'. ich-ellany 1Dating is simply hell WEEKEND/JESSICA GREENE Andrea Dworkin Radical feminist talks about her fight against pornography, the plight of women INTER VIEW Andrea Dworkin is considered by many feminists to be one of the most articulate and well researched scholars at the forefront of feminist theory. Her books include Pornography: "Men Possessing Women," "Women Hating," "Right Wing Women," and "Intercourse." In a recent campus visit she spoke about her research on pornography and it's effects. In addition, Dworkin spoke to Daily News reporter Scott Chaplin. WEEKEND: Why have you committed your life to ending the oppression of women? DWORKIN: Everyone has to decide their own priorities. I have committed myself to the freedom of women. I don't know why anyone would have to justify that, we're- talking about more than half of the world's population, people of every color, ethnicity, historical, and economic circumstance. I think that men's dominance over women is related to many other problems that some people would rather see piecemeal. Men's dominance over women is the "larger picture" and in every struggle for social justice women have a double burden. Fundamentally what we are talking about is changing a society so that women are not looked down upon as a subordinate species of human being. There are millions of specific ways: we need mandatory arrests for batterers; we need the anti-pornography ordinances passed; we need women to be able to prosecute husbands who rape. W: What has happened with the women's movement since the '60s? D: The women's movement has changed a lot. When women first began speaking out, women thought, "this is great, we've discovered our voices." Women didn't expect the kind of heavy handed retaliation that we got when we spoke out. The women's movement has become a lot more serious about issues of power and about confronting male power in this society. And at the same time, society has become a lot more serious about suppressing the women's movement. Today's media is a lot less willing to let people have a look at the movement that really exists. W: Have you had problems getting your books published? D: My work has been pretty much blacklisted ever since the anti- pornography ordinance that Catherine MacKinnon and I wrote for the City of Minneapolis. Book publishers and pornographers in this country are very closely aligned. After it was passed, the American Bookseller's Association, the American Publisher's Association, the American Library Association all sued the city and sent out endless propaganda to every bookstore in the country against MacKinnon and myself. W: How do you feel about separatism in the women's movement? D: I have never been a separatist. I believe in women organizing together where it is useful, but I don't see it as a solution to the problem of women hating. I'm not content to have one coffee house I can go to, one safe street I can walk down - I want to live in the whole world. My view is that we solve this problem completely or it is not solved. W: How do you respond to the accusation that feminists are men haters? See INTERVIEW, Page 11 When Dante was dreaming up his nine circles of hell, he forgot dat- ing. There is no way of getting around it dating is hell. We have all been there at least once in our lives. Once where we find a person we really like and want to be with. Once where we fish a phone number out of the di- rectory and then, with anxious an- ticipation, sit down on our beds and stare at the telephone next to us, trying to find the courage (usually found between the chest and midsection) to dial the seven digits that will connect us with this per- son. Dialing the first three digits are easy. "7-6-4." There. But as you punch the fourth and fifth digits you realize: you are not only asking this person to the movies. You are, in essence, asking them to like you. Nobody likes asking this kind of question, and the sad reality is a lot of people would rather not an- swer it. "7-6-4...4...5...Oh Jesus, Oh Je- sus..." Self doubt creeps in. You dial the last two digits. You hear a dial tone, then a voice. "Hello." "Hi. Is this..." OFF THE WALL From the annals of the bathrooms at the /half-ass: Deputize the homeless Imagine Freud without a penis We all went down with Elvis' hips If it's too loud, you're too fucking old. What time is it in your imagination We too have been there; we can still hear the sound of the surf though we shall land no more. Damnation undoes pleasure. Silence = Death 1988, the year they finally drained the swamps All we want is freedom JOH N SH EA "4Yes." "How are you?" "Good." "Good..." (long pause) Your first complete sentence is, "What are you doing Saturday night?" And when the person says, "Nothing" (Yeah!), you almost hit the roof. Never has the word "Nothing" meant so much. You have known rejection before, smelled it, saw it coming from far away. And this is not it. You are still nervous, but you now feel comfortable enough to ask "Would you like to go to the movies?" without the obligatory "It's okay if you don't want to." It is not neccs- sary; the person does want to. You have a date. As Saturday approaches, you cannot keep your concentration on your work. You are only thinking of the person and how you will improve on your monosyllabic performance on the phone. SKETCpn.RAb You take extra long looks in the mirror, examining your face for fault. You take a few extra minutes in the morning to make sure your hair is combed and your shirt is tucked in. You have not felt this way in a long time. And when Saturday comes, and the sun goes down, your friends notice you are looking extra- ordinarily good this evening. "Going on a date?" they ask. You blush. They rag on you. You sneer and wave your hand at them as you walk out the door. You walk to your date's place of residence. As you reach your desti- nation, your heart quickens and your feet slow down. Self doubt visits you again. "Will I be witty enough?" you ask yourself. "Will I pick my nose at an inopportune time?" DearGodDearGodDearGod.... You approach your date's front door as if it were a shrine. You bow your head, close your sweaty palm, and knock on the door - quietly and quickly, twice. After the appropriate six beats have passed, the door promptly opens. Your date has spent as much See SHEA, Page 13 ECZINN RECORD Continued from Page 4 irony with "Valerie Loves Me., The Davy Jones-like lilt of the verses clashes not only with the harshly-screamed chorus, but also with the fact that Valerie doesn't, in fact, love him at all ("I can only hope for a stolen moment of her thoughts/between the club and all the drinks she'll buy"). But batting .300 just isn't good enough in this league. While this album proves the promise of Lazy Susan, Circle Sky, and Material Is- sues, it more convincingly proves the need for more bands like them. If CMJ's Class of '88 is what's going to lead us into the '90s, we're in for a long decade. -Jim Poniewozik Big Dipper Craps Homestead Many people, confronted with a new album, can't help but ask "What's NEW about this?" - in other words, what does this band do that hasn't been done before? This attitude is a crock. Nothing is new. Since the trilobites developed pain and sexual reproduction about 300,000,000 years ago, all music has been a variation on these themes. And what's so bad about that? The kc () artistic success isn't do- ing it f; ct, it's doing it best. Every memorable plot Shakespeare ever wrote was ripped off from some Italian 50 years his predecessor. But he did it better. Which brings us to Craps. Al- most every song on this album re- calls somebody else. "Meet the Witch" could well be The Smiths, had some noble psychoanalyst nipped Morrisey's -narcissisni and self-pity in- the bud. Other songs contain strong nods to Steely Dan, Wire, and even Big Country a la the clarion-call guitar riff in "Hey Mr. Lincoln!" But the band meshes all these styles into its own style marked by ringing vocal harmonies and crisp guitar lines from Bill Goffrier and Gary Waleik that chase each other all around the cobbler's bench on each cut. But for all their borrowings, what you don't hear much of on Craps is what you'd expect to - namely, The Embarrassment, Dumptruck, and Volcano Suns, the parent bands of BD's four members. Craps is a much more polished, stylized - almost British-sounding - product than any of these bands' releases, sounding smooth to a fault on songs like "Stardom Because" and "Ron Klaus Wrecked His House," which would probably be 10 times better live. Still, Dipper retains enough of its member's roots to avoid the overblown excesses of many of its post-punk counterparts. Craps is as Big Dipper takes a good idea and makes it better. tight as a Detroit public school budget, filled with slick harmonies, tasty solos, and melodies that end not a second too late. The only ex- ception is "Bonnie." a fields-of- wheat, Ameri-guitar snoozer of the sort Dumptruck fell prey to at the end of its career. Like the photo of a Vegas casino strip at night that graces the cover, --- -- -I ---K---------- MIDNIGH~T19TIIE FAI4 9SS RE OF TK6 GRNUAT'E IAB ... M A G A Z I N E Where your advertising dollars get results! Log VIDLOKOS " t ift 14i Orffl/A m n- :--- -----r Fuul., _ FuI.-w. FQ) LI- -o 17 4 I II M1N ANN ARBOR- 1220 S. UNIVERSITY 665-9 '4W' FUL.L, A N NMGUES HOT E UPLY :.VT o 0,51A WE WORK AS LATE AS YOU DO knko's Whenever you need clear, quality copies, come to Kinko's. We're open early, open late, and open weekends. 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