Grand Canyon Continued from Page 9 is his wife Claire. She’s unhappy with her life and what she perceives to be a growing emptiness within herself. Danny Glover is Simon, a tow truck driver who rescues Mack after his car breaks down in a very danger ous neighborhood, a place complete with armed teenagers, overhead heli copters and flashing lights. Steve Martin is Mack’s best friend Davis, a producer of violent films. He’s hip, Hollywood and has an an swer for everything, that is, until he’s shot by a mugger for his watch. Then his theories on life change drasti cally. But when he recovers he returns to creating trash films; films that, by Davis’ own admission “are rocks that contribute to the landslide of the dehumanization of life and the world.” Mack’s secretary, Dee (Mary Louise Parker), also plays an impor tant part. She’s a young woman who exemplifies the problems of loneli ness in the world. Her best friend Jane is played by Emmy winner Alfre Woodard. Jane is the wise one, who finds a happy ending on a blind date with Simon. “Grand Canyon” is a dramatic look at life, complete with tears and laugh ter. Certainly it is a fitting addition to Kasdan’s list of great “real life” films like “The Big Chill” and “The Acci dental Tourist.” |hH _ -I#1' _— The Computing Resource Center is offering free microcomputer seminars to UNL students. The seminars will feature an introduction to Microsoft Word for the Macin tosh and WordPerfect for IBM machines. Lab Location Dates Times Introduction to Microsoft Word for Macintsoh Andrews Thursday. January 23 3:30 - 4:30 p.m. Burr-Fedde Tuesday, January 28 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Schramm Thursday, January 30 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Neihardt Tuesday. February 4 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Introduction to WordPerfect 5.1 for IBM SandozOBM) Wednesday. January 22 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Feburary 6 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Advanced WordPerfect 5.1 for IBM Sandoz(IBM) Wednesday. February 5 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. I . 1 ENROLLMENT FOR 2nd SEMESTER & SUMMER SESSIONS January 14 thru February 14, 1992 *** This policy will be in effect until August 24, 1992*** This insurance works in conjunction with your Health Center fees, so it is important to make sure you have paid these fees as well as your insurance premium. Please contact the UHC Business Office at 472-7435 for fee information or specific insurance benefits. Premium rates are as follows: Spring & Summer 1/14/92-8/24/92 Student Only D $216.00 Student & Spouse D $810.00 Student, Spouse, & Child □$ 1072.00 Student & Child □ $478.00 Each Additional Child D $264.00 . Payments may be made by check, money order or VISA/Mastercard. NQ-CASH PAYMENTS PLEASE! In mailing your premium directly to GM Underwriters, you will need to have it postmarked by 2/14/92. You may also drop your payment off at the UHC Business Office. Basic benefit information available 24 hours a day by calling 472-7437. ^ Courtesy of UPC Nils Utsi as Paste (left) and Mikkel Gaup as Aigin star in the International Film Exchange release “Pathfinder.” Pathfinder Continued from Page 9 “Pathfinder” has an ethical mysti cism brooding in its action. Raste, the Lapp spiritual leader, tells Aigan that a common bond exists between all Lapps, or members of “the brother hood.” Aigan denies that he is part of any brotherhood. “I am on my own,” he says. Raste warns Aigan against becom ing like the Tchudes, men who have “lost their paths” and are susceptible to blinding emotions, such as revenge. Raste inspires the boy and gives him insight and inspiration that guide him through the experiences that will be the key to his maturity. “Pathfinder” promises to be of great interest from the simplicity of its first few suspenseful scenes. From the killing of a pet dog to the first appear ance of the weapon-toting, black-clad Tchudes hiding behind leafless trees, cold-blooded darkness looms. “Pathfinder” received an Academy Award nomination for best foreign film and is the highest-grossing Nor wegian film ever made. It is refresh ing and inspiring. Most Hollywood action-adventure films could benefit from learning the kind of respect Guap gives to suspense and plot. Showtimcs arc 3 p.m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. People Continued from Page 9 “Headphones,” I thought. I remem bered something vague about head phones. I watched the needle on the signal meter jump, indicating that something was going out over the air. I prayed it was my voice. I kept talking as I fumbled for the headphones. I couldn’t take my eyes off the signal meter. I have no idea, even now, what I said. I may have been blasphemous; maybe I recited Shakespeare. All I know is that when I slipped the head phones on and heard my own voice going out to millions of listeners, I sighed a silent prayer of gratitude. Then I played a record. It wasn’t till I tried to stand up a minute later that I realized I’d gone weak in the knees. After that episode, which I consid ered the “birth pangs” of a star being bom, I saw clear sailing ahead. From here on out everything would be easy, as if you could pile up terror and have it all at once. I don’tknow much about jazz. I’m still not sure exactly what “fusion” is. Sounds like atomic energy to me. But the records were labeled, for the most part, so I pulled them from the shelves and set them up. I played the songs that had titles I liked. “The Big Avocado” is one I particularly remember. Fusion isn’t big on lyrics, appar ently, which helps to explain what follows. I’d set up a record and gotten my first phone calls. Well, I’d picked up the phone. Somehow I couldn’t get the caller on the line. This seemed a bad omen: If I couldn’t work the phone, how could I expect to fly the plane? Or the mix board? But the record I was playing was peppy and up-beat. It kept me feeling happy. Then Eli came in. “What arc you playing?” she asked. I shrugged, “Heck, I don’t know.” She went to the turntable and tried to read the spinning label. “You know you’re playing this at 45?” she asked. Fony-fivc RPMs, the D.J.’s night mare. There hadn’t been any “chip munking” vocals to iteer by. “No, I said, and thought maybe now was a good time to try “blood rushing to the head.” When that song ended, 1 switched to the more traditional 33 RPMs. The music became moody and Asian sounding. The kind of music that wants you to lie down and face your Karma. The rest of the show went along kind of like that. I never did get any fan mail, but I finally did get the phone to work and I got two calls. One guy, obviously a man of taste, called to compliment me on the fine music. One guy called to complain. I take that as a positive response. Redundancy humungous mistake RcvUm.4 Fungo Mungo “Humungous” Island Southern California’s funk band wagon is plenty crowded without groups like Fungo Mungo climbing aboard. On the liner notes to its major label coming-out, “Humungous,” the San Francisco quintet gives thanks to fellow Bay Area artists Limbomani acs and Primus, among others. The gratitude is understandable — “Humungous,” a bland, homogenous work, does everything but lift lyrics. The most annoying thing about FM is its insistence on odd sampling, a trick the Maniacs pulled off nicely a couple of years ago on the brilliantly funny “Stinky Grooves.” Unfortu nately, “Humungous” has none of the humor that made that or any Red Hot Chili Pepper album so good. Instead, these guys deal in tired platitudes and rehashed themes. The media-bashing “Sex Sells,” and “Hype is Stupid” state the obvi ous, while “Do You Believe in God” lambastes televangelists (yawn), ask ing, “If I pay will I be saved/If I watch everyday? FM extols the virtues of friendship and community with “Downtown Oakland” and the comball “Homies,” two of the many tunes that borrow heavily from the Chili Peppers. FM catches fire only occasionally, most notably on the “Brothers and See FUNGO on 11