Page 4-Friday, November 16, 1979-The Michigan Daily 4 Or 4F r Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 62 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan A pedant's dilemma: Does this JI t poetry require any defense? London Town i .. ' /e. A'* ,.. Elis My girlfriend goes to school in London, Canada. She has little campus life, but the people are friendly and will help you out even if London isn'tyour home town. 'The town exists on the main highway from Detroit to Toronto. We stopped on our way to Toronto and ate at an Oriental family owned restaurant. Sherri and Marcia were my friends. Sherri's boyfriend played the guitar. Mar- cy Hillard owned a car and we drove all around to see the pretty autumn colors. We stopped in a record store and I bought 12 records for $5. 00. In Canada they sell a lot of used and antique items. Pretty bad, isn't it? As a short story it doesn't have a prayer, lacking character development, conflict, or resolutions. As an essay it falls pitifully short, without thesis or organization. And as poetry? Well, it surely isn't metered or rhymed, and it can hardly be compared to the free verse of a Dylan Thomas or a Gwendolyn Brooks.'All things considered, you would probably agree that it is little more than a babbling, childish description of a trip to London, Canada. The writer is a rather handsome, engaging colege-age man with a disarming smile and a casual stride. He could be any student in Ann Arbor. But he is not a student in Ann Arbor: HE IS A patient at the Northville Psychiatric Hospital and came to the Union's Pendleton Room on Wednesday afternoon with several fellow patients to share his creative writing with anyone who .was in- terested. "Childish? Babbling?" you might now recall. "Of course not," you would protest. "I never thought that for a minute; it's very profound and moving. How could anyone even think those paragraphs have no meaning?" Well, I did. And as I sat silently criticizing this poem and others for their sim- plicity and lack of depth, as I looked around at the eight other members of the audience and wondered how they could appear so By Howard Witt engrossed in this worthless jabber, shivered. I WHY DO I feel compelled to pick apart the. writing of mentally ill people? I asked myself. Because I have been taught at this Univer- sity to be unreasonably pedantic, I answered immediately. My introductory poetry course has left me overly prepared for poems-some of which were even less coherent and more juvenile than "London Town"-written by psychiatric patients. Where is the symbolism in "London Town?" the imagery? the metaphor? a voice in me kept prodding. THE INFLUENCES of my literature cour- ses tormented me no less during the prose readings by several patients. There is no protagonist, no plot, no flashback, no foreshadowing, I couldn't help thinking. I struggled to suppress a recurrent thought: I could write a wonderfully critical English paper on this whole recitation. Yet, I reasoned, it could not simply be the fault of the University that I rejected this poetry. Indeed, had I heard it six or seven years ago I still would not have acknowledged "London Town" as anything like genuine literature. JUST AS I realized this-that all of my scholastic training has urged me to deride such poetry as meaningless and valueless-I shivered again. Could it really be true that because there is no metaphor or symbolism in this poem it has no worth? No, I concluded, that cannot be true. I im- mediately began to counter my pedantic ten- dencies by imagining defenses for the writing. First, I thought, the poems are simple and childish because they are the products of psychistric patients who are incapable of literary genius. But that defense, I soon realized, would imply that the men- tally troubled are in some way inferior to "normal" people, an unpleasant conception that twentieth-century society is trying '7 desperately to eradicate. PERHAPS, I then thought, I could fashion some exaggerated interpretations that would fit the writing to introductory poetry and-' literature standards.- But that defense, too; seemed inappropriate-I could not corrupt the poems by interpreting metaphors that, just don't exist. I could think of no other excuse for this't writing. I wanted desperately to supplant my. cerebral criticisms with uncomplicated emotion, to allow myself to appreciate "Lon- don Town." And then it dawned on me: It is wrong to seek to defend the poetry and essays at all. As I watched the author of "London Town" stroll confidently to the podium, as I heard his voice falter and lose its assurance when he realized", the small audience was focusing its;attention on him, and as I sensed his confidence return as he moved into the rhythm of his poem, I realized that there is no defense necessary foi i this creative writing. It stands alone, immune to academic analyses appropriate for more conventional literature precisely because it i nothing like conventional literature. "London. Town" cannot be divorced from its author's very human presentation. Certainly, as a poem isolated in a book it would mean little;" but when one knows something of the author, - "London Town" takes on a tremendous value.- After battling with my excessively pedantiW standards, then, I realized that all of this sim plistic, juvenile, telegraphic poetry is ac-, tually quite moving. "London Town," accep- ted for what it is and not rejected for what it is not, is a valiant attempt to transcribe for ail audience an indescribable emotion. If you, °y can't appreciate or understand that entirely, sufficient explanation, I am sorry that I am incapable of further explication. The poem' is, ultimately, no less creative or literary than would be any attempt I might make to write' down all the emotions that I associate with a bicycle ride through Door County, Wisconsin. Then again, who cares what I feel about some bicycle ride 'or what some psychiatric"- patient feels about a trip to see his girlfriend", Iafear that I will never completely destroy the pedant in me. - .. _. __-- . =54 Another blow to peace T WAS TWO years ago, almost to the day, when the Egyptian warrior, Anwar Sadat, made his un- precedented peace pilgrimage into the heart of his enemy. Not since 1948 when the state of Israel was established had a rival Arab leader stepped foot on Israeli territory. It was history, and it was a prayer for peace. Maybe. Two years later, many of those prayers have been answered. Israel and Egypt have signed a peace treaty and will soon exchange ambassadors, a diplomatic achievement that would have been unthinkable before Sadat initiated the first step. The chain reac- tion from-Sadat's courage led to Israeli flexibility. Peace became more than just a dream. Yet, since the two countries signed a peace treaty in March, the momentum has eroded in a flurry of despair. What once seemed like relatively smooth sailing into the future has turned into an unceasing tide of troubles. The latest event to rock the unstable foundation of peace results from the Begin government's decision to deport a Palestinian mayor. on the West Bank to Jordan because he expressed sym- pathy for guerrilla tactics. The mayor, Bassam al-Shka of Nablus - the largest city on the West Bank - was arrested this week by Israeli authorities when it was revealed that he had once approved violent tactics to overcome Israeli intransigence. Any chances that he may be released. now hinge on the Israeli Supreme Court which is the only body that can overrule the Begin government. If not, the mayor will be in King Hussein's territory within days. How ironic it is -for the Israelis to exhibit such stubbornness and in- tolerance on the eve 'bf the second an- niversary of Sadat's visit. For not only does it demonstrate the Begin regime's disregard of constitutional rights - the mayor's privilege to express his opinion - but it also threatens to make the eventual goal of peace in the entire region even more elusive. The immediate fallout of the Israeli government's decision was by far 4he most dangerous consequence, and the one ,which portends -an even grimmer future. In an expression of solidarity,' the mayors of all 25 cities in the oc- cupied territories of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip completed the sub- mission of their resignations, leaving the entire area devoid of municipal leaders. These resignations spell even greater trouble for the hopes shared by many Israelis and American diplomats that some chance lingered for moderate Palestinians to become an integral element in the autonomy talks. Those discussions, aimed at establishing a framework for Palestinian autonomy in the occupied territories, have moved nowhere. The Israelis keep waiting for moderates to emerge while the Egyptians press for more flexibility from the now-shaky Begin coalition. (1 be AEI 3t 1 atg PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF lAUREEN 'MALLEY...,.................Chief Photographer YRENA ('hANG............. .......Staff Photographer PAUL. ENGSTROM......................... Staff Photographer D)AVID )HARIS.......................... Staff Photographer U^ISA ALAUSN . .. Staff Photographer JIM KRU Z...................................Staff Photographer .J ' SEIDI...........................Staff Photographer Howard Witt is a Daily Night Editor. ' y ~ 11 1 ;!" ' Stories of hunger and agony in the heart of Cambodia . ,'L. EDITOR 'S NOTE: The Quinn-Judges, Quaker Inter- national Representatives in Southeast Asia, are among the' very few people who have traversed Eastern Cambodia between Phnom Penh and Vietnam recently. Fluent in Vietnamese and French, they visited Kampuchea briefly late in September while on a trip to Vietnam to inspect projects funded there by the American Friends Service Committee. They brought back this eye- witness account of the devastated1khmer people. Those who have lived through the nightmare of the Khmer Rouge experiment in radical communism are not being given any respite. Their immediate tasks of building a government, opening schools, staffing and supplying hospitals are all dwar- fed by thehconstant challenge of finding enough food to keep people alive. On the 45-kilometer drive to Kompong Speu province capital west of Phnom Penh, we saw some young rice growing and even the occasional water buffalo wandering in the fields, but nowhere did we see any evidence that people's lives had returned to normal. PEASANTS IN the om- nipresent faded black clothing had set up a barter market along the roadside near the prpvince headquarters, but a few tIilted vegetables and edible roots seems to be all they had to offer. Wbat used to be the little town of Kompong Speu has disap- peared-apparently the Khmer Rouge blew it up when they By Paul and Sophia Quinn-Judge While working adults and their spouses in Phnom Penh were get- ting a monthly rice ration of 13 kilos, adults in the Kompong Speu area were receiving only six kilos per month and their seed rice was said to be gone. We were told that in recent months their only sour- ce of food had been from the Vietnamese, and as our car pulled into the provincial head- fquartersthe guide pointed out ten ox carts loaded with burlap sacks of seed corn from Vietnam, creaking off to the surrounding villages. Khmer nation have all but disap- peared were borne out during a visit to the Phnom Penh or- phanage. There were only 26 children under six years of age u of a total of 539here. Almost 90 per cent of the children brought in-some by relatives, others picked up on roads-were sick and malnourished. HUNGER HAS killed the very young first. It has also drastically cut the birth rate. a UNICEF of- ficial who has traveled in Kam- puchea for several weeks "Hunger has killed the very young first. It has also drastically cut the birth rate. A UNICEF official who has traveled in Kam- puchea for several weeks estimated that 85 per cent of the women have stopped menstruating because of malnutrition and exhaustion." his own soldiers. Many of those", held and executed at the Tuo'" Sleng prison, a former high school for Phnom Penh's elite,.,-, were Kampucheans who served . with Sihanouk's government of national unity between 1970 and,' 1975. The Khmer Rouge left detailed.' records of those who died in the ' prison, including many photos: The faces of hundreds of the dead now stare at visitors from the:. walls. Among them is the face of, a young cinema actress whir', returned-to Phnom Penh front Cuba in 1976. Our brief glimpse of Kam' puchea ended with the seven-: hour drive from Phnom Penh to Ho Chi Minh City. The peasants biking and walking along High- way 1 seemed to be moving with< more purpose than those we had seen further west. We passed'q few truckloads of Vietnamese' soldiers, but- most of the traffic on this stretch consisted on truckloads of Kampucheant peasants, with pink or red-v checked scarves wound around w their necks or worn turban-style. AT THE.NEAK Luong ferry' crossing of the Mekong, we stop- ped for half an hour. The directory of the Neak Long port spoke good French, and told us that he had, served in the Public Works- Ministry under Sihanouk and Lone Nol."Is your government going tot send us any humanitarian aid?" he asked. "How many tons?" Between the Mekong and the eastern town of Svey Rieng, rice was finally getting planted. Many work groups were transplantin', seedlings in the flooded fields, v while farmers of all ages were plowing with cattle or water buf- falo. After the remains of Sveyy Rieng, however, came the Parrts Beak and absolute quiet. There was no sign of life in this once THE PROVINCE hospital, with 585 patients and only 200 beds, wa a scene from another century. There was no resident doctor and very little medicine. Although a few patients were suffering from wounds inflicted by Pol Pot soldiers, most of the diseases were caused by vitamin deficien- cies. The ninety-two children in the orphan ward were fighting starvation. There seemed to be no hope for those suffering in this hospital, until we met a doctor from the International Red Cross arriving to, distribute a small estimated that 85 per cent of the women have stopped men- struating because of malnutrition and exhaustion. Among the many survivors who told us their stories was Mrs. Pen En, a former French teacher who now guides foreign visitors around the Tuol Sleng Prison, where an estimated 12,000 died under the Khmer Rouge, and which is now a museum. In January, 1978, after Mrs. Pen En's husband, a forestry technician, died in prison and three of their children died of