? re frcf aan an'il Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Doiy express the indcivdual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 Busing: What next? JUDGE Stephen Roth's long awaited decision on how to integrate Detroit's public schools raises delicate con- stitutional questions. Roth ordered Tuesday that a massive cross-district busing plan be implemented, combining Detroit and 53 suburban school systems to achieve integrated education. Almost immediately after, state officials said they would appeal Roth's order. In addition, federal judges may intervene to stop the largest mass busing plan ever ordered. And not long ago, a U.S. Court of Appeals overturned a lower court's order to implement cross-district busing in Richmond, Va. CONGRESS, too, has entered into the busing snafu. The Higher education bill finally passed last week, but attached to it was a rider to ensure that lower education pupils would not themselves be riders-on buses, that is. The bill states that no busing orders may be implemented until all appeals have been exhausted. President Nixon has come out against busing, not unexpectedly. The Supreme Court - no branch of gov- ernment has stayed away from this one - will probably issue a clarification this fall of the 1954 ruling which overturned the separate but equal segregated schools practice. The high court will have much to decide. Which circuit court ruling is proper? Does Judge Roth have the power to consolidate school systems; or does the latest Richmond decision prevent that? Politicians babble on and on, white suburban parents grit their teeth and black parents worry whether anyone cares what kind of education their children may receive once they get where they're going. Meanwhile, George Wallace, one of the first promi- nent politicos to express open and racist - it might be added that he was at least honest - opposition to bus- ing lingers in the hospital. George must be pleased at all those persons bothering themselves about his con- trived issue. THOSE who care so much about busing plans should walk outside, take a whiff of air, pass a supermarket with outrageous prices posted, glance at a newspaper de- tailing the devastation of Indochina and then decide what is really important to them. ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Co-Editor I- I s.I V - Splashing in the NYC pool By DONALD SOSIN Three recent dips in the New York cultural pool proved refreshing and entertaining-one opera, one concert, and an evening of theater. The opera was performed at the tiny Cubicule Theatre, an offshoot of the National Shakespeare Company that presents a continual assortment of plays, dance, poetry and music. The night I went they were doing a brand-new work called "The Four-Note Opera," by Tom Johnson, a 32- year-old New York-based composer and sometime critic for the Village Voice. The work is an hour long, yet makes use of only four notes in the scale: A, B, D and E. The result is not boredom, but wonderful entertainment. The five members of the cast sing about noth- ing but themselves and their arias - the tenor laments that he has but one aria to sing; the contralto announces that the soprano will sing her first aria after she changes and docs her deep-breathing exercises. The accompaniment is for piano alone, and that coupled with the small cast would make the opera an ideal choice for a small repertory company. Johnson's Scene for Piano and Tape, the cur- tain-raiser, was additional proof of the compos- er's wit and imagination, as the taped voice con- verses with the pianist, plays duets, decides it wants to make it on its own, and dares the pianist to cut the speaker wire. The Cubiculo is looking for ways to bring these and other productions to campuses around the country. Music doesn't generally spring to mind when one mentions Pepsi-Cola, but this past year the corporation has presented a series of concerts at their headquarters in suburban Purchase, in as- sociation with the State University of New York College at Purchase. The six performances by the sensational young Concord String Quartet gave listeners the oppor- tunity to hear some of the newest works in the repertoire, as well as familiar classics. On a recent Sunday afternoon the quartet of- fered the Dvorak "American" Quartet and a bril- liant work by George Rochberg, his Quartet No. 3, written a few months ago for the Concord Quartet, and premiered May 15 in N.Y.C. Rochberg's work is an important step in the direction of what one might call "the new eclec- ticism;" Bartokian rhythms play leapfrog with soaring lines reminiscent of late Beethoven, and one hears echoes of Ravel, Dvorak, and Mahler in between. The result is surprisingly well unified, and provides hope that composers may still find something new to say in older musical languages, The performance was superb. The Dvorak had some good moments, but the Rochberg was first-rate from beginning to end. A performance in March of Crumb's Black Angels was equally exciting, and one looks forward to recordings of these and other new works, to be issued later this year. Back in the city I caught one more show- a double bill by Tom Stoppard. In the two plays, After Magritte and The Real Inspector Hound, the characters are involved in cases of mistak- en identity, and a general confusion and help- lessness in dealing with events going on around them that recalls Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead. But these plays are not philosophy lessons, they are whodunits, and very funny ones. After Magritte is a real-time conversion of what one might get out of a painting by that surrealistic master. The characters and set are nitty-Magritty, and the dialogue, a la Ionesco, convinces us that either everyone is mad or that they ought to take out their earplugs and listen to one another. Inspector Hound is the most ingenious play I've ever seen, maybe excepting Sleuth. As the Four-Note Opera deals with operatic convention, so Hound is about theatrical device, and how two critics interact with the play they are attend- ing. Murder is involved, and there are more twists in the plot than Chubby Checker ever dreamed of. The excellent cast (including Carrie Nye, Boni Enten and Remak Ramsay) included eight per- sons, making the plays perfect material for any of the fine theater groups around Ann Arbor. A Letters to The Daily Cancer and blacks To The Daily: IN THE JUNE 5 issue of the Ann Arbor News an article entit- led, "Detroit Blacks Lead in Can- cer" points out that statistics show that black men contract cancer with nine percent greater probability than white men. Fur- ther, there is a 32 per cent in- crease over 20 years ago in can- cer for black men. The manner in which these data are handled by the Associated Press clearly re- veals this society at work covering up the institutionalized genocide of black people. According to Dr. M. J. Brennan (formerly director of Ford Hos- pital's cancer program), t h e large increase in the last 20 years is mostly due to better diagnosis now that rural blacks have mov- ed to the inner cities where med- ical services are so much more prevalent. Just in case this spe- ciousness requires refutation, it's convenient that the adjacent ar- ticle on the same page of the newspaper documents the fact that in Kalamazoo for example, there are two doctors ;serving seventeen thousand inner city residents while two hundred doc- tors service two hundred thous- and suburbanites near and in the same city. The latter is a nation- wide phenomenon. Even more incredible is that Dr. Brennan claims that a great deal of the increase in black cancer is due to a rising standard of liv- ing for blacks. He goes on to say that since blacks now live long- er than years ago they are more susceptible to cancer which at- tacks in more advanced years. One only needs to note the fact that the average life span for blacks is now shorter than 20 years ago to cancel that argument ' see the introduction to "The Chemical Feast" by James Tur- ner). The real reason for the in- crease follows from the obser- vation that two out of the three most prevalent cancers, different for whites, are cancer of the eso- phagus, now related to dietary deficiencies t Science, Feb. 25, 1972), and cancer of the lungs, long related to bad city air. It's clear that it doesn't take a PhD or MD to make the simple connec- tion that forcing formerly rural blacks to live in the poverty of the inner city gas chambers of our society exposes them to the deadly razor edge of our increas- ingly nutritionally deficient and chemically polluted environment. Mark Green Chemistry Prof. June 14 Blow-up on Blow-up To The Daily: ON JUNE 13 the Ann Arbor Film Cooperative exposed on the screen that innovative documen- tary of the mid sixties, Antonio- ni's Blow Up. This film could oth- erwise be titled "One Day in the Life of a Typical Woman Hater" or "How the Feminine Myth is Perpetuated in Today's Youth Culture". This "stunning master- piece" (according to the film coop) is a study in acute con- trasts. Against the backdrop of our modern era, Antonioni has painted prehistoric cave drawings once again: a dazzling portrayal of Our Hero the Man, that dar- ing courageous intelligent and sensitive artist photographer, the golden haired prince on his con- vertible white horse engaged in the heavy struggles of his exist- ence. In every scene he must con- quer anew. Nothing must threaten Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to M a r y Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. his creative genius or his over- whelming sensitivity. A masterful modeling job is done by David Hemmings whom we must view endlessly (or so it seems) in every posture and ex- pression of male glory of which he is capable. Where is the dra- gon to be slain, who is the fair damsel to be saved? No, this is not Love Story and we are not subjected to the typ- ical fairy tale or madonna myths. Antonioni is much too intellectual for that. It is the Bloody Bitches themselves whom our hero must forever fight off. They must not taint him but be kept always fawning in their corners com- pletely subservient, obedient to his every wish, beautiful and of course with their eyes shut. TO PREVENT a case of cog- nitive dissonance with his mod- ern audience, Antonioni has his hero identify strongly with to- day's revolutionary (?) youth culture. The sixties began our psychi delic era and Blow Up treats us both to Vanessa Red- grave's tits and a dope party. Of course, everyone knows how rev- olutionary dope smoking is, but frankly I found myself more than a little uncomfortable watching Redgrave and her sisters with their grotesquely made up faces and unnaturally thin bodies (the ultimate in fair weakness) pros- trating themselves before our curly haired hero to win his fa- vor, I hope the consciousness of our "revolutionary" youth culture has been raised enough since the mid- sixties to recognize just Csow counter revolutionary a d o p e smoking rock culture is if it is used to pejpetuate the age old myths and repression of women. "The social progress of man can be measured by the social posi- tion of women". A stunning mas- terpiece by Karl Marx. Nanci I. Palid June 14 .-- -- I'm sending Spiro on a trip, too... Back to Baltimore! NIGHT EDITOR: CHRIS PARKS EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: ROSE SUE BERSTEIN ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: DIANE LEVICK PHOTO TECHNICIAN: DENNY GAINER