Sunday, September -16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, September 16, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page rive Putting it all t( A reshman's t By ROY PULVERS bored. I suppose that such an in- Tearlessly, I said goodbye to tense period of chaos and those my parents but my dry eyes couple of shaky days of self- were no indication of my emo- analysis and emotional fence- tions when my voice broke straddling had to be followed by through and told them I guessed a couple of days which can only that I'd see them soon. I walked be called boring. My mind just slowly back to my dorm room wasn't quite geared to think with too many thoughts whirling about the real world or anything in my mind and $400 in cashier's else, for that matter. checks in hand. For all of Thursday, Friday, I arrived on Monday and and most of Saturday, not only stayed in my dorm room wait- was I bored to death but I began ing for things to happen to me to have my doubts about the abil- but it soon became clear that ity of my mind to function in an the slip of paper with my name 'academic environment after on the door was not an instant what seemed to be a decade. oget her: houghts And eventually people's smiles began to'seem more real and I was pretty sure that I had weathered the storm. I met my roommate a few day s after I arrived; we're both on the quiet side and ought to get along pretty well. There was a helluva lot of nervous energy ex- pended worrying about what may roommate would be like. Now that too is one less thing to wor- ry about. There is not time to worry about too much now because there are pizzas, religious groups, refrigerators, bicycles, newspa- "I had spent my first week at the U1nitversity feeling my way around campus . . . I was scared but there was an undeniable satisfaction in having broken away. And eventually people's s m i l e s began to seem more real. I was pretty sure that I hadw eathered the storm." Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Students gather on diag to protest overthrow of Chile's Allende and the United State's alleged role. looking hack: the week as itwa ticket to excitement. For two solid days I was the world's loneliest person. The in- securities were massive, and it became very apparent that the only cure would be time. The force of sudden and irretract- able independence was great and was somehow tied to trying to understand where the motivation would come from to propel my-, self through four years of college. The question remains unre- solved and the not-so-massive anymore uncertainties still exist- but the passage of time has made them seem almost inconsequen- tial. Perhaps it is the changing concept of time which is the most notable of all the impres- sions that bombard an entering freshperson. I questioned, I pondered deep thoughts, and, finally, I was But then classes begin and suddenly there is no more time to try to understand my enor- mous feelings of displacement and transition; and there is no time to be bored. Classes meet and push ahead without regard for the screwed-up machinations of a freshperson's mind. The ini- tial onslaught of work is prob- ably-healthy though, and quickly provides a stable base on which to function. It is amazing how quickly academic concerns re- place internal upheaval. I had spent my first week gat the University feeling my way around campus, trying to shake some of the guilt that comes with feeling pretty good about having left home. I was scared but there was an undeniable sat- isfaction in having broken away. pers, movies, books. Everybody seems to have an angle, a way to get into your life for only 10% down or speedy delivery. You can even subscribe to every mag- azine ever printed for half of what normal people pay because you are a college student. A stu- dent in Ann Arbor, city of limit- less opportunities, where there are fifty-cent bicycle licenses- and thousands upon thousands of people who don't know that Mid- westerners talk funny. Roy Pultvers, a freshman from New York, is a ;nest writer for The Dail). I 'arV&II CINEMA nnru nil V 1+111Anll An4 Winn Al U 111tn tE[ e+i ifi w<. e4 r i iri i I pt D I 17NUIU=3Ud1N ASIGO YSCK1 ... - SGC President Lee Gill's plea for a tuition strike last. week ("We've got to start a move- ment") gathered support on .a number of fronts. On Wednesday, a coalition of math teaching fel- lows resolved to support the strike and to organize opposition to "the capricious way in which the University treats students and employes." TFs in the politi- cal science and Romance lang- uage departments also proclaim- ed their support for the strike. At a forum on the strike where some 120 jammed into an East Quad meeting room, Gill an- nounced that over 2,000 signa- tures supporting the strike had already been collected. "Some people," he said "have begun to hear rumblings that this strike might be big." Administration officials were shaken by the growing support for the strike. Allan Smith, vice president for academic affairs, said he was "shocked" to hear Gill ask freshmen to "pocket your September tuition p a y - ment" and admitted an effective tuition strike "would create a substantial crisis." And in a sign that the admin- istration was backing off from its tight-lipped stance on financ- ial matters, Smith said he would reveal highlights of the 1973-74 budget that could help to explain the massive tuition hike. But by week's end, Gill and other strike supporters remained unappeased. Even if the Univer- sity can explain the fee increases, Gill said, the strike is still on. "I'm not going to let them get off the hook," he explained. It seems strangely Kafkaes- que, this cloak of secrecy which hangs over the new requirements or in-state tuition status. You can apply for in-state status, but just how you get it, no one's quite saying. The choice is made from among a variety of criter- ia - some as absurd as prov- ing "intent to make Michigan one's permanent home" - b u t which criteria are for whom is left to the discretion of the regis- trar's office. And that's not all. Should your request be turned down, you get no explanation. An appeal is permitted but that leaves t h e dazed student in precisely Joseph K's predicament: judged guilty, but what for? Any appeal can be no more than a restatement of the original failed defense. Ironically this summer's Su- preme Court ruling on residency came in response to a group of students who argued, success- fully, that it was unconstitutional to deny they were residents, simply because they didn't work in the given city. It backfired on hundreds of Michigan students who discovered that -as part of the ruling, the residency re- quirements for everyone were going to be lots more stringent and subjective. Over at legal aid in the Union this week, throngs of irate students sought advice. They received sympathy but lit- tle encouragement. Just to add a note of absurdity to the bureaucratic tangle, at least one student is lying low and feeling fine. Herb, as we'll call him, applied for in-state status in January, saying he'd h a v e been living in Ann Arbor six months as of July 1. Because he had.no job, he promised, as stip- ulated in the old rules, to pro- duce two notarized signatures at- testing to his residency. Instead, he left town in early May, never provided any proof of residency, and came back the last day of registration to find he'd been awarded in-state stat- us. Some guys get all the breaks. Stay tuned for more. 0 0 0 In a revival of Ann Arbor ac- tivism (circa '68), some 50 stu- dents occupied the local office of U.S. Rep. Marvin Esch Friday afternoon to protest the over- throw of the Allende regime in Chile. They stayed until Esch released a statement on the coup. "It's too premature to make any decision now," Esch s a i d. "The ultimate decision restswith the Administration.", After receiving that reassur- ing statement from their Con- gressman, the demonstrators withdrew. 'U' Housing Director J o. h n Feldkamp addressed a group of 50 freshmen Wednesday to ex- plain why there are more people than beds in the dormitories. The fifty homeless students have been housed as third persons in double rooms in some cases; others have had to put up with makeshift accommodations rang- ing from storage rooms to linen closets. Feldkamp blamed the housing shortage on increased e n r o l 1- ment and assured the students that the University "will not leave anyone stranded." Yesterday was eviction day for the temporarily housed students and with the aid of a University subsidy they moved to the place they will now call home - the Bell Tower Hotel. Bicyclists are learning about Ann Arbor's strange one-way streets the hard way. With the university getting tough on tui- tion and residency requirements, and with the city cracking down on dope-smokers, police h a v e followed suit with bikers - for both illegal parking and for rid- ing the wrong way on one-way streets. Add that one to your list of paranoias. I PC-% U U - ------ i Join The Daily TODAY OPEN 12:45 Shows continuous from 1 P.M. MusicaProuctono Musk by ty~csby BURTU ACHARACH HAL DAVID s'*"UWAWRj REWNRR I" jRSafM STARTS FRIDAY SIDDHARThA A NOVEL BY HERMANN HESSE / A FILM BY CONRAD ROOKS CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard From C~OUJMBIA PiTURES V 3RESTRICTD 40 __ .. _ _ CINEMAII - TONIGHT ONLY introducing the SUNDAY FRENCH CINEMA series RENE CLEMENT'S GERVAISE1957 Based on Emile Zola's L'ASSOMOIR, set in 19th century Paris during the second Empire. The film is not only effective in dramatic terms, but it is also fascinat- ing in its cinematography. Photographed in black and white, the film was printed on color stock to give the illusion of daguerrotype print, effecting a screen trans- lation of Zola's naturalism. Francoise Perier, Maria Schell. Subtitled. sept. 16 aud. a angell hall 7:00, 9:00 $1.00 I i I I mmmmmwmmi Local Poets- The Michigan Daily Arts Page is now accep~t ing poet-ry for publication. Submit work to Arts Editor c o The Daily. U of M and EMU NITE MONDAY Bring Student I.D. and get in FREE DISCOUNTS ON PITCHERS OF BEER 341 S. MAIN-ANN ARBOR CORRECTION I I I The Michigan Daily regrets I the error contained in A Moving Experience in Sound and Light I Tuesday's ad for PRIMO n ed. vnWe SHOWBAR. It should have read: MON DAY-Sept. 17 Films of Curt McDowell PORNOGRA FOLLIES WIENERS AND BUNS MUSICAL and CJQ I' i