The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 26, 1980-Page 5 SKINHEADS VS. HEAVY METAL A T CENTER STAGE Specials concert: A lteral riot BY MARK DIGHTON There's, bad planning, and then there's bad planning. It seemed Satur- day night that the management of Cen- ter Stage could do no right. Through a last-minute change in booking, a con- cert originally scheduled for Bookies in Detroit by Britain's latest wunderkin- ds, The Specials, was tacked onto a concert by local heavy metal bar band, Teezer. That sort of booking is inex- able. So was Teezer. My mother always taught me that if I didn't have anything nice to say then I shouldn't say anything at all, so I won't mention Teezer again. . . except for a bit of ad- vice to the aforementioned group: Louder is not necessarily better. SO, the entire night was set up for conflict. The disco-retread, Coliseum- like interior of the Center Stage was ready for the opponents, with.Teezer's fans playing the lions, The Specials' ns playing the gladiators, and the uncers ... Well, the bouncers were a whole different war. Not only did the Specials' fans object quite loudly to being forced to tolerate the opening act, but many Teezer; fans stayed through the Specials' set to wreak vocal vengeance. Verbal abuse was not the limit to the evening's expression of ten- sion, but it certainly was preferable to the unrelieved stress as we waited for he Specials to enter the arena. IT IS QUITE a tribute to The Specials that they were able to deliver their audience (at least those who were in- terested) from this all-too-realistic scene to a dancing euphoria. They brilliantly fuse the contagiously twisting rhythms of early reggae ("ska") to the drive of punk and end up with a whirlwind of irrestible energy. During some of their most frantic num- bers, they had to have half as many padies on stage as group members just keep the seven crew-cut lads' cords untangled as they careened all over the stage.- One of the vocalists, Neville, never ceased to move throughout the entire concert. While reserved to the microphone, he insisted on running around in circles as if he was all hepped up with nowhere to go. Jerry Dammers, the organist and brains behind the band, occasionally got so carried away that he had to come out from behind his Vox Continental to do a toothless class- clown jig with Lynval Golding, one of the guitarists. In contrast to all of that enthusiasm, Terry Hall, the lead singer (and the one with the scary eyebrows), stood tensely motionless, his expressionless face matching his expressionless voice. The two vocalists actually made a nice pair - Neville with his unbounded energy, black face, and white shirt; Terry with his menacing stare, white face and black suit. The only time he smiled was when dedicating a song to "that twat over there who keeps booing us between numbers." Even aside from Terry's severe look, The Specials' appearance (sort of "neo-skinhead": crew cut, thin tie, dark suit, and white socks) is cer- tainly alien to America. STILL, THEY seem to be doing quite well for themselves. Their Elvis Costello-produced album is selling well enough here in America and is a huge hit in Britain. That's been their story from the beginning, though. The first five singles on their own label, Two- Tone Records, all made Top Ten, a feat which has only been equalled by Apple, the Beatle's old label. If their concert is any indication, they certainly deserve their success. By halfway through their set, they had people crammed onto the dance floor and the overflow dancing in the aisles. When the dance floor got too tight, a, couple of skinheads from the audience, joined the band on stage to dance to "Nite Klub." (Key line and general omen: "What am'I doing here?") That was their first mistake. Their second was when one of the dancers ac- tually got off the stage when the boun- cers motioned them to come off. That's when the proverbial excrement hit the proverbial air circulation device. Of course, the bouncers propelled the guy right toward and through the nearest exit. The Specials stopped playing in shock and quickly demanded that the bouncers let the absconded fan back in the door. When the bouncers refused, smirking superiorly, The Specials left the stage. The crowd's shouts rang up- ward into volvanic force. The bouncers only smiled more sadistically. AFTER FIFTEEN minutes of clap- ping and pounding on tables (oc- casionally punctuated by the crash of a beer mug pounded just a bit too hard on the tabletop) the Specials returned to the stage. After snarling "Respect human beings" in the general direction of the stony bouncers, they launched in- to their hit, "Gangsters." In no time, the crowd was piling up on the stage faster than the bouncers could do anything about it. Before long, they had what must have been close to one hun- dred people on stage with them, dan- cing and hugging them. The concert could very well have en- ded on that triumphant note, but the crowd wanted more and The Specials were glad to give it. Thunderous ap- plause brought them back for yet two more encores. The second of this set was "You're Wondering Now," which also ends the album with a bittersweet a capella refrain - "o ' t-oI* 4ring tnii It hatto toi .1o e vottknow. -repeated endlessly. Before they'd sung this refrain more than twice, the entire audience had joined in. As they left the stage, the audience continued to sing. The feeling was surprisingly com- parable to singing "Give Peace a Chan- ce" at a' candlelit peace rally. All the tensions of the evening were behind us... But not all the dancing. After we had sung the refrain over and over again for what seemed like fifteen minutes, The Specials returned for again two more encores. One of them was "Gangsters" again, I guess because they'd run out of songs. There was no doubt in our minds as we filed out of the gaudy fast-food music hall that The Specials had given their all. What's more, they had even won the war by simply standing their ground. abortion?" Free Pregnancy Testing mmediate Results Confidential Counseling tiComplete Birth Control Clinic Medicaid o Blue Cross . 110Ann Arbor and Downriver area -- (313) 559-0590 Southfield area -) Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. ' a WOMEN. YOU'RE EQUAL IN THE AIR FORCE. ............... h t :I Women start out on the same footing as men in Air Force ROTC. Women wear the same insignia and hold the same cadet positionsin AFROTC, just as they do later on as Air Force officers. And the same AFROTC scholarship can be yours as a woman. 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AIR FORCE ROTC OPEN HOUSE 28 February, 1980, 6:30-8:15 PM 165 North Hall-Call 764-2403 'U' study says inflation hurts some firms more than others £ ROTC Gateway to a great way of life. -Z / "': f f r N r rff rf F. i By JULIE BROWN 1 While inflation can be a severe problem for American business, the impact of rising prices is much less noticeable in some firms than others, according to thfee University researchers i& he Graduate School of Business Administration. The researchers-Raymond Reilly, Thonas Gies and Timothy Nantell-found in a recent study that he consequences of inflation on inancial performance varied with management policies rather than with the inflation rate in the industry. Their study focused on the performance of wholesale-distributors in four product areas: metals, foods, drugs, and building materials. According to Reilly, 'an associate professor of finance, the study involved 642 firms at its first level. 'WE SENT OUT a questionnaire to at many firms," he said. "It was sort of a two-phase effort. We wanted to determine the degree of susceptibility to inflation." Susceptibility to inflation may varyj according to several factors, such as, the variability of product lines, the number of suppliers, and the number of customers, he explained. A firm locked into a customer market, serving two or three customers who largely dictate erms, will suffer under inflationary * onditions more so than a less restricted firm. "We then sent a second questionnaire to those indicating susceptibility," Reilly said. The second questionnaire, which was sent to 250 to 300 firms, analyzed management policies. "We tried to control for representativeness, and that's why we chose those," Reilly said. "They provide us with examples across the spectrum of price change. "WE WANTED to know if there was a difference. From our perspective, there was really no difference." The researchers found that the average inflation rate varied from 6.2 per cent for drugs to 12.3 per cent for building materials, compared with 9.7 per cent for all commodities. -Reilly said that, for purposes of the study, the current inflation rate (approximately 13 per cent) was defined as high. The 1971-72 three to five per cent rate was used as the low reference point, he said. The researchers studied specific management policy areas, such as credit policy, number of product lines, and pricing behavior. One study question sought to analyze pricing behavior, Reilly said. In a hypothetical situation in which a competitor decided to reduce prices, the most common response was to wait out the situation, the study found. CREDIT POLICIES also differ according to the rate of inflation, the researchers noted. "We found that a high rate of inflation did change policies in that firms were less likely Ao let customers dictate policies," Reilly said. "In general, the result we found was that firms are more likely to enforce terms. If they don't get their money from the customer, they have to borrow at very high terms." The variety of product lines may also be influenced by the inflation rate, the study determined. "In the past, wholesale firms have tried to be everything to everybody," Reilly said. "Today, there is a tendency to cut out some of those lines. "Managers are acting in a way that I think leads to greater efficiency," he added. Use Da l Class if ieds LfADIES NIGHT 'tim out# 1140 South University 668-8411 egineer Pacific Gas and Electric Company, one of the nation's largest investor- owned public utilities, is looking for: EE's and ME's who are seeking dynamic careers in the energy business. PGandE recruiters will be interviewing graduating seniors on MARCH 14 Please contact your engineering college placement office for information. PJGC E I 58orbetr tiook f4w gttvttcg 9Jou to0}c,/tJI 'i Q.AkbOlt JAut4Oh 1979 ~Jewbe&nj (A wand Cb~tnncA B~ooleSiigtq qand 9~oinmaQ Deception