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November 02, 1958 - Image 9

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r f' *
tContinuec en; mPie 6 i ues for h11,ats, and sales tax ;ire those vhof;IOt a d a stic re- have a disproporoate rprese
vwould all be in jeopardy if the mvoney for schools and local govv- duzction in the muntrr of cunties taton, acoring t o poutin
ernments. and crtim heof thenumer of the L uyilature.
doimient wlas suiected to iasud -furmctin o t.wn.h1
at it verhauIing." the BIueu BUT 1 M imp t toi tIe ThE1 ta eis a d Sro 'GGING ALONG clos he d
std.F , r : e sm bee sthe uart of c t iirss to re- theo Farm Buea i te 1 h
axeIo a m t .is th m ince f i vaip oproik ie to legIs3 - an Townshlip A LatiIon to
in ei C t t-oer(h n f cc-iii 1 '- ie dstrii ani appmiion- iougly the same iesondi
est i n Bu i y lldt 1onsof 1 th I t e i I gov- met o ht 1 etPa(ion in ts members mIr a con tito-
ke a 11 idf w rmainsierncn cnt. boinhi lranchs of cta LisLaturetlolalc ion mi' th o
of the tti n foredIi0he at i- Thie Breai saic O1: "Our m03- wIld be solely on a ppuilaton ic oi icrive i mi ci orsom
fan prop y o''w"ners by the bs15- ir are reatly cocnrned that a basis, wit1h no other Iftors taken1 tkc(10titutil independ
mill liilalan on taxes" Others aeneral iContitutional revision into consider11 tione " nof towonshiporperhapsmoa-
the Bureau says, want to remove Inght result in It, ,,nngr the The way the state is appor- eth stvr- c tan
ecarmarkingfrtimeatri- oprln.an
mm ofo of loc I hIaiirowth ualnt onups now have on county
mboarids of superi sors.
A} /le n qu i 1isoThe imost ocal giu000rting a
Hlall Aclieves a Uniqte Unity in His ocobroin2
Ha l oo, este mcois the isie is tie Leagie
f Women Vors. It has 330
members in 28 Michigan commu-
Continued from Page 71 sidles of tings. the things that are work is admirable and it now must nites, organized to "promote in-
The second section of the book there " appear obvious even to the most. formed participation by citizens
is just that kind of affirmative In the whole volume and es- skeptical. that Mr. Hall is no ion mgovernment.
statement. pecialy in the second half. the er testing his ings he is using The League claims a conven-
Some of the moat aensitive nd technique and craft of poetry have them. The "Sestina" suggested by tion is the best way to revise the
probing poetry is to be found here grown and matured since the pub- Ezra Pound's sestina, was pub- constitution because it offers:
in this section on "Men Alone." lication of Exiles and Marriages. lished earlier in an anthology and lime to do the job; opportunity to
T y emn ths iltemrc a is a tour de force of technical review the whole constitution;
The majority of the poems in this While the metrics are much control coupled with content. complete revision in one opera- in-cheek campaign supporting the
part are intimate yet objective more subtle there is a real danger tion delegates of high caliber who convention.
statements of life which touch the that the line will drift from thewlnelegat ighecali wc onention
universals in human experience. prose-like to the prose. The dis- BECAUSE this volume is not just will be less susceptible to political Republican candidate for gay
tinction is a fine one but a dis- a book of poetry but rather. the pressures than officials subject to ernor Paul Bagwell has come out
Like Browning, Mr. Hal takes dre-election. in favor of the constitutional con-
real delight in portraying char- tinction none-the-less and it will credo of a man who las a per- vention and so has GOP Sen
t d h cha be interesting to see what direc- sonal and compelling tonguea
acr an-language of his own, the small EYOND the curious mixture of Charles Potter who is up for re-
tere. However, there are many di- t things he might have done more political parties and pressure election. Their allies are to be
erences and one of the most i- skillfully can be overlooked. groups in this issue is the dich- found in unexpected places.
portant ones is the difference in ONE OF THE most noticeable of The continuity of idea and otomy among the state politicians Agreeing are Lt. Gov. Philip A.
approach. Browning portrays he the changes in style and tech- theme is unusual in a volume of hat has caused a strange tongue- See CONSTITUTIONAL, page 11
psychological aspects of charac- nique is the abandonment of what poetry, and it is not true of Mr. ---_-_----_
ter while Mr. Hall concentrates on can facetiously be referred to as Ball, whatever may be said of the
description of attitude to throw the 'ugly couplet,' and while this
younger generation of poets, that]
light on the idea he is driving at. is not seriously put, it is seriously their works are more impressive
intended. Its very occasional use collectively than individually.
T IS NATURAL that the subjects is enjoyable but more than ons On the contrary, it is only by
of poetry are such abstract yet or two in a short volume become seeing this small collection of his
real things as love, loneliness, and less than exciting. recent poems that we can truly
death. As to rhyme, it is judiciously see this poet's work in any kind
It is the poet who must see them used when needed and judiciously of perspective, and this collection
with new eyes and bring them to avoided when wise. The predilec- is impressive. Above all else, it W EA R
life again, whole and fresh. Again tion at times for rhyme is best strikes one that it is the work of
they must become vital and im- put in his own words when he a civilized, sensitive, and creative
mediate and in this, Mr. Hall sue- says, "there are times/ when it man.
ceeds very well. Always, he ap- seems highly serious to catch/ the He has earned his "honest eye"
proaches them with the intent to indeterminate between two and created a poetry both mature
break into "the structure of rhymes." and without pose or pretense. It
things/ by repeated speed and However, the subordination of is his lucid insight and clarity of
force in order to lay bare/ in technical devices to the meaning purpose which distinguishes Mr. S
words, naturally, unwo ded/ in- and intent of the poems in the new Hall as a poet of stature. I
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I

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2

Page Nine

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