Page Two THE MICHIGAN. DAILY Wednesday March 24, 1974- PaeTw HEMCHGN AL Wdesa1 ach2,p 7 Squi By GLORIA JANE SMITH University professors are no- torious for being more than teachers, but also authors and experimenters in their own right. Radcliffe Squires, P r o - fessor of English at the Uni- versity, editor of The Michigan Quarterly, author of many books and a published poet, is cer- tainly not an exception. Reading Tuesday, Squires pre-, sented himself in a subtle green suit, white shirt and uniquely designed green tie, as a sensitive h u m a n being, an accomplished scholar, and an in- terestingly creative poet. "The Day America Fell," is a poem which Squires tells us should be read more "as a joke" than as anything else. It takes the form of a letter written by a soldier to his "Lord Class Four Coadjutor of the. People's res: A Empire and Fellow Descendant in straight blood lines of the raised workers." Meeting children in villages, the soldiers "distributed the syn- thetic chocolate perfected by the Empire's Commission on Fetishes." To women who "ab- sent mindedly bared their breasts," t h e y distributed the "quasi-protein cakes." And to the pacifists, "you know the type, I believe," they distribut- ed . . . for "there is nothing more cruel than to sustain t h o s e who cannot possibly adjust to those who have adjusted to real- ity." However, they established in honor of these pacifists "a sperm bank, naming it after one of their heroes, 'The Thoreau Center for Mass Harmony.'" The soldier ends his letter: / I felt the desert was sliding toward / The stars and smiling poet w through me, / As if it, too, had been liberated / From some- thing, and would be be / Trick- ed again. I enclose, my Lord, / A handful of sand. The audience did not laugh. The emotion was heavier, and certainly not the reaction to a "Joke." Attempting to convince us, then, that either he does feel that there "is a chance for the world," or that as a poet, he is "inconsistent," Squires read "Li- lacs in August." . The poem told of a June bush fire out west which combed "the touseled grass flat in neat black sti ands," burning also the li- lacs. Unlike the grass which re- mains satisfied to "wait f o r spring," the lilacs bloom in Aug- ust: "blood blisters ooze from the decent black boughs." "Isn't the desperate haste to miew of i .Movies are hard to relate to by yourself. When you see a wo- man in the movies you think that if y'ou're not like that, then you're not right," Sklar con- tinued. "It could be really great for women to deal with these images together." Back in January, when plan- fning for the Festival began, the group faced the question of how ho hap set seed perverse?" asks the poet. "Oh, no, the human heart is always charred / Oh, no, it is always August / Oh, no, the heart is not grass."/ In the eighth and ninth cen- tury, he explains, churches were built below the earth. A visit to one of these holy buildings is a "true life experience" for R a d- cliffe Squires, as is his poem, "The Prayer." The poet enters a church "whose threshold now lies be- neath history's rubble." "History," he says, "is only two feet deep, but we cannot sweep it away." In the church is a woman who prays to the Virgin: "This man's wife," she sings, "has borne him no child. Send them a child." comen the festival should relate to men. The decision was reached to hold all-women's workshop, as well as all-men's workshops and mixed ones. "We don't want to exclude those women who feel comfort- able mainly in the company of men. We want to include those women and therefore we went to include those men," said Sklar. ens to An officer enters and explains that "he has come for this wo- man who has shamed the mayor and put off the tourists. She is quite mad." Alone, the poet remembers, as the woman advised, to "pray for too much": "Let me, Virgin, let me also go mad." Of his two love poems read, "The Vine" was inspired by the Rackham Building, where t h e vines have been cut away. "It comes through layers of chalky paint as the shadow of a seaweed-hand," Squires de- scribes the vine which n o w "binds the very stones togeth- er." "When the wall is gone," the poet ends, "it will clasp more air with something stronger than grief. It is thus our love holds our life." Squires once hoped to write a BACH CLUB CONTEMPORARY REACTIONS CONCERT a 1-hour program of original works in the styles of BACH, MOZART, BRAHMS --FEATURING-- be a poem describing the castration of a young boy so that his voice would never change. This is where "The Castrato Singer" be- gan, however Squires explained that in its final version, the poem deals more "with two sta- tes of life, the ordered and the disordered." "The wolves are yodeling," the poeim begins in a description of one state and of one type of singer. "They snap, arch them- selves up from forefeet a n d again disgorge a broken arc of adolescent song." Abstract and circular," the castrated boy sings, where his voice "turns like a star: mov- ing but never rising or falling." "They listen," the boy speaks about the wolves, "waiting like an opaque fear in the memory for my voice to break." Reacting "unlike the journal- prof. ist," to the many sheep who were killed by nerve gas and who would have otherwise been slaughtered and eaten, Squires read "Skull Valley, Utah." "We browsed here one winter," the sheep tell us. "It was a sky-meadow we lay down in when we could not breath. We are here now, a marble empti- ness." "Your butcher's handsno longer frighten us," they say, "we thank you for a noble death; from you we expected otherwise." This sensitive concern for sheep fuses with his concern for all humanity and nature, so that we are left with only one reaction to Radcliffe Squires, that of a sincere desire to ex- perience more of his successful experiments with the written word. University of Michigan, Arts Chorale MOZART REQUIEM Fri.. Mar. 26-8:00 Hi1 Auditorium Maynard Klein, Conductor FREE Always the finest in Screen entertainment Corner of State and Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 75C LADIES DAY Special Price for. Ladies fraom 1-6 p.m. Wed. 1. A folm Is-eye I i , --- - -- --- - ---- from SONY T HE MODEL 40 i By DEBRA THAL A new adventure in media will begin tomorrow night with the opening of the cost free Ann Ar- bor Women's Film Festival. The Festival will continue through Sunday night showing six differ- ent films, each followed by work- shops to discuss the issue pre- 'ented in the film. Each film presents a different image of women, a stereotype which will be discussed in the workshops. The Misfits,dstarring Marilyn Monroe will be shown tomorrow. evening. The work- shops afterward will deal with the' sexual exploitation of women in the media and in everyday life. Friday night, Woman of the Year, starring Katherine Hep- burn will be presented. The film. shows a woman in one of the few positive roles .to be seen in the movies, although both the nmovie and the stereotype are not of' the present but rather from the' 1940's. Workshops will, ex- amine women and independence. 'Saturday and Sunday will ,now different films at each matinee and evening performance. The matinees will have free child care facilities. Saturday afternoon will fea- ture Pumpkin Eater, with Anne Nancroft. The story is one of a woman who has child after child to avoid facing reality; the work shops will discuss the role of women in the family. Saturday night, one of 'he few films by a woman director will be shown. Le Bonheui', directed by Agnes Varda will lead info a discussion of female identity. The topic for Sunday ?fternoon is women in struggle. Joan ofl Arc, directed by Bresson will be shown. The final film of the festival will be All About Eve, with Betty Davis and Anne Baxter, to be shown Sunday night. The work- shops will discuss female iden- tity and competition. Various shorts will also be shown at each performan e. They will include Sisters a woman's film from 1970, a Newsreel film, and She's Beautiful When She's Angry. The Festival is being sponsored by the Charlotte Perkins Gilman Memorial Caucus, a small wom- en's group. They decided that films would be a good away to reach all kinds of Ann Arbor women. "Movies are one thing that ev- eryone has grown up with-re- gardless of their background, whether working class or mid- dle class. This is something that all women in Ann Arbor can re- late to," said Kitty Sklar, a member of the Gilman Caucus. RO94RT 1I(HAkJ. ADFORD POLLARD LITTLUSS AA1D 91G HALSY 4 ACTION-CORDER That Works Like a Camera for 4999w E Y f f J Variations and Fugue on "Jingle Bells," and works for string or- chestra and piano, 4 hands by Joseph Marcus, Randolph Smith, and Mich~ael Pilafian. HOME MADE ITALIAN CHILI afterwards. Thur., Mar. 25, 8 P.M. South VdEINT. Longe EVERYONE INVITED! --Admission 35c- I YOU NEVER HEARD IT SO GOOD / "AROARING VISUAL DELIGHT!" -L.A. TIMES 1l-Ft BUYS F Ann Arbor-East Lansing 618 S. MAIN 769-4700 "Qualitly Sownd Through Quality Equipment" "A MUST" -PLAYBOY - - ~- - - - . I Fr COUZENS HALL presents White Trash andI Siracco DOORS OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. -Wanda Hale NewYork Daly News { NEXT: "GOING DOWN T H E ROAD" AAFC TOMORROW NIGHT 75c March 25 Humphrey Bogart Katherine Hepburn JOHN HUSTON, dir. in African Queen 7-9:30 Aud. A Angell Hall 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti '& Ann Arbor We Don't Just Publish a Newspaper . We meet new people * We laugh a lot * We find consolation OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1:15-3-5-7-9 p.m. -Starts Thursday- APRIL FIRST Dustin Hoffman as 'LITTLE BIG MAN" b P' 0 We play football, (oncel III Sat., March 27, 8:30 p.m. " We make money (some) * We solve problems e We gain prestige * We become self confident e We debate vital issues t We drink 5c Cokes e We have T.G.'s JOIN the DAILY staff Come by 420 Maynard St. 1101 $1.50 B Admission 75c , NOMINATEDFOR ACADEMY AWARDS -_ I ]III u 'i I BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTRESS GP BEST ACTOR BZST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY BEST ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE I 1 ' I SP FE Want some Come to the I K 07 -VER? to get into thing new? BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SHOWS TODAY AT: 1 :00-3:0-5:00-7:0O-9:O P.M. - NOTE - SNEAK PREVIEW FRIDAY NIGHT . .._ _ _ ) I PMAON PICTURESPRESi NS Ali Mac~raw Ryan OB'eal A HWARD G MINSO- ARTHUR HILLER Productioq John Marley&Ray Milland x 603 E. Liber DIAL 5-629 Doors Open 12 Shows at 1, 3, 5, Free List Susper ty o .:45 7, 9 nded i i i I i 4 I i I MASS MEETING Wed., March 24-8 P.M.l 420 MAYNARD ST. rr;,.AI GA "OA Daily Classifieds Get Results Phone 764-0558 KENT STATE M ! I 1 M ANN ARBOR WOMEN'S FILM FESTIVAL Gnd WORKSHOPS I FREE THURS: MAR. 25 7:30 Union Ballroom THE MISFIT, Marilyn Monroe ,1 I k II I FRI: MAR. 26 7:30 Rackham WOMAN OF THE YEAR, Katherine Hepburn SAT: MAR. 27 2:30 Rackham PUMPKIN EATER, Anne Bancroft 7:30 Rackham LE BONHEUR-Agnes Varda, director SUN: MAR. 28 2:30 Union Ballroom i .I , a , _ ,; a Gi , ; k k (( ( (j i i Norman Kennedy from Scotland has appeared in every major folk festival including Newport,j Philadelphia, Mariposa; etc, "The most dynamic, ir resistable, and enchant- ing singer we've ever had at the ARK." -Linda Siglin NEXT WEEK U. UTAH PHILLIPS the GOLDEN VOICE of the, GREAT SOUTHWEST APRIL 14th- Buddies in the Saddle o=w%F A WHAT HAPPENED-AND WHY