daily nebraskan arts & snl page 8 Self-pity, self-disgust tone ruins 'Choirboys' purpose Review by Bill Roberts The Choirboys,by Joseph Wambaugh Deiacorte Press, New York $8.95 With The Choirboys, Joseph Wambaugh gives us another skillfully written novel showing his sympathy for the American policeman. But this time, the incident Wambaugh chooses as the focal point of his story ruins his attempt to win the reader's wympathy. After their grueling night shift, 10 Los Angeles patrolmen hold weekly drunken orgies in MacArthur Park. The strain of their jobs is too much, it seems, so they simply have to blow off steam The orgies are called "choir practices," the policemen "choirboys," the women who attend are named Ora Lee Tingle and Carolina Moon. Asks for sympathy Wambaugh asks the reader to feel sorry for these hard-pressed men whose emotional stress drives them to such de grading actions. More than that, Wambaugh expects the reader to excuse the killing of a pathetic homosexual who happens to wander into the path of one of the drunk, gun-wielding cops. Really, it is too much to ask. The author, in his laudable campaign to give a badge-side account of society, serves us more than we can swallow. In The New Centurions, the first novel by Wambaugh, a former police detective, the perspective on the 1966 Watts riots was welcome. It was a fascinating portrayal of a most important chapter in American history. Certainly the off-duty lives of police men are of legitimate interest too. But Wambaugh's attitude toward the orgies of these policement gives the novel a tone of self-pity and self-disgust. "I mean that the weakness of the human race is stupefying and that it's not the capacity for evil which astounds young policen n," Wambaugh has the novel's most intelligent character say. "Rather it's the mind-boggling worth lessness of human beings," he concludes. 'There's not enough dignity in mankind for evil and that's the most terrifying thing a policeman learns." Leaving aside the supposed dignity of evil, there's not enough humanity in Wambaugh's book. That's the most dis appointing thing about the otherwise realistic Choirboys. Huskers top book list Below are best sellers this week in Lincoln. Best sellers in Lincoln Nonfiction 1. Cornhuskers Number One, Israel 2. All the Strange Hours, Eiseley 3. Angels, Graham 4. The Doonesbury Chronicles, Trudcau 5. The Greatest, Mi Fiction 1. Curtain, Christie 2. Ragtime, Doctorow 3. The Choirboys, Wambaugh , 4. Beyond the Bedroom Wall, Woiwode 5. The Greek Treasure, Stone List compiled from five bestselling books at B. Dalton, The Nebraska Book Store and Miller and Paine. up& Off Campus Art Haymarket Art Gallery-1 19 S. 9th- Paint ings by Chauncey Nelson, jewelry by Brenda Gingles and Judith Kunic Golke through Nov. 24. Music O'Donneil Auditorium- Slst and Baldwin Lincoln Symphony Orchestra- Tues.- 8 pjn.; First Assembly of God Church 56th and R- Evangel College Choir- Fri. 7 pjn., Pershing Auditorium- 15th and N- Peter Frampton and Dave Mason-Sat.- 8 pjn. Theater Lincoln Community Playhouse- 2500 S. 56th- That Championship Season- Fri, and Sat.-8 pjn. University of Nebraska at Lincoln HOWELL THEATRE Presents THE CRUCIBLE BY ARTHUR MILLER December 5. 6, 8, 9, 10, , 2. 13. TICKET PRICES Maintfan $250 Studenta $ 6 00 Sraxm $J.OO Noii-tiudrnt $10.00 Scatoa Croup Rale art AvailabU All Scat Ratervtd Dot Offtct Hour i I 00 to 5 00 Monday ihroufh Friday TUphm 472-2G7) Bom Ofhct: 106 TtmpU BUt. WELCOME TO THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF ICE SKATING.... Adults $1.50 a SkMRMM J B SO mitts A (T H XI 'V u 1 ktokait "cm!" Public Sessions: Monday 67 pjn. Tuea., Wad., & Thurs., 7:3D9:30 p.m. I MARTIN WOLFF PRESFjNTS K 1 t t W i .aft i mm ' A TNI Savaupto 90 on thd 'ran!s - wrm we- 1 ...... ;,, - i of Gift boo!cs. Sava.20 on all !acted prints. r.. I i I .... 8CILT.' f a n , o CI 0ii Li i j 1 .aaanaamjj 1 !(: ?l I 1 5 I I ri ' Oon 8-5, MoMtoy -Saturday istaDirroiei TS3R r. 1 432-CH1 " ( " IP 1 ( " ilJ .n y aM tmmHimm mm Mhk mm mmmfm ' at IX hath, aumm n- oxn