Column Saturday j cartoons I regress < i By Frank Plemons ■ The University Daily Texas Tech U. While clicking across Saturday morning TV programming recent ly, I discovered the entertainment quality of Saturday morning car toons has regressed during the last 10 to 15 years. If I were a kid, I’d certainly prefer the adventures of The Superfriends" to those of The Smurfs.’ The polymorphic powers of the Wonder Twins always gave me the excitement I wanted to see. Plus, Saturday morning cartoons lack the creativity of the good ol’ days. The current “AIT cartoon is taken from the prime-time series, and the cartoon “Beetlejuice" was built on the hype of the movie of the same name, as was the “‘Real’ Ghostb listers.’ Those copied cartoons are no match for such greats as “George of the Jungle (Watch out for that tree!),’ ’Josie and the Pussycats,’ “Scooby-Doo” and the greatest superhero cartoon of all time, “Mighty Heroes.” Although there probably were fewer than 10 episodes of “Mighty Heroes,” with the likes of Tbmado-Man, Diaper Man and Cuckoo-Man, the enter tainment value was unbeatable. Saturday’s non-animated shows are not much better than the car toons. “Pee Wee’s Play House’ can not compare to “Land of the Lost," “Sigmund and the Sea Monster” and “Dr. Shrinker.’ Weekday afternoon cartoons are just as bad. What adventure car toon would you rather watch: “G.I. Joe" with such moronic characters as wrestler/anti-terrorist comman do Sgt. Slaughter or demon on wheels “Speed Racer" with the ne’er-do-well team of Sprite and Chim’chim? Has there ever been a cartoon hero like the “mysterious" Racer X, the older brother and guardian of the unknowing Speed? It’s easier to get caught up in the memories of the cartoons of yesteryear than to accept the new ones. So I opted for re-runs of wildlife programs instead of the depressingly unentertaining car toons. MUSIC The Deadbeat Club’ The B-52's prove why they’re not deadbeats Pago 9 MUSIC Class act A l: of Georgia instructor makes learning rock history a rockin' good time Page 9 DANCE A different beat Ballroom dance makes a comeback on campuses nationwide Page 10 BOOK REVIEW Chuggin’ away ■The Complete Book of Beer Drinking Games” showcases student favorites Page 11 Playboy visits spark controversy By Marc Weiszer ■ The Diamondback U. ol Maryland U. of Maryland student Rathie Slack was curious about posing for Playboy magazine, but she never wanted to do it j nude. “If 1 can wear clothes, I’ll do it," she said “I’m not going to do anything dr as tic I'm not posing nude The senior English major was one of the many students from the Atlantic Coast Conference who interviewed dur ing the fall for Playboy's ACC pictorial scheduled to be released in April The interviews sparked protests and ; petitions at most of the schools where | Playboy photographers interviewed. I Students and administrators were pri ! manly concerned with the use of their university's name in the pictorial, but others protested the exploitation and degradation of women that they feel Playboy promotes “Playboy makes enormous profits sell ing these images of women,” said Minnie Pratt, a U. of Maryland women’s studies lecturer "Playboy only perpetuates the idea that women can 1m* bought and used as sex objects ’’ For the last l-l years. Playboy has fea tured college women from Division 1 con ferenccs to coincide with football season. The magazine also scheduled college pic torials to coincide with basketball sea son Ijist fall. Playboy featured students from the Southeastern Conference, where similar protests accompanied Playboy's visits Hut the protests didn't deter ACC or SEC women from interviewing. Nor did it discourage Playboy Photographer David Chan, who is used to the contro versy that accompanies his campus vis it s “There is nothing new about protests," he said. "A student has a right to l>e upset about certain things this minority has a right to say what they want, just as Playboy has the right to come to the campus It's great — it just shows freedom of expression.” Students who were interested in pos ing for the pictorial first interviewed with ('ban and posed fully clothed for Polaroid snapshots Chan then invited only a select few students back for extended photo sessions "We want the typical coed, the girl next door,” Chan said. “The women shouldn't feel that they have to be able to compare to a cen terfold. If they're a little bit heavy, we can work with it,” “] know 1 in the luckiest guy in the w orld. being able to photograph the most beautiful women in the world,” he said. ANTONIO HANSEN. THE DAAY CTCCL.EGAN OKLAHOMA STATL-l Just get up and go is the slogan of many students who road trip On the road again By Juleigh Sewell • The Auburn Plainsman Auburn U. Several good friends, a car with a full tank of gas, a road map, some good tapes and an adventurous spirit these are the basic ingredients which, when com bined correctly, yield the solution to the ho-hum weekend On a slow weekend, Auburn U stu dents invariably ask themselves and their friends, "What can we do this week end?” A road trip is one answer that is popular on many college campuses. “It allows you to get away from every day life. It lets you take advantage of being young." said Brooks Wooten, a senior political science major. Last year before fall term started, Wooten and his roommates, Scott Turnquist and Tripp Haston, a senior pre law student, took a weekend road See TRIP, Page 11 During the extended photo sessions, the women could pose nude, semi-nude or fully clothed. Students receive $500 for appearing nude, $250 for appearing semi-nude and $100 for appearing clothed. A Wake Forest U. student who posed fully clothed said the Playboy staff put her under no pressure to pose nude or in erotic positions. “The people at Playboy weren’t the people everyone made them out to be. They leave it entirely up to you" After completing sessions at all the ACC schools, Chan chooses about four women from each school to be in the pic tonal. Campus women’s rights activists feel Playboy’s presence on campuses hurts their movement. Melea Lemon Bryan, a member of North Carolina State C Women’s Resource Coalition, said “Wt are trying to promote a better atmo sphere for women on campus-- treating us as sex objects will destroy everything we have done to increase our status as serious students.” Shawn I^ees, The Diamondback, L Maryland; Andrea Liepins, Jeanie Taft, Technician, North Carolina State l and Ryan McQueeny, Jennie Vaughn Old Gold and Black, Wake Forest U.;con tributed to this story. Dorm residents listen to ‘hot’ bedtime stories By Gina Kinslow ■ College Heights Herald Western Kentucky U. Tammy Thompson crawled beneath the covers of her bed while she waited for someone to come to her room, tuck her in and read her a bedtime story. No, Tammy isn’t a 4-year-old waiting for her father. The Western Kentucky 1 sophomore is actually waiting for fresh man Greg Schmidt Schmidt was one of 11 W’estern Kentucky U. dorm residents who brought cookies, nnlk and bedtime sto nes to about 25 residents of a female res idence hall. The women could choose a "cold" or “hot” bedtime story. Greg Vincent, a res ident assistant who co-orgamzed the event, said all the “hot” stories came from "quality magazines,” such as Penthouse or Penthouse Forum. Tina Hewlett, also a resident assistant who planned the event, said none of the women picked “cold” stories. 1 hompson said she liked her story “It was kind of perverted, but it was cute,” she said. All the women in Thompson’s room said they wouldn’t mind tucking the men in. although the risks for freshman Brookie Spear might outweigh the ben efits. “I’d probably die of embarrass ment from reading the story,” Spear said