° The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 27, 1978-Page Poet Hall inspires crowd (Continued from Page 1) Mayor appoints seven to group to write tenants' rights booklet with enthusiasm which explained why the question was insignificant: as a leader of campus literary activity for 19 years, Hall knew that his association with a University poet like Weisberg involved an intimate task --putting feelings into "the wild inward stuff of sounds," as Hall once wrote - which went far beyond credit hours and assignments. THE CROWD seemed to think he was "good" while he gestured firmly with his right hand and moved quickly from poem to poem. The works included an old Ann Arbor favorite hailing the vir- tues and damning the faults of cheeses, "0 Cheese": Reblochon openly sexual; Caerphilly' like pine trees, small at the timber line; Port du Saint in love; Caprice des Dieuix eloquent, tactful, like a thou sand-year-old hostess; and Dolcelatte, always generous to a fault. Hall spoke in a very measured, regular tone, punctuated by a gesturing hand and swaying head. His reading style varied little - even in the one prose selection - except in the one or two instances of sarcasm when he would momentarily assume a role. Accompanying "O Cheese" in Hall's new collection of poems, Kicking the Leaves, are "Eating Pig" - which gave the audience a vivid description of the poet's feelings while doing just that - and "The Black Faced Sheep", one of his New Hampshire poems, part of which reads: You were not shrewd like the pig. You were not strong like the horse. You were not brave like the rooster. Yet none of the others looked like a tamp of granite ,obat grew hair, and none of the others carried white fleece as soft as dande- lion seed around a black face, and none of them sang such a flat and sociable song. HALL AND his wfie, Jane Kenyon, also a poet, will be in town until Friday, when they return to Eagle Pond Farm, in New Hampshire. Today Kenyon will autograph her new book, From Room to Room, in the Hopwood Room of Angell Hall from 2 to 3:30 p.m. and Hall will do the same with the three books he has published this year from 4 to 6 p.m. at Border's Book Store. Following the reading, Jeffrey Weisberg's brother Dan, a literary college senior described the perfor- mance as "very nice." His mother, Lucille, said the event "would have made Jeffrey, were he still with us, very happy." She said when Hall's poems and discussion touched on Con- necticut, she could visualize the images since she lived there as a girl. Harvey Weisberg, Jeffrey's father, called the reading "a beautiful ex- perience," and "very impressive." (Continued from Page 1) tomorrow in Washtenaw County Circuit Court. Rose said the intervention has been postponed more than once, and this will be the first substantive aspect of the case to come to trial. Referring to the case, Laidlaw said, "It's hard to even take lawsuits too seriously." He added that the suit con- tains "frivolous" elements such as the charge that the number of signatures to get the amendments on the ballot was insufficient. "Once the ballot is voted on, the number of signatures makes no difference," he said. Laidlaw said he sent a letter yester- day to all the lawyers concerned. "I'll have to wait and see what those two groups produce, and then I'll state in the booklet those areas that are accep- table or start from scratch." i He said he hopes some general agreements can be reached before the two groups of lawyers can write their portions of the city-sponsored document. He added that the different sections might be distinguished by dif- ferent colored paper to aid the reader. THE APPOINTMENTS of the tenan- ts' advocate attorneys were based on a' list of people who applied for the job but Laidlaw said he had to "go out and enlist them (landlord advocates) and armtwist them." Some statements made in the previous tenant's. rights booklet "just aren't true," according to Laidlaw. He added that some of the statements in the booklet were more like what the law "ought to be" than what it is. r Rose said the previous booklet was "censored by the political process, because it was negotiated betwe( tenant and landlord advocates anjWi Council. ; TEICH AND ROSE co-autheoed"tl legislation under which they are no working. Greenspon has been involv in four rent strikes in the last two yea in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilant area. "I think it's important that terran know their rights, and it's inipdrtai that they get the right perspective said Greenspon. He also said impi-ta facts were omitted or not clarified the past and he hopes this bookletw correct that. / Forsyth and Ellis said thy wee unaware that they had been appointe and Lighthammer could not be reach for comment. Diggs trial proceeds as planned from wire reports WASHINGTON-A jury of eight women and four men was chosen yesterday to hear the corruption trial of Rep. Charles Diggs Jr., a founder of the Congressional Black Caucus. Federal prosecutors will begin Ellington s spirit lives at jazz fest finale Diggs was charged with 21 counts of making false statements to a grand jury, Diggs never appeared before a grand jury. Diggs, a Michigan Democrat, is charged with receiving kickbacks from three congressional staffers and hiring three others solely to handle his per- sonal and business affairs. DIGGS HAS contended he is the vic- tim of "selective" prosecution by Justice Department officials and that has done nothing wrong. Gasch, predicting the case would last two weeks, told propspective jurors they would be sequestered for the trial because of "widespread public in- terest." Diggs, 55, has been elected to the House continuously since 1954 from his inner-city Detroit district. The dean of black members of Congress, he easily won Michigan's Democratic primary last month in a bid for another term. THE 35--COUNT indictment retur- ned in March charged Diggs with mail fraud and concealing the alleged scheme from the House finance office. It said Diggs, who has pleaded inno- cent, defrauded the U.S. Treasury of $101,000 from kickbacks and payments to staff members who did not work for the House. The government charged the scheme was intended to pay the "personal, business and House of Represen- tatives" expense of Diggs, who has been grappling with financial problem for some time. According to the indictmen congressional employees who did n work for the House included a worke for the congressman's funeral hom4 the House of Diggs Inc., an accountar who worked for Diggs, his family an the business, and an attorney who als did work for the funeral home, Digg and his family. IN ADDITION, the indictment. say Diggs inflated the salaries of threesta members who worked 'i-Mi hi congressional office, and had them kic back part of their compensation to pa his personal bills. Diggs is chairman of the Hous District Committee, (Continued from Page5) were playing, it's tough to go wrong. Starting off with a roaring "trip through Ellingtonia" which contained such classics as "Magenta Haze," "Perdido," and "Caravan," the group highlighted many old tunes and also played a few nice but undistinctive new ones. Primarily made up seasoned big band 'veterans, the group features several instrumentalists which solidly build, upon the Ellington tradition. Trombonist "boogie-woog," and drummer Rocky White, who has a roaring, cymbal oriented style, were the most impressive. Crazily shimmying across the stage, Mercer time and again drew "from the tradition," mixing up old and more recent tunes: "Ko-Ko," "Jeep's Blues," with a triumphant "In a Sen- timental Mood" being the best of the lot. A SPECIAL treat of the performance was the premiere of a piece Eclipse Jazz commissioned bassist Charles Mingus to write for the orchestra. Sim- ply sent to Ellington with the title "-29," the piece was anything but per- functory. It was a crazy tune, not quite a pat- chwork of different elements but definitely lacking enough strong melody to fit in with everything else that was played. Nonetheless, the piece was in most ways a triumph, featuring. dynamite solowork which helped an- chor it, and an often shimmering pat- tern of transformation. Rather than trying to emulate Ellington, Mingus seems to have gone for the essence of this orchestral wizard's style. And thanks to the band and Mercer, the ten-minute piece was generally a solid victory. The orchestra finished up by bringing out 'their vocalist, Anita Moore, Han- dling such Ellington songs "It Don't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing" and "Do Nothing 'Til You Hear From Me," she won over the audience and ecstatically finished up a set of grand music. cl wi pr SALTtalks, open again (Continued from Page 1) irrency manipulation charges but it does not restrain the two nations knockout strike" against the Sovi ouded prospects for a new treaty for a from breaking out new weapons rocket force. This appeared to be aria hile. systems if a new accord is not reached. tack on U.S. interest in developing th But now the climate seems to be im- In his speech to the U.N. General large mobile missiles MX -and Tri4ez oving. Assembly, the Soviet foreign minister II, accuarte submarine-launche SESSIONS HAVE been scheduled for said an early conclusion of the missiles. Diggs presenting evidence to support their case against the congressman today. Jury selection began after U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch refused to delay the trial despite news story errors about the charges against the Michigan Democrat. DEFENSE ATTORNEY David Povich complained that a Washington Star story and broadcasts by area radio stations on the eve of the trial had said today and tomorrow in New York City. The possibility remains open that the talks will resume in Washington on Saturday, with Carter taking part. After six years of prolonged negotiations the talks may be at a "now or never" stage. An earlier, expired treaty has been informally extended, negotiations "is of particular impor- tance." He said a new agreement "is equally needed by the Soviet Union, the United States and the world at large." THE RED STAR, the newspaper of the Soviet Defense Ministry, has charged the United States with trying to gain the ability to launch a "first, The United States, trying to bieakth deadlock over "modernization"ha proposed that each side be permitted t test and deploy one new land-based it tercontinental ballistic missile and on new submarine-based missile' durin the life of the treaty, until 1985. 0 .- Y ou ve earned I . You've earned a place in the elite group that can say Grad from the University of Michigan." "I was a '79 Be able tip prove it to your children. Have your portrait takens for the 1979 MICHIGANENSIAN (U of M's Yearbook) and for yourself. Call 764-0561, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. for an appointment