w w w w w w w w w w ,qw IW lwp- T T MWI qqw qw -,w 71F 7 Abortion (Continued from Page 3) dorm the rest of the year. She gave bir- th to her baby the week of final exams in April. Her choice was not, however, based on religious or ethical considerations, but on an emotional feeling of curiosity and fear that an abortion would end in a complication. "I was just too scared to get an abor- tion," said Tania. When she first discussed her pregnancy with Health Services staff, Tania said her mind was set on having an abortion. But when she heard the baby's heart beat "curiosity took over" she said and she decided to have the baby. Two years later, with baby Mark crying for her attention, she doesn't hesitate to admit that she has regrets. "College is for learning and for having fun," she said. "Sometimes I really think it's terrible I missed out on a lot of things. Today, Tania said she would recom- mend an abortion for a woman in her first year of college. But she adds: "If you really want to (keep the baby), keep it." Tania said she doesn't want to be idolized or labeled as an ideal woman or a martyr who decided to affirm life over abortion. "I was lucky," she said, explaining that her parents are able to help her to care and provide for her child. "I'm really pro-choice. I think those right to lifers are so obnxious." "I was stupid. He was stupid," said Tania of the couple's failure to use any kind of birth control method or to think of the consequences of their actions. But Matthew Gutchess would probably have praised Tania's decision despite her own reservations. Gut- chess, a member of a small campus pro-life group informally called Studen- ts for Life, said; he feels it's his duty to encourage'women to make decisions like Tania's. Gutchess said he used to picket at the local Planned Parenthood - when it was located on North Main - on foot- ball Saturdays. Sometimes he joined as many as 35 other protesters, he said. Other times he picketed by himself, "because I felt it needed to be done, that it was something I should be doing."J On occasion, Gutchess said he tried to push anti-abortion information into a woman's hands as she entered the clinic. However, he added that theI pickets were "mostly for the people driving by, to give them a view theyI don't usually get." Planned Parenthood officials have recently charged that groups such as Michigan Right to Life are encouraging their members to use illegal tactics to put abortion clinics out of business. But Gutchess denies this accusation. He claims that the sidewalk abortion counseling he does is effective both for the woman and the frustrated anti- abortion protester. "We have our right to peaceably assemble," Gutchess said in an authoritative voice. "The framers of the Constitution wrote that in. And that's a good outlet." Recovery Room: patients find comfort after surgery Gutchess suggests that it's "probably a popular thing for clinics to do to pic- ture their opposition as fanatics." But walk through the two purple doors and into the newly constructed Planned Parenthood of Mid-Michigan off Huron Parkway Drive and Joanne Peterson will recall when windows were smashed at the old facility one football Saturday. system protects the premises, and Peterson said, "Anyone who tries to break in, the police will know im- mediately." Peterson feels strongly about the con- traceptive education programs her agency offers as well as the abortion and vasectomy procedures patients can request. "I think the most profoundly immoral 'We have our right to peaceably assemble. The framers of the Constitution wrote that in. And that's a good outlet.' -Matthew Gutchess Students for Life pickets. Planned Parenthood is his target, he said, because counselors there don't try and encourage a woman to have her baby. They convince her to abort it, he said. "It's not like she has a choice," Gut- chess added. udy, who asked that her real name be withheld, discovered she was pregnant during holiday break. The diaphragm she was using had apparen- tly failed. She discussed the pregnancy with her boyfriend. They made the choice together; she would get an abor- tion. "Now when I talk about me getting pregnant, I talk about us getting pregnant," said the LSA senior. "It was an awful thing to happen, but it didn't really have any consequences for us. "I always thought that I would be devastated. But now I know that when something bad happens, I'm strong enough not to let it get to me." This year after she graduates, she and her boyfriend plan to marry. Judy said the pregnancy brought the two of them closer together, showing her how supportive of the relationship her par- tner actually was. Judy said she is not completely without feelings of loss. "I feel sad now that we're getting married and I know we'll want to have kids," she said. She said she is satisfied, however, when she considers that having a baby would have changed her life dramatically. "If abortions weren't available, I probably wouldn't have gone to graduate school," she added. "Besides," Judy said in an upbeat tone, "it's good to know that we're fertile. It's a good thing to know when it's time for us to have kids." Young is a Daily managing editor. Best flms, 1984 By Byron L. Bull L ooking back, it doesn't seem like it was a great year for films. But af- ter consideration, I begin to wonder if that assessment isn't based more on expectation than realization, as is often the case when you ask film critics for their thoughts on the medium. It seems like there are never enough great films, and all too many lousy ones. The times I spent hunched forward on the edge of my seat in absorption weren't quite compensated by the many more long hours I spent sunk down almost below the armrest, my thumbs twiddling as I patiently waited for the house lights to go up. In all fairness, this year was likely no worse than any other, and possibly better than many. I'm frequently charged with being too harsh in my criticism, an accusation that may sometimes be valid, though anyone who sees many films, and reflects on them with any con- sideration, can't help but begin to react in extremes. Film is a special art, an expensive medium that is merely a business to many of those who work in it. A filmmaker doesn't have the luxury of freedom that a writer or painter has. Film is the most expensive and un- wieldly field an artist can choose and the one most likely to resist his efforts at complete self expression. This last year saw a number of very special films. They were intelligent, well crafted, and also thoroughly en- joyable entertainment. Yet the total receipts for all these films combined probably didn't match one good day's gross for Ghostbusters. Such is the nature of the beast. I can't do anything to reverse the situation, but I can acknowledge those films that in the last twelve months have offered us more than-to use that ugly phrase-good escapist fun. I tried, out of respect of tradition, to come up with a Ten Best Films list but I honestly could only think of seven. I'm being neither facetious nor pretentious, I really just couldn't think of ten so I cheated and added a list of three notable runner ups that I liked, not enough to lie about for convenience sake. I've also limited the list ot films that have played in Ann Arbor, or will by the date this list makes publication. THE BEST FILMS OF 1984 1. Stop Making Sense Johnathan Demme's film of a Talking Heads performance is not only the best concert film, it's a very special, very magical experience. David Byrne and his high tech big band are vitally energetic and bright. They radiate warmth like few bands in any field can summon. The Heads embrace elements of everything from hard rock to performance art to gospel with ingenuity and a rapturous intensity that makes this year's other big music film, the dreadful Purple Rain despicable in- significant in comparison. David Byrne conceived the staging of the show and is at the heart of Stop Making Sense's success; however, director Demme's efficient, smart camera work and editing that so vividly and intimately capture the action should not be overlooked. Maybe not an important film by conventional definition, but it is the brightest film to have played any screen in town this year. 2. Comfort and Joy Scottish director Bill Forsyth's mild mannered comedy about a radio disc jockey who finds himself in the middle of a gangland ice cream war was fascinating. Forsyth, who last year gave us the truly wondrous Local Hero is a filmmaker with an ability to con- struct dreamy little films full of subtle wit and deep emotions. In this, only his fourth film, Forsyth excels with a finely polished sense for crossing comic ab- surdism with moody sentimentality. The result is a film that can at times be hilarious as well as disquietingly bitter- sweet. This is the kind of film that may seem light as you're viewing it, but it gets under your skin and leaves you feeling affected long after you've left the theater. 3. The Brother from Another Planet The misadventures of an ex- traterrestrial slave on the run who crashlands in Harlem that is refreshingly left of center. Joe Morton gives a solid performance as the em- pathetic black E.T. with clawed feet, no vocal chords, and a knack for video games, and Sayles' script is sensitive and very funny. The films only major flaw is that Sayles' still doesn't show much of a director's instinct for getting his clever ideas up on the screen on an interesting way. The scenes have an annoyingly stagey stiffness, and there's not much in the way of texture or at- mosphere to bring the setting alive. Still, the films very crudity adds in ways to its homemade charms, and this is certainly a far more novel venture than you're likely to find in the main- stream cinema. 4. The Gods Must Be Crazy I almost didn't include this one because technically its even more primitive than the Sayles film. Gods looks like it was filmed with a hand wound camera, with the sound haphazardly dubbed in. Secondly the film is pure fare, undiluted slapstick played all out. But writer-director- producer-cinematographer Jamie Uys fills it with such an abundance of slaphappy wit that the material rises above its mechanical limitations, and is endlessly delightful. The storyline, with numerous, giddy diversions follows a bushman played by a real aborigine named Nixau) who witnesses a Coke bottle drop from a passing plane and, assuming it to be a lost possession of the gods, sets about on a journey to the en- of the Earth to return it. It's a roughly cut jewel that shines with good fast fun, with a wealth of gags and pratfalls unlike anything since Woody Allen's early films. 5. Choose Me Unfairly neglected, Alan Rudolph's quick, sexy comedy about three forlorn singles whose lives suddenly become entangled in a complex web of circum- stances was surprise from out of the blue. Rudolph's timing and intricately surprising script recalls the Lubitsch screwball comedies of the forties, up- dated and jazzed up. Keith Carradine, Lesley Ann Warren, and Genevieve Bujold give three of the most beautifully alive performances of the year. This film will likely be on cable or the campus guild scene soon, keep an eye open for it if you missed it because it's intoxicating fun. 6. Broadway Danny Rose Woody Allen's endlessly charming talltale about a luckless show business manager and his bizarre clientele was his finest work since Manhattan, but will not be as well remembered. The story is rich and offbeat, one that Allen masterfully sketches in with little flourishes of all the various styles he's tinkered with in his films of the last ten years, but here he overlaps them and evenly measures them with authority. A funny, touching film that you might have to distance yourself from if you're familiar with Allen's work before you can really appreciate it. 7. Stranger than Paradise Youngewriter-director Jim Jar- musch, with encouragement from Wim Wenders and $120,000 that he raised on his own, sh about film f tor in some 1 may not re American c mirers are well made, very talent midst. Stranger fueled com film about young loser searching f go from Ne finally end Florida in w study of en traveled n They're not begin with, it. Jarmusch sustains we is that the looking for memory of imitation to the film - th furniture, tI hot dog sta - is an ugly and his cine shoot the fi down forr equivalent o a theme. A worth seeing NOTABLE R 1. The Killin 2. Passage to 3. Starman One closir listed above the Ann Arb local art hot how lucrativ to a more though I sus the Ann Art were as doll and shopping are, this c significantly people of the a more con blessed with wasteland c west. The Talking Heads: making perfect sense in '84 Peterson, executive director of the non-profit organization, added that a special incinerator had to be purchased because of anti-abortion activists' at- tempts to search through the agency's trash. "They would look through the garbage and try to find names of patients so they could call them up and harass them," Peterson said. Everything about the facility located on Professional Drive reflects the tight security. And staff members are adamant when it comes to preserving a patient's confidentiality. All of the windows in the clinic are surrounded by a tall wooden fenceto keep out prying eyes. A security alarm thing a person can do is to bring an un- wanted child into this world and then abuse it," she said. Three years ago a peer educator program began, Peterson said, that trains teens to go back to their high schools and talk to other teensrabout sexual responsibility. In this particular education program, the teens are paid minimum wage and given 128 hours of intensive training - all as part of an ef- fort to reduce the increasing incidence of teenage pregnancy, she said. Her wish for the right to life protesters is that "these people work with unwed mothers and child abusers" instead of sending obscene letters or making obscene phone calls to Planned Parenthood. But Gutchess plans to continue his 4 - Weekend/Friday, February 1, 1985 Weekend/Friday,