Page 6-Sunday, October 29, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, 0 S Proposition D: Last call) student drinkers, campus. b 'Darcy Dancer's Donleavy chronicles excesses of the Irish Destinies' By Terry Gallagher The Destinies of Darcy Dancer, Gentleman By J. P. Donleavy Delacorte Press * pp. $9.95 P. DONLEAVY is making a J career out of maintaining one's dignity while among the Irish, a difficult task in any season. His The Unexpurgated Code is a landmark in the field of etiquette dealing with such diverse and novel questions as how to break wind gracefully when you are in bed with a woman you hardly know (with accompanying illustation) and what to say when you get caughtpeeing in your host's sink ("An awful habit I picked up in my youth and damn if I can correct it") or, even worse, when you catch a guest peeing in your sink ("For the love of God, please stop it" or "Where the hell were you brought up?"). You can see what a helpful supplement that book is to your Emily Post for those distressing and delicate social occasions she is too timorous to confront. Donleavy's latest novel, The Destinies of Darcy Dancer, Gentleman, is more of the same, keeping one's chin up in a millieu "where churlishness is always but a breath away."~ Reginald Darcy Thormond Dancer Kildare was born of aristocrat stock in the west of Ireland. His mother, a very tweedy, horsey woman, takes just barely enough time out of the saddle to give birth and as soon as Darcy begins the slap-induced wail, she is out after the fox again. Not surprisingly, his mother dies in a riding accident in Darcy's childhood. The "Dancer" in his name is due to a long- shot that paid off for his father on the day he was born. Darcy Dancer is seldom far from the saddle for the rest of the novel; the vagaries in his fortunes can be traced by his connection with horses. While young he is often fox-hunting, an excellent opportunity to display one's style and verve, not to mention one's tweeds, kennel and stable. After Darcy is disinherited by his father, for repeated indiscretions with the housekeeper, he goes to work as a stable-boy for the family of a schoolmate. Awfully Stupid Kelly. Kelly's family is very much arriviste, subject to sneers and abuse from their hired help who feel that working for merchants is beneath their station. When Awfully Stupid Kelly returns from school he is shocked to find Darcy Dancer in his parents' employ when he is clearly of much better breeding. 'Mr. Michael told me you Teriy Gallagher,. is,, a' 4HIouing Security Officer at Mosher=Jordan. come of very grand ancient landed people indeed. And that you had your own private tutor.' 'Yes, once upon a time, Kelly. But now, however mournful and regrettable it may seem, I am but a mere stable lad.' 'But of course you're not. You mustn't say that. How awfully awful.'" The Kellys, aware that it wouldn't do to keep an aristocrat as a menial, send Darcy on his way, appropriately attired and with pocket money. Darcy parlays these assets with his dignified bearing and posh accent to defraud two of Dublin's finer hotels out of months of accommodation and meals, always concluded with port and cigar, of course. After several months at the Royal Hibernian Hotel, amassing mountainous debts. all seems lost. The horses have been running out of the money; the hotel staff has become suitabley shirty; Darcy can hear the whispers and feel the stares as he crosses the lobby on his way to the track each morning. He changes strategy and begins to bet impulsively: "One's luck is in names today. And that's why mine's Dancer." Darcy stakes his all on a 100 to 1 shot from Awfully Stupid Kelly's stables, and wins, of course: nearly 12,000 pounds, enough to satisfy all of his creditors .Je can once again steady his gait and meet Q. SHE IS A small woman, only five feet tall, for all of her eighteen years. Almost everyone at Dooley's towers above her blonde head as she inches towards the bar. "A pitcher of Molson's, please," she requests. The 19-year-old bartender winks. Pitcher and frosted mug in hand, the woman squeezes through a clump of visiting Michigan State fans, past Shaky Jake, who whistles and hoots at the oversized television screen, around a group of fraternity brothers who are hailing the victors, and finally sits at a table with several friends. "Happy birthday!" one of them shouts. And the woman pours her first legal beer. This scene may never be repeated if Proposition D, a ballot proposal that would raise the drinking age in Michigan to 21, passes on Nov. 7. Proposition D has been lambasted, lauded, scoffed it, and editorialized about throughoutithe state since July when it was officially placed on the ballot. The proposal is surrounded by conflicting statistics and emotional arguments. But one thing is certain. There are people in Michigan who think 18 to 20-year-old adults should not be allowed to drink. The drinking age already has been raised to 19 by a bill sponsored by state Sen. James DeSana (D-Wyandotte). That bill, according to DeSana's aide Pat Harrington, was designed to filter alcohol out of high schools. Signed into law last spring, the 19-year-old rule is effective Dec. 3. Unlike Proposition D, however, the new law contains a grandfather clause, which means that only those who will turn 18 this Dec. 3 and afterwards will be restricted from drinking until their 19th birthdays. Proposition D would go into effect 10 days after certification of the election, and would apply to everyone under.21. Rev. Paul Bailey is a Methodist minister and coordinator of Coaliton for 21, an umbrella title for several organizations that support the strict drinking age. Bailey thinks 19 is not high enough. "It's a worthless piece of legislation, a complete waste of time, a facade for legislators to show their constituency they're doing something," Bailey charged last summer. Bailey and Rev. Allen Rice, another Methodist minister and executive director of the Michigan Council on Alcohol Problems (MICAP) have worked in conjunction with Bill Finlan of the Macomb County Parent- Teachers Association to convince Michigan voters that lowering the drinking age in 1972 was a mistake. Back then, says Rice, no one knew what effect a lower drinking age would have on Michigan. Now, Rice asserts, "It's wiser today to have the drinking age at 21." Whether or not any group can justify it, a higher drinking age will cause headaches for those in the alcoholic beverage industry. In Second Chance the lead singer of Mugsy swivels almost obscenely as he parades across the stage in his white Elizabeth Slowik is co-editor of , the Sunday Magazine. pants. Sweat clings to the edge of his upper lip. He stops to watch a dozen couples perform a dozen frenzied versions of identical dances. One drum solo later the band is ready for a break. "How many people here are under 21?" the singer suddenly bellows into the microphone. More than half the crowd responds with cheers. "There's a proposal on the ballot," he continues, "that would raise the drinking age to 21. It's important that loses your tax revenue. There will be a shifting of burden to others out there. This proposition has economic consequences to every taxpayer in the state of Michigan." Besides losing young customers, bars would probably have to pay higher rates for liability insurance as a result of Proposition D's approval, according to Foltz and Carver. If a drinker is served at'a bar and later that day is involved in a, car accident, the bar is legally responsible. Most barowners By Elizabeth Slowik No longerv be jamme frespersonsc won't run dr there will be officials are c enforce a residence hal As manag security se charged wit alcohol polic a committee discuss dorir Foulke ba status quo "With the ex Lawyers' Clu will be under an individua says, because there is always the risk for the stability of a small, clean unabashedly the stares of the hotel that she might -marry an Irishman. apartment somewhere, "with a view of staff. That's a very sound objection if we the lake perhaps" (do you recognize There is a little stylistic innovation in believe Donleavy's capsulization of the yourself, here?) until he realizes that "Darcy Dancer." The alliterative title Irish male in The Destinies of Darcy that suburban quietude is the seductive is familiar: Donleavy ends most Dancer, Gentleman: appeal of ossification, death. chapters, here as in his other novels, "There were of course Donleavy plants himself in Ireland with a brief verse; his narrative style, parties. Every night. They because the possibilities for sublime as always, depends heavily on bring back drink from the pub. excess are greater there than anywhere fragmentary sentences. Also familiar Everyone becoming drunk. So else on Earth: take my word for it. His are the rich, sensuous, nearly tactile prescription in The Destinies of Darcy descriptions of commonplaces: the boring. They sing, then they Dancer, Gentleman is "Hold death taste of Irish cooking, the smells of the the. wash off the blood,shak away by intemperance, unchastity and stable, the warmth of the bosom of Miss e ffe extravagance." The Irish, it is widely von B., his housekeeper, very obviously hands. And drink again. And reported, take a backseat to no nation a mammal. then fight. Night after night it when it comes to those characteristics. What is most recognizable to is like that." Darcy Dancer explains his country to a Donleavy's readers is his continuing Why then does Donleavy choose to foreigner: "I am sorry. But we in abuse of the Irish: "But the bad name live his life in such a place? Why does Ireland do not think it unfit for there to of the Irish spreads all the world and is he find Ireland so compelling as to set be some dust and cobweb about." only improved when they become a most of his novels there? Answering The dignified pose, the assertipn of laughing stock." If we allow the these questions, we uncover the equanimity for Donleavy's characters American-born but long-term Irish prevalent theme in his canon. is a sham. The wisest of them always resident Donleavy.to identify himself as realizes that life is best lived while Irish, it is this capacity for national. In Donleavy's novel The Onion being buffeted, emotionally, physically, self-flagellation that puts him squarely Eaters, the protagonist lives in a and fiscally. Donleavy closes this novel in the course of Irish literature. derelict castle in Ireland that is with a terse assertion, cloaked in the In Donleavy's most famous novel, crowded with outrageous characters, book's controlling metaphor, hoseback The Ginger Man, a woman is asked if infested with poisonous reptiles, riding: "Lose no nerve when unhorsed. '- undermnippsleby °?n ahemical .drilling . Mount again.-Go well Fly fenrce,'liedge she might ever merry..She wetr.1 scheme ,andl :taffpo, iostly by saupcy - andwall'Till the Huntsman's,blowing a solid "no." She v,il1 ejiy r na , she servant-wenches,'e gmetimes yearns his long slow notes. ' , everyone register to vote." He turns and quickly pads off staff to join his band. Second Chance manager John Carver confides that the bar may have to become a restaurant to attract an older clientele if Proposition D is approved. "Our overhead's too big," he explains. ."We couldn't crack a nut on just weekends." Weekends, says Carver, are when college students pour themselves and their money into Second Chance. "P ROPONENTS SAY bars can change their style over night," says Gary Foltz, a general manager at Dooley's in East Lansing. "That's a pipe dream. You just don't become something overnight. That's an illusion that proponents like to throw out." Although Foltz says there are no changes ahead for Dooley's, he is, careful to add, "There's a current market. If that constricts, so will we." Foltz says he expects some bars, especially those that cater to young adults, to go out of business. And those lost businesses will eliminate jobs and cut back on potential tax revenues, he claims. "If your revenue and success, go down the -fe,the'local government take out insurance in case of a lawsuit. Approximately six per cent of his gross income goes for insurance. "This (proposal) creates a large number of unlawful consumers on your premises that will go out into the community and do some damage," explains Foltz. "We will not be able to keep 18, 19, and 20 year olds out, because that would be discrimination," notes Bill Marzonie, owner of Don Cisco's, a local disco. "Once in the club, we'd have to check every single person's ID all over again to make sure they're old enough to drink. It's a disadvantage from an efficiency standpoint." "It won't stop those who are not legal," warns Foltz. "They're going to continue to drink, and a certain number. will continue to drink at Dooley's. They'll be resourceful and get fake IDs." MOST STUDENTS on campus are not ready to give up booze. They' say they'll rely on older friends to buy alcohol for them. Fraternity and sorority spokespersons declare they will continue to host alcoholic TGs. It is the dorm residents who will be forced to -curtail party plans. and consume activities prohibited." That is "keggers" a prevalent on "Obviousl problems wit to drink on having that we aren't i condone flag Foulke p enforcement Because a r will be of age alcohol will But, sponso alcohol is si document st year-old han He indice method of i dorm partie resident's bi and require at parties. E be impleme new meal ca Some claim See DR F9 t 0'0 iiB S 44 Y ;{ f fr / 4 1 d i +! t f J# 4 F.*.+.lr ".+ f..',tr ' ".<_s_ '_f..'.?.'!_b.+ !#* 5 6. 3 k ki? f k. b 5, A 't A Q f t P a . e !c s