"Dan in the This (well group the sm "'Stay best f 'Mart citem which The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 8, 1979-Page 7 Music is this radical's weapon tcontin edfromPage6) owe them a certain obligation to tour. New York telephone numbers for the much easier to wear a Rock Against sing In The Streets." "It's got riot But what happens if you're in a group L.A. and New York gay switchboards, Racism button than to go to a bar and sound," agrees Robinson. and in a city 5000 people want to see and TRB Two comes with listings of meet people of another race. It's much gets us talking about everybody's you. Do you play five nights at a place political groups from the Black Pan- easier to picket an Elvis Costello con- almost everybody's) favorite like the Agora, or do you play a larger thers to the Clamshell Alliance, as well cert than go up to Harlem." of late, the Clash. "Mick Jones is place?" as suggested books, magazines, and The manager switches on the lights, ceetest guy," confides Robinson. "The Agora," we answer. "Then you newspapers.) He answers, "I want rudely indicating that the bar is closing. Free' was written about Mick's miss four other cities," he replies. them to have access to the information It's after three, time for Robinson to friend Robin, like my brother "And what about Japan and Sweden?" if they want it. You influence people by retire to his fourth floor hotel rc om, and in'." Then we bubble with ex- AOBINSON'S SONGS often have example. If they want to do something for us to step outside, only to find our ent over the Clash's latest LP, marvelous sing-along choruses, like the bourgeois or something outrageous, cars have been locked inside the includes "Capitol Radio" and "I line "we don't need no aggravation" that's okay. I've gone too far with the parking lot gates. 4preacnin--incn.,pa. sne so_ .t-tI-" '6 Fought Te Law and the Law Won. We complain about sell-outs like Rod Stewart, and Robinson counters, "Whenever anybody gets popular, the people who like him kill him. If our album was to go platinum, you'd say the same thing about us. If it was that popular, they'd see the radical thing as a commercial gimmick. Popularity equals distrust. "MY GOAL IS to be around for a long time. I would rather stay exactly where we are now for ten years than become megastars and retire in four years." Robinson clearly believes in his tour: "If people buy your records, then you from "Bully For You" and "sing if you're glad to be gay" from "Glad To Be Gay." "The ritual of the chorus, that repetition, that rhythm, is what makes songs special," Robinson says. "That's the difference between poetry and song lyrics." He also notes: "The sound is as im- portant to the meaning as the words are. I don't like to see my lyrics prin- ted." We ask Robinson if he expects people to act on the information he provides with his albums. (Power In the Darkness came with a paragraph on Rock Against Racism and the L.A. and preaching in the past. The 10 o'c1 ock news on CBS is more effective propaganda than our stuff." Robinson is wearing a button (or "badge" as he calls it) that reads "Vic- tory to the Peoples of Southern Africa," and we are wearing the "TRB Two" buttons that were distributed free before the concert. "A badge can be a meaningful statement, or it can be a cnn-onut." he says. exnlaining: "it's SPRING ARTS STAFF ARTS EDITOR Joshua Peck ARTS STAFF: Sondra Bobroff, Sarah Cassill, Mark Coleman, Sara Goldberg, Eric Graig, Jock Hender- son, Katie Herzfeld, Anna Nissen, Christopher Potter, Nancy Rocker, R.J. Smith, Nina Shishkoff, Tom Stepheos, Keith Tosolt Jack Haley, who charmed millions as the Tin Man in the popular film "The Wizard of Oz", died Wednesday at the UCLA Medical Center following a heart attack. Haley is shown in the foreground as he appeared at the last Academy Awards, and in the background as the Tin Man. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB FRIDAY, JUNE 8 $1.50 EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX- BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK (Woody Allen, 1972) 7 3 10:20 MLB 3 WOODY ALLEN doing to Dr. Ruben's book what should be done to Dr. Ruben's book. At once a parody of pop-psyche and movies themselves, EVERY- THING . . . takes hilarious shots at italian neo-realism, Shakespeare, schlock horror films, 2001, notorious army training films, and the sexual misinformation we all learned behind the swings. Manic, messy, and marve- lous. "Allen's high points are Himalayan."-Vincent Canby. With JOHN CAR- RADINE, LYNNE REDGRAVE, LOUISE LASSER, LOU JACOBI. WHAT'S UP, TIGER LILY? (Senkichi Tanizuchi & Woody Allen, 1966) 8:40 only MLB 3 A Japanese agent named Phil Moscowitz (!) searches for a stolen formula of the perfect egg salad sandwich. What happens next is anybody's guess, as Woody gives the gold finger to the James Bond epic in this hilarious jumble of a movie (a real Japanese thriller which Allen rewrote and re- dubbed). Allen's most anarchistic film with some of his best one-liners. Tomorrow: WAIT UNTL DARK and THE 7% SOLUTIO41