4 Page 8 -The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October'13, 1987 Books From Rockaway By Jill Eisenstadt Alfred A. Knopf $15.95/hardcover If you pick up Jill Eisenstadt's first novel, From Rockaway, keep one thing in mind: this is pleasure reading. Don't be too quick to criticize its style. From the first chapter, one can't help but start to fear that this is going to be a long ride of cliches. Yet the book's cliches serve to show the staleness of the town of Rockaway, or "Rotaway" as it is mock affectionately called, and of the main characters, a group of young lifeguards. Their way of approaching life, by finding excuses to party, whether on a prom night, a drowning, or the burning of the town's theater, is the norm in Rockaway. One of the young women is able to finally escape this stagnant town. The character Alex earns a college scholarship which is out of the ordinary for her group. In Rockaway, Alex is. scared "to think that everything ends up into Before and After: Before and After School, Timmy, prom night." Unlike her boyfriend, Timmy, and two other lifeguards, Peg and Chowder, Alex is not going to go with the flow of Rockaway and accept the town's traditions as a measure of the passing of time. At college, Alex has her own set of problems. She has to deal with new people who at first, like her group of Rockaway friends, seem to have been grossly stereotyped on Eisenstadt's part: there's the radical that strips in a bar to protest inflation in a laundromat, a sex-and- looks obsessed roommate, the druggies, and "girls who don't wear underwear, and wax their eyebrows." Alex's move also changes the rest of the Rockaway group. Their lives at Rockaway still go on, of course, yet now they are more than just vaguely aware that there is another world - which Alex represents. For her boyfriend, Timmy, who sees himself as having "no idea which direction anyplace really is, except New Jersey, where he sometimes goes surfing on his days off," that means coming to the realization of his own shortcomings as a high school dropout. However, the novel does not just focus on Alex's triumphs and the other group members' failures because she left and they didn't: it is about all of them. In F r o m Rockaway, all of Eisenstadt's characters have their own share of personal defeats and triumphs. By the end of the book though, one realizes that it is a group triumph when, a year after prom night, they are all back together again and come to the- realization of how much control the town of Rockaway has really had on their lives. And better yet, they come to realize what control Rockaway does not have on their lives. Although the stereotypes are strong in the beginning of the novel, Eisenstadt pulls this off. The characters are really deeper than they first seem, and deeper than Eisenstadt first makes them appear. It also seems that Eisenstadt's use of incomplete sentences in her "trendy" writing style shows that she has had a foresight into what would make the novel most surprisingly real and enjoyable. From Rockaway is recommended for anyone with a sense of humor.- And, on the serious side, it is also recommended for anyone who may feel trapped by their past. "Rotaway's" citizens are definitely held by the powerful grip their past has on them. Yet From Rockaway, shows that the degree of influence of one's past does not necessarily have to be the same in one's future. -Marie Wesaw Balancing Act The Balancing Act is a relatively new band from out West that will play at the Blind Pig tonight in support of its new LP 'Three Squares and a Roof' (on Primitive Man/I.R.S. Records). Pictured left to right are Jeff Davis, Willie Aron, Robert Blackmon, and Steve Wagner. Cover at the Pig is $4, and the band will also play an in-store gig at Schoolkids' somewhere between 4 and 5 p.m. 'Someone' is loaded with far too (Continued from Page 6 the casting call. That leads me to suspect that Scott is more interested in the metaphoric level of his material: a number of his little sequences drive home the imperial value of domesticity. But a successful effort along those lines demands an innovative flair which Scott does not employ here. After Ellie learns of Mike's affair, she wany clic visits a gun club and takes aim at the groin area of a paper target. Ouch! Cliches like that blast film creativity right through the balls. Moral simplicity damns this film: you not only can go home again, you must. Mike realizes that he'll never be a very good opera date, so he wins Ellie back by protecting her from the outlaw who inevitably threatens their humble home (the notion that Mike is fated to return to his proper place, however, doesn't strike me as particularly romantic). If Scott wanted to defuse the Quinn Martin melodrama and remain true to the script's populist origins, he could have skipped the shoot-out. Picture Tom Berenger in the ruby slippers, clicking his heels together and murmuring in his best stereotypical Tony Danza accent, "Dere ain't no place like home, dere ain't no place like home... " Interested in writing about film, theater, music, books or dance? JOIN THE DAILY'S ARTS STAFF hes JibL mlID U I E S 1' LIB- R A 4 W.O.R. .S.H.O.P.S The University Library offers workshops on searching online databases via DIALOG and BRS. These brokers offer access to more than 300 databases. Databases are available in the following broad subject fields: business, education, life sciences, medicine, physical and applied sciences, social sciences and humanities. Examples of individual databases are: MANAGEMENT CONTENTS, ERIC (Educational Resources Information Center), BIOSIS (Biological Abstracts), MEDLINE (Index Medicus), COMPENDEX (Engineering Index), DISSERTATION ABSTRACTS ONLINE, and ARTS AND HUMANITIES SEARCH. Faculty, students, and staff are invited to enroll to learn how to do your own online searching, and/or to understand what is involved when library staff does an online database search for you. Library staff can assist you in acquiring your own BRS and/or DIALOG account. For additional information, contact any campus library or send a message using the MTS message system to ONLINE SEARCHSERVICES. Additional courses will be announced in the Michigan Daily. BRS System Seminar - This workshop is designed for novice BRS users who have little or no previous experience searching the databases available on BRS. BRS Information Technologies is a commercial company that brokers access to bibliographic and full-text databases. The seminar covers basic system commands, Boolean search techniques, and database selection. The lecture includes a discussion of sample search questions and how to construct search strategies. Online practice time is provided. Prerequisite: None Dates and Times: Sept. 29 10:30am-12:30pm Nov. 10 9:30-11:30am Location: Undergraduate Microcomputer Center (fourth floor) Instructor: James Crooks Registration: Required, send to University-Library-Courses using the MTS mesacae svtem or cal 93624.n Basic system commands, Boolean search techniques, and database selection are covered. The 4ecture includes a discussion of sample search questions and how to construct search strategies. The two-hour session also provides online practice time. Prerequisite: None Dates and Times: Oct. 6 10:30am-12:30pm Nov. 17 9:30-11:30am Location: Undergraduate Microcomputer Center (fourth floor) Instructor: James Crooks Registration: Required, send to UniversityJLibrary-Courses using the MTS message system or call 936-2408. Fee: No charge. BRS Colleague System Seminar - This workshop is designed for people with existing access to BRS Colleague. Participants learn basic system features and Boolean search techniques, and also receive an introduction to the MEDLINE database. After a short introductory lecture participants use their own Colleague passwords to access the system. During the practice time, librarians are available to provide assistance with system commands and search strategy design. Prerequisite: Participants should have access to BRS/Colleague. Dates and Times: Sessions will be scheduled for groups of.10 or more. Location: Alfred Taubman Medical Library Instructors: Librarians, Alfred Taubman Medical Library Registration: Required, call Barbara Shipman to arrange classes (763-2037). Fee: No charge. Going Online - The 15 minute video Going Online.: An Introduction to the World of Online Information (published by Learned Information, Inc.) offers a concise, highly comprehensible overview of online searching. It explains the online searching process in theory and demonstrates Prerequisite: None Dates and Times: Sept. 22 10:00-11:00am Nov. 5 10:00-11:00am Location: Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library Classroom 806 Instructor: University Library Staff Registration: Required, send to UniversityJ.ibrary-Courses using the MTS message system or call 936-2408. Fee: No charge. Introduction to Pro-Cite - Preparing bibliographies for publications or papers is often a time consuming, task. This workshop introduces Pro-Cite, the bibliographic information management system that allows you to create a personal database of bibliographic citations and to produce perfectly formatted bibliographies automatically. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to build a practice database and will learn the basic principles of storing and retrieving information through keywords or subject headings using the software. The workshop uses Zenith microcomputers; a Macintosh version of the software is also available. Prerequisite: None Date and Time: Oct. 30 9:00am-noon Location: Undergraduate Microcomputer Center (fourth floor) Instructor: University Library Staff Registration: Required, send to University library-Courses using the MTS message system or call 936-2408. Fee: No charge. Computerized Literature Searching Using Wilsonline - If you have ever searched Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature, Social Sciences Index, General Science Index or any other periodical index, you may want to consider using Wilsonline, an online information retrieval system providing access to 15 frequently used databases. The workshop provides an introduction to the principles of Boolean search strategy and to the content and commands of the Wilsonline system. Participants will have the opportunity for "hands-on" searching Using the Labadie Database - The Labadie database is a subfile of pamphlet and serial holdings of the Labadie Collection, which is part of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, University of Michigan Libraries. The Collection's holdings are mainly in the areas of Social Protest and Reform Movements, including Labor, Gay Liberation, Feminism, Left and Right Wing Movements, and Anarchism. The seminar covers basic Spires commands; used to search this MTS database. The lecture includes a discussion of sample search questions and how to construct search strategies. Online practice time is provided. Prerequisite: You must have an account on MTS (CCID). Date and Time: Oct. 14 1:30-3:30pm Location: Undergraduate Microcomputer Center (fourth floor) Instructor: James Crooks Registration: Required, send to University-Library-Courses using the MTS message system or call 936-2408. Fee: No charge. Women's Music Collection - The Women's Music Collection (WMC) is a database created by the staff of the Music Library. WMC indexes the musical works of 2000 women composers publishing between 1750 and 1950. The database includes songs, operas, and chamber music. The seminar covers basic SPIRES commands used to search this MTS database. Boolean search techniques, and database selection. 'The lecture includes a discussion of sample search questions and how to construct search strategies. Online practice time is included. Prerequisite: You must have an account on MTS (CCID). Date and Time: Oct. 27 9:30-11:30am Location: Undergraduate Library Microcomputer Center (fourth floor). Instructor: James Crooks Registration: Required, send to University-Library-Courses using the MTS.message system or call 936-2408. Fee: No charge. i I I Using the RLIN Database - RLIN (Research Libraries Information Network) allows searches in a machine- readable database that holds the equivalent of the University of Michigan's own card catalog (most materials cataloged after 1975), catalogs of other major research libraries, and cataloging produced by the Library of Congress. Searches can be made by using personal and corporate names, titles, and subject headings. The seminar covers basic system commands, Boolean search techniques, and database selection. The lecture includes a discussion of sample search questions and how to construct search strategies. Online practice time is provided. Prerequisite: None . Dates and Times: Oct. 6 10:30am-12:30pm Nov. 5 9:30-11:30am Location: Undernraduate Micrncnmnuter I .i r