Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 16, 1972 PT I DA t ,9 LAST CHANCE! to find a roommate, or sell your car, or .. . through DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Due to the rapid approach of semester's end, all classifieds must be prepaid. Come on in to 420 MAYNARD 10 a.m.-4 p.m., MON.-FRI. INSTANT COFFEE: Localj By GLORIA JANE SMITH pi Poetry, as my depleted wallet too often tells me,. can be very zO expensive. Sparce soft - cover lo publications of poets - both D relatively known and unknown w - sell for dollars, not mere w cents. U Peddling poetry has turned te p r o f e s s i o n a 1. Literary si magazines, it seems, must now to be printed and illustrated im- pressively - a practice which ou tends only to bike up prices. w4 Well, browsing through local w literary magazine racks recent- ac ly, I came upon an exception to So the rule: Instant Coffee. he Yes, Instant Coffee, an Ann Ti Arbor publication "vaguely as- sociated with She University," that not only includes some fine poetry, but sells for a mere two bits. Its cover, which in Future Shock tradition comes in a va- riety of colors, reveals a some- what grotesque drawing of a person drinking, of course, a cup of coffee. Its white inside pages are obviously the churn- ings of a mimeograph machine. But unlike its rough exterior, the magazine includes a polish- ed sampling of local poetry - "Everything in here was writ- ten in Ann Arbor. Contributors are mostly University profes- sors, teaching fellows and stu- dents. Terry Patten, who co - edits Instant Coffee with Shelly Siegel, contributes "Copper Guitar" (reprinted on this page), an in- teresting comment on the pow- er-play that is commonly ex- changed between charismatic New Freshmen! Do you want money, a draft deferment, leadership and management training, self-confidence? If your answer is yes, then invest /2 hour of your time to find out how you obtain the above by attending the Army ROTC orientation at Room 200 in North Hall at j 3:30 p.m. every day. oets ii erformers and their audiences. Reading through the maga- ne, one sees familiar names of Kcal poets - Robert Hayden, onald Hall, Robert Stilwell - ho have read in the past at the eekly poetry readings in the GLI sponsored during the win- r and fall terms by Univer- ty's English Dept. and Ex- nsion Service. The images that float through- ut the magazine are usually elil-designed. Catching my eye as a poem by Tom Elliott who, ccording to added notes, "used study with Robert Lowell but e moved." In his poem "Affair oo Middling: Poem," we hear: ... you spend al your time beating across the country iprint in a wind-up car that tuefl around when it bumps into an ocea. Or Neal Bruss' "D e p t h - Charges," where we hear: The lethal ashcan glides to the hull: It heaves to catch her. For a mo- ment, chey embrace Then bloom, a ragged meal camellia, Bulkheads unfolding as plat and stamen. Other contributors i n c 1 u d e Jane Kenyon, Merrill Gilfallan, Larry Russ, Sandy Beadle, Steve Schwartz, Bert Stratton, Jeff Justin, Shelly Siegel, Lawrence Goldstein, James Clarke, Linda Silverman, Deborah Tall, Tom Elliot, Andy Carrigan, and Joe Salerno. All-in-all, Instant Coffee is 25 cents well spent. Janus Films Presents ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S MYSTERY CLASSICS THE LADY VANISHES AND THE 39STEPS 39 Steps-6:30 HA w E IBER Lady-7:55 A" - 9 39 Steps-9:30 Read and Use Daily Classifieds GIGANTIC Back-to-School Sale VALUES UP TO $14.00 2 pairs of pants-$500 2 shirts-$50* 6,000 pair of pants at $500 While shopping at CALIFORNIA PANTS, 200 Michigan Avenue, Ypsilanti, be sure to visit our Phase II Shoppe. c c i I E F C COPPER GUITAR I'm a member of the Rolling Stones' Secret Police. Mick Jagger moves lumps from his throat. His feet stamp. His eyes go every which way. Already I'm waiting at the hotel. With two hours to go Keith Richards spins through the ice like a Hoover. Jagger nods fast and points. Some fly to the outskirts in their trenchcoats. I marchoback and forth at the third bed. Afterwards I climb the stairs to my window. The traffic is magnificent. Voltage builds up at crosslights and flows, slowing before turns. I check my wrist. Light should be shining through the mist now in Kyoto. Nobody changes the world. It seems like I leave a room full of crying women every day. Charlie Watts tells me he's feeling low too. Behind I walk on one leg, carrying things. 8:47 Mick Jagger's red lips have begun, groping with absolute precision. -Terry Patten (reprinted from Instant Coffee) Featuring: Great Hamburgers Fantastic Corned Beef OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 7 a.m.-Midnight GRILL OPEN 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Lower Level-Union