The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 20, 1992- Page 7 e9in9at either opening Men bond in male support groups e by Gwen Shaffer Daily Gender Issues Reporter exr Society says it's okay for men to ro (excused) be sensitive - but not too sensitive, because men are supposed to be 'eeey strong. But if they're too strong, and library Studies they become brutes. Conflicting ideals are often the der norm for men. xcused) To assist men in sorting out some of these issues, the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center ky (SAPAC) has sponsored support groups to help men gain a better un- derstanding of themselves for the (excused) past three years. Ulester Douglas, a facilitator for sources the discussions, said the program benefits women even though only men participate in the support ne groups. "Some of the assumptions about ns what it means to be a man are coun- terproductive. Talking allows an op- portunity for better relationships Jennifer Silverberg/DAILY GRAPHIC with women," Douglas said. Douglas said the "prescriptions" of how men should act have led to the oppression of men's feelings. "It is a slow emotional death," Douglas said. "By getting in touch and dealing with issues, we alleviate a lot of the pressures. We hope to Powers said he understands why people may be upset about a support group for men, but feels these con- cerns are unwarranted. "It's true the people who are re- ally oppressed and need support are not men, like lesbians and women of 'Some of the assumptions about what it means to be a man are counterproductive.' - Ulester Douglas group facilitator "The purpose of the group is not to support men who feel threatened by women gaining power." Powers, who first joined the sup- port group as a participant, said he feels he has acquired a better under- standing of himself and people in general. "Last year, I went through the group and felt I got more out of it than I did out of school," he said. Kata Issari, interim coordinator for SAPAC, said that the program owes its success to the fact that it was started "by men, for men." "Because of its structure, it has been very successful," Issari said. "I've never heard any criticism from women." Powers said that a diverse group of men participates in the work- shops. "The only similar thing about the men are that they are not the tradi- tional macho male and are socially- minded," he said. challenge the assumptions about male roles in society and adjust some of them." Christopher Powers, a workshop coordinator, said he has not heard negative feedback about the pro- gram. But some women have ex- pressed anger that men feel the need to discuss their oppression and that an organization designed to repre- sent women is sponsoring the groups. color," he said. "But one thing we talk about is confronting our own sexism." Powers said the workshops deal with several themes, including men and violence, men and sexuality, the relationships of men with their fa- thers, and male-male friendships and relationships. "We are talking about different things relating to our masculinity and trying to express traits that are traditionally female," Powers said. CITIES Continued from pagel again in June, was to set up the fu- ture agenda. Yesterday, the caucus briefly discussed the lack of control cities have over state-owned property within city boundaries as well as problems with students who live off campus. "We have people walking down the street with open cans of beer from one party to another," said Mt. Pleasant mayor Susan Smith about Central Michigan University students. Ypsilanti mayor Clyde King said Eastern Michigan University (EMU) students behave similarly and Ypsilanti's problems intensi- fied when EMU outlawed the sale of alcohol on campus. "It increased the problem by ousting it out into the community," King said. He added that campus Greek or- ganizaton also create conflicts be- tween the city and the university. "When these organizations have a wild party, we have difficulty de- termining who's responsible," King said. "(Greek organizations) work within the framework of the stu- dent activity center. When they do something good they want to take credit for it, but when they don't, they want to lock their doors." Ypsilanti city officials have been meeting with EMU administration and King said they have set up lines of communication. Ypsilanti plans to address EMU students at orientation "to say this is what we expect of you if you're going to live in our city," King said. Brater and Smith said Ann Arbor and Mt. Pleasant operate similar programs. East Lansing mayor Elizabeth Schweitzer said the city distributes booklets containing information about responsibilites of living off campus to students and also meets each term with the student assembly. "Sometimes it's more effective to work with the students directly than go through the administra- tion," Schweitzer said. ""We're talking about a very small number of students who really cause prob- lems." Civilians flee southern Lebanon under Shite-Israeli artillery fire KAFRA, Lebanon (AP) - Thousands of civilians fled villages in southern Lebanon yesterday as Shiite Muslim guerrillas and Israeli soldiers rained rockets and artillery shells at each other for a third straight day. There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries on the Lebanese side. Thirteen people in the town of Kiryat Shemona in northern Israel were treated for shock and injuries after one rocket attack. The fighting fueled tension in the volatile region in advance of new Arab-Israeli peace talks in Washington. Each round of talks has been pre- ceded by renewed violence in south- ern Lebanon. Arabs have accused Israel of creating incidents in an ef- fort to derail the talks, but Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and the Palestinian delegation said they planned to at- tend next week. In New York, the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday appealed to all parties to the violence to "exercise maximum restraint" and enhance the Arab-Israeli peace pro- cess. Shiite and Israeli gunners blasted at each other with rockets and how- itzers from dawn to dusk yesterday. Guerrillas of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah used mobile launchers to fire salvos of rockets at Israel's Galilee panhandle and the Israeli-oc- cupied "security zone" in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah, which opposes the peace talks, is trying to drive the Israelis from the security zone . CLASSIFIED ADS CIDHELP WANTED CHILD CARE CENTER NEEDS PER- SON to plan activities and supervise school- age children part-time Mon.-Fri. 2:45-5:45 p.m. Exp. required. 761-7030. CHILDCARE WORKER in my home T: 2:30-4, Th: 2-7 Non-smoker, Own trans. 761- 7213. DEPENDABLE, STRONG WOMAN to as- sist disabled professional woman with lunch, personal care. Weekdays, other shifts available. Must be a cat lover. 662-2734. EARN up to $50/wk. & more part-time sell- ing "Be Wolverine safe" condoms. Great op- portunity for men & women. Call now! 1- 800-736-6064. EXPERIENCED PERSON TO CARE for 10 mo. old in my Pitts. Twp/Saline area home. 5 days/week 8:30-2:30 pm. Non- smoker, car and references a must. 429-4312. LIFEGUARDS, RANGERS, BOAT RENTAL OPERATORS- $5.25-5.80/hr. Minimum 18 yrs. old. Ingham County Parks Dept. Reply to Ingham County Personnel, 5303 Cedar, Lansing, MI 48911, (517) 887- 4328. EOE. MARTHA'S VINEYARD, MA Summer employment - sales clerk & ass't candy makers. Female housing available. Write Murdick's Fudge, 5377 Londonderry SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49508. What Are You Doing For A Job Next Summer? Earn $8,000$10,000 As A College Pro Franchise Manager. Learn Valuable Busi- ness Skills And Build On Your Resume. No Experience Required. Complete Training Provided. CALL 1-800-54,.4-325 HELP WANTED PART-TIME. Beg. in May. Great for student, maintenance & pool exp. a plus. Please call Joe at 313-537-6619. RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS: Student Sprinkler is now hiring for summer manager positions selling and installing Toro under- ground sprinkler systems. Earn up to $10,000. For more info. call 665-5390. NEEDED: ENGLISH INSTRUCTORS Teaching conversational English o college students & businessmen in Seoul Korea. BA degree required. Roundtrip airfare & housing provided. Call John at 485-1814. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for a well es- tablished infertility clinic. If you are a male between 21-40 years of age and a graduate student or a professional 5'10" or taller we need you. Donors will be paid $50 per ac- ceptable specimen. For further information please write P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48106. STAFF NEEDED FOR MACKINAC IS- LAND resort hotel - front desk, night audit, dining room, housekeeping, kitchen, mainttenance, bicycle mechanics, line cooks. contact Iroquois Hotel, winter office, 2488 Village Dr. SE #9 Grand Rapids, MI 49506. (616) 247-5675 or 663-5971 (Ann Arbor.) SUMMER MANAGEMENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE TASP INTERNATIONAL is looking for highly motivated college students to fill management positions this summer. Earn $6000-$8000 while building your resume and gaining valuable business experience. Territories are open across the State of Michigan, particularly in Gross Pt., Troy, Birmingham, Farmington Hills, Lake Orion, Livonia, Clarkston, and Livingston County. Territories are filling quickly, for more information call Gregg Merians at 1-800-543-3792. TOP RATED N.Y.S. COED SLEEPAWAY CAMP PAYING TOP SALARIES Seeking: Counselors, Waterfront, All Specialties. Contact: Ron Klein, Director. Camp Kinder Ring, 45 E. 33rd St., NYC 10016. 212/889- 6800 ext. 272. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, telephone research interviewers, part time, Institute for Social Research. Must be available minimum 24 hours a week, also eves, and weekends. Mandatory training, 6 p.m.-midnight held several evenings a week throughout the month of March. $6 per hour to start, $7 for fluent Spanish interviewing. Apply in person, weekdays 9 a.m.-4 p.m., room 1066 Institute for Social Research, 426 Thompson St., be- tween William and Jefferson. Applications avaible Mon. Feb. 17-Mon. Mar. 2. For ad- ditional taped information, phone 747-1282. No further phone calls accepted. A nondiscriminatory, affirmative action employer. EL WNTED MINORITY UNDERGRADUATES Paid summer internships in health care management (in Detroit area) Call Dr. Lichtenstein UM School of Public Health 313-764-5433. BUSINESS SERVICES ARE YOU RESUME CLUELESS? Ex- perienced resume writer. Will write and print your resume. Call 668-8927. BIG M TYPING- Term Papers, Letters. Fastand reasonable. 996-1383. COLLEGE CLEANERS: 705 N. UNIVER- SITY ST. Professional dry cleaning. Shirts. 662-1906. EASY MONEY!! IF YOU PAY RENT I CAN legally save you money on your Michigan taxes. Have W-2, call Steve at 769- 3123. HOUSE SITTING WANTED for end of March. Excellent refs. Doris (216) 263-1194. NITEWORD - Papers, reports, resumes, presentations, graphics. Specials. (Answering machine) 971-0427. OFFICE PRODUCTS OUTLET: Largest selection of used in Washtenaw, Livingston, & Lenawee counties. 4-drawer files from $39, chairs from $5, computer furniture from $29, desks from $19, bookcases from $19, IBM reconditioned Selectrics II from $159, & much, much more. Free delivery. Call 313/ 475-1130. TYPING: Resumes, cover letters, & applications. A2 Typing. Call 994-5515. YOUR CHANNEL TO THE SECON- DARY COMPUTER MARKET. We match buyers and sellers of used computer hardware. Local broker licensed withinter- national network. CALL COMPUCYCLE, INC. 313/887-2600. GOING PLACES. ARE YOU DRIVING TO NYC? or even better to Princeton, NJ or thereabout? I am a UM student in desperate need of a ride home on 2/21 or 2122. I will share gas & driving. Call Cheryl NOW! 996-5973. BROKE? GO NORTH! Springebreak ski get-away. $49-$69 nightly. Cheaper mid- week rates. Includes cozy, log cabin lodging, outdoor hottub and FREE ski trails and e- quipment with coupon. 10 minutes from Traverse City. 616-276-9502. ONE WAY TO FT. MYERS. Leave 2/22 evening. $69. Call 973-0547 evenings. PLANE TICKET Newark-Detroit CHEAP! One way for March 1 $120. Call 769-5356. SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TEXAS. Spring Break Condo's. Call 1-800-683-4853. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS AT STAMOS TRAVEL Best European/Greece airfares, 663-4400 ORIENT SPECIALS: Tokyo fr. $921, Taipei fr. $992, Hong Kong fr. $1016, Bangkok fr. $1111, Seoul fr. $1033, Sin- gapore fr. $1094. Ask for Dan or Claudia. 129 or $189 anywhere in USA on Con- tinental Airlines! Bring AMEX card & Con- tintental voucher. Ask for Irene or Ann at REGENCY TRAVEL 209 S. State, 665- 6122. MUSI HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Lessons: pop, folk, blues, rock and classical, not just guitars. TICKETS DETROIT TO NEWARK/NY or Miami 2/ 27. Call John 764-8900. REAL CHEAP PLANE TICKETS to Phoenix Feb. 21-March 1. Call for info. 769- 2604. TKTS. WANTED for Garrison Keillor at Hill Aud. Pay up to $50 bonus. 668-9944 1 ROUND TRIP ticket Detroit-Charlotte, NC. $100 o.b.o. Sarah or Magnus 930-2775. Leave Feb. 22, return Feb. 29. ANNOUNCEMENTS ZEN MEDITATION COURSE, 5 Thursday evenings, 6:30-8:30 pm. 761-6520. Attention Advertisers: Due to Spring Break, the Classified Dept. will close on Friday, Feb. 21 at 3:00 and will re-open on Monday, March 2 at 9:00am. Early deadlines will be: Classified Display ads for Monday, March 2 due: Thurs., Feb. 20 at 11:30am. Classified Line ads for Monday, March 2 due: Friday, Feb. 21 at 11:30 am. Look fori. i.n he ANN.U.N.EA.. ENTS BUNGI JUMPING IS COMING TO UM. Schedule a meeting at your fraternity, sorority or residence hall. Dates filling up fast! 1-800-GO-BUNGI. YOGA COURSE, 6 Tuesday evenings, 7:30-9 pm. 761-6520. ADOPTION - Devoted father, full-time mother seek newborn to join family. We promise your baby love & understanding, a good education & fun. Supportive grandparents. Legal. Call Bev & Howard col- lect - 914-235-3917. TRIP TO RUSSIA-Students interested in an inspiring, exciting, & memorable 9 day semi- nar hosted by Russian students call Jenny at 763-8482 for more info COMPUTERS NEC 286 POWERMATE Plus - 40 meg, VGA monitor, 3.5 & 5.5 HD floppy drives. $750 o.b.o. Call 769-9431, leave message. IBM 386-33MHz COMPATIBLE. 120 Meg. Fast Hard Drive. 1.2 & 1.44 Meg. Flop- py drives. 4 Megs RAM. 14" super VGA monitor w/ 1 Meg. SVGA card. Logitech mouse. New w/ 1 Ir. warranty. $1629. 486- 33MHz w/above items for $1979. Call 482- 4490. COMPUTERS COMPAQ 286 DESKPRO, VGA, IlD, $595, Laser Jet HP $600, IBM $750. NECMultispeed. Laptop, backlit, $699. Toshiba laptop with modem, HD, $999. Compaq SLT 286 VGA laptop, HD, $1595. Warranty, 662-0148 or 570-1729, 24 hrs. LASER PRINTER '91 APPLE II NT. $2500 or best. Call Todd 995-5575. READ, THE "L. { .;*N.*..* .' .**..J*. ......Y.. . Does your resume have all the punch of a 98-pound weakling? PUMP IT UP. Work as an account executive this summer or next fall in the display advertising department at lt il igau atit! Freshpeople and sophomores preferred. Business and communication majors this is your chance to get the experience you NEED! Be a part of the Daily tradition...you'll get a resume that no one will push aside! Stop in at 420 Maynard, 2nd floor & pick up your application today! Applications due: Friday, March 6,1992 II r-- rI CLASSIFIEDS I MONEY MAKING OPPORTUNITY Local business expanding it's sales force & is looking for full & part time people. If you are: looking for high income potential, have transportation, are clean & neat appearing, out going & self motivated. Call Mr. Delben 429-7900. 10 to 4. * MOUNTAIN JACKS IS HIRING full-time waitstaff and part-time wait staff, dishwashers, bussers, and a part-time I Study in London, England - I Emphasis in Liberal Arts, International Business, and Criminal Justice Mainstream classes with British students, plus specially designed courses just for American Students All courses approved by University of Wisconsin-Platteville and validated on an official UW-P transcript $4,475 per semester for Wisconsin and Minnesota residents $4,775 per semester for non-residents