I Im m - -'- = - - --- --- - THRATR1 .V V - V " -LOCAL B4 A' TA BI For ne standa crafts: ards, h Rolex, "Oyst fashio perfor qualit The di DON'T GET CHAINED - TO YOUR TYPEWRITER IStraddlng Sandi will set you free (ConuedfomPge Sandi's Typing & Wordprocessing * and not in America and I think that's 426-5217 a pity," he said. campus pick-up and delivery I "Lawrence is a great writer of good thru: 12/11/85(i per customer) B passion and eloquence, in some ways -~~~~~~~~~ l n J ike Eugene O'Neil. Since he was primarily a novelist, what he has written as a playwright is similar to a condensation of his novels onstage.'" Set in the coal-mining country of England's northern Midlands, the play centers around a typical Lawrence character, the independent woman. Lawrence, like Ibsen, made his best characters female; he under- stood them so well. In the play we feel the despair and frustration of Minnie, who is trying to be a wife and make a home for herself within the suf- focating walls of a miner's cottage. There are no villains in this play, only TH E W ISE people caught in a life that they have no control over. In 1985 Minnie wouldn't be out of place; in 1912 she is. Her husband isn't cruel to her and in fact he loves her -arly eight decades, Rolex has set the very much, but he too is a victim of ards of timekeeping in style, in circumstance and false expectations. manship, in reliability. These stand- his role as a man.d honored today by your Authorized Jeweler, define the world-famed Remarkably modern for its time, er" image. Its mystique exceeds mere the play is still contemporary, pain- n; it is a focus for dependability and ting a very modern problem that 'mance in timekeeping, a lifelong women face upon a backdrop of class ;y investment.fconsciousness. Lawrence also uses the dialect of the miners to add poetic scerning watch buyer has learned to realism to the play." t \ . .. "w.14b. .4 \. .,.A.... iJOHN RUSSELL BROWN: Straddling both sides of the Atlantic is no ... .. -I Important notice By Hobey Echlin N THE HIGHLY commercialized world of new music there are few bands that defy the cliched monikers and even fewer who want to. Map of the World does both. Now ap- proaching their sixth year of more or less existence, the band features founding members Sophia Hanifi as singer/songwriter, her brother Khalid as guitarist/singer/songwriter, and newer members Tim Delaney on bass and Tom Whitaker on drums. With the release of their second record, the Hiroshima Girls EP, and with an Oc- tober 8 New York show booked and other East Coast dates in the works, Map of the World have established themselves as Ann Arbor's best new music act and are becoming the band to watch. Their first record, MonkeyPaw/Disconnection won Map of the World instant recognition in such musical venues as Creem magazine, and only hinted at their potential for diversity. Listeners hear Khalid Hanifi offering the darker side of the Map with the brooding "Monkey Paw," while Sophia exposes a more accessible, poppy "Discon- nection" with its catchy but not too cutsey bassline. People who have seen them live all over town were subject to more of the diversity of the band. Brooding ballads have been followed by hook- filled dance songs like "The Point of the Party." You just never really know what to expect. Burt Bacharach might follow the Kinks, or CCR follow Gene Vincent, besides their broad range of originals. Lacking any imposing stage presence, the comparisons to acts like the early Talking Heads started cir- culating, but still no one could grasp their sound, though "psyche-rockers" and "off-center modern pop" were healthy attempts. To complicate things further, their new EP offers even more dimensions of Map of the World's sound. With ex- tremely clear vocals from Sophia and an extra-powered sound from Khalid and Whitaker's production, the title track, "Hiroshima Girls," is a swifter jangly-guitar ramble with even more biting lyrics than before: Somedgy I'll find a way to get out of the Backwards Time Bomb common count. / Don't let it hap- pen, say the Hiroshima girls / Sur- vivors don't live in the real world. / Don't plan on looking inside the Mother / For the heartbeat of the future. This is followed by the unpredic- tability of a cover of the Willie Nelson/Patsy Cline sit-down-and-set- a-spell classic "Crazy," with Sophia providing the eased out country vocals. And add to this the B-side's second song, the happier, and dare I say, poppier "Great Days," and you've got a record that's as refreshingly diverse as it is quan- tumly strong. a po( plain K: song go t going Paw, I was and my h write the w W: from S: you 1 thing Well, thing calle nove dark W. K: blow: sion. W. of do there wom have this s gettii that vivid of thi: K: we 've It's k4 good. lyric: K: word and I thing now 1 bulls] W: work "Hire arou: these work idea1 r-- Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY MAP OF THE WORLD: (left to right) Khalid Hanifi, Sophia Hanifi, Tom Whitaker, and Tim Delaney. recognize this commitment to excellence, this Rolex reputation for integrity in marketing. For him, there is just one source for the elegant, impregnable Rolex of his choice: his Authorized Rolex Jeweler. For expert guidance in your own Rolex purchase, for its uncompromising war- ranty and Swiss-honed after-sales service, come to the people who present and protect the genuine Rolex product: your Authorized Rolex Jeweler. ROLEX r "He has a superb ear and sense of language," said Brown, who has cast a completely professional ensemble from New York to play the parts of the miners and their families. The Daughter in Law will be presented Thursday, through Satur- day evenings at 8 p.m. on Oct. 3-5 and the following weekend as well at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "I look forward to meeting an audience because when one is doing rehearsals one gets more and more anxious to see it performed in front of an audience. Because a play is never complete until then." W" OOKS We're up on everything! News ......... 764-0552 Sports ........ 763-0376 Arts/Mag. .....763-0379 Classifieds ... .764-0557 Circulation ...764-0558 U be 3i... d.........- Stargazer (Continued from Page 3) The most indisputable quality of Contact, however, is its realism. Sagan achieves a remarkably believable plot for two reasons. First, he sets events in the very near future, when the technology seems familiar to today's readers. The Message is received in 1988, and the novel ends at the turn of the millennium. Second, the author pays scrupulous attention to scientific detail. The audience en- joys the advantage of reading a scien- tific fiction book by an expert on the concepts involved. Sagan is able to transmit hisknowledge clearly and simply. As a result, Contact is not only highly entertaining, but educational as well. Scientific genius is 'rare, as is' literary accomplishment. Contact 1 spoke with Khalid and Sophia (Tim and Tom were busy with other music projects) at length about the World and its place in the musical sun. Sometimes deceptively simple, sometimes unconsciously profound, sometimes surprisingly candid, they can be a little misleading once in a while. But if you're confused, well, you've got as good an excuse as any to see them when they get back from the East Coast. Weekend: Let's talk band history. Sophia: We tried to put a band together for a long time with things like ads, where we lived, in Saline, and we would come to Ann Arbor because of all the musicians that lived there. Khalid: Which is kind of true ... there weren't that many musicians. S: We had a really shakey kind of thing for a while. K : For a long time. (laughs). We just had a sort of theoretical music set-.up. But we finally got people to go for it and formed the first band. S: So we all moved in together and lived together for about two years'. . . K: .. . which was more like a bad marriage than anything (laughs). But don't print that (mock seriousness). W: No, no, no, certainly not (mock (assurance). S: Then we had a falling out with the band and the other person decided to get married. So then Tom (Whitaker) had been around producing our single.- the first single before the EP - so he knew our music really well. And we asked him if he'd be our drummer. Then we found Tim (Delaney). K: Tim was just there. Tim's per- fect, real easy to deal with. W: What kind of music did you grow up with? S: Beatles. K: Beatles were the big thing. I went through my Who phase and my Kinks phase, I still love all that stuff. W: What about music you listen to now? K: In terms of pop music, I listen to very little. I listen to Big Star, which is really great. S: Really pure pop. K: It's something you never heard before, so you're not sick of it at all. It's like getting three Beatles albums that had never been released. S: I've been listening to really bad country music. W: Which brings me to my next question. Where did the Willie Nelson / Patsy Cline cover on the new EP come from? S: Just because I like it. I have this album of Patsy Cline's which is just great. So I thought, what the hell? K: Patsy Cline was an obvious per- son to cover because of the voice similarity. S: Well, I don't know if you could say that. W: What about influences in songwriting? Is there anything you listen to and say 'That's the kind of music I want to play'? S: There are so many phases of that kind of thing ... K: I've gone through so many phases of that that I don't even think about it anymore. When I write a song, I don't try to write like anyone else. I just try to hear a color or a feeling. W: I can hear everything from Elvis Costello to a jangley '60s flavor. It's all there? K: Oh yeah, it's all there, and more. S: We've written these songs in such a long period of time -.I mean for where we are - that there's all these little things. W: How many years has it been? K: Since '79 at least. I mean, when we first started writing songs, the few songs that we did write were like - 'O.K., I'm gonna write a song like Elvis Costello' - and I would go through and get all the chord changes. And that lasted for about a year. You go through phases. And now, I just do whatever I do, (Laughs). It's all process. W : As far as your music goes, what about the diversity of styles? Like "Monkey Paw", a kind of weirdity, and "Disconnection," a real musical song, and "Hiroshima Girls," more of HARRY'S ARMY SURPLUS ALL LEE'S & LEVI'S Men's and Women's Jeans OFF REGULAR 2'uPRICE! price good thru Oct. 10, 1985 201 E. Washington CORNER OF FOURTH AVE. 994-3572 aOeeda serve you MD BOERSMA TRAVEL Call the FRIENDLY AGENT Ask about our Halloween trip drawing. BOERSMA TRAVEL - DOMESTIC ' 14 NICKELS ARCADE + 994-6200 Fc demonstrates Sagan's excellence in both areas, and establishes him as both scientist and artist., 10 Weekend/Friday, October 4, 1985 Weekend/F