Sunday, September 26, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tracking down grizzlies in the Canadian Rockies Older students view the University IContinued from Page 3) now. I'd like to consider mas- "I was upset if I got any- thing less than A," she recall- "Aiy . , - I. - Contnued from Pmne : on those frosty nights - full ski gear including hat, mit- tens and ski jackets right on down through tight knit sweat- ers and turtle necks to long undies and ski socks. It took, of course, half the night to change into our tent wardrobe, take the day clothes back to the car, and finally find a comfortable sleeping position despite the restricted movement of our appendages. And food - we did every- thing short ofbsweeping under the picnic table and scouring the fire pit to destroy all traces of it. Joan even went so far as to clean up departed neighbors' spots if the grounds crew didn't do the job to her satisfaction. And what if a bear still comes to dinner? What else? You speak in soft tones, slowly back away and climb the nearest tree to beyond the bear's reach. Now, this could mean an Olym- pian sprint ten feet up a pine if it's a grizzly you're sweet- talking. But what if you've just come between a mamma bear and her precious cubs? Drop to the ground, roll up in a ball face down with hands shielding the back of the head and nlav dead. Then you pray the bear plays along. If you're lucky you might escape with a mere scratch inflicted by the bear's probing swat. 'JNE CAMPfR AT McKinley National Park in Alaska how- ever, got a little more adven- ture out of playing dead in the shadow of a seven foot grizzly that he had bargained for. Soon to be folklore, the tale was passed on to us (such story-tell- ing runs rampant amongst campers) by a copie who'd just gleaned the details first- hand. Hiking through a part of the vast Alaskan wilderness, the unfortunate fellow stumbled n- on a bear who was evidently not accustomed to having un- expected company drop in. Feeling a bit testy, the host de- cided to chastise his visitor without hesitation. And at the sight of the grizzly's magnifi- cent teeth, the well-trained hik- er hit the dirt. Puzzled over the peculiar "death" of his prey, the bear decided he ought to take a clos- er look at the situation. Lifting a clumsy paw, the beast took a wack at the heap of flesh at his feet, casually drawing blood from nervously pulsating veins. He repeated the experi- ment several times. Finally convinced he was dealing with a freshly killed carcass, he pro- ceeded to do what most bears do to season their meat - he buried it. You see, unlike hu- man beings who savour meat straight from the butcher's block, the bear likes his meat good and rotten, and a hole in the ground is as good a pantry as any in the wild. The battered adventurer re- mained buried for what he thought was enough time for the bear to engage himself in other endeavors, eventually emerging with a most amazing story to tell. Meanwhile, the naturalist con- tinued with his own tales of horror. Joan and I cuickx caucused to decide whether more bear tidbits were worth our while. Curiosity having got- ten the best of us, we turned our attention back to the mar in the brown safari suit. the bear uses his ca- nines for tearing and rinning away at flesh," he was savin as a slide of a bear, with cav ernous mouth wide onen flash ed on a screen behind him "And he's got teeth for every different occasion." "Enogh already," I thought, "let's not overdo it." But he went on. "Bears have been known not only to eat the beans he stole from you bat sometimes the can - so yot s'e they have pretty good di- gestiN e systems. "And to go along with that," he co-tinued, "they have strong muscles for mastication enab- ling them to eat anything soft- er than steel." Another slide flashed across the screen, and we were treated to the sight of some black bears blissfully devouring someone's picnic lunch. Once the naturalist had every one under his spell he informed us there's no hiding from the King of the Rockies. "Smell is the dominant sense in the bear's life and when man goes out in the woods he can be a pret- ty smelly animal despite his best efforts to mask it with de- odorants," he said, inciting a patter of nervous laughter. He recalled a mountain fable to illmstrate his point: "There was once a pine needle that fell. The eagle saw it fall, the deer heard it fall and it was said that the bear smelled it fall." But wait, the bear has even more virtues. And the interpre- ter swiftly ruled out every pos- sible escape route I had plan- bear ... he had to be shot." The crowd was silent. Some bears, the first and sec- ond "offenders" we learned, suffer less severe penalties. They are carted off to the deso- late Yukon region some 600 miles north. And many die-hard domestics make the long pil- grimage back again, sometimes only tosbe met by a bullet in the chest. The program closed with one; last slide of a dead black bear severing the white line stretch- ing down the middle of an end- less ribbon of asphalt. Music permeated the chilled dusk air: "You are a child of the uni- verse. No less than the moon and the stars, you have a right' to be free." The humbled audience dispers- ed and as people shuffled back to their campsites they wereI ters work. I'm interested in ed. "I found that my family and law and I'm interested in pub- the housework were interfering lic relations." with my school." Now a single parent, living Speaking of her two sons - with two of her children, Jen- a 20-year-old University junior nifer finds the major obstacles and a high school senior - Sel- to her education not inside of a ma says, "The one thing I didn't the class, but outside of it. want to do is compare my tran- Along with a full academic load script to theirs. I didn't want and her responsibilities as a to compete with my children." homemaker, Jennifer works Unlike Selma's late return twenty hours a week. She also to school, Barbara's re-enroll- finds herselfhdoing more home- ment came as natural to herE work than the average student as breathing. She has done it a - not always because she has number of times. to, but because, "It's a basic nme ftms worry among returning women! She sauntered through her un- that they are going to have to dergraduate years at Michigan work twice as hard." State University, entering in But in class Jennifer feels, 1962 and finally earning her! "very much a part of the scene bachelors degree seven years - I've been in classes with ' later. In the interim, "I was freshpersons and felt I had just in and out a lot, takingj more of of an edge because of part time classes, I got mar- my maturity. Although they ed, had a kid and worked." have more of a continuity to She returned to school in 1971, their education. - I mean I took a masters in community took my last French class in ' psychology, and is aiming to- 1959. But actually . . ." Jenni- wards a doctorate from the Uni- fer interrupts herself, "I don't versity, with help from a CEW have a great deal of time to scholarship. think about it." "I worked 40 hours aweek Yet, she admits "it's still a dents, "This campus is set up drain. I really feel a need to for kids from 17-22. It has no contribute financially and to concessions for child care. Sim- give them (her family) some of pie things like going to the li- my time." brary for reserved reading means babysitters. It's a big, A LTHOUGH A FEW services, hassle." 't 't ' lik C :W nd UNScatr yet despite the inconveniences _ exclusively to the mature stu- which await them, older students dent, University policy towards continue to enroll in ever in- many of their needs remains in creasing numbers, as high large part one of simple ignor- school students become mare ance. aware that no law bars those. In one effort to fill this gap, who are over 18 from applying the University Commission for to college. Women will be opening in a Says Marilyn McKinney, ad-1 lounge in the Union next week missions counselor for students where in the words of commis- in EONS, "They have a tre- aon memer stcanrolKirkland, mendous desire to go back to: "Study for your psych test, sit school and get that degree. and talk about similar concerns These people know within them- - like how do you get home selves that if given the chance, to make dinner. It's a place to they can do it." eat lunch, be yourself." But for most, the benefits ex- In the words of Lena Wallin, tend far beyond that piece of an LSA counselor for CEW stu- parchment. "It's a time of real growth for me," sivs .Jennifer. "The world is a lot bigger than it was," The u iters are lady staff members, Have a floir for artistic writino ? r " 'y o u a r e nt e r . - poetry. and mis t or wri-i g fea ture arts: Contact Arts E d itoar. co The Paste this inside vour medicine cabinet. no doubt occupied by the more selfless meaning of "Don't feed the bears" and "You are in bear country." So occupied were they that no one but the naturalist spotted the bear who casually strolled past the stage after the performance. r f t r ' c c ,p t ;E ned should I find myself face to A FEW DAYS LATER on our face with anywhere from 200-600 way South to Banff we pounds of angry meat. spotted our first bear. "Here's something you should There he was in all his stark' remember if you're planning to glory, lumbering across the run away from a bear: If a highway to the delight of seven bear was running the 100 yard carloads of tourists. We pulled dash he would beat the fastest over to the side of the road, human being on earth by 30 locked our doors and rolled up yards," he said. the windows. From five feet "That wv's, before the "Six I could almost feel the coarse- MIllion Dollar Man!" chirped ness of his coal black coat. He one wit from the audience. stood, I imagined, about five The speaker plowed on. "May- feet tall, weighing maybe 300 be grizzlies can't but black pounds. He was small for a bears can climb trees. Remem- bear. ber that when you plan to flee .n As he caressed the tall grass by the vertical route,,,inthe gutter of the road with by tevria ot. his wet snout, Joan and I noted 1j"INALLY, THOUGH that aft- how he didn't even seem to no- I , U had oft- tice our presence. Shortly, we ernoon we'd heard of a decided we'd had our fill and woman who just the day before kourfan had taken to the water to we siddedbcn track. thwart a bear's attack, "Any- Rligdown the window I one who has ever told you to tuck my head out and looked jumo in a lake and swim from back. A man and his family a bear hear this - grizzly emerged from a station wagon; bears can swim and black bears and headed slowly but directly, bars caneswime ndbtter m ers for the bear - cameras and are even better swimmers." poaocisnhnd The audience seemed to be potato chips i hand. growin irritable with the na- Maybe our face to face en- cocky manner just as counter with a bear was from he hifted into a mellow I behind a pane of glass and we1 MORE COMMON around cam- pus than the Jennifer; Sarahs, are those students who,r having finished a first degree a number of years ago, are returning to get a second. Such1 is the case of Barbara Bader' a grad student in social work ! and psychology, and Selma Weisman who is working to-; wards a specialist in aging cer- tificate in Rackham. "I would never have gone back (to school) if it wasn't' for living in Ann Arbor," Sel-i ma, 50, says. "I never lived in1 a town where everything ist swallowed up by the University.i So I finally decided to take ad-: vantage of the best thing this, town has to offer."' b "I felt the need to be back in school especially since I wasn't working. I suddenly felt!? a motivation I didn't even real-' ize I had. But I was twenty; years out of school and things had really changed." Selma attended school full time for two semesters lastf year. This term, she is auditing a biology of aging class, while looking for a job where she can combine her skills in the health field, social work and gerontolo-; (as an undergrad)," she says, "and I've always thought that all the work I've done has made me appreciate school. "And you have a different perspective on school when you've been out in the field working," Barbara continues. "I'm pretty independent, I've' worked and paid my own way. And there's something to be said about the maturity you gain from having been out." Barbara has found that her work experiences between col- legiate stints have related well to her chosen program - com-' munity psychology and social work - which emphasizes field training and working with peo- ple in the "real world." "The older you get, the hard-' er it is," Barbara says, from experience. "You have a family, you move ... If you're commit- ted to maintaining some sort of family life you have to make sure your family is behind you. Fortunately for Barbara, her family has been supportive of her decision. "Around finals time, my husband will step in! and help (with extra house-! work). It's always been that way. PROFESIONAL ThEATRE presents - - - - - - - -- - -a a a T- IN THE Z September 24-26 in the PCWER CENTER Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2p.m. and 8 p m ' ~Advance ticket sales and information: Ticket Office, neso h n Theatre Lobbv 13131 764 0450 Tikesal^^^^^^^^^r ^^^^^^^^^^so^ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I I U I t . .. , - r Y t ;. I e.. ...er a .. I l ' k _r~k i I .I 1. Change in bowel or bladder habits. 2. A sore that does not heal. , I ii E i 11 'I . Unusual bleeding or discharge. 4.'hickening or lump in breast or elsewhere. 5. Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing. 6. Obvious change in wart or mole. .7. Nagging cough or hoarseness. If you have a warning signal, see your doctor. U I I I I t, .4 I] Americanf Cancer Society 1 7H IS S C - Y P I THIS SPACE CONTRiBUTED BY THEPUBI.ISHER first Suddenly we weren't couldn't take home a fanatastic gy. deal frith the bear, a wanton tale, but that man was putting "I'm listening harder now. warrior, but with his instigator: 'half his ass on the line just When I took a biology class homo sapiens. so he could one day say, "I've years ago it was required and! "By fartes t da r seen a bear." I couldn't have cared less about eBy far the most angerous it. But I'm taking it now be- man himself," he said somber- On July 7, 1962, the first at- cause I want to." ly. "Campgrounds are like one mospheric nuclear test within However, Selma encountered' big open salad bar and you can't1 the United States since 1958 difficulties trying to pursue both 'blame the bear for wanting to took place when a low yield her family obligations and! come into this buffet where a weapon was exploded in Ne- ncourses in which she set loftyI mnltitude of food odors come vada. standards for herself. drifting, wafting up his nostrils, wheting his appetite. "And because a bear is cuteFo TLo and cuddly," hebcontinued, Looking For Things To Do? "people tend to lose their fear of it on sight." MICHIGAN S T U D E N T ASSEMBLY Incidents of assault on people by bears usually amount to a ; (MSA) is interviewing for the following case of human provocation or! important positions: else man overstepping his bounds, the narcisist he is, and TREASURER, ELECTIONS DIRECTOR challenging the bear's authority over its own territory. True, and DIRECTOR OF sometimes encounters are acci- STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS dental but often the bear be- comes involved against his will. This encounter related by the MSA is also interviewing for positions on various naturalist belongs to the latter internal committees and University committees. category. "This man cruising along the CONTACT MSA NOW! highway spotted a bear and de- MSA OFFICES 763-3241 cided he wanted a photo.for his S 3909 M. UNION BLDG. 763-3242 family album. Well, because the bear appeared so oblivious to_-- - - - his arrival, the gent hopped out with a bag of marshmellows -' Sforbaikt. Heo ured the bear THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BANDS closer and closer with each one and ' hen he snapped the shot Present he nutdthe bag of marshmellows in his pocket and turned his back on the bear. "Well, the bear figured he hadn't had enough marshmel- t ()"lv half a derrierre and the R E D nork ended up with one less CAREER PLANNING IS POWERFUL STUFF CARFFR Why not consider participating in a CAREER PLANNING SEMINAR. Participants will learn and practice the basic skills of career planning: self-exploration, career exploration, and deci- sion-making in 8 two hour sessions held weekly. The seminars are offered on Monday, 2-4 and Tuesday, 1-3. Planning t Placement Come to CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT (3200 SAB) or call 764-7460 to sign up - 3 i- A Paramount Picture In Color 1 f i 4 k { i I , a , i Last Lectures Several Michigan professors have been asked to prepare a lecture as if it were the lost lecture they would ever give- to consider what things they feel would be most important to say. These last lectures will be up to one hour in length with no questions or discussion following. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1976 JOHN BAILEY NEAR EASTERN STUDIES WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1976 MARVIN FEIHEIM AMERICAN CULTURE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1976 ALFRED MEYER POLITICAL SCIENCE WEDNFSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1976 i S I i i SKELION Internationally famous pantomimist and comedian IN HIS FIRST ANN ARBOR APPEARANCE SATURDAY, OCT. 2, 1976! 1:30 P.M. CRISLER ARENA Tickets at $4.00 (Gold Section) at $6.00 (Blue, Main Floor) i) ALAIN RESNAIS' 1959 HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR One of most powerful anti-war statements in cinema, this French film recreates the scope of World War II by setting up a meeting between a French actress and a Japanese architect. They fall in love and the affair stirs up painful memories in both of them. Resnais reveals the multi-layered elements of their lives-the filming of a film within a film; an actress playing an actress; an anti-war film within an anti- war film. SHORT: RAIN (Doris lyans & Manus Franken) TUES.: Sergei Eisenstein's IVAN THE TERRIBLE (Part 1) CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLDARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 ALAIN RESNAIS' 1963 MURIEL A thought provoking film which deals with the interaction of past and present, MURIEL presents characters leading fragmented lives, haunted by the past and unsure of the present. Beautifully photographed, with a screenplay by Jean Cayrol, who says of the work "we hoped to show NOW SHOWING COMPLETE SHOWINGS TODAY AT 1-3-5-7 OPEN 12:45 14 "BRILLIANT" CAROL KANE in Tester "wth "POWERFUL" l' 1 11