18—The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 sc reb. oard ~ sports calendar Today Women's Volleyball • Soccer Georgetown at Penn State, 8 p.m. (Rec Hall) LaSalle at Penn State, 7:15 p.m. (Jeffrey Field). Women's Tennis Wrestling Penn State at ITCA Northeast Regional Varsity Wrestle-offs, noon (Rec Hall) Championships at Penn. Men's Swimming and Diving Ponn State Diving Invitational. Woman's Swimming and Diving Invitational Penn State Diving Invitational. Tomorrow Football Penn State at Cincinnati, 1:30 p.m Man's Swimming and Diving Penn Stale Diving Invitational. Women's Swimming and Diving Penn State Diving Invitational. Field Hockey Cleveland Virginia at Penn State, 1 p.m 4 (Lady Lion Field). 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' '',';',., ,/,//' ;;;; ~ ~,,,,,,,,,,,,, ~• /, / , ~ , , 2:// % '2••',',', ''' ,', , • ', 4/./ /./Msf':•;/L./z M6IMI Women's Tonnis Penn State at ITCA Northeast Regional Championships at Penn. • Women's Tennis Penn State at ITCA Northeast Regional - Championships at Penn. N.Y. Jets 7 New England 6 Miami 5 Indianapolis 3 Buffalo 1 Nightly: 7:45, 9:45 Sat., Sun.: 1:45, 3:45 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct. PF PA 2 0 .778 208 135 3 0 .887 173 156 4 0 .556 220 194 6 0 .333 172 204 8 0 .111 121 216 4 5 0 .444 150 132 4 5 0 .444 260 278 STEELERS Houston Win! 6 3 6 3 5 4 4 5 3 6 Denver L.A. Raiders Seattle San Diego Kansas City NATIONAL CONFERENCE East 6 3 6 3 5 4 4 5 4 5 N.Y. Giants Washington EAGLES St. Louis 9 0 • 0 1.000 255 124 5 4 0 .556 183 180 5 4 0 .556 170 196 Boston 3 8 0 .333 164 216 New Jersey 0 9 0 .000 184 272 SIXERS Washington New York Minnesota Detroit Green Bay Tampa Bay L.A. Rams 8 1 0 .889 191 127 San Francisco 5 4 0 .556 228 187 New Orleans 3' 6 0 .333 173 235 Detroit Atlanta 1 8 0 .111 171 284 Milwaukee 4-444-**************** e T T HIS R W R EEKE T ND RE ONLY K ! . 41 : r BLOOPERS r- Presented by r Circle K NEVER SHOWN ON T V A RARE COLLECTION OF UNRELEASED OUT-TAKES FROM FAMOUS T.V.SHOWS * 15 minutes of new footage in this years show -4x * SPARKS - 121 iK it ( FRI. SAT. SUN. Nov. B—9 10 7pm and 9pm EACH NIGHT iK , g.t * Adm. $3 with campus I.D. $4.00 all others 4( i. , A'r Limited Good Seating Come Early —No Children Please irk ******************** Sunday's Games Atlanta at EAGLES, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m. Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Houston at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Indianapolis at New England, 1 p.m. Los Angeles Rams at New York Giants, 1 p.m STEELERS at Kansas City, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Seattle at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Los Angeles Raiders at San Diego, 4 p.m. New York Jets at Miami, 4 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 4 p.m. • .444 183 153 .444 182 185 .667 219 181 .667 196 187 .556 221 202 .444 220 231 .333 171 204 .667 207 146 .667 203 151 .556 158 168 444 136 145 444 186 216 SHOW Sat. & Sun. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct. GB 4 1 .800 4 3 .571 1 3 3 .500 1 1 / 2 2 4 .333 2 1 / 2 0 6 .000 41/2 Central Division 5 2 .714 5 2 .714 Chicago Atlanta Cleveland Indiana WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Quebec 5 0 1.000 Boston 4 2 .667 1 1 / 2 Buffalo 3 3 .500 2 1 / 2 Hartford 2 3 .400 3 Montreal 3 4 .429 3 1 3 .250 31/2 Houston Utah Dallas San Antonio Sacramento Pacific Division St. Louis 5 0 1.000 Chicago 4 1 .800 1 Minnesota 5 2 .714 1 Detroit 2 4 .333 3 1 / 2 Toronto 2 5 -.286 4 0 5 .000 5 Edmonton Calgary Vancouver Winnipeg Los Angeles L.A. Clippers L.A. Lakers Portland Seattle Golden State Phoenix Today's Games WALES CONFERENCE St. Louis at Buffalo, 7:35 p.m. Patrick Division PENGUINS at New Jersey, 7:35 p.m W L T Pts GF GA Toronto at Detroit, 7:35 p.m. 10 2 0 20 58 34 N.Y. Rangers at Winnipeg, 9:05 p.m 7 5 2 16 56 49 Vancouver at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m. FLYERS Washington '~ -'~ ✓~~ -~ ;:~% „ ; >: ~, '~~~ / " , ,4 ONCE BITTEN Starring LAUREN MUTTON. ILM CARREY. KAREN KOPINS and CLEAVON LITTLE Director of Photography ADAM GREENBERG Associate Producer RUSSELL THACHER Executive Producer SAMUEL GOLDWYN. IR Screenplay by DAVID HINES & JEFFREY lIAUSE and JONATHAN ROBERTS Story by DLMITRI VILLARD Produced by DMITRI VILLARD, ROBBY WALD and FRANK E. HILDEBRAND Directed by HOWARD STORM FEGilnuerrs37lloll6llCAUllolllo 13 , Original Soundtrack AVM table iorwisa - aa. - 13 on MCA,Curb Records _. F. 1.4 5...1.11.,..L1WyNC4.11.. LaAD..s,E.N.::•:-:1 MEZ=I:I3 3 3 .500 1 1 / 2 NY Islanders 3 4 .429 2 NY Rangers 2 4 .333 2 1 / 2 New Jersey 1 4 .200 3 PENGUINS .041 ......,„:;;-- ._,.......7.„..,•;f,,,,,,,e.;;,,5, A1 4 A , W(3.?, ~R, Y * ' q',,g ' 4:, '' . ..: : A'o*'l , :;•o•d F,.%:;:••',.:;.'•:'.,:5.;:,;:',:•;-:,:g -,.:,, 6 4 2 14 48 41 6 6 0 12 42 40 5 6 1 11 43 47 3 7 3 9 44 55 Adams Division 9 3 1 19s 57 44 8 3 1 17 59 37 7 5 1 15 50 38 6 6 0 12 48 59 5 6 2 12 54 60 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division 4 5 2 10 37 4 7 1 9 50 3 6 3 9 50 2 8 3 7 39 1 11 0 2 37 Smythe Division 10 2 1 21 7 5 1 15 6 5 2 14 6 6 1 13 3 10 1 7 ~~.: 'i >a • ' • • Sneak preview Saturday only 8:00 p.m. arts ine hurts good acting Story! By DEBBIE GOLINI Collegian Arts Writer If you spent your days behind a computer terminal, what would you do for excitement in the evenings? Would you decide to visit New York's SoHo in order to purchase a cream cheese-and-bagel sculpted paper weight? Sounds absurd? Well, that's the pretense behind After Hours, the latest movie to infiltrate State Col lege. After Hours gives a night in the life of Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne), a computer programmer looking for a little excitement. Paul meets Marci (Rosanna Arquette) in a coffee shop after work; she tells him about an artist friend of hers who sculpts pa per weights resembling bagels. Now, Paul, having nothing better to do with his life than watch television, decides to visit this friend-- Kinky Bridges (Linda Fiorentino) under the pre tense that he really needs a paper weight. Of course, the audience knows that he is really interested in seeing Marci, a very spacey and ditzy individual. Anyway, Paul heads to ward SoHo, where his adventures begin and the audience's boredom sets in. To recount Paul's whole evening would make me relive an experience I'd rather forget and cause you to quickly turn the page. Let's just say that Paul's character was so inept and dull that this viewer didn't care what happened to him at the end of the movie. Paul's visit to SoHo could best be described as a series of jumbled scenarios (linked together by one of the silliest plot twists of all time) that serve to abuse the talents of such capable actors as Dunne, Arquette, Fiorentino, and Teri Garr (who plays Julie, a beehive-sporting cocktail waitress who sleeps in a bed surrounded by mouse traps). The situations that Dunne's charac ter finds himself in probably aren't typical of SoHo on the worst Saturday night. Poor Paul is chased by a group Pictures By VICTORIA JAFFE Collegian Arts Writer A Human Portrait: Five Contemporary American Photographers, the current exhibit at Zoller Gallery, is an intense depiction of life through the lenses of five very different artists. Shelby Lee Adams captures tough, yet weathered people in the Appalachian moun tains of Eastern Kentucky. "These pictures are in no way to be interpreted as a general representation of Appalachian people or their culture today," Adams said. His series of portraits shows the dreary life in the back woods of Kentucky. Adams' work, which spans 10 years, is almost painful to experience. In "Untitled (girl)", a young blonde girl with arms folded —gives a sorrowful yet defiant look into the camera. Many of the other individual pictures show old, angry men. "Lee Hall Coal Miner" is an elderly ex-miner with one eye and numerous wrinkles and whiskers. The most upsetting portraits are Adams' family collections. The family of outcasts show hopelessly poor and disturbed people, where the only possible healthy member also becomes a disappointment. "Correrrine Age Collegian Photo I Howard Small Robert Lima of angry tenants who believe he's behind a rash of burglaries; he has to deal with schizophrenic Marci; and he becomes a paper weight himself when another sculptor (Verna Bloom) decides that that's the best way to hide him from the tenants. The problem with After -Hours stems from the fact that the plot tries to encompass too many of the oddities found in SoHo. Had the script writer just kept to one or two situations, the characters could have been more clearly developed. Instead, about seven or eight characters are thrown at us without ample background or time to develop them. When we get used to Paul interacting with Marci, for instance, he is quickly forced to move to a different locale, where! a new group of weirdos take over to make his evening a nightmare. In a movie that skips around as much as After Hours does, it is hard to adequately judge the acting. Dunne is believable as a man who is bored and wants excitement. But the audience quickly loses interest in his plight as his character keeps getting himself into one stupid situation after another. The supporting actors are equally hard to evaluate, for they move on and off screen at a rapid pace. Ar quette pcirtrays her character as the flake she is intended to be. Through her facial expressions and movements she makes Marci a rea listic, if not pathetic, character. Fio rentino has perhaps the best role in the movie: Kinky Bridges is an artist who is into bondage and hanging out in a dance club that shaves the heads of its customers. Playing the role to perfection, she demonstrates the toughness and artistic quirkiness that would characterize a person like Kinky. Garr's role of Julie is quite small, and once again she plays a woman who seems a bit afraid of her own shadow. Garr has a way, though, of making a cocktail waitress who wears a beehive and listens to old Monkee's albums seem plausible. illustrate 14" illustrates a glimmer of hope, as the young girl in the picture looks content, serene and, above all, clean. But then the next portrait in the series is "Correrine Age 16 w/ baby." At that stage Correrrine is fatter, dirtier and more miserable looking. Her total transformation is completed in the third photo of her mini-biography, appropriately titled "The Cycle." Here, as Correrrine, her brother and her toddler sit directionless and unmotivated on their porch, Adams clearly states that it is almost impossible to wrench one's self out of such desperate poverty. "My purpose with my photography is to confront the viewer with something he may never have encountered before his own vulnerability and humanity," Adams asserts. He continues the confrontation with cafe portfolios in Cincinnati. These people also look angry and bitter, especially "Granite Man," with determined animosity set into the lines of his face. Mark Goodman is' another artist in this exhibition whose work depicts the down-trod den. Goodman, however, photographs in Mill erton, NY, an area to which he was a total stranger before his 10-year shoot there. Ad ams was born in Kentucky, and his work seems more in-touch with the emotional spotlight Lima's interests go beyond supernatural By JILL S. KOSKO Collegian Arts. Writer Professor Robert Lima becomes a pretty popular guy around the spoo kiest time of year. Those interested in learning the history of Halloween know he's the right man to talk to. Recognized for his knowledge of the supernatural, Lima, professor of Spanish and comparitive literatures is perhaps best known to University students for his course Comp Lit 120, literature of the occult. "Back in the late 1960 s when everyone was trying to find new ways of expression and new courses, I was invited by the college to create a course. And that's what I came up with. I was amazed that they accepted it a lot of people are very biased." Lima stressed that Comp Lit 120 is about people's beliefs in the occult, not how to practice them. "The first thing I say in class is, 'those of you who are here to learn how to do this are in the wrong course.' A few people get up and leave." His curiosity in the subject stems from his childhood in Cuba where there exists a strong tradition of the occult in areas like voodoo. No, that doesn't mean that Lima is sticking pins in replica dolls of his least favorite students; nor does he nec essarily adopt the beliefs of the occult. But he does believe in the ability people have to believe. "I Violation, Space Goop undergo changes By PAT GRANDJEAN and NATALIE NICHOLS Collegian Arts Writers Violation Members of Violation changed its lead singer and.format since a suc cessful summer as professional musi cians, band member David Franklin said. The band, consisting of Franklin on percussion, Nathan Thompson on rhythm guitar, Steven Zoffer on bass and former lead singer Steve Shartel, supported itself solely through gigs at local bars such as Nello's, the Brick house and the Phyrst this summer, Fianklin said. The band also per formed at the 19th annual Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts and several fraternities during the sum mer. Since then, Shartel graduated and was replaced by current lead singer and guitarist David Lamb at the end of the summer. This change prompted a step in a different direc tion, he said. Violation changed its format from mostly covers of 60s bands such as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and Creedence Clearwater Revival, to more recent, danceable tunes by mu sicians such as the Police, Bruce Springsteen and Talking Heads. De spite the change, Franklin said, Vio lation's musical philosophy is the same. "We play music with meaning," he said, "I wouldn't play anything else." The band is also working on more original music. "We'll probably have one-third to one-half originals by the end of the semester," Franklin said. He said that when the Violation played their song, "Don't Let It Both er You," at the Oct. 11 anti-apartheid rally, the crowd gave the band mem bers positive feedback about it. The band likes to get involved with five photographers' diligent work realities of those folk, as compared to Good man's more detached, foreign outlook. Goodman's lighter, more whimsical photos have the appearance of family snapshots, but are very interesting. He includes a simple shot of a boyscout; then in the next photo, a young woman clad in black and with an old, tired, distant expression is in the foreground. The background of the woman's portrait is a white mannequin that contrasts the dark reality in the woman's face. Other works include an endearingly chunky girlscout with long blonde braids who seems familiar and friendly, especially compared to Goodman's more posed attitudes. These photos are apt to make one smile and therefore serve as much needed cheerful relief. An upbeat collection of work is contributed by Melissa Shook, who photographed her daughter Krissy from infancy through young adulthood. Shook captures her daughter's playful innocence in the earliest portraits and shows Krissy metamorphosizing into a young adult at the tender age of seven. In "Krissy, Nova Scotia," Krissy sunbathes in a bathing beauty pose, wearing sunglasses and lying next to a doll on its own beachtowel. Though still a child, Krissy is beginning to take herself and life —more seriously. take their belief system seriously. People have a right to their beliefs no matter how weird weird in our sense they are. What is strange to us may be in fact very normal to someone else." A man of varied interests, Lima does more than teach. An author of poems, plays, novels and essays, a literary critic, a semi-professional archeologist and a translator of Spanish literature are just some of Lima's occupations and activities. Recently the Society of Inter-Celtic Arts and Culture published his new est book "The Olde Ground," a book of 19 poems complete with illustra tions. The poems were inspired by archeological sites that Lima vis ited in France, Spain and the British Isles. He is also an expert on Argen tine writer Jorges • Liiis Borges (whom he knows personally) and he has just finished a biography on Spanish writer Valle Inclan. In the future he hopes to write a book on how Christianity has adopted pagan festivals for its own purposes. But now on his year long sabbatical, he is mainly concentrating on poetry. Born in Cuba to parents of Hispan ic origin, he didn't know a word of English until age 8 when he arrived in New York in 1945, shortly before World War II ended. Exposed to the "American Experience," he grew to love New York, learning "street smarts," stick ball and the English its audience, Franklin said. The members encourage the crowd to dance and put a lot of energy into their performance, in hopes that the audience will pick up on it. The Violation plans to play in the bars again this year, Franklin said, and should be featured at the Phryst within a month. Space Coop Space Goop (featuring guitarists J.R. Mangan and Mike Biddison and drummer DaVe Biddison) made a flaky but most successful local debut during last St. Patrick's Day week end. Since then the trio has found solid employment at the Brickhouse, the Phyrst and the Brewery. Dave Biddison emphasized that his group has been through several major changes in the last few months. "We've added material, we're tight er, and we're used to each other," he said. The bandmembers infuse their per formances with energetic and goofy onstage antics that earn a very warm response from the audience. They specialize in classic cover songs from the '6os and '7os, such as Neil Young's "Cinnamon Girl," Lou Reed's "Sweet Jane" and "Walk on the Wild Side," Van Morrison's "Moondance" and David Bowie's "Ziggy Stardust." Also included in their sets are several songs by the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Grateful Dead. Recent additions include "Day Tripper" and "Please Please Me," and the Police tune, "Roxanne." Personnel shifts have been a regu lar part of Space Goop's routine since its earlier incarnations as Ticapoo Brain and Ruth Tissue. Lately, the group has taken to filling the gap left by the departure of saxophonist Ter ry Selders (he is now the band's agent) by occasionally inviting gui tarist Charlie "Slick" to sit in with language. Now, he doesn't even car ry a trace of an accent. Lima lived in New York for 20 years. "I've always , considered my self a New Yorker, but now I've been in Pennsylvania for twenty years. So now I have to decide if I'm a New Yorker or a Pennsylvanian." he said. At Villanova University, he re ceived an undergraduate degree in English and philosophy and a Mas ters degree in theater and drama. Afterwards, he was a freelance writer, editor and translator for several New York City publishers. In addition, he worked in film and theater, writing a few plays, acting, directing and designing. But as he became more and more interested in writing, Lima gave up the theater world, finding its way of life too unsettled. "I needed to find some peace of mind," he said. "After all that I tried teaching." Lima feels teaching has been his most rewarding job. "It's a fas cinating thing there's so many facets to it. You get to meet a lot of different people and have an effect on the way people are shaped. You can open up their minds and put some good things in there. Plus teaching gives me blocks of time in between to write." In 1962, Lima began his teaching profession at Hunter College as a Space Coop performs downtown recently. Though the band has gone through name changes Ticapoo Brain, Ruth Tissue and the current label it has kept its musical enthusiasm stable. This presents the band with yet an- other identity. receiving radio airplay soon. "When he comes onstage, we put on The band members are also plan these waiter jackets we bought at ning to widen their performance base New World that are this awful yellow- beyond State College. They will be brown color and call ourselves the playing Scranton over the Thanksgiv- Mustard Brothers," Dave Biddison ing holiday, and expect to follow that said. He added that the trio played a with a two-week tour of the Florida Halloween party at the Vets' House Keys. Spring will hopefully bring a attired in bumblebee outfits. tour of New England, particularly the Anyone who suspects on this evi- Vermont ski resorts. Dave Biddison dence, that Space Goop seems to be noted, "State College is a pretty all sartorial display and little sub- closed atmosphere. It's easy for a stance should know that the group band to get tired if they don't get out has just recorded an original song at once in a while." "At the Henry Street Settlement" is an artistic rendering of two children at play, and makes effective use of shapes and angles. This compares to Shook's more straight-for ward shots of Krissy as a baby. The most unusual photo in her presentation is titled a "Self-Portrait with Krissy." The self-portrait reveals only Shook's feet as Krissy sits prom inently in a chair. It makes the observer wonder: Does Shook see herself as just a pair of feet in comparison to her daughter's entire being? The fourth photographer, Ken Light, will have his displayed photos included in With These Hands, a book to be published next spring. Light's work is in tribute to the "labor that feeds America" and portrays cannery workers, a potato picker and other remnants of an aspect of American life that most people never let themselves become familiar with. Light zeroes in on realities inherent in a migrant worker's existence, even to the point of including his photo "Field Latrines," a photo of dingy, dirty wooden outhouses marked "Ma" and "Pa." Most of Light's display depicts stark, real people, tool in hand, as in "Hoer Pepper Field," where a tanned, wrinkled man squints in the sunlight with his hoe proudly held up. The most The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 8, 1985 lecturer in romance languages. His arrival at State College in 1965 was a big change from his life in one of the world's largest cities. In an autobio graphical article appearing in last July's Town and Gown, he writes, "The question then was whether having left my New York City roots, contacts, and motivatation all important to my writing I would by able to carry on in the new environment. In short, I had to come to a new Dead Center in myself. That took time, but it happened." Married for 21 years and a father of four kids, Lima feels that State College is a nice place to raise a family. But every once in a while he has to get away. "You appreciate things more when you get back," he said. 'Lima enjoys traveling by himself, feeling that by being alone, he expe riences things more intensely. "That's important to writing to experience things intensely. That's what triggers creativity," he said. However, Lima doesn't feel one has to travel far and experience many things to be a good writer. "You just have to pay attention. Pay attention to what goes on around you. It's what's inside you that mat ters. You have to develop your own perspective and learn to share it with the world. That's what writing is all about." Susquehanna Sound in Northumber land. "Give It Up All the Way" will be surrealistic contribution is "Two Ladders, Dusk," in which two ladders, perfectly cen tered in a pear orchard, appear to take the audience toward the sky. Debbie Fleming Caffery's work uses the most abstract approach. Caffery shows the real emotions that the other artists captured, but she also plays successfully with texture and lighting to create a mysterious mood. In "Profile of Boy with Shadow," a young black boy looks off into the distance with his shad ow behind him. He appears to be looking ahead toward his future, yet not able to escape from a past shadow or history. This is just one of Caffery's many thought-provoking renditions. "Overseers Arm on Dirty Truck" takes an ordinary worker's pose and forces the audience to see a whole world in just a man's arm. Dark tones and provoking light ing make her "Polly" series of portraits fascinating. Polly, a large woman with a proud presence, looks different in each shot, depending on Caffery's use of angle, shadow ing and focus, thus creating true artwork. The last chance to experience A Human Portrait: Five Contemporary American Pho tographers at Zoller Gallery will be this Sunday.