The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 5, 1991 - Page 15 The Norton Book of Modern War t Edited by Paul Fussell W. W. Norton & Co./ hardback When you think about it, it's not strange at all that warfare has become ,the embodiment of ultimate suffering. Despair undermines courage, death ends the quest for honor, and pain and hatred make all victories pyrrhic. For ,those who reject Hemingway when he pleads, "Never think that war, no s matter how necessary, nor how justified, is not a crime," reading the col- ected works of The Norton Book of Modern War will probably change your minds. The collected stories, poems, and personal narratives which fill this book span the globe, 75 years and four major conflicts (the two World IWars, the Spanish Civil War, and Vietnam). If some of the works are not of the same literary excellence as others, there are very few pieces which leave the reader unaffected. "Never such innocence again," said Philip Larkin, - thinking of the doomed ranks of youth who had marched off to die in the trenches of Flanders with sugerplum visions of glory dancing in their heads. The terrible irrationality of that war is a stigma which marks every story in the collection. The chaos of war is reflected in the riotous confu- sion of the Spanish Civil War, where no one was quite sure who was fight- sing whom, and an ally of yesterday was likely to betray you to the modern- ;ized guillotines of the Revolutionary tribunals tomorrow. A generation later and half a world away, the same violent injustice reigned in the inno- scent little Vietnamese hamlet into which Lieutenant Calley (subject of a recent, forgiving People magazine profile) led his men. They vented their fanger and bullets on the Viet Cong, a massacre which continued until hun- dreds of unarmed women and children lay strewn, dead and dying, in the mud and ditches of My Lai. The death and suffering portrayed is not merely unjust, but inhumane as well. Beginning with a wretchedly dry, official bulletin on how to deal with putrefying and unburiable corpses, and continuing over the comman- der of Auschwitz's account of pitching screaming babies into the gas chain- - bers before returning home to bathe and play with his own children, the climax of the horror was reached, for me, in an account of the murder of a VC sympathizer. Troops gathered to "watch the fun" as the woman was tied and subdued, a fire hose's "tarnished brass nozzle forced between her legs, forced against the resilient folds of flesh... A scream started from her throat, a sound unlike any other! Red and pink and brown and white and green, a torrent of mixed flesh and high pressure steam... " The evil of the Nazis is well known - less well publicized is the darker side of troops fighting for the "right" side, like these American Green Berets. Editor Paul Fussell writes that the publication of the truth about war is an ironic victory, "ironic" because it relies upon past horrors for inspira- tion, but a "victory" in that it fights against future wars. It is harder for governments to recruit or compel warm bodies to fight and die when those bodies have minds. When soldiers know that "being all they can be" means being figures in a casualty count or paraplegics in a VA ward until they die, waging war becomes difficult. As some dreamer once said, "What if we gave a war and nobody came?" "The truth will set you free," said another, and certainly the Norton collection does a good job of breaking the bonds of ignorance which allow war's horrors to continue. Jonathan Harrison WCBN Continued from page 13 who just want to listen to different cultures and ideas, remember 88.3. "How to listen to WCBN?" asks Mattson of himself. "It's kind of like New England weather - if you wait five minutes it will change. We're not saying that you have to like everything that we play. We're not trying to appeal to every- one. We're just trying to do excel- lent, diverse radio." NECTARINE Continued from page 11 ery other Monday, the Nectarine played host to such rock illuminar- ies as Soul Asylum, Johnny Winter, Husker Dii, and later a solo Bob Mould. "Those shows, I'm done with those. Too many problems, too many crazy people. Just not worth it," says Bender. If there are shows, they will be more expensive and with a different attitude. "Like a show before we'd get say, 700, 800 people at around $12 a ticket, okay? Now say you'd get 350 people so you'd have to get double the ticket price to get the same act. So that's how it would be possible.... It could be a nice space for that, where you could have an in- One of WBCN-FM's famous disc jocks spins a tune you probably won't hear on most other radio stations. That's why their tao line claims "Radio Free Ann Arbor timate show and a good show, but it....,gn ........ would be for somebody that The Nectarine was a focus for not targeting students per se. The Nectarine Ballroom regardless, un- wouldn't mind paying $24 or $30 a some students' extracurricular ac- one thing I do know, it'll take a lot der any circumstances because that ticket, you know. It wouldn't be tivities before the renovation. Now, less to make it go, to keep it alive would've been extended much past like before where you're jam packed Bender says, students are not likely than it did before. And by being 21, where it was. So I mean, if it goes, at and you know, it would be a lot to be the main audience. "We're it'll be a lot less problems. It least this gives it a fair change to nicer," explains Bender. more or less on campus, but we're wasn't going to last as the make a go ...," says Bender. ART Continued from page 13 adds that, "support for kids is much greater when they are involved in sports.... We provide a supportive environment for them to compete in the arts." Controversy often accompanies the visual art scene, but Chamberlin feels that AAAA has not had prob- lems with censorship. "About eight years ago a print called, St. Francis and the Rape of Japan offended someone, and their church group wrote all sorts of letters to protest," laughs Chamberlin. She stands behind an ideal for signifi- cance within art, however: "I like pieces that communicate beyond their technology." An abstract piece must speak to her in order for her to consider its worth. That's why AAAA encourages its artists to de- scribe their intent and their creative processes for their exhibits. "You almost never walk out of an orches- tra concert and hear someone say, 'My kid can do that."' Chamberlin says. She wants to give viewers of visual art at the Association a chance to be educated before they brush off an experimental concept. Chamberlin's predictions for coming trends in the art world is in unique compositions for furniture. Artists are making chairs and tables out of anything from demolished cars to nerf balls. "You recognize the parts," she explains "but then see them transformed into a whole new concept." This makes the art ac- cessible, because one can see its pro- cess, but also an aesthetic and chal- lenging experience. And that con- cept is really what the Art Association is all about. I 4 X I 4 .f w 10C''-~~t W,. ',