page 5b jj ft 'Si ..." it ' !! fUQQQj a w . The poets The last time William Klootkorn put together a book length collection of poems they looked at life through the eyes of a 70 yeai old Kansas tanner. The book, entitled Alvin Turner As Fanvoi, was published by Road Runnel Press last spring. Now ho has completed another set of 48 poems and sent it off to a California publisher, but the main character is a little different type of person. " These poems are about a 19 year o'd youngster," Kloefkom said. "They show him leaving a small midwest town, boied and restless, and he wanders around the country bumping into people. "The book is called Moving On. It begins with restlessness and ends with restlessness," said Kloefkom, a teacher ol creative writing at Nebraska Wesley an University. The boy starts out with the 1 1 v ' 1 '.''V v . A yourself to flesh influences, like when; other x:ople an; at ancf saying, 'That's a bunch ol bullshit. I wouldn't do it that way.' "You've got to have that kind of extreme si; If belief. The neat thing about it is that everybody's dilferent. "I mean, I really admin; professionalism, I really admire dedication. And I would accept anything if I felt that it was done with that level ol conviction. Whether or not I ayieed with it oi not. Whether or nut I was interested in it. But I really appreciate that dedication, you know. "And anything less than that is jusl some kind ot foppish jacking off." notion he might do great things but he's ilways b,;ho!(i:ng to the little town he's from." He admits the therm; isn't new, but he'll tiy to bin. g a little freshness to tfvj wi ihng. "If you sit aiuund waiting for a totally new subject you'll wait foiever," Kloefkom said. "You should try to invent new ways to say old things. Only to i m is new." KJoelkom, AO, with medium length gray hair and sideburns that stretch down below his ears, was born on a !aim in ;.outh central Kansas. When hi! was 2 his parents moved to Attica, a Kansas town of 700, and he grew up then1. "The poems in Alvin Tnrnoi were piovokcd by my grandfather, who is dead now, and I've written about, him ;:s I would have him be," Kloelkorn said. from Moving On (44) There is a beer can bobbing on Wulclen Pond. Also a duck. Not far from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, a young man in marshmallow pumps is drop kicking a football. He is unaware of the girl in the yellow smock, in Tallahassee, who is reciting First Corinthians 13:3, or of the kiss in Sandy Springs who hns chosen the school custodian's closet as the setting for her first pregnancy. Meanwhile, a jet drops from the air like a deceased quail, a length of its instrument panel blooming like curious grass for the milkcows. Along the main street of Timothy, Wyoming, a rodeo queen is aware of her measurements while in a cemetery west of Waterloo the Republicans and the Democrats are at each other's bones. Even in Chicago the various world drones on: a pimp on State Street peddles leftover liver, a man not more than half a mile away dances with his only wife, a woman. William Kloefkom go left