9 m m m wmqm v w v -Wk Coer tory xx, ...:.. : x.":::::.V : ::: r.v........... ..:.n.............t .... :: f w::."::.w:l."": v:: "": v::: v:: -;.,....-,...:::.:. ..........h.:.. t................................ s vhn. ... n...,:.., . n.........:. n.h ............:.s... +.:.... n.. r...n ............. .............. .......t.......t..........................................:n::.::.vtv:::.v.".ttv.v::.v. }}..... x..... rt.................... Gunning through medical school By Georgea Kovanis HE basement commons of the niversity medical school resembles a cocktail lounge, with dim lighting and restaurant-style booths. It looks com- fortable and relaxing. But even though it's early afternoon, students are already filtering into the area with backpacks in hand, mum- bling about the upcoming exam. By 7< p.m., the room will be packed with students nervously thumbing through texts and class notes. Tension is building. There are only four days left until Monday, when the first and second- year medical school students must take theirconcurrents, the monthly exams which cover all the labs and lectures in the preceding four weeks, and they aren't easy. "(Concurrents) are like hell, only worse," says Mike Mott, a third-year Inteflex student. "You come out, your mind is fried; if you can see straight you're lucky," he says. Medical school students say it's not unusual to study upwards of 30 hours the Saturday and Sunday before a con- current. The pressure of taking in the reams of material in medical school takes its toll. Dr. James Taren, associate dean for educational affairs and student af- fairs, says about one-third of the students go to the school's Mental Health Clinic for counseling. "The hours are very long, the requirements are difficult, there's a lot of stress associated with medical year, the game has been refined into Gunner Bingo, where pictures of studen- ts take the place of numbers on a bingo card. Students' pictures are marked, each time they ask a question, and as soon as a cardholder gets five marks vertically, diagonally or horizontally, the cry of "Bingo" rings out. While the material is most difficult in medical school, it is a student's un- dergraduate performance which decides whether he or she will ever have the chance to gong a gunner - or be one. The number of students who make it in each year - about 190 out of the 3,000 to 4,000 applicants - have won out in a, struggle that involves high grades, top test scores, money, and sometimes even sabotaging other students' ex- periments. The average undergraduate grade point for a student admitted into the University's medical school is a 3.6. "If you have less than a 3.5 you'd better have real good test scores, real good life experience, and look good at the in- terview," says Dave Brenner, a third- year medical student. Rob Weinfeld, a senior who has been accepted into the medical school, says other interests are relegated to the background in the all-important pursuit of good grades. "If there was a chemistry exam coming up. . . there was no way I was going to do anything but study," he said. "You don't go to a movie in the middle of the week when you could have gone to the library," he says. Sloughing off can be a critical error, according to Weinfeld. "If you don't at- tack classes like you're. going to Pseudo, style By Byron L. Bull The Style Council My Every Changing Moods Gef f en I N THE OPENING title of the Style Council's second album release, Paul Weller laments that he's caught up in a whirlwind, and this ever changing mood, and hits the nail painfully on the head. This is a con- fused, mish-mash of an album, very slickly produced, but full of incohesive, often absurd ideas. A collection for the most part of sanguine pop songs that's very pleasant sounding, at a first casual listening, 'but frustratingly devoid of any depth under closer scrutiny. As frontman for the Jam, Paul Weller was literally at the forefront of the late '70s new wave explosion. With the Sex Pistols and The Clash, The Jam wore instrumental in the revitalizing of rock. As angry and frustrated as their con- temporaries were, they also had a quality uniquely their own, com- passion and a sense of idealism that seta them apart from the soapbox cynicism that formed the core for the punk movement. The Jam spoke to a generation of Britons growing up in the wreckage of an empire with a future as bleak as their socially and economically stagnant present. As a songwriter, Weller wrote poignant character portraits like "Private Hell" and scathing social commentaries such as "Eton Rifles" and the now classic "That's Enter- tainment." While his inclination toward romanticism, from the early metaphorical "English Rose" to the late, beautifully wrenching "The Bit- terest Pill" displayed a maturity and insight lacking in many older, more ac- claimed writers. The Jam were anything but another powerchording adolescent angst band. But toward the end Weller pushed the band in a musical direction that didn't exploit their potential as much as please his own taste. The Bitterest Pill and Beat Surrender EPs, with more estensive orchestrations, and a heavy black music influence, were not the band's forte, and they dissolved shortly after. On his own, Weller teamed up ;with keyboardist Mick Talbot, whose taste and attitudes more closely paralleled his own, and they formed The Style Council, released a quick succession of singles, and then a compilation album titled Introducing The Style Council. The Style council's sound is a softer, more pop-inclined one. They're more melodic than The Jam, but far more highly derivative. The'band pays a heavy debt to '60s pop-soul, and in fact could be described as neo-Motown. With a use of Vocals, and arrangements so thoroughly imitative it transcends homaging to the point of pure mimickry. Weller, from the earliest days of The Jam (when the band was labeled a Who clone for their revived mod look and Weller's use of Townshendian chord progressions) often talked about a cyclical theory of music. One in which bands returned to the music's roots to revitalize, expand upon, and eventually return to again. The Style Council is that theory practiced to an extreme. The raw passion that once fired Weller's music is gone. The Style Coun- cil is more ofda craftsmanship band. Heavily mixed and as slick as any Trevor Horn product. To be fair, as a performer, Weller is at his peak here. His voice has never sounded so strong and soulful, so great in range and technique. His guitar playing is technically andsstylistically far richer than what he's ever demonstrated before. And the arrangements with co- producer Peter Wilson, the horns in particular, glow with a seemingly effor- tless sheen. Musically this is a very pleasant sounding record. Weller's pure joy at playing runs at an infectious high. Fur- thermore, the chameleon-like ease with which Weller and bands swap styles, from jazz to funk to even big band, is amazing. But so much musical bed hopping is part of what robs this album of its heart. It's just too cleverly eclec- tic for its own fun. Weller isn't adapting styles as much as simply imper- sonating them. He's like an im- pressionist who can get the voice right but can't act to fill the needs of the role. Once the novelty of his tricks wears off there's little else of interest. Consequently, once you start listening to the lyrics you realize Weller's muse is on leave. Why else would he take a love song and drop in a corpse of a line like, I might be a king, and steal my people's things/But I don't get into that power crazy way. While in another song he lapses into idiosyncratically dense gibberish that says, Teardrops turn to children - who've never had the time/ To commit the sins they pay for through - another's evil mind. The one theme that runs through the love songs on the album (there's six of them) is an immaturely idealistic one. Weller expects us to believe that good thoughts and love will overcome all ob- The Style Council: Council of Sa i uine pop Taren: Medical rigors stacles, that in time, if we all keep our spirits up, the world's problems will fade. That's a disturbing syllogism for the same person who wrote the viciously accurate account of man's inhumanity to his own in "Bricks And Mortar." Two of the songs are needless revisions of material from the first album. "Headstart for Happiness" is doctored up with some cute ad libs and turned into a male-female duet that lacks any of the original's charm, and would sound comfortably bad over AM radio. While "The Paris Match," a genuinely affecting bit of melancholia in its original, sparser setting is overorchestrated and stuffed into a Cole Porter-George Gershwin arrangement. Sung by a woman named Tracey Thorn with silky smoothness, the song's bittersweet lyrics get lost in the musical mire, and the result is as soothing as listening to rainfall, but also as evocative. One would expect the politically- oriented songs to be the strongest, but in fact they're the album's weakest par- ts. They're unsophisticated, petty wim- perings hel musical con "The Wh sounds goo singing ag Burrel styl what he ha than that ( country an together ani against the so easy, si wonder how listener to b "A Gospe piece of bla eventually Remember thought tha anti-war so covers of it. As it is, i 'self-satisfies fails to say up with lin may look h their starv the same s complacent desperately 'There were some people who I learned not to get near before a chem. test because they were so hyper.' -- Nadine Becker premed student school. There's no doubt about that," Taren says. To get a competitive edge, some students ask obscure questions to im- press the professor. "There are those people who insist on raising their hand just to hear the sound of their voice," says Ramesh Shivdasani, a second- year medical student. The price these students pay is to be labelled a "gunner" by their classmates, meaning they are gunning for better grades. "When they'have a ten minute break between classes, they study. They're gunners," said first-year medical school student Mark Ebell. If a gunner is asking too many questions, other students will play "Gong the Gunner" by banging on the springs of their desks. Over the past medical school, it could be damaging," he said. Weinfeld's example of chemistry is particularly appropriate because students say that is the course which counts the most. "I think the conventional wisdom is ... if you don't get an 'A' in organic chemistry, forget about getting into medical school," Taren says. "There are some people who I lear- ned not to get near before a chem. test because they were, so hyper," says Nadine Becker, a senior who is going to study medicine at Emory University in Atlanta in the fall. "There's a lot of people building (the pressure) up because in everyone's mind . . . this is the most important course," she says. "The whole atmosphere is based on the fact that when you're applying for medical school... if you don't make the grade, you won't get in." The pressure in organic chemistry and other premed classes, spurs some students to psychout others, according to one student who asked that her, name not be used. After a test, "they sit and ask you 'what's your grade' and they'll lie like a dog. They tell you they got a 98," she says. In one of her chemistry classes she said, some students sabotaged a precipitation experiment conducted by a group of classmates. "I'm not sure what they poured in, (but) they screwed up the whole ex- periment," she said. With a 3.8 grade point average, the student said other classmates used to call her "mean killer," referring to her high scores on tests. But unlike the rest of the premeds, she is not applying to medical schools. She dropped out after a month and now wants to be a writer. The shift was anything but easy, however. "I thought I'd never be anything unless I was a doctor," she says. "Money, security.. . it's almost a holy.profession." Her change of mind will mean one less woman in a profession that is already heavily dominated by males. Only about 28 percent of the Univer- sity's medical school students are women - a ratio that some say fosters a double standard by male students. "It's interesting that the guys think it's perfectly OK for a woman to be a physician - as long as it's not their wife," said one Inteflex student who asked that her name not be used. Women who want to be doctors are sometimes viewed as stepping into a profession not meant for them, one female medical student said. "It's not an asset to be female and a doctor, but if you're a man and a doctor, it's won- derful," she said. Some students say that aggressiveness by male students is ac- cepted, but the same behavior by female students is frowned upon. "Competition is just not accepted in women," says Dan Kreider, a second- year medical student. The women who do make it in the school have to overcome the stigma. Lisa Zetye, a second-year medical student, says she has few female frien- ds outside of the school now because she finds women in other fields "too wim- py." The biases against female doctors begin when they grow up with books that always depict doctors as male, says Pathology Prof. Gerald Abrams. "I think there are a lot of deep-seated cultural reasons. . . and thankfully that's changing," he said. 14 Weekend/Friday, April 6, 1984 3 Week