a 0 -a ,I 4 I f It t' I A Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 3, 1970 Friday, July 3, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classilied Ad Service, Phonc 764-0557 12 Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 12 Noon Deadline DiFgging in to the ancien FOR RENT The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- nance and the University of Mich- igan Regents' bylaws prohibit dis- crimination in housing. Questions should be directed to Off-Campus Housing, 764-7400. ROOMS FOR RENT in old house, 5 blocks from campus, call 662-5456 persistently. 20039 BARGAIN!-$40. One man needed for July-Aug. Arbor Forest Apts. 769-7248. 10C40 1 OR 2 MEN to complete 2-bedroom apt. for fall. Air-cond., disp. $250 for 4, $225 for 3. Also 1 sublet July/Aug. Call Elliott or Animesh, 668-8915 or 761-7435. 11037 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. 5Ctc 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail, for fall. McKinley Assoc.. 663- 6448. Socte Summit Associates CHOICE APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE FOR FALL 761-8055 49Ctc FOR RENT SINGLE ROOM. 428 Cross St. AA, $55, 663-3886. 21C431 FOR QUIET mature female, furn., a/c, 1 bdrm., apt., utilitarian, July 3-Aug. rent negot. 769-1632 appt. only. 18038 CAMPUS-HOSPITAL REDUCED, attrac- tive paneled small furn. first floor room for man or woman, 21 or over. house refrigerator. $10.50/wk. Lease through Aug. 663-5666 or 971-6270. 19Ctc 911 S.Forest Near Hill St.-Modern 2 Bdrm., 3-man. 668-6906. Fall. 14Ctc BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED EDITOR Skilled in organizing and presenting special projects. Write Mich. Daily Box 68 or phone 971-6445. USED CARS '68 VW, 33,000 miles, radio, $1100. Kathy, 763-0286 or 278-1296. 5N39 '61 BUICK Le Sabre 4-dr. sedan, excel- lent condition, one owner. $250/offer. Call 769-0024. DN40 THE ABBEY THE LODGE CARRIAGE HOUSE THE FORUM VISCOUNT still the local favorites! Several selectj apartments available for summer and fall semesters in each of these modern buildings. Charter Realty Fine Campus Apartments 1335 S. University 665-8825 loctc AUGUST OCCUPANCY (2 bdrm. unit--summer %1, term) Campus area, cool, furnished apart- ments. I and 2 bdrm.-ample park- ing, contact Resident Manager, Apt. 102, 721 S. Forest St. 16Ctc Apartments Limited ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS FOR FALL J35 TYPING-Cheap and fast and profes- sional. Call Candy, 665-4830. DJ48 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric. Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc TASK ALL THESES-MANUSCRIPTS-PAPERS expertly typed-edited PRINTING - THESES - FLYERS BROCHURES economical, 24-hr. round-the-clock service FOR ANY OFFICE SERVICE call THE PROFESSIONALS 10 years experience in Ann Arbor 761-4146 or 761-1187 1900 W. Stadium Blvd. 26Ptc EXPERIENCED SEC. desires typing in her home or part time in your office. Call 971-1533. 25J38 MULTIPLE TYPING SERVICE Thesis Service Papers Dissertations General Office and Secretarial Work Pick-Up and Delivery Available Prompt Service CALL 971-2446 1968 OPEL, deluxe sedan, 7400 miles, Blaupunkt AM-FM, extra snow tires, leaving country. 662-8788. 4N381 FOR SALE-1952 Pontiac OK car, $50. WANTED-VW, Ford, Dodge etc. BUS; VAN for camping with boys from Child Care Center. 761-7779. 49N38 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS TO NYC or vicinity, TODAY! A/C car; must be willing to share ex- penses, possibly driving. Riders also to points along Ohio, Pa., or N.J. Tpks. CALL NOW-Andy at 764-0560. Leave a message if I'm not there. I'm leaving this afternoon. DG37 PLANE TICKET London-Detroit, Aug. 6. $90. 764-1400. 39G41 CALIFORNIA BOUND? Have 1970 air- PERSONAL C.K.A. "To write T'notes or not"- that is the question. FD38 CANTERBURY HOUSE presents COMMANDER CODY and his LOST PLANET AIRMEN "Shall we fiddle while Rome burns?" Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 330 Maynard St. $2.00 32F38 WANTED-Native speaker of Czech. to practice with. 662-2352 eves. 26F38 RESEARCH SCIENTIST (Ph.D.), single, air-cond. pad, seeks female conver- sationalist over 21. Ask for Tom, 663- 3084. 29F39 HOUSECLEANING DONE 'or $1.25 hr. Call 761-7452. Ask for Anita. 30F37 CHERYL-bring your paint brush with you, LR. DF37 Geoffrey Bibby, LOOKING FOR DHLUN, Alfred Knopf, Inc., $10.00. By HENRY WRIGHT Many archaeologists today are concerned with the explanation of human history, not with its rediscovery. Over a century of systematic archaeological work has resulted in a seemingly complete historical framework of inter-related cultures of known ages t h r o u g h o u t the world. Should one therefore in- sist that archaeologists consider exclusively questions of "why" and "how" rather than "what"? This volume shows that such exclusiveness would be foolish. Looking for Dilmun describes the rediscovery of a lost civili- zation whose existence was mere conjecture only twenty years ago. This civilization is critical to the understanding of rela- tions between early Mesopota- mia and early India. That the ancient Sumerians had commercial relations with a place called "Dilmun" has- long been known. That Dilmun was somehow connected with the island of Bahrain in the Gulf between Arabia and Iran was suggested in 1880 by Sir Henry Rawlinson, the British soldier- scholar who was among the first to translate the cuneiform writ- ing of Mesopotamia. However, Bahrain was seldom visited by Westerners prior to oil develop- ment and little archaeological work was done. In 1953, the Danish archaeologist P. V. Glob and his British assistant Geof- frey Bibby came searching for lost Dilmun. They were struck by the . fact that though there were reports of over ten thous- and burial mounds on the twen- ty mile long island, there were no reports of ruined cities or towns. They walked over the en- tire island before deciding to excavate on two adjacent mounds of debris near its north end. The smaller mound proved to be the ruins of a temple con- structed of stone blocks. Both the architecture of the building and the pottery within it were unique. The only clue to the age of the temple was a copper bull's head found in a cache of ritual paraphernalia. This re-, sembles a 'head from the Royal Tombs of Ur in Mesopotamia dated to about 2400 B.C. This temple raised more questions than it answered. The larger mound was capped by a six- teenth century A.D. Portugese fortress and a ruined Islamic town. There was little evidence of what lay below these relative- ly recent ruins, but the mound was the largest in the area, and a likely candidate for an earlier city site. The complicated business of working on an urban site and day-to-day life in an archaeolo- gical camp are well described -by Bibby. As season followed sea- son, the Danish team found be- low the Islamic layers the ruins of a Hellenistic city of the third century B.C. Below this were evidences of occupation during the ninth century B.C. when the kings of Assyria were ravaging nearby southern Mesopotamia and of the fifteenth century B.C. when the Kassite Dynasty gave Mesopotamia one of its largest periods of relative peace. Near the very bottom of the mound were the ruins of successive well-preserved cities of the per- iod of the enigmatic temple. Gradually a picture of daily life in these cities was put together. A street with well-built dwell- ings was cleared. A substantial city wall with gateway was near- by. This gateway may have been where goods entering or leaving the city were inspected or taxed. Around it was a concentration sbooksL by the bull's head from the tem- ple. The seals further indicate that the early Bahrain civiliza- tion was a mediator of commer- cial contacts between the giant urban states of the two river valleys. The good reputation of the Danes led to their working in many of the small sheikhdoms on the Arabian mainland, While scholars from a large imperial nation are automatically sus- pect, those from a small nation are less go. The Danes helped in the creation of local government archaeological laws and organ- C r e a t t e 0 c a i R t a s z 0 tt c f c b n r, a t 9 ii a cond. Buick Electra. Will pay gas if FREE U CRAFTS FAIR-sell, display, you drive car to be in San Francisco trade. July 17 and 18. On the Dig. Aug. 1. Car avail. July 22. Call 483- Leaves of Grass. 763-2130. 27F43 8430, ext. 324. 38039 - RUMMAGE SALE Sunday, July 5: sew- MUSICAL MDSE., ing notions, trim, patterns, material, RADIOS, REPAIRS 1950 Singer sewing machine, clothing, carpets, mattresses, etc. 305 Maple NEW AND USED JAZZ: Ridge, 761-9861. 28F38 P aulazzup WEEKLY OR WEEKEND ENCOUNTER Monday night-Canterbury House GROUPS. Emotional re-education & 8-10 p.m. 50c X38 interpersonal awareness. 663-7616. 16F44 RADIO, TV. Hi-Fl repair. House calls--. . ._ Very ndEngaemn Veyreasonable! Very cheap! 769- FOhAE imodEggemen 6250. DX42 Ring. EDUCATION at its best. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. STEREO SYSTEM - Garard 50 turn- Ftc table, XAM 25 watt amp, 2 double- XAM speakers, 4 mo. old SONY tuner, OAKLAND AND HILL. Large 1 bdrm. 25 records; $200/offer. Call 769-0024. apt. 761-6074, 1-785-0743. 48U40 DX4C X - IT'S PICNIC SEASON! HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Instruments and accessories, new and And no picnic is complete without used. Lessons, repairs. 209 State. potato salad. On your next picnic 665-8001. 10 a m.-7 p m. X take along a quart of our original recipe German potato salad for only HELP WANTED $1.20. Call NO 2-0737 BABYSITTING, student parents need OLD GERMAN sitter for 1 smily, happy baby. Ideal RESTAYRANT summer job, for young girl, own trans. Phone 663-4458 after 6. 49H42 120 W. WASHINGTON 24F4C of stone measuring weights and stamp seals. Each button-like stone seal had a distinctive car- ved design which could be im- pressed into a lump of clay plas- tered over a jar neck or wrap- per around the knot in a bale of dry goods. Subsequent illegal tampering with the goods would require breaking the clay lump. These seals proved especially important. They are exactly like a rare seal type found in both Mesopotgmia, 450 miles to the northwest, and in the Indus Val- ley 1100 miles to the east. In both r'egions, thesehsealstoccur in layers of 2500 to 2000 B.C., confirming the date suggested izatiorls. Their reconnaissances revealed surface traces of un- suspected dead communities. Excavations were conducted on several new sites. Among many intriguing dis- coveries are a yet earlier cul- ture best represented at a sea- side village and cemetery in Abu Dhabi, 300 miles to the east and much closer to the Indus Val- ley. The little village of stone houses set on a tiny island a few hundred feet off the Arab- ian coast was inhabited by peo- ple who kept a few sheep, goats and cows and hunted gazelles, camels and dugongs, or sea EDINBURGH APTS., 912 Brown St. The Royal Dutch Apts., 715 Church. The King's inn Apts., 1939 Dewey. Taking applications for fall rental for all 3 locatios-;.or rental information call 761-6156 or 761-3466. 4041 CAMPUS NEW FURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR FALL DAH LMANN APARTMENTS 545 CHURCH ST. 761-7600 38Ctc 711 ARCH-Near State and Packard- Mlodern 2-bdrm. apts. for Fall. Dish- waher, balcony. air-cond., and much more. Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867. 26Ctc AVAIL. FOR SUMMEl & FALL ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom, bi-level apartments. Stop in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. 11Ctc Campus-Hospital Fall Occupancy Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 47Ctc BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEV IS? VISIT US 663-0511 761 -5440 5oCtcI 2 BDRM, furn. apt. $210 for 3 persons, includes utilities, parking. 761-2939. 9Ctc GIRL-Room w/kitchen privilegts. $40/ summer, $55/fall. HU 5-1586. 12C38 1 AND 2 BDRM. furn. units for fall, 1 bdrm. $155 and $160. 2 bdrm. from $210 for 2, from $225 for 3. Call 663- 1761. 15044 FURN. APT. for rent 'til Aug. 20. 2250 Fuller Rd. 663-9576 eves. 16C45 BDRM. in 7 bdrm. house, back yard, kitchen facilities, campus. 663-8609. / 17C3Mi SUMMER SUBLET FOURTH GIRL NEEDED for modern apt. 769-7753. 50U41 SUBLET - Girl needed formodern A/C 4-man apt. CHEAP. 761-7452, 1U37 LOVELY APT. for single woman or married couple. Walking distance from campus. July-Aug. Call 665-8051. 42U38 JULY-AUG. SUBLET - 1 bdrm, furn. apt. in groovy house; campus and hospital. 769-1064. 43U40 2 GIRLS to sublet modern apt. $35. Call 663-7744 or 665-9616. 44U39 1 GIRL'NEEDED to sub-lease huge 2- story apt. $40. 769-2404. 45U39 EXPERIENCED editor with six years university teaching, M.A. plus Ph.D. hours in literature, desires free-lance editing, writing. 662-0348 evenings. DJ40 PHOTO SUPPLIES AT CENTURY The Best in Good Used Cameras WE BUY, SELL, TRADE Everything Photographic DARKROOM SUPPLIES LUMINOUS PAPER Repairs on all makes Century Camera (At our new location) 4254 N. Woodward, Royal Oak Between 13 and 14 Mile Rd. LI 9-6355 'l'ake I-94 to Southfield Expr. North to 13 Mile Road-then East to Woodward and North (Michigan Bank, Security and Diner Charges accepted) 1Dt FOR SALE SELL YOURSELF on Daily classifieds 764-0557, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 764-0557 'pscratch ings into the distantA STUDENTS in mech. engin. needed for psych, exp. 3testing sessions tak- ing approx. 2 hrs. total time; you will be paid $2.50/hr. David Shapiro, 429-2531 days, or 663-9769 eves, to arrange appt. 47H37 BABYSITTER A.M. WEEKDAYS, start July 6. Call 761-5249. 48H37 WANTED--Once a wk. help w/house- cleaning. $1.75'hr. Call 764-7452 cr eves. 971-8611. 4637 MISCELLANEOUS LEAVING COUNTRY-Must sell entire Great Books set; 4 mos. old, worth $850 for $450. Call 769-0024. DM8 ROOMMATES WANTED PROFESSIONAL-GRAD needs room- mate for July-August, own bdrm., pool, near hospital, call Ron, 662- 1058 or 761-8270 (days). 9Y38 WOMAN GRAD wanted to share really nice apt. Own room. Rent negot. 764- 0510 mornings, or 662-0348 evenings. DY40 BIKES AND SCOOTERS '68 OSSA $75, needs some work. Call 769-7269. DZ48 '67 HONDA CB 160 with cover, extra back tire, helmet, $275. Call Steve Mooney, 763-3117 or 769-1844. 18241 '70 TRIUMPH TR-6 650cc-Excellent condition. Must sell. 1200 miles. Be- fore you buy anything else check this one out. 769-7528, call before 5. 20238 PERSONAL JACKIE-WELCOME BACK TO AA. FD38 UNION BARBERSHOP OPEN MON-FRI THIS WEEK 31F38 PAINTING - Student desires painting jobs, inside and outside. Four years experience. Call 662-4736. FD UPTIGHT? h nget rightuat WILD FLOWER-the unique boutique, 516 E. WILLIAM (above the bike shop). 23F3E DO YOU hate to type? Call Candy at 665-4830. She's fast and accurate and cheap, cheap cheap! DF48 THE DAY that Ding Dong Bell. Never Wright and Bedtime Storey get to- gether the Bird of Paradise will zap he Daily. DF38 -THE BLURB- is back in town. DF3E A closet without something from the WILD FLOWER is just a bunch of clothes-WILD FLOWER-the unique boutique, 516 E. WILLIAM (above the bike shop). 22F38 FLY YOUR FLAG!! WE'RE FREE!! LEAVING Ann Arbor for the Fourth or anytime? Why not take some AA Blues posters with you. Call 763-1134 or stop by the festival office-2nd floor Mich. Union. 21F37 PERSONS witnessing accident in Food and Drug parking lot, Stadium and Packard, Thurs., June 18, 5:30 p.m., gold Mustang and Mercury, please call 971-5446, 25F40 NOTICE TO MICHIGAN DAILY BOX HOLDERS, MAIL IS IN THE FOL- LOWING BOXES: 50, 123, 30, 5. FD THE ONLY place in Ann Arbor to buy her diamond engagement ring. CHECK IT. AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-715 1 F SUMMER RENTALS Choice Apts. at low rates. Ann Trust Co. Phone 769-2800. Arbor 22C83 BLUE DENIM: Super Slims Button-Fly Troditionol Bells ..... FOR - 6.. 50 .. .6.50 .. .6.98 .. 7.50 OWN ROOM for Girl. A/C, mod. apt. July-Aug., cheap! 761-0563. 47U40 4TH MAN NEEDED, for modern luxury apt. near caipus and med. center. A/C, dishwasher, July-Aug. only. Will bargain for rates. Call Bob or Frank, 665-7501. DU40 FURNISHED EFFICIENCY near cam- pus, July 1-Aug. 26. 80/mo. Call 665- 0053 after 5:00 p.m. 49U40 SUMMER SUBLETS 761-8055 14Utc CHEAP-July-Aug. sublet, A/C, 4-man apt. $50/mo. 761-7452. 2U42 WANTED TO RENT WANT TO RENT parking space fall- winter near East Quad, if you are not using your's write Bill Jacobs, 61-55 98th St., Rego Park, N.Y. 11374. 15L29 GAY GRAD, male, needs clean, quiet, cheap, private room. Call 761-7275 until 11:00 p.m. L35 SINGLE APT., normal facilities, for July-Aug., preferably near campus. Please reply Box 378, Mich. Daily. DLtc PETS AND SUPPLIES HEALTHY lovable kitten, female, needs home badly, otherwise must go to animal shelter. 665-0777 after 5. 12T39 RUMMAGE SALE Monday, July5 sew- ing notions, trim, patterns, material, 1950 Singer sewing machine, clothing, carpets,7mattresses, etc. 305 Maple Ridge, 761-9861, 8B38 DIVING GEAR All major brands at discount prices, Ann Arbor Diver's Co., call Mike Wills. 665-6032 persistently noons or after 5 best, 711 Arch, No. 301. 7B45 GET THE DRUM set used by the Byrds' and Commander Cody's drummers! Ludwig Drums. Full set. Zildian cym- bals. Reasonable. Call 761-2704 any- time. DB4 LOST AND FOUND FOUND-1 pair prescription glasses in Law Quad parking lot Saturday morning. 665-4061. DA38 FOUND-Siamese female cat. No collar. Hill and Packard vicinity. Call 668- 8819 anytime. DA38 REWARD: lost blue point siamese cat, Main-Hoover-Stadium area, please call 769-6045. 13A40 WALLET STOLEN from library refer- ence room, Wed. Please return pa- pers, no ques. 662-9613. 12A39 BICYCLE FOUND, men's lightweight. Eng. bike. 761-1736 to identify, ask for Terry or Judy. DA38 FOUND by Harvard Valiance-Medium size pair of glasses for slightly near- sighted person. B ro0wn, squarish shaped. Found before end of spring] half. Contact M. Hirsch at Daily any time to claim. DA40 BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS .........2.49 MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's . . . 5.50 (4 Colors) Sta-Prest "White" Levi's ......... 6.98 Nuvo's... ... . 8.50 Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam's Store 122 E. Washington Sidney Bernard, THIS WAY TO THE APOCALYPSE, The Smith Press, $5.95. By ROBERT CONROW Opening S i d n e y Bernard's Apocalypse is very much like unwrapping last year's Christ- mas fruitcake. Although the bits of cherry, green mint, and as- sorted nuts remain, much of the flavor will have been lost to the passing year. And so it is with Bernard's Apocalypse, a chron- icle of the sixties, neatly pack- aged for the seventies, yet filled with cherries, mints, and assort- ed nuts from the years' past. A majority of the more than 75 essays contained in the col- lection originally appeared in such diverse publications as Cheetah, The Morningsider, and the New York Herald Tribune Magazine, and w e re scattered throughout the decade begin- ning in 1961 and lasting through 1969. One envisions Bernard himself as a°'sort of David Sus- kind of the underground, wan- dering from protest to love-fest while always peering through granny glasses which focus only on those elements generally fil- tered out by the "establishment" media. This technique, while engag- ing, tends to grow a bit tedious as, for example, when Bernard devotes himself to a "Short American Hiptionary." Terms defined include the "Be-In" which "invariably attracts suit- shirt-and-tie people who always ask, 'What is going on?"' And if they have to ask Bernard, "they are in the wrong part of the park." Or "Hippie," which is defined as a person who must move fast to get where the ac- tion is. Heis, in Bernard's lingo, "a person with a well-exercised pair of hips." When Bernard resorts-to such didacticism, he seems only to be betraying his own case of" what must, in all honesty, be seen as an acute case of gener- ation gap. He is after all, as an introductory note points out, "now 50, maybe secret year two over under." This, in itself, should not be held against, him, but in trying to relate via the printed page the goings-on of what surely must now be seen as the most "audio-visual" of all generations, he is virtually up against the ivy walls. It may, perhaps, only be con- sidered unfortunate that Ber- nard and others of his ilk have failed to gain the same insight as Tuli Kupferberg (also some- what aged at 42) of the Fugs. In his essay on "The Fugs vs Coca Cola," Bernard quotes the hip-easy Kupferberg as describ- ing the impetus behind the Fugs. "In a way," notes Kupferberg, "we thought of ourselves as a leap off the printed page and off the daily headline. It is a pragmatic case of being able to reach the kids ... who are not in touch with parents, college dons, government leaders and paper intellectuals." And here it seems again revealing to note that Bernard, in describing Lead Fug, Ed Sander's publication, feels the necessity of resorting to the genteel terminology of "a highly entertaining little maga- zine whose title is a four-letter word followed by the word You." The one exception to this in- hibition is evidenced during the author's all-too-infrequent fo- rays into the grown-up world of national politics. Here the tiger in Bernard emerges unleashed and fully-blown. A choice bit of investigative reporting may be seen in Ber- nard's essay on "The Authen- ticity of FDR's Secret Testa- ment." Here the Kandy-Kolored Tom Wolfe journalese gives way to hard-hitting Clark Mollen- hoff factualism. The spine of Bernard's article Today's Writers ... Henry Wright is Curator of Archaeology at the Museum of Anthropology and is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University. Robert Conrow, a doctoral candidate in Ameri- can Studies, is spending the summer writing his thesis and walking his dog Kubla. A grad- uate student in Business Ad- ministration, Ron Brasch writes poetry and last year edited Generation. rests on a few prophetic words penned by President Roosevelt while he planned his grand de- sign for postwar coexistence just weeks before his fatal illness. As his source, Bernard relies heavily on a now out-of-print volume of FDR Braintruster, J. J. Kissenden. In it, according to Bernard, it is made clear that Roosevelt was increasingly plagued by a group of war hawks led by Vice President T r u m a n and Representative Lyndon B. Johnson. There can be no doubt, ac- cording to Bernard, that Roose- velt's "secret document" attests to the President's belief that Johnson would have no hesita- tions about bypassing Congress, or indeed public opinipn, in his weakness for military solutions. Roosevelt therefore spelled out his fears, according to Bernard, by saying that "Where careful diplomacy is called for, you can depend on Lyndon to opt for careless militarism." The reason this document was never picked up by the major press, in spite of audible whis- pers in Washington circles, lies in the realm of what, for want of a better term, must be called "professional -ethics." Bernard quotes a UPI "informant" as saying that newsmen "have long felt it was not in their province to break the story; that the testament was, in a true sense a family document. And that FDR Jr., who is believed to have possession, alone had the option to run with it or suppress it- a C cl t A o to r of fi u F n le ra d W of li es d fr Poetry of renewed TV10 per month FREE Service and Delivery ---NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED--- CALL: Nejac TV Rentals 662-5671 SERVING BIG 10SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 Saint Geraud, THE NAOMI POEMS: CORPSE AND BEANS, Big Table Publishing Co., $2.45. By RON BRASCH Saint Geraud writes magnifi- cent war poems. It doesn't mat- ter whether they're concerned with death by solitude, unrequ- ited lover, or the Vietnam blood- letting that makes shadows of us all. Each is a war poem. The foreward of The Naomi Poems: Corpse and Beans re- veals "Saint Geraud" to be a Jesuit gone-bad from an eight- eenth cen t u ry pornographic French novel, The Triumph of, Vice. Considering Oeraud's rev- erence for perversion, the pseu- donym is more than slightly strange. No saints, dirty-mind- ed, fictitious or otherwise, live here. Only Bill Knott. And Knott burns for himself and all of us like summer foxfire across a national forest: ... Iwrite these lines to cripple the dead, to come up halt before the living: I am one man, I run my hand. over your body, I touch the secret vibes of the earth, I breathe your heartbeat, Naomi, and always I am one man alone at night.. Although Namoi appears in relatively few poems, her face and body exist everywhere. "Last Poem" and "After the Burial" refer to Naomi's recent death; as to the relationship in life, we can only speculate. In late 1966, a mimeographed letter circulated among poets and critics. The letter, allegedly written by a friend of the poet, stated that at 26, Bill Knott had killedi himself in a Chicago tenament on North Clark Street. The reasons : he was an orphan and a virgin and couldn't endure any longer without being loved by somebody. Too easily we can theorize the suicide letter to be symbolic, dismissing it as a grandiose ges- ture, rather than considering the desperate depths that Knott has experienced. Through these pastoral, confessional lyrics of "sleep, death, desire," many only two or three lines in length, Knott is committing suicide be- fore our eyes. The beach holds and sifts us through her dreaming fingers Summer fragrances green between your legs 1 t p B ti a p ti re u W K pr bi sp ar T) ar I HI di