Page 10 Daily Nebraskan Friday, January 31, 1986 I- tl .. IL. IL-. Jtl IS3tj130 H Sinca1976 VAKIETY IN FOOD Breakfast Lunch Coffee Break 8:30 am to 4:00 pm CHEESE BURGER AND CURLY Q FRIES Only S1.24 Today With Coupon 1-31-86 imJ M-mHiH CWBbhiutfMvU 1123 "R" ST. NEXT DOOR WEST OF NEBR. BOOKSTORE Htii(iH' "if' Humans turn furry, swim and eat fish in crazy 'Galapagos' By Scott Schmidt Staff Reporter Sunday's Student " Supper Survival Kitpl 2.45 ). 1 ...At Sunday 4-9 p.m. AH locations. Imagine this. You are much like a seal, swimming in the ocean, eating' fish and your body is covered with fur. But you are human. According to Kurt Vonnegut's latest novel, "Galapagos," human beings will evolve into furry little fish-eating mam mals during the next million years or so. Movie Review "Galapagos" is the story of man's evolution as seen through the eyes of Leon Trotsky Trout. Ah, you say, how can a man see the course of evolution spanning more than a million years? Simple. He is a ghost. The setting for Vonnegut's novel is (where else?) the Galapagos Islands. What better place to follow the evolu tion of man than Charles Darwin's old stomping grounds? The story starts in 1986. The world is in serious economic trouble. War and famine reign. But even in the worst of times, a few well-to-do people remain unaffected. These "unaffected" people include Mick Jagger, Jacqueline Onassis, Wal ter Cronkite and Henry Kissinger, among others. They are about to embark on a cruise through the Galapagos Islands, "The Nature Cruise of the Century." Great $9.95 Meal Deal just by flashing your student ID card. r mm Student ID C! S. n W n Menu variety for treating the munchies $9.95 Ileal Deal Sunday Hight thru Wednesday Get a large 2-topping pizza and a pitcher of soft drink for $9.95 every Sunday night thru Wednesday night 5 PM 'til closing. Just show your student ID card any Sunday night from 5 PM 'til closing and we'll give you a large 2-topping pizza and a pitcher of your favorite soft drink for only $9.95. It's the best deal around. And more proof that we really take care of the student body. Offer expires May 31, 1986. NOT valid in combination with any other Pizza Hut offer. Valid at 3 Lincoln locations. I S Music to mv I V soothe the I savage ear Call-ahead lffiiMrf)l iti service for lmW f Vff W A ready-when-you- I I lillr M W jF 1 arrive pizza j service for quick stops. 1 1 Low prices I I for curing the I Hight f 1986 Pizza Hut, Inc. Little did the passengers know that they were about to become the sole progenitors of the entire human race. Unfortunately, Mick, Jacqueline, Walter and Henry would never make it to the Galapagos Islands. The gene pool for the entire human race would be limited to a handful of less-than-significant humans. The story is in true Vonnegut form: funny, crazy, and touched with the cyn icism of which Vonnegut is so fond. Galapagos has no real plot. It has no chronological order. Vonnegut moves freely from 1980 to 2300 without a flinch, taking the same attitude about time he did in "Slaughterhouse-Five." The thing that holds his work together is the grouping of random characters fated to fulfill destiny. The characters' lives are bound by this common fate, which is unknown to them. Coincidence groups them, and they stumble along toward their preor dained lot. More than this bind, though, is an idea that runs constantly through Von negut's novels. That idea is that man eventually will destroy his world and himself with technology. Nuclear bombs, ice nine, and, in "Galapagos," a more general cause for man's destruction. "Great big brains" take the rap this time. Vonnegut assumes the role of Father Nature. He preaches as if he were the watchguard of science. We can listen, or we can perish as the result of our "great big brains" working overtime to assure our destruction. Despite Vonnegut's lack of plot, his stories do have substance. Some of his characters are unforgettable, if not lovable. If you have read Vonnegut before, you will recognize Kilgore Trout, appearing again in "Galapagos." He is the eccentric science fiction writer who has appeared in some of Vonne gut's other novels. The narrator of Galapagos, Leon Trout, is Kilgore Trout's son. "Galapagos" is good, fun reading. But if you want to taste Vonnegut's style at its best, pick up "Cat's Cradle" or "Slaughterhouse-Five." 'Out of Africa' still best seller Not too long ago the best-selling books in the university and Nebraska Bookstores either were written by Stephen King, Gary Larson orBerke Breathed or were about Tom Osborne. Now, "The Color Purple" and "Out of Africa" recent movie releases have topped the charts for the third straight week. King has dropped to No. 9 on one list and Osborne's autobiography, "More Than Winning," is missing from both lists. Here are last week's top sellers from both student bookstores: University Bookstore 1. "Out of Africa," Isak Dinesen (Vintage, $4.95) 2. "The Color Purple," Alice Walker (Pocket, $3.95) 3. "The Original Hitchhiker Radio Scripts," Douglas Adams (Harmony, $9.95) 4. "Lake Wobegon Days," Garri son Keillor (Viking, $17.95) 5. "Valley of the Far Side," Gary Larson (Andrews, McMeel and Parker, $5.95) 6. "Love Medicine," Louise Erdrich (Bantam, $6.95) 7. "How to Massage Your Cat," Alice M. Brock (Knopf, $4.95) 8. "Neil's Book of the Dead," Planer and Blacker (Harmony, $8.95) 9. "White Noise," Dan Delillo (Penquin, $5.95) 10. "Penquin Dreams and Stranger Things," Berke Breathed (Little, Brown and Co., $6.95) Nebraska Bookstore 1. "Out of Africa," Isak Dinesen (Vintage, $4.95) 2. "The Color Purple," Alice Walker (Pocket, $3.95) 3. "Breaking with Moscow," Arkady N. Shevenko (Ballantine, $4.95) . 4. "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynmen," Richard Feynman (Ban tam, $4.50) 5. "Bridge Across Forever," Richard Bach (Dell, $3.95) 6. "Love," Leo Buscaglia (Faw cett, $3.95) 7. "Strong Medicine," Arthur Hai ley (Dell, $4.50) 8. "World Almanac and Book of Facts, 1986," (Newspaper Enterprise Assoc. Inc., $5.95) 9. "Talisman," Stephen King and Peter Straub (Berkley, $4.95) 10. 'Third Garfield Treasury," Jim Davis (Ballantine, $8.95) 11 MIDDLE MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES STRAIGHT OUT OF SCHOOL Your Health, Business, or Public Administration degree may qual ify you for an exciting and re warding career in Health Care Administration. EARN OVER 18,000 TO START 30 DAYS VACATION WITH PAY EACH YEAR ADVANCED EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES COMPLETE MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE For more information, contact: MSgt Robert Pond (402) 556-0715 CALL COLLECT! o , 12th and 'P' St. 477-1234 FRIDAY & SATURDAY AT 12:00 MIDNIGHT SEPARATE ADMISSIONS S3. SO EACH I D REG 0 FOR (Ri FILMS -NO PASSES-S!o5-APS3ci frcm our ' ELM STREET .. " MGM U 3f I "Tli3 Ooeliy J ?OTcr Picture Sfssu" r PlAZftl j I THE J BREAKFAST CLUB AUMVtftMlFiCrueC