4 Lifestyles Thursday, December 6, 1990 The Battalion Lifestyles Editor Kristin North Holiday traditions RICHARD S. JAMESAThe Battalion Theodore Bice of Bryan ponders possible Christmas gifts as he sits on Santa’s lap. around the world By TERRI WELCH Frohlich Weihnachten! Feliz Nav- idad! God Jul! Merry Christmas! As familiar Christmas traditions occur here in the United States, many other countries will be cele brating the holidays with their own customs. Take, for instance, Germany. A pre-festival known as St. Nicho las Day is held for children on Dec. 6, said Wulf Koepke, a professor of German in the Department of Mod ern Languages. “Children place their shoes on the window sill and hope for St. Nicho las to leave sweets if they have been good,” Koepke said. The real Christmas celebration is on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve, he said. Presents are given and parents deco rate a natural tree with ornaments and real candles. Children are not allowed to see the tree until the can dles are lit, Koepke said. Dec. 25 and 26 are public holidays in Germany and families gather to gether for fun and good food, he said. Geese, venison and Fish are the main dishes. “Germans really live it up for New Year’s,” Koepke said. “There is lots of dancing and a number of customs for good luck.” Not far from Germany is Norway, where families gather for dinner as church bells ring in Christmas at 5 p.m. on Dec. 24, said Kato Hagen, a senior finance major from a town close to Oslo, Norway. “The east coast traditionally serves a dish that includes meatballs, pork ribs, sausages, boiled potatoes and sauerkraut,” Hagen said. “Ho memade beer is also served.” Trine Maasoe, a senior English major from Bergen, Norway said, “The west coast serves steamed lamb ribs that have a salty flavor and are very good.” Boiled potatoes and lutefisk are also served, Maasoe said. Julenisse is the Norwegian version of Santa Claus, Hagen said. The children are told he lives in the for est. He comes at seven or eight in the evening on Dec. 24 to bring presents to all nice girls and boys, Hagen said. Usually an adult will dress up and let the children see him coming. “The children must sing to him before they receive their gifts,” Ha gen said. This differs from family to family. If living on a farm, boys and girls are told to place a bowl of warm rice and milk with sugar, cinnamon and butter on top out in the barn, Hagen said. A smaller version of Julenisse will come and eat it in the middle of the night. “If he doesn’t get anything, Jule- Hanukkah celebrates religiousfreedomfori During this holiday season those of the Jewish religion will be celebrating Hanukkah which has no relation to Christmas ex cept that they both occur around the same time of year. “Hanukkah marks the liber ation of the Temple which Assy ria occupied,” Rabbi Peter Tar- low of the Hillel Foundation said. “It concerns the idea of religious freedom for all people." The celebration differs from family to family, but usually in cludes the menorah, a candela brum with nine branches, Tarlow said. Each day of the eight-day tradition, candles of the menorah are lit until all are lit at one time. Gifts are given to the children during the eight days, and each family decides how gift-giving will take place, Tarlow said. “My cnildren wanted to have one present on day one and work up to eight presents on day eight,” Tarlow said. The gift giving, which symW izes the gif t of religious freed® is usually the reason Hanukkaks confused with Christmas, he said Tarlow, a professor in theDt partrnent of Sociology, said I liberation took place around 13i B.C., and Hanukkah has b«i celebrated since. nisse will be mean to the animals,” he said. As the children grow older and care less about Julenisse, presents are put under the Christmas tree which is very similar to those in the United States, Hagen said. Between Christmas and New Year’s Day, Norwegians celebrate Julebukk, Maasoe said. “Julebukk is our version of Hal loween,” she said. “Families dress up so they are unrecognizable and go from house to house singing. Hop ing to get invited inside.” Closer to the United States, Mex ico has a variety of customs that take place during the holidays. In a tradition similar to Norway’s Mexican families go to other houses in a procession known as “Posada” which means “shelter,” from about Dec. 12 to Dec. 23, said Alejandro Csitkovits, a senior finance major from Matamoros, Mexico and presi dent of the Mexican Student Asso ciation. “Posada symbolizes when Mary and Joseph wandered around looking for a place to stay the night Christ was born,” Csitkovits said. “People sing a song that asb: shelter.” Usually, each home hasapfc breaking which is a custom li comes from the missionaries, said. They would tell the Men people that the pihata symbot the devil and the people had break it up, he said. On Dec. 24, families get toget for their own customs and ate tional dinner that includes rotar tos, turrones and a drink km ronpope, Csitkovits said. Families also attend milk mass or “Misa de Gallo' Christmas Eve, he said. “When 1 was a little kid.myft; would have a pihata and a dk that included turkey, stuffing sweet potatoes,” Csitkovits said. As far "fre exchanging p Christmas is not as big as “ElC; Reyes Magos” or “The comings’: three Wise Men,” he said. Tlieo bration is held Jan. 6, and gifs given symbolizing the gifts theiti wise men brought to baby ]« Csitkovits said. Many other celebrations als« take place across the globe this: day season. ^ Spend the holidays catching up ^ By CINDY McMILLlAN The abrupt change in tempo from pulling all-nighters studying for finals to lying on the couch for a month at Mom and Dad’s house is enough to give any college student whiplash. Don’t be a complete vegetable — this is a great time to catch up on all those books you’ve been meaning to read. The following list includes a few old and new favorites. “Catcher in the Rye” by J.D. Sa- ling er. If you’ve never read it, you’ve really missed out. As the jacket liner says, each generation has tried to claim the book as its own — that’s because the themes are timeless and universal and vital to young people of any era. The main character is a young man trying to rationalize the goals and roles While Salinger finds a common ground we can all relate to, I’d wager there are some observations Thompson makes that noone can relate to or begin to un derstand. But that doesn’t stop them from be ing entertaining and amusing. Nothing is off-bounds to Thompson. Campaign scandals, the wonders of sa tellite-dish television, looting on the high seas — this collection of short es says and journal entries approaches both the mundane and the fantastic with hilarious irreverence. In one memo to his editor of his aspi rations to the journalist-in-space pro gram and possible story ideas, he writes: “If the telephone call doesn’t come from NASA and they send Cronkite instead of me into space, then it will be time to Good books: “Catcher in the Rye” J.D. Salinger “Generation of Swine” Hunter S. Thompson “Texasville,” “The Last Picture Show” Larry McMurtry in life he’s been expected to accept. He’s been sent to the right schools, raised in the right family and dressed in the right clothes, but he can’t see the point in any of it. He fails out of one school after an other not because he is unintelligent, but because he pities and loathes his shallow, blindly accepting peers and the system they have so easily bought into. One after another, he mentally pushes each of the people who should be close to him —parents, teachers, girlfriends — further away as he draws within himself. The struggle to make sense of mod ern society and find his own place in it is something I think all young people can relate to. Sometimes, maybe in the mid dle of a really tough semester or at a turning point in our personal lives, we all stop and ask ourselves “What’s the point?” While this book doesn’t really provide any answers, the extent to which we identify with the character is a revelation in itself. “Generation of Swine: Tales of Shame and Degradation in the ’80s” by Hunter S. Thompson. Another chroni cler of modern society, Thompson’s ob servations are funny, caustic and weird. deal with my notion of taking Vanessa Williams to Johannesburg for a casual Saturday night of dinner and dancing “Generation of Swine” is labeled Gonzo Papers Vol. 2, the second such collection of essays and short entries. The third, “Songs of the Doomed,” was released earlier this year and is available in hardback. “Swine” is the most recent Thompson novel in paperback. “The Last Picture Show” and “Tex asville” by Larry McMurtry. Though these aren’t McMurtry’s most recent novels or perhaps his best, they do a wonderful job of catching Texan local color with sharp wit and endearing characters. “Picture Show” takes place in Thalia, a small, arid town near Wichita Falls, about mid-1960s. Duane and Sonny play for the high school football team, spending their spare time roughneck ing, playing pool and going to the pic ture show Saturday nights with their girlfriends. The story is one of love and growing up in a small Texas town, where the pickings are often slim for young men and women looking to settle Video releases ^ After the holidays have been cele brated, try popping a new release vi deo cassette in the VCR to take away some of the out-of-school blues. Many of the summer’s hottest movies will be available on video cassette in Decem ber and January. Movies which will be released on vi deo this holiday include: • Silence Like Glass • Ghost Dad • Last Exit to Brooklyn • Street Hunter • Torn Apart • Robocop II • Gremlins II • Dick Tracy • Priceless Beauty • Hiroshima, Out of the Ashes • Amityville IV My Blue Heaven Young Guns II Ford Fairlane Diehard II 1 Navy Seals 1 The Freshman Dec. 5 Dec. 6 Dec. 6 Dec. 12 Dec. 12 Dec. 13 Dec. 19 Dec. 19 Dec. 20 Dec.26 Dec. 26 Dec. 27 early January early January early January early January early January down and nature is apt to deal a dirty hand. The strength of McMurtry’s writing is his characters — they’re real, funny, proud, lonely, sometimes a little pitiful. But I feel like I know them, and by the end of these two books, I feel like I grew up in Thalia. “Texasville” catches up to the same Thalia residents in their middle age, complete with wives, children, jobs, a few oil wells and a few unrealized dreams. The satiric look at Texas’ oil bust and boom is a funny dimension to this much longer, much later follow-up. Be sure and read these books before seeing the film version of “Texasville” this Christmas. Local organizations give to community during Christmas By LISA YOUNG While most Texas A&M students are preparing for finals, a few char itable campus organizations are truly in the spirit of Christmas. Local chapters of two national sororities are sharing their study time with the community by providing activities for the children in the Bryan-Col- lege Station area. Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, in conjunction with the Cain Hall Asso ciation, is sponsoring a Christmas party Saturday night for Bryan-Col- lege Station high school students. “We decided to sponsor a Christmas party to provide a social outlet for them,” says Vice President and Service Chairperson Denise Nance. The high school students in the Bryan area do not have many so cial activities to choose from, Nance says. “The party will give them the opportunity to be with people their own age in a safe, controlled envi ronment,” she says. The Cain Hall Association is a new organization formed this fall for the residents of Cain Hall and other male scholarship athletes. Cain Hall Association’s president, Ramsey Bradberry, says they want to be posi tive role models for the community. “Our main goal is to improve the relations among the athletes, other A&M students, and the community,” Bradberry says. The children will get an opportunity to meet some of the athletes that attend school here, he says. The party will be Saturday from 9 p.m. to midnight at Camp Junior High. Admission is f 1 with a canned food item and $2 without. The canned goods will be donated to the Twin City Mission, and proceeds from both organizations will sponsor future service projects. While the Alpha Kappa Alpha so rority will be aiming its Christmas spirit at high school students, the members of Delta Sigma Theta will oe locusing on the smaller cl# in the community. Breakfast with Santa, print' for children between the ages and 12, is an annual event spent by the Delta Sigma Theta sort The organization will be hold#! service project Saturday morn:' the Lincoln Recreation Center “The children really enjo’ event,” says sorority member' Boswell. The members cookW fast for the children and after*; play games and read to them well says. “We even have Santa: 1 an appearance at the break!’: the children will be able to gift' their lists.” Pam Sherman, social ad ^ chairperson for the sorority Breakfast with Santa is a worth* project. “It gives the childrt chance to interact with blackct students,” Sherman says. “It# makes me feel good that I’m f something back to the communf Though most students are if long before Christmas day, the# ganizations hope to make a ¥ J impression on the children if Bryan-College Station area Christmas. Ui bl . If Ch time of y be the cs The 1 say, are depressi by a lac bon, loi f tions. Peo F Christrn !ogy lect Peopl they wa ; family, pressed. Coun Noel R 1 look at Christrn 3 “You Christrn ! To a ; holiday 1 look a ! Christrn | realize t are goir ■ get back “Thit for you • perfect I ean't sp get toge j Ian to home o to oth< ! blues.” Holic same tii