16—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Sept. 10, 1980 Reconstruction of Delta Tau Delta Photo by Sherrie Weiner Delta Tau Delta fraternity house was almost totally destroyed by fire last Winter .Term, leaving most of the building as devastated as the hallway above... the Scorpion TUESDAY "Fantasy Airlift"* WEDNESDAY "Terry Beard" THURSDAY "Tahoka Freeway" FRIDAY "Terry Beard" SATURDAY "Backseat Van Gogh" * Happy Hours all nite long on Tuesdays Catch Monday Nite Football downstairs at "THE SCOREBOARD" on our 7' Advent T.V King Biscuit Flower Hour Monday, 11:00 p.m. Saturday Evening Music Sweep Saturdays, 9-1: The. Beatles Forever Sundays, 10:00-11:00 PM Sunday Night Jazz Sunday At Midnight The Midday Music Menu —Monday-Friday at 12:05 The Living Classics Sundays, 6:00 a.m.-12:00 noon The Newsblimp BBC Rock Specials Saturday Evening Scoreboard Newscentre Reports WXLR The The 232 W. Calder Way Presents Where The Music Speaks For Itself By DAVID MEDZERIAN Daily Collegian Staff Writer Nine months after a devastating fire all, but destroyed their house, the brothers of Delta Tau Delta fraternity are finally moved back in. "Everyone has a lot of pride in the house," said Craig Emery (10th landscape architecture), a Delta Tau Delta brother. "We're working together to make this house number one. It was rough at first, but we had a lot of help from the University." Construction at the house, located at 429 E. Hamilton Ave., should be finished within a week, according to House President Bill Herman. "The whole house has undergone renovation," he said. While the exterior remained , essen tially unchanged, the interior has been completely rebuilt. The house has been extensively redesigned for better space efficiency, especially in the basement and in the second and third floor bedroom areas. Old storage rooms have been removed to enlarge the basement recreation room. On the upper floors a large bathroom, destroyed by the fire, has been relocated and its space converted into living quarters. Herman said that he and fraternity brothers Bill Kidd and Larry Hixson worked with the Jack Frost Construction Co. in repairing, the house throughout the summer. The renovated house features the latest safety equipment, including a , complete sprinkler system and emergency lighting "We're one of the few houses with a sprinkler system," Herman said. "We have, without a doubt, the safest house." Holistic Health through YOGA September 12-14 - yoga postures - relaxation 4eNW/ - self-healing techniques - breathing exercises - diet techniques Center for Well-Being 200 W. Colle g e Ave. Rm. 204 237-3042 WXI.II Music and More The cause of the January 9 fire was traced to a short circuit in the heating system near the television room in the basement of the house. Ironically, a new sprinkler system was slated to be in stalled the following week. John Albanese (10th-computer science) was in the TV room when the fire broke out. "We were watching television and heard the smoke alarm," Albanese said. "We had to climb out of a basement window." Albanese said many other fraternities helped replace the members' personal belongings. Although the fraternity's insurance covered repairs to the structure, losses of personal property were left to in dividual's policies. Herman estimated that only half of the fraternity's property was salvageable, and even fewer per sonal items. "I'd say only 25 percent, or less," he said. Herman said that he personally lost about half of his belongings. Other brothers did not fare so well "I salvaged what I could," Emery said, "but most of the stuff I have is stuff I bought over the summer." Irwin Slotnick (Bth-horticulture) said he and his roommates were lucky compared to some of the brothers. "We lost .very little," he said. "A lot of the guys lost everything." Spring Term pledge George Skawski (10,th-landscape architecture) said that Spring Term rush seemed no different while the members were housed at The Lofts. "It was unique how they pulled together," he said. "It didn't affect them." But Herman said planning spring rush Saturdays at 5,6, 7 & 8:00 p.m. nearly complete f; . - tP.:*•!.;• f 1 • t" , 6 %, 1 ,41,- , 1,1 , ' , 1. 1, 1 „;v.70. • ;WI% 3 , 71:t t$ .9,i,„„ vie • ..but renovations and reconstruction are almost complete and 46 of the. brothers have finally moved back in. Repairs on the house should be finished about a week. while living at The Lofts was a problem. "Did you ever try to plan a fraternity party in an apartment a few miles off campus?" he asked. Berman_ said Benchmark Realty Inc.,the managers of The Lofts, were hesitant about fraternity parties, fearing they would resemble those in the movie "Animal House." "We had to beat that stereotype," Herman said. "Benchmark was quite pleased." The fire has not affected membership as there are now 46 brothers. "You can't beat that when house capacity is 50," Herman said. Last year, Delta Tau Delta also had 22 new pledges 11.1111111 W The Arena at Skimont (closed Mon.) Rts. 322 E. , 466.6271 DATE 'N' STEAK by spring. Scholastically, the fraternity giros aided by University faculty members'. 7: "We didn't lose.. any ground scholastics," Herman said. "We maintained about the same level: - 'of performance." Despite the fire, house unity seems stronger than ever. „ ot "I wouldn't hesitate to say that just being through something like this pulled us together," Albanese said. 1. "As far as the unity of the house we're 100 percent stronger," Herman said. "It's been a test," he said. "I fee) thiit we passed it very well." (Ike RE4/4 ii°l /SE OF FINE BEEF . 00 a.m. :1••• • 4- . f r „ 4 130 Heister St State College 237.0361 Misia: A femme du monde for the ages "Misia: The Life of Misia Sert" by )rthur Gold and Robert Fizdale, Knopf, $16.95, 314 pages. By P.J. PLATZ Daily Collegian Staff Writer "This woman could not care less about hiving the seat of honor at a fete; she preferred the best seat, It is generally not-the same. At the theatre she wanted to see rather than be seen. Therefore artists loved her." (From "La Char treuse de Parme," by Jean Cocteau.) The woman is Misia Godebska Natanson Edwards Sert. The artists who loved her were Ravel, Stravinsky, Liszt, Faure, Satie; Bon nard, Vuillard, Renoir, Toulouse- Lautrec: Claude!, Valery, Mallarme, Colette, Cocteau; Diaghilev, Ninjinsky, Chanel. The list goes on and on. And "Misia: The Life of Misia Sert," Arthur Gold and Robert Fizdale, is a marvelous book about an incredible woman. Misia, one of the most generous, 'charming and fascinating women of the 20th century, was a patron of the arts of the highest calibre, With an interest which stemmed from her love for the :Mists, not their love for her. Born in 1872 to Polish sculptor Cyprien Godebski and Eugenie Sophie Servais, a daughter of celebrated cellist Adrien- Francois Servais, Misia led an unhappy childhood, schooled mainly in Paris. Although shuffled from one relative to thf other, she was, ultimately, surrounded by the distinctive world of the fine arts. the daily collegian Stephen King's back, •Firestarter: "Firestarter" by Stephen King, Viking Press, $13.95, 428 pages. B4STUART AUSTIN Daily Collegian Staff Writer Hot on the heels of the success of "The Shining," chiller film of the sweltering summer, and "The Dead Zoiie," currently burning up the paperback charts at number one ~,c e,s_StevenXlKLnewest horror novel, "Firestarter. In keeping with the tradition King established with his earlier novels, "Firestarter" is the story of an intividual with abnormal mental powers. In this case, a young girl exhibits pyrokinesis, the ability to start fires with her mind. The origins of this unusual power in young Charlie McGee are traced back to an experiment in which her parents, took part as college students. A CIA-type organization known as The Shop administers a test of arioexperimental hallucinogen. The drug leaves her father with a trace of whdt he calls "the push," the ability to mentally change other's perceptions. Her mother gets an even smaller trace of telekinesis, the ability to move physical objects with her mind. Charlie, however, inherets a full-fledged dose of pyrokinesis. •Wing masterfully combines fantasy and reality into an exciting adventure in the realm of fear. Charlie's abilities and their consequences are equally horrifying as the ruthless, brutal tactics of The Shop. The never ending vigilance of Big Brother is all too believable. The characters in "Firestarter" are sufficiently developed to be beliveable in the light of the bizzare circumstances in which they are found. Andy McGee is a young professor with a secure middle class''suburban existance who comes home one day to find his wife murdered and his "talented" daughter kidnapped by The Shop, • McGee's existance becomes a deadly game to get 'Hand-Me-Downs': family fun Generations of loves and hates "Hand-Me-Downs" by Rhea Kohan, Random House, $10.95, 373 pages. By PADDY PATTON Daily Collegian Staff Writer There is more to inheritance than just a physical estate. These other heirlooms loves, hates, attitudes and convictions passed from one generation to the next are the motivating forces in Rhea Kohan's "Hand-Me-Downs." Kohan writes her novel with a special gift for characterization and a natural talent for pointing out humor In everyday situations. The most outstanding figure in the book is Yuspeh, an 80-year-old k Rhea Kohan 'Not only a patron of the arts, but a muse' It was from this upbringing that mua "became not only a patron of the arts but a muse, an inspiration to artists." In 1893 Misia married her cousin, Thadee Natanson, a quiet intellectual who founded a magazine called "La Revue Blanche." The periodical en compassed the arts on an international scale, and was tres populaire from 1889 to 1903. However, it was Misia who became the more popular of the handsome pair. "A mistress of feminine guile, Misia knew how to lean on a parasol, handle a fan, show her rounded arms and breasts to advantage as she adjusted her hat and veil. . . She was a rough-and-ready princess.". She lived in luxury, in a sumptuous apartment whose parlor housed a pair of grand pianos, at which she and her friends would play and sing for many a Jong soiree. It was through her husband's work at "La Revue Blanche" that Misia met Henri Toulotthe-Lautrec. He was fascinated with the handsome woman, and used her as a model for many of the revue's covers (one of which decorates the dustjacket). Part of this book's delight comes from its in-depth investigation of the people Misia knew. Artists whom we have all known and admired for years are brought to, light as real people, rather than some sort of demi-gods. Par example: "Lautrec was an authority on the subject of brothels. When Yvette ar s mother-in-law personality who's as sharp as the proverbial tack. Her insights are of the funny but penetratingly accurate variety. At one point she says to her son, "You're a dumbbell. . . . You should kiss more the wife and less the daughter; and when the daughter pushes in, the smart father pushes her out, because if he don't, he's a dumbbell who will ruin his own daughter." Yuspeh's comment is the book in a nutshell. The three women about whom the book is written Malka, Helen and Marilyn are succesive generations of the same family. Malka and Marilyn (grandmother and granddaughter) are portrayed as bitter, frustrated and unfulfilled, seeking to rise above their surroundings. Helen, caught between two awesomely self-centered and unloving women, fights for her own portion of love in the world. As Yuspeh intimates, the central struggle is between Helen and Marilyn over Lenny Helen's husband and Marilyn's father. It is Marilyn who eventually rises above the desperation and meaness of such a struggle, and her maturation constitutes the essence. Kohen follOws Marilyn's development from a successful, ambitious, unlovable divorce lawyer to a woman over whelmed by the inhumanity of her life. hot as ever ' an inferno of horror Guilbert asked him where he lived, he casually gave the address of a well known whorehouse. Asked how he could stay in such a place, the eccentric aristocrat replied, 'My God, would you rather I entertained such riff-raff at home?' " Misia divorced Natanson to become the mistress of newspaper tycoon Alfred Edwards. She was showered, draped and esconced in jewels, furs, yachts and champagne. And She reveled , in it all. But that relationship, consummated in a short-lived marriage, left her an in dependent woman again, until her fascination and subsequent remarriage to Spanish painter Jose-Marie Sert. Along the way she became intimate friends with Serge Diaghilev, for whom she founded and financed the fabulous Ballets Russe, and fashion designer Coco Chanel, whom she also "discovered" and financed. Her relationships with the tern permental pair rose and fell with Wall- Street-figures regularity, but un derneath it all the three shared an in tense love for one another and their worlds of art. One particular ballet in which Misia played a key role was "Parade," produced by Diaghilev: " 'Parade' was announced as 'a ballet realiste by Jean Cocteau,' but in the program notes Apollinaire invented a new word, sur realisme (super-realism), to describe its magical fusion of decor, . scenario, music, and dance, which he felt had a Photo by James Leonard Marilyn's eventual salvation from this inhumanity after divorce, group therapy and the death of her father is abstention from love altogether. While Kohan's choice of this particular ending and her sup port for it are reasonable, their exact logical underpinnings are not easily perceived from the book. As a travel guide through the jungles of southern California society, "Hand-Me-Downs" demonstrates Kohen's talent for satire. Everything from valium happy psychotherapists to swinging singles (and marrieds) is fodder for Kohen's cannon. These touches, asides and details are the best moments in the book. The characters of secondary im portance are sketched with par ticularly astute insight. Marilyn's sister Phlylis, for example, is the prototypical vintage flower child. She and her husband Neil run The Cosmic Cucumber, a very expensive, very laid back,. very posh—and very silly, in Kohen's opinion natural food restaurant. "Hand-Me-Downs" is complex, but where the weight of its content threatens to overwhelm it, the leavening of Kohen's writing comes to the rescue. As social commentary, its quality is excellent; as a story it is at least worth a thought-provoking reading. poetic reality more intensely valid than reality itself." The ballet brought together "Erik Satie's first orchestral score, Pablo Picasso's first stage decor, Leonide Massine's first Cubist choreography', and a poet's first attempt to express one step ahead, to at least protect his daughter from the same fate as his wife. His advantage, "the push," which he uses more than once to just barely save his life, seems to be waning in effectiveness. He must place an equal burden on Charlie to get them to the end of their horrifying game. Charlie McGee seems to be just like any other second grader, except when she gets angry. Then things get too -hot -to..handle.-She had-:always been told by her parents that the fires are bad and she mustn't succumb to the temptation to lose control. But faced with the do-or-die choice when she and her father are cornered by The Shop, she does indeed lose control. King skillfully manipulates . this into one of the most exciting scenes in the novel. Perhaps the most fascinating character in "Firestarter" is Shop agent John Rainbird. A large, disfigured man of Navajo ancestry; Rainbird is a killer with a difference. His driving force in life is a death wish, and he has been preparing for 20 years to meet his own end. When he carries out a brutal murder on Shop "business," Rainbird gazes into his victim's eyes, trying to find the answer to the mysteries of death. He always fails to make his discovery, and finds only an expression of puzzlement in the face of the unfortunate individual. However, never to be thwarted, he finds Charlie, and realizes that she is the key to his life's problem. They must die together. King's fecundity in the horror novel market does not force him to compromise his writing quality. Although his novels concentrate on individuals with strange psi powers, each is excitingly different and therefore sure bestsellers. "Firestarter" is no exception to this rule. Even at the $13.95 hardback price, it's been selling like hot cakes. Robbins strikes again "Still Life With Woodpecker" by Tom Robbins, Bantam, $6.95, 277 pages. By JOHN PROTEVI • Daily Collegian Staff Writer How can you describe Tom Robbins? Those of you have read his books know what he's like. Describing him to those who haven't may not be as hard as telling the proverbial blind man about the rainbow, but it's. not much less dif ficult. Oh, I can tell you what he writes about. But his style! One British critic has said that "Tom Robbins writes like Dolly Parton looks." Not a bad attempt, ac tually. Luscious, overripe, bursting at the seams; loud, bright, flashy they all fit. But maybe it's better to say he writes like an outlaw. Outlaws play a big role in "Still Life With Woodpeckers." In The World According to Robbins, outlaws are "can openers in the supermarket of life." They are "the spoon which stirs the stew of life." They operate "for freedom, for beauty, for fun." 'Yep, he writes like an outlaw —that's as close as I can come to describing him. "Still Life" isn't only, or even mainly, about outlaws, though. Also prominent in this particular recipe for "the stew of life" are love, lust, ecology, royalty, contraception, neoteny, pyramids, and more, much more. "Still Life" isn't just a mishmash, though. This stew has a plot. It's of the boy meets girl, etc. variety. Sounds normal so far, but what a boy! What a girl! Bernard Mickey Wrangle, outlaw bomber extraordinaire, is the boy him Self without words." A most im pressive set of directors. Indeed, this is a most impressive book. Photographs, and reproductions of the paintings of Misia by Bonnard, Vuillard, Toulouse-Latrec and Renoir in glorious vibrant color are generously sprinkled 'Class Reunion:' pass the "Class Reunion" by Rona Jaffe, Dell, $2.75, 445 pages. By P.J. PLATZ Daily Collegian Staff Writer Rona Jaffe's "Class Reunion" is a pretty dumb book. So why bother reading it, much less , Into. the wee hours of the morning? For the same reason as eating a Tastykake you know you're being inundated with empty calories, but they taste so good going down. . . . , • .. • ..‘• . . . • • - • Rona Jaffe Annabel is the flirtatious Southern belle, Chris is the mealy mouse with dishwater-brown hair, Emily is the Semitic suburbanite, Daphne is Miss Perfect, otherwise known as the "Golden Girl." These four women Princess Leigh-Cheri, ecological activist and disappointed romantic, the girl. They meet at the Geo-Therapy Care- Fest, which Leigh-Cheri plans to attend, Bernard to bomb. The Geo-Therapy Care-Fest is a meeting of save-the-earthers whom Robbins indicts, tellingly, for "tunnel vision," for refusing to see that "good can be as banal as evil," for "using (a cause) as a substitute for spiritual and sexual unfolding." It's a commonly spoken, and just as commonly ignored, truism that we will have to become better people more alive, more loving if we want a better world. Leigh-Cheri had ignored this, fleeing from herself because of past hurts, burying herself in her zeal. nut Bernard's outlaw ways win Leigh- Cheri over from her sober commitment, her righteous indignation, her worship of Ralph Nader. Ralph Nader, who has put everything before himself, to the extent that a world composed of Ralph Naders may be well on the way to being saved, but will it be worth living in? Leigh-Cheri had wondered how to "make love stay." Now, offered the chance, she plunges ahead bravely. She decides finally that it's no use "saving the earth if it means losing the moon." The moon. Ah, the moon. Robbins loves the moon. Much of this book is about the moon its effects on lovers, tides, tubercular composers, poets, and menses. Robbins also writes about the conflict between lunar vs. solar minds. This conflict runs through his two previous novels, "Another Roadside Attraction" and "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues." cult classics both. Lunar people 'Misia' by Toulouse-Lautrec ju n kfood meet as fresh-fced girls, still but a stone's throw out of high school, in the Radcliffe of the early 'sos. Match each with a (prospective) boyfriend/lover/husband, add liberal doses of pathos, stir frequently, and see how they grow. . There is an amazing, amount of soap opera pulp here, but some amount and a decent amount at that of insight and perception on Jaffe's count. And Jaffe, no newcomer to the publishing world, can write. She possesses a glorious talent of eeking out just the right words to describe just the right feeling. "She didn't know anything about football and she had no idea when the game would be over, but it seemed endless. Those fools out on the field would run about two feet and then hurl them selves on top of one another in order to achieve as much mayhem as possible. Who cared?" (Indeed! ) And her views on men, although not as lyrical and gutsy as Erica Jong's, are at least amusing: "She decided that most men were children: a hopeless combination of horny and guilty." Photo by Richard Avedon "Class Reunion" makes for light, breezy reading. It's as silly as soaps and second-rate telemovies, but has equal drawing power. Read it with a bag of Doritos at hand. are "mystic, occult, feministic, spiritual, pacific, agrarian, and erotic." He likes them better than the "abstract, rational, militaristic, industrial, unemotional, and puritan" solars. In "Still Life," Robbins beautifully juxtaposes the two when he sprinkles in with Bernard and Leigh-Cheri's love making (a lunar scene if I've ever read one) excerpts. from a dry as the sun baked desert speech by the ever-solar Ralph Nader. Do I recommend this book? Absolutely maybe. It won't be to everyone's taste. If you liked his other two books, you'll love this one. But it's un compromising in its outlawry, so traditionalists, beware. Tom Robbins is unique. In "Still Life" he's a moon-worshipper, a lunar-type without apology. He's also a romantic, wondering how "to make love stay." He's even a champion .of inanimate objects. But above all he's an outlaw, chasing his personal vision of freedom, beauty, and fun. throughout the book. These, along with the remarkable blending of style and fact by authors Gold and Fizdale help to make this a most special celebration of an era; its art and artists, and the one woman who helped make those artists names we know and respect today. Wednesday, Sept. 10 17 Tom Robbins