0 0 ;; 0. The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Jc Page 2-Sunday, Jcnuary 20,1980-The Michigan Daily Fre space poetry izd l U c;.s.,!: '~'4 . %kf4J ,, ,. ' ;f1 f / / R lY , 1 'v ri/ ; . - ,' ~'L s * e - " f,+ y*q . .ce i ° f{ ii ", . ". ' i'; 1wf"" f f ~w / JE./ y, R'Crw !"r' n.,w7u % *" l~i° '/9 //// ANI V K 'S 9, 1r . _ "..." JL IN RN . oommm s 02 1 a j.f 'rr f, il? .1 \ ".4Af SS Rock And No Water And The Sandy Road "There is more romance in anthro- pology than there is in ordinary life." -Derek Walcott, "What the Twilight Says: An Overview" Scratchy calypso And Crack-lipped, dry highlife Call for dry Shango With dance in the dead grass. Dusty hounds sniff at Black lizards shrivelled And scattered on rocks that Shango rules burning In drums and dumb heat And songs that sing charcoal: Black hands that fuel the beat Dry on the shadows, Bursting in racefire That kindles the white streams And smothers the rain cries, To call more for Shango To scorch the new islands Caught in the salt seas: Jamaican or Cuban , Crying Mali and Songhay. Burning god laughing In dance in the sun disc; Babylon chaffing. The yams of Ibadan. Shango, dance hate with Olodumare's dry corpse, And burn down the old myths In racehate and brown salt. Sour the breast's milk With your call back to Babylon Shouting for raceguilt In your dry, dying whine. -David Victor The~ Suprem~e Court Books Raking the muck on the Third Est .Yl 4~~6 1Disrobul 'U) 3 0 'P 6 [V e J e k , p ' . . E X P E V P S .---- By Keith Richburg THE BRETHREN: INSIDE THE SUPREME COURT By Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong Simon and Schuster $13.95, 467 pp. UICKLY NOW, what is the name of the chief justice of the U.S. su eme court? For extra credit, what U.S. president appointed him? Now for the bonus question: Name each of the other eight justices (first and last names, please). For ten points, which two justices are commonly referred to as "The Minnesota Twins?" If you answered "Warren" for the first question, you are only half right-or half wrong. After all, Mr. Nixon must deliberately have been trying to create confusion by replacing chief justice Earl Warren with chief justice Warren Burger. But if you have trouble naming Mr. Burger's colleagues on the bench, or if you never heard 'Burger and Justice Harry Blackmun referred to as "The Min- nesota Twins" (they have known each other since grade school), well, con- sider youself still better informed than most. Quite contrary to anything I am sure the founding fathers ever intended, the Supreme Court has become the in- visible branch of government. The President daily commands the atten- tion of the nation, and the men and women.of Congress regularly run the media gamut from the Evening News to Face the Nation, winging off on junkets here and there, conducting fact-finding Keith Richburg is the Daily's edi- torial director missions, or running for office. But not those nine staid old men of the high court, who, out of tradition and a general disdain for rough-and-tumble politics, stay removed from the public eye. Justices avoid reporters like the plague, limiting their public appear- ances to bar association gatherings or commencement exercises, and rarely-if ever-consenting to personal interviews. This exclusion from public scrutiny is partly dictated by the rules of judicial decorum, which prohibit public com- ment on pending cases. But often the hush-hush during cases becomes so ingrained that secrecy for secrecy's sake becomes the norm. The court's contact with the public comes only when the nine robed men emerge from a back room to about 200 spectators and reporters, to announce with a judicious amount of pomp and circumstance the latest edicts, decrees, and findings of constitutional law. The decisions are presented as fait accompli, presumably after exhaustive research on matters of law, and unless an occasional dissent is particularly revealing, little is known about the politicking and back-room bargaining that goes into producing some of the weightiest decisions in our history-the Bakkes and the Gannetts. The decisions, and the legal reasoning, are published for broad public perusal and open discussion by scholars and journalists, but often more factors than the law go into the making of a majority. Since the Supreme Court has become so expert at maintaining a shroud of secrecy around its own internal workings, one footnote in Justice Burger's dissent in the Pentagon Papers case 'becomes particularly ironic: There may be an analogy with respect to this court. No statute gives this court express power to establish and enforce the utmost security measures for the secrecy of our deliberations and records. Yet I have little doubt as to the inherent power of this court to protect the confidentiality of its internal operations by whatever judicial means may be required. Burger's obsession with maintaining the secrecy of the court runs on a direct collision course with the kind of in- vestigative journalism that has come to characterize, for better or for worse, much of modern day reporting. That kind of investigative journalism (in the less-enlightened days known as "muckraking") was perfected by Messers. Woodward and Bernstein in All The President's Men, and taken one step further in their encore presen- tation, The Final Days. There is much to be said for this new breed of journalist, this investigative reporter who will stop at no length to find that second source to back up the irrelevant but fascinating details that footnote history. That kind of reporting, after all, uncovered the lies of Watergate, the tragedies of Vietnam and Cambodia, and the sins of the C.I.A. But even the most dogged defen- der of first amendment rights has moral problems with journalists groping for skeletons, often invading the private lives of public citizens. Even the staunchest supporters of a free press, who heralded AU The President's Men as a triumph for the first amen- dment, had to look with some distaste at The Final Days, and ask themselves, really, what principles were served by having everyone know that Richard Nixon liked t private, or drinking prol W HICH ren: I the latest eff Washington vestigator S4 same criteri Days, one v what legal, purpose is Justice Ma Burger, wha Justice Brei think of all c question that nalism from and journali would have t But there Brethren-a minutiae of and person authors deta is too often quick to cri this book d court's veil strate how 1 not apolitica legal judgm of the court, and-tumble going on "o just the opp the nine just and respons and makes r political one are indeed admit so or r such, and th as such, and SeeBI 5 'C 4 David Victor is working toward his' masters degree in English. He has won numerous poetry awards at the University' and is founder and editor' of',Risinig Star, a periodical; ofpoetry. A