age SEVEN THURSDAY, MAY 15,1975 THE LANCE '^^Fiction For The Ear’’ - John Barth Reads fpiling his audience, I ni just a musician gone wrong ” uthor John Barth a weU- received reading Thursday nirfitof“ficti(Hifortheear. “Hicre is a difference, he «id “between writing for the J ’and for the ear.” The biding Professor of English and Creative Writing at Johns Hopkins discussed his orevious works “Chimera,” “The Sot-Weed Factor,” “The Floating Opera,” “Giles Goat- boy” and “The End of the Road.” He noted that “I write fantasy and then serious work and then back to fantasy.” This is similar to what Andre Gides said of his own work when he described his style as “finishing a project, walking to an opposite corner of my imagination, and beginning a whoUynew me.” Barth then read several long sdections from “Chimera” relating to the mythic Greek hero Bdlerophon. “What I tried to do,” he explained,” was to look at Bdlerophon as an everyday person ^o one day decides to be a mythic hero and sets out to learn how to do it.” Following “Chimera” Barth read a “snijyet” from his yet to be publi^ed novel “Let ters.” An q)istolary novel, using letters from a character 0[U5 as the vehicle for conveying the plot, “Letters” consists of letters between a number of unrelated coorespondents and deals with the “role of epistoles, doctored letters, mislaid letters, faked letters and forged letters in history,” he said. “Think of ^and opera—where would it be without the mislaid letter to livenip the plot?” Barth said he has been working on “Letters” for over seven years, and that it was roughly one seventh finished. Students Attend Competition Three St. Andrews students, David Harris, Mark Podhorency and William Pherson, recently attended the Emory University Business Games Finals held at the famed Research Triangle Park near Chapel Hill, N.C. Under the direction of Dr. Skip Hdmes, diairman of the college’s business department, the St. Andrews team competed with college and university teams from all over the country. Each team was screened to make sure that its level of scholarship in the fields of effort involved was strong enou^ to make them competitive in the finals. In games like the Emory finals, each team is assigned an industry and a product and must compete wito the other teams in an effort to cope with simulated business con ditions. The busmess year the teams operate in is divided in to quarters and profit or loss totds are computed for each. A panel of judges the reviews each team’s performance and chooses a winner. The St. An drews team was placed in the business of producing and marketing digital docks and pocket .calculators, and finished second to Wake Forest University Each SA team member received fif- teai dollars in prize money and the college received (Mie hundred dollars worth of com puter time. Both the students and Dr. Holmes were pleased that they fared as well as they did against substantially larger colleges and universities. It was quite a learning ex perience,” Dr. Holmes com mented, “li am very proud of our team.” Fall Readings (continued from p.l) poets and dosest friend of the late Anne Sexton) can come to SA,” he said. Bayes indicated that the Common Experience, directed by professor Whitney Jones would probably sponsor next year’s Ezra Pound lec ture, and that attempts were heing made to get Pound’s longtime publishe James I^ughlin and Pound’s friaid, the scholar Hu^ Kenner, here tor the occasion. A benefit reading for St. An- ifrews Review is taitatively slated for Tuesday, Sep- tanber 16. It is antidpated tiiat the readers will te Dr. Edmund (“Mike”) Keeley, director of Oie Division of Drama and Creative Wnting at Princeton University; Carolyn Kizer of Washingtm, DC, former head of the Literature Division of me National Endowment for the Arts; and Judith Johnson She.^ „l New York of the Yale Younger Poets award. Keeley, a Guggenheim Award Winner, will read from his translations of the Greek Nobel Prize winner, C.P. Cavafy. “There’s something difficult about writing novels,” he said. “You have to get used to working in a sustained vacuum for long periods of time without any feedback from readers. Poets get feed back all the time since poems are so much less time con suming. I asked Robert Creley how long, for example, it took him to write a poem. ‘Thirty minutes,’ And how long for a book? ‘Five years.’ Doctors are especially good poets, it seems. History is full of them. College Group Attends Meet On Handicaps St. Andrews Presbj^erian College students Laura prumhella-, Steve Lindsay, Buzzy Pierce, Craicetta Ren don, and Robin Titterington, accompanied by Dr. Robert M. Urie, director of health, counsel and rdiabilitation ser vices, recenOy attended the annual meeting of The President’s Committee on En^)loyment of The Han dicapped, in Washingtwi, D.C. Overall theme of the meeting was “Threshold to Century ni - Affirmative Ac- tiffli.” The three-day meeting con sisted of presentatiOTis by various individuals, including Paul Stuber, Reynolds Metals Company; Dr. Harold YiAer, Hofstra University; Alfred Pimentel, Gallaudet College; and, Robert McIntyre, AFL- ao. In addition, discussions were hdd concerning the pros and cons of Affinnative Ac- tion-from the local and m- dividual perspective. Simultaneous panels ^re also conducted wiUi regard to labor, management, and government; Innovative Ap proaches to Employment of Severely Handicapped People; Educational ^d Training Needs of the Severely Handicapped; Placement Techniques - To Assure Acceptance of Han dicapped People; Vototeere and Their Impact on the M- fitmative Adion Movement; Legislation Ad ion ^ of the Future; Disable m Ac^n; and, Congress of People wiUi Disal^lities. William Carlos Williams used to dash them off at his typewriter between patients. Ever heard of a good doctor who became a novelist?” Ending his ninety minute readii^ to thundering ap plause from the full house at Avinger Auditorium, Barth spoke to a number of classes the next morning before retur ning to Maryland. Bacchanalia (Continued from Page 1)~ their friends. Some of the throwers turned into pushees, however as a group of pushers came up behind the throwers and shoved them in with the throwee. (If you can figure that out you are owiously Gertrude Stdn reincarnated.) Altogether twaity-four people ended up in the wet. After lunch a team of bluegrass guitarists set up and played valiantiy in the face of power and speaker failures and not a not inconsiderable degree of humidity. While this was going on at the college Union, swimming, sun bathing, and frisbee throwing were the order of the day at the St. Andrews Beadi and Yacht Club next to New Meek. A few dozen more people were thrown in the lake, but most found it so cool and refreshing they stayed in. An Italian dinner was put on by Epicure that Saturday evening. Red tabledoths ador ned the tables; candles lit the cafeteria, whose glass walls had been curtained off to keep out the sun whidi refused to set until nearly ei^t o’clock. By nine all was in readiness for the Launching, a formal affair on the E^tamble ■ Terrace. Music was jx-ovided by the lioyd Hinscm Band, as elegantly dressed couples dan ced among the light-strung trees. The attme of the 475 people in attendance ranged from the resplendent Malcolm Doubles in a white tie and tails to an exotic Morgan Miles decked out in a white dinner jacket and tennis shorts. “I could have danced all night” seemed to be the theme of the evening and they nearly did, for it was past two in the mor ning when Lloyd and his com pany were finally allowed to pack iq) and go home. Sunday morning an un derstanding Epicure held brunch for the bleary-eyed survivors of the previous evenings merriment. With the brunch Bacchanalia came to an end, the Real World im posed itself firmly on St. An drews for the duration, and preparatiMis for exairs began in earnest. Food Services to Change Hands St. Andrews will have a new food service next year syas business manager Julian Davis. In an interview wth St. Andrevre will have a new food service next year, says business manager Julian Davis. In an interview with Tlie Lance, Dr. Davis said that the college had decided not to renew its contrad with Epicure Management Ser vices because of internal reorganization difficulties being experienced by Epicure and some unsatisfactory business transactions. “Epicure was until recently a three man partnership, Davis said, “but they recently ^lit and one of tiie partners formed his own cranpany. Bdh were vying for St. An drews’ buaness and for the services of our cafeteria’s manager, Dewey Humphries. Dewey decided to go into business for himsdf and sub mitted lower ted. Being a small operatioi just handling St. Andrews he will have less overhead and will save the college maiey in the lixig run, Davis noted.