THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Orating poets inspired by PB S p i A) ro C e ,3a \..1\ 0 . ' y0 l d* e mu + P~s~ R~ . , "0' *. a 0 , 17 r Y 4Ie E E u s 1 t r ~ u e s i i By JOHN McMANUS ner and Robert Bly, a National According to informed soiirc- Book Award winner. Charles es, there are more poetry read- CWright and Charles Simic will ings in Ann Arbor than almost also read from their works. anywhere else - including Man- "Lately the readings have be- hattan's famed villages. come fairly colorful," say Eng- lish Prof. Donald Hall. "There's Aording tord oneocalpet, na ham in every poet." you can hardly maneuver in 'There was a time, however, the city without bumping into a when poet were unused to read- poetry reading." Orating artists ing their work publicly. Conse- ran be found at local coffeequnyredgsweusal houses, ;bars, parks, University quently, readings were usually dous a, parks, University stiff and dull. Today, ho vever, auditoriums and high sch aols. most poets thoroughly enjoy THE UNIVERSITY English such experiences and express department has one of the most themselves with a flourish. comprehensive series of poetry HALL POINTS outthat"oral reading of any college in t he publication" or poetry reading is country. se becoming much more popular Every Tuesday afternoon inacosteourysaspty the Modern Languages Bldg., crs the country as s poetry the English department offers a poetry reading, oftan from a major poet who is reading his/ WD ORLD:AMOUS Although the Tuesday after- noon affairs are free and open A to anyone, they are actually m part of a course - English 343. Entitled a "Seminar in C'on-A temporary Poetry," the three- credit course also features lengthy discussions with + h e'ciU poet following the reading. AMONG THOSE who will ap-pH pear this semester are Louis Simpson, a Pulitzer prize win-2T The result is the rebuilding of an oral tradition true to the origins of poetry some 4,00 years ago "when all poetry was memorized and p ss d on mouth to mouth." Because of the growing im- portance and popularity o the oral presentation, Hall is chang- ing his own style and writing with an eye to reading his work out loud. The University program, which has received the enthus- iastic support of the students, consistently draws 250 to 300 grads and undergrads to each Tuesday afternoon reading. "Twenty years ago there were very few poetry readings in the US. Today there are thousands," stays 'Hall. UITAR STUDIO i~tftUiE~tS FOREIGN ePa -V DOMESIC RENTAL ACCESSORDIES NE LESSONS FOLIKC STRUMENTS }3A CLA.SSIC .TOM 65-8 G ELECTRIC ONE 665-8001 TXETSNM VARBOR (UPSTAIRS) Local museums offer students wide range of bizarre exhibits By SARA RIMER Since most people do not relisht the thought of wandering bleary- eyed through a labyrinth of gal- leries behind a babbling tour guide, mammoth museums with A-Z collections can be frighten- ing. The appeal of Ann Arbor's three major museums rests in their reassuring smallness. They are not going to eat you up,t season you with massive doses of culture, and spit you out feel-f .ing suffocated and over-exposed. The museums are welcome1 cases on rainy days when dodg- ing sharply pronged umbrellas or groping through the Grad Li- brary's stacks becomes unbear-t able. And whether you want to gaze happily for hours at a mummy, a dinosaur, or a Picasso, Annf Arbor has a museum to suit your taste. The Museum of Art may not be The Metropolitan, but it hasl an impressive smattering of bigJ names-Picasso, Henry Moore, a n d Alberto Giacometti, to name-drop a few. THE MUSEUM'S permanentf collections include arts of thec Western world from the sixth century A.D. t the present, Far' Eastern, Near Eastern, African and Oceanic art including paint- ing, isculpture, ceramics, and manuscripts. For contemporary art enthu- siasts the museum offers some excellent examples of expres- sionism cubism, futurism, sur- realism, and abstract expres- sionism. SINCE THE museum was ac- credited last year by the Ameri- can Association of Museums, it was able to obtain excellent traveling exhibitions. Last year it showed German expression- ism, Bauhaus, and Hans Hoff- man. The Natural History Museum houses one of the oldest Mich- igan, residents - a mastodor which lived here during the ice age. . Featuring a survey of prehis- toric specimens, the museum also exhibits dinsoaurs and the fossil marine creatures of Mich- igan. The* third floor gallery dis- plays animal and plant life, North American Indians, an ex- tensive collection of minerals including polished gems rang- ing from agate to zircon, and a planetarium are exhiibted on the fourth floor. All the exhibits are carefully explained with diagrams, and one can acculumate an impres- sive store of natural history knowledge in a short visit. The Kelsey Museum of Arche- ology, characterized by its for- bidding- Romanesque Renais- sance architecture, attracts a fair share of local museum ad- dicts. , "EVERY ONCE in a while we get a couple of real weirdos," claims a Kelsey employe. "One man wanted to come in and wake the mummies up. Another pulled up a chair in front of the display of ancient gods, and copied them all down, explain- ing that, they had put a curse on him." Interestingly, m a n y people deliberately avoid the Kelsey Museum on stormy, rainy days. "On bad days, it's a little eerie and mysterious in here," explains a museum employe. It looks safer and more secure on sunny days." THOSE BRAVE enough to venture inside the museum's gloomy exterior will discover a mummy on loan from the Met- ropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Egyptian book of the Dead, an ancient doll house from Egypt and various exam- ples ofancient arts, crafts and building materials. The displays are accompanied by excellent explanations which provide fascinating insights into early civilizations. } TEXTBOOKS UP TO 3 OFF N R R RID BKST ANN ARBOR'S FRIENDLY BOOKSTORE, i' ;: I - 20% STUDENT DISCOUNT 1