v w w a w W. w w w w I w qw, w lw R E L ASE S Tetes Noires - Tetes Noires (Rapun- very political, with many of his classics aerial shot of a lighted city - flying T zel) assembled. Includes, "The Revolution high at night, perhaps, with lots of tiny R E C E NThis album is a great blend of alter- Will Not Be Televised", "Johan- lit up things far below. The synthesizer native pop. Described as a folksy B52's- nesburg", "Winter in America", and stays mostly in the background, the type group, they are a wacky lyric, folk- "B-Movies". The album is full of Scott- piano is simplistic and the trumpet ' S new wave band from Minneapolis. The Heron's distinctive rap-type vocals, but points up and off to the edge of the sky. A j LUvocals are very refreshing, having a on "Johannesburg" he comes pretty Very illuminating! Pretty without stronger sound than many of the female close to outright singing. "Re-Ron" and being shitty. T.a.a.G. groups around today. The charm was in "The Revolution" are probably the the bizarre lyrics and the instrumen- best cuts, but nothing on here is bad. Bobby McFarrin - The Voice I tation, which includes an electric violin M. W. (Elektra) and maracas. M. G. Bobby sounds like 33 1/3 per cent of a r s.the Persuasions. He sings constantly, Randy Newma (Soundtrack to) TheCE while breathing in and out as well. I call Nra NWanr(Sountrc.t))h- it "pneumatic singing"; lots of bron- Natural (Warner Bros.) chial action. Whether it's the Beatles Generally considered one of Talking Heads - Stop Making Sense Black Uhura - Anthem (Island) "Blackbird," James Brown's "I Feel America's greatest living songwriters (Sire) Vocalists Michael Rose, Duckie Sim- Good", or Charlie Parker's "Donna (if not the greatest), Newman is also a Not really a concert album nor a pson, and Puma Jones speak straight to Lee", this is a masterful performance. marvelous film composer. Those who soundtrack, thiscompaniVp piece to the the heart. Sly Dunbar and Robbie There are no overdubs. A digital have listened closely to the often lovely upcoming Talking Heads concert film Shakespeare on drums and bass lay recording. T.a.a.G. arrangements Newman puts behind his is essentially a "best of" collection with down the most solid tracks, though. songs will be delighted with this lush, all the tracks live. Meticulously recor- Nothing on this album is unneeded, Various Artists - Cotton Club Stars romantic score where the instrumen- ded and mixed, full of tight, full blooded however. Highly recommended. T.A. (Stash) tals are up front, finally. B.L.B. musicianship by David Byrne and One helluva package featuring live company. Where The Name of This recordings from Harlem's Cotton Club Band Is . . . was a comprehensive F (along with a few studio recordings by Frankie Goes to Hollywood - Two enough history of the Heads live, this Cotton Club types). Tap dancing, hip Tribes (Island) album traces them to where they are vocals, hot swing - it's all here. I like these guys. They look like such now, and it's a very worthwhile look. -Robin and Linda Williams - close as Featuring several very hard-to-get Wallies, and they (or at least their The cassette version is a better buy, We Can Get (Flying Fish) recordings from the likes of Duke publicists) always sneak in something since it features longer tracks than the This country-blues couple is A-OK Ellington, Jimmy Johnson, Cab sly or subversive into their work. All disc. B.L.B. live, but this album lacks the spark and Calloway, The Three Peppers, and the cuts here are well-produced dnce fun I associate with them. It all sounds Louis Armstrong. T.a.a.G. music, but except for a cover of Edwin ® 'UI a bit flat, and a bit too commercial. Starr's "War", there is a definite lack Several songs, however, are very good Recent Albums was compiled by of strong material particularly lacking Gil Scott-Heron - The Best of Gil Scott- and worth listeng to. R.H. Marla Gold and Joseph Kraus from in the area of tune. The execution of the GlSo t- Ma riGdndbJsephrsf material is outstanding - it's just that Heron (Arista) llreviews written by staff members of the material is weak. C. C. Of course this is all great stuff. It's all B WCBN and the Daily: Tony A udas, Byron L. Bull, Cecile Cloutier, Marla Gold, Theodore arwuf ar- Young Alberta Hunter - The Twenties wuf Grenier, Rick Hoefer, and (Original Blues and Jazz Vocals) Martin von Wyss. (Stash) A batch of vintage rarities from our favorite vintage gal. In all it's one r heckuva collector's item. Particularly inspiring is her 1927 date with Fats C C -~ Waller. Dig also her fabulous 1922 ap- S to. pearance with an orchestra led by Eubie Blake! T.a.a.G. Tk Rainer Bruninghaus, Markus Stockhausen and Fredy Studer - Con- 764-0558 tinuum (ECM) N o M ore Surprises The first cut, "Strahlenspur", is the best. It pounds very much like the album's cover photo - an out of focus Hassle Free Color TV Rental No LongTermComimn o Long Ter Noommitments MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY NEEDS YOU! No Security Deposits No Hidden Costs. Positions are now available on the following Regental and University Committees: Free in Dorm Delivery, and service Board of Control of intercollegiate Athletics Civil Liberties Board Research Policies Committee Call Residency Appeals Comnittee 425-1600 And Many More! , Today Stop by the MSA office for a fulllisting of open committee positions. Applications are available now. rentucoior DEADLINE for submitting applications is THURSDAY, VID "CNMR SEPTEMBER 20, 1984 - 5:00 P.M. For more information contact Laurie Clement, 3039 Michigan Union, 763-3241 2 Weekend/Friday, September 14, 1984 - -. ,., 1- ro tiP, .. E.i, s" Y §,#, Y 9 't Y R t am . @.,'¢,t ,n.R' ,r~m, x~r:4:,Y ° .iPsR.T T'6aCE' B a.. V A *. V :F . 3 s m. r..?r - -* r .+. a "'. . .... .. . . ..>. x r a:... S -T 0 R r writers. The backlash factor has been exaggerated. I don't believe it exists," he says. Mark Leachman, president of the University's College Republicans, says the possibility of a backlash is very real because Ferraro doesn't balance the ticket in the traditional way - by geographical region. "You may get ceptance speech while nursing her five month-old daughter. "Tears went gushing down my face because I thought 'She's born at a time when a woman has a chance to be the vice-president'," Edgren says. "I have a lot of hope for her generation." 'There's a Ferraro factor involved with all the races. It provides a new dimension for selecting women as candidates. There is now a notion that women can win.' -Prof. Marjorie Lansing Eastern Michigan University because, who knows, if it was their time of month, they might be irritable and say something wrong to start some sort of terrible war." Ferraro' trouble with campaign fun- ding is something else many women in the political arena share, says Pollack. "If you have lunch once a week with the bank president and play golf on weekends, getting the money for your campaign is much easier," Pollack says. If you have to make an appoin- tment with someone you don't know and explain why you are qualified, you are at a disadvantage, she says. "The money in this country is still controlled by men." As a prominent political name, Ferraro must now deal with the media blitz experienced by all public figures. And as a woman she faces a new type of journalistic scrutiny - for instance the furror about her husband's business- dealings. Larry Sternberg, a senior engineering major, says Ferraro may have hurt Mondale's camapign because of the controversy over her husband's finances. The press would never get at' the candidate's wife the way they have Ferraro's husband, Sternberg says, adding that there might be some sort of double standard. LSA juni Ferraro h media" on finances. D tra exposur pected, tho woman. Few wo Ferraro ti has been s public's int that doesn her style haircut. Says LSA "I like the wearing s man's suit Local ha number o "Ferraro especially 30. Even wi nominatior do not se parapherr: image is s posters. Fe Joshua Har just hit th weeks ago See some Southern De'mocrats who like Ronald Reagan and will push away more," Leachman says. "But I think it will turn out to be more of a plus than a minus." The Republican Party is well aware that the women's vote is key because of Ferraro and the gender gap, says Rae Weaver, executive director of the Republican Party in Washtenaw County. Weaver added that the GOP will undoubtedly include the Equal Rights Amendment in their 1988 plat- form. She says she believes there are just as many Republican feminists as Democratic-though they may not be as active-and she doesn't believe the Ferraro nomination will make things easier for women politicians. "I think the big splash came when she was nominated," Weaver says. "But there are not going to be any big rip- ples." x Lansing, however, says she thinks having a woman on the Democratic ticket certainly helped her land her party's nomination for University regent. "(Ferraro's) a kind of lodestar. A high star which gives you something to shoot at, to go for," Lansing says. State Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Ar- bor) says she was "ecstatic" when she found Ferraro had been added to the ticket. Pollack, a Michigan delegate to the Democratic.National Convention, says she went to San Francisco com- mitted to getting a woman nominated for vice president. But her work was already done by Mondale before the convention officially started on July 16. "At six o'clock in the morning I woke up and found out a woman had been nominated. I had to tell it. I had to share it with someone. It really meant more to me than I thought it would," says Pollack. City Councilwoman Kathy Edgren (D-5th Ward) says when she heard of Ferraro's nomination she got the chills because she views it as a great step for future generations. "You don't really realize that you have been deprived until that need (for women role models) is filled," Edgren says. She says she watched Ferraro's ac- Cynthia Hudgins, district office., manager for U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell (R- Ann Arbor), says her response to Ferraro is "generally positive" but she doesn't feel there is any "Ferraro fac- tor" affecting her own political power or that of her female colleagues. "In the last ten years a greater num- ber of women have been running for political office on all levels," she says. "I don't see that Ferraro will ac- celerate that. Those who are inclined to run for office are doing so." "Ten to tw'enty years from now this year may be seen as the turning point" for women in politics, Hudgins says, but Ferraro's nomination hasn't changed her own ambitions. "I've always felt that if I wanted to move ahead I could," she says, in- sisting that she has never experienced any prejudice against her because she was a woman. Hudgins added, however, that she hopes the vice presidency doesn't become "a slot for women" but rather that a wdman can eventually be con- sidered for president. Pollack says she believes woman candidates face certain problems sim- ply because they are women. WHILE POLLACK says there is less direct discrimination against women today, there are those few who bring up negative stereotypes - emotional, pet- ty, bossy - and try to pin them on a female candidate. They ignore the positive ones, Pollack says, such as the idea that women might make better, negotiators. Pollack uses a racetrack analogy to describe the plight of women politicans in a male-dominated system. Women don't have weights on thier feet because of outright discrimination, she says, but "someone keeps changing the starting line to give male candidates the head start." Women fall behind because they start from a differenct place, Pollack says. Diane Feller, an LSA junior, says she is aware of different types of discrimination against women in society. She fecalls the time a high school teacher told her class jokingly that "women shouldn't be in government Ferraro with daughter: Not a typical mother and d Weekend/FriW