S Am w w w w w I w w 4. MICH.ELLANY '60s children have grown up Over the past month it's all been few years after I did. coming together... I was born into a world where the JOHN space race was considered more First my lava lamp died. This important than the arms race. As a was my fault, really. I dropped it. LOG I E child, space was a challenge, an Several times. Now the red stuff is opportunity for exploration. We all clumped around the pencil I used have since moved from Trek to to try and it break up with. Wars to SDI. When I think of Then my TV died. It wasn't just happening, and it freaks me out." N.A.S.A. I think of Neil any TV. It was a family heirloom. And then Douglas Ginsburg Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Wally During my formative years, this prompted arch-conservative Newt Schirra. I'm sure many "children of bulky, black-and-white monster Gingrich to admit that he had the '70s" think of Christa brought me thick-lined images of bogarted that joint. Newt Gingrich! MacAuliffe. Caped Crusaders, Banana Splits, Finally, I read the writing on the I was born into a world where astronauts, and Muhummad Ali. wall. The decade that spawned me is Presidents died in office more often Then Dan Rowan died. I used to dying. My past is becoming the than they lied in office (at least as far Weekend/ Karen Handelman watch Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In basis for nostalgia. as we knew). For the first nine years with my parents on the now-defunct Next New Year's Day, all of the of my life, the suggestion that the J e anStelevision. Say "good-bye," Dick. "children of the '60s" will be at least President might lie was grounds for ("Good-bye, Dick.") eighteen years old. Next September, a fight. For the children of the '70s Then I saw Musket's production most incoming students will have the suggestion that the President Wve of Hair (the American Tribal-love been born in 1970. We are separated might not is grounds for laughter. With entensive legal and political experience, Rock Musical). Midway through by only five years, but we grew up And they can't remember President the wife of Democratic Presidential Candidate the show I realized that the in different worlds. Nixon, a man I grew up hating - Paul Simon has many ideas of her own. undergraduate performers were every I will try not to argue that my the spiritual godfather of the Reagan bit as close to the material as I was world was better. Hair and BVD Administration. Ray Donovan and INT E RVIEWyears ago when I played Johnny reminded me of the social malaise, Gary Hart remind me of Spiro Casino in Grease. lunatic rhetoric, appalling politics Agnew and Thomas Eagleton. Then I saw Beyond the Valley of and, of course, majestic fashion Walter Mondale reminds me of Jeanne Simon, the wife of Democratic Presidential hopeful Paul the Dolls. BVD is Russ Meyer's failures, which surrounded me during George McGovern. And Al Haig Simon, was recently in Ann Arbor to speak at a Soview Jewry forum twisted vision of psychedelia, filled my formative years. But I can not still reminds me of Al Haig. and a meeting in support of her husband. As a lawyer and former with "hip" lines like, "Don't bogart help arguing that I am different from Illinois state representative, Mrs. Simon takes an active role in that joint," and "This is my people who became sentient only a See LOGIE, Page 13 advancing national education and working for human rights all over the world. During her brief stay, she was interviewed by Daily staffer SteveV Blonder. ____T_____A________N_ Daily: How do you view the role of the President's wife? OFF THE WALL Simon:I elly don'tlikenthe temFistLa dIwthnk ts u t oo- down to every other woman in the United States and I would just prefer PARK RA 4% ON )POL, DOWN4TWN AN AM to be called the President's wife. The term First Lady has been in use (m ignorance is bliss, why aren't . ga T NA ever since Martha'Washington and I guess what gripes me is that it is a there more happy people around BWAV' t uvIT 9. NO, i&M IN title that has been handed down from our British ancestors. And being here? S MEKWM4 NIf .UKON personally Irish by background, I regret titles. But it's not American, it f"$ON WY? -WOSt. truly isn't. Jacqueline Kennedy, when she was in the White House, detested the term and asked her staff never to use it in her presence. re Nowadays, it's a word of art, and if someone calls me a First Lady, BECAUSE IGNORANCE IS I'm not going to pull up my hand. But I'm going to try and insist that BLISS ONLY WHEN APATHY IS I have an identity of my own as a President's wife. Jeanne Simon, Mrs. TOLERABLE WEAP H Paul Simon, I don't care. But to make a contribution as Jeanne Simon, T not as the wife of - I think I can do that. I think that Rosalyn Carter and Eleanor Roosevelt are two excellent examples of what President's (in reply)! wives can do. They were both women who were unafraid to tackle And apathy is tolerable only when tough issues. I think that there's a role out there, and that the women of boredom is inevitable. NETUTA [ REI America, and the men, want to see a woman in the White House who is making a contribution. D: If you were in the White House as the President's wife, what (in reply) issues would you choose to focus on? BOREDOM IS INEVITABLE S: I really care about basic education, and that means libraries. I'm WHEN ONE IS IGNORANT.A- not a librarian, but I really want to see better library service. Not for Hub MONK large libraries, but mainly to see that the people out in the small towns (in reply) ot t"g"? and villages across the United States have access to libraries. That's And one is ignorant only when one very, very important. refuses to learn. We're from southern Illinois, and there's lots of coal mines down r e a there. The health and safety of coal miners has long been a serious' object of study for me. I found out that federal regulations are not in (in reply) s I, place for exits for air shafts in a lot of mines. And we have lost many ONE REFUSES TO LEARN miners because of that, and I think it's a shame. WHEN KNOWLEDGE HAS NO But I really care, I guess mainly about women's issues. About the VALUE. restoration of Title IX, which means there will be no discrimination on account of sex in any federally funded educational program. The effect of Title IX was largely wiped out by the decision in the Gross City (in reply) College case a few years ago, that the Supreme Court handed down. Therefore, ignorance is bliss. Women's issues have not faired well in this administration. All the above graffiti was taken' See INTERVIEW, Page 13 from a wall in the Freize Building. PAGE 12 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 13, 1987 The real enemy:'Ri By Lisa Pollak Russkies, a red, white, and blue cliche directed by Rick Rosenthal, is more than just another lousy movie. It's our enemy. Underneath the sappy script, the rotten actors, and the laughable plot, Russkies is really a formidable, well-funded, and dangerous foe. It's an antagonist ready to prey on the weaknesses of our media-warped American attitudes. It's an enemy that tries to brainwash us with sub- versive stereotypes of Russian and American people, and then has the nerve to call itself the "truest mean- ing of the word detente." I'd laugh, but it really isn't funny. Danny (Leaf Phoenix), Jason (Stefan DeSalle) and Adam (Peter Billingsley) are three army brats, (translation: no-talent veterans of assorted chocolate syrup commer- cials) who beY - in Rambo, wear dog tags, and play soldier games ad nauseum. They find a kind-hearted, shipwrecked Russian sailor with an artificial accent (Whip Hubley) washed up on the beach. First the kids want to blow his brains out. But corny lovestuff triumphs over ideology, and the young lads gear up in camouflage and race against time to send the sailor home. Aww. Now, it would be really easy for me to make fun of Russkies as one of the year's corniest movies. We're talking ABC Afterschool Special, here. We're talking cutesy kids, stupid love scenes, and lots of touching silhouette-against-the-sun- set shots - all wrapped up in plenty of red, white, and blue smarm. But the truth is, when I think about Russkies, I don't see red, white, and blue. I just see red - from anger. I found Russkies' hypocrisy outrageous and enraging. Rosenthal actually had the nerve to think his movie about "how the worst of en- emies can become the best of friends" would teach us that Rus- sians and Americans are really the same deep down inside. There's just one problem: someone forgot to teach him. You see, in Russkies., Americans and Russians really aren't the same at all. The communists and capital- ists have their own distinctively clich6d characters. Take the Russian sa dr far "d co co bli He ply an nc en try ba Rc cli or is ni "I FILM Leaf Pheonix and Whip Hubley star in 'Russkies'. 'Less Than Zero' t By Andrea Gacki Examine the title of the film Less Than Zero. Is it from an Elvis Costello song that assesses life's worth by some overprivileged youth of Los Angeles ( like the Bret Easton Ellis' novel of the same name)? Or is it a rating of the movie (as in a scale from one to ten, ten being the highest, etc.)? Since the movie makes no men- tion of the Costello song, and little else the book from which it was adapted, one is inclined to agree with the second proposition. Since I read the book, it is diffi- cult to refrain from comparing the two. Less Than Zero,"the movie, is not entirely awful, It is however, an awful adaptation of the Easton Ellis novel. Though this literary work is far from my favorite, it has certain moods and convictions worthy of portrayal that are conspicuously ab- sent from the movie. . All that remains in the midst of a rather dull movie is a glib, moral- izing sermon upon the perils of drugs on today's super-rich young adults. The beginning of the movie was promising - I was almost expect- ing a faithful literary adaptation. Our first glimpse of the characters is at their high school commencement exercises. As the speaker urges them to follow their dreams in life, the crowd replies by shouting "We want money!" This marks the first expo- sure to this superficial, materialistic, albeit glamorous, culture of Clay Easton (Andrew McCarthy), his girlfriend Blair Kennedy (Jami Gertz), and his best friend Julian Wells (Robert Downey, Jr.). The book focuses only upon Clay. Since three characters are placed in the forefront, Clay must share the spotlight, and tends to be trivialized. In Ellis' -novel, Clay ultimately found that the drug-laden, apathetic world of youthful of L.A. repugnant. In the film, he's more of a prude from the outset, completely sepa- rated from the drug culture, and self- satisfied at not having his friends' problems. The turm6lU and introspection formerly omnipresent in Clay's character are subverted by selfish- ness. Instead of musing over his meaningless existence in a vapid culture, Clay now focuses all of his energies on winning Blair back. Blair, in turn, concentrates on saving Julian, who has a fifty grand drug debt owed to an old high school buddy, Rip (James Spader). The movie .suffers in the alls flat weakening and trivialization of Clay, its only character with depth, and the illumination of Blair and Julian, who should only be supporting forces, only serves to detract further from Clay. All that is left are three rather shallow characters, none of them garnering much sympathy. One of the book's strengths was its barrage of trendiness - from the sickeningly cool character names to the casual mention and presence of every fashionable sort of drug or clothing. Yet, Less Than Zero, the movie, revels in its trendiness. In- stead of portraying shocking events with disconcerting apathy, the film languishes in Architectural Digest- like settings with little action and nothing even mildly upsetting. If you have not read the book, the movie will be less annoying, though still shallow. You will watch as Clay and Blair chase and protect Ju- lian the despondent junkie, who in turn spends his time running from the bad guy Rip (whose badness is untapped and ineffective) and Rip's henchman/goon Bill ( the only char- acter with a boring name). The performances are adequate, but none salvage 'the movie. The tension that supposedly surrounds the clam nature of Andrew Mc- See FILM, Page 11 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 13, 1987