Poet Brooks addresses lHopwood Award winners By SUE INGLIS Although she has written hundreds of sonnets, Pulitzer Prize winning poet Gwendolyn Brooks said yesterday she does not plan to write any more of them. "I don't think this is a time for son- nets," she told the 11 winners of the 1981 Avery and Jule Hopwood Contest for freshpersons and sophomores, "It's a time for wild, raw, free verse in which rhymes may seem to creep in at times." BROOKS, WHO spoke before about 225 people in- Rackham Lecture Hall, described her poetry as "life distilled." After offering congratulations to the Hopwood writing award winners, she said, "I'm going to distill for you," and recited nine of her poems. Laurie Porter, a Residential College sophomore, won the top prize money of $250 for her first place essays "The Dream of Stardom" and "A Chocolate Kiss." In the fiction category, Bradford Parks, an LSA freshman, earned first place and $200 for his piece, "The Music." The $150 first-place award in the poetry category was given, to Residen- tial College freshwoman Erica Littler for her poem, "Fat Birds/Stupid Boys." HOPWOOD AWARD winners shared a total of $1,850 in prize money. Funding for the award comes from a bequest left the University by alumni playwright Avery Hopwood. The contest takes place in spring and summer as well as the winter, with the most prestigious award presented in the spring. HAPPENINGS- FILMS A-V Services-Teenage Father; Young, Single, and Pregnant, 12:05 p.m., SPH I Aud. CFT-Lolita, 4,7, 9:45 p.m., Michigan Theatre. AAFC-Rock and Roll High School, 7, 10:20 p.m., Aud. A, Angell; The Kids are Alright, 8:40 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild-Murder by Decree, 7, 9:15 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Mediatrics-We're No Angels, 7 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud.; The Twelve Chairs, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. SPEAKERS Museum of Anthro.-Bag lunch, Carla Sinopoli, "Medieval Architecture in Northern Morrocco," noon, 2009 Museums. Comp. Lit.-Bag lunch, George Bornstain, "Fixed Forms: The Modern Sonnet-England," 12:10 p.m., MLB 4th floor Commons., Bush Program, School of Ed.-Asa Hilliard, "Is School Integration Possible?" 4 p.m., SEB Schorling Aud. CARP-Bill Hilbert, "Unification Principle: A New Ideology," 5 p.m., Rm. 4, Michigan League. CCS-Lec., Michael Rabin, "Random Algorithms," 4p.m., 170 Dennison. Chemistry-Lawrrence Lohn, Jr., "Protonic States and the Hydrogen Bond," 4p.m., 1200 Chem. Computing Ctr.-Bob Blue, "MTS: A Global Overview and Basic MTS Commands," 7p.m.,2003 Angell. Mi. Robotics Research Circle-William Tanner, "Insight into Robotics," 7 p.m., Chrysley Ctr. Aud. Mortar Board-Lec., forum, Harold Shapiro, "The University and the 1980s," 7p.m., Union Pendleton Room. Int. Christian Student Assn.-John Keating, "How Christian is the West?" 7:30 p.m., Int.Ctr.. Special Libraries Assn.-Gloria Donoher, "Freelance Librarianship," 7:30 p.m., League Room C. Ctr. for Japanese Studies-Bag lunch, Thomas Hare, "Patronage and the Noh,"noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. PERFORMANCES; School of Music-Concert, "Lieder" in English, Constance Barron, Joseph Blatt, 8p.m., Mendelssohn Theater. Mich. Men's Glee Club-Cornell University Men's Glee Club concert, 8 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. UAC-Soundstage Coffeehouse, Madcat Ruth, 8 p.m., Union U. Club. MEETINGS Campus Weight Watchers-5:30p.m., League Project Room. SWE-Peggy Varuska, Bendix, 6:30 p.m., 229 W. Engin. Honors Program-First Org. mtg. for Abraxas, a new honors literary publication, 7 p.m., 1017 Angell. Inter-Varsity Christian Fell.-7 p.m., League, Union. MSA-Task Force mtg., 7:30 p.m., 3909 Union. Al Anon-8:30 p.m., N2815 U. Hosp. (2nd level, NPI). Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society-mtg., followed by faculty tea, 5 p.m., 3003 Chem. PIRGIM-Mass mtg., 7 p.m., Union COnference Rms. 4 and 5. MISCELLANEOUS Computing Ctr.-Demo., DECwriter, "How to Use the DECwriter Ter- minal," 8 a.m., 405 UGLI. Computing Ctr.-Chalk Talk, "Basic Use of the MTS Command Language," 12:10p.m.,1011 NUBS. Vision/Hearing-Paper disc., "Retention of Topographic Addresses by Reciprocally Translocated Tectal Re-implants in Adult Goldfish," 12:15 p.m., 2055 MHRI.' Med. Ctr. Bible Study-12:30 p.m., F2230 Mott Library. SWE-Pre-Interview Program, Hughes Aircraft, 1 p.m., 270 W. Engin.; Hughes Presentation, 7 p.m., 246 W. Engin. International Night-France, 5 p.m., League cafeteria. Guild House-Poetry reading, Chet Leach, Paul Grams, Jack Zucker, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Men's Basketball-vs. Illinois, 8:05 p.m., Crisler Arena. Meekreh-Felafel study break, 10:30 p.m., Markley Concourse Lounge. Ecology Center of Ann Arbor-Home Heat Energy Conservation Workshop program, 7:30 p.m., public access television. S.O.S. Comm. Crisis Center-Interviews for prospective volunteers, 114 N. River Street, Ypsilanti. WCBN-Live interview with Swami Brahmananada, 3:30 p.m., WCBN. SYDA Foundation-Swami Brahmananada, "Secret of the Sid- dhas-Natural Meditation," 7 p.m., Freinds' Meetinghouse. Washtenaw County Parks and Recreation Commission-Registratibn for the WCPRC Cross Country Ski Program, Washtenaw County Building, Ann Arbor City Hall, Ann Arbor Public Library. OBIR-Career Day, 4:30 p.m., 141 Business School. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them to Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. INTERESTED LS&A STUDENTS LS&A Student Government is holding interviews for: 2 seats on the Student-Faculty Policy Board. 1 seat on the LS&A Student Government Council. 1 seat on the Michigan Student Assembly. Interviews will be held Monday, Jan. 26. Hopwood manuscripts are read by two judges in each category who then rank them in order of preference, ac- cording to Hopwood Program Coor- dinator Anrea Beauchamp. Judges are usually University English professors who are not currently teaching a writing class, she added. Before the ceremony, Brooks chatted with aspiring poets and prose writers who came to have coffee with her. She answered questions and talked about the role of the black poet, the current forms that prose and poetry are taking, and the craft of writing in general. Brooks deplored what she saw as 'a cheapening of the language." "Journalism is getting shabbier and shabbier," she said. "Fiction writers seem to think that if they have a little sprinkling of sex, well, then that's all that's necessary. I think Tom Wolfe is doing the best with new journalism." Brooks, who holds 40 honorary doc- torate degrees, is best known for her poems "The Riot" and "The Tiger Who Wore White Gloves." A Poet Laureate of Illinois, she has authored 15 books and is a recipient of the Shelley Memorial Award. Erica Littler, Residential College freshman, Hop- wood poetry, $150, "Fat Birds/Stupid Boys." Tina Datsko, LSA junior, CowdenMemorial Fellowship, $500, writing smaples; Debby Kim, LSA senior, Bain- Swiggett Poetry Prize, $50, "Birthed Unborn," "Sunrise," "Anniversary"; Alex Korn, Residential College Freshman, Hopwood essay, $200, "Picasso, Stein and Einstein: A New Dimension"; Anna Marie Nissen, LSA senior, Cowden Memorial Fellowship,$500, writing samples; Laurie Porter, Residential College sophomore, Hopwood essay, $250, "The Dream ofdStardom" andm"A Chocolate Kiss"; Deborah Shields, LSA sophomore, Hopwood poetry, $150, "Home Grown Coup." Patricia Ann Schaefer, LSA sophomore, Hopwood essay, $200, "Shakespearean Essays"; Joe Cortese, LSA senior, Academy of American Poets Award, $100, "After the Mine Shut-Down"; David William Casper, LSA sophomore, Hopwood essay, $200, "Two Essays on Greek Tragedy"; Shelton A. Johnson, LSA senior, Cowden Memorial Fellowship, $500, writing sam- ples; Dennis John Harvey, Residential College sophomore, Hopwood fiction, $100, "A Change of Seasons"; Mary Katherine Parks, LSA junior, Cowden Memorial Fellowship, $500, writing smaples; Josephone Kearns, U-M-Flint sophomore, Michael R. Gutterman Award in Poetry, $100, "Fly Poem," "Available Materials," and "Painting Dock Sections"; Laura E.O.B. Cur, Residential College freshman, Hopwood poetry, $100, "Selected Poems"; Maureen Anne Darmanin, LSA freshman, Hopwood fiction, $150, "The Showroom"; Bradford Scott Parks, LSA freshman, Hopwood fiction, $200, "The Music"; Mary Jean Blessington -Residential College junior, Hopwood fiction, $150, "Trekking East"; Orren Perlman, Residential College fresh- man, Jeffrey Weisberg Memorial, $100, "Walking the Hills of Galilee" and "Letters From the Throat." Nazi guard may be WASHINGTON (AP)-A former Nazi death camp guard who has lived in this country for 31 years must be stripped of his U.S. citizenship the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. By a 7-2 vote, the justices said 73- year-old Feodor Fedorenko "illegally procured" his U.S. citizenship in 1979 because he lied to immigration officials when entering the country in 1949. THE FEDERAL government now can strip Fedorenko of his citizenship and move to deport him. The court's decision made clear that even if government prosecutors did not think it necessary to take away Fedorenko's citizenship, the Im- migration and Nationality Act demands Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLE) PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING poet Gwendolyn Brooks waits to speak to the Hopwood Award recipients yesterday at Rackham Lecture Hall. Returnees tell stories of torture during captivity From United Press International Stories of beatings, deprivation and mental torture began to emerge from the freed American hostages yesterday in phone calls to their families. The details were sketchy, described in emotional tones by loved ones who tried to recall everything said in phone calls a half a world away after 14 mon- ths of agonized waiting. IN ONE OF the calls from Wiesbaden, West Germany, former economic and commercial officer Malcolm Kalp, 42, told his brother and sister-in-law he had been beaten and put in solitary con- finement for between 150 and 170 days because of his attempts to escape the American Embassy in Iran. "He told us he had tried to escape several times," said Linda Kalp in Brocton, Mass., the wife of Kalp's brother Richard. "That sounded like him," she said. "We knew that if anyone didn't cooperate with him he wouldn't cooperate either. We knew he was a tough guy and he wasn't going to take anything lying down," she said. MARINE SGT. Johnny McKeel told his mother, Wynona, of Balch Springs, Texas, that his captors said she was dead in an effort to get him to cooperate. He kept asking about the family, wanting to be sure everybody was all right," she said. "They told him I was dead when they interrogated him. "They told him they'd let him come home if he talked to them. They Only gave him three of our letters," she skid. "They even took away his watch and his billfold, so he'd be confused, so.he wouldn't know what time it was." . Donald Cooke, vice consul at the km- bassy, told his parents, Ernest and Susan Cooke of Mamphis, Tenn., that he spent most of the year in a prison near the Caspian Sea after the faIled rescue attempt in April. Fraud found in cancer research NEW YORK (AP) - A medical researcher who admitted faking some data also reported growing human can- cer cells which have now proved to be monkey cells, scientists say in an ar- ticle to be published today. The article in the British scientific journal Nature throws a new cloud over the work of Dr. John Long. Scientists said the incident may have slowed basic research into Hodgkin'sdisease, a lymph system cancer that strikes 7,100 Americans and causes 1,700 death a year. THE SCIENTISTS who re-examined Long's work said there was no eyidence of deliberate fraud involving the cultures. Long, a former researcher at Har- vard medical school, has admitted that although he learned in 1979 that the cell lines might have been misidentified, he concealed the problem from co- workers. He was forced to resign from the medical school and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston last January after admitting he falsified CONTACT LENSES SOFT AND HARD' CONTACT LENSES $210.00 includes all fees. * includes~ a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment parts of the data in a 1979 scientific paper on the cultures. ALL OF THE PAPERS referring directly to the now-challenged cell cultures will have to be reassessed to see if-any data of scientific value can be salvaged," Nature said in a draft ver- sion of a news story accompanying the scientists' article. The incident was confined to basic research and did not affect the treat- ment of any 'Hodgkin's disease patien- ts. Long had reported growing ur stable cancer cell lines since 1973. GOOD SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS Camp Tamarack interviewing THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 SUMMER PLACEMENT call 764-7456 for appointment it. AUDIITII@N MUSICIANS PERFORMERS 'JEJ Registration 12:30-3:30 Auditions begin at 1:00 Ann Arbor, MI Mon., Feb. 2 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Michigan Union-Kuenzel & Welker Rms. Bowling Green, OH Tues., Feb. 3 BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY University Union Also at Cedar Point Jan. 31 & Feb. 14 r-- TECHNICIANS Please send resumes by Feb. 1