as "influential," he cited his success in persuading James Wright to give up rhyme, on the grounds that "most rhymed poetry any more falls into a singsong' pattern," and poets should, there- fore, try working without it. "I think he's confusing things. There are enormous possibilities for the use of rhyme," Kennedy, insisted. "For example, Yeats just scratched the surface In his use of off-rhymes." "Any kid in the street knows that rhymes are not exhausted. I'm all for searching for new forms," but they'll have to be very strict ones if poetry is going to use Carol Leventen is majoring in history in the literary college. the power it gets from being con- fined." KENNEDY recalled Richard Wil- bur's image of the genii in the bottle as particularly pertinent: "the force," he insisted, "comes from the genii's being locked up," just as the poem is locked up in its metrics. He believes that there's nothing1 intrinsically wrong with writing in a university atmosphere, and "the danger of the academic life is simply that it takes too much time." But the academics, writing what they know best, unfortu- nately come up with things like "novels about campus life and poems about classrooms," he com- plained. Example: "in the magazines of the past year, maybe a dozen poems have appeared addressed to 'My Students in English Compo- sition'. They're looking too hard for subjects to write about." There's a real danger in this type of thinking, Kennedy asserted, because "a poem should not be allowed to choose its own subject, instead of having one forced upon it. "Yeats did not sit down and say, 'I am going to write a poem about Byzantium,'," and, by the same token, "Blake's 'The Tiger' is cer- tainly about a tiger, but it's also about a zillion other things you could hardly think of." IN THIS context, he referred to Robert Frost's statement that if a man's going to be a poet, "he'd better be a farmer, or else cheat his employer." Kennedy's second "awful evil" is the prevalence of "formula" or "equation" poems which are en- couraged by "bad creative writing teachers." John Logan, teaching at the University of Chicago, "turns out 'little John Logans'," he said.* "I used to be sceptical myself, un- til I worked with Arnold Bader, who doesn't try to impose him- self on young writers. "Besides," he reflected, "it's of some use to have an audience." Beats are "rearing up on their hind legs and saying that the world's going to pot." But "I sym- pathize with them, though, for refusing to join the society in which we live." He objects to their writing be- cause they "throw out all forui. They pretend to seek new ones but in actual practice," he thinks, along with Truman Capote, that "beat writing is merely typewrit- ing." Kennedy excepted Duncan Continued on Prage Three CONSERVATIVES are making a strong showing in the Ivy League. The Yale Calliopean So- ciety, which was once the virtual laughing-stock of the campus, now has to limit the size 'of its ranks to keep from -growing unwieldy. Princeton's oldest political dis- cussion group, the Whig-Clio club, is now seeking to affiliate with some national right-wing organi- zation. A New Conservative So- ciety has sprung up at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, beckon- ing to both undergraduates and graduates. "At Harvard, where Fair Deal- ing professors (historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., economist J. Ken- neth Galbraith) carry on the tra- dition of the old radicalism," Chamberlain of The Wall Street Journal writes, "the new presi- dent of the student council turns out to be anti-Schlesinger and anti-Galbraith, a crusading con- servative in an almost forgotten mold." Outside the campuses, college, BUT OF LATE these conserva- tive publications have taken new leases on life from a crop of young-blooded and perceptive new writers and editors. Some publi- cations so blessed are: Human Events, a conservative Washing- ton newsletter with a paid circu- lation of 42,000; National Review, New York publication of William Buckley; Modern Age, new quar-, terly published in Chicago; and Freeman, issued by the Founda-! tion for Economic Education at Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y. - Similar transitions are in evi- dence in the editorial offices of conservative newspapers in Rich- mond, Va., and Indianapolis, Ind., for example. "The quality of writing provid- ed by the new conservative re- cruits from the American cam- puses is far above anything that has been published by young writ- ers in the left-wing journals in recent years,'" Chamberlain notes. "Indeed, the Schlesinger-Gal- braith generation-now in its late 40s and early 50s-is the last to contribute anything of note to ,left-wing polemical literature." CONTENTS POETRY-BEAT VS. ACADEMIC By Carol Leventen CANADIAN HOCKEY By Dave Cook STRUCTURES SYMBOLIZE ENERGY By Pot Golden SEE RIGHT-WING STUDENT SHIFT By Peter Stuart EVOLUTION OF CLASSICAL MUSIC By Boyd Conrad RECORD REVIEWS By Boyd Conrad Page Two PThage Three Page Four Page Five Page Six Page Two Page Six One difficulty young writersIN I share is that of getting published. he The problem occurs when new poem journals, opposed to- the current Minu style, or tradition crop up but York they, in turn, become strictly or- Moss line, stay fot. back, m~requE By Brahms theI By BOYD CONRAD and Johannes Brahms: Concerto for chan Violin and Orchestra in D Major, conv op. 77-Yehudi Menuhin, violin; themr Orchester der Festspiele Luzern con as i ducted by Wilhelm Furtwangler. 1si Electrola 90013, $5.98. Th , the With the large number of re- foldi cordings currently available of the bute classical standards, it is only rare- fast, ly that anything earthshaking by tions way of performance comes new a s to the lists. It is a happy moment write indeed when one hears such a re- hold cording as this one. Virtually every they aspect of it is a delight even to it ei: the most jaded ears. For those who have never heard any of the E new German imports on the Elec- KE trola label, here is your ideal chance. Menuhin plays through- he c out as if he were thoroughly en- but joying the music, and he evi- tical dences an ease of technical mas- the tery and a sensitivity of feeling gesti which has been sadly lacking in ably his more recent performances. judi The late Wilhelm Furtwangler 0i more than lives up to his reputa- poet tion as the former dean of the exisi German conductors as he handles wha the orchestral passages with the real lyricism and majestic power a "Y characteristics of his style. What of Menuhin brings to the work by peoi way of easygoing freedom, Furt- poet wangler tempers with a concep- stud tion of the whole work to which toda he relates every part with master- "1 ful though subtle control. The re- both corded sound is excellent, keeping goin the solo violin in good balance his with the orchestra without arti- T ficially highlighting either. The the notes on the album are all in awa German, but who needs them sens when the music speaks so well rela for itself? 'the Wolensak1 Webcor1 Gemork Voice of Music!T Always the TAPE REC( anda Special Low Pi Goldwater's book fantastic demand. WAR-SAW PHILHARMONIC WITOLD ROWICKI, Conductor WANDA WILKOMIRSKA, Violin Soloist MAGAZINE EDITOR: THOMAS KABAKER PHOTOS: Cover: Top, David Giftrow; Right, NYSPIX-Commerce; Bot- tom, News Service; Page Two: John F. Smith; Page Three: David Giltrow; Page Four; Left, United Nations; Bottom: News Service; Page Five: Top: New York Times; Bottom: Associated Press; Page Six: David Giltrow; Page Seven: Top, David Giltrow; Bottom: Daily. IA 11 I' I11 Hill Auditorium 8:30 II WEDNESDAY. JAN. 18 PROGRAM: Overture 2 "The Bartered Bride"-by Smetano Violin Concerto No. 1-by Szmanowski Four Essays by Baird Symphony No.- i in-C Minror-by Brahmis TICKETS: $3.50-$3.60-$2.50-$2.00-$1.50 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY BURTON TOWER EXAM TIME is Outline Time Use our coidensed WORRIED? STUDY OUTLINES for EXAMS SLL SUBJECTS Urich's Bookstore BUY and S) FOLLEl