v , .V W w RAPE kicked the dog and choked the goldfish. He was that kind of guy." Continued from Page 7 All his life, Belcher has felt His father was an alcoholic who insecure around women. That's not "beat up everybody in the family, surprising-to some degree nearly Sea Feast 2 lbs. of Shrimp $9.50 DOMINICK'S The Campus Meeting Place , C \SA 812 Monroe I N (. "I Open Mon-Sat 7:30am -10p.m I ~Sunday 4:00-8:00 p m. Buy one *uonerBURGER I opper KING sandwich, get another ARENT Whopper® free YOU I .. Stadium Blvd. Please present this coupon before ordering. Limit one coupon per customer. Not to be used with other coupons or offers. Void where pro- ' a cohibited by law. in Eisenhower Eeoe This offer expires 10/31/86. Briarwood Good only at: * * 458 Briarwood Circle /9 Victors Way BRIARWOOD MALL _ 725 Victors Way ANN ARBOR, MI all menfdo, but they'ie -riot alf rapists. So why did he do it? "The opportunity to have my way with her," he says. "I could be in control. No rejection. Rejection didn't matter. It didn't matter; I had control. Whether I was appealing or not didn't matter, I had control. How far we go, I had control." The fear of rejection and a fragile ego were at least partially responsible for Belcher's crime. Ultimately, of course, it's Belcher himself who is responsible. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 You can experience Ann Arbor's newest Night Club & Lounge in the new Holiday Inn West Happy Hour Monday-Friday 4pm -8 pm Live Entertainment Nightly NOUVEAUTE Proper Dress & ID Required (21 & older) 2900 JACKSON ROAD "Db't mirsunderstand whatI'in saying here. I hope you guys don't print this wrong, because I feel for the victim. If I could change it, I would. If I could take it all back, I would. But I'm going to be a victim, too, for the rest of my lfe, because no matter where I go, no matter what I do, this is going to be hanging over me. My life will never be the same again. Ever." Until he raped Lisa-the first and only time he ever raped, Belcher claims-he was continually lying to himselftabout his self-image. When he gets out, Belcher says, he will be able to deal with women "a whole lot better than before. I won't be so damn scared of them." Quite a paradox: A rapist being afraid of women. "It wasn't like I hated women so every time I had a chance I was going to jump on one," he says. "That's not the case." For Belcher, the attitudes that led him to rape his next-door neighbor may never be completely gone,but the weekly group therapy sessions he has been attending at Jackson State Prison seem to have tempered them. For the first time in his life, he says, he is able to be completely honest with himself. He says he would kill himself before he would rape again. "If a guy's been living a lie his whole life, and every time a situation came up where he couldn't handle it he'd put on another mask, and when that one was worn out he'd put on another one, and when it got too tough he got drunk. If a guy's lived his whole life like that and never faced anything, and he faces something as serious as this, and was totally honest-not with everybody else but with himself-he's got to be better off.' FISCH Continued from Page 9 was a hitch. Tom called this "the tough part"-separating the returnables by brand out of their random order. Later I got to take apart the lights and wipe layers of dust off the fixtures. At another point I got to clean up after a baby who spit up a yellow liquid. I also learned that when one of the managers asked for help with some task, that meant that he or she would watch you do it and offer much-needed supervision. When I was asked to carry liquor upstairs, Tom would say things like "Looks heavy," or "Careful." I never did get the pomotion, but there's no reason to get caught up in that money-status thing. I grew this summer. Someday I'll be a foodrunner. I've got all the tools now. It would be a real shame to waste them. INTERVIEW Continued from Page 9 Calloway, Jack Benny, I like comedy. D: How did you become such a legend? J: I made myself a legend. I built myself up... kinda hard to explain. You know, I got no education. I've never been inside a college. I never been inside a school. So I can't give up now. I'm my own teacher. I taught myself, whatever I want to know. D: What do you do for enjoyment? J: Dance. Go to bars and dance with three or four girls at once. I've danced at (Mr.) Flood's (Party) and I took the contest, first prize. Took it at Dooley's. When I get on that floor it's like a ball of fire. D: Who would you say is most influential for you? J: The college student. They're my friends. I love them. I love to be around them. They're nice. I help them and they help me. I help them with their schoolwork. And when they got a paper to write I help 'em with their paper. I show them how to write and relax themselves... Everytime I help them they get A's and B's, good marks. D: How do you help them? J: I already know the answers. They pop up like the guitar comes to me.. D: Did you ever read books? J: I never could read. I ain't got no education. I play by ear. D: How have students changed in 30 years? J: Never change... 60s don't bother me. They're like '86 to me. D: What's your message for college students? J: Keep on pushin'. Keep goin'. Don't give up. I didn't give up so why should they give up? D: Do you have friends all over town? J: Friends everywhere. I love to make friends and be with 'em... I don't remember their names. I remember their faces. Faces are more important to me than names. 'Cause I meet 2,000 people, I sign 2,000 autographs a day. D: That seems like a lot of autographs. J: Nah, it never bothers me none. D: Do you like your popularity? J: Yeah. But I don't let nothin' bother me. I don't get excited over nothin'. And I don't let nothin' go to my head. I don't let fame go to my head. D: You work for Ann Arbor Music Mart? J: Yeah, and when I get ready to leave I just tell 'em, "See you tommorow." They can't say anything 'cause I got too much seniority. When I'm there I do my work. I'm the carrier, I clean refridgerators, load 'em, unload 'em and carry 'em to rooms. I support my own habits. I work for what I want. D: What are your habits? J: I love to enjoy myself... I'm a free spirit person. Sean & Madonna's 'Shanghai Surprise' : a ct By James Sanford EVEN WHILE IT WAS IN production, "Shanghai Surprise" was becoming something of a running gag in gossip columns around the world and stars Sean Penn and Madonna were the butt of the joke. Given this kind of publicity, you might think the Penns would have toiled day and night to make sure their first film together was a critic-proof masterpiece, a celluloid slap in the face to their critics. Ironically, their finished product stands as a virtual invitation to their detractors to get out the whips. Even the Sean- Madonna faithful are going to have trouble finding kind words for "Shanghai Surprise." The best that can be said is that it might play better after a few Singapore Slings. The setting is 1938 Shanghai. Penn plays Glendon Wasey, an obnoxious American neer-do-well selling glow-in-the-dark neckties in the Orient. Through a series of meant-to-be-amusing circum- stances, he is coerced into helping missionary Gloria Tatlock (Madonna) in her search for "Faraday's Flowers," a huge cache. of opium hidden inside a shipment of artificial roses. Good-hearted Gloria desires the drug not for her personal use, but to ease the suffering of wounded soldiers and sailors she's been tending. Locating the flowers turns out to be a tedious task, not only for our hero and heroine, but also for the audience. "Shanghai Surprise" is a comedy without any laughs, a mystery without any suspense, an adventure without any action, and, to put it simply, one of the year's biggest turkeys. Typical of the film's "wit" is Wasey's constant teasing of his virginal sidekick by calling her "Miss Padlock." Another knee- tickler comes in Wasey's repeated bumping of his head on car doors. And everyone will be rolling in the aisles during the sequence in which the opium hunters, having taken an accidental dip in a fish tank, make wisecracks about each other's smell. Chortle chortle. Although he first captured the public fancy as the cheerfully drug- dazed Spicoli in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High," Penn shows nary a trace of his comic talents here. As played by him, Wasey is an abrasive, graceless thug, and when "Miss Padlock" finally opens her doors to him, viewers can only suppose it was the lack of Occidental males that made her commit such a foolish act. Madonna, who made a more than auspicious debut in last year's "Desperately Seeking Susan," seems to be desperately seeking direction here. She never finds any, THIS WEEK ONLY Passport orlID Photos * IH ~5.00 on I with this coupon I I I I VAN DYCK DOBOS I PHOTO STUDIOS 617 E. University u Suite 250 996-4841 kw -------M~ and the result is a flat, amateurish performance of an insipidly written character. She doesn't sing a note, either, leaving the soundtrack vocals to executive producer George Harrison. Time has been unkind to the ex-Beatle in more ways than one, based on the evidence presented here: Not only does his self-penned title track include such crude lines as "you could have been kinder / and shown me Asia Minor," he also delivers his dreadful ditties in a thick, eerie voice which brings to mind that of a ghost with post- nasal drip. Director Jim Goddard gives the i l r 652-69E A family troditi for over 36 year '82 LECAR 2-dr. red, clean. $2195 '80 DATSUN B 210 2-dr. light-blue. $1595 '79 MAZDA GLC 2-dr. automatic transmission, $1295 good transportation. FILM 83 MERCURY LYNX 2-dr. one owner. $2995 I Putumayo brings youi For 26 Autumns offered the excit traditional cloth{ represent forwa * Barry " Putun " Belle F *"Camb * J.G. I * Tricot " Ruff i " Elliott " I.B. D. * David * Rober " Kenne and m Clothing With A Flair the Sean attempts to defend his wife from the viscious attacks of film critics everywhere: 'Shanghai Surprise' is major turkey. 1200 S. University PAGE 8 WEEKEND / SEPTEMBER,19, 1986 WEEKEND / SEPTEMBER 19, 1986