Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 7, 1972 Page Two THEMICHIGAoDAILYWednesdy, June7,197 cc: ha li n1 McGovern wins 3 states (Continued from Page 1) Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), three per cent, Rep. Shirley Chisholm (D-N.Y.), two per cent. McGovern captured his home state's 17 delegates to the Demo- cratic National Convention with- out opposition in yesterday's South Dakota primary. President Nixon won the 14 GOP convention delegates with- out opposition. Sen. James Eastland (D- Miss.) easily won renomination in the Democratic primary yes- terday to a sixth term, and civil rights figure James Meredith was defeated in a bid -for the Republican nomination. Eastland, who had waged his most spirited campaign since 1954, jumped into the lead with the first returns and quickly out distanced both attorney Taylor Webb of Leland and state Rep. Louis Fondren of Moss Point. Businessman Gil Carmichael of Meridian whipped Meredith of Jackson, whose enrollment in the University of Mississippi in the 96es attracted national atten- tion, for the Republican nomina- tion and the right to oppose East- land in the November general SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Today Is BARGAIN DAY 75c until 5 p.m. ELIZABETH' TAYLOU1 MICHAEL CAtNAI SUSANNAHI XY& aZee election. Two independents have al- ready announced for the race. Meredith led in six of the 82 counties, all of them areas with heavy black voting strength. With 2,e03 of 2,522 voting units reporting, the Democratic vote was Eastland 149,109 or 69.8 per cent, Webb 51,375 or 24.0 per cent and Fondren 13,242 or 6.2 per cent. The Democratic turnout was almost 10 times heavier than the GOP vote. In other Senate nomination contests: -Republican Sen. Clifford Case of New Jersey easily won re- nomination. Paul Krebs, a for- mer Congressman, won the Dem- ocratic nomination . to oppose him. -Rep. James Abourezk won Democratic nomination to the Senate in South Dakota. The Re- publican race was not decided. The seat is now held by ailing retiring Sen. Karl Mundt. --JacksDaniels, a banker and former state legislator, won a 25-way race for Democratic Sen- ate nomination in New Mexico. Pete Domenici of Albuquerque was the Republican choice to seek the seat of retiring Sen. Clinton Anderson. -Sen. Lee Metcalf swept to Democratic renomination in Montana. Helena rancher Henry Hibbard led in the Republican race. By RIChARD GLATFER X, Y, and Zee bored the hell out of me the first time I saw it. Yet, lookirg back, I thought I had seen glimmers of themes that someone, somewhere, some- how had injected into this rau- cous, bloated mess of a movie. Themes like the impossibility of honesty, the difficulty of self- liberation, the totality of human role-playing, etc, etc, etc. After all, some reasonably in- telligent mind could have con- ceived the basic outline and then passed it on to grossly inferior hands. Zee (Liz Taylor) and Robert Blakely (Michael Caine) are unliberated, party people. Philanderers both, but firmly attached to each other. Stella (Susannah York), a young wid- ow, is also a feminine type: docile, vulnerable, defenseless. Stella hits it off with Bobby at a swinging soiree, and Zee, jealous, possessive bitch that she is, declares war. Zee's tactics: a sudden flight to Spain, designed to send Robert into a rage; an even more sudden return to London the following night, one that spoils Bobby's romantic plans; an auto accident that somewhat ruins the lovers' weekend Scottish tryst; and ul- timately, as one might expect, a failed attempt at suicide. Is there an answer for this happy trio? A light begins to glimmer when Stella agrees to visit Zee in the hospital during her suicide convalescence. The The MicehiganDatty, edited snd man- aged hy stu~dents at she University at Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- lgon. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbose, Michigan 48104. Published daily Taco- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. subscription rates: $10 by earrere. e11 by mail. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Gh'o); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). two achs):(- an honest, open rapport unlike anything seen thus far in the film. No ap- parent role playing here. Stella shyly tells Zee of her Lesbian tendencies. Zee tells Stella of an event from her past that she has never had the courage to tell anyone previously. Inevitably, Zee comes to Stella's apartment and seduces the girl. True love at last? Hardly. Robert happens over to the apartment, sees his wife answer the door, views Stella in bed, and slowly, confusedly be- gins to comprehend what has happened. Zee smiles a bitchy, scheming, victorious smile. Stel- la buries her head in the pillow. The End. Certainly, there are possibili- ties here for a cynical film about all those themes I've mentioned and more. Add some lines like, "I'm sick of the way I'm ex- pected to be," and, "Her whole life is a lie," and those ghosts of themes might actually seem to exist. Masochist that I am, I went back to X, Y, and Zee to search for ghosts. No such phantoms exist. X, Y, and Zee is an irredeemable 200 megatonner.- The movie is one big gimmick from its cutesy title to the opening shot (white ping pong ball against black background, then slow motion shot of Liz frantically gyrating in an attempt to make the paddle meet the ball) to the closing one (stills of the three stars intercut while Three Dog Night blares on the soundl k. Brian lutton's direction is care- less and flashy, a poor attempt at a VirWoni. Woolf-style shock treatment that just doesn't work. "Frankly, Scarlett, I don't give a shit," coming from the mouth of Liz Taylor might have had an effect in the mid '60's, but it doesn't now. All this is compounded by the film's terrible miscasting, Liz does her Virginia Woolf thing- the bitch with the heart of brass -and does it more hysterically than before. She is shrill and unsubtle, unsympathetic and seemingly invulnerable, when the character she plays should be exactly the opposite. Michael Caine does a smooth rehash of Alfie. He too is slick, relying on a small collection of mannered expressions rather than trying for a more varied and genuine style of acting. Susannah York, pretty, fragile, and defenseless, is more closely fitted to her role (though I'll be damned if I can see why anyone as youthful as she would be attracted to the paunchy, sagging, middle-aged Blakely's). Yet she too fails to project the depth or sensitivity demanded by the role. As for those themes and things I thought I'd seen; set a monkey at a typewriter and he just might come up with a word. I'll be damned if those stereotypes were intended as such or if those conversations about hon- esty and other peoples' expecta- tions were conceived with any larger purpose in mind. U.S. court overturns Richmond busing order TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI * NATURAL TECHNIQUE DEVELOPS FULL CREATIVE ABILITIES *ePROVIDES DEEP REST AND RELAXATION " lIFE EXPANDS IN FULFIiLMENT INTRODUCTORY LECTURE (Continued from Page 1) sible to integrate schools real- istically and fairly only by go- ing outside the city's boundaries. "Only a plan that encompas- es all or part of the metropoli- tan area can guarantee the con- stitutional rights of all the peo- ple in that district," he h a s said in explaining why he pro- poses consolidation of Detroit schools with surrounding sub- urbs. Judge Robert Merhige Jr. of Richmond, who was reversed yesterday by the circuit court, concluded there were too fewv whites left - Richmond is about 75 per cent black - to do any- thing meaningful about school de- segregation without reaching out to mainly white Henrice and Chesterfield Counties. A similar solution appears in the offing in Indianapolis, At- lanta and elsewhere as judges wrestle with the fact big-city schools reflect the growing black character of the population. The question is one the Su- preme Court will have to resolve. However, its answer will not come until after the new school year has begun - and probably after the 1972 presidential ele- tion. The justices already have post- poned until next winter t h e i r consideration of a school case from Denver that could clear the air considerably. It calls for a more precise definition of of- ficially sanctioned segregation. Federal judges are not about to erase political boundaries or to order children onto b u s e s without evidence of segregation by official action, or at ]east purposeful inaction. As Chief Justice Warren Sure- er said last year about the Charlotte, N.C., school case: "It is important to remember that judicial powers may be exercis- ed only on the basis of a con- stitutional violation." The high court never h a s stated directly whether judges can consolidate adjoining school districts to accomplish integra- tion. Whether the judges have pow- er to restructure the inernal government of a state alsom ust await the outcome of the ex- pected appeal in the Richmond case. TONIGHT 7 and 9 THURSDAY-JUNE 8-7 P.M. UGLI-MULTIPURPOSE ROOM for further info. call 761 -8255 I A ERIWAWARYD -~ STARTS TOMORROW! TAtDr tonBEST Costume Design NOM 'NATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS NCLUDING B EST PICTURE 3 A 1S 231 S. State Dial 66-6264 STATE f"Openl1n45 Shows at 2 p m., 5 p.m, &8 p m. ENDS TODAY! lacked" (PG) with Charlton Heston Shown Today at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Jury. Prize Award Winner 1912 Cannes Festival "SLAUGHTERHOUSE- FIVE" NVRA ITP-1MtO