mmmm Back to School Special! i Hdruckor 1/3 lb. Origirial Hamburger $1.50 R«S $3.80 Worry - Offer expires Sept. 30, 2000 2206 S Texas Ave, College Station, Tx Limit - 1 per customer / Must have coupon | Department of Student Activities w ■ ■ Center Volunteer Opportunities Fair Wednesday and Thursday September 6th and 7th 10am-2pm MSC Fiagroom and Hallway GivEm, Aggies! tor rno re serve (a* taniu.edii Virtual Volunteer Services Center!! http://givenn.tamu.edu/ Amy Carrier acamer^bush.^chool tamu.edw Eon Salter % lori-j^tamu edu 845.1133 Mobil Aggieland Alternator Auto 8 Mobil SUNDAY SPECIAL: OIL CHANGE FILTER & LUBE includes: Windshield • Tire Pressure Check • Washer Filled • Charging System Check • Brake Check • Transmission Check • AC System • Suspension Sunday Price only s 17.95 reg. $22.50 We Provide Auto Repairs, Maintenance, and State Inspections 815 University Dr. (Next to McDonald's) College Station, TX 77845 Mobil Hours: 260-7272 Mon.- Fri. 8:00 - 6:00 Shop Hours: Sat 8:00 - 2:00 Mon.- Sat. 8:00 - 6:00 Sun. closed Sun. closed AGGIELIFE THE battalion Thursday, September?, 2000 Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West Gregory Maguire Published by Reganbooks Sure, Frank L. Baum’s classic tale of wicked witches, an innocent farm girl and an eventful trip down the Yellow Brick Road was supposed to be about trading in the gold stan dard for superior silver, but if one doesn’t have a taste for alle gories or, say, stories with hap py endings, then Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the Wfest might be more appeal ing than Judy Garland singing about troubles melting like lemon drops. Maguire’s Wicked intro duces readers to a green-skinned girl named El- phaba, her un faithful, alcoholic mother; fanatical ly religious father; beautiful, but armless sister, and freedom fighter- younger brother, leaving the reader to think, “With relatives like these...” After growing out of shark-like baby teeth and getting through a stint as a missionary working with her fa ther in the Quadling badlands, El- phaba is sent to a university to make something of herself. There she boards with Galinda (perhaps more familiar as Glinda, the good witch). a prima donna social climber who could not be less thrilled about living with such an outcast. At the university, Elphaba contin ually fights with the head mistress, Madame Morrible, and begins secret research with Dr. Dillamond, a goat biologist who is trying to discover the link between animals and Animals (an Animal has the capacity for spo ken language and thought) be fore the Wizard takes away all Animal rights. Dr. Dillamond’s eventual murder and Madame Morrible’s coverup of the crime initiates Elphaba into a world of con spiracy that changes her life, coloring her against all au thority figures and making her a radical misan thrope, hellbent on getting re venge against the Wizard and Morrible. Elphaba is strange. She is overly standoffish. She has an unreasonable fear of water. However, she is no evil witch. OK, she does want to rid Munchkinland of that troublesome Dorothy character, but only because Dorothy took the shoes promised to her by her sister. Plus, the Wizard — the hapless character of Baum’s clas sic is Wicked's evil despot who reg ulates the kingdom of Oz with the terrifying Gale Force — killed her lover and regulated her Animal friends to mere livestock. Elphaba is not the warmest of characters ever written, but she is undeniably human. Maguire’s ele gant prose and careful crafting of her character allows the reader to un derstand her without pitying her plight. Some might call it sympathy for the devil, but her demise in Wicked is a remark concerning more Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoyevsky Published by Bantam Classics Philosophers as far back as Plato and as recent as the Marquis DtjSade have questioned the value of human life and the possible justifications for crime, but nowhere are the questions brought to life as well as in Dos toyevsky’s classic Crime and Pun ishment. In the novel, set in 19th century St. Petersburg, a young former college student named Raskol nikov murders a pawnbroker in order to redistribute her wealth. In the planning stage of the crime, he sees it as a justified killing. After all, she makes her living on the misfortunes of Olli ers, so is it not just to rid the world of her? While the answer to this question seems clear to Raskolnikov in the beginning, as the novel progresses, he struggles with his conscience and periods of madness stem ming from his paranoid fear of discovery. The imagery in the novel is augmented by Raskolnikov’s grinding poverty and the sacri fice his sister is willing to make for him: marrying a rich man to free the family from debt. The deeper questions about human nature and morality the tragic end of an embittered • young woman than the courageous J death of a murderous of a tyrant. / With Wicked, readers may be presented with the character of El- phaba, but the image that keeps sur- ; facing is one of humanity itself. (Grade: B+) — Beverly Mireles ; notwithstanding, this novel is an ex-' cellent read with no unimportant' scenes and never-ending suspense. The only real drawback is that the events tend to be slightly repetitive and that the Russian names present some problems in remembering who all of the characters are. Readers would be well-served to keep a note book handy to jot down some of the characters’ names and roles. (Grade: A-) Jason Bennyhoff = Literary classic |3 = A cut above Q = Passable reading D F Don't buy it Waste of paper Mid ii Company Sign-Ups Sun. Sept. 10 th Starting at 12 noon outside B.S.C. office in Wehner Bldg. Come early, many will be waiting Career Fair website: http://wehner. tamu. edu/bsc