E MET r. N - e. f -W-ft PALI.NDFOMY PAT AD PREET ...not a DAFT. FAD but a toy for the Iiterati By STEVEN S. TIGNER WORDS HAVE LONG functioned as both the play things and the most trenchant artillery of literati and small children. On the literary side, perhaps the most ancient and enduring of all verbal amusements has been the com- position of palindromes. They pre-date crosswords and crostics by more than two millennia, and are known today in more than twenty languages all over the globe. These "nugae difficiles" are words, sentences or verses which read the same when the letters composing them are taken in reverse order, and their compo- sition down through the centuries has challenged and delighted countless men of letters (dozens at least). Two popular examples in English are ABLE WAS I ERE I SAW ELBA and A MAN, A PLAN, A CANAL-PANAMA! Any such literary device which writers from Apollinaris Sidonis to James Joyce have seen fit to use surely merits at least our cursory at- tention. 7he tchiyah .Q I4 e MAGAZINE THEATRE, architecture, poetry and jazz are the focus of the January Magazine. Leading off the issue, Steven S. Tigner examines palindromy, that curious preoccupation with words that has fascinated writers from the ancients to Joyce. Not a pass- ing fad but a valid game for the literati, Palindromy Past and Pres- ent continues to interest men of letters today. Mr. Tigner is a grad- uate student in the phiosophy de- partment. The recent departure of the Uni- versity of Michigan Jazz Band for a State Department tour of Latin America raises a question about the future of jazz on the University campus. On page three, Steve Rab- son, a senior in English and a part time jazz musician, examines thev issue in Jazz on Campus-Why Not in School? Architecture, the art many aes- theticians feel most closely resem- bles music, is the subject of an arti- cle by Walter Brown. Mr. Brown, a fifth-year student in the archi- tecture college, uses a new book by Carl Condit to examine the archi- tecture of Louis Sullivan. His arti- cle, Architecture as Metaphor ap- pears on page four. A Repertory Success in Minne- sota (page five) reports the pro- gress of the Tyrone Guthrie Thea- tre in Minneapolis. H. G. McNally is an administrative member of the Guthrie staff.' Two new books of poems, "A Roof of Tiger Lilies" by Donald Hall of the English department and "For# the Union Dead" by Robert Lowell, are given critical analysis in The New Poetry: Two - Critical Views' (page six.) Donald Hill is an as- sistant professor in the English de- partment. G. Abbott White editst the campus inter-arts magazine, w Generation, and the New Poet Series. Malinda Berry, Stephen Berko. witz, Robert Ellery, Roger Rapo- N port, David Berson, Peter Bickel- mann, Jeffrey Chase and Steven Haller contribute to Books and Records in Review (pages seveny and eight). Cover artist Judith Engel, a graduate of the architecture and a design college, illustrated the Mag- azineb The drawings on this page 'are by Mr. Tigner. MAGAZINE EDITOR: LOUISE LIND Page Two &ook4i and I ecoriv'4 nrevie4w Tradition has it that Sotades, an Alex- andrian poet of the third century B.C., was sealed in a leaden chest and cast into the sea. In addition to criticizing Ptol- mey II Philadelphus for marrying his own sister, Arsinoe, he invented palin- dromes. (It is presumably for the form- er offense that he was sent into aquatic exile.) Contrary to popular opinion, palin- dromy has not gone the way of phlogis- ton. It must be admitted, however, that the palindromic possibilities of English were a long time gaining recognition. The reason for this seems to lie primar- ily in the fact that the highly inflected nature of Greek and Latin (the tradi- tional palindromic media) permits a great deal more freedom in word order than does English. It was wrongly as- sumed that English lacked the flexibility necessary to serve as an effective palin- dromic medium. As recently as 1821 the New Monthly Magazine was able to state (not quite categorically): "In English but one Palindrome line is known." But people hadn't tried hard enough; today, owing to the efforts of such word wizards as England's Leigh Mercer and America's Dmitri Borgmann (who has kindly pro- vided many of the examples used here), we have thousands. LATIN PALINDROMES sound charac- teristically smooth, subtle and sophis- ticated, in sharp contrast to the claudi- cant, crass and crude ones of our own tongue. Compare the ancient lawyer's motto, SI NUMMI IMMUNIS (roughly, "Give me my fee, and I warrant you free"), with our English equivalent, PAY ON TIME, EMIT NO YAP (modern Brit- ish). Even in fun, Latin sounds better. Compare: O RES TIBI SI TORTA AT ROTIS IBIT SERO ("O, even if your thing is twisted, it'll still move slowly on wheels"-B. Campbell, contemporary American) and STIFF, O DAIRYMAN, IN A MYRIAD OF FITS! (modern Brit- ish). The early Christian era led to such gems as SIGNA TE, SIGNA, TEMERE ME TANGIS ET ANGIS ("Cross thyself, cross thyself, you touch and torment me in vain"-Apollinaris Sidonius, fifth century). And there has been an unbe- lievable amount of ink spilt over the re- markable two dimensional palindrome can Fishwick, writing in the Harvard Theological Review, supports a claim that the rebus "originated with Latin- speaking Jews in the period immediately prior to the Christian era." Another well known palindrome is to be found in a mosaic in the pavement of Se. Maria del Fiori, at Florence. It shows a figure of the sun, surrounded by the line, EN GIRO TORTE SOL CICLOS ET ROTOR IGNE ("Lo! I, the sun, whirlingly wheel 'round my circles and revolve with fire"). During Elizabethan times, Camden composed the remarkable ODO TENET MULUM, MADIDAM MAPPAM TENET ANNA,/ANNA TENET MAPPAM MADI- DAM, MULUM TENET ODO (each word is a palindrome, as well as the whole). At about the same time, "a certain beau- tiful lady of high degree' attached to Queen Elizabeth's retinue adopted the palindromic motto ABLATA AT ALBA ("Secluded but pure") when, following a court scandal, she was banished. The only echo (in English) of Camden's feat seems to be that brilliant, scintillating dialogue between Anna and Otto: ANNA: "DID OTTO PEEP?" OTTO: "DID ANNA?". As for sayings of motto caliber, English has but one: NO EVIL LIVE ON! Dean Swift, in a letter to Sheridan, gave us what is to my knowledge the only instance of an extended, bilingual palindrome (Latin-English). Though im- perfect, it remains no mean accomplish- ment: PARTA SIT PARARE EN TEGI OS. REM MUS 'NI" ODIOSO ILLUD OS IMA MOTO.--O, TOM, AM I SO DULL? O, SO I DO IN SUMMER. SO I GET NE'ER A RAP. 'TIS A TRAP! Perhaps the two most famous palin- dromes are Greek. Both are, unfortunate- ly, unprintable here (for typographic rather than censorial reasons). One ap- pears on a marble benitier in the Church of Notre Dame in Paris. It may be 'En- glished by' "Wash your sins, not your countenance alone." And at the beginning of the last century, Ambrose Hieromon- achus Pamperes wrote the other, a rec- ord of 455 line palindromic verse (in a dialect of ancient Greek which seems to have been his own) dedicated to the "Emperor" Alexander. There is some doubt whether or not its shortcomings are out-distanced by its length. ENGLISH PALINDROMY apparently began with John Taylor, the "Water Poet" (1580-1653), who is credited with LEWD DID I LIVE & EVIL I DID DWEL. However, it was not till the 19th century that the more familiar MADAM, I'M ADAM and ABLE WAS I ERE I SAW ELBA appeared. James Joyce used both of these in the Aeolus Episode of "Ulysses," but I cannot here attempt to justify the ways of Joyce to men. There have been minor outbreaks of palindromy in both England and Amer- ica over the past hundred years, but thus far they have remained below the epi- demic level. Newsweek was surely mis- taken (though admittedly clever) in labeling palindromy a DAFT FAD, for it has remained astonishingly persistent. The English -anguage contains a very large number of single word palindromes, from the commonplace CIVIC and DEI- FIED to the rarer EVITATIVE and RED- yv , ? y' EYEDER (more red-eyed). Certain per- son, place and thing names are also to be included: DR AAGAARD (Dean of the University of Washington m e d i c a 1 school), APOLLO, PA., and the YREKA BAKERY, for example. Single word palindromes and simple reversals have been used by many auth- ors. It has been claimed, for instance, that Poe deliberately made the first five letters of ULALUME palindromic. Vladi- mir Nabokov uses the palindromic place name EXE and the near-palindrome DIDACTIC-KATYDID in his "Pale Fire." He also employs such word reversals as REDIPS-S P I D E R an d TOILEST- T.S.ELIOT. (Such verbal ploys are not peculiar to Nabokov, of course.) English palindromic sentences are numerous, but there are really very few (less than 100) which sound wholly nat- ural. Here are some samples: -WAS IT A CAT I SAW? -PULL UP IF I PULL UP. -DENNIS AND EDNA SINNED. -SIT ON A POTATO PAN, OTIS! -"NOT NEW YORK," ROY WENT ON. "DO NINE MEN INTERPRET?" "NINE MEN," I NOD. Others, while perhaps a trifle odd, have obvious merit: -TEN ANIMALS I SLAM IN A NET. -EVE, CAN I STAB LIVE, EVIL BATS IN A CAVE? -STRAW? NO, TOO STUPID A FAD. I PUT SOOT ON WARTS. -LIVE DIRT UP A SIDE TRACK CARTED IS A PUTRID EVIL. --I MAIM NINE MEN IN SAGINAW; WAN, I GAS NINE MEN IN MIAMI. -DEGENERATE MOSLEM! A CAR OF PANS SIDEWAYS, YAWED, IS NO SNAP FOR' A CAMEL! SO META RE- NEGED. - PART DID EVE LIVE IN EDEN. (I SAW EROS NAP. GOD DELIVER EROS DEIFIED-SORE REVILED DOG!) PAN SORE WAS-IN EDEN I EVIL EVE DID TRAP. There are hundreds more. Palindromes are by no means confined to Greek, Latin and English. They are known in Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Fin- nish, French, German, Hebrew, Hungar- ian, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Old Norse, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Span- ish, Swedish and Welsh, as well. Ex- amples of each are included in Dmitri Borgmann's forthcoming book on palin- dromes (and other' word curiosities) to be published by Charles Scribner's Sons later this year. Here is a lovely one from the Japanese (kana syllabary): NA-KA-KI YO NO TO-O NO NE-BU-RI NO MI-NA ME-ZA-ME NA-MI-NO-RI-BU-NE NO O-TO NO YO-KI KA-NA. ("Everybody wakes up from the sound sleep of a long night--Winter. How de- lightful the sound of the oars of a fishing boat on the sea!") WITH PALINDROMES of this caliber being produced today, palindromy is not apt to die out in the near future. For those who are still doubtful, and remain inclined to view this whole pro- ject as a violation of my adjuration to SMEAR NO SENILE LINES ON REAMS, I have one final comment: GNU DUNG! 5'1 y : is 4 ^ f n SNCC: The New Abolitionists, Howard Zinn, Beacon Press, Boston, 241 pages, $4.95. ". . . more a movement than an organ- ization .. . an identify crisis for the na- tion . . . turning point . . . never before seen .. . civil disobedience on a national scale ... freedom now ... whites and Ne- groes together . . . bloody beatings . exasperates its friends . . . harasses its enemies . It is hard to draw a coherent picture of SNCC from Howard Zinn's book. The impression is of an emotional montage. Zinn makes no claims to be writing the definitive history of the Student Nonvio- lent Coordinating Committee; rather what he aims for is to leave the reader with a feeling for the role of the SNCC movement as well as its actions. The book, for the most part takes the form of personal stories beginning with how individual SNCC workers started in the movement and continues through their particular horror story. Zinn has tried to find a unifying factor in the moti- vations of the "young rebels"-but SNCC aupears to exist without benefit of speci- fic creed. The members are, however, fighting for more than equal rights be- cause they know "that the values of present American society-and this goes beyond racism to class distinction, to commercialism, to profit-seeking, to the setting of religious or national barriers against human contact-are not for them." And herein lies the real impor- tance of SNCC-and its uniqueness: The members of SNCC "nurture a vision of a revolution beyond race, against other forms of injustice, challenging the entire value-system of the nation and of smug middle-class society everywhere." Even if SNCC (and the sit-in tech- nique) were to evaporate tomorrow, it would still have had an impressive impact on American society. It brought to light a Negro never seen before by white Amer- ica-the young, educated Negro. And with him came a determined, impatient chal- lenge to the white and Negro Establish- ments. The sit-ins "represented an intri- cate union of economic and moral pow- er" that went far beyond courts of law both to dramatize the situation and apply the pressure of civil disobedience. The conscience of the public and its pocket- book were both touched-and there al- ways remains the spectre of potential civil war aroused by the real image of larse-scale civil disobedience. SNCC also via "direct action" supple- ments the slow mill-grinding of demo- cratic, representative government. It cre- ates a political power "which resides outside the regular political establish- ment."-Zinn sees it as grassroots action moving where entrenched self-interest will not act. In addition, SNCC's stress on nonvio- lence is healthy. "It is a reminder to a violent world that man has been too quick to reach for the sword in the past." Still another contribution of the SNCC sit-in movement is to broadcast the idea that the slogan "private property" has long disguised the fact that "so-called private enterprises drastically affect the public interest, and the public therefore has a right to make certain demands upon them." This goes beyond race, as do all the vital questions of the civil rights movement. And it is Zinn's belief that the true worth of the movement will be judged by the effect it has on the injus- tices in all facets of American life. -Malinda Berry THE ABOLITIONISTS: A Collection of Their Writings, edited by Louis Ruch- ames. Capricorn, New York. Paper- bound, $1.65, 255 pps. A BOOK RIDING close to the crest of the present wave of books and articles about the abolitionists which has grown up in the wake of the civil rights move- ment, Louis Ruchames' "The Abolition- ists: A Collection of Their Writings," is one of the finest anthologies of its size produced on the subject. Including selections from abolitionist pamphlets, articles and documents writ- ten during the 1830's, 40's and 50's, Ruchames anthologizes the writings of the "racial radicals" of the period in a manner which creates an accurate pic- ture of their reform and structure. The book's chief failing-and, perhaps this is something one ought not to expect from any anthology-is the fact that it presents only a small, and rather discreet portion of the spectrum of opinion of the movement-and this without the context of the political climate of the time as a whole. The result is we come to imagine the times as being entirely more radical than was, in reality, the case. To adequately- as one reviewer has suggested-relate the abolitionist movement to the desegrega- tion movement of today, a greater appre- ciation for the politics-that is to say, the atmosphere-of the earlier period is necessary. In the face of this, other criticisms will, no doubt, seem minor. To mention a few, however, one might note that, in comparison with those of their white contemporaries, the works of Negro abolitionists are relatively more neglected. In this respect, I realize that information about the Negro writers of the period is, for the most part, germinal in many respects; but this sort of thor- oughness is, after all, one which we have come to expect of an academic treatment. In places, Ruchames' editing is sloppy. Perhaps this is a function of his attempt to create an anthology as cosmopolitian in its scope as in the spectrum of views it presents. But this, nonetheless creates a jerkiness in the organization of the whole which is unwonted. On the whole, however, Ruchames has done something valuable here-and his collection should be read. --Stephen Berkowitz Robert Capa's "Images of War" stands out as supradocumentary expression of the war experience. In a span of some twenty-odd years and four wars, Capa says, both in his pictures and in his notes, "I hate war." But the pronouncement is not a scream; it is, if possible, a song, a prose-photography epic which sees be- yond war and into the souls of those caught up in it. From his first pictures in the Thirties until his death in 1954, Capa's acquaint- ance with his subject was intense and im- mediate. He lived in the foxholes, slogged through the mud, went ashore with the first wave at Normandy Beach and bailed out with paratroops over Germany. He knew the meaning of being a soldier, but never forgot the civilians and their indomitable spirit in a time of ceaseless crises: "There are no braver people ... and no more terrified either. . . . In spite of death, life in its ordinary regular drudging character is more durable than the desire to stop it." Photographically, Capa is a master of his medium and in many ways a pioneer. With one or two exceptions, his work is done with available light, and the ab- sence of the intruding flashgun makes his perspective all the more cogent. Tech- nique is never more apparent than con- tent or message, so the camera indeed becomes an intergal part of Capa, cap- turing naturally what he saw and felt. The full tonal range of the photo- graphs reveals a master printer as well, and Capa's use of selective focus, blur and grain long before these became popu- lar, imitated techniques is the mark of a careful innovator. Capa claims the reason for risking his life taking pictures was so "the soldier who looks at the shots . . . ten years from now in his home in Ohio, will be able to say, 'That's how it was;'" but he was after more than this. He was trying to express in the unaccepted medium of photography "the tension and drama of battle which I could feel and follow with my naked eyes." Beyond this is the photographer's eye for the intrinsically visual values of composition and design, the reflections of reality that Capa found all around know of Capa's ey escapable wishes to twice as b compel bel The pic Naples is the verbal "I took o camera. I : the prostr their dead fins were truest pici not anti- truth of a rate perce more wid more. "I had t die. The 1 die. But t the photo sures that CANDY b Hoffenb New Yo WHEN peare (and even was a tra ticians an ing did no was talkin Readers 339 years. lar novel o been cons Odyssey. ' satirizing Terry Sou are talking "Candy" Christian about Le like "Gull years ago temporary Some r significant structured writing. It the stand familiar spoofs the as one cr rather ho in a man scenes of mentation behavior." This as that the b 22" did fo Candy Ch who belie fully is a lege." Her exp that porti ites like, Hill," and like "She comparisoi The boc "to help fi her from wich Vill finally on volved wit: fessor, Me Emmanuel keit and Howard J and an E The plc through i (C< S A A R T E O P R O T O R E P O N E T E R A T A S which has been variously translated, "The sower, Arepo, guides the wheels carefully," "The sower intentionally holds the wheels firmly on the plough-field (on his plough)," and so on. It was early dis- covered that the letters in this palin- drome could be arranged in the follow- ing non-palindromic, but religiously sig- nificant, pattern; A P A T E R NO S A .PATER'~ S T E R. O T E R d From this discovery it was but a short step to the rebus' use as a talisman against disease and disaster. Much later it even found its way into the advertising copy of a milk products company. Dun- IMAGES OF WAR by Robert Capa. Grossman Publishers, Inc. New York. 1964. pp. 175. $15. SINCE THE DAYS of Mathew Brady's photographs of the Civil War, docu- mentary photography has claimed in- creasing attention from critics, editors and photographers themselves. The word "documentary" has been changed, for better or worse, to "photojournalism," implying something artistically more significant than mere mechanical record- ing of events for future reference. For this reason, out of the millions of feet of film exposed during wartime, him. His pictures and his text erase the stereotyped image of the photographer as a mechanical, insensitive opportunist. At one point he says, "I hated myself and my profession. This sort of photog- raphy was only for undertakers. . . . It's not easy always to stand aside and be un- able to do anything except record the sufferings around one." Capa's technical excellence and his deeply human involvement with all the actors on the war stage make "Images of War" a hard-hitting vehicle for the sharing of an artist's perspectives. Even if one wishes to argue that Capa's work shows only part of what there is to THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, JANUARY 31, 1965