Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 7, 1977 Maied students cope By 1)AVID GOODN1AN There is a peci it group of students for whoml changin" diapers between chapters in a psychology text is :n everyday experience. They get used to truing down invitations to join friends for lunch at Burger King because the sitter has to be paid this week. BUT DESPITE the extra du- ties atd added worries, thou- sands of students choose to start families and have kids while still in college. Thousands more decide to resume their educa- tion while their children are still young. These men and women must learn to somehow jiggle skimpy budgets and balance the de- mands of study and young chil- dren while also finding time for themselves and their partners. How two student couples with kids are coping with their mul- tiple responsibilities as students, parents and spouses shows the resourcefulness and resilence of the human spirit. PIOTR AND MARGOT Blass sit in the study of their one- story hose on a quiet residen- tial street on Ann Arbor's north- west side. The Blass household hears clear evidence of their children's presence - Anatol, five, and Oscar, three-and-a-half. Toys and other playthings are scattered everywhere. A recent-' ly-assembled model train set sits on a table in the living room. Piotr outlines a typical day in the Blass family: "It works like this. You see, we get up in the morning-I leave very early and my wife takes the kids to the day care center. Then we spend the day studying. My wife usually watch- es the kids in the evening. I stay at the University until late -10 or 11 p.m." OSCAR, three-and-a-half, en- ters the room and starts per- forming'h e a d s t a n d s on the couch. Piotr continues, "I try to be with the children on the week- eds. I sometimes take them to the library with me." Oscar in- terjects: 'I read books." Piotr, 28, is in the final stages of completing his doctoral dis- sertatirn in mathematics. Mar- git, 25, is attending the Univer- sity as a son-degree student, but hopes to eventually earn a de- gree in veterinary medicine. THEY FIRST met in their na- tive Poland. When Piotr left for political reasons, Margot follow- ed him to America. They were married in Cambridge, Mass. in 1971, where Piotr was enrolled in larvard Graduate School. Shortly thereafter, they moved to Jerusalem, where Anatol and Oscar were born. Piotr figures it has taken him between three and five addition- al years to get his PhD because of his and Margot's decision to have children. "But, you see, my feeling is that there cons s a time in life when you want to start a family," Piotr explains. You can't imagine something else getting in the way. "In the end, having a family is a big help," he adds. "It gives you optimism. The kids are real- ly very entertaining. We are never bored. Family life is much more complex." IF THE BLASSES have any regrets about having children, they don't show it. "We would like to have more children," says M a r g o t. "I would like to have one more and then adopt one," While Anatol and Oscar were very young, Margot stayed home with them full-time. However, last year, Oscar began attending the Child Care Action Center, where his older brother had been going for a year. This made it possible for Margot to begin taking classes. "THE CENTER is really a great help. The situation was really quite difficult before they were old enough to attend," Piotr remarks. Margot adds: "The center is really quite convenient for us. It's right on campus, and if I want to see the kids, it takes me five minutes to get there." Although day care eases their time burden, it adds to a second problem Margot and Piotr face --lack of money. "WE PAY (the center) $196 a month for the two children. It's a considerable expense," says Piotr. The family's financial needs have led Piotr to take on a heavy load as a teaching fellow, extra work grading papers and a part-time job with the Math Review. "One problem that arises con- tinually is you have to be pretty careful with money," Piotr adds. "We get some assistance from my parents. If they weren't help- ing, we couldn't make it." FOR A SECOND couple, time for each other is the main cas- ualty of their -decision to com- bine parenting and education. Pat and Dick Wilson live in the Northwood apartments on North Campus with their chil- dren, Aaron, five, and Rachel, nine months. Dick, 30, is push- ing toward completion of his doc- torate in college administration while working half-time in the University's Office of Academic Planning. Pat, 31, works as a media specialist in a Detroit high school. The Wilsons met each other in 1966 in Philippi, W.Va. (Pat's home town), where Dick was attending Alderson Broaddus College. They were married in Augult, 1968, AT FIRST, both Dick and Pat taught high school, After a year they moved to Ann Arbor while Dick worked on a masters de- gree, and returned to West Vir- ginia in 1970, Two years later, Aaron was born. "We always assumed : that if we wanted to continue both hav- ing careers, we could," says Dick. "We always sort of assumed we wanted to have children," Pat explains. "We also wanted to have some time to spend to- gether before we had kids-to travel, etcetera." -, ,3 ony rnoto uy CHRS IN aC-um-NR AARON WILSON carefully chooses a piece of candy for his sister Rachel as his parents, Pat and Dick Wilson, look on. PAT DESCRIBES her first se- mester back in college as "real- ly hard." She commuted daily over a hundred miles to attend classes at the University of West Virginia at Morgantown. She had to shut herself off from the world in order to get any study- ing done. "After supper, I would go in the bedroom and close the door," she says, Pat got her degree and work- ed for another year, Then the Wilsons came back to Ann Arbor so Dick could begin work on a doctorate. "After Rachel was born, I had to go back to work," Pat indicated, in order to help meet the family's growing financial needs. "WITH A SECOND child, the demands don't c h a n g e," re- marks Dick. As with the Blass- es, the Child Care Action Center is a crucial factor in making the Wilson's two-career family pos- sible. While Aaron attends the center, Rachel stays with a sit- ter who lives only three doors away.. Still, with such busy schedules, Dick and Pat often are lucky to see each other a sthey pass in their front hallway. "Because of the schedules," Dick explains, "I don't know if it's so much of a conscious thing, but Friday evening is sort of a special time to spend with each other. "ONE OF TIE biggest ad- i'stments has been to our own r-latiosship with each other," he continues. "We've had to sit down and tilk with each other. It's forced us to talk about how we fuel, instead of letting the other -one figure it out," he says. Although they are happy with their way of life, Pat and Dick also admit their doubts. "You still have the feeling," says Pat, " 'Should I be home with the kids at any cost?' This will be a big decision next year when Dick gets a job." "For good or bad, the chil- dren have not been mother-cen- tered," Pat continues. "Dick has been with them as much as me. If he didn't help, we just couldn't do it." DESPITE THE burdens they face, both couples acknowledge that many other student-families have a much rougher time. "I really don't know how'some couples make it," says Dick. "We're not typical, because of Pat's job." "We have some friends," Pat adds, ". . . they're on food stamps. They had three little kids and he was on an assistant- ship. They couldn't even afford to get the paper" Says Piotr Blass: "We know some other people-foreign stu- dents-and I don't know how they sake ends meet. There was a guy who had three kids who was forced to babysit for them and he had to drop out." Blass s a y s the University should take more responsibility for the special needs of students with children. "The immediate faculty are very understanding and aware of my special prob- lem. The administration seems not to want to know." Long credit line SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Changing the name of Bank- Americard to Visa amounts to a 1,800-mile trail of bank cards bearing the new mark, accord- ing to company officials. That's the distance covered by new cards laid end to end that member banks will issue to 33.6 million American card- holders, who will simply make - the switch to Visa cards as cards ,are renewed. Doily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER BLASS FAMILY AND friend strike a pose for the Daily photographer. Piotr (left rear) holds Oscar, 3. Margot (center) contends with the four-legged family friend while Anatol, S, is ob- livious to them both-