. > gy r o- xf . , . _ 0 0 0 0 0 The First Run F1 Back to the Future II Back to the movies as M McFly (Michael J. Fox) t again in this basic rehash, original. (At Fox - 9:15) Born on the Fourth As big a draw as Tom Cr some, he's as much a cm Weekend plague for others. But his felt li I performance as paralyzed versio Vietnam vet Ron Kovic is the least2 highlight of Oliver Stone's larger- besid arty than-life film. If for nothing else, older othe go to see him scream the P-word. Show of (At Briarwood - 1:00,4:00, 7:00, 9:35; Showcase - 1:00, 4:00, 7:15, Driv 10:00) Elde vise s forTand uZse i for Courage Mountain Freer. 'emadc Obviously somebody out there barri list The Ten Percent solution ike the Shirley Temple on of Heidi wasn't enough. At now she has a love interest des the goats, in the form of man Charlie Sheen. (At wcase - 12:35, 2:40, 4:45) ring Miss Daisy rly Southern woman Jessica dy and chauffeur Morgan man break down some social ers. Adapted from Alfred '1 Uhry's Pulitzer Prize-winning play, performed in Ann Arbor last semester. Strange casting award goes to Dan Ackroyd as Miss Daisy's son Boolie, who can't seem to pick good films consistently to save his life. (At Showcase - 12:05, 2:20, 4:25, 7:40, 9:40, 12:10) Enemies, A Love Story A tragi-comedy set in the years immediately after World War II about a man who is emotionally involved with three women at the same time: his second wife, his mistress, and his first wife, who was believed dead. Sounds like he's tired! From the Isaac Bashevis-Singer book, and critically acclaimed everwhere. (At Briarwood -12:00, 2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40) Glory Matthew Broderick, Morgan Freeman, and Denzel Washington star in this lauded film about the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, the first Black battalion in the Civil War. Directed by Edward Zwick, a producer of thirtysomething. But don't hold that against him. (At Briarwood - 12:00, 2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:45, 12:00; at Showcase - 7:10, 9:40, 12:10) Hard To Kill Martial arts stud Steven Segal chops and kicks his way through the evil men who killed his family. Don't expect much dialogue. (At Fox - 7:30, 9:45; Showcase - 12:40, 3:05, 5:15, 7:40, 9:50, 11:50) Henry V Kenneth Branagh's adaptation of Shakespeare is grittier than Olivier's version but makes an admirable transition from stage to film. (At Ann Arbor 1 & 2; Fri: 4:30, 7:05, 9:35; Sat: 1:30, 4:30, 9:35) Internal Affairs Internal Affairs is the division A wicked farce of mistaken identity from Russia's great comic writer and dramatist Nikolai Gogol (Dead Souls, Diary of a Madman, The Overcoat). University Players Directed by Richard Klautsch Mendelssohn Theatre Feb. 22, 23, 24 at 8 PM Feb. 25 at 2 PM Tickets are $10 and $7; Call 764-0450 or 763-TKTS. An important new voice has been added to the chorus of local newspapers and media this semester, with the birth of Ten Perant, "A news-monthly for the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti Gay Community," according to the masthead on the new free paper. "We would have liked our first front page to have been about the positive aspects of being gay just as much as you would have," the paper editorialized. Phi "We could have ignored the negative COb stories." But they didn't. The first issue featured stories on two recent series of anti-gay incidents, one at Eastern Michigan, the other at the wCBN station offices in the Student Activities Building. The message in both stories, and a central theme of the paper itself, is that attacks-against lesbians and gay men need to be reported and addressed in public. "If no one reports acts of i i 8 harassment or discrimination, no one else realizes it takes place." U.. According to Ten Percent, last term a staff member of wCBN's companion station, wijx-AM, vandalized the desk used by the station's gay radio collective, and defaced materials pertaining to lesbian and gay issues. "Hey fags and dykes," he wrote, "I have a right for AIDS free environment... Castrate all Fags, Rape p all Dykes. Straight white men are #1!" n The incident was not reported to the University's Affirmative Action Office, wrote the paper in an unsigned article, because the radio station's leaders were worried about a heavy-handed response by the Administration. This would not be - unprecedented; the Administration moved to tighten control over the station in 1987, after racist comments were aired. No one should be questioning wcBN's commitment to gay and lesbian issues (the station has welcomed the Closets Are For Clothes program, produced by the gay radio collective), but conflicting interests here raise an awkward dilemma. Ten Percent argues the radio station covered up the incidents (in lieu of an internal investigation) to protect its own interests. And certainly the daily discrimination, intimidation and violence that gay men and lesbians experience need to be exposed. And yet the University has a dismal track record on this issue, so reporting the incident to what the Administration calls the proper place would in this case have been of dubious worth. The Administration has failed to respond adequately to the recent demands for change submitted by the Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee (LaROC) - which included removing discriminating clauses in University housing policies and adding "sexual preference" to the University non-discrimination statement. The demands are essential, basic, and undeniably needed - things the University has been under pressure to change for years. The University has also failed to address similar cases of discrimination and harassment in the past. Given the possibility of Administration action against the station, the decision to handle the incident internally was probably Inspector General sketchpad t.zinf correct. But the station should have made the entire series of events public through student groups like LaGROC the Daily - groups which can be trusted. Then the public could have been forced to confront the expression of that hatred which lies below the surface of its everyday life, while minimizing the risk of a crackdown from above. Eu. Exposing anti-gay sentiments has been one of the most important functions of gay newspapers and magazines as long as there's been an open gay movement in this country. As pervasive as this attitude is, the mainstream media still find little room to discuss it. Bucking the trend last week was the The Advocate, the national gay magazine which released quotes from a racist attack by cas news commentator Andy Rooney. Rooney's homophobia had been widely reported, though quickly forgotten (in some circles). But with the latest remarks he seems to have finally gotten himself in hot water with the network. "Most people are born with equal intelligence," he told Advocate reporter David Burke. "But Blacks have watered down their genes because the less intelligent ones are the ones that have the most children." This confuses the fact that poor people have more children than rich ones, in general - and most Black people, remember, are still it This was a recurring plot line the entire two-hour show, as Jan and Phillip try all sorts of strategies to increase the odds than Jan will get pregnant. The show's focus, however, didn't revolve around Jan's bed, but a much graver and unBradylike theme. The episode could have been called "Born on the Fourth of Brady" as Bobby's racing career is prematurely cut short when he has a wreck at the Nashville 500. Several scenes, most likely inadvertently, mirrored ones in "Born on the Fourth of July." As much as Bobby's plight at first resembled Ron Kovack's, soon enough it became Bradyish. Bobby falls down during rehab, but instead of having his bone come jutting out of his leg, Bobby gets back up to the delight of his family. Bobby doesn't go to Mexico and fall into a trap of drugs and whores, instead poor - people implic: educat CBs I from ti obviou susper Roone beliefs justify in soci The a in the nation While remark added, me, ga with ra homop appare Roone succee below comme But first ph The incide unders public The Aa weight comm Unive make impera Bobby to his sweet portra Quinn the w So d '90s. ( older actors Brady Student seating is $5 with ID at the League Ticket Office in the Michigan League only. \i 11tH 11 l tt ....., ~ NII Is I (C I irN 1A niew t wrtd0d tsaitthI ~ing th(e health 1 id. bitspre-mom tuidtoo competitive. 4 4 ~ \h sith. [It new it was for toet. Nomrm involved in AIDS rn~etArct. It's ewitiog an~d et~etngWok. OR of the bet I ttip abotPublihealhis t ~that there are a lot ofjobs" D)ebbie WedeO, WM , EI198 The IUniversity of Michigan Ctutts for Dtae C ontrol Atlanta, (Ciria tl esitf f kA cyanSc&hV( ofbW 9fHozW ,ffo~irS 0atthg,5cho(tf tbfic I tie, 76S4-5455. W6WMB6A K, c T. ix mwtMI~YOU « N' E IO MWL IMNd SEES? o , AtffIt4& T!5* j A SF. F-t~tdWRYrNo JEVA No ww~IBts RWOTl ~' GAMS OICommy' AtPQP1 6,TAWO~T UMIN 5oNIC O UMFTG Ot HA~ ~0T m Ami PPMY SOAIURDP. wmF CF. 4T TA IMAIAS VW ml TS o1U4 R1IGHATWAI' CO UNSTSHI VIE T UO oWD 04 FO LA W I A MI' -PRY$RA i rIM.NX You mL . " 1 7 R D&~n l g.oq Tyson's fall took place in Japan, not at the customary Trump Castle in Atlantic City. Donald Trump himself however, was dealt a knock-out blow earlier this week when his wife Ivana announced she was filing for divorce. It seems Ivana claims Donald eyes have been straying a bit too often lately. Is it just a coincidence that Trump appears (fully clothed) on the cover of this month's Playboy? I think not. And just like that, the '80s are gone. They didn't even linger like the smell of Be Bim Bop in your hair after you've eaten at Steve's Lunch. We are left alone to wander in the vast bleak Beckett-esque universe of the '90s without the consistencies we came to depend upon. At least we know one thing will always be the same: the Bradys will always be the Bradys. In the land of the Brady Bunch, things a bang and then lingered a b are absolutes. After all, Mom doesn't occasionally or often, Mom always says "don't play ball in the house." We look to the Bradys for guidance. They are our childhood sages. Having trouble with your finances? Do you turn to Donald Trump's Art cf the Deal? Of course not, you think of Mr. Brady teaching the lesson of caveat emptoror "let the buyer beware" when Greg purchases that lemon of a car. Political problems? One can bet Gorbachev saw the benefits of multiple candidates when Soviet Tv recently aired the Brady episode in which Greg and Marcia run against each other for student government president. And there's no doubt that part of Buster Douglas' fight training was a daily viewing of the fanous Peter Brady vs. Buddy Hinton title bout. Did you notice Tyson's loose tooth after the fight? The Bradys are always there for timeless advice. There was never a problem the Bradys couldn't lick. At least there wasn't until last Friday. On that night the new CBS series the Bradys premiered. It started promisingly Brady enough - Greg is a doctor, Cindy is a morning disc jockey, Carol and Mike have remodeled the famous Brady abode, and Bobby is a stock car race driver. Refreshingly enough, none of the original cast have become better actors since the early '70s. This aside, I could tell something was rotten in Bradyland. Soon I saw something I never hoped I'd have to see, Jan and her husband in bed for the purpose of bringing a Mike and Carol a grandchild. Though the romance was hardly as sizzling as LA Law or even The Wonder Years , it was a long way from Bobby and Millicent's firework kiss. r° o c 4 tir e ... 1CCL H5ED i'tiANmuj+lr , & _ _ wco ~15 WEEKEND Fehinary 10, 1990 is WEEKEND February 16, 1990