Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 20, 19o 1 Students Needed for Athletic Committee POSITIONS ARE ON: e Advisory Committee on Recreation, Intramural, Club Sports (ACRICS) a Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics Interviews will be held Tuesday, April 22. Drop by the SGC office, third floor of the Union, for more information. I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN BOOKS i Sunday, April 20 Day Calendar Women's Tennis: UM vs. Wiscon- sin, Varsity Courts, 10 am. WUOM: Future Worlds Series - Gene Roddenberry, creator/produc- er, "Star Trek," on "Inside Science Fiction, Outside This World," 1:10 pm. IM Sports: Family recreation, State, Hoover, 1:30-5:30 pm. Graduate Outing Club: Hiking, at Rackham N. Entry, 1:30 pm. UM - Dearborn: David Lewis, slides / lecture, "Henry Ford Coun- try," Fair Lane Masion, 4901 Ever- green Rd., Dearborn, 2 pm. Music School: Sophomore trum- pet recital - Cady Music Rm., Stearn 8,2 :30 pm: Carol Pao, violin, Recital Hall, 2:30 pm; Lorraine Therese Miller, organ Doctoral, Hill Aud., 8 pm; Gail Barnes, piano, Re- cital Hall, 8 pm; french horn stu- dent recital - Cady Music Rin., Stearns, 8 pm. Musical Society: Vladimir Horo- witz, pianist, Hill Aud., 4 pm. UTP: Aristophanes' The Birds, Power, 3, 8 pm. Monday, April 21 WUOM: Award-winning docu- mentary, "The Great American Pleasure Railway," produced & re- ported by Jim Russell, NPR, 10 am. Botany: Gordon Hager, u.C., "RNA Polymerases and Transcrip- tion Spcicficity in Saccharomyces Cervisiae," 1139 N S. 4 pm. CREES: Adam Sarapata, "Percep- tions of Sical Inequalities in East- ern Europe," E. Conf. Rm., Rack- THE! University of Michigan Library ANNOUNCES AMNESTY DAYS' Mvayland Z AllRecrdsWill Be Cered for Overdue Books Returned on Those Days to Any Library in the University Library System. ham 4, pm. Audio - Visual Educ. Ctr.: To Be Young, Gifted, and Black, resched- uled, Pendleton Rm., Union, 8 pm. Music School: Degree recitals - Barbara Topel, piano, Cady Music Rm., Stearns, 8 pm;; Matthew Walsh, organ. Hill Aud., 8 pm: IRichardStanley, saxophone, Recital Hall, 8 pm. Career Planning and Placement 3200 Student Activities Bldg. Why not invest a year in volun- teer educational or social service? TexasCatholic Conf. is sponsoring work with children & community serva. in Texas; benefits $75/month, rm. & bd. & health insurance; for details contact CP&P, 764-7460. Last PACE exam., in May; appls. deadline in Detroit April 30; Appls. available at CP&P. Summer Placement: 3200 SAB, 763-4117 , "-1-- T nn l nr" . Tr nfor Rprrra h l P Konert i-oweu or Klcfard b ~er- There's one major poetic mis- I t'fLhesei S.G.F. Vacation Camp, Boys, PA: hart, developing fairly directly take here, in that, presumably It of the series, interview Monday, Apr. 21 part of from the traditionalist poets of the six words are not used for Gave some indications morning & afternoon; needed -Iteer waterfront director; further details the early part of this century. their definitions or connotations Of being like us available; register by phone or in He usually does not follow the so much as in a mercenary way in the first poem, and the final person. now prevalent trends of flip- merely for their representation 'one confirms the building su- Attention-students: Last minute +pancy or morbidity. His humor of disconnectedness. He sees spcon that t i l igs i camp job openings still available - dspicion that It is really is like waterfront, sailing, riding (Eng./ .sry and usually more melan-%to forget that he says in another us. "It" and we are all take Western), arts/crafts, nurse, doctor cholic than funny. There is a poem that our "blunders . . . "for a shadow", connected wih I (family inc.). feeling of human extensiveness Are our additions to what is ;iv-' noparticular form so once Be sure to register with summer forced painfully to revert upon en." As in some others of Ml4 n p ar om sh orld placement if still looking for job again separated from the word OUT o FANN ARBOR. 1itself, making man very small lander's poems, the artifie in 'outside. And in the last series i Attention: Students in AA Weds. in comparison with the world this is so dominant that it lacks of the book "A shadow" is e , May 7 (not starting Spring Half) outside. It is helplessness - the the sincerity that would make plained as death. contact Summer Placement for infocosene fthsese f on short-term job - good pay. conseq ence of thissense f the reader want to believe him. "F Fam rdi anLoisile y.=smallness - that is Hollander'sI It sounds merely iea aa Remembering the Fountain*' Farm Credit Bank, Louisville, Ky.: , 2sud eey like a- aca-isoe ftebstp ;sn Summer job opening for Bus. Ad. main theme, and he uses dif- demic exercise, albeit a skillful is one of the best poe ;s m (B.S.) or Ag. Econ. (B.S.) must ferent approaches to explain it. one. the volume in terms both of have quantitative analysis skills. In "Eine Kleine Nachtinusik" it language and of "meanig." Al- is: BU-TA'TTTTT.ithough it is a complicated ar- is: TENSE 'TALES' ollaner's pessimlstic poetry: view of mans hopelessness TALES TOLD OF THE self, even from his own history. human qualities, but even these FATHERS by John Hollander. He doesn't seem to like the sit- fail to create much energy. "It" New York: Atheneum, 1975, uation, but these, the words as sees: 100 pp., $7.95. symbols, are parameters of It's own dim pages By TOMI DuVAL existence that must be acknow- N t b fe ledged.Noteven bring, un JOHN HOLLANDER is a tra- for their mere and sexual play leaves-both ditional poet, much like Inexorable syntax. parties "barely afire even with there's Ciass-ified His own windy shibboleth in The quibbles of the pillow case, in "Head of the Bed," section 12, . all is gray Silence, save for his unresolv- ed organ chords,j he gives us some hope, but the musician, who has "three grace- less daughters" is blind, . .. by a window giving on His sunken yard. Separation from the world has} begun, even though an effort is made, through the music, ' I t ii4t,s most apparent in his use of repeated c:n-i sonant, and especially vowel, sounds, to an almost overbear- ing degree. But somehow they are actually pleasant in all h-s poems: ... feeling tears from his Eweeping brow, Dreaming of intervals lost - stretched out on Wastes not of snow, nor sand, nor cloud, he tossed, And knew not why, in the undying noon. IHe uses these internal asson- LiAt Art courses now open for registration OFFERINGS AVAILABLE:r DRAWING Art 101 FIGURE DRAWING] Art 102 A VISUAL FUNDAMENTALS 2-D Art 103 x)+ VISUAL FUNDAMENTALS 3-D Art 104 HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY (ANEW COURSE) Art 112+1 Vi.,yy ' , #zm e to maintain a place in it. ances and alliterations to str.ng- then connections between im- HOLLANDER'S technique is portant words and ideas. Yet ambitious, particularly in he is smart enough not *o em- several sectioned poems. Per- ploy much end-rhyme, be:ause haps the most ambitious, at it would then be too obvious, too least structurally, is "Breadth., artificial Circle. Desert. Monarch. Month- ' Wisdom". In an attempt to unite NVITH ITS emphasis on mel- all these nouns into a single ancholy, most of Holland- theme (based upon their all be- er's poems lack excitement and ing "unrhymable" and there-'liveliness. This may be a man- fore of a solitary nature), he re- ifestation of hopelessness. In a turns to his central problem of group entitled "Something About man's necessary separation It", Holland .presents a portrait from everything outside of him- of some of the most sinister of rangement of clauses a n dj phrases, common to much :f Hollander's verse, it maintains throughout a definite lyrical quality in sounds of rhythrls. Speaking of what is no lo!ger seen in the dry fountain: ... unquickened, the god who lies entombed In theenoon sunshine; and no legacy Of his, the almost-enduring nymphs whose voices Drown the rock talk and water murmuring Deep below their discourse. This hints again at the recur- rent hopeless mood, but it is es- panaded to a comment on socie- ty as well as on individuals, since it is religious in origin. Now he says clearly, paraphras- ing the New Testament, what he has always been suggesting: What has been done here was. done in green wood: What do we do here now in the dry? He gives no answer becauseI man is only a "Remembere"," not knowing that this fountain is a signal of future dryness, of whatever kind. pletely personal issue. He is writing about others, not him- self. Approximately a quarter of the volume is worth reading for this detailed account a n d some of the more intriguing ideas he deals with; and ano- ther quarter for the apprer'- tion of his often remarkable technical abilities. Tomr DuVal, a former Gener- a/ion e d iit o r, not only reads moetry but writes about it fre- Yo u k A nd Ser vie d Ths d~o~e at it LikvermsAng meri hi re Of course you would. You work hard. And you're good at it. Like most Americans. But, if all of us did just a little better, we'd wind up with better products, better services and even more pride in the work we do. America. It only works as well as we do. 1a I . 1 J t 1 t ' 1 i," I A CONTROLLED pessimism 1 ' i prevails. It never becomes an obsession because the poet lTeNtoa omunnlroutvyWha,,+ for the most part avoids mak- ing his discouragement a co'n- SPIRITUAL. COMMUNITY OF THE SUN PRESENTS DICK GREGORY * Speakinq on the food crisis and survival of humanitya* FRI., MAY 16, 1975-7:00 P.M. UNIV. OF MICH. BALLROOM Donation $4 plus I can of food profits ao to world community food bank ann arbor. mi GET TICKET in ADVANCE of show! Available at David's Bookstore-529 E. Liberty and ;n the Michigan Union Daily Classifieds Get Results fw ra ... . . : U-M STUDENTS The University's Enrichment Program offers you the opportunity to take courses during Spring Term in the Practical and Vocational Arts at the Washtenaw Community College Campus. This spring's course selection includes Auto Services, Welding, Typing, Black Art, Carpentry, Photography, etc. The cost is $12.50 per credit hour with the registration fee waivered for U-M students. FOR MORE INFORMATION AND COURSE REGISTRATION, CALL WCC AT 971-6311 RecyciYourBooks (turn them back into cash) We buy books back to offer them again at "used"prices to students This is WHY you get the price you do for a book: We predetermine the best price we can offer based on our ability to resell the book in some future semester. We check for: " usage in future courses o past history of usage " currentsor old edition If you have additional questions please feel free to ask one of our buyers. If you have any doubt about whether a book has resale value, be sure to bring it in. We feel we have the best overall prices, but there is considerable variance among the bookstores. PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM APRIL 23-27 POWER CENTER EVES. at 8 p.m.; SUN. MAT. at 3 p.m. Tickets now on sale at PTP ticket office, Mendelssohn lobby, 764-0450. Tickets also available at Hudson's at Briorwood. A FUTURE WORLD'S LECTURE SERIES PRES ENTS k* SEY OURDIMN PRESIDENT OF NATIONAL MIGRAINE FOUNDATION I lFEE BACK,: FAD OR THERAPY"