Faulkner love poems, discovered in attic I -., , '4 * . .a ">r The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 28, 1984 - Page 5 Gunman wolnds '4; 4 ' .. AUSTIN, Texas - Fourteen love poems by novelist William Faulkner, whose refusal to pay a subsidy to a publisher kept the works hidden for 60 years, have been found in an attic and will be published this spring. The book, to be titled Visions in Spring, will be released May 26 and is described by its publisher, the University, of Texas Press, as a. "haunting" and "lyrical" work that addresses loneliness, desireandkother "basic human emotions.'' THE POEMS marked the transition of the Nobel Prize-winning author from poet to novelist and was his last major work of poetry before publishiing his first novel, Soldier's Pay. Faulkner, best known for novels like Absalom, Absalom! and The Sound and the Fury, bound the poetry by hand and presented the 88-page volume in the early 1920s to his future wife, Estelle Franklin, while she still was married to her first husband. "This collection of poetry was the first book-length work that Faulkner had ever submitted for publication," Vicki Woodruff of UT Press said yesterday. "But it never made it into publication because Faulkner balked at paying a subsidy the publisher wanted in order to get the poems into print." Although Literary historians were aware the works existed, the original apparently was lost. A Faulkner scholar from Chicago, Judith Sensibar, received permission from the author's daughter, Jill Faulkner Summers, in 1979 to search through the attic in the family home in Charlottesville, Va., for the elusive poetry. "It's interesting in its own right, but its primary importance is the way it casts new light on his later fiction,'' Sensibar said. French Diplomat in west Beirut - BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Uniden- tified gunmen critically wounded a French diplomat as he walked to work yesterday, pumping five bullets into the head and body of cultural secretary Sauveur Gliozzio from a passing car. While Gliozzio fought for his life at the American University Hospital, rival militias shelled residential neigh- borhoods on either side of the "Green Line" separating Moslem- west from Christian east Beirut. POLICE reported a 5-year-old girl had been killed and 29 people wounded in the shelling, the latest violation of a tenuous cease-fire arranged this month in Lausanne, Switzerland. At least 10 people were killed and 53 wounded in similar violations Monday. French and police sources said Glioz- zio was just two blocks from the heavily fortified French Embassy in west Beirut when he was shot at close range by three men in a car. The sources said they believed the gunmen had first followed the diplomat AP Photo for nearly half a mile from his apar- tment near the Commodore Hotel, the a wounded man down a street along the unofficial headquarters of the foreign press corps. GLIOZZIO was rushed to the American University Hospital, only a block from the scene of the shooting, for emergency surgery which lasted three hours. He was hit in the head, stomach, leg and twice in the abdomen, sources said. No one immediately claimed respon- sibility, but an underground group known as the Islamic Jihad has previously threatened retribution against French and American diplomats because of attacks by their nations' peace-keeping forces in Lebanon. Unknown gunmen shot and killed a French Embassy driver and wounded the wife of a French diplomat in January. American political attache William Buckley was abducted in west Beirut near U.S. Embassy offices Mar- ch 16 and has not been heard from sin- ce. The attempted assassination did not slow down this week's phased with- drawal of France's 1,250-member peace-keeping contingent, the last unit of the four-nation Western force sent to Lebanon in 1982. Study says youth more conservative, WASHINGTON (AP) - American high school students have forsworn most political protests, tempered their obsession with moneymaking and careers, and are "probably more closely aligned with their parents than they have been in 30 years," a survey of youth attitudes contended yesterday. "If there washa generation gap in the '60s, it narrowed to a crack in the '70s. It's barely a hairline in the '80s," said Janis Cromer, author of the study en- titled "The Mood of American Youth," prepared for the National Association of Secondary School Principals. CROMER, director of com- munications for the District of Colum- bia Public Schools, was author of a similar survey of student attitudes in 1974. In eight areas - drugs, education, work, politics, choice of friends, religion, sex and dress styles - a majority of students said they agreed with their parents' views, her report said. "While significant numbers of today's students say their parents are 'old-fashioned' or 'too strict,' when it comes to more substantive issues such, as politics, sex, drugs, religion and ,careers, young people appear to have increasingly adopted the views of their parents," the survey concluded. The students said the most important problems facing America were unem- ployment, inflation and violent crime. In 1974, at a time when the Watergate scandal was reaching a climax, the top domestic problems were listed as politics and the environment. That year only 4 percent of high school students said violent crime was a problem. The biggest challenges facing the world are nuclear disaster, the threat of World War III and poverty, the students said. "IN THE 60's, students were charac- terized as having long hair. They were involved in protests. They mistrusted anyone over 30," Cromer said. "In the '70s they were described as the 'me' generation," were preoccupied with careers and making money and "had a strong aversion to politics." The report, commenting on how today's students differ from their predecessors, said that "unlike the more vocal youth of 20 years ago, issuing a hue and cry over public issues is seemingly not part of today's student disposition. Four Shiite Moslem gunmen rush "Green Line" in Beirut yesterday. Defense research approved (Continued from Page 1) dsall's work to aid in anti-submarine warfare and to improve America's fir- st-strike capabilities. THE REJECTION -Only the eighth since the Classified Research Review Panel was formed in 1972 - sent the proposals to another committee which rarely takes part in decisions on classified projects. In an 8-4 vote on March 9, the Research Policies Com- mittee decided the projects did not violate the guidelines. "I made the decision based on my own judgement but the committee's endorsement was a permanent con- sideration," Sussman said yesterday. Freedman, who resigned from the classified panel after the March 9 vote, said Birdsall's work could help put the United States in a first strike position in a nuclear war. With the aid of research like Birdsall's, Freedman said the United States will be able to pinpoint the location of Soviet submarines, while keeping its own fleet relatively hidden. THE U.S. EDGE in submarine technology would lessen America's vulnerability to a Soviet attack, and might induce it to strike first, she ex- plained in a paper after she opposed the projects. Birdsall has maintained that his research can be used to track sub- marines, but has civilian uses as well. In February, the Progressive Student Network attempted a sit-in at Birdsall's North Campus laboratory, which failed when University security officials lear- ned of the plan beforehand. Afterward, Birdsall said his projects can be used not only by the Pentagon, but also by the Weather Service and fishermen. "But none of the others are willing to pay for it," he said. I will be interviewing on March 30 for day camp counselors in the Chicago area CIRCLE-M DAY CAMP MAKE APPOINTMENTS THROUGH CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT -Marcy Brower SUMMER JOBS AT TAMARACK Brighton, and Ortonville, Michigan - Camp Kennedy, Agree Outpost, Teen Trips Positions still available for: cabin counselors * specialists in arts & crafts, waterfront & small crafts, campcraft-nature, trip leading, ROPES course, sports, horseback riding, drama-dance, photography, video, computers * unit and specialist supervisors " nurses " physicians " secretary * food service staff * maintenance assistants " bus drivers Also opportunities to work with emotionally impaired children at Silverman Village INTERVIEWING APRIL 4 AND 10 SIGN-UP: CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Tamarock is the Jewish residential camp sponsored by the Fresh Air Society of Metropolitan Detroit, since 1903 6600 W. Maple Rd., W. Bloomfield, MI 48003 " 313/661-0600 * Voting problems plague MSA election (Continued from Page1) p.m.; the Dana Building from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; the Dental Building from 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; the Taubman Medical Library from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; the School of Education building, from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Lorch Hall from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; the East Engineering building from 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; the Business School from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; the MLB from 8 a.m.-3 p.m.: the North Campus Commons from 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; the Fish MATH (MAJORSIMINORSI APTITUDE)... You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps Moth volunteers why their degrees are needed in the dass- rooms of the world's developing notions. Ask them why ingenuity and flexibility ore as viral as adopting to a differentcul- ture. They'll rell you their students know Math is the key to a solid future. And they'll rell youthat Peace.Corps odds up to a career experience full of rewards and accomplishments. Ask them why Peace Corps is the roughest job you'll ever love. PEACE CORPS Bowl from 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; the Union from 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; West Quad from 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m.; South Quad from 4-6:30 p.m.; East Quad from 4:30-6:30 p.m.; Bursley from 4:15-6:30 p.m.; Couzens from 4:30-6:45 p.m.; UGLi from 3-5 p.m.; Markley from 4-6:30 p.m; Mosher Jordan from 4-6:30 p.m.; and Alice Lloyd from 4-6:30 p.m. Daily reporter Claudia Green filed a report for this story. AL TER NA TI PE CAREE R FAIR WORKING FOR A C/ANGE FRIDAY MARCH 30 8-10PM AND SATURDAY MARCH 31 10AM-6PM EAST QUADRANGLE CAREER WORKSHOPS AND PANEL DISCUSSIONS ON: EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY ART/THEATRE LABOR SOCIAL SERVICES ORGANIZING HEALTH SERVICES COOPS/BUSINESS MEDIA LAW/GOVERNMENT i nrr rrgrrrorrarr rrrrrrrr rrsrrrerr , r rrr -sr enmrr, .+ oomruP P es e~trr r«, ') N 3CPS TO REPRESENT YOU- MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY needs more than Your money e a. CALL YOUR FRIENDS! ., / >~ i~4;7 BLOOM C IS IN ALERT THE PRESS! __. i E OUNTY - 1 / J6 i March 27th & 28th JOIN THE MILO'S MEADOW GANG EVERY DAY .. . V11 2'1I ITEF I . I