-11" 10 - The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, March 2, 1995 4. 40 Boogerman Interplay Sega Genesis "Boogerman" is the most disgust- ing video game ever made. It doesn't even have one drop of blood, and is one of the most creative Sega carts ever created. So, how could it be so disgust- ing? Well, the overweight, jalapeno- and-beans-eating superhero farts, flicks and burps his way through Di- mension X-crement in this fun game, in order to save his world from being overrun by pollution. What an envi- ronmentalist! In his pick-and flick-adventure, Boogerman kills his enemies with belches and farts, and best of all, by throwing boogers. By picking up extra items along the way, the sick superhero enhances his weapons with milk, al- lowing him to spit big juicy loogies, and with a chili pepper that gives him more gas than taco night at Alice Lloyd Dining Hall, permitting him to fly. Boogerman uses his atomic butt blasts to get past numerous gross char- acters like Puss Creature, Scab Crea- ture and big bosses Hickboy, Deoder Ant and Booger Meister in his attempt to save X-crement from being overrun by garbage. He swings, climbs, flies and even picks through piles of trash in his demented dementia, in an exciting, challenging and sometimes frustrating game. "Boogerman"'s superb graphics and animation make the repulsive game that much more realistic. The anima- tion flows beautifully, as the poor slob jumps and runs through the different adventures, picking and flicking along the way. The only main problem with the game is the difficulty players en- counter with reading some of Boogerman's gauges. As Boogerman travels through Flatulent Swamps, Boogerville, Mu- cous Mountains and numerous other levels, players have to be careful to correctly read the different weapon and life meters. It is difficult to correctly interpret the long string of snot that determines the amount of available boogers and the color of Boogerman's cape that determines the number of hits the superhero can take before being flushed down the toilet. With all its shock value and quality design, "Boogerman" is a sure hit and continues to entertain hour after hour. Its use of strictly biological fun makes the game a lot less violent and more enjoyable than other adventure games, creating fun for the entire family. Well, maybe not. -Brian A. Gnatt *****"******************************eA**e@@***********@@. 0 r00 i 11 I s " " S " " SEGA GENESIS# CONITEST Here we go again, folkies, another video game contest for you to enter. This time the prize is the Boogerman game for : the Sega Genesis game system. And ... lucky for you guys, this time all the answers to the questions are contained in - this week's Weekend section (that's right, you need to read . # the section). Seems easy enough, right? Good luck! . A Marriage Made in Heaven or Too Tired for an Affair Erma Bombeck Harper Paperbacks As I enter the age where my friends are actually getting married, it's some- what of a comfort to read Ermac Bombeck's "A Marriage Made ini Heaven or Too Tired for an Affair." With great humor and poignancy, she leads the reader through her marriage from the traumatic and exciting walki down the aisle, to her own children'si marriages. While she doesn't make marriage sound like a breeze, at least she shows that even the worst mo- ments can be survived with a healthy dose of laughter. Bombeck has made a career of writing amusing anecdotes about her life in such books as "Motherhood: the Second Oldest Profession" and "When You Look Like Your Passport Picture, It's Time to Go Home." Read- ing her novels is like having a mother or friend by your side; warmth and love fill her stories. This book is of the same high caliber as her past writing. Because it is so nicely divided by chapter/age, it is easy to read in short spurts, making it the perfect book for someone who doesn't have much free time (which would encompass nearly every college student). I haven't been through some of life's more momentous experiences, such as pregnancy. However, that fact didn't stop me from laughing out loud when Bombeck spoke of her lack of modesty during pregnancy, as she "bared [her bosom to a doctor in the hall" to ask if she looked normal, only to find out "he was a telephone repair- man." She goes through tales about the strange changes that take place in adults when a child appears in the home and the worries of having off- spring return to the nest after college with the same down-to-earth humor. Not all of the topics she writes about pertain only to mothers. For instance, who can't relate to the inva- sion of machines, where you can go through an entire day without hearing a human voice, or the impact of tele- vision on a relationship (where "sex was worked in around the commer- cial breaks")? Sprinkled in with all those hilari- ous capers are a few more serious moments, which graces the book with a perfect sense of balance. One chap- ter is devoted to the death of a friend and the way it brought Bombeck and her husband closer. Reading about Bombeck's miscarriage made me cry. And knowing that she could manage to keep up her writing and still care for her family inspired me. In the end, what is the reader left with? Not a manual for the perfect marriage or even very much advice about how to run your life. Maybe the most valuable thought Bombeck leaves us with is the idea that a good marriage is possible. Love doesn't have to be elaborate to work; sometimes it is about gestures as simple as hiding the pickled cauliflower from the kids, then giving it to your spouse because you know she likes to eat the tops. The world may not be a perfect place, but books like Into the Green Charles de Lint Tom Doherty Associates Welcome to a world where music opens a path into the green, the land of magic and spirits and ageless wonder. Open the pages of Charles de Lint's "Into the Green" and you'll meet Angharad, a tinker, ha r, and witch, in a world where co ibinations of three lead you places most will never see. In Charles de Lint' latest novel, we follow Angharad's life, as she grows from an immature girl, to a sad adult, to a woman with a mission to bring magic back into a world filled with people who are araid to con- front the extraordinary. Admittedly, the idea of returning magic to the land is not-a new theme in fantastic literature: However, Charles de Lint has the afity to weave words into such a story that, once you've picked up the book, you'll find it extremely difficult to return it to the shelf. A worn idea becomes full of life through this engrossing novel. Like many of his novels, de Lint takes full advantage of a store of an- cient folklore and braids old stories in with the new. Such ideas as the magic of three, the horned god of Celtic mythology, and tree magic appear several times throughout the story, as Angharad makes her way t9 her des- tination. For those of us with a little background in Celtic mythology, it is entertaining to note the deft way in which de Lint repatterns these old designs into an lovely web of ntricate design. You don't need such previous knowledge, though, to apprpciate de Lint's spectacular creations, The one problem I had with "Into the Green" was that the beginning was not as seamless as it might have been. It seems as though de Lint be- gan with the idea of writing several short stories about the travels and discoveries of Angharad and only about halfway through the book de- cided to join the stories into full- fledged novel. The opening stories seem to have few ties, other than the fact that they nearly all cqncern Angharad and magic; they don't flow as smoothly as I would have liked. It might be that de Lint wanted to fully flesh out Angharad's charact be- fore jumping into the main plot. How- ever, I think it might have been more coherent had there been better con- nections from the start. On the other hand, when the d6vel reaches the half-way point the stries actually do begin to come together. and it's easier to settle down into the novel The tale becomes mre com- plicated and interwoven, and de Lint's gift for words and stories becomes more and more apparent. Often when someone puts out a large volume of material in a sltrt amount of time, the resulting books are poorly written and the plots sound repetitious. Charles de Lint has no such problem; he is a prolific writer who has rapidly become a must-read in the fan- tasy genre. Even if you are not a great fan of fantasy novels, I would stIl Bombeck's make m realize that the recommend that you read "Into the problems life hand4 ne can be sur- Green." vived as long as I reii mber to laugh. -Holly Singer -Holly Singer Parallel Time: Growing Up in Black and White Brent Staples Pantheon Books, hardcover Author Brent Staple's' blue-col- lar hometown of Chester, Pa. was "a bulging muscle on the Delaware,a place of promise and money and steel." It is powerful imagery such as this, so quiet, pointed and able t paint a precise portrait of what is being described, that Mr Staples makes expert use of throughout "Par- allel Time." It is also hat Staples's autobiography of his first 20-som years so powerfully alluring. "Th cold," he writes of a Chicago winter, "slipped its knife through the bath room window and cut you as yo, showered." Much like the assailant portrayed here, Staples strikes quickly and effectively with his descriptions, so much so that each one has the feel of a short, well-directed from a video biography montage. Staples's ability to craft vivid im- agery seems to be largely the product of his extensive journal writing, be- gun while pursuing his Ph.D. in psy- chology at the University of Chicago. Yet there was much that preceeded literary pursuits (he currently serves on the editorial board of the New York Times) which well could have led him down other, far more risky avenues. Drug and gang activity, hav- ing come in to fill the void left by the departure of industry from Chester, claimed the life of one of Staples's brothers; little money and divorced, over-burdened parents left other sib- lings languishing in fruitless pursuits. Staples, however, manages a scholar- ship to a local college and afterward to the University of Chicago, thereby moving abruptly from the realm of black poverty to white opportunity. Unfortunately, Staples assumes that the reader knows why he is torn between thse two worlds. For all the turmoil that such a transition would seem to cause (and which the cover of the book seems to suggest, with its prison uniform-like black and white bars and subtle reference to doing "Time") Staples fails to explain to the reader the causes that lie behind it Instead, he focuses almost solely o; the manner in which his fear and anger manifest themselves. For a good portion of the book, he is able to get away with such an ap proach, allowing his forceful imag cry to carry things along. Indeed. Staples's assorted pictures of his youth are movingly pieced together in a patchvrk fashion, almost like a mob' saic, which must be admired for both the composite image and precisiot craftmanship that led to its creation' But when Staples is done weaving his story, the reader finds that there is n common thread of self-analysis to tip;I together the pieces of "Parallel Time" into something purposeful; there is no glue to make it one. -Matt Ben{ 0 a 1. Name two of the illustrious characters from the Boogerman game, other than the Boog-man himself (this one's a given). 2. Where did Toad the Wet Sprocket get their name from? " M " 0 j 4 } S S! 0; 3. Who is the director of "The Needle"? 4. What is the name of the boy in the death fact? 5. Name two of the songs on the record "Addition and Subtraction". 6. Who wrote the most articles for Weekend this week? Return your entry to the Arts room at The Michigan Daily, Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard, by 5 p.m. on March 6, 1995. S s s " " " i " " " " " 0 0 i " S 0 *0 " r r S " " " " " " " " i " 0 __ 1-- Name L r Phone # F " This contest is not open to any employee of the Daily, or their mates or their family. Or pets. 0 ********************** BLOOD Continued from pages chemistry developed between Segal's traditional guitar style and Pieti's mod- ern-chord dissonance, while Rafferty never seemed to run out of percussion ideas. Cimol i'snoise explosions added a certain tension to the proceedings, especially during Badynee's attempts to quiet things down with a ballad-like progression. "This is what all of us do all the time, just jamming in our basements and stuff," explained Badynee. "The difference here is that we all got to- gether and an audience got to see what it's like." But as good as the chemistry' was, Badynee explained that the band members probably wouldn't be work- ing togetheron otherprojects. "It's like. if you meet someone who's married and you've got great chemistry with them, but you know they're already' taken. This will just be something we do with different people, maybe ever) couple of months, or maybe this will b the last show, who knows ? We'll seer what happens." Perhaps the best way to summa rize St. Januarious' Blood's music', is that it represents the violent, sounds of one part of the thriving;; energetic Detroit music scene. Or perhaps Pieti summed things up best with his conment at the end of the> show: "My ears hurt!" ' ;U'. pI HOOTIE I University of Maryland University College Continued from page 7 of pop music but also languishes in the One-word Syndrome category of rock monikers. The problem here is that most of these one-word names denote noth- ing about the band (trnlike the bombasticism above, which tends to denote too much). A few such as Prong and Helmet suggest a hard- edged groove while others like Phish or Wings suggest limp-wristed guitar technioue. and although possibly in- "Hello Cleveland! We're Phish! Are you ready to rock and roll until you bleed?!" It just doesn't work. Most one-word names, however, don't indicate much meaning. Unless you extrapolate a bit further than what the group gives you. For example, Wham! as in "Wham! Here we are! We sure do suck!" Or, Yes, as in "Yes, we suck." Or, Megadeth, as in "We Megasuck." (In "Rock Names," by Adam Dolgins - completely worthless trivia reading if you're in- terested - Megadeth guitarist Dave Mustaine says "The band's name means the act of dying, but like really brilliant but emotionally angst-riddei 0 band - part of that grungy explosion' thing. The name c6nnotes the band - it's image, it's sound. Yet, standing alone, the word is rather plain. The best band names always ap- pear to indicate nothing yet suggest everything. The Beatles is a play ort words of Beat music and the insect. The Rolling Stones is named after A- Muddy Waters tune - the type of, * sound the band wanted and the imagi ery they wanted to conjure. The Re- placements is a common-sounding bar-band title. Cows is an unnaturat name for an unnatural band. *Small classes *Instruction in English *Students from