I Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 23, 19'75 t Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 23, 197~i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN '."' A . "M:$";';:: .i.% :;i$"' {iiiii ::'it?:'s f7:: f" :r":'i"'. m :y i: r. s BOOKS Sunday, February 23 Day Calendar TV Ctr.: The Music Shop, WWJ TV, Channel 4, noon. WUOM: Bernard Lewis, Prince- ton U., on MidEast Civilizations,I 12:55 Pin. IM Sports: Family recreation,' State, Hoover, 1:30-5:30 pm. Planetarium: Venus, Jupiter, au- dience - requested topics, Exhibit' Museum, 2, 3 pm. Music School: Symphony Band, Geo. Cavender, conductor, Hill Aud., 3 pm; degree recitals: Sheila , Murphy, double bass, Recital Hall,I 2:30; Barbara Tuss, Zion Lutheran Church, 4 pm; Diane Zola, soprano, Recital Hall, 4:30 pm; french horn student recital, Cady Music Rm., Stearns Bldg., 8 pm. Monday, February 24 Career Planning & Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 MA for administrators and plan- ners of the public sector offered by Carnegie-Mellon U., 5000 Forbes IGUILT A ND CHA NGE Ave., Ptitsburgh 15213. . M. S. in Criminal Justice, at U. of New Haven, CT., includes Social and Behavorial Sciences, the in- stitutions of the criminal justice system, and analysis tools. Community Information Special- ists, is a new kind of Librarian. Master's degree offered by U. of Toledo, Dept. of Library and Infor- mation Services, Toledo 43606. Re- quires 12 mos. Job Finding Workshops are of- fered weekly to help with resume construction, job interviewing and job hunting strategy. Held on Tuedasys at 4:00 p.m., Thursdays, at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m. Call CP&P to sign up. Summer Placement ,, .j A woman lost in the black middle class DIFFERENT PACES Two slick tes off the urban, sidewalks AoAmeProgram, "A Profile of troit, MI. Will interview Thurs., Af omerian mt si1ConpteFeb. 27 from 10 to 5. Opennigs: CCS: B. Zeigler, "Basic Concepts A .DrUi Cuslr n in Modeling and Simulation," 2050 Unit .S els any Frieze Bldg., 10 am. ni Leaders. Specialists in many CREES: John Fine, "The Bulgar- Ian Horrors and the Americans,"_ Commons Rm, Lane Hal, noon. 'EXTENDED Council, Exceptional Children: INTER-CITY GREETINGS "Transactional Analysis in the Spe- NEW YORK (AP) -- This cial Ed. Calassrm." 238 SEB, 7 pm. Art: Cynthia Schira, "Weaving," city and Detroit exchangedl Art, Arch. Lec. Hall, N. Campus, 8 electronic New Year's greet- pm. ingsseven hours each night for Audio - Visual Ctr.: Birth of So-insecnghfo viet Cinema, Pendleton Ctr, Union, the entire month of January 8 pm. 1975. Musical Society: Moscow Bala- The good will messages were laikas, Power, 8 pm. communicated by means of the Views of atur Finite World: Man's huge sign overlooking Times Use of his Resources," Rack Aud., Square. Tributes flashed on the 5 pm. spectacular screen came from Music School: Composers Forum, New York's Mayor Abe Beame, Recital Hall, 8 pm; Degree Reital !INwYr MyrAeBae - Graham Purkerson, organ Doc- Detroit's Mayor Coleman A. toral, Hill Aud., 8 pm. Young, Michigan Gov. William General Notices G. Milliken, Henry Ford II, CRISP: Registration thru CRISP, Leonard Woodcock, president of Fall, Spring Half, & Spring-Sum- mer will be controloled by regis- the United Auto Workers' Un- tration appt. cards, distributed ion and other leaders of both equally to all participating units cities. at a time determined by them. One feature of the inter-city exchange was an electronic view of Renaissance Center in -m m---- - Detroit with the notation: "big- M AI L T H IS er than Rockefeller Center, the $500 - million Renaissance CI 1UPON FOR I Center in downtown Detroit will F 0 L D E R S O N i serve as an entertainment, con- vention and business center." ILOW EST-COST Because of the energy crisis, FA R ES& T O U R S1 the sign operated only between !TOE U R O PE 5 p.m. and midnight. cs R r [ . t t r F WHO IS ANGELINA?, by Al Young. New York: Holt, Rine- hart and Winston, 236 pp., $7.95. By VINCE GREEN rTELEVISION, always a crude thermometer of social change, has handled the emer- gence of the middle class black with its usual cliched predict- ability. Each week we're serv- ed up a mess of shuckin' and jivin' one-liners from the likes of "The Jeffersons". Fortunately for all of us, Al Young has penetrated this stereotype to provide insight into the psyche of one black woman. Who is Angelina? reverber- ates the post-college depression blues. What is significant about Al Young's new book is his abil- ity to provide depth and person- ality to the elusive quality of black middle class anxiety. Conscious of being black, and not untouched by her counter- culture activism at the Univer- sity of Michigan, Angelina tries to put together a meaningful existence in the hip work-a-day world around Berkeley. Ange- lina faces the let down of im- potent actions in the 70s'. Part of the generation that teethed on the idea that what one did could make a difference, she now is forced to ruminate en a harsh reality that provides lit- tle, if any, fulfillment. THE COLLEGE reader can't empathize, or at least shud- der at the forebodings of her dilemma. Angelina wants more out of life than Madison Avenue consumption, but is equally dis- appointed in her friends chic, hedonistic destruction of them- selves as an answer. As f these problems weren't enough, An- gelina also faces the haunting guilt that she has betrayed her ethnic identity by leaving her family in Detroit and coming to California. Young provides a glimpse in- to the milieu that psychiatrists say is producing most of their new patients. Young is at his best when showing the middle class black torn by the culturai; rack. simply can't relate to the week-> end dashiki, super fly mental- ities around her. Her appeal as j a character, but also th- rea- son for much of her unease, is . a down right spunky i iesty L about other people and herself. She is the disquieting portrait of the person who knows themself too well to romanticize about the. real world anymore. In many ways Angelina pro- vides a mouthpiece for Young's school girlfriends are set d in- own confessions. Born in t h e to families and obesity. College south, and later raised around friends are thronging to the lat- Detroit, Young attended the Uni- est vogues of cocaine aad kin- versity of Michigan and is cur- ky sex. rently writing as a Guggenheim inbAngelina finds herself caught fellow. One gets the feeling that that old tiveihave ben severed it is as much Al Young's at- in the cultural stretch that took tempt to cope with the catapult her to California. Her o n o y to middle class, as it is Angelna solution is to go back where Greens'. The most obvious ex- most of this torn psyic lies, amples of author and character California. merger are when Young deals The reader leaves Ange a with philosophical questio a5. back in California trying to sill Angelina fears that her life the maelstrom through a simp- has no meaning, or even more ler life. Young tries to end the disconcerting, that there is no story on somewhat of an un- meaning to life. All this has swing, but leaves me feeling brought her to the brink of.. even more depressed. Ange- suicide. Remembering t h e lina's newest lifestyle of natural Camusian advice of an Aunt foods, TM, and clean living Jujie, "don't think for a min- seems bland and boring. ute that the worlds gonna stop HER NEW resolve is simply just on account of you done. to live life with a-nbtval- somehow slipped out of it," she ence. "That's the way ! used pulls herself out of this abyss. to think," she said finally, "ei- Young leaves these existential ther you do or you Joo t. But vignettes sprinkled through -out it isn't always that easy. Most the book. of the time it's some.oace in MARATHON MAN by Wil- liam Goldman, New Y o r k: Delacorte Press, $7.95, 3 0 9 pages. WALKING SMALL by L. J. Davis, New York: George Braziller, $6.95, 214 pages. By DON KUBIT PERE ARE two stories which take place in New York City. Both heyoes have three names. There the similarities end. Marathon Man is William Goldman's ninth novel. 'You may also know him as the screenwriter of "Butch Cas- sidy and the Sundance Kid." Walking Small is L. J. Davis' fourth novel. If you haven't.; read any of his other three, you probably have no idea who he is. The hero of Walking Small is Donald Peabody Coffin. When we first meet him, he is on the threshold of manhood.hA seven- teen-year-old virgin, he leaves home and heads for New York, in search of that city's mnost desireable- and often, least at- tainable attraction - a life of perpetual screwing. Coffin does manage to lose his virginity to a distant second cousin, but this experience is more profound than even he ex- pected it to be. It changes his life. From then on, Coffin'sssole ambition is to do nothing. THE NEXT time we see him he is a 34-year-old clerk in a slum liquor store, selling booze to the poor and having expertly mastered the art of surrender while beingurobbed. Davis offers no clues as to why Coffin turned out the way he did nor why he "evades the intolerable demands of the American Dream." The reader must take solace in the fact that Coffin has succeeded at be- ing a failure. He does make one vain at- tempt at heroism. His rooming house is sold to an up-and-com- ing young businessman and all f } the tenants are evicted s a v e Coffin, who not only outwits the new owner, but proceeds to fall 4;.. in love with his young wife. A tragi-comedy is in order ' and on cue occurs. In the end, Coffin is reduced to a boob tube freak finding the symbol- ism of his life in Sesame Street. There are some humorous moments in Walking Small, but over member of the Third Reich on the whole it is a minor por- who is trying to claim a for- adic novel that leaves t o o tune in stolen diamonds hidden many questions unanswered. in a safety deposit box it New PERSONALLY, I like L. J- York. Davis and I think one day 'WHILE TRYING to correct he may write something me- I the injustices done to his morable. This novel certaialy I father, Levy learns of another isn't it. form of justice, outside h i s On the other hand, there is books and seminars. He learns Marathon Man, a book obvious- that men kill not because of an ly written with the subsequent, over-aggressive nature, b u t movie adoptation in mind. The because of the helplessness of scenes are cinematic and t h e the victims of violence. He de- storyline is filled with suspense cides the only way to cure that and adventure. It is a 'ast- injustice is to give ba-k the paced novel, what some would pain. call "easy reading." "The polite justice of public Thomas Babington Levy wants trials and executions are games ofanyscheduledairline TO: ICELANDIC AIRLINES 6305th Ave., N.Y.,N.Y.10002I' Phone: (212) 757-8585 ForToll Free Number outside N.Y., dialWatslInformation 3 (600) 555-1212 3Name Street 3City * State zip . Pleasesendfolderson: 0 LOWESTYOUTH FARES I Save money no matter whenI youleave, how long you stay! D CAMPING TOURS Deluxe camping forl8-30 I age group. Big choice of -. | tours including Eastern 3 Europe. oi SKI THE ALPS Thur mid-April. Low prices for1&2weektours. O CAR &RAILTOURS IChoice of1, 2& 3week tours.3 Gowhereyou want. Campers, too! d ICELANDIC TOURS Expeditions for naturalists, geologists. Viking history tours. p AFFINITY GROUP TOURS Form your own school club group of at least 25 members traveling together. Save 3rs money. Have fun with friends. Icelandicoffers daily scheduled jets from New York, and several J jets weekly from Chicago, to Luxembourg in the heart of Europe. At lower fares thanany *other scheduled airlineI since 1952! SEEYOURTRAVELAGENT ICEBNuIC AIRLINES Your Best Buy In The Sky L------- - iiM M Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 rTHEY ARE believable instanc- es of a young w o m a n dealing with the notion of the absurd. These bits of existen- tialism are not heavy handed. Her eventual answer, trans- cendental meditation, leaves onel feeling that neither authar norI character is fully satisfied wit.I this as a means to cope with the middle class rut. T h e s e scenes are awkward and com- prehensible only to the most ar- dent devotees of this stuff. For the most part, they sound like a bunch of third eye mumbo jumbo. Young is obvious'y ex- p'oring new territory and is much more at home when deal- ing with ethnic dialogue, rather than mystic incantations. between. It's taken me all my life to learn that.", It is this 'in between" that3 makes this book's ending so haunting. Young seems to be saying that for the coac"-rned, honest individual, life can offer little fulfillment. The best way to cope with it is an almost self-negating ambivalen :a. Vince Green is a senior ma- joring in English, to be a perfect man. A former Rhodes scholar and now a grad-t uate student at Columbia, he1 dreams of becoming a maca-9 thon runner with a Ph.D. He 1 is obsessed too with the missin to clear the name of his father, a suicide victim who was haunt- l ed by the Joe McCarthy Witch-I hunting purges. Levy concentrates on in;s' reading and running. His ambi- tion to be a social historian is sedentary and within his grasp, but there is one missing clement! in his life. Levy, for all his striving, has never had an ad- venture. His time has came. Without giving away the in- trigue, the plot revolves around Levy, an overlapping networkI of undercover agents and a left-, for winners," he says. Perhaps, the world would be peacti.il, if those intent on disturbing that peace knew before they started that if they lost "agony w a s around the bend." To those who never seem to lose, Levy translates this mes- sage. There are six million people in the naked city. They all have stories. And here are two of them. Perhaps then, this is what makes the Big Apple so inter- esting, that both Coffin, non- committal and subdued, a n d Levy, social historian in dang- er, can take the same subway to work. D on K ib if /is a freelance Siriter liming in Ann Arbor. i ABUSE OF POWER All the small things that wreak havoc with a system of justice I -rk-Airways - LUXURIOUS BOEING 747 JUMBOJETs TO FRANKFURT Travel Group Charter Ahfare Only $329.99 min $395.98 max. 1 May 26 June 19 March 26 2 June11 July3 April7 3 June16 July24 April12 4 June30 July31 April27 5 July 21 Sept 4 May 17 6 July 28 iAug.28 May24 7 Aug 11 Sept.2 I1June7 Send me detailed Inormaton )D GY I 3a~w~tV~ .. aa ..i..n.ah . ---m A NGELINA knows she should BURNT OUT on friends and be racially conscious, b u t lovers, and the victim of a recent robbery, Angelina flees' California for a Mexican va- cation that she hopes will put F NC Hsome meaning back in her lie.; FRENCH A vacation that was turning in- GERMAN to the mundane collage of m- seums and sidewalk cafes is RUSSIAN turned around when she meets a man named Sylvester Poin- Lang uage Co-ops dexter Buchanon, or as he pre- fers,LWatusi. JUSTICE IN EVERYDAY LIFE by Howard Zinn. Patal- Books, 5 ETA ETA ET RE uma, California: Morrowl Books, 258 pp., $8.95. By JACK HIBBARD 'THIS IS an era of stress and struggle, with monstrous injustices clawing all around us. The media feeds us the injus- tices that sell-the juiciest and most scandalous. The numerous indignities we suffer everyJay I are never mentioned. hasn't felt manipulated, maneu- tistically to have o>rc,u ex- vered, cheated and treated wth clusions, namely young pet sans te unfairness. .ustice in cinder 28 COMPee 114 LM. JbL; i Everyday Life gathers together a series of incidents that proves beyond any doubt that all of us, especially the poor, are subject' to the dominance of those in power and those with money. RUT THE BOOK is neither about money or power. It's about the exercise of nower in situations, about people w h o have been badly treated by oth- OXFORD HOUSE Open Houses Sun., Feb.23 2-4 p.m. across from the Arb As her guide through part rf this odyssey of self-discovery,a Watusi is one of Young's most enjoyable and unique charact- ers. Watusi's own capsulation provides the best insight into his character. "Hear people talkin about 'I'm a Fraudian, I'm a Marxist. I'm a christian and all that, not necessarily ir' that! order historically speaking, y' understand, all I got to say is I'm me, a stone Watusian if there ever was one." rVHE MEXICO trip is c u t short when Angeliaa must - return to Detroit to see h e r father, the victim of a recent robbery and shooting. Young uses this visit to show how An- gelina's past is as much a rea- son for her confusion as the present. There is simply noth- ing she can relate to. 01.1 high, Howard Zinn, a profies'oof erpeople. Zinn takes o7 istt''- law at Boston University, h a s tions, cites specific cases. taken on the task of publicizing The first half of the expose the true nature of injus-ice in uses extensive support to re- our nation. His Justice in Every- veal serious impropriaes, in- day Life attempts to 4 al in a suits, and inhumane activiaes comprehensive manner with all of policemen, judges and prison the "little" things that are officials in our system of jus- wrong with the American Sys- tice. tem. Granted that the criminal jus- THESE SO-CALLED small in- tice system needs serious and equities are in truth enor- expeditious overhaulinig. Zinn mously serious. There is a cer- would start this prorness by tain double system that festers bringing an end to all prisons. at the root of the American THE POLICE and the courts ideal. The most important thing are necessary parts of our to remember is that we are all system, but as the extent of the subject to a series of dominal- power granted to these arms of ing influences. These are pri- justice approaches the absolute, marily based on money and ulti- the extent of corruption and mately will have control over brutality becomes absolute and our lives and loves. accepted as well. There isn't one of us who The jury system is shown sta- Public defenders are s'own to be overworked to the c'>int of utter uselessness, wville the "fat cat" elite lawyers are overstrained only by the num- ber of jaunts they mike to the bank. Basically, a poor man nr even one of average income stat's is in the hands of an angry vio- lent god if he enters tie judicial system as a criminal defend- ent. THE SECOND HALF of t h. book concentra'es on non. criminal everyday "complica- tions". The topics dealt w i t h include housing, emp'oyment healthand education. It wauld seem that the feller ii office of! HEW is under attack. Ac-utlly, the aim here is to make every- one aware that if he should be mistreated by his landlord, em- ployer, doctor or te-ocher, lie should not accept it as sone sad and bewildering pri -t of h:s piece in the American P I n . Alright, Zinn says, if we know about the mess, we shoaid clean it up. Institutions get away w i t h murder. They are allowed to be lazy, arbitrary, 'afar, inhu- mane, sexist, and ra.s. Even the wealthy get a bad dcal.! Child Retardation C Are Centers in Boston are profiled with the claim that the rich are also ak- en for a ride by thes ins:tu- tions. { HE PURPOSE of education ithis system? Scnools aL-e! programming centers that work to create a certain type of per- 10 son: the worker, who is sub- missive, non-questi ring, a n d lacks initiative. The school's method is to divide - sexually, economically, socially - a n d then conquer after all students have been funneled into their proper channels. The case histories are well done. They are totally developed and well written by law tu- dents and prisoners, ex-cons and others whose pro, ems were due to the insensitini._ of in- stitutions. The book is m o s t worthwhile if you hanger for an expose, complete with an abun- dance of examples, and pages of evidence and countlis case situations. BUT ZINN falls short in a crucial area. He cannot of- fer a concrete sugge-,'ion as to how the endless and discourag- ing mess can be remedied. The author was tre nendous at pointing his finger at the ugly underside of jus ics- Hope- fully this is only an initial step and another manual will be writ- ten to tell us how to help our- selves. jack.i-Hibbard is a former law student rnrre ntl y working at Borders Book :Shop. Earn our two-year scholarship. 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