Page 6-Sunday, February 4, 1979--The Michigan Daily -- -. The Michigan Dafy-Sunda Prop D:Te morning! i- l. New directions for THE COUP By John Updike Alfred A. Knopf, $8.98, 299 pp. COLONEL HAKIM Felix Ellellou, expatriate deposed president of an insignificant famine-ridden African nation, chronicles his spiritual, sexual, and political experience in John Up- dike's new novel The Coup. The book, which takes the form of a giant memoir recounting the events before, during, and after a coup d'etat in the small country of Kush, ranges from unchar- ted desert wastes to snowy Wisconsin, from rides in a silver Mercedes to near death by thirst on camelback, from lyrical eroticism to copulation in a dit- ch, and from complete political power to usurpation and imprisonment. Ellellou's character progresses in harmony with the narration, which makes frequent skips globally and temporaly. He is erudite, mystical. fanatically anti-capitalist, and cpable of a self-deprecating humor. He appears.curiously removed from the events of his life, describing death, triumph, love, and destruction with a distant nonchalence reminiscent of Didion's A Book of Common Prayer. Ellellou terrifies American diplomats, who label him a "schizoid paranoic," and is alternately worshipped and ignored by his tribual constituency. Yet he remains a noble and graceful man throughout, sure of his religion, secure in his cultural and ethical principles, certain of his inherent superiority, and, thus, capable of being humble. Kush is an undeveloped nation which Ellellou struggles to keep undeveloped. He lists the country's assets as "twen- ty-two miles of railroad and one hud-. nred seven of paved highway. Our national airline consists of two Boeing 727s. . . . Average life expectancy is thirty-seven years, per capita gross national product is $79, the literacy rate is 6 per cent." After describing the paucity of industry, agriculture, and exploitable resources, he adds, ironically, that diseases, of which Kush boasts "an ample treasury," should perhaps be listed among the nation's natural resources. In spite of Kush's quagmire of pover- ty he rejects the proferred American aid, because he forsees consequences of destruction, expolitation, and shame. He points out past deleterious results of foreign aid in the neighboringcountry of Zanj: "I am told you favored its suf- fering citizens with tons of number two sorghum, a coarse grain grown for camel fodder, which gives its human consumers violent diarrhea . . . (You dug) deep wells, which disasterously caused the herds to stay until the grasslands around the wells was reduced to dust." Even these most altruistic of foreign contributions have detrimental effects; other attempts at aid, such as the donations of boxes of' "USA USA USA Kix Trix Chex Pops" and powdered milk to a country with no water, are ludicrous and irrational. E LLELLOU REJECTS foreign aid for pragmatic reasons; he sees it as engendering a self-propogating Anne Eva Ricks is a senior in the Honors Engis/z program. By Anne Eva Rick dependence on Western nations. By keeping foreign aid from his borders, he hopes to maintain the integrity and pride of his starving people: "A barefoot man is not poor until he sees other people wearing shoes. Then he feels shame. Shame is being smuggled into Kush." wiped out thi Heyneman con the best forei third world co alone or event tiveness of a W stead of repl with the lowes 'El/ell is not o) but-pers search iM love an, John Updike propriate pomp: "Our technical boys can mop up any mess technology Screates. All you need is a little developmental input, some dams in the walls, and some extensive replanting with the high energy pappas grass the teir natural predators. guys in the green revolution have come ncludes that, "Sometimes up with..." The diplomat fails to men- gn aid we can offer the tion that the ostensible "green untries is to leave people revolution" is dependent on petroleum try to counter the attrac- base fertilizers and foreign irrigation. Vestern style of life. . . In- acing cultural patterns A MERICANS ARE, in Ellellou's t level of another-which eyes, insidious, insipid, and shal- low; he resents the importation of American values and materials in lieu of Kushian tradition. He tells his people, "The world groans beneath the voracious vulgarity of these un- believers. They suck dry vast delicate nations in the service of the superfluous lou s journey and the perverse." He ridicules .s r American women as "obese brides n ly political, fatuously trying to beautify themselves (with hair curlers) while they parade in 'ona?, a soul- supermarkets," in comparison with the naturally elegant beauty and grace of S quest for "the long round brow of the Tutsi royal line, as erotic, as meek and glistening ' intim a , as the twin bulges of a (Kushian C" woman's) buttocks." American men are "puerile, -awkward, winning, and hopeful," and function in a world based on "glut and obscenity." Ellellou's journey is not only political, but personal, a soul-searchng quest for love and intimacy. Updike's precisely delineated scenes of confron- tation, rejection, and reconciliation ex- plore the possibilites of the marriage relationship. Each of E~lelou's -four wives and mistress suggest crucial outcome of development components of a working marriage, ly a euphemism for although he loses them all- through 1-we might try to retain neglect, death, and disappearance. His ,community and family happiness is finally achieved with his and individual ethnic independent and cheerfuly unfaithful ditional culture while in- third wife. powerful tools of our Ellellou's personal mid-life crisis and successful self-discovery move parallel forts to preserve his but contrary to his political failure and itions and social struc- the corruption of his country. These op- in light of his willingly posing movements, interwoven with the nment and the facile, rich cultural heritage of Kush, con- lance of the American. tribute to the fascinating complexity of mats, who act like this beautifully written, highly en- diplomat states with ap- joyable novel. FRECKLE-FACED 19-year-old knocked at the ice cubes floating at the top of her mug of Coke. "This is the first time I've ever come to Dooley's on a Saturday night and been able to get a table right away," she said, peering over the balcony rail at the relatively quiet clusters of people in front of the huge TV screen, which was beaming the MSU-Iowa basketball game. Cozy couples nestled together in front of the fireplace, and waitresses glided between chairs, rolling forward to the pounding of recorded music. There were no tables free, the pinball machines were monopolized, but the frenzy that a weekend night at Dooley's used to mean was missing. "I guess it's crowded enough in here," shrugged the young woman with the Coke, poking again at her ice cubes. "All the insanity is gone." Though they're -still allowed inside the gracious confines of their favorite locals, many students are staying out of their establishments, and most local gathering placesdhave taken to using hand stamps to identify legal drinkers, serving non-alcoholic drinks in special glasses, and marking the drinks with straws in an effort to keep a close eye on the underaged. Still, those in the 18- 20 bracket frequently send older friends to the tap to buy for them, and propriotorial surveillance over such ac- tivity is apparently rather slipshod. So the bars have not turned into pop stands; they don't like to talk much about their soft drink sales, but it's a singular table that boasts no booze. Managers and owners don't seem too inclined to come down heavily on those who sneak a few sips, and they generally say that they give a first of- ONG-TIME fraternity-sorority favorite The Village Bell was vir- tually vacant two weekends ago, with yards and yards of open wood where elbow-to-elbow students used to slosh drinks and lie about their sex lives. A cheerful bartender presided over about a dozen customers, and had plenty of time to wipe the bar again and again while explaining the new bar, which was to be installed the next week, the fine tape system in the works, and plans for a late-hour restaurant service which, it is hoped, will attract an older crowd. There's-still a line in front of Bimbo's restaurant, which never did rely heavily on the 18-20-year-old customer anyway, but the boisterous, mug- By Eric Zorn ti l s . - . , . i i r t ' , . f / ' v " Y i want to an ass of 20-year-( in the doi Drink especial everyon Universi during t) freshpe dominat ignore ti tors, wh and don the stud( of enfor staffs. Kegge campus and the perhaps dly than gatherint rarely t .i I a J .7. ^ % '., t r -, His tenacious stand against the en- croachment of foreign values has documented 'historical precendent: in the February 1979 Human Nature, Dr. Donald Heyneman, a professor of parisitology at the University of California at San Francisco, documents the ecological tragedy of the Aswan Dam, resulting in the salinization of soil, erosion, arid uneradicable epidemics of schistosomiasis. He men- tions other unintentional disasters of Western technological intervention, such as the flourishing of lice, roach, and mosquito populations after DDT is so often theo and frequent political contro cultural values participation, pride of the tra troducing the own. " Ellellou's ef country's trad tures are futile corrupt govern ignorant arrog career diplo salesmen. Onec drinking the bars this term because they are no longer legally old enough to drink. Campus area taverns are reporting a clientele which is only about 20 per cent under the age of 21, and the new com- position of the crowd has changed the atmosphere for almost everyone. Dooley's, erstwhile hangout for the recently enrolled, no longer sports the noisy crush of people which made it the place to get face time on th?4own. "It's quiter, and there's a little more sophisticated tone," observed Tom, a 24-year-old graduate student. 'I can sit and have a nice talk with someone, and it's nice not to have to fight the teens for a table." HERE'S also no shortage of- bodies inside Don Cisco's disco- teque Friday and Saturday nights. Would-be hoofers face the familiar crunch on the dance floor, and the game room percolates with ac- tivity. However, as bar and restaurant owner Bill Marzonie points out, "Ann Arbor is a weekend town." There's no longer. a cover charge on weekdays, and Don Cisco's has always tried to ap- peal to a slightly older crowd anyway, but the fight to survive financially worries all bars north of Division Street. No one believes that the new prohibition is totally effective in keeping young lips from nipping on the drop that cheers, and underage studen- ts report it is difficult, but not im- possible, to share in the fun at local drinking establishments. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission ruled on, January 23 that bar owners may not prohibit 18-20-year-olds from entering Eric Zorn is co-editor of the Daily Arts page.] fender a warning and confiscate the drink in-order to prevent the one- to two-thousand-dollar fine and possible suspension of their liquor license for violations of state law. Though smaller nightspots like Mr. Flood's Party and The Blind Pig are a bit more subdued, they haven't felt the crunch of Proposition D the way that larger places have. Second Chance con- tinues to draw fairly well as a show bar, but a doorman, shouting to be heard over the booming power of the band on stage, said that the four bars that used to be open on weekends have been reduced to two, and now it's only one on weekdays. smashing groups of new voters who were such a headache for the waiters and waitresses no-longer find it as spor- ting to come in and sing along with "My Wild Irish Rose." Said one 19-year-old, "You've got to play it cool if you want to drink these days, and who wants to be discreet at the bar?" It follows that, even though drinking is possible for, the clever at local bars, many students don't like the idea of having to sneak around and play the same games they played in high school. Once safely inside and supplied, there is still the smaller number of familiar faces and the less frenetic pace that an evening on the town now offers. "If you (Continued from Page 3) such photographs existed, Markley director Leroy Williams called "an emergency staff meeting." At the meeting, Williams reportedly ex- pressed his anger that he had to discover this- covert partying through the media, and then, in his words, "I found out some things." "The staff has got to realize that they're employees of the U of M. . . we have to dp our job," he said later. The "crackdown" has come at the expense of the staff, who have been asked to watch very carefully for alcohol and report violations. The hard-nosed reaction is perhaps understandable, but shows little evident regard for the sensitive position that resident staff have on a hall as friends and advisors. The realities of the new prohibition defy conventional disciplinar actions, and, the :staffs must devise more realistic mechanisms for coping with the com- plex social circumstances. A resident advisor must simultaneously take on, the roles of authority figure and peer. "Either way, we get screwed," sighed one East Quad staff member. "If there is a party going on outin the hall and we ignore it, it might get out-of-hand to the point that police and security are called; if we hang around and keep things under control, we run the risk of being caught or- blackmailed." "It's a stupid law and I'll have no part in enforcing it," said one angry RA who- wouldn't be identified. "Having parties only in private rooms is absurd from an educational point-of-view. I've already organized two parties this year, and bought the beer for both. I won't be a cop." RAs generally feel much more like students than staff.-"It's really quite 'a charade," said a Hill area dorm RA. "I was at a loss when the winter term first started, and so were a lot of students. They stood around a lot and wondered what to do. But when I saw my fellow 'staffers 'ignoring' parties, buying and practically pouring drinks into the mouths of the kids on their halls, I figured there's nothing to worry about if we keep it under our own control." Though the students themselves generally don't have to worry about being caught by the building director - since none of them indicated that they would not terminate the lease on a student's first offense - there are other prgblems which not everyone thinks about. Ruth Addis, director of Stock- well Hall, is especially concerned with the fate of alcohol abuse control education programs which have been able to operate in the dorms in the past: See DRINKING, Page 8 and if th ridiculou Most b ned "how down," a said, and staff mer responsi drinking. "I'm n run their building taken a 1 humanist noted tha dance at and his h about oth . Morrov of West asking th efforts at allowing1 both mdi ties are p RFs are position,' personally their flo responsib violation. "We're sand," ad hand. we trouble. ei One woi director b life would dorms ha( but that is following where pho taken. Aft drinking i See Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON .1).ards and bar patrons are now subject to careftil inspection. r.)&a(Sadbr'PIIEISaefo ujct aeu f~~tt~l e +7 r ,ap{ .# 4o .a0rrr .i .. .. :# ,r e 3'