Pulitzer Prize winners named The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 13, 1982-Page 7 presents NEW YORK (AP)- The New York Times and The Associated Press each won two 1982 Pulitzer Prizes on Mon- day. The Kansas City Star and the Kan- sas City Times won the Pulitzer for general local reporting and a Times staffer was cited for national reporting. The gold medal for public service went to the Detroit News for a national investigation that produced five dozen stories on "a pattern of deception and unresponsiveness" in the way the U.S. *evy reported shipboard deaths of sailors to their families. In the arts and letters categories of the 66th annual Pulitzer awards, Sylvia Plath, a poet who became an idol of feminists some years after her suicide two decades ago, was awarded a Pulit- zer for the posthumous volume, The Collected Poems. Novelist John Updike won the fiction prize for his best-selling Rabbit is Rich; and Charles Fuller's A Soldier's Play received the drama prize. The prizes, most of which carry $1,000 cash awards, were announced by Michael I. Sovern, president of Colum- bia University, which administers the competition. AP's Saul Pett received the feature- writing prize for his encompassing por- trait of American government, and Ron Edmonds of the AP was honored in spot news photography for his series of pic- tures of President Reagan as he was hit by a would-be assassin's bullet. The prizes were the 32nd. and 33rd won by the AP-17 for reporting and 16 for photos. John Darnton's dispatches to The New York Times from Poland won the international reporting prize and the Times' Jack Rosenthal was cited for editorial writing.. The staffs of the two Kansas City newspapers won general local repor- ting prize for their coverage of the Hyatt Hotel disaster and its causes. The two papers produced more than 340 stories and hundreds of pictures in tracing what went wrong with the skywalks of the hotel that collapsed and killed 114 dancers last July 17. In addition to sharing that prize, the Times won a second when its Rick Atkinson was honored for national reporting. Atkinson was cited for what the Pulitzer Board called a memorable series on "America's chaotic management of its water resources" and other national stories combining "solid reporting and stylish writing." Other prizes in the arts and letters categories: -Biography: Grant: A Biography, by William S. McFeely; -Music: "Concerto for ,Orchestra," by Roger Sessions. A special Pulitzer citation in music was awarded to Milton Babbitt "for his life's work as a distinguished and seminal American composer. Journalism prizes also went to: -Paul Henderson of the Seattle Times for special local reporting; -Ben Sargent of the Austin American-Statesman of Texas for editorial cartooning; -John H. White of the Chicago Sun- Times for feature photography; -Art Buchwald of the Los Angeles Times Syndicate for commentary. Buchwald commented, "I'm going to be a better person now and I'm only going to write Pulitzer Prize-winning articles." ... .f 'Records / / I Modern Romance-'Adventures iClubland' (Atlantic) I suppose it's inevitable that KC & the Sunshine Band, The Average White Band, and Wild Cherry have to be men- tioned in this review, but let it be known that the similarities between those groups and Modern Romance extend only so far as blue eyes, flaxen hair, and alabaster skin. The beginning, and end of all those other groups was that they relied ex- clusively on successfully imitating the, sounds of the popular black groups of the day. Modern Romance wouldn't set- tle for that. If you believe- Modern Romance, their chief claim to fame is being the first modern dance band to incorporate salsa as a rhythm base. I don't buy that, frankly; their latin action is mostly confined to just talk. Sure, they've got more percussion than you could ever hope to name and a positively hyper horn section, but it's all put to the ser.. vice of a relatively straightforward disco beat. Only at their busiest (i.e., the climax of "Clubland. Mix") do they sound anything like carnival. If Modern Romance are salsa, then so were Eruption's "I Can't Stand the Rain" and Vicki Sue Robinson's "Turn the Beat Around." Fat chance. Modern Romance's true import lies efsewhere. Adventures in Clubland is a seamless and endlessly ;clever amalgam of just about everything that's good in modern dance music. Though the arrangements from song to song get relatively formulaic after awhile, there's no disguising that within that format they're making giant strides. How do they do that? Let me count the ways. First, and most obviously, they are an important crossbreed of the current British funk scene, bridging the stylishly cool pop-funk of Linx and Cen- tral Line to the aggressively brassy Stax attack of Spandau Ballet, ABC, Pigbag, Funkapolitan, et al. In doing so, they carry the physical punch of the latter groups without succumbing to the histronics that can make a lengthy ex- posure to their music trying. For Modern Romance, it seems second nature to be both smart and commer- dial at the yery same time. Secondly, and more importantly, they have done for rap music what no for-real rap artists have yet done--namely, make it work within a lbona fide song structure. Both Kurtis Blow's and the Furious Five/Lover's apts have been mixed, to put it I dly. irst of all, it's no small feat that Qoffrey Deane should rap so ll-most white rappers embarrass Negmselves every chance they get (cf., ABC's "Alphabet Soup," if you want a laugh)-but it is an undeniably major 4 ecomplishment that he works so well within the context of this band. Daean- ge can rap and sing and even vocalize freely in between those categories. But it wouldn't be half so impressive if he didn't have some really fine songs to rap against, songs that would sound great from anyone, but benefit greatly from Modern Romance's unique treat- ment. "We've Got Them Running" is a particularly excellent example, a soft and subtle gem of a song, nicely con- trasted with the steamroller assault of "Can You Move." "Can You Move" is in and of itself a song to be reckoned with-not only commercially (as its popularity on the disco charts will at- test), but aesthetically; it's a simply ingenious non-linear, dubbed-to-the- gills approach to dance music, eviden- cing just the sort of frantically struc- tured chaos that should send Was (not Was) running for the studios. In fact, all of the songs have something to recommend them (except the forgettable "Bring on the Funkateers" and the unforgivable "Queen of the Rapping Scene"), though, as I said, the arrangements tend toward an occasional sameness of sound. Still, you can't fault a young band for overusing a sound when they've so obviously 'hit on something hot. I'm certainly not complaining. -Mark Dighton Eric Gale-'Blue Horizon'- (Elektra /Musician) Eric Gale is a man whose best-known work is the guitar solo on Bob James "Angela-Theme From Taxi." The best thing about that solo is that it con- jures up images of Merilu Henner. On the new "serious jazz" Elektra/Musician label, Gale has been allowed to take his musical direction where he pleases. Not much of a traveler, Gale chooses West Orange, New Jersey. Blue Horizon (a place where George Benson went beyond years ago) is Gale's exploration of reggae-jazz, and it fails miserably. 375 N MAPLE 769-1300 TUES-All Seats $1 BI.AKf [OVWARDS' 1:30 4:15 7:00 9:35 1:15 3:15 5:15 You'll be glad l_..: 7:20 you carrel 9:40 20th CENTURY- 4 fOFFIRE®7:00 A(AD11111AWARDS ! 9:30 9:45 The compositions are endless and directionless. Most are simply inter- minable phrases repeated over and over and over again. Gale gets stuck between lightweight reggae and a less- cheerful version of Bob James fusion; the result is a waste of vinyl. The band that backs Gale on Blue Horizon is made up mostly of ex-Kid Creole members; that makes them old cocoanuts. They too get caught in the swamp into which Gale has driven them; they appear merely to be going through the motions. . The album's closing track, "97th & Columbus," is referred to in the liner notes as a collection of the "happy music" Gale used to play. It isn't par- ticularly good, but'it is better than the other solemn cuts on the album. Gale finally plays with a little bit of the emotion he hopefully possesses. He claims to be very proud of his band and the album; regrettably, the pride hasn't found it's way onto vinyl. It is difficult to make excuses for Blue Horizon. Possibly Gale got lost in the transition between light fusion and reggae, or it could have been the New Jersey air. It is impossible to tell. Whatever the answer, one can only hope that Gale decides to move one way or the other and stretch out on whichever road he chooses. -James Harris Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 4 r \a -INDIVIDUALTHEATRES WED"SAT"SUN ~only $15 shows before 00 m LAST 14 DAYS! ALL NEW RICHARD PRYOR LWE ON THE SUNSET STRIP (R) TUES- 5:15 6:55,835, 10:15 WED-1:55, 3:35, 5:15, 6:55,'8:35, 1 0:15 University of Michigan DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY 1982 WERNER E. BACHMANN MEMORIAL LECTURE Professor Saforu Massamune Massachusetts Institute of Technology STEREOCHEMICAL CONTROL OF THE 1, 3-DIOL SYSTEM: 6DEOXYERYTHRONOLIDE B3, RIFAMYCIN 5,AND TYLOSIN __ ".. DEATH T deadly funny MICHAEL CAINE CHRISTOPHER REEVE DYAN CANNON DEATH TRAP (PG) TUES 5:05,7:15,9-25 WED--12:45, 2:55, 5:C mmmm ---" ARAP is AINN ARBOR NEWS J THURSDAY, APRI .15,1982 330 P.M. Room 1210 CHEMISTRY 7 05, 7:15, 9:25 I Now& The Week S Dialogue: Entertaining and in Review: informative interviews A lively with local, state capsulization and national of the week's figures ... everyone events at the from a swami University. to Douglas Fraser. 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So call 800-528-8000 for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college bookstore oron campus bulletin boards. w 2 # S ,I II