4 Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 20, 1987 Group wants to change male image By PAMELA FRANKLIN A newly-reinstituted group, Men Against Rape Culture, wants to change the male image and break the gender stereotypes that en - courage rape. Men Against Rape Culture (MARC) sponsors programs that explore sex-roles and discussion groups which discuss gender issues and competition between males. Its activities hope to create better understanding among men, and bet - ween men and women. "It strives to form genuine relationships in a supportive environment between men, rather than having competitiveness, which is unusual for men because most interaction between men is a competitive nature," explained Dan Bornstein, an LSA junior and group member. "In some ways it's like the woman's movement in what we are trying to accomplish, but it's very HAIR DESIGNERS. FACIAL SA LON . NAIL SERVICES COSMETICS. WAXING. PEDICURES different because as men we have to give up power," said another member who wished to be unidentified. The group hopes to change the image of the male. Bornstein said, "(Men) lack a full range of emotions because we are taught to be macho, cool, competitive, in that type of environment you are repressed or rejected... What our group is saying is we want to dis - #jeruteUS AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State & Division) Sundays: 9:55 worship; 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Wednesdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. CENTER OPEN EACH DAY for information call 663-9376 ROBERT B. WALLACE, PASTOR * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave.- 662-4466 (between Hill and S. University St.) William Hillegonds, Senior Minister Sunday Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00a.m. UNIVERSITY MINISTRY J. B. Notkin, University Minister University Seminar: Galations 11:00 a.m., French Room. play our full emotions. We want to be comfortable with being anything we want to be." GROUP members view them - selves as "enlightened" and "pro - gressive," but not radical. They want freedom to express themselves without having to feel guilty about being unmanly. Recent group activities include a speech by former Democratic con - gressional candidate Dean Baker, a graduate student in economics. The group will also be involved in the "Take Back the Night" rally and march in April. The MARC calender of events include a panel discussion on "A Multicultural look at Masculinity" on Sunday, March 8. The movie "Heartbreaker," about friendship between men and woman on Sunday, March 15, and a look at "Men and Spirituality," on Sunday, March 22. POLICE NOTES Break-in Ann Arbor Police are investigating a break-inearly yesterday morning at the parking garage of the Rackham Graduate School, according to Sgt. Jan Suomala. University security caught caught the intruder but he has not yet been charged. The suspect apparently entered by prying off a grate, then left without taking anything. -By Steve Blonder IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Battle continues in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon - Druse militiamen captured most of west Beirut's commercial Hamra district during nightlong street-to-street combat with Shiite Moslem fighters, police said yesterday. They said 15 fighters were killed and 35 wounded as the battle for control of Beirut's Moslem sector raged into a fifth day despite Syria's threat to send troops with shoot-to-kill orders to quell the conflict. That raised the overall toll since the fighting erupted Sunday to 80 killed and 315 wounded, by police count. A focal point in the fighting was a seven-hour battle for the Commodore Hotel off Hamra Street. It was stormed by grenade- hurling Druse gunmen behind a massive barage of armor-piercing rockets. Soviets release dissidents MOSCOW - Psychiatrist Anatoly Koryagin came home yesterday after five years in a labor camp, and officials said Jewish activist Jose Begun would be out of prison in 24 hours, nearly a week after his release was first announced. Foreign Ministry spokesman Geniuses Gerasimov reported the releases at a news briefing. Koryagin, who had accused authorities of putting sane dissidents in psychiatric hospitals, and Begun were among the most prominent dissidents still held, but other well-known activists remain in prisons or labor camps. Begun, 55, was still at Chistopol Prison yesterday. An Interior Ministry official telephoned Begun's wife Inna last night and told her to go to the prison, 500 miles east of Moscow, for Y her husband's release today. Report criticizes human rights trends around world WASHINGTON - The State Department yesterday called the police crackdown in South Africa the most troubling human rights trend of 1986 and dismissed some of the Soviet Union's newly proclaimed human rights moves as "only talk." The department's annual report to Congress on human freedoms in 167 countries also criticzied South Korea, a close America ally, and claimed an inability to determine whether the Central American Contras were guilty of war crimes in their fight to overthrow the pro- Soviet Nicaraguan government. Like its predecessors, the 1,356-page human rights survey is a detailed report card on the human condition in lands ranging from the democracies of Western Europe to North Korea - which Assistant Secretary of State Richard Schifter likened to the regime in George Orwell's classic novel of repression, "1984." Volunteers search for skiers lost in avalanche in Rockies BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. - Two hundred volunteers joinedl 60 skilled mountaineers and dog teams yesterday on an avalanche- gouged Rocky Mountain peak in the hunt for skiers missing in a massive snow slide that killed at least one man. Helicopters were sent to the peak before dawn yesterday to drop explosives to release snow still hanging over the slope, Summit County Sheriff Delbert Ewoldt then sent in the search teams. Edwoldt said officials were not sure how many skiers were missing, but "we have information for two for sure with possibily a third." 4 4 A 747-8787 Mon -Fri: 9:30 - 7:00 Sat: 9:30 - 4:00 1220 S. UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 T H E Selected Sandwiches* after 4pm Saturdays Michigan Union, Ground Floor *MUG, Cheese MUG, Chicken Nuggets-6-pc. OFFER EXPIRES 2/28/87 A A EXTRAS Raises make hubbies horny NEW YORK - A pay raise or a promotion whets a man's appetite for sex, and a demotion or dismissal curbs it, a seven-year study of 1,632 couples indicates. Sex increased from 2.6 to 3.6 times a week when the man's career status improved, but decreased to 1.2 times a week when there was a_ setback, according to a survey conducted by Srully Blotnick for a book, "Ambitious Men: Their Drives and Delusions." In a quarter of the cases where there was a setback, the couplet refrained from sex for a week. "Men who got a raise or a promotion said they felt like hot stuff for the next few weeks," Blotnick said. "They wanted to share it, and it comes out in an erotic form." The good feeling occasioned by the raise "doesn't go on forever$ usually 10 days to two weeks," Blotnick said. "These men don't turn; into sex maniacs." The survey found that when women got good job news, they usually: wanted to celebrate more socially, "by having a few friends over, or going out to an expensive restaurant," Blotnick said. "Her idea of celebrating wasn't to go home and ravish her husband." If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. 4 4 ROUGH DAY? Re~lax with thU~Iie 93idigtrn ailn A :1 TALLY HALL IS: A HAIR STYLIST AND CLIENT TURNED MAAIGPRNER IN A HIGH-STYLE BUINESS ENDEAOR..> He's an experienced hair stylist with a loyal following and dedicated staff. She's a satisfied client with plenty of business and management experience. But today they have more in common than just hair. Triu AhoSr4 Cmman and Ronni Farmer hau Camaan'c Wair CSalon 0he Michigan BatIV - Vol. XCVII -No. 101 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates" September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief...............................ROB EARLE Sports Editor............SCOTT G. MILLER Managing Editor..........................AMY MINDELL Associate Sports Editors..............DARREN JASEY News Editor .....................PHILIP I. LEVYRCKAPN Features Editor...................MELISSA BIRKS GREG MOLZON NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Steve ADAM OCHLIS ~ Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Jim Bray, Brian Bonet, JEFF RUSH Scott Bowles, Paul Henry Cho, Dov Cohen, Rebecca SPORTS STAFF: Adam Benson, Jim Downey, Liam Cox, Hampton Dellinger, Leslie Eringaard, Martin Flaherty, Allen Gelderloos, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Frank, Pam Franklin, Stephen Gregory, Edward Haselhuhn, Al Hedblad, Julie Hollman, John Husband, Kleine, Steve Knopper, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Loranger, Rob Levine, Jill Marchiano, Adam Schefter, Adam Michael Lustig, Jerry Markon, Edwin McKean, Andy Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan, Mills, Gary Mull, Eugene Pak, Faith Pennick, Martha Bill Zolla. . 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Sales Manager.............................DIANE BLOOM Arts Editors.........................REBECCA CHUNG Finance Manager..............REBECCA LAWRENCE SETH FLICKER Classified Manager....................GAYLE SHAPIRO Books.....................SUZANNE MISENCIK Assistant Sales Manager........ANNE KUBEK Features.................................ALAN PAUL Assistant Classified Manager................AMY EIGES Film..................................KURT SERBUS DISPLAY SALES: Karen Brown, Kelly Crivello, Irit Music..................................BETH FERTIG Elrad, Missy Hambrick, Ginger Heyman, Denise Levy, Theatre......... ..LAUREN SCHREIBER Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, Laura Martin, Mindy r i AR S. A A.,6- . i __ ____ n__. _.__ e r.___ __ °__ ._ r____.