Thursday, September 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, September 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Life at the ig 'U'- a potpourri of experiences By BETH NISSEN There is no one distinguishable flavor of life at the University of Michigan; it is an academic Baskin-Robbins .with different flavors for different tastes. They range from the routine vanilla of daily 8 a.m. lectures to the more exotic spices of personal discovery that, are indemnic to the formative Wonder Bread college years. The large enrollment at the university is both, an attibute and a headache. There are crowds to jab elbows with and dodge in lecture halls, corri- dors and counseling offices. The University seems adolescently awkward and uncomfortable with its own gangling size; it cannot yet manage to com- petently handle it. THE ADOPTED SYSTEM for changing this semester's classes and advance classifying for next semester's is an old marriage of ancient and modern. Counseling offices have efficient- looking computer scan forms, but the student must still wear out the soles of a pair of sneakers getting the different sections signed by the proper department pen. Selection of classes is more difficult than pen- cilling in the correct circle on the IBM form or standing biannually in long lines in front of Water- man gym. A few professors are reputed to be reliably excellent, and some fallow attempts are made to get student feedback to those making their maiden choices. Yet for the most part those students who choose classes from the pages of the catalogue and time schedule take the same prize or zonk risks as the contestants who squealingly choose Door Number 1, 2 or 3 on "Let's Make a Deal." Students can easily be sectioned into a musty and senile class unless they are as alert and investigative as the best detective the networks have to offer this sea- son. ONCE THE CLASSES are confirmed, those con- scientious and motivated students seem to find the atmosphere for studying acceptable. Dormitories and co-ops are usually throbbing with the noise of competing stereos and incessant rapping, but there are several libraries open at accommodating hours. The Undergraduate Library is more a place for social looking than serious booking, but is suf- ficiently quiet. Besides housing one of the finest collections of printed knowledge and opinion in the States, the Graduate Library provides claustra- phobic little study closets where you can close yourself into an academic solitary confinement. Part of the chemistry of any place is its appearance. The central campus is a patchwork quilt of different architecture. The building styles range from the Parthenonesque Angell Hall to the cool electric tomb of the Modern Language Build- ing. The Administration Building protects the Uni- versity's higher-ups behind bricked walls punch- ed with suspicious slit-like windows. The acknow- ledged intellectual sanctum of the entire campus is the block-square law quadrangle. It is an ivy-beleaguered school with chapel-like halls and its beauty and serenity are, by conservative esti- mate, responsible for approximately 1 per cent of the enrollment in the law school. THE HEART OF the Ann Arbor campus is the Diag, with its cement aortas shooting off in every direction. It is a large and free stage for human play; frustrated and frustrating musicians often give concerts there; blue-jeaned merchants market the Ann Arbor Sun, their own crafts, or hand out thousands of trash-destined pamphlets and leaf- lets. People with slotted cans and worthy causes are stationed at each end with their eyes on your small change and benched groups sit and watch each other. The social life in Ann Arbor is in an air pocket; it is not open or overtly friendly, nor does it seem to absorb strangers or the timid readily. Every- one is considered responsible for lining their own social pocket with compatible friends, and there seems to be considerable resentment if they pick someone else's pocket. Despite the Univer- sity's large number of people - and perhaps be- cause of it - Ann Arbor can be a tearfully lonely place. THERE ARE meeting and eating places to go for the comfort of other bodies. The campus bars will still yield some conversive contact if enough effort is made or liquor is bought. When the 3 a.m. hungries hit, or when the dorm closes on Sunday, there are a scattered few places to find a University crowd. The Brown Jug claims a loyal patronage, even with its Criscoed food, and Gino's jitters the di- gestive systems of its frugal and poverty-stricken customers. Pizza Loy's has a reputation for imag- inative submarines and the deli has a capital re- pertoire of hearty sandwiches - if you have the capital. If the campus's social ills and the gastronomic atrocities combine to cause the student physical distress, the University has thoughtfully provided the marvelous efficiency and economy of the Health Service. The building encloses the medical records of all students, a handful of overworked doctors, and a pharmacy that sells prophylactics cheaper by the dozen. It is color-coded like a day- care center; you walk through the yellow door to have your tongue depressed and you walk through the blue door to have your wallet depressed. DEPRESSION CAN reach epidemic proportions here. The atmosphere on campus is generally somber and serious. Most students take their stu- dies and their lives very seriously, and the com- petition in several pre-graduate school programs is scalpel-keen. This is a campus of amateur architects: everyone is busy building their own impressive and well-balanced transcripts -nd con- structing their futures credit by credit. During mid-term and finals time, the Undergrad- uate Library becomes a literal concentration camp crammed with cramming craniums; the entire campus area can be electric with tension, running on fear, adrenalin, desperation and double-strength coffee. See STUDENT, Page 5 Streakers reveal naked truth to curious voyeurs By JACK KROST In the early part of spring last year, a bizarre fad, calling for the shedding of one's clothes and running around nude in public, descended upon Am- erican society, and upon this Univer- sity, like an epidemic. The maniac craze, called streak- ing, spread like a brush-fire during a summer drought across a humor- deprived country, and attracted waves of astute comment from self- appointed prophets of social analy- sists wherever streaking incidents occurred. For the most part the craze was limited to the uninhibited collegiate environment, where exam pressures < and liberated social norms added to the attractiveness of the idea of let- ting off steam by shedding a few in- hibitions, and a few clothes. THE FAD didn't really start gain- ing ground, however, until the first week of March, when most American colleges were immersed in their win- ter semester mid-term examinations. Michigan, on the tri-mester system, a slightly different set-up than the quarterly semester schedule of most colleges, was out on spring break at this time. However, as UM resumed classes a week later, the maize and blue proved it was certainly not one to side-step the streaking challenge. Ann Arbor's traditionally resource- ful student community rose to the occasion with a plethora of unusual, creative streaks; group streaks be- fore large audiences, individual at- tempts,. streakers in body paint, and even a streak by an uninhibited wo- man one night through the staid Uni- versity Law Library. THE BIGGEST and most well at- tended streak-in was the "First An- naul UM Lucky Streak," held on the Diag on the night of March 12. The event, the first real occurrence of streaking at the University, attract- ed some 50 streakers and approxi- mately 6,000 curious spectators in the 29 degree weather. There was only one minor compli- cation that night, however; there were so many spectators that the streakers sometimes were hard put to streak properly - that is, run in See STREAKERS, Page 4 Greek By CINDY HILL A "granfalloon," as defined by author Kurt Vonnegut, is a proud and mean- ingless association of human beings. I keep that in mind when I recall my days as a sorority member. It was my first year at the University: a year spent in total frivolity, rowdiness, drunkenness, and other hedonistic pur- suits. IT WAS A helluva lot of fun. , Which is not to say that life as a Greek is all play and no work. I re- member, sometime before finals week, the migration down to "The' Pit"-a room devoid of any decoration or fur- niture except work desks. There are students who study all term. Regularly. STUDYING-like partying and dat- ing-are the values emphasized in a Greek house. And they are enforced not only by peer pressure, but by pressure from "the national." Most Greeks speak of "the national" in the same tone of voice a hardhat speaks of "the Presi- dent." "The national," if your grades fall below a specified minimum (usually about 2.5), will put you on probation. Two terms on probation, and a Greek was generally expelled. MOST DIDN'T have to worry. As Greeks proudly point out, the average GPA of most sorority/fraternity mem- bers is a cut above the norm. But the partying, dating and social life generally survive long after night- mares of "The Pit" have vanished. A house is a guaranteed ticket to social acceptance. And at times, it could also be a guaranteed ticket to socal caste. "Dating' is still carried on as an age- old traditional rite, complete with all the trappings. (Boy asks girl out, girl accepts, gets dressed up for the occa- ion with make-up and curlers. And he guy, of course, pays.) AW' IBTT Vm. nni nthrmnt life: stress grades, social activity ing "well-rounded." Social and be-' A DISPROPORTIONATE number of sorority women go into nursing and teaching: Fraternity members often be- come business executives. And many are married, engaged, or "pinned" by the time they graduate. The mood, politically, is often apa- thetic. Racial representation is still in " the consciousness-raising stages and the virginity crisis is still a divisive issue in some houses. IN SHORT, houses often live in a world divorced from the 70's. They exist in something of a tir living with much the same their "sisters" and "brothel decade or two ago. The politically active, of co not shunned. But after awhile ber can grow tired of being it as the "house radical" or th cally active one," even whenr is attached. In any case, house activit prohibit extensive outside invo just as the social structure cu ciatioii with the world ou Greek system. GREEKS GENERALLY securit ne-freeze, ,with other Greeks, usually people with- values as in their own house. Often, this means rs" of a your friendships from year to year are limited to the same people. urse, are The system leads to many lifelong, a mem- lasting friendships. It also leads to a ntroduced certain degree of social isolation. Le "politi- Several years ago, the issue of racial no stigma segregation reared its ugly head. Black members and other minority groups ies often are now eagerly sought as members, lvements, when they do not join the black or orbs asso- Jewish houses on campus. tside the GAY POWER and, to a large extent, woman power has not yet hit the Greek associate system. But then, to a large extent, the hot, burning issues of the day are often passed up in dinner conversation for a more thorough discussion of class- es or weekend activities. Contrary to popular belief, the Greek system is alive, well, and surviving at the University. The much- touted down- fall of sororities and fraternities is far from being a reality, and will probaby remain that way as long as the values that the Greeks represent survive. The recent crisis of the system has tbeensmainly one of the survival of the fittest. Following their heyday in the early and mid-60's, many of the small- er houses have had to fold. BUT THE more popular houses-like Kappa Kappa Gamma or Pi Beta Phi sororities and the Phi Gamma Delta: fraternity-never really felt the crunch. There are often regrets among mem- bers that they did not fully experience or appreciate University life before, joining ("pledging") a house.- "Yeah, it's fine for your first year; or two," a dissatsified member says, "but after all, I'd much rather be liv-; ing on my own now." Student counselors battle bureaucracy, offer free advice and cheap lunches By ANDREA LILLY The Student Counseling Office (SCO) was initiated six years ago by students in a Project Community Group who believed they were be- ing railroaded and rubber stamped by the regular counseling procedures. Utilizing their own experiences, a University counseling handbook, and the data from stu- dent course evaluations, the student volunteers began counseling other students in both the School of Education and the Literary College (LSA). THE PROJECT worked so well that they found themselves, much to their surprise, with an official office and a budget from the very school whose system they tried to circumvent. During its entire history, the SCO has tried to fill needs that weren't being met elsewhere. Counselors made student course evaluations available, provided hot lunches and backrubs, opened up the office as a meeting place for ad hoc groups, and gave friendly advice on all sorts of topics. In the school of Education, the students coun- selors-University juniors and seniors-are em- ployed on a part-time basis, usually eight to ten hours per week. "Mainly student counselors help alleviate hassles that other students have with drop/add and help them understand what the BGS (Bach- elor of General Studies) program is all about," says Rufkhar. Both counseling programs are considered to be highly successful, both by their participants and the University. In contrast to the regular University counsel- ing procedure where a harried faculty member gives the same, old, tired advice over and over again while dealing with perhaps hundreds of students, the peer counseling program is much more personalized. IN THE SCO, students are given advice on everything from personal problems to which professors are lenient about deadlines. Usually, this advice is much more practical than that of a faculty members, who often lack a basic un- derstanding of the student's viewpoint. For example, faculty advisers often will not handle candid advice about other professors and frequently they gloss over the undesirable aspects of a course. Often, they are not even aware of how students perceive an instructor and have no idea how effective he or she is as a lecturer. Student counselors, however, are usually able and willing to speak frankly about the courses they have taken. Also, the SCO staffers keep files on various classes for easy reference. If you have problems staying awake during HOWEVER, unless a house is full and needs the room space (which is ACCORDING TO head counselor Robert still rather rare), the only way "out" Hutchcroft, "most of the training is on the job, is the arduous, and sometimes messy although we do instruct them on academic path of "de-activation"-which makes counseling." a member something of a Greek sys- Tn A hA t hestidnt cAunseliens nnoram is