Page 6-Sunday, February 18, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Doily--Sunday,, Febr IOKS God and man at Harvard Washington's best-kept se c f/ By Brian Blanchard HARVARD HATES AMERICA By John LeBoutillier $7.95, 161 pp. T fHE SOBER Chronicle of Higher Education, read by the higher-ups in the business, recently carried an item entitled "Right-Wing Students Exert Growing Influence on Cam- pus/Even their foes say conservatives are well- organized, well-financed." Running two pages, the article reported that the Young Americans for Freedom, the College Republicans, and a crowd of other young rightist interests are fin- ding considerable audiences for their well-known "anti" stands: anti-Red, anti-Welfare State, an- ti-abortion, and anti-women's, as well as anti- gay, rights. Nervous liberals are quoted. "We must stop them," muttered one student, "before they stop us." And a not unsympathetic spread of neocon- servatism, focusing on its ringleaders and quoting their aphorisms, fills out an Esquire v Brian B/anchard is the Daily z University Editor. currently on the stands. Soon, if they haven't yet,, the editors at Newsweek and Time will run "Special Reports" on this New Right: "Campus Conservatives Back in the Saddle." As a matter of fact, a new book by a Harvard Business School student, which amounts to a tract for the crusade, has already made Newsweek. The author, we learn, is a new en- fant terrible in a movement to clean up after that wild party thrown back in the Sixties. As one who generally sides with the liberals, it's my hope that that writer, John LeBoutillier, is their most articulate young foe. Terrible, he is indeed. When, by the way of background for Harvard Hates America, I began skimming LeBoutillier's model, William F. Buckley's God and Man at Yale (1951), I expected a generalized essay lamenting, in Latinate vocabulary, the passing of the Tory traditions and the failure of our fight against Communism and its sympathizers. It was that. It was also, however, a carefully written, ex- tensively researched condemnation of Buckley's Alma Mater. He focused on specific lectures and See HARVARD, Page 8 By Julie Rovner'and Julie Engebrecht T HE HOSTESS at the Campus Inn looked up from her reservation book wearing a puzzled express sion. "You're supposed to meet who?" she asked. "Mark Russell," the reporter replied, slightly taken aback. The hostess mumbled "Russell" to herself, glancing at the list again, and came back with her an- swer: "Nope, I don't have any Russell here." And she was doubtlessly far from the only one in Ann Arbor unaware of the arrival of Mark Russell. In fact, the 57- year-old comedian has often been called Washington's best kept secret. Judging from the response of the boisterous crowd that mobbed Rackham Auditorium one cold Monday night last month, though, that secret seems like it may just be getting out. "I may have to re-evaluate everything I thought about college students after tonight," Russell was saying after the performance, a drink in one hand and a pipe in the other. On stage he looks surprisingly young, but now the fatigue betrays his age, as he pon- ders remarks he made earlier on the'"apathy" of the seventies generation. "I always equated apathy with me not getting any laughs," Russell says. "Can they be apatheticand well-informed at the same time? I don't think so." A glimmer of a smile crosses his face. "Or *maybe I'm being egotistical when I say that if they laugh, that means they're well-informed." Mark Russell emerges as an unassuming original in the ubiquitous world of seventies comedy. First of all, there is his stage presence: he appears in a suit and tie, and his sole prop is a piano, on which he periodically accompanies himself. What truly sets him apart from the mainstream, though, is neither his delivery nor his Julie Rovner is co-director of the Daily edi- torial page; Julie Engebrecht is the Daily MSA reporter.t U 'When Nelson Rocke- feller was a little kid he had a lemonade stand just like every other kid, only his was the only one listed on the New York Stock Exchange.' bright singing voice. It is the fact that his material is drawn almost exclusively from politics. Russell has been hailed a verbal Art Buchwald. On- stage, his conversation seems completely spontaneous, giving him the aura of a businessman who's had a little too much to drink. One need listen not only to what is said, but to the ingratiating enthusiasm with which Russell performs. His act is really an hour-long string of political one-liners, punctuated by songs with titles like "Rule Reagania," or "I'll go to the Ends of the Earth for You, But I'll Never Go Metric." Onstage, he appears to be a perfect cross between Tom Lehrer and Walter Matthau. In Russell's hometown of Washington D.C. politics is everywhere, even in the Marquis Lounge of the Shoreham Hotel, where Russell has been the mainstay s r Yv "' .Z r 1 Sw , "' := _. G t ,"._\ A Love, loss in Cheever' s suburbia THE STORIES OF JOHN CHEEVER By John Cheever r Alfred A. Knopf, $1S 693 pp. T HIS COL{ECTION of John Cheever stories, 61 in all, offers a chronological study of the .author's development. The stories vary greatly in locale, narrative viewpoint, and tone; yet despite this variety, there is a fundamental continuity to them: Cheever is concerned with the nebulous discontent of the upper-middle-class suburban dweller, the resident of the commuting Westchester suburbs of New York, the advertising man, and the rising executive. In Cheever's cheerfully disparaging introduction to the anthology, he writes: "Naive, provincial in my case, sometimes drunk, sometimes obtuse, almost always clumsy, even a selec- ted display of one's early work will be a naked history of one's struggles to receive an educaton in economics and Anne Eva Ricks is a senior in the Honors English program..W, . By Anne Eva Ricks' love." The stories develop from the exist, in the majestic houses and viewpoint of "a young man truly spacious lawns of the New York subur- shocked to discover that genuinely bia. But all is not well with the residen- decorous men and women admitted into ts. Despite their success (or actually their affairs-erotic bitterness and even because of it) they suffer from anxiety greed," to that of an elderly urbanite and nostalgia for simpler, more in- surprised by nothing. An evolution of nocent times. Their sorrow is found in subtlety, the ability to negotiate bet- the very nature and structure of their ween poignancy and being maudlin, is lives; there is no stability in either evident in this progression of stories, locations or relationships. Every but along with increasing sophistication promotion means a move to a better comes a loss of the crude power of per- house or a higher-status suburb. sonal impact-the later stories of Cheever documents the effects of defeat and disillusion are sad, not suburban instability on friendships with tragic. 'neighbors, on children's security, and Cheever delineates the disconerting on marital continuity. mixture of pride, bitterness, and affec- tion many suburban dwellers feel HEEVER IS a social and domestic toward their cities; he understands the U writer. His novels Falconer and natural ambivalence toward the Bullet Park, as well as these stories, rewards and demands of success. concern the relationships between Cheever knows . that domestic parents and children, husbands- and frustration, hatred, and' get i7;aaIe6 Wtves, and between siblings. Here, he is sad, and painfully truthful in "Goodbye 'My Brother," a story about the dif- ficulties of trying to like an intolerable brother. He delights in the rewards of a good marriage in "The Pot of God," and chronicles the wreck, of a destruc- tive one in "The Season of Divorce." Cheever is funny and often wise about the embarrassments and joys of love: stories about falling in love with the right people, like one's patient and loyal wife, are sweet and cheery; stories about falling in love with the wrong people, like one's babysitter or someone else's wife, alternate between the hilarious andrtheatragic.dSome stories are bizarre, about drastic measures ("The Housebreaker of Shady Hill") or serious neurotic or para- sitical behavior ("The Season of Divor- ce,' "The Children"). He has often been accused of having a limited subject and style, but he is similar to William Faulkder in making the choice to explore one theme and one situation from every possible angle. His prose, singular in its clarity and sim- plicity, complements the subject-he See CHEEVER, Page8...,, 'It's so nice to be here at the University of Mich- igan ton igh t. Yes, sir, the University of Michigan, where football is inflated and ex-presidents are un- elected. ' since 1961. He currently divi Shoreham, roadtrips, special which runs in over 100 papers Mark Russell didn't plat comedian. As he tells it, thint way. He originally wanted to 1 heroes were such jazz greats zy Gillespie. He began his ei series of Washington pubs, r with jokes and other varieties His break finally came wil Carroll Arms, at that time a p across the street from the Ca he find out what was going discovered a gold mine of mat THE WAITRESS at the i rupts to take the ordei types order non-alcot ders vodka. When the remain a beer and the waitress doesn the remaining five change t grinning Russell announces tc wishes to change his order waitress gives him a strange 1 There is little contrast betw Russell the performer. He si the table, leans back, lights] charge. He-claims he hasn't how he achievedahis success eyed, "I'm just a fun guy; laughs - like a political Henn He readily admits, however his career came with Waterg when Nixon finally left office, to writing my own material. F rip from the wires and read.' last several years, particular national following, continues niche," says Russell. "I reall; petition. I don't, for instance, these guys do who are just sta rooms in New York and Holly' I mean, if I had to depend on plate here, I'd be in troubl without a newspaper, I'm in tr Mark Russell says that hi; involved individuals. Richard perfect example. "You don't' is naturally funny himself i "You want someone who take. While he claims Republica more readily than Democra have a choice there for a whil his own political leanings, anc he doesn't remember specific can't generalize about son declares. "It seemed like See RUSSELL