a Page 4--Friday, April 11, 1980--The Michigan Daily It's more than no exams and casual lectures FREIBURG, West Germany-I ama University of Michigan student spen- ding my junior year in Freiburg, Federal Republic of Germany. I am here for many reasons, but above all, I want to learn about the differences between life in Germany and in the States. Many of the important differences between the two countries have provided me with the opportunity to look not only at this country, but at my own land from another point of view. STUDYING ABROAD means, among other things, seeing that there is an alternative to CRISP. It means there is more to life than five hours in the Grad library five nights a week. Generally, it means seeing that there is more than one "right" way. The most obvious difference here is a purely physical one. The "cam- pus," as Americans know it-a tightly grouped, centrally located array of old brick buildings-is practically unknown here. The University of Freiburg has had to deal with the.fact that the university grew up around the city and not vice-versa, unlike the situation in Ann Arbor. The campus, if one can call it that, is spread all over the city. To go from one class to another can quite easily involve a 10-15 minute bike ride. Most people who have passed though the U-M system have lived at one time or another in one of those under- classperson storage bins, or "residence halls" as they're referred to by the University. "Die Studentenwohnheim," the German form of dormitory, is har- dly comparable to an East Quad or a Markley. Double and triple rooms are virtually unkown here. Most students live in singles. In my dorm there are 12 singles to a floor. Each floor has its own facilities, including a kitchen and dining/living room. THE DORM cafeteria as Americans know it is not found in the German dorm. We cook for ourselves in our small-but-adequate kitchens. If we crave cafeteria food, we eat at the Men- sa, the university-owned chowhall in town. The main dorm in Freiburg, "die Studentensiedlung," is almost two miles from the university. A trip to the university lasts all day. Unlike in Ann Arbor, walking home for an hour break between classes just doesn't work. The organizational and social dif- ferences can be, just as striking as the physical ones. For example, a professor from the U-M would be aghast at the conduct in the average lecture hall in Germany. Students in lecture, expecially in the larger lecture halls, talk freely throughout the period, disregarding the lecturer. People come and go during the lecture, making no attempt to go out of their way to be quiet. IN MOST cases, a German professor in undaunted by such behavior. In fact, By Mark Ryan many professors never lift their heads for any reason, but rather read off a manuscript the entire hour. Under the German system the students are left to fend for themselves much more than in the States. A Michigander might be at a loss here, as I was at first, due to the lack of such things as a required reading list. There aren't even required books. The professor will usually recommend a few books during the first lecture in case anyone wants to read up on the material. Not only are there no reading lists, but there are no grades for most classes. "Klausuren," as the Germans call them, or exams, as they are known to us, are rare here. It may be hard to imagine life without a midterm, but it does e*ist. The students here are tested after two and four years to determine if they can advance to the upper class or graduate level. SOME STUDENTS in Freiburg rarely go to lectures. The skipping is not taken seriously by either students or faculty. Many students feel they can achieve what they need without the lec- tures. The U of Freiburg has its own version of CRISP, called "das Schwar- tzebrett." This is a bulletin board, or sometimes a table, outside the respec- tive department, with a schedule of what's offered, when it starts (not many classes start in the first week of the semester) and a sign-up list. Once the list is signed, you are "registered" for the class. Moreover, this "complicated" process is mainly for the seminars and labs. Lectures have no registration restrictions and are limited only by the number of people the lecture hall will hold (sitting, standing, or hanging from the walls ). THE PROCESS of scheduling is mainly bureaucratic. Students have a list similar to what we get at the U-M as freshpersons. This list recommends courses which should be taken to pass the test for their degrees. At the begin- ning of the semester, students see what's offered, match it with what they need, and everything is set. A week before the start of the fall semester most of my German friends didn't even know what they would be taking that semester. They hadn't thought about it yet. Want to go to the library to study? Good luck. If you are lucky enough to find a spot in the library quiet enough to study, you will have to hurry, because the library closes at 8 p.m. And the stacks are closed, so if you want a book you must look it up in the catalogue, place an order for it, and then come back 2-3 hours later to pick it up. That's at the main library. The divisional libraries are for reference only. Any research done with the biology library materials here, for example, gets done in the biology library._ I have a student ID here. I rarely use it, though. I never even carry it with me because; being the size of a birthday card, it's a burden to.carry. I have no ID number as we know it at Michigan and find that it's nice being referred to by my name, and not 451-27-8 ... IF I'VE SEEMED rather cynical, that's because I am. I'm cynical and critical of U-M because I now realize that there are better ways of doing things. There are two ways this essay could be interpreted. One is that the German system is unstructured, archaic, and inefficient. This opinion, I must admit, I held when I first came to Freiburg. The other is that it is a much more personal, a self-motivated system with less pressure to perform and a much higher emphasis on learning. Good arguments can be made for both. But despite its shortcomings, I per- sonally prefer the U-M to Freiburg. I feel that I accomplish more at Michigan through hard work (a result of the high academic pressure) and an accelerated pace in the classroom. For me, this is much more satisfying. HOWEVER, AT the same time, I feel there are things to be learned from other systems, such as the Germans'. The German students seem to have much higher self-motivation factor. They aren't forced to do everything with the threat of a test. This, I feel, plays a substantial role in the professional life of the graduated student. { The students here also seem much more eager to learn than at Michigan. At U-M, students have the attitude that "if it's not going to be on the test, don't teach it to us." Here students show up regularly for seminars to listen to theln fellow students' presentations, while receiving a, grade only for their in; dividual presentations. What is presenw ted in class will not show up on a test. : I have tried neither to glorify the Germans, nor to ridicule them. I simply wanted to contrast the two educational systems in such a way that one would take note of their individual differen- ces-differences which may lead us to a better understanding of our own system. To say I prefer the U.S. system does not mean it is either without fault or that it cannot be improved upon. Mark Ryan is a University student spending this year in the Junior Year A broad program. !\Jiin (' E '(l rs (If EIiIOri( itl Fre( m (10111 Vol. XC, No. 152 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MSA politics will live on Feiffer T A R R i V liptVTt )fMal HARD 6ARAP 1LJO TA ,NI- /~SORH R7N' 15T5 -rcv ~n1 r 0 p striI WA7 e fu l/S L L ,w i5 xu e6 unwri ' 4 i F& I p T IS UNFORTUNATE that the stu- dents of this University have decided to maintain partisan politics in their student government for yet another year. By electing the Peoples Action Coalition/Black Student Union ticket of Marc Breakstone and Virna Hobbs to the top spots in the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), the voters indicated they are satisfied with the directions MSA has been taking this past year. We take this opportunity to wish the newly-elected president and vice- president luck as they assume the reins of a student government that has done little for students in recent mon- A boycott a W HEN PRESIDENT Carter an- nounced his plans to boycott the 1980 Moscow Olympics, it was not clear just how far he intended to pursue his goals. He might have left it at strongly imploring the United -States Olympic Committee and the individual athletes not to go.. Failing that, the president might honorably have put his boycott plan to sleep. Doing so would have been perfectly in tune with other half- hearted foreign policy measures, but unlike the waning of his toughness on Cuba and Iran, discontinuing the push for a boycott would unequivocably have been a good idea.. Instead, Carter has been conniving ths. And we once again express the hope that MSA will transform into a grassroots, student service-oriented organization, and will not be rendered impotent by party squabbling. Breakstone seems to have the right idea on some issues. He worked on the course evaluation project currently being conducted at CRISP. Yet, he has also said he favors MSA emphasis on issues such ,s student in- volvement in the tenure process and- student participation on college executive committees. These are issues that, while requiring attention are not the grassroots problems that affect students on a day-to-day basis. t what price? in every way to keep the U.S. out of the SOlympics. He is considering revoking the athletes' passports, as well as various other moves to hinder their travel to Moscow.' Carter also recently prohibited transactions with the Russians in connection with the Games. The move severely affects NBC's preparation to televise the event, and raises serious constitutional questions; the order amounts to nothing less than indirect censorship. Though most Americans favor the boycott, perhaps they will object to Carter's methods-restriction of travel and trade are attacks on some very basic liberties. r i ;/ \ SM V Some people think that corporate power has been tamed; that state and federal laws, "countervailing" forces like labor and "shareholder democracy," have curbed cor- porate abuses. If you think they're right, con- sider the following: " Last year more than 100,000 people died. from cancer they got on the job, in the air, and in their food. Yet big business has launched a propaganda war to undermine the Oc- cupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA), the Clean Air Act, and pure food laws; + While prices jumped 13 per cent last year, take-home pay for workers rose less than 9 per cent. Yet big business spent almost $500 million for professional union busters to cut wages even more; " In the past few years there has been an explosion of corporate crime-from 400 com- panies admitting payoffs to hundreds of chemical timebombs like Love Canal.Yet big business opposes new criminal sanctions as ''over deterrence.,, * In 1978, big business spent more than $20 million to elect their friends to Congress. In 1980, they plan to double that political action spending; and, * From 1975 to 1978, giant conglomerates increased three-fold the number of small businesses they gobbled up. Yet big business opposes new antitrust laws as violations of the "free market." TO UNDERSTAND fully the influence and power big businesshas inAmerica rwe must also consider where our next meal, our next tank of gas, and our jobs will be coming from. The food farmers sell wholesale is marketed by a few large processors. Coast to coast, supermarkets sell the same few com- panies many brands. Most tractors, chemicals, farm implements, and veterinary medicines come from economically- concentrated suppliers. Two companies, for example, supply more than half the seed for 68 million acres of corn in the United States. Consider the fact that supermarkets have boosted their profits by 28 per cent in the last year. The Seven Sisters-Exxon, Shell, Mobii, British Petroleum, Standard Oil of California, Gulf, and Texaco-account for 38 per cent of A look atBig 19 Business By Rob Leighton all the oil moved in the world. Their holdings in Alaska, the Gulf of Mexico, and the North Sea will probably increase this share. ALL THESE companies are vertically in- tegrated. They control the flow of oil from the wells through the pipelines into the refineries, and finally into your car. Aware they are dealing in an exhaustible resource, the Seven Sisters have diversified. They now own more coal than the companies that specialize in coal mining. Gulf Oil recen- tly pleaded no contest when charged with a uranium price-fixing scheme that drove the cost of uranium up from $6 to $40 a pound. Mobil and Shell lead the way in non-energy- oriented diversification. Mobil now controls Montgomery Ward and the Container Cor- poration of America. Shell produced and sold enough aluminum, copper, nickel, and zinc to put it on the Fortune 500 list without its energy holdings. Imagine driving to work one morning-a drive that you have taken for the last twenty years. When you arrive you find the company has permanently shut down its operations. If it sounds bizarre, reconsider. It is happening all over this country. In Michigan alone 200,000 jobs were lost owing to 4,000 plant closings between 1967 and 1973. More often than not, the employees were given short notice-too short to find another job-and inadequate severance pay. AND TODAY, we find hundreds of thousan- ds of auto workers unemployed. The American worker is no less productive than the German or Japanese worker. Foreign cars have grabbed a large share of the American market because the American auto makers failed to produce a fuel efficient small car quickly enough. The reason: the produc- tion of large cars yielded greater profits. We live in a nation which holds to heart the spirit of democracy. Yet we find that cor porations, despite their power to affect ouze lives, are not accountable to the American people. The corporate criminal has little to fear if caught committing an illegal act in the in- terest of his company. Penalties are mild, with suspended sentences and small fines tle rule. More often than not, a company caught in a crooked deal is often allowed to do what it denies having done in the first place. When corporations are prosecuted in a manner similar to the way you or I might be i we broke a law, they funnel huge sums Of money, far exceeding funds a public prosecutor could justify, towards their defen- se. Examples of this lie with anti-trust suits, and more recently with the Ford Pint'o criminal negligence suit. CORPORATIONS state, "If you don't like what we are doing, don't buy our product. 1 But let's be realistic. Big Business has its fingerprints on close to everything we buy. Boycotting products would mean returning to the Middle Ages. Threatened by the influence, abuses, unad- countability of big business, numerous con- sumer, religious, and labor organizations, and environmentalist and women's and minority groups have joined together to pose a true countervailing force to big business. This coalition will be inaugurated on April 17, Big Business Day. Although the thrust of Big Business Day s to protest corporate abuses of power, it marks the beginning of a joint effort to make bi4 business accountable to us, the American people. Only when it is accountable will big businesses comply with the laws and regulations enacted in the public interest, and only then can corporate profits begin to be scaled with the needs of people. Rob Leighton is co-coordinator of Big Business Day/Ann Arbor. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: PIR GIM schedules energy conference To the Daily: What about nuclear power? Everyone seems to have an opinion-build more plants, close existing ones. The use of nuclear power has created one of the biggest moral, economic, social, worrying about the election, and the state government is too busy with "important" things and keeps putting legislation into special committees to "study" the problem. We could start right here in Michigan Union from 9:00 a.m.- 5:30 p.m. Saturday, April 12, and 1:00-5:30 p.m. Sunday, April 13. The Conference will feature a series of workshops involving solar-active and passive systems, photovoltaics, wind energy, native energy businesses, anai spokespersons from public aiti governmental offices. It is important that the con- munity learn about the viability of alternative energy sources and participate in the Ann Arbor City