Friday, May 15, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Poac Five Getting along Friends and stones Barbara Hepworth, A PIC- TORIAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Praeger, $12.50. By SEWALL OERTLING I find it annoying to be con- fronted by a grey-haired grand- mother leaning on a cane with the weight of sixty years, who raises twenty-foot high monu- ments in marble and bronze. Dame,Hepworth would be pleas- ed. This autobiography' is a vis- ual record of her life. Some 300 photographs which she assem- bled and edited are, strung on a thin ten pages of text. The quiet, naked way she leads us through her life and work elicits mixed reactions. For instance, her work is obviously related stylistically to Henry Moore, five years her senior and long a close friend. There is a photo- graph here of Moore at work, but no comment on the inter- relation of their sculpture. And Brancusi-how did he impress you, Miss Hepworth? However, the book in its total- ity denies the implications. of questions such as these. I feel that this is the reason the au- thor selected some poor photo- graphs of her cats: just to say see had a cat, the kind of cat that appears, in poor photo- graphs. She is saying that Henry Moore was more than an in- fluence, he was a friend, and so as important as the unknown shopkeeper who sold her files in St. Ives, in Cornwall. At the end of the book, one will feel that one has come quite close to a woman; one will know it because there will be no handy adjective to describe her. Is she sensitive, searching, passionate? Obsessed with her work? Not quite. Not entirely. She has let you meet her and know her on the terms that you know the person you love, as a combination of too many things to fit a label. As for the sculpture of Miss Hepworth, it nevel' achieves the structural complexity of Henry Moore's work nor the spiritual enigma of Brancusi's. Even in the most abstract examples, it remains strongly evocative of human or natural imagery, as the artist herself admits. Two of the themes she has dealt with all through her career are the figure in the landscape and the mother and child. In the first category, she is unimpressive. The latter works comprise ef- fective images of the interde- pendency of two separate ele- ments. Technically they are ex- cellent solutions to design prob- lems and are impressive in their variety of structural form and manipulation of surface texturet There can be found more than a suggestion of the traditional ceramic aesthetic, in which the pot, or in this case sculpture, de- mands that the interior indicate some idea of the exterior and vice-versa. In the third category, images from nature, the artist is seen at her best. Miss Hepworth's photographs of the English countryside give some indica- tion of their origin. The patterns and massive shapes of the land- scapes in Cornwall are combined with the timeless dignity of the ebb and flow of tides and sea- sons. Their contours are un- hurried and their rhythms pon- derous. She leaves the single moment without comment. With no hint of nature's transitory moods, she conjures up the movement that lies beneath both violence and lyricism. I might leave you with a quote, a rather interesting con- temporary statement of aesthe- tic method. The scene finds Dame Hepworth returning to Yorkshire, her childhood home, to accept an honor. "I realized,". she says, "that it was only by breaking away from the rigours and darkness of the North that I could really give praise to the Yorkshire background which raised me and trained me." If you are male, between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five, a book that may well save your life is IV-F, A Guide to Draft Exemption, by David Suttler (Grove Press paperback, $1.50). Mr. Suttler offers no less than a complete compendium of all possible medical, moral, and psychiatric maladies considered by the Surgeon General of the Department of the Army to be sufficient grounds for IV-F ex- emption from military service. The medical list alone is en- couraging, for many maladies that a young man may not dream worthy of that lovely Re- jection Notice are related: vari- cose veins in the testicles, chronic eczema, warts on the soles of feet, obscene tattoos, benign tumors, hardening of penile tissue, severe ingrown t o e n a i 1 s, and hemorrhoids. After examining the official list and finding himself medically sound, a male can always delete the distil phalanx of his ring finger (the index and middle finger are too valuable to do away with) and thus win ex- emption. Mr. Suttler includes a chapter on the pre-induction physical, on appeals, discharges, and pen- sions (or how to fight it even after induction), and offers samples of all printed forms and questionnaires that would have to be handled in any con- frontation w i t h the Selective Service System. This book may be especially helpful to those seeking other patterns of ex- emption (e.g. academia or de- fense jobs); a lopped-off distil phalanx may save one not only from the Merchants or Death but from five years of graduate school as well. Another Grove Press paper- back, The Bust Book ($1.25), offers advice on where to stash it, what to do when the stash is discovered by the Authorities, how to conduct oneself when confronted with police ploys, how to use or not use bail, and how to makerthe best of a trial, if it comes to that. Written by four students, including Weath- erwoman K a t h y Boudin, The Bust Book offers some very practical suggestions, such as: don't sign police statements, be- cause "confessions" are often added later by the Authorities. An appendix, with descriptions of the bust scene in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, New Jersey, and San Francisco is offered. Women seeking a d v i c e on contraception, fertility, abortion' hirsutism, and venereal diseases may f i n d concise answers in Woman's Choice, written dryly by Robert Glass, M.D. and Na- than Kases, M.D. (Basic Books, $5.95). The information pre- sented is concise (the text runs only 138 pages) and rather con- servative - alleged dangers of the pill are referred to briefly, and given scant credence. The chapter on abortion rates only seven pages, discussing medical techniques (no home remedies) and psychological effects. An A n n Lander-ish section on "Questions Women Ask" closes the book, e.g. "Tell me Doctor, what can I do about blocked. Fallopian tubes?" Planned Par- enthood, which goes unmen- tioned here, will answer most of these questions with no charge and in a more personal manner. Women with menses and fac- ial hair under control, but sup- porting a student husband and- or lover, may pick up a few or- ganizational and f i n a n c i a pointers, if not sympathy, from Barbara Debrodt's How To Put Your Husband Through College (Harper and Row, $5.95. Mrs. Debrodt's specific suggestions are heavily padded with book- shelf plans, card-game rules, and such helpful suggestions as: "After you have planned your room, decided the effect you and your husband want, listed the uses of the room and the items to be stored there, you can pick up the second free tool of the decorator. Imagination." Few mothers will want to follow the author's pediatric advice: if the baby cries a lot when going to sleep, and you live in a small apartment, "put the baby . into a large closet (testing the ai ri supply first, of course)." Mrs. Debrodt does not reveal how one tests the air supply of a closet. When the grocery bill world overwhelms and the lure of wilderness calls, a valuable book to pack would be The Art and Science of Taking to the Woods, by C. B. Colby and Brad- ford Angier (Stackpole, $7.95). Where Debrodt pads, Colby and Angier offer nothing but spe- cific and practical suggestions on tools (bought and h a nd- made), tents, fires, cooking, sanitation, emergencies, hiking (without getting lost), pests, first-aid, on-the-spot equipment repairs, and many other topics. In a large format, the book is usefully illustrated (e.g. how to use fallen trees to make a shel- ter), and people who know bet- ter than I have told me that The Art and Science of Taking to the Woods is one of the best of its kind. Virginia Scully's A Treasury of American Indian Herbs (Crown, $6.95) is another useful compendium that woods-lovers will no doubt find fascinating. Mrs. Scully discusses the weeds, herbs, plants, and berry bushes that were known and used by American Indians, especially those of the Rocky Mountain areas; she not only describes them (in alphabetical order) but also relates their history and lore. Small woodcuts illustrate the entries, but they are not really specific enough to be truly dependable. In the second section of the book, Mrs. Scully lists, again alphabetically, a n enormous range of diseases and ailments, with the Indian herbal remedies that were once used for them. We, learn that pennyroyal re- vived a fainted Indian, that yucca chewed served as a lax- ative while its bulbs were anti- septic for ulcers, that ingested ferns expelled tapeworms, that a brew of sumac berries was esteemed as an anti-syphilitic, that nettle juice stopped hem- orrhage, that fresh marigold leaves when ingested cured * stomach-ache, and that a decoc- tion of blackberry root provided a fine eye-wash, At times, Mrs. Scully is ex- ceedingly simplistic; for exam- ple, she comments of peyote (listed under narcotics) that it "plunged the taker deeply into a languorous world of swirling colors and sensuously exquisite hallucinations." Under other en- tries, such as "birth control," she is more extensive: "When a baby is a month old, a trench is filled with warm ashes and the mother lies down in them, re- laxing and drinking a tea made of wild geranium. By doing so ... she will be safe from preg- nancy until the baby's first birthday." -R. A. P. b 0 0 k S b 0 0 k1 S b 0 0 k S R. 17. Cassil. editor, INTRO No. 2, McCall, $6.95, Bantam Paperback, $1.25. By JIM PETERS Drawn from the critical eyes of some twenty-odd coll ge Eng- lish departments where what is "good" is first debated, this grouping of short stories and poms strives to be "the an- nual collection of the best col- lege writing in America." And here it fails; for, while the authors presented are skillful interpreters of their art, both in terms of content and style, the anthology is hardly repre- sentative of what college writers are into. Editor R. V. Cassill's "Let It Be" attitude has shaped an an- thology for the fearful middle- class whom he soothes with his introduction: "But just as sure- ly. their wit, compassion and eloquence, invested in these poems and stories, mean that we need not tremble in the face of a blank and featureless dis- aster because the walls of our institutions are trembling. These people and the generation from which they speak say much about the continuities of their lives and how steadily the imagination responds to the weathers of changing seasons." Even attempting some broad metaphorical interpretation of any one of the stories, a reader cannot find more than indi- viduals caught in their own self- perpetuating games, games to which the authors themselves seem blind. Such ennui belongs more to the Fifties than to the present. For are the combatants in Betty James' "A Winter's Tale" doing anything about their mutual alienation, tangled in the author's gothic purpose? Even the little dog, who seems to know exactly what's going on, resorts to his supper for escape. All the stories here cling to the mystery of the human in- ability to change one's condi- tion. Dean and Freida are con- tent with glances and half car- resses in David Rollow's exercise in mental anguish. If the stories here merely retell one another, then "A Mirror of the Waves" by William Crawford Woods illum- inates the basic situation with the most precision. The thesis: We are all in some rambling ro- mantic asylum and are not too sure whether we want to seek freedom. His careful descrip- tion of Denise, the fragile Capri- corn locked in the tower, gives us the closest look at what real change could be; the shotgun of the guard, however, is as con- vincing as any "words of wis- dom" Mother Mary could ten- der. And even "Go On, Johnny, Go On!" by U. of M. student John Tot tenhat, portrays a he]io looking for something to do with hi freedom. Jealous wives, jealous lovers. and con- fused adolescents abound in th se stories, moving around and exercising their emotions. Few achieve any realization of what is happening; they go no- where. "Passage to the Day" by Charles Dolson is the only sty- listicall- adventuresome endeav- or, but his temporal juxtaposi- tioning only compounds the fatalism of his characters, and the smiling optimisim of the close is the stuff of which easy irony is made, Turning to th - ory inlIn- tro, one is it first startled at its sensitivity and skill of °x- pression. The craftmanship here is tight. the images direct, and the insight remarkable. But only rarely does a poet aspire to more than uninvolved observa- tion: "Scientist of poetry/ they're burning Newark! and when she went away I turned in my sleep and the deepest synapse of my brain sparked and broke." "The Last Ameri- can Dream," Hugh Seidman). The times of trouble are noted, but again the inward turning, the personal reflection indicates no stand. Of the five Michigan poets published here, only Jeffrey Stern's "Winter Wolves" and "Accident" by Ken Fifer pre- tend to give us news of the universe, while Ronald Vroon's subtle "Flying from Metro to Chicago" itself expresses the struggle between this awareness, and egocentric perception. Far more is happening in col- leges and universities than one sees in the pages of this year's Intro; the range of political means and goals, the changing attitudes towards art, social jus- tice, sexual and economic free- doms,tand liberation from the Protestant ethic are involving people now and moving them towards action, while the dog- mas which motivate them are , still being formed. Intro with its "wit, compas- sion, and eloquence" is a safe step back from youth culture, where the role of art comes to no more than consolidation. If this anthology were truely rep- resentative, it would strain our patience, contradict, and incite, but move ahead. Today's writers . . Jim Peters edited Genera- tion. A painter and ship- builder, Sewall Oertling is a Teaching Fellow in the A r t History Department, R. A. P. edits the Daily Books Page. urning away ichard rautigans _____-V . . The New Book by Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich The author(s) of the bestselling paperback The Population Bomb present the first comprehensive, detailed analysis of the worldwide population-ecology crisis. An * indispensable sourcebook for all Po ati0 concerned citizens; a timely and R relevant textbook for courses in Resenvironmental science. -ve "I have found this authoritative E reand well-documented discussion of today's great problems not only - valuable but also very interesting." -Linus Pauling "A superb book." -Preston Cloud Cloth, illustrated, $8.95 Here are two poems from the book: Jules Verne Zucchini M en are walking on the mooantoday, planting their footsteps as if they were zucchini on a dead world while over 3,ooo,ooo people starve todeath every year on a living one. JMIj 20, 19b0 Critical Can Opener Tere is something wrong with this poem. Can you "ind it? Hardcover edition $4.95; Delta paperback.$1.95 wkt hoo.- - 4 S"it Richard Braut oan's three previous bestsellers Just everyone who sees your eyes in beautiful bloom with Maybelline Daffodil eye shadow! One of three exciting shadow bouquets - Daffodil, Peach Blossom, Pink Peony- in the Maybelline Blooming Colors collections. Just blend, shade, and shape using two soft petal colors, highlighter, and the contour shade in every compact. Try them all - Daffodil eyes, Peach Blossom eyes, and Pink Peony eyes. Be blooming beautiful! Only $2. WOO,= UM,-