A Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 23, 1987 Nobel winner taught at 'U' (ContnuedfroamPage 1) were trying to get him, and we were anxious to have him," said Robben Fleming, president of the University during Brodsky's stay. Prof. John Mersereau, chair of the Slavic languages department, said, "I'd always predicted that if he lived long enough, he'd get it. I'm just surprised he got it at such a young age." At 47, Brodsky is one of the youngest to win the world's most prestigious literary prize, worth about $340,000 and the promise of a boost in sales of his published works. His poetry has been translated into 12 languages. Brown said, "He was very bitter about the political authorities who persecuted him, but he loves Russia." Brown described Brodsky's poetry as, "terribly concerned about the human condition. He has a very vivid imagination, and his technique is splendid. He has a marvelous command of versification." Brodsky's poetry is difficult reading. His verse is intensely personal addressing the human concerns of suffering, love, death, separation, solitude, sin, and salvation, wrote George Kline, translator of Brodsky's works, in an introduction to "Joseph Brodsky: Selected Works." Brown still smiles when he recalls the day he was walking down North University and saw Brodsky pointing to his dented car. Brodsky, who was just learning to drive and afraid of causing an accident, thought it was funny that someone else hit him. Every seat was filled when Brodsky read his poetry for the first time to an excited crowd at Rackham Auditorium in 1972. He has toured the nation reading his works to over 40 universities and colleges including Yale, Harvard, Berkeley, Cornell, Columbia, and Northwest- ern. Brodsky's works have never been published in the Soviet Union, and last month they were confiscated I CARRYIFREE 1 OUT DELIVERY 1 IN MAIN CAMPUS ZZd NORTH CAMPUS 665-6005 995-9101 1 ORIGINAL SICILIAN TRAY 1 IOne Coupon Per Person 1 DEEP DISH SICILIAN Not Accepted at so * William St. Restaurant I PIZZA WITH 2ITEMS & or Dine-In at1 2 PEPSIS. 12" X12" ES:C 0/a22/ L - -.- rn--.. -- -.......................- ....- The LSA Project for Language Research and Development, the Committee on Foreign Language Instruction and the Language Laboratory announce a Colloquium on Approaches to Foreign Language Testing October 24, 1987 9am-4pm Hussey Room Michigan League SPEAKERS John Clark, Defense Language Institute Charles James, University of Wisconsin Dale Lange, University of Minnesota Charles Stansfield, Center for Applied Linguistics Marjorie Tussing, California FL Competency Project from Ardis's exhibit at the International Bookfair in Moscow. But Soviet authorities have recently returned his works and 30 other books to be distributed at the fair. Kline wrote that the apolitical content of Brodsky's poetry may have prevented him from winning political approval in the Soviet Union. Since coming to the United States, Brodsky has written several essays critical of the Soviet Union. Academy secretary Sture Allen said the decision to award Brodsky had nothing to do with politics. Brodsky is now a U.S. citizen living in New York, where he continues to write poetry and teach. Mersereau said Brodsky moved in 1981 because he wanted to be near the literary action on the East Coast and close to the ocean. During the fall he teaches at New York University and at Columbia University. In the winter, he teaches at Amherst and Hampshire colleges. He still visits Ann Arbor; the last time was three years ago for the funeral of his friend, Carl Proffer. Informed that he had won the honor while eating lunch with British spy novelist John Le Carre in a Chinese restaurant in London, Brodsky said he hoped the award would draw more people into reading Russian poetry. He joked that the prize was a "big step for me and a small step for mankind." -The Associated Press contributed to this report. PoIn 6105 Phone 764-0558 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Iran attacks Kuwaiti oil rig KUWAIT - An Iranian Silkworm missile hit Kuwait's offshore supertanker oil terminal yesterday, setting it afire and wounding several people, officials reported. None of the U.S.-flagged tankers the Navy protects were in the area. It was the third Iranian missle attack in a week on the sheikdom nestled between Iraq and Saudi Arabia at the head of the Persian Gulf. The Kuwait News Agency quoted officials as saying five people were wounded and on remained hospitalized. Shipping and diplomatic sources said casualties were low because no ships were loading at the Sea Island terminal nine miles offshore and fewer than the usual 20 men were on duty. Iranian leaders have threatened retaliation for a U.S. navy artillery attack Monday that destroyed two of Iran's offshore oil platforms. The shelling responded to an Iranian missile attack last week that hit one of the reflagged Kuwaiti tankers near the sheikdom's coastal oil facilities. CAW, GM reach agreement' TORONTO - Canadian General Motors Corp. autoworkers were back on the job yesterday following an Oshawa, Ontario, wildcat strike that briefly shut down three assembly plants despite a tentative contract settlement. The Canadian Auto Workers union and GM of Canada Ltd. reached tentative agreement late Wednesday on a pact mirroring agreements reached earlier with the Canadian arms of Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. The settlement includes pension indexing to fight inflation - the union's top priority - along with an immediate 3 percent wage increase, 25-cent-an-hour increases in the second and third years of the contract and cost-of-living increases. Workers will vote on it this weekend. Pro-Iranian group threatens U.S. naval forces in Gulf BEIRUT, Lebanon - A pro-Iranian group that holds American and French hostages said yesterday that "thousands" of suicide bombers are poised for attacks against U.S. and European naval forces in the Persian Gulf. The group, Islamic Jihad, claims to have carried out a series of suicide bombings against American and French targets in Lebanon in 1983 and 1984. The attacks killed more than 370 people, mostly American and French servicemen. The threat was made in a typewritten Arabic statement, copies of which were delivered to the offices of Western news agencies in Beirut. It was accompanied by black and white photographs of American hostage Terry Anderson and French captive Jean-Paul Kauffmann. Arms talks called productive MOSCOW - Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze "basically resolved" a dispute over West German nuclear missiles yesterday in talks both sides described as productive. The two, holding their third round of negotiations this year, were trying to settle the last sticking points in a treaty to scrap intermediate- range nuclear missiles. But no date was set for a third summit meeting between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, at which such a treaty could be signed. Soviet spokesman Gerady Gerasimov said the subject never came up. Both sides agreed in principle to the missile accord during Shevardnadze's visit to the United States last month. EXTRAS Clandestine cleaner creeps, sweeps, and does dishes GILROY, Calif - Instead of being cleaned out, a Gilroy man's house was cleaned up by a mysterious housekeeper who broke in, made his bed, took out the trash, washed his dishes and gathered up his dirty clothes. The unidentified victim, who told police he is sure last week's indident was not a practical joke, found a note saying : "Dear Sir, I hope you don't mind. I cleaned your house. Don't worry, I won't take anything because my father is a Duke in Spain. Don't worry. I'll clean your house for as ling as you live here." The note was signed "Prince Eddie." Gilroy police commander Vern Gardner said his department is trying to uncover the mysterious housekeeper. Besides the cleanup, the person left the front door ajar after replacing the man's old drapes with new ones. "We're not exactly sure what we could charge him with," said Gardner. "It's too bad he didn't break into my house." If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. The M chga wateI. Vol. XCVIII - No. 32 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term: $13 in Ann Arbor; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub - scribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the National Student, News Service. 4 w X4 4 I I4 / 44 .t Z 0 4 b 0c?/h 1'7 / I... r Y A ti r~.4.. 4vYQ I A, 1, THE MUSLIM STUDENTS ASSOCIATION' SPEAKER: CAT STEVENS (YOUSEF ISLAM) LIVE PLACE: RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER TIME: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1987 2:30 P.M. FREE ADMISSION ,. + a y1. 'r AMMZ ;*r-- " ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS ELECTIONS'" NOV.18.19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV.18-19 " NOV. 18-19 * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS'- -i-- NOV. 18-190" NOV. 18-19'" NOV. 18-190" NOV. 18-190" NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS " Y p. One Success Story After Another. A U C ALLSPECIALS CURICH S FAL P NOW CHECK OT OURSPECIAL PRICING GOING ONNO * LSA ---- " Appropriates money to student organizations " " Appoints students to student-faculty committees Monitors the school from a student's viewpoint Editor in Chief......................................ROB EARLE Managing Editor.............................AMY MINDU.t. News, Editor ..........................PHILIP I. LEVY City Editor.................................MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor...............................MARTIN FRANK University Editor..........................KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Francie Arenson, Vicki Bauer, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Keith Brand, Jim Bray, Dov Cohen, Hampton Dellinger, Kenneth Dintzer, Nancy Driscoll, Sheala Durant, Heather Eurich, Stephen Gregory, Linda Hecht, Grace Hill, Jeff Hughes, Steve Knopper, Carrie Loranger, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigman. Tom MacKinnon, Andrew Mills, Peter Orner, Eugene Pak, Lisa Pollak, Jim Poniewozik, Melissa Ramsdell, Martha Sevetson, Rachel Stock, Steve Tuch, David Webster, Rose MaryWummel. Opinion Page Editors........................PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK Assoc. Opinion Page Editor..........CALE SOUTHWORTH OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Rosemary Chinnock, Noah Finkel, Jim Herron, Eric Holt, Josh Levin, I. Matthew Miller, Mocha, Jeffrey Rutherford, Steve Semenuk, Tony Sherman, Mark Weisbrot. 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