Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 19, 1969 Pag To TE ICIGA DIL _ r _ _ f , Short stor By MARVIN FELHEIM The Collected Stories, by Jean Stafford. Farrar, Straus & piroux. $10. Going Places, by Leonard Michaels. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $4.95. These 'two collections of stories offer some fascinating and provocative Contrasts. Miss Stafford, if one may be excused the expression, is an old pro; these 30 stories which cover a 25-year span of writing, are her collected works to date. These are pieces crafted for the ultimate- effects, generally irony and/or compassion. Her masters, as she admits in an author's note, are Twain and James, a strange team perhaps, but there are traces of both, more especially of James; to be exact, she derives from James through Edith Wharton and Katherine Anne Porter, for hers is a feminine sensibility; and thus she belongs to one of the main streams of American short story writing. It is no accident that the dust jacket carries a drawing of her face superimposed upon pages from The New Yorker, where many of these stories have appeared (she has, of course, published in many other journals as well). She writes with elegance; her collection is undoubtedly on coffee tables in- well-furnished homes across America. Mr. Michaels is cut of different cloth. His stories have appeared es: in the more 'intellectual" journals (all Reviews: Massachusetts, Partisan, Paris, Transatlantic, New American), Going Places is his first collection (13 stories). The style is rough, vigorous, mas- culine and strictly contemporary. These are not cocktail-table or bedside works. They demand not passive absorption (or even its more positive aspect, understanding) as much as participation; indeed, they are best when read aloud, to an audience, preferably small and able (as well as willinig) to get the punch. These are urban-oriented, about people today, NOW, and riotiously funny. Mr. Michaels is young (PH.D., Michigan, 1967), an academic (he teaches at Berkeley), and a new breed of cat on the writing scene. His literary ancestry goes no further back than his contemporaries. The editors have divided Miss Stafford's stories into' four groups; the bases are geographic and chronological.,Her most per- sonal works are about girls, young or old, in a small town named IAdams, Col., where there is a college and where in the summer rich visitors come from the East. The stories explore the sad human condition, the little cruelties of poverty, and, whether told in the first or third person, seem autobiographical. Miss Stafford writes about this region and these characters with compassion (the people have none for each other) but essentially without humor, except for a wonderful "bad" girl, Lottie Jump, who takes Emily Vanderpool, the narrator on a nerve-wracking shoplifting expedi- tion to the ten-cent store. rsuls then book sbooksbooks The evolution of a radical mind By LORNA CHEROT Communist Councilman from Harlem, by Benjamin J. Davis.' International Publishers, $6.95 hardcover; $2.85 paper;: Although not a compelling or dramatically insightful book, Communist Councilman from Harlem is a good-though sket- cVy-chronicle of the evolution of' the radical mind. Arranged and edited from the manuscript released after the death of Davis, the collection of autobiographical notes could serve as a sufficient primer. for the liberal mind on why he must become a radical. Benjamin J. Davis' daddy was a bigwig In the Negro fac- tion of the Georgia Republican party, and he firmly believed that once the Negro obtained equal voting rights then the problem of the coloreds would be solved. But Ben Davis, who stu- died law at Harvard University, soon learned that to the com- mon white man a nigger Is still a nigger and to the white politi-? cian a nigra is a nigra even if he is an Ivy League graduate. That tenet of Southern coun- selor backwater life T became manifest to Davis while serving as a defense in the Herndon Case. Angelo. Herndon, a 19- year-old black communist, was arrested on grounds of attempt-- ing to incite insurrection in vio- lation of the Georgia Constitu- tion, for leading a group of dis- gruntled black and white work- ers in an effort to collect un- employment insurance. T h e charge angered Davis. And even more oppressive was the blatant affroit to black people in the judge s manners (nigger and ,darkey were upheld as appro- priate terms with which to ad- dress members of the Negro race, because they were recognized as white terms of affection). All this incensed Davis, and the ver- dict enraged hime. Davis there- f ore became a communist.' At this point I think some facts concerning the publication sof Communist Councilman from Harlem must be revealed. The book was published four years after Davis' death. He suffered a long and serious illness after his release from Terre Haute federal prison where he served a five-year sentence for violation of the Smith Act. I remarked earlier that the book was sketchy and could at best serve as an elementary piece of work. It is my opinion. that much of the material was suppressed by the federal gov- ernment and Terre Haute prison officials. Davis was under con- stant surveillance while in pris- on by the FBI. The .chapter on prison life is particularly soft pedalled. Ac-, The Michigan Daily, edited and- man- aged by students at, the University. of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552- Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbdr, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. WOW! cording to Davis, accounts, as published, the greatest evil of prison life is extreme boredom. Although Davis was incarcerated in the heart of Klan territory, adjacent to the infamous Cairo, Ill., there is no mention of men- tal abuse of harassment by racist prison guards or inmates. Neith- er is there any mention of any type of unprovoked infliction of corporal punishment. I find this Today's writers... MARVIN FELHEIM is a pro- fessor of English at the Uni- versity. LORNA CHEROT is a radical sophomore staff member of The Daily. quite remarkable when you con- sider the fact that Davis was a red-not pink-black, which amounts to an extra bad nigger. Another element of the book is particularly blurry. Why did Davis join the Communist Party as opposed to the Socialist Par- ty? He states that he believes political equality is not enough, but that economic equality takes precedence in the movement for black liberation. Therefore, I would assume Davis would join the socialist party. But he cites the communist position with re- gard to local and national legis- lation as his reason for joining the Communist Party-namely their sponsoring of the anti- lynch act and their participa- tion for the defense in the Hern- don case and support for Negro History Week in New York City. Also, Davis expresses firm belief in the spirit of democratic gov- ernment. Yet nowhere is there a chapter, a page, a paragraph, a sentence or. a word devoted'to the Iexplanation of his belief in the Marxist-Leninist doctrine of communism. This blatant neglect too conveniently perpe- trates an image of Davis to the the layman reader as a member of the "lost generation" who was driven to his radical subversive philosophy out of sheer frustra- tion rather than conviction. Throughout the patchwork' publication on parchment there is a basic lesson for whites in established positions of political, economic and social power and their dark lackeys if they wish to snuff out the fire that spurs black militants and theif while radicals allies towards libera- tion. The oppression of the Negro is not accidental, nor is it the result of some malfunctioning of the capitalist system. On the contrary, it is deliberate on the part of the monopoly capitalists who derive super- profits from the oppression of the Negro. The national op- pression of the Negro is due not to capitalism failing to work properly but to capital- ism working as properly and perfectly as it can. The capi- talists and even their most liberal apologists avoid this conclusion like the devil does holy water. Yet it is this statement of Ben Davis which I view as his trage- dy-the tragedy of time, because he and I are of different gen- erations. I recognize this fact as Davis recognized the time dif- ference between himself and his father. In the Communist science, I learned that socialism alone could give the Negro his full freedom, for only under so- cialism could he enjoy full self-determination. Thus I be- came an advocate of socialism, believing that the working class would in time provide the revolutionary leadership needed to attain socialism. Fbr some reason I always viewed the working class ' as starving aspirants satisfied by a token piece of golden America, who were staunch supporters of the status quo, rather than a- cadre of revolutionary agitators. Then, who is to foment the rev- olution? . . . the arnichair in- tellectual who objectively theo- rizes- on every social and 'polit- ical phenomena? . . . the four- year crop of establishment- bound graduates? . . the demo- gogic swayed "everyday people?" .. or.the young radicals, hip- pies, yippies, white/black pan- thers or whatever the latest group is, who are so insistent on doing "their thing" that the revolution has developed a pro-, gress jam? The greatest tragedy of Ben Davis is he became establish- ment-not in philosophy but in location. Davis was a member of the New York City, Council dur- :ng a era of Tammany Hall. He became an advocate of change through the electoral process. He learned to speak political bullshit and when he campaign- ed before his Harlemites, he found himself in the same awk- ward position as the college blcak who discovers he can no longer rap or jam with the brothers and sisters on the tene- ment stoops. Two other categories are Boston and Manhattan. Here we read about grown up, more or less sophisticated women, who move in "society." They, too, have their problems: the loneliness of the spinster, the terrible agony of maintaining one's position-vis-a-vis neighbors or old friends, in a deteriorating marriage. in any ex- cruciating choice (and these women seem to have many, such as whether to give money to drunken or aged beggars or to the church), and in the preservation and service of beauty. In these pictures, Miss Stafford stretches her own sympathies, and ours, frequently to the breaking point; then, the irony takes over and we are face to face with the truth. These pitiful ladies living their lives of quietude and despair are neatly dissected; the false notes. the bleeding hearts are examined and the essential ambiguity of the human situation explored. The method throughout is dramatic juxtaposition. A spinster ("the heart of a spinster . . . is at once impoverished and prodigal, at once unloving and lavishly soft") sees "I LOVE SOMEONE" written in chalk on the sidewalk, but her experiences of the day include attendance at the funeral of a friend who has committed suicide and watching, at night, a street fight between ruffians. She decides to live with her image, created by her friends, of someone who once suffered a tragic love affair. In retrospect, Miss Stafford's stories all seem as wan as her creatures. We remember her skills, the artful creation of a quiet but frequently a desperate world. The real problem is that her characters too often seem to feel sorry for themselves and become bores. They are helplessly caught in their middleclass existences, troubled chiefly about their social roles. Reading a group of these stories together is a depressing and saddening experience. Better one at a time, slowly with a drink or before sleep, when one can take time to appreciate Miss Stafford's slight but real talent. If Miss Stafford's stories all seem to focus on woman, lonely and sad, white, Protestant, and somehow a bit uninteresting, Mr. Michaels' folk jump. Here are mainly couples, city-people, young (mostly in their 20's), hung up on sex, and identity. His plots are relatively unimportant; the disclosures which he wants occur in the presentation of character "and events, not in the action. What we get are impressions, frequently violent, of occurrences and people. His is an hysterical, cliched, overpopulated world. People are in motion, colliding, talking, talking, yelling. They rub against each other, exacerbate each other, but they find something. And they are never boring. They are not quiet and their desperation is both dramatic and vigorous. They are not relaxed and like their counterparts, in Roth, say, they do not allow the reader to rest, either. Michaels has a fine ear for dialogue. Whereas in Miss Stafford's stories girls in Colorado and matrons in Boston speak in the same restrained voices, here all speak a shrill u'p-to-date clipped form of Americanese, which pricks its way to the essential truth. In Going Places, this truth is revealed without being madeiapparent by craft. It is there all the time, under the appearance like bone under flesh. Michaels cuts, deftly, without sentimentality, but with a scream and a laugh, to the bone. Several of these stories have won prizes. V. S. Pritchett selected "The Deal" for The Quill Award. It is rpminiscent of Miss Staf- ford's "I Love Someone." In both stories a spinster lives alone in F a block of flats in the city, near slums. Here the girl is young. Sher drops her glove. A Puerto Rican street tough picks it up. The en- counter is direct: he offers to. return the glove for $10; she coun- ters: 25 cents. They make a deal: the glove for a kiss. He follows her into the hall of her building; the others insist too upon kisses. They force her to the ground. One of them, called "the hat," hits her. Eventually she escapes through the locked door to safety. The encounter is violent, fearful, direct. The conclusion is without sen- timentality: "The hat" asks her for "something": but she closes the door on his voice. The fear reminds us of Emily Dickinson's encounter with the snake. It is there, in the human condition, in the confrontation, in the imagery of hat and glqves and keys. Miss Stafford describes it; Mr. Michaels presents it. In effect, she tells us how to react; he leaves us alone with the facts, which are too violent to ignore. We are forced to think about it; Michaels' eye and hand have opened up the situation for us. We are chilled and we don't drift off to sleep. Reading these short stories all together is disturbing, challenging; they are filled with the drama of life. Sunday, July 20: JEAN RENOIR'S "LE CRIME DE MONSIEUR LANGE" "WOMAN ON T HE BEACH" ANGELL HALL, AUD. A 8& 10 P.M. 75c *i PRESENTS ALEXIS WEISSE'NBERG l1rcut rfa/iona nil)' en('bn urfl'dPianxsl InI Rackham Auditorium S ed., July 23-8:30C (TPhird l ot u / in the Sionzmu .S r 'Q MARLENE DIETRICH in JOSEF VON STERNBERG'S "DISHONORED"-8 P.M. "THE SCARLET EMPRESS"O1 P.Ml 4. elf - ,* Saturday, July ANGELL HALL, AUD: A 75c 19 PROGRAM Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue. Symphonic Etudes Tombeau de Couperin . Three Preludes J.S. Bach Schumann Ravel Rachmaninoff SICKETS: $5.00-$4.00-$2.00 at THlE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Hours: 9:00 to 4:30. Mon. thru Fri.; Sat. 9:00 to 12:00 (Also 1 % hours before performance at Rackham Auditorium) Order Your Daily Now-- Phone 764-055 . ,, f" HERE'S, THE EYE-DEAL" BY MISS RITZ r World Campus Afloat is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond. Once again, beginning in October of 1969, the World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and Associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. In-port programs relevantto fully-accredited coursework taught aboard ship add the dimension of personal experience to formal learning. Classes are held six days a week at sea aboard the s.s. Ryndam which has been equipped with classrooms, laboratories, library, student union, dining room and dormitories. Chapman College now is accepting applica- tions for the'Fall and Spring semesters of the 1969-70 academic year. Fall semesters depart New York for ports in Western Europe and the Mediterranean, Africa and South America, ending in;Los Anglles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles through the Orient, India and South Africa to New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and mail the coupon below. SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. Ryndam, registered in The Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in 1948 and meets 1966 fire safety requirements. ; i A * Art student Leana Leach of Long Beach sketches ruins of once-buried city during World Campus Afloat visit to Pompeii. M i R R R f" i" i i" i i R i i R R i i R! f R i R i" " f i!! i i! f i i 0 i 4 R i i i R!! ! i i R R! f R i f..i f i i. i i i i R R i f R i" it O MU WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Director of Admissions Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92666 Please send your catalog and any other facts I need to know. i k " j July 21st through July 25th are the days to meet Joan Mont- I