Page 2-Sunday, October 23, 1977-The Michigan Daily RAMLINGS! stu mcconnell The Michigan Daily-Sunday ACROSS the desk from me sat a supremely disinterested manag- ing editor of the Milwaukee Journal. It was late on a grey afternoon in that grey city, and he wanted nothing more than to crawl into his car and putter home to watch the TV news in West Allis. But here' was this obviously con- fused kid who wanted a summer internship with his paper. Why, he wanted to know, wasn't I a journal- ism student? "Well, sir," I said from beneath a blue blazer and, an incredibly un- comfortable tie loaned to me by my younger, smarter brother, "I just can't shake the feeling that the journalism department at Michigan isn't very good." "Not very good," he scowled, more to himself than to me. Great. Here was this punk writer passing judg- ment on professors thirty years his senior in the business. Next, please. Actually, I was a .journalism student at Michigan once upon a time during my freshperson year. I also was once Felix the Cat in a Hallo- ween play, and both have about the same bearing on my ability to some day land a job at the Milwaukee Journal. , My first J-class (and everybody else's, too - it's a prerequisite) was J-201, Social Role of the Mass Media. The name didn't mean anything to me then and it really doesn't now since all the department course names are pretty much interchange- able - Media and the Arts, Media and Government, Media and the World, Media and My Head, Media and Reality, etc.. We learned all about how to read a newspaper. The lines run left to right, you see, . and they impart concise information. We had multiple choice tests. We met football players, who were happy to have a four credit course which did not require their. regular attendance. Well, I thought, what can you expect from a mass lecture, 200-level course? I enrolled in J-301, a "news writing course". Here I learned to write by comput- er. Your average sentence length is 18 words. You forgot to include the interesting and relevant information about the burned condors. Please retype and resubmit. Click, click. Whir, whir. Instant journalist. It took a few more courses, but I eventually realized that I hadn't been writing very many stories for the news media. journalist [n.] - one employed to write or edit subject matter for the news media. Philosophy 297 taught me that either something is or it is not. Thank God for Philosophy 297 - I might still be enrolling in Media and Cosmic Consciousness with a straight face. That doesn't mean I don't take these courses anymore. I simply take them with other equally jaded Daily staffers who rotate lectures and Xerox notes. THE realization that my definition of "journalist" did not coincide with the journalism department's led me to that identity crisis faced by almost every undergraduate, though never carried to conclusion by many: changing majors. A number of interesting possibili- ties suggested themselves. I thought about zoology - there aren't too many zoo journalists, you know. I could sit around my desk at the Major City Tribune and wait for an editor to rush up to me with a story about hypertension in pigs, because I was the only one there who knew about it. "Get McConnell on this pig story!" I fantasized him shouting. And then a Pulitzer in Animal Husbandry writ- ing. - I could be a dentist. It would make my mother happy to have the world's first journalist-dentist as a son. Pardon me, sir, would you mind giving me your view on the Middle East while I extract this molar? We've just got your X-rays back and they show you to be an incurable Socialist. Lots of money in that business too, with which I could later endow the journalism department with a McConnell Chair in Media and the Tooth. I even considered something less down to earth - Religion, Philoso- phy, English Literature, Dance. My friends were real hot on this stuff. Be an English major, they said; you'll be great to talk to at cocktail parties. "But what do I do for a living?" I. asked. "You could always write for a newspaper," they suggested. My friends are not above a bit of irony at the expense of a panic-stricken Nothing Major. So now I'm at The Daily, majoring in Media and the Media, and in history, which I've always enjoyed (my father teaches it). Early in September a fledgling writer came to my desk, wanting to~"now if he could write for The Daily. "Why aren't you a journalism major?" I asked. "Well, sir . . ." he began. "Never mind," I said. "Can you write?" ROOKS A different kind of Attacht Marriag.e By Eric Zorn with Siamese sunday magazinue iMETHOTdCE PUZZLE F490 N 3 93 7 D 95 M 26 S 27KE2 ' 50OF 51D5 U 74 R7 L 96 P 97 9 4 C 5 I 6 L 7 E 8 9 0U 10 U 111 J 12 5C 1 28 29 0 30 4 31D 32 w 3 345P 34KN 7 5 52 P 53 U 54 K 55 8 56K 571I 58P"59U H 14 15 36, 371J 38 G 39K 41S411W 4 2 T i i i i i i r'^--- !--1-i 95 98 - 76 - 99 77 1 78 K 140 C 8 3 105 43 0o A 106 1 8 1I 10 G 60 L 61 U 62 83 A 84 85 07 W 108 S 109 B 63 F 64 K65 T 86 I 87 K 66 R 67 T 112 7 68c 9J 90 2H113 w Q 19 i zo a 21 U 44 0 41 1 i B 94ID R4 104 - 9 . e - - 1 i - - 4 -- - t- 1* i3 136 117 118w 119, 1 20 J 121 122 3 123 E 124 IC 127 H 128 W 129I A 1301 F149J 1500151 A152U153 V 173 174 G 175 A 176 Q 177 1 4, 4 196 N 197 F 198 U 199 P 200 154 K 15' P 156 M 157 0 158iS 1591 193 P 1 A195 B 178 A 179 U 180 M 181 0 2 02 J 203 KI 1821 D 1831 BY STEPHEN J. POZSGAI Copyright 1977 INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, transfer each letter to the cor- responding numbered square in the grid above. The letters printed in the upper-right-hand corners of the squares indi- cate from what clue-word a particular square's letter comes from. The grid, when filled in, should read as a quotation from a published work. The darkened squares are the spaces between words. Some words may carry over to the next line. Meanwhile, the first letter of eachguessed word at the left, reading down, forms an acrostic, giving the- author's name and the title of the work from which the quote is extracted. As words and phrases begin to form in the grid, you can work back and forth from clues to grid until the puzzle is complete.. ATTACHMENTS By Judith Rossner Simon & Schuster; $9.95 C AN ONE TAKE a fairly ordinary story of life, love and raising chil- dren-the stuff of which soap operas are made-spice it with sex involving two freaks of nature, and come up with an excellent, thought provoking novel? Attachments, Judith Ross- ner's latest since Looking For Mr. Goodbar, suggests that one cannot. A long and barely interesting exercise in the sorting out of the psyche of today's middle-aged woman, this work probably wouldn't be noticed at all except that the protagonist and her best friend find it necessary to marry a pair of Siamese twins. Nadine Smith, obsessedasince age 15 with the twins Amos and Eddie, takes us by the hand and leads us ponderously through her life - from troubled childhood to troubled adol- escence to troubled college days to troubled marriage, divorce, remar- riage, childrearing, etc. The exper- ience of wading through the 400 page first person narrative becomes, at times, as irritating as taking a long car trip with someone you don't like very well. You get sick of her twisted whimpering neuroticism, tired of her troubles popping up just like you knew they would, and impatient at the character who simply hasn't generated your sympathy. Bound and stricken by what Ross- ner wishes to portray as an unspeak- ably conformist background (her father is a swimming pool salesman in California), Nadine grows up seeking to break with tradition and find the new limits of her generation. Is there any act which is impermis- sible? If so, why? Confounding this urge to define herself and her morality is the search Nadine under- takes to find a person she can attach herself to; a person to shoulder and share the burden of her burgeoning neurotic anxieties. A close friendship with the brilliant young Dianne Shapiro (the woman who will eventually marry the other Siamese twin and complete the menage a quatre) is comforting to Nadine, but it doesn't provide solu- -tions to any problems. Dianne has Rossner Now, book has up of ht proceeds ing that involved ward a s opera tia ly norm differen This we friendsli destroys while twi lose thei ity, Dia how ridi stay ma creature At th inevitabl Dianne vorce. have to she sets she nee attachm new-fou BUT] at th otic atte her life, doesn't problen narrato the ge Jackie 4 to stum old TV I - the i the guy don't be become she's be neurotic As the and ba Rossner there ca in awfu struggle cannot I 3c2N szoS A. Ammiunition containing chemicals that produce smoke or light 8. Deceive; trick C. Neck; connecting passage D. Model for the Ugly Amer can E. Sacrifice; offering F. French political advisor; author of Vietnam: Sololoole dune guerre (Full name) 36 84 106,117 130 152 165 115 176 179 192;'195 88 94 105 125 134 164 21 56 5 13 141 204 81 122 69 52 111 83 95 171 183 77 32 8 50 63 85 99 109 124 142 154 28 M. American war strategy 1965. 1968' N. To be carried along again 0. Process of de-countrifying P. Grisly event of March 16.1968 (3 words) Q. Ancient proverb (2 words) R. Presh water game fish (2 words) 26 73 104 157 166 181 188 37 65 3 185 72 197 57 202 163 2 30 45 82 71 136 34 145 151 158 201 123 4 53 59 79 97 148 156 170 186 194 103 139 her own troubles, and is ill-equipped to be sufficiently supportive. Back east at college, Nadine's first twc lovers seem to promise security and wise guidance, but they turn out as screwed up as everyone else in this book; fooling her, taking advantage of her love, and leaving her somehow more convinced than ever that if she forms a solid attachment to another person, her problems will be solved. To escape the false, high-flown fatuosity and empty promises of- fered by men in the academic world Nadine drops out of school and tries to escape her past by courting an marrying lowly Joe. Tumulty, a blue-collar restaurant owner. When the marriage is hell and nothing works out, she returns home t4 California and survives on her re kindled fixation on the Siamesf twins, now looal celebrities. Hej attraction to these freaks is the resul of two overriding concerns - sh( C 3 5 v V nC n wants to become party to the firmest, most tangible human attachment she knows of, and at the same time, to destroy all notions of what's proper and improper by doing the most out- rageous thing she can. Her seduction, though implausible in its concep- tion, is swift and to the point., Soon Nadine is romping in bed with Amos and Eddie - a potentially bizarre. scene described with almost no imagination and devoid of eroticism. 51 149U 6 137 206 19 92 G. Present portah among nations - - -. - -7-9- 60 131 161 116 133 174 39 175 H. Observant; considerate - - 12 -47 22 89 14 68 113 178 128 1. Likelihood;chance 93 18 6110 20 207 27 58 49 87 107 J. Greatest; farthest- 46 150 90121 38203 .K. Psychological turning point of the - -- - -m - - Vietnam War (2words) 16 100 40 55 127 155 162 182 190 66 101 172 L. Fluid diffusion through membrane - - 1 7 184 61 8076:96' S. Steal a march upon T. I hq image of Revolution (4 words) 9 78 177 3119619Answer to Last Week's Puzzle 34 3 13 - 1-- 6 "In our unconscious 24 29 120 75 98 147 48 67 n , we C n nl jjg 75 98 48mind, we can only be killed; 15 205 159 193 ;,-189 it is inconceivable to die of a natural cause or of old 86 102 146 23 168 43 47 112 126 132 140 135 age. Therefore death in it- _self is associated with a bad 187 act, a frightful happening, something that in itself calls 11 35 44 54 62 74 153 180 199 91 10 118 for retribution and punish- 70 191 143 144 173 138 m ent" (Elisabeth) Kubler-Ross 25 33 114 160 169 42 167 108 129 119 OnDeathandDying U. Commander of American forces in Vietnam (1964-1968) V. Frank acknowledgement W. Priority:precederce (3words) ARS MUSICA Benefit Concert, Saturday, Oct. 29, 8:30 p.m. St. Clare's Episcopal Church - Temple Beth Emeth 2309 Pokrd Rd. $5 tickets available at: John Leidy, Complete Cuisine, Kitchen Port, Jacobson's. Worksby Vivaldi, Handel, Farina, Kotzwara Champagne Reception to follow concert , W HEN DIANNE, fresh from a dis- do fault s .astrous marriage herself, joins serious d the group, it seems as though Nadine uting ought to be consummately happy. marrial n Not only is she attached to her contem g husband, but her husband is attached spoiling o to the husband of her best friend. It someho certainly makes for a cozy little sex witi e group. When children arrive on the Conve r scene, human attachments inundate touching t their little country house, so much so what i e in fact, that one wonders where they Siames( put the furniture. that by One little thing clouds the issue, lessly. though: Neither Nadine or Dianne interest seem to realize, when they decide to ignored escape their lives and astound the ties for world, that marriage is generally synonymous with love. The women Attac are hiding from a harsh world, and ed bet the twins cheerfully admit that they incomp married "for steady sex." Love is of stor never a. question, and caught in the floating middle are the three children and Rossnei each woman's individual future.__ about w Neither are given _ their proper hearts *,,chance. ._ . ,fourson