',Yl r e ir1igau :43 tiiy Section Six-Student Life Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 9, 1971 Twelve Pages STUDENT LIFE 0 A two-way By TAMMY JACOBS Supplement Co-Editor Students come to the University to learn, to pre- pare for a future, to avoid the draft, to placate their parents. Once here, they will attend lectures, read texts, take exams, and, at the end of four years, graduate - may- be. They will also change - their life styles, their poli- tics, perhaps their personalities. And the changes will come not from classes, but from the outside forces that result from living in the University environment. For, during the four years, Ann Arbor will become "home," and besides going to school, the students will carry on the human functions of finding lodging, get- ting food, and seeking recreation. They will be the recipients of a form of campus life far removed from that which their parents exper- ienced. As did their parents, they will face efforts to socialize them into the adult world, but, unlike their parents, they will be exposed to much rebellion against that socialization. College is traditionally a time when students be- come socialized into theworld - they learned so that they may have a better job, live a life accentuated by material goods, and be a "good citizen." But in the past decade, there has been an anti- socialization process just as strong, which instead places its goals on "getting it together" with oneself and others both culturally and politically. In the process of four years, it is this period of traditional socialization mingled with struggle against it, this campus life, that will teach the students more than any amount of classrooms or textbooks. When a student enters the University, he often has a preconceived notion of what he will experience. But within the first few months, he is faced with a number of new realities to assimilate and deal with. He is faced with classes, often crowded, often dis- appointing and only sometimes meaningful. He is faced with a myriad of activities to join or watch. He is usually faced with a dorm life of dues, crowd- ed bathrooms, long meal lines and the forms his Resident Advisor keeps handing out. He is perhaps most of all, raced with a new set of political and social values, to accept or reject, or even ignore. And he has the freedom to deal with all these things as he sees fit, without parental guidance or strict school rules. Many ignore as much of the new values as possible, and live their four years bound to books and the uni- versity library, retaining much of the life style they had when they entered the University in the first place. Others will vary this with one or two activities - perhaps music, or theater, or one of the over 600 clubs listed as student organizations. They, too, will get their degree in four years, per- haps remaining oblivious to the anti-social process. But for many others, perhaps even most, the four years at the University become a series of radicalizing experiences, leaving the student to never again be able to totally accept the world of his parents. These experiences go all the way from participat- ing in a sit-in over a political issue to simply realizing that most of one's friends and acquaintances s m o k e marijuana. Such experiences begin when a freshman enters college, although the first things he is exposed to are tradiitonal. The rush of getting books and remembering class schedules, of buying football tickets and getting ad- justed to the dorm are all very much the life his par- ents lived. Midway through the football season comes frater- nity rush, a throw-back to the old days. But by now the student has realized that things are different. See THE SOCIALIZATION, Page 2 socialization You can go on a macrobiotic diet . . A kaleidoscope of student life styles On-campus job recruitment Must the 'U' take a stand? By GERI SPRUNG Should the University take an official stand on moral issues? This question, batted about as the Univer- sity community debated over the presence of classified research on campus last semes- ter, has also circled around another on- going University issue in the past few years -on-campus job recruitment by firms with questionable policies towards the environ- ment, women, and blacks. On-campus job recruiting by corporations allegedly engaging in "immoral activities" such as racial and sex discrimination, or air and water pollution, has been struck at in the past through various types of disruptive tactics. Recruiter "lock-ins", building take-overs, and even the throwing of paint in the face of one recruiter and a dead fish at another were indicative actions taken during the 1969-70 school year. This past year, however, those who ad- vocated an end to job recruiting at the Uni- versity put away their dead fish and began to lobby through new, more standard, chan- nels. Before allowing a corporation to come on campus, the University sends it a statement which says that University services are "not available to any organization which discriminates because of race, color, creed, sex, religion or national origin, and does not maintain an affirmative action program to assure equal employment opportunities." Early last fall, the Brain Mistrust (BMT), a radical research organization, charged the University with violating its own policy by allowing corporations which operate in South Africa and follow the discriminatory apartheid laws there to recruit at the Uni- versity. Rather than stage a disruptive protest, the group brought its charges to the various placement offices on campus. Most schools and colleges maintain individual offices to aid their graduates in finding jobs." They began with the placement office of the Office of Student Services (OSS) which primarily serves the literary college and also brought their complaints before the student-faculty policy board that governs the office. After several weeks of discussion, the board accepted BMT's arguments last Oc- tober and passed a policy for their office which would, in effect, bar 250 major cor- porations which all have offices in South Africa from recruiting in OSS facilities. The OSS board interpreted the Univer- sity's job-recruiting policy statement to for- bid the use of the OSS placement office serv- ices to any "profit corporation operating where discrimination is legally enforced on the basis of race, color, creed or sex-for example South Africa. These corporations, however, could still use the other placement offices on campus. In an effort to extend its policy University- wide, OSS sent letters to other placement offices, advising them of the new policy and requesting their reactions. Concerned members of the University com- munity quickly became divided on the new OSS ruling, but the issue was soon more than just a question of which'particular cor- poration could recruit on campus. Those favoring the OSS policy-considered the more radical policy-said they general- ly favored increased University involvement in moral issues. Many of these persons have been involved in actions to force the Uni- versity into a leading role against institu- tionalized racism, and American industrial expansion-such job recruiting being one of its manifestations, they claim. Those who opposed the policy claimed it violated "individual freedom". The feeling of the majority of those running other place- ment offices was that the University should offer its services to all corporations and the individual should make the decision whether he wishes to see that corporation. The Engineering School Placement Office maintained that they do not have the "fa- cilities to sit adequately in judgement on possible discriminatory actions outside the University," by employers using their serv- ices. Therefore, they said, as long as the employers are not under conviction of vio- lating any state or federal laws, they are free to use the services. Further, in a joint statement early this year, the business school, law school, engi- neering college, and chemistry dept. over- whelmingly endorsed the operations of their offices saying that participation in an in- terview is a voluntarv nt on thea nrt nf t1 ... or try your hand at drama