Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 7, 1985 Documentary focuses on men in the '80s glop Students debate LASC's 6 a (Continued from Page 1) sign of weakness." THE POPULAR perception of the father's role in the family is dealt with in two of fourteen songs in Katter- man's documentary. Written and performed by Peter Alsop, "Be Gentle, Robin" is a song about a father who encourages his son to show tenderness as well as strength. Another untitled song by Alsop, written with his three-year-old daughter, deals with a father who always says "no" when his child asks for something. Other songwriters put humorous words to their tunes to ridicule the male stereotype. ONE SUCH song, "The Penis Song," was written by former art student Geof Morgan, who noticed that male models in his life drawing classes were considered "naked" rather than "nude" unless they were a jock strap. "A song like that pokes fun at the image of the young stud who goes around thinking he's a great sexual performer, "Katterman says. "The songs are funny, not bitter," he adds. "It cuts down to size the John Wayne's, but it does it in a fun, thoughtful way." TWO OTHER songs that focus on male homosexuality also try to teach a lesson through humor. Two gay composers, Ron Romanovsky and Paul Phillips, wrote "Womb Envy," an account of a male who as a child "wanted to be a lady so I could have a baby." The two composers' second song "Homophobia," comments on society's response to gays: There was a man who took a stand And tried to shed some light He said that sexual preference is a basic human right The school board layed him off and said The budget was too tight Sound's suspiciously like Homophobia to me. Katterman admits that many men would find such music "disarming." But he says he included them in the documentary because he wanted to examine all sides of male sexuality. The songs are placed at the end of the program, however, because "they represent a minority of males." "I DIDN'T want to offend people right off the top," Katterman says, 'but you have to cover all bases." Thoroughness and resourcefulness, along with accuracy and quality, were the reasons the Detroit Press Club awarded Katterman's program, ac- cording to Wayne Klein of the Detroit Press Club Foundation. Katterman believes the spectrum of themes presented in the songs enables the documentary to "speak to men of all ages," including college students. "I FELT the pressure to be masculine - strong and always right,"'he says, remembering his own college years at the University, 1974- 78. "(Male) University students come because they want to go into engineering or med. school," he con- tinues. "I doubt they're aware of other important relationships. It'd be more satisfying if they don't feel con- strained by standard images." And after spending about 100 hours over four months researching the various musicians, splicing tape, and writing a narration for the documen- tary, Katterman admits that he pon- dered his own feelings toward being male. Dpily Photo by JAE KIM Trench break Bill, a worker from Toolsafe Construction, takes a break from building a trench in front of Angell Hall yester- day. House votes to create three memorials 0 0 Ideolog By HENRY PARK Members of the Latin American Solidarity Committee debated critics of their policies at their open house last night in the business school. LASC members said the purpose of the debate was to educate people on A their reasons behind their recent ac- tions, including their decision to protest Vice President George Bush's campus visit and CIA recruiting on campus. ONE OF LASC'S critics, engineering freshman Erik Alvarado, said the group's Central American views are misguided. Citing the Nicaraguan gover- nment's spiritual forefather, Augusto Sandino, Alvarado, who lived in theG country eleven years, said there should be "no foreign powers" in Cen- tral America. LASC, he added, should talk about "both sides, both powers in Central America." Some members of the audience questioned the objectivity of LASC and one said that although people are dying in Central America, it would be simplistic to say the situation there was bad considering the violence in American history. One person said there was "no documentation" for LASC's opinions, but LASC member Jackie Victor cited congressional reports on Central America and pointed out that LASC literature includes an extensive bibliography to investigate. University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson said he attended to "observe and be educated." WASHINGTON (AP) - With Washington already boasting no fewer than 106 national monuments, statues and memorials, the House voted unanimously yesterday to authorize three more, including a tribute to Americans who fought in the Korean War. The other two memorials would honor women who have served with the armed forces and the 5,000 black patriots whorsupported the cause of the American Revolution. THE THREE MEMORIALS, ap- proved on unanimous roll-call votes, would be financed by private funds, built on federal land in the Washington area and maintained by the National Park Service. In floor debate Monday, Rep. G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery (D-Miss.), chairman of the House Veterans Af- fairs Committee, said the Korea memorial would honor "the silent veterans who served in the war and slipped quietly back into civilian life practically unnoticed," over- shadowed by comrades who fought in World War II and later in Vietnam. Urging approval of a monument to women who have served with the U.S. military since the Revolution, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, (D-Colo.) said, "There's a myth in America that all women sat out all wars on a pedestal somewhere." The reality, she said, is that women "have been walking alongside men in every war.'' The proposal to establish a memorial to the 5,000 slaves and free blacks who served as soldiers and sailors or provided civilian assistance during the Revolution was sponsored by Reps. Nancy Johnson (R-Conn,) and Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.). DJ 7154-VC5i371 __ LOST & FOUND FOR SALE GREEK GAB HELP WANTED HELP WANTED LOST - Necklace with wooden beads and white teeth. Please return - has personal value. Reward 995-1709. 57A1107 LYNX '82 GS Wagon - 4 speed, air, power, stereo cassette, Michelin radials, 665-7953. 74B1108 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY or WINTER TERM! Female lease $260/mo. includes homecooked meals, utilities, laundry, cable. Owen Co-op. Call Chris 996-5973. 78B1111 PATTY, yes I'm psyched! Being your little sister is going to be the GREATEST because you are! Ann 01E1107 WANT GREAT ROMANCE for your spring formal? Let us give you the atmosphere. WELLER'S CARRIAGE HOUSE. 429-2115. cE1211 FOR SALE CHAIR, wood and woven rope, Danish modern. $49.663-0438. 98B1113 '79 - SCIROCCO - Great condition, 4-speed, New Sound System, many other extras. Must Sell. Best Offer663-2487. 87B1112 1983 MERCURY LYNX. Excellent condition - 482-4449 --After 5. 44B1108 1980 MAZDA RX-7. 5-speed, great condition. $5250. Call 665-7391. 14B1107 - ATTENTION STUDENTS - Giant Flea Market Household items, furniture, jewelry, vin- tage clothing, new and old. 150 dealers. 6:00- 10:00 p.m. Fri., 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Sat.- Sun., 214 E. Michigan at Park, Downtown Ypsilanti, 487-5890,971-7676. cBtc FOR RENT PERSONAL SUBLET for Winter term - Jan-May lease one bedroom apt. - off East University. 3 rooms all furnished - utilities included $375 a month call 996-0435. 82C1113 SUBLETTER WANTED. Spacious, Furnished Studio Apt. S. Division. Great Location. Dec 31 thru Aug 31.995-0231. 56C1107 ROOM FOR RENT - Available Dec. 1 - Apr. 30.2min. from Campus. Call 995-0298. Read and Use Daily Classifieds 65C1108 WANTED: used Mackintosh system. Call John: 1-649-4230 or 1-855-9685. 76F1113 ALL your cosmetic needs at the village Apothecary. 1112 S. University. cFct UNDERGRADUATE LAW CLUB: Two Litigation attorneys 7:00 Nov. 7 Pendleton Room. 85F1107 NEW CREDIT CARD! No one refused. Visa/Mastercard. Call 1-619-565-1657 for info. 24hrs. 51F1108 A CUT ABOVE HAIR DESIGN - Special $5 off any service, first visit only. Call 662-2544 for appointment. cFtc RESEARCH VOLUNTEERS - Warner-Lambert/ Parke-Davis Pharmeceutical Research Division, Community Research Clinic, is seeking healthy male volunteers, 18-55 years of age, to participate as subjects in drug research studies. Monetary compensation is provided to research volunteers. For further information call Mrs. S. Moran, RN, Research Volunteer Coordinator, (8 a.m.-4 p.m., Mon.-Fri.), 996-7051. 66F1108 DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS 1 George Herman Ruth 5 Defeat 10 Small dogs 14 Recent grad 15 Fragrance 16 Beehive State 17 Nicklaus 19 Minelli 20 Makes a choice 21 "Skylark" poet 23 Son of Seth 24 Strawberry's stadium 25 Koch and Asner 26 Barracks bed 28 B.: Bachelor's deg. 30 Work unit 32 Outflow 33 Sign up 35 Resort town near Santa Barbara 39 Preordains 41 Martinique, e.g. 42 Mopes about 43 Exile isle 44 Ravel opus 46 Chaney of films 47 Greek letter 49 Made do (with "out") 50 Explosive initials 51 Ring finales, for short 54 Menotti, the composer 56 Hollywood's Garr DOWN 1 Luggage 2 Succulent 3 Feller of baseball 4 Port in NW Germany 5 Rings the bell 6 Planets 7 Caviar 8 Court shot 9 North Carolinian 10 Influence 11 Useful 12 Looked upon 13 Carriages 18 Rouen schools 22 Lend an- 24 German sweet breads 26 Relinquish 27 Old Greek coin 29 Tom, Dick and Harry 31 Sentimental tripe 34 Garden vegetable 36 DiMaggio 37 Later 38 "- it romantic?" 40 Tumbler's milieu 42 Up to date 44 Encourage 45 Updates, in a way 48 - Khan 51 52 53 55 57 59 60 61 62 65 Skewered meat Honshu city Atomizer One at Creator of "Le Penseur" Exclamations Feds Josip Broz Muscat's land Honest - ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: TENOR APAR ADS AGAPE SADA LAOS C A N I S M I N O R ALBA OLAN CADRES MIT EKG ENSI LAGE LIP AI1DA TR8T A CE TY LE NE R I FE C A R ROLL E ME RA L D E A SY I L LO0M EN E D I S IS A S T I S A Y D IS T RE SS I RA RO0T E N HA L 0 P LU M A NE W D E GE NE RA TE W IN E U L NA B IK E S A TE P L AN B LE S S 11/7185 CONFIDENTIAL & INEXPENSIVE GYNECOLOGICAL CARE PLANNED PARENTHOOD 3100 Professional Dr., Ann Arbor (near Washtenaw & Huron Pkwy) 973-0710 cFtc STUDENT SERVICES DIAL-A-JEWISH-STORY. 995-5959. cG1122 GMAT Stanley Kaplan Educational Center, Class to prepare for the January GMAT Exam will begin November 20. Call 662-3149. cG1113 TUTORING by Grad student. All subjects incl. composition. 1-968-0976 eve. 36G1112 RESUMES - written - also word processed or typeset; coverletters, too. 662-4530. cGtc ACE Word processing, student discount. 769-9069. 21G1120 ACCURACYINK Editing/Word Processing Reasonable Rates. 971-4139. cGtc WOMEN: LET ME MASSAGE your way to better health and relief from stress. A real help during exams. Gift certificates available. Call Phyllis: 668-8436. 62G1108 TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS wanted. Call 761-5343, 3-5 p.m. 99H1120 HELP WANTED: Student or organization to run Spring Break trip to Daytona Beach. We pay highest commissions with the lowest retail prices. Special incentives for volume. DON'T BE LEFT OUT IN THE COLD! Call now 904-767-0327. 71H1111 SERIOUS STUDENTS male or female to work for meals lunch or dinner. Mon. - Fri., some weekends. Large sorority. Call 663-8785. 74H1113 DESPERATELY seeking bussing (tables) assistance! Please call Liz 668-0241 or 761-4810 for details! 77H1111 WAITPERSON full or part-time experienced. Inquire at Old German Restaurant 120 West Washington..662-0737. 70H1118 THE ANN ARBOR NEWS has a position open for a Utility Driver. Candidates should have a good driving record and a reliable vehicle. Hours are Saturday & Sunday 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. and Monday & Thursday 3:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Hourly rate plus Mileage Reimbursement. Apply at The Ann Arbor News Personnel Department or call 994-6744 and ask for Lee Ann. We are an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer. 83111112 VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Citizens Advisory Committee on Rape Prevention is interested in interviewing women who have successfully resisted an assault, for video project. If interested call Sue at 996-9517 or write to CACORP, Box 8647, 100 N. Fifth, A', MI. 48107. 84H11112 DESPERATELY SEEKING an Econ tutor for intro course. Please call Cheryl at 668-8965 after 6:00. ASAP! The sooner the better. NCHI112 PHOTOGRAPHER NEEDED to shoot B/W photos and tint them. Call Annie 764-7909. 68H1115 SPRINGBREAK 86 - Campus Rep. Organize Sailing Charters - FT. LAUDERDALE/ BAHAMAS. Commission and FREE Cruise. Write or Call Captain Williams 37 Hendricks Isle Ft. Lauderdale 33301 305-523-9259. 90H1108 EARN MONEY circulating petition for a part time legislature. Limited number will be hired. Call 994-5109 (Jim) 69H1108 EXPERIENCED WRITER - Wanted to work with experienced photographer as part of a team. 461-1972 after 5:00. 61H1108 THE ANXIETY DISORDERS program at the University Hospital needs volunteers for a research study accessing the helpfulness of two medications in the treatment of panic disorder (also known asanxiety attack). Somesymptoms of panic disorder are sudden surges of fear, accompanied by racing or pounding heart, chest discomfort, droziness, shortness of breath, trembling, and fear of going crazy or losing control. Volunteers not currently taking medications on a daily basis for nerves, anxiety or depression are needed. This study includes free diagnostic work-up, physical examination, and treatment to qualified persons. Call 764-5348. 49H1108 RELIABLE PERSONS needed to do snow shoveling, yard work, gardening and other odd jobs around my north campus home. Call Mary 769-2127 after 8p.m. 80H1107 COOK WANTED for small fraternity, good pay, flexible hours call 761-7104 or 665-5873. 45111107 BEAUTIFUL WOMEN OF ALL AGES have you often wondered what it would be like to be a model and have your own pictures just like Glamour or Cosmo? A well known photographer from California can now make that dream possible, call for an appointment or just stop by, West Coast Photography, Golden Gate Mall, 8551 N. Lilley,_Canton, MI 48187,453-7580.44H1112 AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Reservationists, Stewardesses & Ground Crew Positions Available. Call (refundable) 1-518-459-3611 For Information. 24HRS. 41H1111 BUSINESS SERVICES SANDI'S TYPING & WORD PROCESSING ***20% Off 1st paper (with this ad)** Fast & accurate. Papers, briefs, resumes, letters, theses. Campus pick-up & delivery. 426-5217. cJtc COMPUTER CLERK - typing, inexpensive, professional, guaranteed, fast, campus location. 995-9254. 67J1108 MERCURY'S MESSENGERS - Balloons & Cakes delivered for all occasions. Visa, MC, AMEX accepted. Call 24 hours. 668-8492. cJtc BRAND NEW TELEPHONES - Installed as low as $15. Call Telephone Crazy 769-1603. cJ1115 HOME ROW TRANSCRIPTION/WORD PROCESSING 572-0649 cJ0423 NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE*Be a distributer of fast/easy moving products. Large profits. Write to: Sunpar Marketing, 255 Great Arrow Ave., Suite 750CI, Buffalo, N.Y. 14207-3081. 59J1107 EDITOR - 40 years experience in making good writing better. Best quality, low rates, fast service. 995-0772. cJl2ll TYPING - ALL KINDS - Fast, efficient service. Reasonable rates. Laurie, 973-1592. cJtc A-1 TYPING - On Campus. Professional Rush Service Available. 668-8898. cJ1211 Papers/Resumes/Coverletters EXECU-TOPS Word Processing 663-7158 cite TYPING - All types. Fast guaranteed work @ reasonable rates. 668-6109. 85J1113 THE NEW SCHOOL OF PIANO First lesson complimentary. 994-0371 cJ1211 REALM'S LSAT COURSE November 12 - December 5 Reasonable Rates. 665-3579 70J11o9 ACCUTYPE WORD PROCESSING Resumes, Papers, Cover Letters, Etc. Complete Secretarial Service Available Same Day Service 761-5050 cJtc GOING PLACES DRIVE RIVIERA to Scottsdale, Arizona Decd.1 or soon as possible thereafter. Call collect 313-682-4040. 96K1114 TRAVELER from Detroit to A', has blue snowsuit left behind from citizen who helped traveler with directions. Owner of snowsuit call: 1-934-9002. NCKI l0 NEED CHICAGO ride, me and Albion friend, Thanksgiving, will pay lots of gas. Call eves uitil 11:30, Mary 761-6591. NCK1107 UNDERGRADUATE LAW CLUB: Two Litigation attorneys 7:00 p.m., Nov. 7, Pendleton Room. NCK1106 SPRING BREAK 86 - Freeport, Bahamas. $379 February 22 - March 1. COMPLETE TRAVEL. 761-6500. cK1211 BOOK THE BAHAMAS for Spring Break - from $399 round trip airfare, hotel 7 nights. FABER TRAVEL - corner Liberty and Maynard 769-9011. 29K1107 MISCELLANEOUS = TICKETS WANTED: OSU football tickets and blue tier basketball tickets. Price no object. 994-0145. 93Q1126 NEEDED: 1-6 Purdue football tickets in student section. Evenings, 761.6591. 81Q1108 NEEDED: 5 UM/OSU FOOTBALL Tickets. Pleasecall668-76497p.m. -9p.m. 80Q1112 WANTED: 2 UM Season BASKETBALL TICKETS - Blue Section Only. Please call 668-76497p.m. -9p.m. 79Q1112 AVAILABLE: 2 good tickets for Purdue-Michigan game. 665-8934. 86Q08 OSU 30-50 yard line seats needed. "Will pay MEGAbucks" 614-451-7536 or 614-891-3888. 73Qj18 NEEDED: 2 good OSU-UM tickets. Top dollar paid. Caroline 764-7024. 72Q1111 UM/OSU tickets needed for large company. Will pay top dollar. (614)457-1251/890-7985. 18Q1113 WANTED: Six Ohio State football tickets. Call (800)821-3923 and ask for Rita. 17Q1141 DESPERATELY WANTED. OSU/Michiga' football tickets. 973-9582. cQtc ABSOLUTE top dollar paid for UM football tick- ets. Call 973-6327. cQc 6 7 8 11 HELP WANTED r. -- -i - -4- 20 22 n PART TIME for order-entry,. shipping and miscellaneous jobs. Must be excellent typist. Flexible hours. Call Tracie at 769-9088. 0OH1111 DEVELOPING THAT RESUME? MUSICAL 32II- 29 MH 34 1 13 r P36 (3 3 I WANTED - Electric BASS guitar. Please call Jill at 662-2931 before 11:30 n.m. NCN1108 It 1 m