The Aichigan Daily-Saturday, November 18, 1978-Page 9 Some 60 persons were all ears when Bill Mathews gave hints on publishing work. Bill Mathews eyes Bill Mathews Workshop sets " " poetry in motion Paula Rankin, poet from Old Hickory, Tennessee. A NN ARBOR BECAME a Paradise for Poets last week when more than 60 striving writers descended on the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union for the first Fall Poetry Workshop. The four-day event, which ran Wednesday through Saturday, featured a number of small workshops designed to stimulate writing. Four accomplished poets catne to town to assist with the workshops and give readings at night. Jointly 'sponsored by the English Department and the Michigan Council for the Arts, the WorkshdpyWas an overall success. Dr. Stephen Dunning, professor in English and education who was instrumental in organizing the workshop, said the response was "overwhehningly positive." He was assisted by Kathe Kohl and Shirley Smith. The workshop was unique in that it wasopen to anyone interested in writing poetry, regardless of ability. People from the community and from local high schools participated in the experience along with University students. This made for an interesting group of people ranging from a 15- year-old high school student to an 84-year-old writer of ecological verse. Being in a workshop situation enabled the participants to work with experienced poets rather than just hear them read. William Mathews, Faye Kicknosway, Paula Rankin, and Malcolm Glass were the poets who helped lead the workshop. Through exercises, readings and discussions, they demonstrated different writing styles as well as individual approaches to creation. ONE OF THE MOST interesting and beneficial exercises was led by Rankin, who had the participants draw a floor plan of the first home they remembered living in. The people then wrote a room by room narration, stating what came to mind at each location. Most participants were surprised by how much information they recalled about events thought to have been long forgotten. Besides "generating" workshops, two "finished product" sessions were held in which participants were encouraged to write completed poems. The most complete poems were read at the evening readings and during the final Saturday morning reading when participants were encouraged to read a poem produced during the workshop. One of the most apt statements about poetry and its relation to everyday life comes from Mathews' poem, "A Roadside Near Ithaca, New York:" In memory, though memory eats its banks like any river, you can carry by constant revision some loved thing. Besides working with the visiting poets, many participants had the opportunity to talk with writers who pursue both a career in writing and work at the University. Sessions were held at the Hopwood Room with Eric Rabkin, English Professor, E. J. Burrows, executive producer at WUOM, and Robert Hayden, Professor and for- mer library of Congress Consultant. For those who missed out, Professor Dunning plans to schedule another workshop- "sometime in March." Regular poetry readings are held throughout the year at the Pendleton Room and at the Guild House. The campus also has two literary journals that seek student work. Photos and story by WAYNE CABLE Faye Kicknosway making an excruciating point. Stephen Dunning, workshop co-ordinator. I ~U