Poultry in Motion Ever since last week, when we introduced the concept of the Chicken Powered Cart (CPC), we have sensed * change in the public. There is a new hope in this country, an optimism that has not been seen in our lifetimes. The Chicken Powered Cart holds out the possibility of a new solution to ancient problems: starvation, disease, poverty. There may even be unfore- seen benefits the Chicken Powered Cart has for posterity. Realizing that it was only a matter oftime before someone else tried to take credit for this invention, we hur- Ammmmllmlml IddillL ar ms w - ... I& I The lunatic, the lover and the poet come home to the Heidelberg's poetry slam iedly contacted the U.S. Patent Of- fice to register the Chicken Powered Cart. We summarized the concept to a longtime Patent Office employee named Jeneatte Devins: "The idea is to take a cart, and to put a long pole on the front, and have chickens pull it." "Well, why would they be pulling it?" she asked. * "Well, it's mainly for energy," we explained. "You see ... the problem is you use a car for a couple of months and then it stops working, right? But with a chicken, the chickens pull the cart and then you can eat them." "Oh!" "It's renewable energy." "Oh, okay." "And see, the way we see it, this hasn't been harnessed ever before. il the other people who are in favor of cars or horse-drawn carriages, they don't see that there are other purposes that you can gain from your transpor- tation energy." "Oh, okay, okay." "And also, I've read that you can use the body heat of chickens to heat your home." "Oh." Having sold the government on the idea, our next step was the more difficult task of enlisting the scien- tific community behind the Chicken Powered Cart. Naturally, we contacted the Animal Science Department at Michigan State University. Professor Richard Balander, a poultry specialist, initially expressed some doubts as to chickens' ability to ull together and move the cart: "They have very minimal strength in their legs, and besides that you couldn't get them to all pull in the same direction anyway." This of course, is the same sort of false, hate- ful stereotype used historically to keep various ethnic groups out of the workforce. But we believe in the American chicken. We feel that the American chicken wants to do its part * improve, the efficiency of farming communities. Professor Balander did concede that the strong breast muscles of chick- ens could allow for a cart driven by flying chickens, but this energy could only be kept up for a short period of time. "I suppose that you could use it for 30 seconds," he said. We see this as introducing more ses for the Chicken Powered Cart. hickens could walk for normal Cart use, but they could fly if the Cart was needed to, say, help children escape from a burning barn or rush an elderly person to the hospital. Some argue that chickens are not the most effective cart-pulling poul- try. Professor Balander rejected this hypothesis. "Turkeys are even more uncontrollable than chickens," he *ined, "You might as well train a brick to pull a cart." .iProfessor Jim Hermes of the Poul- try Science Department at Oregon State University took a more optimis- tic view of chicken leg strength. While Professor Balander pegged the num- By RONA KOBELL P aul Stebleton sees some thing in thrift shops that most of us miss. "Value Village, a not quite renovated grocery store, full of families and couples searching shelves of second hand junk stocked by women with missingteeth,"the young poet belts out in a Vegas- lounge singer kind of voice. Nice imagery, Paul. Good body language. I give it an eight. What is this, dance fe- ver? Not quite. It's more like Robert Frost meets The Gong Show. It's called the Poetry Slam, and it's hap- pening right here in Ann Ar- bor. According to Wolf Knight, a local shop worker who moon- lights as a poet, the Poetry Slam was started to "free poetry from the' academic establishment and return it to the people." Knight, with his honest demeanor and pension for raw, unpretentious poetry "that comes from the heart," is typical of slam contestants, where the regu- lars are a bit irregular, and phrases like "Fuck you, polyester crack- pot" can sound as melodic as Shakespeare's "My mistress's eyes are nothing like the sun". You ain't in English class anymore. Good poetry is no longer packaged in conclud- ing couplets and iambic pen- tameter. At least, not in the not-so-hallowed halls of the Club Heidelberg on the first Tuesday of every month. The night begins with an open-mike i- forum, where six poets read for about five minutes each. Fea- tured readings are also sched- uled. After the reading, five or six poets can choose to "slam." The slammers perform before five judges, who rate them on a scale of one to 10. Audience cheers and jeers can sway the verdict on the poetry. The highest and lowest scores are thrown out, and the raw score stands until some- one with a higher mark knocks them out. The two remaining poets duke it out for the grand prize of the night - a crisp, clean, $10 bill. Who is qualified to decide whether or not poetry is "good"? Some poets claim that these random members of the audience who are wooed into judgeship by a free pitcher of beer do not always decide fairly. "Generally, some people stack judging so that certain people win, or you get some smart-asses who push through the poem that seems to be the worst. It becomes sort of a mockery," Stebleton stated. Stebleton would rather that the judges be "people who were educated in poetry." But according to Larry Francis, emcee of the slam for over a year, these sometimes inebriated listeners are as qualified as anybody else. "Anybody's qualified to judge poetry, that's the whole damn point. When you set criteria for judging and start excluding people, then you're going against the original notion of the slam." about elitism, not about giving poetry back to the people." Knight and Francis agree that the past national competitions have been marred by disorganization, unfair judgment calls and lousy emcees. For Knight, that unfair- ness inverts the progress he has made in trying to convince people that slam poetry is a true art form. "Outsiders see (slamming) as a game for kooks, primal screamers and swishy little boys from the Vil- lage," Knight wrote in letter to the organizers of the national slam. "We can be all of the above, but we must attract and hold outsiders long enough to bring their own poetry forth." If the national players don't clean up their act, Knight fears that slam po- etry will "turn inward, go baroque, and die." While Knight, Marsh and Francis think about the national picture, many other Heidelberg slammers are just thinking locally. When Connecticut native Ken Cormier first discovered the slam two years ago, he was searching for any available, local performance venues. Now Cormier, a student in the Master's Program for Creative Writ- ing at Eastern Michigan University, books local readers at the Guild House poetry reading on Monday nights. He likes the idea of a slam, but feels the contest works best if it doesn't carry over to a national level. "The slam should stay lo- cal and never get more serious than that," Cormierstated. "Once you get to the end of the contest and pass out the $10, that'swhere the competition should end." Paul Stebleton agrees that sometimes poetry is best under- stood when contained locally. A midwesterner at heart, Stebleton feels that his work is often regional. "I've found that I can transcend re- gional barriers. But it's still a little in- timidating when I take my stuff some- place else and get a different opinion from a different region." Other regions are also not always as tolerant of nervousness as a local audience might be. New York City is one example of a place where a maverick poet might be subject to flying wads of paper or loud humming during a not-so- well received performance. "The New York audience is a much more challenging art community to deal with. They can be insensitive and tell poets they're crappy.In smallertowns, people are more willing to listen," explained Joe Maynard, who runs the Rightbank Reading Series in the Williamsburg neighbor- hood of Brooklyn. He added that such brutal honesty is not necessarily detrimental. "At least in New York you know when you're stumbling on useless words, when something you're saying is bombing." Maynard's reading series grew out of the neighbor- hood painters' request for a "place to meet and discuss ideas." Five years ago, a few local painters read once in a while. Now Maynard estimates a turnout of 20 to 30 at the bi-weekly meetings. Although his series is not a slam, this Benton Harbor native has attended several Illustration By JORDAN ATLAS savings, Francis added, will go towards the National Poetry Slam Contest, which will be held this year in Asheville, North Carolina. The roots of the National Poetry Slam competition were sown about seven years ago by Mark Smith, who began slamming at The Green Mill, a Chicago bar. Local Vince Keuter brought the idea to Ann Arbor in 1988, making Michigan the second state in the country to host a slam. The rest, according to Knight, is slam history. "Four years ago, the first national slam was invitation only. San Francisco got a hold of Chicago and said, hey, let's have a contest, and we'll bring the people from New York and Boston," Knight remembered. "They had so much fun that they decided to open it up and make a national thing out if it." In the past, the contest