w w w w w w -lool. IIW" -qw- 1- ,441pr- T nf C COVER STORY 'The year in chutzpah Page 10 As we approach year's end the usual flood of "best and worst" lists begin to roll in. Weekend wanted to be different, so we begin our "best and worst of 1983" with a little discussion of chutzpah-no one is sure just what it is, but we do know who had it and who didn't in 1983. Cover photo by Doug McMahon. MUSIC In the toilet Page 3 That's certainly not where one of the latest music sensations, Spandau Ballet, spends their time-but it is where the English import discovered their unusual name. For more inside information on this up-and- coming hit machine tune into an exclusive interview with Spandau Ballet. DISCS Barbra's dream Page 4 Fifteen years ago Yentl was only a dream for Barbra Striesand. It was a story that none of the major studios would touch. Her persistence paid off-in movie and album forms. Her latest LP is the soundtract to Yentl. There are some hits and misses, to be sure, but it's still Barbra. Also catch the jazzy review of former Journey-man Steve Smith's new album, Vital Information. THE LIST Happenings Pages 5-7 Your guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes and bar dates - all listed in a handy-dandy, day-by- day schedule. FILM Dear mom Pages8& 9 Parent-child relationships can be difficult and heartfelt - something Shirley MacLaine and Debra Winger discover in their new film Terms of Endear- ment. Also take a look at the latest from a man who never fears experimentation, Francis Ford Coppola. His sibling rivalry story, Rumble Fish, offers an in- tense analysis of brotherly love. CLASSICS Hallelujah! Page 12 It wouldn't be the holiday season without at least one performance of Handel's Messiah. The Univer- sity Musical Society does its best to spread good cheer with a performance of the holiday classic. 'Tis the season Even Weekend has to study for finals, so this is the last issue of the term. Watch for a special Sugar Bowl supplement next Friday. But don't worry, Weekend will resume produc- tion in January. In the meantime season's Behind the screens E VEN WITH the December rush of films yet to come, here's a list of those flicks destined to be in the run- ning for year's 10 best and worst motion pictures: The Right Stuff - An astonishingly well-made tribute to our boys in space. Incisive, humorous, detailed, and ex- citing. The Big Chill - A great film, notable for its sensitive and understated script as well as the uniformly high standard of acting from the cast. Risky Business - What appeared to be another crass teenage sex flick tur- ned out to be a witty, stylishly-directed teenage sex flick. Good performances and music. Wargames - Enjoyable quasi- science fictional account of a computer whiz' infiltration into defense com- puters. Snappy hi-tech fun. Tender Mercies - Robert Duvall starred in this disarmingly subtle study of an ex-alcoholiccountry singer. Return of the Jedi -For pure fun and mind-boggling adventure in your favorite galaxy far, far away. La Traviata - A colorful, emotional rendition of the Verdi classic as no one but Zefferelli could have done it. Local Hero - A quirky film com- posed of many tiny observations of human behavior. Scotland never looked better. Y!?7i The Big Chill: Reversed chutzpah or great film? aaa aw a a~saa , %, " ki "A A kj' greetings! --I Weekend Vo IIIssue 11 Magazine Editors ..................... Mare Hodges Susan Makuch Sales Manager......................Meg Gibson Assistant Sales Manager ............ Julie Schneider Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 and 763-0371; Michigan Daily, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Adver- tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily. Monty Python's Meaning of Life - More controlled insanity from the in- coherent minds of our favorite comedy troupe. The Pirates of Penzance - If you were one of the lucky few who saw this film before it was yanked from theaters, you saw a magnificent com- bination of movies and Gilbert & Sullivan. " Among the movies that were definitely a waste of money during this year's season: Private School - This film was not only silly and dull but was unashamedly written according to market surveys. Jaws 3-D - A disgrace to fish. everywhere. Horrible script, tacky ac- tion, and a ridiculous plastic shark. Porky's 2 - The original was merely stupid; the sequal has the audacity to tackle serious social issues in between the stupidity. Superman III - Richard Lester's version of Superman insults the audience's intelligence and lacks the style and substance of the original. Blue Thunder - A nasty little film that substitues action for characters. John Badham demonstrates none of the style and feeling of his other summer film Wargames. High Road to China - A mindless Raiders ripoff. Tom Selleck's movie debut is I two hours Spring girls' ten. tising wa would con silly Sprir The Ej movie th story of Pure expl The Os Peckinpa cerning h control of I I i f il I MUST HAVE been sleeping. I do that a lot, and therefore miss a lot of im- portant events and other clues to existence. Somewhere during 1983, I must have nodded through the best released, because the finest listening. T did this year was to Motown's re-release of Marvin Gaye's greatest hits. Ho hum, Eurythmics, Culture Club, David Bowie. Hmm? Michael Jackson, Elvis Costello. Roll over, Aztec Camera, New Order. Dream on. But some people are awake and more sensitive than me. They can read the cryptic messages and divine the real reasons behind things. The best they saw; you can see it now: P. J. RYDER (Owner, PJ's Used Records) " UB4O, Labor of Love (Island) " Was Not Was, Born to Laugh at Tornadoes (Geffen) T Talking Heads, Speaking in Tongues (Warner Bros./Sire) " Inserts, Out of the Box (Inserts) BILL SPINDLE (Daily Editor-in- Chief-elect) " Talking Heads, (Speaking in Tongues (Warner Bros./Sire) " Rickie Lee Jones, Girl at her Volcano (Warner Bros.) BEN AND LARRY MILLER (Non- Fiction, GKW siblings) " R.E.M. Murmur (IRS) " Big Country, The Crossing ~(Polygram) TOM ALLEN AND KEITH DWYER (Liberty Music Shop) " Harmonic Choir, Solar Winds (Ocora) " Brideshead Revisited (Broadway cast) (Columbia) " Sophie's Choice (soundtrack) (Southern Cross) " Cats (Broadway cast) (Geffen) * Strauss, Four Last Songs with Jesse Norman (Phillips) " Bach, Goldberg Variations with Glenn Gould (Columbia) ". Vivaldi, The Four Seasons with Trevor Pinnock (DG Archives) " Mozart, Piano Concerti #s 20 and 27 with Clifford Curzon (London) " Mozart, Symphony series with Christopher Hogwood (L'Oiseau Lyre) THE STAFF OF SCHOOLKIDS RECORDS " King Sunny Ade, Juju (Island) " Replacements, Hootenanye (Twin Tone) " Big Country, The Crossing (Polygram) " Violent Femmes, Violent Femmes (Slash) " R.E.M. Murmur (IRS) " Art Pepper and George Cables, Going Home (Galaxy) " Chico Freeman, In the Tradition (Elektra/Musician) " Soundtrack to Under Fire (Warner Bros.) MARK SHOSTAK (CBS college marketing rep) " The Alarm, The Alarm (IRS) " King Sunny Ade, Juju (Island) * Bob Dylan, Infidels (Columbia) " Aztec Camera, High Land Hard Rain (Warner Bros.)1 --Ben Ticho Best Sports F ROM THE opening day squeaker against Washington State to the 17th place finish by the cross country squad, it hasn't been one of the great sports years at the big 'U.' Never- theless, there have been some bright moments in 1983 Michigan sports and here are some of the best: BEST BARGAIN It costs only $1 to see the Michigan baseball team play at Fisher Stadium. If you're sick of paying outrageous prices to see the football team lose three games a year, come check out Bud Middaugh's squad for just a buck. Last year the Wolverines finished third in the nation with an amazing 50-9 record. Their combined record over the last two years is 94-19. BEST STREAK The Michigan men's tennis team has won 16 straight Big Ten titles. BEST PERFORMANCE. Michigan's Brian Diemer winning the steeplechase at the NCAA outdoor track championships last May. Michig * Markray B The mi don't tell ped to a champioi still good sixth pla haven't 14 got here i B N How we free ever the Michi B Mic Volley After early in tl to be a volleybal The ut upended before th B The so; an All-A very sue last sumi 2 Weekend/December 2, 1983 11