Page 6-Friday, June 8, 1979-The Michigan Daily TOiROBIA T...R.,BI Singer fights fc By MIKE TAYLOR sees only on rare occasions-stand in Special to the Daily the lobby of Swingo's Hotel, hoping the CLEVELAND-It's fifteen minutes pallid disco music of the Snap Shots in past midnight and still there's no sign of the Keg and Quarter Lounge will just go Tom Robinson. We begin to wonder if away, and inviting our new hero out for the tip we got after the concert was a a night on the town. well-intentioned mistake or an act of I THINK WE first understood Tom pure malevolence. But as we're getting Robinson's sincerity when the bouncers up, Danny Kustow, the Tom Robinson tried to make us stop dancing during his Band's angry guitarist, walks through opening number at the Agora, "All the front door with Robinson not far Right All Night," and Robinson objec- behind, ted, "they can stand up, you know." We-eight fans turned into fanatics Robinson's concert was a triumph y th¢ kind of erck and roll show one because the power of his politics-he is [SON SPEAKS >r gay liberation upfront about both his homosexuality and radical beliefs-combines with the energy of his tight four-piece rock band to form the sort of cathartic release no one else (short of the Clash, of course) can provide. Dancing to rock and roll is enjoyable enough, but when the song is called "Ain't Gonna Take It" or "Don't Take No For An Answer" it's a special thrill. Robinson accepts our invitation and we head out-in three separate cars-for a gay disco called Exedra. We ignore the "Members Only" sign and plunge inside, only to find it strangely empty. The swirling disco lights have no one to illuminate. We decide we'd rather talk than dance anyway, so we head back to our cars. WE CRUISE PAST a Muzak fac- tory, and by the time we hit the open road we're racing. Tom Robinson's car takes the lead. By the time we catch up we've reached Trax, another gay dance spot. But the doorman won't let Robinson in because he doesn't have an I.D. with him. "But he has two records out," we protest. "I don't care who he is," the doorman retorts. Robinson pulls a piece of paper from his pocket-the ad for his con- cert-and points to his smiling face. "That's me, and I'm 28," says an exasperated Robinson. "I'm sorry," Mackey takes after lengthy (Continued from Page 3) MSU to become chancellor of the State University of New York in January 1978. It was speculated that the board's hand was forced because Harden had said he would leave MSU June 30 even if a new president had not been selected. But board members disputed those claims, saying they had chosen the best possible person for the job. AS THEY lauded Mackey, trustees expressed relief that the long search process was finally over. "I have nothing but good feelings about where we're going," said Joh Bruff (D-Fraser), chairman of the Board of Trustees. Several trustees said the choice of Mackey would vindicate all the criticism surrounding the selection process. THE STORMY 18-month search process was plagued by leaks of can- didates' names to the press, which was a betrayal of the confidentiality MSU's search and selection committee had promised presidential contenders. The process broke down so much that in mid-April the 17-member committee suspended its role, and the trustees ap- pointed a six-member select committee to choose the new president. The game that doesn't need any help The BILLIARDS atthe UNION Reduced rates 'til 6 PM the man replies. "We must have an ID." WE DECIDE TO return to.Swingo's, wondering all the while how strange it is that Robinson, who is as close to beinga media hero as thegay community has (he has been written up in Christopher Street and the Advocate) should be turned away by one of the city's most prominent gay discos. Back at Swingo's, we sit down in the back of the Keg and Quarter Lounge-as far from the band as we can get-and Robinson buys us a round, ordering a double orange juice for him- self. We tell Robinson that most of us are from Detroit and he tells us we just missed him at Bookies. "After the show, Wayne Kramer of the MC-5 showed me around the town," he says. "We visited the Motown studios." THIS TOUCHES OFF a brief laudatory discussion of Martha and the Vandella's promise of revolution, See MUSIC, Page 7 MSU post search Mackey himself withdrew from the competition after his name had been leaked in April, but said yesterday he agreed to re-submit his name because university representatives urged him to talk further with the search committee, promising that his status would not again be revealed. "They made a strong case about the nature of the University," Mackey said. "It was sufficiently appealing." WHEN QUESTIONED about his af- firmative action policies, which ap- parently were criticized heavily at Texas Tech and during his tenure at the University of South Florida (USF), he said, "I have a personal and moral obligation to go in spirit well beyond what the letter of the law requires." Mackey apparently had difficulty with faculty and students at USF. Various USF sources described Mackey as a "cold and ruthless" ad- ministrator, but criticism at Texas Tech has not been as strong. Some have described Mackey as being inaccessible, but he said, "I have always tried to be accessible to the people who want to see me." AFTER THE press conference, Mackey met with administrators, and student and faculty groups. He avoided questions about MSU's recent decision to divest itself of stock in U.S. companies which do business in South Africa. Mackey said he was attracted to MSU by the "potential that the school has for leadership both nationally and in the world." He will assume the post no later than Sept. 1. Harden said he would be willing to serve until Mackey moves to East JLasing, and will offer his assistance d-trin gthe transition pe-od. -