48 - The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine - Thursday, January 21, 1999 Road-Trip of the Week Cooperstown gets new life from recent heroics The Michigan Daily Weeken ® State of the Arts WORK, SCHOOL AND.9O21O' By WiWeissert Weekend, Etc. Editor COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. - As far as career choices go, 1998 was a great year to be the owner of the Baseball Hall of Fame. The year, which experts trumpet as finally resurrecting baseball from the deeply seeded scars of 1994's strike, brought the newly supportive public as many physical gems and artifacts as it did emotional thrills. For every home run in the upper '50s, '60s, or '70s which Sammy Sosa slammed onto the Clark Street pavement or Mark McGwire crushed into the St. Louis night; for every mound celebration convened at Yankee Stadium, there was a ball to chase down or a glove hurled skyward to catch or a uniform to tear off someone's back. And physical memorabilia is what a place like the Baseball Hall of Fame is really all about. Visitors to the hall are immediately confronted with the physical shrine that was baseball's greatest season in years. There are the shoes, uniform and batting gloves Big Mac wore when he got just enough of that Steve Trachsel pitch Sept. 8 and the home plate he touched as the line-drive - No. 62 - just made it over the Busch Stadium wall to left. There are the multitude of bats Sosa useda while chasing McGwire, nestled among just about everything either player used, touched or breathed on during the final weeks of 1998. But of course there was a hall of fame before the start of the 1998 baseball sea- son and there will be one after another team has replaced the destiny-dusted Yankees as world champions and the achievements of McGwire and Sosa have faded from memory at least a little. For starters the hall of fame offers the three most recent players inducted into its hallowed folds: George Brett, Nolan Ryan and Robin Yount. Brett is a player known as much for his pine-tar debacle as for his flirtation with hitting .400 in 1980 and for his 3000-plus hits during his 21 seasons with the Kansas City Royals. The man baseball's elders dubbed the "Ryan Express" finished his storied career the game's all-time leader in strike outs with 5,714 and compiled seven no-hitters for the Mets, Angels, Astros and Rangers. Yount finished 15th on baseball's all- time hit list, and the long-time Brewer was named by USA Today as the American League Player of the Decade. While it will be a few more weeks before hall of fame officials finish com- piling video tape retrospectives for the hall's newest members, visitors in the near future can still enjoy video high- lights of the careers of the hall's 1998 class: Yankee slugger George Davis, Front office smooth-operator for the Brooklyn Dodgers and Yankees Lee MacPhail, Negro League standouts Larry Doby and Joe Rojan and Don Sutten - whose illustrious career included stints with the Pirates and Angels. The plaques of last year's class hang first in a room filled with bronze tributes to all of the hall's inductees. From there, hall-goers will have the It's the beginning of a new semester. This is the time to start fresh, and once again I'm making the same resolutions I've made every semester since I was a freshman here. This will be the semes- ter when I will get that 4.0 G.P.A., get involved in some more resume-build- ing extracurricular activities, go to the CCRB every day and get in shape, work on some community service pro- jects and become an all-around nicer person. But every semester, I take a break and start watching TV, and all of my resolutions get pushed aside for anoth- er four months. I'm not a true addict, according to my housemates. Far from it, actually. I make sure I don't spend enough time at home to become hooked. But it's a constant struggle, and I'm sure that anyone who has ever sat down "just to check CNN and find out what's hap- pening" and then missed class watch- ing "90210" reruns will agree with me. There are several levels of the col- lege TV addict. A viewer in the first level of addiction has "his or her show," one program that the viewer has to watch each week. Be it "The X- Files," "The Simpsons," or "Dawson's Creek;' these people will reschedule meetings, program their VCR, and do anything to make sure that they don't miss an episode. The second level is made up of the soap fans. It's hard to pin down exactly; how many peo- ple belong to this group, because almost no one willingly sits down and says, Jessica Eaton "You know, I've Daily Arts Editor heard that the writing on 'The Young and the Restless' is really good and that it has excellent character develop- ment. I'd like to see it sometime." These are the people who get hooked by turning on the TV during their lunch hour and are unwittingly drawn in by the traumas of people with names like Victor, Adrienne and Veronica. Before they realize it, they need to watch every day. I am a member of the third level. This group is the most dangerous, because it is possibly the group most affected by the TV. We even exceed the soap watchers in our obsession. Post card courtesy of The Baseball Hall of Fame Located In the "blink-or-you'll miss It" village of Cooperstown, N.Y,. The Baseball Hail of Fame is now chock-full of Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwlre memorabilia - but, as always, also features exhibits on everything from the Negro Leagues to fea- tures on the base ball media, to all the statistics any fan could ever want. option of heading to the baseball theater and the hall's movie presentation "The Baseball Experience." The movie is championed by promoters as a "13- minute multi-media glimpse into the heart and soul of the game" but in reality is nothing more than self-serving drivel. Die-hard Tigers fans may want to catch the movie only because it features a 1984 picture of an ecstatic Kirk Gibson, arms thrown skyward, as a packed Tiger Stadium looks on - but the movie is def- initely the'first thing to cross off the must- do list, if pressed for time. On the way into the theater (and eas- ily accessible with out actually stopping to see the movie) is a slightly out-of- date but nevertheless cute little locker room providing visitors with away, home and historical uniforms for each of baseball's teams. It is here that you also can learn that the New York Yankees spent two years as a Baltimore Orioles franchise, and exactly how many people can crowd into the pools at the Dome where the Arizona Diamond Backs play. On the other side of the theater is a chronological history of the game through old photos and a number of interesting small video presentations. The third floor features the museum's ballpark exhibit and offers fans photos and small replicas of some of the game's most famous venues from the Negro League's Bidwell Park to New York's original Yankee Stadium - a field that was littered with gravestones in right and center field. The models and architecture shots give way to exhibits on the history of the All Star Game which are followed by historical romps through the playoffs and the World Series. Besides catching a 1990s tribute to the accomplishments of the Braves and Blue Jays, here you can peer through glass at the championship rings pro- duced by each year's champion, scoff at the hilarity of the once-tried nine-game world series and marvel at just how many times two teams from New York have battled for the World Series crown. One big problem with this excusion is that Cooperstown is located a good two hours from the absolute middle of nowhere. But, as the history-of-the-game exhibits make clear, the shrine to baseball is located where it is because the 2,300- inhabitant hamlet in very-upstate New York was where "the first scheme for playing baseball was determined." But what really makes Cooperstown so special are its artifacts. There's the ball from the perfect game hurled by David Wells (formerTiger, traded for no one) on Beanie Baby Day in New York last sea- son. There's Tim Raines' 50th stolen base and the bat Matt Williams used to hit 43 See BASEBALL,Page 58 TV. The week that was What happened on TV's best shoWs Wed.-Tues. "Dawson's Creek": Love and lust are in the air as the six hormonal horndogs pair off in the first of a two-part episode. Jack puts on his birthday suit in order to help Joe with an art proect, the newly reinvented perfect Pacey conspires to give Andie her dream deflowering and 6awson and Jen continue their skinny.dipping ses- sign. Next week reveals who amongst the creeps actually did the deed. "90210": Struggling with a heroin addiction is tough and Dylan knows it. But it's not half as toug as Kelly's problem of how to sleep with new beau Matt without ruining her memories of ex-boyfriend Brandon. Steve tries a new get-more-rich-quick scheme by selling video tapes on how to hit on women and like everything else in his life, it fails. Donna and Noah have their weekly fight, proving that lovers do not; have to get along to get it on. "Law and Order": The discovery of a dead body in a Volkswagen Bus leads to the unveiling of a police conspiracy to infiltrate anti-Vietnam protest groups in the late '60s. McCoy soon discovers the victim was working undercover but was murdered by a guard whose son died in Vietnam. "Friends": (R) Haircuts are in stable condition and resting comfortably. "ER": (R) Get us some new storylnes, stat! "The Sinqisons": Celebrating the success of the minor league baseball team, Homer and pals et drunk and drive a car through Springfield Elementary. They do thousands of dollars in damae and prompt police to mistakenly impose a curfew for any one younger than 1 nspired by a British horror flick, the kids retaliate and launch a radio smear campaign that reveals the secrets of the adults. Springfield's elderly population ends the adults vs. kids controvers by imposing a curfew for anyone under the age of 70 - doing so after outlining their plan musically. "X Flies": Skinner comes down with a life-threatening case of varicose veins. Scully and Mulder race against the clock to find a cure and a reason for the disease. The answer? Let's just say they opened a rat(boy)'s nest with this one. "Ally McBeal": Ally and Greg bring their relationship back from hiatus, while John and Nelle move in the other direction. Ally and Richard argue a case in which a sex addict husband seeks an annulment in order to avoid paying alimony. Meanwhile, Dr. Tracey is on vacation and a shrink (actually Bruce Willis in an uncredited cameo) steps in and manages to drive off both Ally and the biscuit - and driving them into each others therapeutic arms, so to speak. "Buffy The ampire Slayer": It's the buffed one's birthday and things are not- . exactly happy.Buffy's powers are diminishing to the point where even Cordelia can manhandle meatheads while Buffy must stand idly by. Is the slayer's Sunnydale reign over? Will she turn her attention to political aspirations now that she's of legal age? Nah - by the end she's still the vamp killer we know and love, but Giles' job as the watcher (and Buffy's father figure) is in jeopardy. "Felicity": Felicity returns from winter break and announces to Noel that she wants to have sex with him. What follows is farce and folly seldom seen on TV: trees bum a la "Pleasantville" and minibars are pilfered. Problems arise when Felicity and Noel find out that Ben and Julie are seeing each other - although how much of each other they're actually seeing, uh, remains to be seen. compiled by the Daily Arts Staff. Viewers in the third level of TV addic- tion watch anything and everything, especially if they've seen it before. These addicts have discovered that basic cable service offers the best brain-numbing fluff around. And across campus, procrastinators like me are hooked. Here, for your viewing pleasure, is a sampling of what I've found to be the best time-wasting TV out there: "Beverly Hills 90210" "Friends," and "Mad About You" reruns - Especially the early episodes, the ones from the early '90s. These shows appeal to TV addicts because we all wish that we were as cool, as beautiful, and as much fun as the characters. "Friends" is also on twice every day Monday through Friday, so there's never an excuse to miss a day. Sometimes, the true addict can even watch the same show twice within the span of a few hours. TV Newsmagazines - Yes, they all cover the same geriatric health risk and auto safety stories. And as proved by the unfortunate incident of "60 Minutes II" running a story that "Dateline" ran in '94, sometimes they cover exactly the same stories. But one Top 10 videos (Last week's top videos and the studios that produced them) 1. "Armageddon," Touchstone 2. "Titanic," Paramount 3. "The Wedding Singer," New Line 4. "The Mask of Zorro," Columbia/TriStar 5. "Dr. Dolittle," Fox Video 6. "Lion King ll:Simba's Pride," Disney 7. "Small Soldiers," Universal 8. "Good Will Hunting," Miramax 9. "Austin Powers," New Line 10. "Gone With the Wind," MGM/UA Source: Billboard Magazine Top 10 Albums (The nation's top-selling albums for the week) 1. DMX, "Flesh of My Flesh" 2. Lauryn Hill, "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill" 3. 2Pac, "Greatest Hits" 4 Offspring, "Americana" 5, Jay-Z, "Vol. 2 ... Hard Knock Life" 6. 'N Sync, "'N Sync" 7. Jewel, "Spirit" 8. Mariah Carey, "#1s" 9. Garth Brooks, "Double Live" 10. Various Artists, "Now" Souce:BiJlboard Magazine of these examples of quality ming is on every night of and the viewer can justify actions with the mantra, watching the news and learn what's going on in the world addict has learned that TV p tion is all about justification VH1 - Since MTV unwatchable about five y VH1 has begun to provide g sion fun at all hours of the "Pop-Up Video"'s fun tri else can you get facts abc hand smoke accompanying singing "Every Breath You that great "Behind the Musi about Milli Vanilli's fall fi the third-level addict can s here. Nick at Night - Begir "Happy Days" at 10 p.m. an ing through "The Wonder 2:30 in the morning, Nic beats TV Land hands-dowr nostalgic reruns. Almost ev student has seen all of thes least once, but that only ad appeal. The History Channel - documentaries, biographies presidents, and occasionall Top 10 movies (Last week's top grossing movies 1. "Varsity Blues," Param 2. "A Civil Action," Touch 3. "The Thin Red Line," 2 4. "Patch Adams," Univer 5. "At First Sight," MGM 6. "Stepmom," Columbia/ 7. "You've Got Mail," Wan 8. "Prince of Egypt," Drea 8. "Virus," Universal 10. "In Dreams," Dreamw Top 10 Books (The week's best-selling hard-cove 1. "A Man in Full," Tom WI 2. "Seize the Night," Dean 3. "The Poisonwood Bible 4. "Billy Straight," Jonath 5. "The Simple Truth," Da 6. "Memoirs of a Geisha," 7. "When The Wind Blows, 8. "Angel's Flight," Michai 9. "Charming Billy," Alice 10. "Rainbow Six," Tom CI Top 10 Singles (The nation s top-selling songs fo 1. Brandy, "Have You Ever? 2. Deborah Cox, "Nobody's 3. Britney Spears, "... Bab 4. R, Kelly and Celine Dion 5. Eagle-eye Cherry, "Save 6. Jewel, "Hands" 7. Shawn Mullins, "Lullaby 8. Divine, "Lately" 9. Lauryn Hill, "Doo Wop ( 10. Goo Goo Dolls, "Slide"