_ a, - a a a 0 Jp-: a l ' as rated by the1 Daily Arts staffl El As a junior at Michigan in 1988, John Scherer won the NCAA 10,000-meter outdoor championship, becoming the first Wolverine to win an outdoor national championship since Olympic bronze medalist Brian Diemer in 1983. Scherer, who has one year of eligibility left at Michigan, had previously come in second at the 1987 NCAA Cross Country Championships. In 1987, Vicki Morrow became only one of two Michigan softball players ever to garner All-American honors, and also captured the Big Ten Most Valuable Player award during that season. Morrow, who played from 1984-87, holds nearly every Wolverine pitching record, including most wins and strikeouts in a career, by nearly a two-to-one margin. Morrow is also Michigan's third all-time leading batter with a .300 career average. Tony Silber Just when you thought all of those trite, sentimental trbutes to the 1980s were behind you, I feel a duty to comment on films of the past decade and how they have changed. The cinema is a young art form, to be sure, with only about 100 years of history. This peculiar, yet wonderful form of expression has undergone constant metamorphosis since the first days of the makeshift zoetrope machine and early vaudeville silent shorts of the 1890s. The first two decades of the Twentieth Century saw creative filmmakers like Charlie Chaplin establish their marks on the young industry. Later, D.W. Griffith introduced the epic film, followed closely by the development of talkies in the '20s. Movies grew in scope and diversified in texture during the '30s as they became popular American recreation. Color motion pictures first dazzled the world in the late '30s. Movies were becoming big business, and the Hollywood studio system was born. The '40s saw films become tools of wartime propoganda, news reporting, and nationalism. The 1950s introduced many new creative filmmakers to America, including exiles of Nazi Germany and the Scandinavian Ingmar Bergman, whose impressionistic methods changed filmmaking forever. The new "art film" format expanded in the '60s expanded with the rise of the counterculture, and a young generation of American filmmakers came on the scene. The disillusionment of the '70s can be seen in the decade's films. Movies became personal forms of expression and artistic variation. They also became vehicles of criticism and satire. Where does that leave us now? It is difficult at this point to make generalizations about the films of the 1980s except to say that there was a lot of variety and surprises. I believe we have some great films to show for this last decade thanks, in part, to the constant experimentation in film technology as well as the evolution of contemporary film genres. That leaves me with the unattractive task of sifting through the thousands of films we have seen since January, 1980 to arrive at a list of the ten best of the decade. Be warned - this is just my opinion, and I'd like to hear whether you agree. 10. (tie) Glory (1989) and Driving Miss Daisy (1989) This past holiday season gave us some gems, especially these two, destined to battle for Best Picture. Very different stories here: one is a tale of the first Black regiment of soldiers in the Civil War; and the other, a character study of an elderly Jewish woman living in Atlanta and the Black chauffeur hired to drive her. Both films are magnificent in storytelling as well as exploring character relationships. 9. The Shining (1980) Definitely one of the most terrifying films ever made. Stanley Kubrick's sophisticated thriller from the Steven King novel never ceases to chill in its tale of the hotel undertaker who goes mad while isolated in the-. cold Colorado Rockies. Terrific camera work and awesome cinematography. 8. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) Even Steven Spielberg is allowed one masterpiece each decade. In the '70s, it was Close Encounters, but for the '80s, this one takes the cake. A thoroughly fun adventure saga in the mold of the old Saturday afternoon serials sends new hero Indiana Jones in search of rare artifacts, complicated by ruthless Nazis and other assorted creatures. 7. Pelle The Conqueror (1987) Absolutely beautiful yet terribly sad film featuring the great Max Von Sydow as a widower who migrates to Denmark with his young son, Pelle. The storytelling, emotional grip of the film is draining, and Sydow's performance pleas for tears and endless applause. 6. Atlantic City (1980) Thoroughly engrossing look at an economically depressed America from French director Louis Malle. The focus is on the crime-ridden East Coast gambling mecca and all the small time hoods and dreamers who roam the lonely boardwalk in search of wealth and dreams. Innovative European filmmaking in an American setting creates this unique find in '80s cinema. 5. Fitzcarraldo (1982) Werner Herzog's stunning character study of a man possessed is a riveting cinematic feast delighting in the vivid visual setting of the lush South American jungle. Klaus Kinski is spellbinding as Fitz, a dreamer who envisions a grand opera house in the Amazon, but must first make a perilous and unbelievable journey to achieve it. Completely captivating, but not for everyone. 4. Blue Velvet (1986) David Lynch's seamy portrait of the underside of the all-American small town makes for one of the most shocking, disturbing, and original films in years. Dennis Hopper, Isabella Roselini, and Kyle MacLaclan star in this thoroughly weird picture which depicts a murder investigation and the trail it unearths to the dark side of every community. 3. Diner (1982) Every once in a while, a motion picture comes along with a cast of unknowns who all go on to be stars. Mickey Rourke, Steve Guttenberg, and Kevin Bacon all got their starts in this wonderful character study of five friends living in 1959 Baltimore and the small diner where they partake in the foods of friendship. 2. Local Hero (1983) Director Bill Forsyth's priceless picture has an indescribable magical quality to it. A Texas oil exec is ordered to a small coastal Scotland town to purchase the local beach for a refinery site, but he (as well as all of us) falls in love with the town and all its crazy citizens in this charming, offbeat delight. 1. Raging Bull (1980) Martin Scorsese's account of the life of prizefighter Jack LaMotta in black and white is surly one of the most gorgeous motion pictures ever made. Countered with Robert DeNiro's performance of the decade and the brilliant screenplay by Paul Schrader and Mardik Martin, the choice of the best film of the '80s is pleasantly easy to make. And now, we embark with optimism on a new decade of movies with the hope that an end- of-the-'90s list ten years from now will contain motion pictures likewise destined for classic status. program in the '80s. As the country's top-rated player in '87, Abbott, who now pitches for the California Angels, pitched for the us Olympic team in Seoul in 1988. Other Michigan products now in the Not to say that nothing of consequence transpired before the spring of11988, but the decade ended well for Michigan. champion Iowa last year, they were facing very difficult competition. Iowa, which had won 98 straight conference dual meets, was as close to dynasty status as the Mings were a few years prior. Led by John Fisher, Larry Gotcher, Joe Pantaleo, Sam Amine and Mike Amine, the Wolverines' own Murderers Row, Michigan snapped Iowa's winning streak and made history in the process. While the women's basketball team has struggled over the past decade, it shined back in 1981-82 when all-time leading scorer Diane Dietz was leading the way. Dietz, who played from 1979-82, led the Wolverines to a 17-9 record her senior year, scoring a career- high and school-record 45 points in a 101-93 victory over Illinois in the second-to-last game of the season. For her career, Dietz scored 2,076 points and averaged nearly 20 points per game. Even though Brad Jones never played on a winning team in his tenure at Michigan, the current Winnipeg Jet was the most prolific scorer during the Wolverine hockey decade. Jones, who led the team in scoring three straight seasons, holds the school record for assists with 138 and is the school's second all-time leading scorer with 227 career points. Jones went to the Jets after his senior season and is currently playing in the NHL with former defender and New York Islander Jeff Norton, who played with the 1988 United States Olympic team. Michigan men's tennis coach Brian Eisner has captured seven Big Ten titles in the past decade, making his the most successful program at this school. Led by All- Americans Matt Horwick, current assistant coach Mark Mees, Jim Sharton, Malivai Washington, Ed Nagel, Dan Goldberg, and 1982 NCAA singles champion Mike Leach, the Wolverines have dominated throughout the '80s. In what is generally considered a warm-weather sport, Michigan has been able to keep pace with perennial powerhouse schools like UcLA, Stanford, Georgia, and Pepperdine by finishing in the nation's top 15 nearly every year. E If the men's tennis team is the program of the decade, swimmer Mike Barrowman deserves consider Michigan's athlet decade. The 1988 Barrowman set a world's record in breaststroke this making him the Wolverine athlete to hold a world re Be Sc 1l Mark Binelli Top Ten Films of the '80s (in no special order) 1. Sid and Nancy Best Overall Film - Everybody's making such a big deal about how gritty and realistic Drugstore Cowboy is, but what about Alex Cox's much grittier and much more realistic (Matt Dillon makes it seem awfully easy to just decide that he doesn't want to be a junkie anymore) account of the strung-out romance between Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious and his girlfriend-groupie Nancy Spungen? A surreal, darkly funny, severely tragic update of Romeo and Juliet, with the star-crossed lovers meeting at methadone clinics instead of moonlit balconies. 2. This Is Spinal Tap Best Comedy - And definitely best soundtrack of all time. 3. Raising Arizona Second Best Comedy - Nicholas Cage's hairstyle and the'knuckle- scraping fight scene insure this film a permanent place in the archives. 4. Do the Right Thing Best Film with Extreme Social Importance - Regardless of whether or not you agree with his politics, Spike Lee is passionate about what he has to say, and his passion resulted in a thought- provoking, innovative, entertaining film, one of the most important films ever about racism. 5. Amadeus Best Epic Biography - Tom Hulce's insane laughter showed that director Milos Foreman could tell the story of the life of a great man without deifying him, and in the end beat out some stiff competition from Gandhi and The Last Emperor. Plus, a very cool soundtrack by Mozart. 6. The River's Edge Michigan's women's track and field teams sparkled early in the decade (1982-83) when they finished second in the conference for two straight years. Led by two-time All- American discus hurler Penny Neer in '82 and two-time All- 'American middle distance runner Suzanne Frederick in '83, the Wolverines finished higher than they had ever previously or subsequently placed. . Golden Spikes Award winner Jim Abbott highlighted the parade of stars to travel through the.Michigan baseball major leagues include Barry Larkin, Chris Sabo, and Hal Morris. But with all the great players to emerge from the baseball team this decade, the program has the unenviable distinction of possibly being the first Michigan program to be put on probation for violation of NCAA rules. A ruling on Michigan and the baseball team's fate is due in the very near future; 0 When the Michigan wrestling team travelled to West Lafayette, Indiana for their January 28 dual meet matchup with perennial b/ r l. -'. :J : /f <' { y'r,'r r!i/1f4: }f? fi ::: :: :: :>: $< w Ii WEEKEND Januariy19,1990