w w w w w w w w w -- w -W _W -or T T T T lw T MICH.ELLANY A meter-beast! Quick! Start the car! INTERVIEW Anne Herrmann English prof. explores literary treatments of women, gays and transsexuals Anne Herrmann is a profesor of English specializing in women and literature. She taught a senior seminar this semester in Women's studies called Transvestitism and Transexualism and Cultural Experiences. She was interviewed by assistant Weekend Editor Rebecca Cox. Daily: What do you talk about in your class this semester? Herrmann: The idea was to think on some level more abstractly with concrete cases about the construction of gender, and I think one thing that has come up is that the difference simply between sex and gender is sort of a minimal one... that the further differentiation would be gender identity which has to do with transsexualism, people feel that they're something other than what their body defines them as. D: What motivates that feeling that you're not in the right body? H: Partly I think that it often begins with cross-dressing as an adult and then moves on to a greater sense of need to change one's sex. For instance, just recently we saw the TV movie The Second Serve, which is a film of the Renee Richards story. Which is very succesful in the end. D: Do you think women writers are trying to redefine what a woman is? H: They are writing for a more egalitarian role in society and I think, depending on how feminst or political they are, they're thinking about a role that is outside of what we traditionally call feminine or masculine. D: Do you think feminism has had a large impact on these writers? H: I think so, definitely. D: Are other sexually oriented novels, such as romance novels, termed women's literature? H: It's interesting that someone from the New York Times took a survey about a year or two ago, and found that women were still largely reading romance fiction even on college campuses. D: What does that say about how women feel about themselves? H: I think in a way it says that on one level of consciousness nothing much is changed, romance still seems most compelling to women. It's partly an escape, and also a part of the socialization process. But I also think that on some level, that kind of fiction hasn't really disappeared, it has just been undervalued, since other kinds of fiction have become experimental and you have to be taught how to read it. D: Are the women in romance novels good role models? H: My main concern is that with so much focus on romance the socialization process for women still has to do with how to behave properly in a hetoerosexual relationship, rather than thinking about becoming an active agent in the world. It still has to do with a single man. So things like being a politically active person, or even being an active person in the workforce gets undermined so that romance becomes the absolute main focus and function of a woman. See INTERVIEW, Page 9 I DON'T PLAN on getting married for many years, but already, I am fairly certain that I will not spend the rest of my life living with certain types of people. I have ruled out smokers, Reaganites, anyone who wears as much or more make-up than Tammy Faye Bakker, and above all, meter-readers. I must congratulate the Ann Arbor Parking Batallion on their efficiency. I personally have re- turned to my meter five minutes too late, to discover a ticket written a split-second after the meter ex- pired by a meter-reader who had subsequently vanished. I wish this S.W.A.T.-team-like efficiency upon all city departments. Expired meter tickets are terrific because they encourage you to tempt fate. The city offers people who just miss the expiration a substantial discount on their fines if they rush down to City Hall to pay the fine within two hours of the violation. Many, many people take the City up on this offer, later finding themselves at the gateway to a living hell. They drive downtown only to discover that every stretch of available asphalt around City Hall OFF THE WALL This week, a sampling of romance- oriented graffiti from the Graduate Library: Goddammit, Amy, I love you! (in reply) Tell her, not us! MOUTHS ARE NOT CONSID - ERED SEX ORGANS. Who said? LOOK IT UP IN AN ANATOMY BOOK. Mike M. - Forget her - I love you! I LOVE YOU, KATHY You just think you do, Dave! WHO IS DAVE? DAMN YOU, KATHY -DOUG Who is Kathy? Damn you, Doug! -Jenny I JUST GOT LAID THE OTHER DAY. (in reply) Is that why you look like an egg? Whatever happened to "saving it" for one's wedding night? (in reply) "It?" Afraid to write "virginity"? Over 50 percent of teenagers by the age of 18 have lost it. Lost what? Their mittens, you cretin! comes with its own parking meter. First, the errant drivers get to wait several minutes for a space to open up. Then, they get to feed the meter. They go inside, wait five minutes to pay their fine, go to the bathroom, return to their cars, and discover that they slightly mis- gauged how much feed the meter would need, and the whole ritual is repeated ad infinitum. And if things weren't bad enough already, Ann Arbor has demonstrated an affinity for being on the very edge of hi-tech meter developments. Of course, the super- powered gizmos don't help cus- tomers any. The Tally Hall parking lot was free for a while. Now you drive in and find signs which warn you to remember your parking spot num- ber, and head for one of the conveniently located machines. You mumble the number to yourself, forgetting it just as you reach the twisted cousin of a redi-teller. So you jog back, get the number again, and punch it into this ancestor of HAL 9000 (of 2001 fame). Then you punch quarters into the change-gobbler. It spits out a receipt, your proof-of-purchase. I'm sure there's a special button on this thing which directs the meter- cretins right to every car that's overstayed its welcome. It probably even encourages the meter-beasts to stick around for a few minutes to see if the guy driving the Volvo makes it back in time. State Street, between the Union and Steve's, is lined with thuggish machines, too. These Star Wars- inspired updates on the standard, mechanical meter feature both a gray-and-black LCD readout (which is virtually impossible to read on a sunny day) and a frightening ability to count backwards. If you're late getting back to your car, they start tallying negative minutes: "-1, -2, -45, -367..." I don't know, but I think how long I've been gone is my business. And I'm always nervous when on Monday mornings I pump the first quarter into a meter See LOGIE, Page 9 MUSIC Three top country voices take some risks wi Dolly Parton, Linda Companion" and one of Trio's two Sheila E. drew you near to me... Too young bids for a hit, "To Know Him Is To to know better, too old to refuse... Ronstadt, and Love Him." The Phil Spector Sheila E. (Paisley Park I Warner Should we pass or should we Emmylou Harris classic never sounded so sweet and Bros.) play... You better look twice, Trio(WarnerBros.) swoony, and David Lindley's there's someone under her dress... Hawaiian guitar gives the dreamy Several cuts on this epinymous It's just that I'm so curious... I'll What a coup: teaming three of ballad a surprising tangy twang. LP are mired in (almost) cliched country's most distinctive voices Ronstadt handles the other Prince production antics. Well, for one album. Dolly Parton, the possible single, a powerhouse there are worse places to be. When Queen of Country Crossover; Linda version of Linda Thompson and this album is at its best, though, it Ronstadt, who left the country Betsy Cook's "Telling Me Lies," in really smokes. scene some ten years ago to sing which her typically understated There are plenty of upbeat dance everything from Gilbert and vocal builds slowly in intensity. grooves but the ballad-like "Hold Sullivan to Elvis Costello; Em - When Parton and Harris jo n her on Me" is likely to command your mylou Harris, who has remained the gorgeous chorus, the result is attention. "Boy's Club" is sexy fun true to the down-home sound. It worthy of awe. Similar magic is that reminds me how much I might sound like a slick way to sell worked on the hertwrenching I ve laughed at (and loved) the first a record; thankfully, the record Enough, one of Kate Vanity 6 album. sounds neither slick nor contrived. McGarrigles saddest and prettiest While the campy retouched songs, which Ronstadt interprets "Hon E Man" is a dose of photo on the cover and the enclosed with sensitivity, serious eighties funk with an paper dolls might suggest a sly In an era when recycled enter - ecstatic horn section. Tie these send-up, Trio is in fact a heartfelt tainment prevails and so many LPs guys down! ode to the kind of traditional sound are simply slight variations on past that's largely missing from the successes, it's refreshing to see Are you wondering if the album contemporary country music mar- three established stars taking a bit is as sexy as its cover photo of ket. The packaging may be a joke of a gamble. If Trio does not pay sultry Sheila might indicate? Well, but it quickly becomes obvious tha' off at the sales counter, it won't be check out these single lines from these ladies take their music very for lack of quality, but rather the the selection of songs: seriously. The largely acoustic unwillingness of buyers to take a backing given such country classics chance themselves. "I'm gonna turn you on (hot)... I as "Rosewood Casket" and "Farther Rest assured, Trio is a safe bet. gave you the key to my virginity... Along," as well as such a James Sanford I'm captured by my senses... And charmingly offbeat selection as the Depression-era "Hobo's Medita - des 9 tion," is not only beautiful and " g Eand H+ET 'nac inspired, it's brave too, at a time' when nearly everyone is electric. Complete As with Dan Fogelberg's sur - a Contac prising bluegrass LP High Country - Snows a couple years ago, youSCruvenC spend the first few playings of theaft album waiting for the producer to plt step in and gloss everything up to A UAC MUSKET PRESENTATION a Contact met the demands commercia disc, Trio is largely free of con - cessions. This is a straightforward country record, movingly sung. When these three voices blend toges, t he whole is much greater than the sum of its parts - which MusicyRichard Rogers is considerably potent in itself. 0 While there are some exceptionsarneesize pas' along the way, Parton generally odS takes the high end, while Ronstadt 'Icud nyadiiimtedtm*ot handles the low, and Harris' light s nge oed hsi vibrato nestles comfortably inh m between her more dramatic friends. "The Pain of Loving You," which Book, yOscar Hammerstein 2 opens the LP, and "FartherAlong," OPTOM the closer, showcase the group hamnewhile the rest of the eye c tracks tend to spotlight a particular member of the trio with the other ARBORLAND CO two lending support.973-7 Parton takes the lead on the lovely "Rosewood Casket," "Mak -April 2,3 8:00p April 4 2:00 & 8:0 0 ing Plans" (a hit for her as a duet with Porter Wagoner) and her self- POWERC TE $,5 penned "Wildflowers." Harris gets to carry the plaintive "My dear Frmore info,c' 763-1107 PRINT FROM THE PAST DAILY FILE PHOTO September 13, 1972: Students chat with city police officers on the Diag. THE DAILY ALMANAC 15 years ago - April 1, 1972: "Cops stand by as kids get high," read the headline. It was the first annual "Hash Festival" (known in subsequent years as the "Hash Bash"). Despite freezing tempera - tures, intermittent snow showers, and the possibility of arrest, some 500 hardy pot-smokers gathered in the Diag for the event, which coincided with the effective date of Michigan's new marijuana law lowering the penalty for possession to a misdemeanor. A small, "poorly disguised" police presence simply observed the proceedings. "The Hash Festival should be - come an annual affair," one organi - zer said, "and we hope to see every - body out here again next year." "Next year?" another answered. "What's wrong with tomorrow?" -,PA~GE 81 'EEDARL, 8 ~WEEKE D/APRUL,i98F