The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 4, 1998 WB offers comedians creative freedom' The Baltimore Sun For Carol Leifer, it's the opportunity for a creative carte blanche. For Robert Townsend. it's the chance for some tal- ented black directors, writers and actors to hone their skills. And for Ed McMahon, it's the chance to serve as father figure to a bunch of young kids anxious for the big time. For all three, working for the WB is working for the new network on the block, a reality that may translate to fewer viewers and less exposure but brings with it a host of other benefits. "It kind of appealed to me that (the network) is in the evolutionary stages." Leifer said. "It can be a little intimidating to go on a bigger network and maybe know that if you're in a bad time slot or don't deliver in a couple weeks, you're off the air. There's not that kind of pressure here. They've really let me do what I want to do. I like being a pioneer." As do they all, apparently. Townsend, who rose to film fame as an actor/writer/director ("Meteor Man," "Hollywood Shuffle"), says he was drawn to television because of the potential for maximum exposure - important for a man who believes his work provides more than just entertainment. "As an African American especially, there aren't a lot of positive role models on T" Townsend said, "and there aren't a lot of shows that teach as well as be funny. My whole career has been built on stuff that has been funny but has something to say. "I never want it to be a preachy show, but I think that it is needed," he said. "Certainly, in this day and age, when people have gotten so far away from values that you can't sit at 8 o'clock and watch television with your kids ... that's the reason that I created this show." "The Parent 'Hood," in which Townsend stars, is the '90s equivalent of such family shows as "Father Knows Best," "The Andy Griffith Show" and "Cosby." And those are comparisons Townsend relish- es. "The real reason I created 'The Parent 'Hood,"' he said, "is because there's a whole generation that's not growing up on what I grew up on, unless it's on Nick at Nite. Mlaybe it's corny, maybe it's sappy; those shows I grew up on. they always had a happy ending but at the core was a real message" Tlevision. he said, offers the best medium for getting his philosophy across. "I can get a message to millions and millioi of people ... every week." McMahon. who's been in the entertainment busi- ness for nearly half a century, gets a real kick out of his status as senior statesman at WB. "There's a lot of reverence and a lot of respect for me, which I really think is great," McMahon said, who co-stars on "The Tom Show" with Tom Arnold. "Onc day, the stage manager came in and started to tell mne something, and Arnold comes up to him and says: 'Get off the stage. This man has 50 years of experience doing this; you don't even speak to him."' McMahon laughed as he told the story, a lau4 familiar to nearly everyone, that's what 30 years sitting alongside Johnny Carson does for a man's career -- a career that now calls the WB home. courtesy of WB Network "Airight Already"'s Carole Leifer enjoys the creative freedom of working for upstart WPNetwork. Her critically acclaimed show airs on Sunday nights. 'Chess' deserves royal treatment A1 a ft-clifts. Yf' 'Fabric' weaves realistic theory Power LChess vas Sierra Win 95 CD-ROM "Power Chess '98" helps PC chess shed the 'cold calculator' image it acquired when IBM's Deep Blue beat world champion Gary Kasparov. One of the main criticisms against Deep Blue Was that it ran off cold cal-R culations and? thus lacked SfN the human;T clement that% is as integral? to chess as moving the F. . pieces. The same argu- ment was threaten- ing the home computer chess market ... until now. Enter the new breed of computer chess with "Power Chess '98" from Sierra leading the way. "Power Chess" invents a royal family of opponents. In most chess' tames of the past, the game itself was the opponent. Now, there is the Power Chess King and Queen, prince, princess, commoners and nobles - which you create - against which the player's skills can be tested. Each opponent has its own distinct playing stylc. The Queen is the true master of the game here and is really the main character behind Power Chess. although the King was meant to be the main opponent. The playing styles of the prince and princess mirror their crow ned counterparts, but they don't have as much skill as their elders. In the past, chess games weren't really educational, despite the com- panies' attempts to use that as a sales pitch. More often than not. this educa- tional aspect D IA waslimited to a "hint" feature per- taming to what move to s make next. While the, suggested move was normally very good, the computer never explained why the move should be made, so the player was forced to draw their own conclu-, sions. That was fine for more advanced players, but never really helped the beginner. "Power Chess" teaches every player a little something and can be extremely useful to the beginner. When a game against the Power Chess King ends, the Power Chess Queen reviews the game, move-by- move. She analyzes the majority of the moves and gives feedback as to whether or not the player, or the king, made a good or bad move. But most importantly she tells why certain consequences' occurred, then proceed to show you what probably would have happened if a certain move had taken place, instead of the move; that occurred. This is very much like playing with a chess instructor since it gives you a deeper understanding, of the game. There are three differ- ent levels of detail on which you can have the Queen explain her analysis of your game. For example, on the highest level of detail, she will tell you the names of some openings as well as the his- tory behind them. When you play the Power Chess King, the King will always have a flaw in his game that you should try to recognize and exploit. Once you do so, the King will adapt, and never make that same mistake again. There is an entire series of matches for you to play against the king.each one pre- senting a new flaw for you to learn to attack. If you're not learning enough in class, "Power Chess '98" will give you a nice lesson so you. too, can become a master. Deveron . Sanders The Fabric of Reality David Deutsch Bantam Publishing In his latest book, "The Fabric of Reality," David Deutsch confirms that "the truth is out there." But, unlike Mulder and Scully, he is not looking for it in the crop-circles and muddled alien-abduction accounts of middle America. Deutsch, a renowned quantum physicist, makes the far-more-shocking- than-"X-Files" claim that we. as human beings, already have all of the tools to construct a unified, scientific explanation of everything. Everyone who has ever had even the slightest interest in science fiction (and who hasn't seen "Back to the Future" and argued the various ramifications and paradoxes inherent in the misadventures of Marty McFly?) will be awe-struck by Deutsch's chapter on time travel. "The study of time travel provides an arena- albeit at pre- sent only a theoretical, thought-experiment arena - in which we can see writ large some of the connections between what I call the 'four main strand.'" Drawing from established fact in quantum mechanics, Deutsch illustrates that past-oriented time travel would not be paradoxical (even thew Johnsonian "kill my parents before they meet" situations) and that "changing the past is no differ- ent from changing the future, which we all do all the time." As a layman's science book, "The Fabric of Reality" is very well thought out: Each chapter ends with a brief sum- mary and a glossary of new terms introduced in that chapter, both of which are invaluable aids. Additionally, Deutsch's writing is concise but never textbook-like. In his arguments and explanations lie paints a graceful and persuasive arc. Deutsch's only real stumbling block is a slight unevenness in his choice of focus: lie indulges in several laborious and unconvincing refutations of a commonly bandied-about phi- losophy but then merely glides over far more esoteric fields (e.g. quantum computation.) Deutsch explained, in a recent e- mail interview, that "the imbalance is caused by a policy deci- sion that I made early in the writing process. I decided that I would only explain what was necessary for the understanding of the book's central thesis. Everything else, I ruthlessly cut out." All things considered, "The Fabric of Reality" is a fresh, clear demonstration of the far-reaching implications of a con- certed scientific understanding of the Universe. It is definite- ly worth a look. - David Erik Nelson Western Swing Tim Sandlin Riverhead Books "Western Swimg" is a love story that begins with a fissure between Loren and his wife, Lana Sue. This fissure startsvwith a Vision Quest and a Toyota spitting gravel and deals with the various bumps and roadblocks of marriage, loss and memory. Sandlin explores, with humor and raunch, what people -do to each other and themselves by love -- not Harlequin romance love, but love for someone's singing on the tait The kind of love that's given to objects of desire like a litt boy whose best friend is a clamshell or I ana Sue who looks for cowboys when her husbands fail. III "Western Swing," there is a subtle but important focus on the differences in how people deal with their past: The past as something tainted that one should move past, the past as something to be explored and explained. Along with thisare anecdotes that anyone whohas encountered suspicious green-marshmallow salad at family reunions or who has worked as a dishwasher will identify with. For this era, in which "multiculturalisnfl tracing family roots and clog-dancing becaus your great-grandpa was Irish are the norms, the subtext of how we deal with the past has particular importance. History - ... personal and otherwise - is an issue pee- ularly endemic to our own, post-modern America. Loren's particular reaction to these norms is to visit authors' graves and talk to them. The process of retelling shows how Lana Sue and Loren come to terms with the past by tallying up losses and wins. Sandlin has the ability to eviscerate people and their past a-' present actions while leaving them looking somewhat pretty the end. Ultimately, Sandlin seems to be writing beyond these two characters and addressing Americans in general. Loren, the main character, has the quirk of not really being in his own life, watching or commenting about himself' as if lie's another person. It's as if Loren has been cloned and one of them serves to watch the other. It's remniscient of people in high school, in a setting where the image supercedes the person. Sandlin doesn't show a "normally" functioning human being. But then again, that view is also endemic to our cul- ture, to which no one is free from Oedipus or Proz "Western Swing" is either written by a freaky author abof ordinary folks or by an ordinary author about freaks. Sandlin captures the space between the individual and the action - singing on the toilet, because what else are you supposed to do?- and weaves it out for you. - Cara Spindler 40 I> _______________ i-oil SUc C ESS "The price of success is hard work." - Vince Lombardi Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity is looking for men who: want to succeed academically * want to serve their campus and community * want to be leaders VI * want to have fun Join us for an informational session tonight at 6:00 p.m. in the Wolverine Room of the Union to learn how you can become part of this select group of men.