Great expectations By PAUL ENGSTROM Speculation on the future naturally sparks insecurity in any college-bound, high school graduate. Expectations of life as a first-year University of Michigan student for example, can launch feelings of anxiety and turmoil in even the least neurotic member of the future class of '82, myself included. These feelings are certainly not un- founded, considering new students base their impression of university living on "personal" letters from faculty ad- dressed "Dear Student," signed with a rubber stamp and dreary, out-of-date photos of dorms amidst freezing slush and overcast skies published in Univer- sity brochures. WE ALSO HEAR opinions of vacationing upperclassmen or, even worse, rumors spread by acquaintan- ces of vacationing upperclassmen. And on top Qf all this, we're subjected to tales, told by older generation graduates, of self-made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, not to mention $3 per month room and board in hospitable off campus housing run by a motherly archetype. After' assessing the information gleaned from these sources (University form letters, photos, acquaintances, relatives, rumors, et al), an entering freshperson can form an image of what campus life will be like. One must remember, however, that every sour- ce is biased and one really can't picture the University experience until one has been through it himself. I expect to learn the truth this fall. One of my sources, for example, a former University student planning to return after a year's absence, revealed that the food isn't too bad for cafeteria cooking. However, the novice is only impressed by the variety and the word is that the quality of the food worsens in the gourmet's mind as time passes. One can at least survive those bleak Sun- days, when only a "noon dinner" is ser- ved, at the local McDonald's. ALTHOUGH dorm living may at first be quite a novelty, I have received Paul Engstrom won first prize in the 1978 Detroit Press Club high school journalism contest, and will join the ranks of University stu- dents in September. Subscribe to The Daily- Call 764-0558' reports that the novelty wears off quickly. After revealing the computer's dormitory choice for me - Bursley Hall - to knowledgeable University students, the typical response is laughter, followed by, "You've been screwed." Understandably, one would feel slightly apprehensive about one's living quarters after hearing such a -response over and over. But after the initial reaction, the University expert explains his response with a description of the campus-to-campus transpor- tation ordeal - the drudgery of living from one University bus to another, while traveling between the North Campus abode and central campus classes. If I hadn't already seen Bursley Hall among the trees and the Schools of Music and Architecture, I would have had a mental picture of it amidst barren wasteland somewhere above Mackinac Island. In the end though, I guess I should just be thankful I'm not in the infamous South Quad. Rumors. All rumors. DORM ASSIGNMENTS seem to be only one of the recurring complaints which surface while speaking of this in- stitution of higher learning in Ann Ar- bor. Other gripes include: the at- mosphere is cold, everyone's a num- ber; students hardly see professors ... 600 at a lecture. . . the personal warmth is gone.. . loneliness sets in; bureaucracy abounds - find out where Form A is, fill out Form A, turn in Form A - frustration. But, from time to time, one also hears of what a great learning experience it truly is. The University's facilities are fantastic and the recreation superior. In fact, not enough people utilize the facilities to their fullest extent, or so I've been told. Another unfortunate rumor involves the University's female population. Gloria Steinem followers, or even women with the slightest positive self- image will be quite offended, and rightly so, when I reveal that male University experts have informed, if not warned, me of the University female's lack of physical beauty. AN ENTERING student can only wonder whether the rumor is true-if the female intellectual stereotype (the librarian with glasses and hair tied in a bun), does, in fact, make up the bulk of the female population. But it is highly possible, and probable, that these seemingly male connoisseurs were rejected at some point on the Univer- sity female spectrum and have resorted to slander for revenge. Whether these rumors of University life are true can only be speculated upon at this point. If they are true, I am sure the campus will be. . . stimulating, to say the least. Whatever the actual conditions, I'm sure we will all survive. Grads are old hands at learning 'U' Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Incoming students get a taste of University life during orientation. H ave' You Heard the Latest? SUBSCRIBE to the and You'll Always Be in the Know! For Delivery to Your Doorstep PHONE: 764-0558 by NICK KATSARELAS As far back as I can remember, my dad used to take me to Michigan foot- ball games. Dad was an "M" alumnus, and he instilled in me a high sense of pride and respect for his alma mater. And rightly so. The Wolverines had the best-looking helmets in the nation. Their colors were the brightest, their stadium, the biggest. I remember at half-time "Whiskey" would push a ball the length of the football field, and at the end of the game the all-male Michigan marching band would strike up "Temptation" - win or lose. Now any school with an excellent athletic program like that of Michigan must have an excellent academic program. It follows logically. AS A HIGH school senior, I applied to only one university. I expected from it glory and prestige unmatched by any college in the land. So it was in the fall of 1974 when I. commenced my collegiate career, accompanied by an inflated image of what to expect. I had a particularly interesting con- cept of the "academic type" I would find at Michigan. There were, I thought, two types of women at the University: smart ones and pretty ones. God gave gifts of intellect to half the females and gifts of pulchritude to the other half. Unfortunately, Univer- sity women probably fell into the for- mer category, Michigan State received the latter group, and God's screwups - those who receive both gifts - attended U.S.C. But I am happy to say that my expectations were mythical, and there are many intelligent, beautiful women attending the University. I also expected the University to be inundated with the type of male who feels the normal wristwatch is not enough. These gentlemen sport a watch that gives not only the time, but a barometer reading, temperature, com- pass reading, the sea level and "pi" worked out to 12 places. This, it turned out, is a vastly-generalized and inac- curate description of the male population in Ann Arbor; it describes only engineers. I ALSO expected to receive the finest education available. Michigan's Medical School is excellent, as is its Law and Business Schools. Thus, its undergrad program was bound to be equally impressive. But when I began my educational career at Michigan, I saw certain flaws in this "superior educational institution"-lectures with a faculty-student ratio of one to 380; courses, in which at the end of the semester you realize, by no fault of your own, that you haven't learned anything; a tenure system that forces Z Q RIBSPECALT D CHICKEN I' O SHRIMP O SEAFOODS DINNERS * SANDWICHES * SIDE ORDERS CARRY-"OUTS OR DELIVERY SERVICE - PARTY TRAY SERVICE students to sit through rambling, in- coherent lectures by senile professors. Yet below this layer of flaws and ineptness, there is a core of outstanding and brilliant faculty and students. - The University's academic environ- ment is nurtured by the diversity and the brilliance of its student body. However, all too often the only diversity among students is the northern-Detroit suburb from which they come. ONFE OF THE most frightening preconceptions I had of the. University was its impersonality, and my tran- sition from a multi-faceted individual to a ten-digit number was almost inevitable. With over 40,000 students and faculty, I soon realized my in- significance in all the University's complexity. Therefore, I concentrated on making my dormitory (I was an R.A.) my own little "University." Others do the same with their co-ops, fraternities, sororities and apartments. You must have a home-base, or the University will seem endlessly like a foreign land. But it wasn't long before the forbiddance of the University's size first wanes, then disappears. An omnipresent thought haunted me in high school: would my professors ever know me by name? I never thought they would. Some never did. Some did, but for the wrong reasons. Although professors are usually busier than high school instructors, they do occupy offices and answer phones. ways And lines. I never expected to queue up as often as I had to. You stand in line for football tickets and CRISP appoin- tments. And at the dorm cafeteria. I even remember after an early morning false alarm at my-dorm, there was an incredible line-up to go to the bathroom. And if you think when you're ready to graduate the lines disappear, forget it. The last week of my senior year I lined up to get my cap and gown, then moved to the next line to get guest passes for commencement. On Graduation Day,I stood in a line that took 40 minutes to proceed through Crisler Arena. I even stood in line to kiss my grandmother af- ter the ceremony. I always heard that my college years would be the best years of my life. And amidst back-to-back all-nighters almost impossible workloads and looking in January for September apar- tments, these years have been the best:. I've made life-long friends and have had experiences that have been enriching and memorable. And I've learned some things. But the greatestssurprise of my" college experience has been that after.; all, those football ganres, from childhood to my senior year, at th _ University, I still don'ti k the words-: to the Michigan alma mater. Hail. Nick Katsarelas is a 1978 Univery' sity graduate and will attend laws school in thefall. Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Wise and worldly University graduates line up one more time. I I 1 I V. I I. f f; I- u.0.. .^}.: ?.v *.*. __ __ - \ . .. . ..... .{ .4 .... y4. .._ . i ...