10B hetchigarnDaily Weeken Thursraymebrry 20,1997 0 0 The Michigan Da#Weekeng Mag ;i Sound and Fury ALL IS NOT FAIR 'IN LoVE AND WAR' BY DEAN BAKOPOULOS Three days a week, I teach a high school creative writing class. Last Thursday, when we came to a lesson on dialogue, I chose Ernest Hemingway as an example. My students are a sharp bunch, and they'd all heard of Hemingway before, though they'd never read him. I must admit, I was a'little disap- pointed - but certainly not surprised. Nobody seems to teach Hemingway these days. Hemingway has made a minor resur- facing this winter. Unfortunately, it's because of the goopy Sandra Bullock- Chris O'Donnell film "In Love and War." Sadly, it might be the closest thing some people will ever come to reading Hemingway these days. After 60 credits in writing and litera- ture at the University, I've read only one Hemingway novel for class. I've taken several specifically "American" litera- ture classes, and I've read scores of short stories as assignments - nothing by Hemingway. Methinks something anti-Hemingway is spinning through academia. Of course, this comes as no surprise to most people. As literary studies become increasingly politicized, the tendency is to shy away from reading the dead, white males; especially dead, white males who were often mean, miserable and close to misogynistic. It's an understandable trend, but a lamentable one as well. When I first set foot into a University classroom, Hemingway held a position in my heart that bordered on idolatry. To me, Hemingway represented all that a writer should be; and though my opinion of him has tempered considerably, I still feel a slight twisting pain in my side when I hear folks mock the great Papa Hem. And this mocking happens a lot, especially from other writers. Vladimir Nabokov, a writer I like very much, said he read Hemingway in the 1940s - "Something about bells, balls and bulls, and (I) loathed it." But it's not just writ- ers who poke fun and make sport of Hem. It's my own friends. While studying in Cambridge a few summers ago, it seemed I had died and gone to Heaven: Around every coner, down every corridor, people were talk- ing about books. Bliss. That is, until some brand new acquaintances asked me to pick my favorite writer. I cleared my throat.Took a sip of stout Cracked my knuckles. "Hemingway," I said. "I guess it's Hemingway." A few snickers. A chortle. "Hemingway?" a voice sneered, "It figures." I sulked in the comer as the crowd turned it's attention to a Marxist criti- cism of Aphra Behn or something. I fin- ished my pint and walked heavily up the steps to my room. "What do they know?" I thought. Hemingway is a good and fine and clean writer. It is a good and perfect night and I will fish in the morning. I will catch many fish and afterward I can fry them and maybe find a woman to come with me, a woman like the one I met in Padua during the war. It' these reveries that get me into trouble. But in my mind, Hemingway is one of the most important voices that has ever howled across America. More important than the Beats, more impor- tant than his Lost Generation peers, more important in many ways than the first American writers like Emerson and Dickinson. In terms of craft, few writers have made so deep an impression on the liter- ature of our country. Imagine dialogue without Hemingway's influence, imag- ine sparse clean narratives, imagine the slew of postmodern tales of alienation and grief. If you doubt the influence of Hemingway, try to imagine the literary world had Hemingway never existed. Imagine writers like Kesey and Carver, Mailer and McInerney, without 2 1____________ Hemingway's influence. Admittedly, Hemingway was at his worst when writing about women. His female characters are shallow, and the tone with which he treats them is often condescending. But rather than see that as proof of a misogynistic streak, I like to think of it as a flaw in his craft. Perhaps he really was just bad when writing about women. (Though, in some cases he is good, too, like in "Farewell to Arms" or perhaps "Garden of Eden.") "Farewell to Arms" is the only Hemingway novel that I have been assigned (the rest I explored on my own). It was taught by one of my favorite professors, a well-respected novelist. In July 2, 1961, when Ernest Hemingway blew his head off in Ketchum, Idaho, this professor of mine, then 18, was in Paris, Hemingway's old haunt. He went from cafe to tavern to bar, toasting the memory of Papa, and he could see scores of other young writ- ers, toasting and mourning. These days, you sometimes feel that a toast to Hemingway should be done quickly and quietly, if you do it at all. It seems a shame to me that future generations of literature students and young writers may never be exposed to the magic of Hemingway's stories and prose style. Instead, they'll be left to throw popcorn at the screen as Chris O'Donnell and Sandra Bullock smooch. - Reach Dean at deanc@umich.edu. ZAMBONI Continued from Page 3B much water down on the ice and you're also wasting energy," Daugherty said. The Zamboni drivers strive to create perfect ice or "a sheet of glass," as Knuble described it. Drivers find that skaters rely on well- groomed ice. "Oh yeah, especially the Michigan players. They'll tell you if you do a bad cut," Knuble said. He added, "People like nice smooth ice, because if you don't do a good cut and the ice is bumpy, the puck is jumping around and it won't stay flat." The players are not the only people who react to the ice quality, as manager of building operations and Kinesiology senior Mike Olson remembered. "Everybody's eyes are on you, so the last thing you want to do is leave any uncut snow. People will boo you ..... As a matter of fact, it happened last year to a few people. So that is the only scare I always have." Young Wolverine fans Pat Welty, Keith Griffin, and Matt Nenadic affirmed Olson's fears and beliefs about achieving good ice quality. "I think we ... should be able to drive them because (the Zamboni drivers) all miss spots. They go so slow and if we would drive them we would be done with 10 minutes left in the intermis- sion. Yeah, they could do more fun stuff during the intermission." Of course, the thought of 10-year-old Zamboni drivers may be questionable. University alumnae Jennifer Jonas wants to drive the Zamboni for different reasons. "I've always wanted to drive the Zamboni at Yost. It's just cool. I mean just getting the ice ready for the guys, that's probably the coolest because they're the best." Nursing senior Whitney Tonkin expressed an even greater desire to drive the Zamboni. "I'd rather have a Zamboni than a car" she said. Her friend, LSA senior Marie Belanger, agreed. " That Zamboni runs better than my car." If the Zamboni runs better than a car, Daugherty attributes that to Yost's seri- ous preventative maintenance that is conducted by the University's heavy equipment department. "They're great. In fact, we give them a special arrange- ment where we will actually bring one of their people on-call to a game ... just so that they're here in case a problem happens;' Daugherty said. Daugherty believes all the efforts to maintain the Zambonis are worthwhile. "We can sell all the hockey sticks we want and tickets and popcorn at the concession stands, but if we don't have a Zamboni and our ice isn't good, then we're out of business," he said. University alumnus Joel Gerring also believes that the Zamboni plays an impor- tant role in hockey. "I think Zambonis exemplify hockey. The Zamboni is like its own entity It has become its own little icon because no other sport has some- thing like that where you actually have to take time out to actually resurface the playing area. You don't do that in any other sport and that's really cool." As the demand for the machines rises and improvements continue to be made, Zamboni company president and inven- tor's son Richard Zamboni recognizes the significance of his father's creation. "I feel it has been extremely important and certainly had an impact on the skat- ing world," he said. The company has plants in Paramount, Calif. and Brantford, Ontario, and each produces approxi- mately 100 Zambonis each year. Zamboni believes his father worked really hard and remained a "guiding light" until his death in 1988. Zamboni added that his father did not go out with the idea of revolutionizing the skating world by creating the machine, but many believe he did revo- lutionize it. "You wouldn't have the sport going like it is today without the resurfacing machines," Zamboni said. The Zamboni continues to gain pop- ularity on and off the ice. There is a series of Zamboni memorabilia includ- ing shirts, key chains, and little toy machines available. The World Wide Web boasts numerous sites dedicated to the machines. Cartoonist Charles Shultz often writes a Zamboni into the exploits of his "Peanuts" characters. The band The Gear Daddies wrote "The Zamboni Song" which was featured on the movie soundtrack for "D2: The Mighty Ducks." In addition, a band calls itself The Zambonis, and sings of tales such as falling in love with the hockey referee's daughter. Zambonis will remain an integral part of ice sports as they continue their popularity. Daugherty encourages any- body who wishes to learn to drive the Zamboni to intern at Yost. The 13 cur- rent drivers come from all levels of edu- cation and all types of majors. Although Knuble joked that the coolest part of driving a Zamboni is that, "the chicks dig it," he and Olson agree that one great part is the challenge of driving the machine well. "It's an intriguing machine that everybody wants to know about, and to be one of the select few to drive at a Michigan hockey game is a really memo- rable experience" Olsen said. C= U-. U 5 Feb. 21 Pulsations Terraplanes Mar. 14 Lapdogs Feb. 20 Immigrant Suns Mar. 13 Lisa Hunter Audrey Becker PRESENT THIS NOTE THIS NOTE IS WORTH TWO DOLLARS TOWARD THE REGULAR STUDENT PRICE: $7.00 RUNNING LATE FOR THAT EARI MORNING CLAS VISIT YOUR CAMPUS BURGER KING@FOR SOME GI FREE DELIVERY DJ'S PIZZA c( 1.20 t BREAKFAST SERVED: SATURDAYS: 8 am -101 i I BURGER KING Lower level of the Michigan League 911 N. University Ann Arbor 48109-1265 For more information, please call 763-4652. Sponsored by Michigan League Programming: .$4 .A tdn far' ' ,a i AI Offer good on 1214 SOUTH UNIVERSITY, t Expires April 15 *ir* one coupon per customer per visit. N No substoistutions, peae. hm e '. I l 1214 S. UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MI f a ti , ' 4A # ,