Page 4-Saturday, April 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily Punk: Behind the chopped-off hair and violence SAN.FRANCISCO-Only one student ever shocked Paul Ehrlich while he taught at Tamalpais High School, and that was Susie Deikman, when she turned punk. Ehrlich would be viewed as hip rather than straight by most people. He was close to students who took psychedelics and rebelled against the establishment in various ways. But when he saw the change in, Susie-who was so bright, talented, mature, as well as an ex- cellent poet-he was stunned. "I realized I was a different generation," he said. "I didn't un- derstand it-and what's more, I didn't want to understand it." THE BIG PUNK gathering this particular Friday is in San Francisco's Temple Beautiful, which is a landmark in recent cultural ar- cheology. It is an old synagogue that once housed a Black Muslim group, then became a dance hall. It stands flanked on the east by the old Fillmore Ballroom where the psychedelic '60s were launched, and on the west by what, until very recently, was Jim Jones' People's Temple and has already become something else: the Korean Central Presbyterian Church. Inside, beneath the high dome where a few lights still glow in the big Star of David, punks are gathering, dressed like Charles Addams characters celebrating some non-stop Halloween, their thing young bodies in black tights and graffiti-covered Salvation Army shirts; heads and faces painted and dyed in many colors; hair chopped, sliced off, shaved; shoulders and arms adorned with chains and leather; black fingernails; high heels. SUSIE AND HER friend Marie Baar/ are here, right up against the stage between the two giant speakers. Their hearing is definitely at stake; even in back of the balcony where we sit, cotton ear plugs are necessary as the band warms up with a grating sound. Susie is readily recognizable because she shaved her head yesterday. Marie's woolly orange-red hairdo blooms nearby. Both are wearing men's cotton shirts. Marie's is a plain working blue, Susie's a bright red, magic- markered all over with "obnoxious" and other favorite words. Black tights, with short black lacy minislips over them, and black heels com- plete their outfits, which they have selected with all the care of girls who follow Glamour in choosing dresses for proms. .' The band, No Alternative, staggers on stage, heating and slamming instruments. The featured singer is Johnny Genocide, a pale, skinny lad with bleached blond hair who jerks and twitches. He is the antithesis of Elvis Presley, a denial of sex, expressing maybe the effects of too much Thorazine, maybe of booze. HE BERATES THE crowd, tosses lighted cigarettes out into it, receives testimonials of empty beer cans from below and flings them back. On the wide floor the punks start to move-shoving, elbowing, pushing each other around, mock-fighting with fists in, their ver- sion of dance. It seems oblivious to rhythm. Occasionally, someone falls to the ground and is dragged about by arms or feet, then allowed to stagger off to the side benches. These people do not hate each other; they are just enjoying some simple body contact, Susie and Marie will later explain. BUT IF THE gestures are ambiguous, the sounds get straight to me-angry, dissonant, stressing the second beat in a rhythm that op- poses the heart. My stomach constricts, the dirty stained glass windows turn dim grey. I feel anxious. The only release would be violent motion. This is fun? It takes me the whole next day to recover. The startling thing about Susie and Marie in person is that they are the most alert, positive, funny, and imaginative people I have met in a long time. WE TALK IN the kitchen of Marie's mother's old Victorian, where both at the moment reside, having had enough, finally, of their previous abode, a raunchy hotel where most customers came for only an hour, in pairs, and paid cash. BEFORE THAT EACH had lived for a while with a boyfriend but that had turned awful. "Boys are so emotional," explains Susie, "they're romantics and such babies. Everything they do they overdo, and then they want your help." "So you don't think people should live together?" I ask. "Not in a boyfriend-girlfriend situation-not until they grow up," says Marie. That they are too young for some experiences is one of the discoveries Susie, 17, and Marie, 19, made since they left their life in affluent Marin County-where there is plenty of space for wholesome activity-and moved into the seedy city punk scene in pursuit of the real and the true. SINCE THEN, WHILE their hair went through various hues, they roamed streets at hours and in places they had certainly been By Rasa Gustaitis cautioned against, talked with people they would never have met back home, spent nights drinking and not eating and trying heavy drugs and getting sick. They had done a lot of wild and weird and dangerous things. They had done them for reasons similar to those that drove other young people of their. social station to become bohemians in Paris in the '20s, created the beat generation in the '50s, thing in a box. So they ask you questions: Who are you? What are you?" "You have to relate to people more nicely," adds Marie, "because people will be frightened." "A lot of people get into punk because they are looking for themselves, they want to be challenged and experience abandon. The scene lets you explore in a nurturing atmosphere," Susie explains. BUT ALL THIS sounds like zen, I observe. Maries agrees. "When I was first reading about punk rock in music magazines, I said, looks like fighting, really isn't. But what about those kids with safety pins through their cheeks? I had been told: "We are sacrificing our bodies so people will wake up to what society is doing to us." WELL, THEY SAID, there are things that area done for attention and shock. "Both of us have these icky scars on our arms," says Marie, showing a jagged cut above the vein in her left wrist. It was self-inflicted, but not in an attem- pt at suicide, "to see if you have the power to cut yourself and not be afraid of it," says Susie. But a lot of people their age, do commit suicide, I say. "Yes," says Marie, "and it's no wonder. 'Cause you're told all over the place, don't expect a future. Don't have children, don't this and that. Our parents were told, 'Get. married, live for the American dream."' Some punks are also fascinated by war, and are fans of such things as Soldiers of Fortune magazine. "But they don't want to kill-they just want to go into the jungle and survive," says Susie. "You want to be pushed to your limits of physical survival." FOR SUSIE AND Marie, the punk adven- ture has a happy ending: both will be going on to school next fall-Marie to San Francisco k State University, to study "a lot of languages," Susie to a small Eastern school that allows you to intern in careers of your choice. Daughter of a psychiatrist, she plans to go on to study medicine. In the process of their self-testing the friends have discovered, for one thing, their parents. Both moved out from home, then-having established their breakaway through the punk rite of passage-found they could return in more adult roles. They also discovered that too much sex could be a bummer. So they invented "punk bun- nies:" lots of people sleep together in one49 bed-but just to cuddle. And the future? "We are the future," says Marie. "And we should be having children, with our attitudes, and bringing them up, I'm not going to live to die." "All the negative stuff, like Johnny Rotten saying, 'No future,' that was to wake people up," says Susie and quotes a slogan of the Sex Pistols: "'We're the flowers in y'our dustbin."' Rasa Gustaitis teaches journalism at the University of California at Berkeley. She wrote this article for the Pacific News Ser- vice. Vaily rhoto by MAUREEN O'MALLEY THESE YOUNG PUNK rockers are two of thousands who have shunned society and turned to a new subculture to search for meaning in their lives. and the psychedelic culture in the '60s. Like the punks, these earlier bohemians were mostly middle or upper class white. "It's kind of trying to break down some of your barriers," explains Susie. "You explore everything you're taught and find out where you have conditioned responses. I want to choose to believe what I believe. I like my ideas to be thought out." WHEN YOU LOOK highly peculiar, she says, - "people don't go by appearances because they get confused. They don't see 'pretty girl'-a 'God, this is just like Zen Buddhism.' They're just taking the thin layer of dust off their eyes more violently." Violence is, indeed, the edge upon which the punk adventure moves. And that partly ex- plains why Susie and Marie prefer booze and scorn marijuana. With alcohol, "a show is more fun because I don't care if the band isn't that good," says Susie. Grass is "too subtle." Grass also does not catalyze violence. Alcohol does. They had explained that the dancing, which rltu 4 eav r (p f EIditoriail Freedom' Vol. XC, No. 153 News Phone: 764-0552 1- Edited and managed by students at the Universityiof Michigan . "; - r Busi*ng: Sti O NE CIVIL RIGHTS issue that affects more white Americans than just about any other is busing. It is not just in cities that children have been bused to school districts other than their own, but in many suburbs as well, where black populations are growing. In Ann Arbor, various integration proposals are being considered, and the plans seem to be moving forward quite smoothly. But desegregation busing plans are not working very well in certain other American locales. In Cleveland, a federal district judge is considering holding board of education members in civil contempt for their lack of cooperation. He might even put the school system in receivership. The opposition to integration is even more malignant in the town of Wright- sville, Georgia, where blacks and whites haverrepeatedly clashed over the issue in recent weeks. State troopers have been on hand to quell the ii Li a struggle disturbances, but blacks have still complained that armed white adults were appearing at the schools. The legal justification for busing is found in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, in the clause reading, "No state shall ... deny to any person within its jurisdiciton equal protection of the laws." Some conservatives point to the date of the amendment's ratification-1866-arguing that at that ,time, legislators approved of segregated schools even as they voted in favor of the amendment. But society and its institutions have changed in the interim, and our schools have become a mainstay of our other freedoms. The Supreme Court was right to extend the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to education. Legal and law enforcement authorities in Wrightsville, Cleveland, and anywhere else segregation is being hindered ought to see busing plans through without delay. Like all good Americans, I have cut my spending by 2 per cent to keep in line with the President's new budget. To do this, I had to cut out contributions to church and charities-projec- ts I support-but you have to draw the line somewhere to beat inflation. Yesterday, I decided to see how the government's plan was doing; I called my old; friend Alvin D. Chipmunk, over at the Treasury Department, and set an appointment. "Hi, Russ. Good to see you again," Alvin said. "Looks like you lost a few pounds, Alvin," I said as I took a seat. "So tell me, how's the public responding to the new economic plan?" "NOT WELL," he answer-- ed. Then, leaning over his desk and speaking in hushed tones, "In fact, if you can keep it a secret, right now I'm working on a new plan: Operation Ty Cobb." "I didn't know the President was such a big baseball fan," I replied. "Oh, that has nothing to do with it," he said. "Tell me, Russ, do you know what the most popular printed object in the U.S. is?" "Greenbacks? Savings Bonds? IT&T stock?" I replied. "Wrong!" Alvin said. "Baseball cards. We're going to call in all the greenbacks and exhange them for baseall cards," he said, his face a picture of Baseball cards are better than money By Russ Meredith triumph. "ALVIN, WHAT IN the world makes you think the people will support this idea?" "We were worried about that at first," Alvin said, "and so we had a survey taken. According to our Looney Harry poll, more people would rather watch a baseball game than a Presidential economic report." "But what makes you think the people will be willing to spend baseball cards?" "That's the real beautyof this plan, Russ. One of the big problems in the ecomony right now is the low savings rate. But here," he said, while reaching in- to a desk drawer and pulling out a dark blue plastic case, "look at this mint set of Ruth, Mays, and Mantle. Face value is about five bucks, but who'd spend them on a Big Mac, Coke, and fries?" "I CAN SEE your point, Alvin. They're really something fresh from the mint. But people are used to seeing pictures of presidents on money..." "Look closely at the end of Ruth's bat. See that smile?" "Ah, yes, I missed it at first," I said. "But. what about other nations? What will they say?" "The Japanese are thrilled-those people are the biggest ball fans in the world; the Arabs love the idea of a currency that the U.S. people will support; and as for Canada, well you don't think those pro ball teams in Montreal and Canada were ac- cidents, do you?" "VERY CLEVER," I replied. "But what about the Europeans?" "They want equality for soccer cards. We're .working on ex- change rates right now." "OK, I'll buy that," I said,. "but how will I know how much money I'm holding? Shortstop is $20, fir- st baseman is $10, or what?" I asked. "No, we'll be doing it based on team standings as of the last time Atlanta was in first place. Hen- derson is over at the Baseball Hal of Fame looking up the date now." Then looking at his watch, "I've got to get these proof sets over to the Congressional leader- ship," he said as he pointed to, several cartons on his desk. "But here, take this set as a gift," he said, walking me to the door and putting a sealed plastic box in my hand. "I was going to give it to. my son, but I egan get another one." "Thanks," I said, as I put the box in mypocket. "But I'm still worried about how this will work." "Don't worry, Russ. The President approved this plan last week while he was pruning roses. He's sure it'll work." Russ Meredth is a senior majoring in political science and economics. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: ECB lecturer defen 40 WHY Pf)NT YOU CONGRES~SMEN CuT -Ic P6FeNSE $UP&C-T Tool. WELL, IT WOULD NAVE BEEN To the Daily: In the March 11 edition of the Daily a letter to the editor claimed that an English Com- position Board (ECB) lecture "destroyed students' bodies and souls" by encouraging them not to read the material, but to make an impression on the instructor. The letter, based solely on a student review of the February 21 lecture in the February 22 Daily, reflected the author's un- familiarity with both the lecture and the English Composition Board. The ECB has been mandated by the LSA faculty to improve the quality of undergraduate writing on the Ann Arbor campus. ECB faculty see writing as a process through which students learn about the subject matter of cour- ses. In their writing tutorials, ECB faculty members teach organization, development, and clarity; in the Writing Workshop, they address individual students' needs. The ECB faculty is a necessarily protean group, responding to the demands of a diverse student body: the senior who asks for criticism of her market analysis requires a dif- ferent type of instruction than the freshman who must write a paper on Plato but is having difficulty beginning the assignment. The February 21 lecture resembled a Writing Workshop session. Forty students, concer- ned about taking essay exams, attended. The lecturer began with a stated assumption that students had completed assigned readings, attended course lec- tures, and studied their lecture notes in preparation for their ds writing exams. Her advice to students was uncomplicated: get together with your friends, formulate your questions, divide your readings, and discuss your answers with the group; her suggested method for taking an exam was equally straightforward: read your exam, organize your time, plan your answers, and proofread. There was nothing "chilling" about this lecture. There was nothing subversive. The number of questions at the end of the presentation would seem to in- dicate that University students program need more lectures on the organization of their ideas for essay exams. Although Mr. Silberstein's concern for meaningful education is laudatory, in this case she ha made a hasty generalizatio based upon an imperfect under- standing. Her observations would be more welcome if she were to take the trouble to educate her- self in the work of the ECB. -Emily Golson ECB Lecturer April4 not covered peppy, preppy, and overly right- wing to wear red, white, and blue ito, show some much needed spirit?.... We don't think so. It is your responsibility to recognize that there are still people who love and respect this country. Our rally was not pro- nuke or pro-draft, it was pro- MOW THAT? . . LOIG OE51 CSLYAD H Greek rally i To the Daily: Protest, Protest, Protest! That is all we ever hear from The Michigan Daily. It is incon- ceivable to us that you com- pletely ignored such a positive and patriotic celebration as the All-American Day Rally, held in conjunction with Greek Week on Chapin review blasted I/ II/ I makes his audiences feel as if