4 OPINION Rage 4 Tuesday, October 4, 1983 The Michigan Daily -.*LL.. Brooke: Roughing it at Princeton 4 By Barbara Misle Poor, poor Brookie. Stuck at Princeton and mom says she's acting like she's at Auschwitz. It's tough being a commodity at an Ivy League school. People treat you like you're something more than human. But not Brooke Shields. She just wants to be an average fr shwoman. And it's a struggle. Between organic modern dance, incon- venient walks to the bathroom down the hall, and groping to find her classes, Brooke is determined to dispel nasty rumours that she's just an empty-headed glamour goddess. Brooke shared her woes in an interview with the Detroit Free Press last week, claiming that she's not at Princeton for the publicity, but it's something she really wants to do. "1 THINK THAT people - the press more than the public, I guess - have this idea, that, I don't know, that maybe..I think it only hurts when they think that I'm not serious about something that I do," she told the Free Press. "If they think that I don't really want to go to school or to act, or think that I'm just doing it for the publicity - that I don't do anything genuinely. "I think that's not fair, because everything I do, I want to do. The press has always said, ever since I was a little girl that I was pushed into all of these situations - and that even though I didn't want to do them I knew it was good for my career." SO, BROOKIE'S getting a raw deal from the media. It is really outrageous to conclude that her mother/agent/banker/confidant is making all her decisions. Whose choice was it when Brooke gurgled into modeling when she was 11 months old? While most toddlers were fantasizing about being showered by ping pong balls on Captain Kangaroo, Brooke's naked bottom was on the ,diaper commercials they were watching. Be- fore age 12 she was playing "pre-teen for the cheerleading squad made her a qualified Princeton candidate. Although her composit SAT score was a little below the school average of 1350 - Brooke peaked at 1220 - she was above the national average of 893. The scores and her public testimonies of rigorous studying are part of a slick publicity plan to land Brooke at Princeton. In the modeling empire she rules, images sell. And what better image is there than the studious Brooke trotting to classes in a Shetland sweater and topsiders - just like a normal kid? BUT BROOKE ISN'T a normal kid. She is so dependent on mother's "support" she goes home every weekend and calls her on the phone every night. A normal kid wouldn't have appeared in the August issue of Glamour magazine in an article entitled "Brooke goes to Princeton." In the article, she admitted she only brought one of her 60 stuffed animals to school. Her lusty image is just that - an image. She's never had a steady boyfriend. On top of that, during the filming of Endless Love a stand-in did the nude scenes and the director had to twist Brooke's big toe until her face displayed the proper amount of ecstasy. Now her mother is twisting Brooke's arm so she displays the proper demeanor of a college girl. But like her false pleasure in the movies, her attempt at being "just a normal kid" are just as empty. UNDER THE "Princeton Plan," mother Terri is asking Brooke to make use of one body part she has continually been admonished to ignore - her brain. Brooke is supposed to nourish her intellect to fit the Princeton college-girl image. But since Brooke was an infant star in diapers, Terri Shields has discounted her daughter's right to her own life, vicariously living out her dreams through Brooke. Brooke says she knows exactly why she's at college: "Why am I here, why? But education is so fulfilling. The next four years that I will go through I can never get back again. I didn't want to miss these years of my life." Pretty convincing stuff. I'm sure you could mosey through any dorm on campus and find4 at least one average student who says education is "fulfilling." College, at least in part, is the means to an end - and so too for Brooke, only she's denying it. Claiming to want four years of intellectual stimulation doesn't hold water and looking gorgeous won't pull Brooke through on this one. Brooke lacks credibility which shatters her defense that she isn't being manipulated once abain by her mother's fiscal claws. Compared to at least one peer star in college, Jodie Foster at Yale, Brooke's goals don't seem genuine. Like Brooke, Foster has been acting since she was a toddler - even playing a pre-teen prostitute - but when Foster went to Yale, after completing high school in France, she didn't have to fight to be taken seriously. Sincerity is a quality Brooke can't purport to have. Meanwhile Brooke bops to class, sans sunglasses, hoping people call her "Brooke" not "Brooke Shields" (her mother says the full name sounds like a product). She's living a farce. Brooke has every right to imbibe an Ivy League education,bbut sheshouldbstop spouting this lie about wanting to be an average kid. Brooke Shields is not average and for 18 years she and her mother have in- vested a lot of effort and cash to be the op- posite. The average college freshwoman, Brooke Shields, kicked off the school year with her face on the cover of National Lampoon and Glamour magazine. prostitute," and later posed nude for pictures - both situations in which she was guided by her mother's keen business sense. Mother Terri says Brooke doesn't do anything she doesn't want to, adding that "Brooke doesn't know how much money she has. She only knows how to treat people the way she wants to be treated herself." WHAT AN accomplishment. Not only has Brooke's now jean-clad bottom made millions of men stop smoking, but she has mastered the Golden Rule. Maybe that's what im- pressed the admissions officers at Princeton. But Brooke says she earned her way into the Ivy League university just like any other, student. Diligent studying in high school wedged into a tight schedule of acting, modeling, and workouts Misle is a Daily staff writer. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan CORTE MADERA, Calif. - Because she was well into adulthood when her parents ni Vol. XCIV - No. 23 Editorials represent a majority o 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board I again gover almos panies today, have b It's dragg holdin and pleme Rec' resolu tially " The the r( Michi "a s worke only fi comps The v remai portfo " Offi consti emplo off spi sell a holdin Dilly-dally divestment VE MONTHS ago the University * Officials have further restricted the regents took a moral stand list of stocks they will sell by excluding st South Africa's apartheid private gifts from the divestment nment by ordering the sale of resolution; t all University stocks in com- " Officials have abandoned a 1978 s which operate there. As of resolution requiring them to monitor however, none of the stocks the employment practices of com- een sold. panies in the portfolio which operate in time for the University to stop South Africa and divest from those ing its feet and sell these firms which continue racist practices. gs. Officials have been diluting The University has a history of delaying the resolution's im- diluting its stated South African policy. ntation for too long.. Officials bent a theoretically sound 1978 resolution into an ineffective ent developments show that the administrative hassle. They may be on tion was watered down substan- their way to doing the same with last over the summer: spring's resolution. That officials need some time to only companies excluded from rearrange the portfolio is understan- esolution were firms that are dable. But movement in the last five gan based or companies that hire months has been in reverse if it has oc- abstantial" number of state curred at all. The University has not rs. Yet officials have identified sold one share of stock, yet the ve firms for divestment, out of 33 resolution has been diluted by ex- anies operating in South Africa. cluding gifts and by throwing out the ast majority of the companies 1978 resolution. Officials have given the n in question in the University's companies they keep free reign to lio; adopt any employment practices, no matter how racist. cials still have not defined what Divesting was intended to be a clear tutes "a substantial" number of stand against South Africa's apartheid yees, and are beginning to back policies, but as the months drag by, the ring estimates that they would statement is becoming more and more bout 90 percent of University muddied. gs in the affected firms; divorced after years of a tumultuous marriage, Sara T. was unprepared for the severity of her own reaction.- "It should have been a relief," she said. "They were an unhappy pair of mismatched people." Instead, she was torn by grief, textbook reactionus of 'tuch younger children of divorce. "Nobody prepares you for how to g ro feel about a divorce when you're 30. All the literature is for 10- and 12-year-olds," she continued. "I don't need my parents anymore. There's no bed for me in their York, the son of a house. Yet I feel abandoned." confronted by his SARA is one of a growing num- ce after they ha ber of adults today who are faced for 35 years. "Kid with such an unexpected to a certain age emotional crisis, brought on by a their parents do divorce rate among older done," he said. S Americans which has risen came as a shocl dramatically in recent years. In nice, basic parent 1968 four of every 1,000 married don't do that sort men between 55 and 64 divorced; incredibly sad." by 1979 the figure had risen to 5.7, For some time according to the National Center his father had be for Health Statistics. And as the to his work, wh U.S. population continues to age, wanting some ever more adults are likely to ex- became more de( perience the break-up of their community cau parents' marriages. uneasy. She was The result, even for "children" loose on the de in their 30s and 40s, can be "a real remembered. "Ii rocking of the stability of the they broke up, sh world," observed Judith Waller- her activism." stein, executive director of the later learned, ha Center for the Family in Tran- volved with anoth sition, a counseling service in PARENTS WH Corte Madera, Calif., just north delaying divor of San Francisco. children are out o "Nothing makes an adult more only be delaying vulnerable than the death of his creasing - th parents," she added, and at its sequences, say d worst, "divorce increases According to vulnerability in a similar way." academic counse In addition to having their per- many students ha sonal world drastically altered, hard time with pa adult children frequently are that occur shortly recruited as unwilling confidants entered college. F - sometimes by both parties - removed from th in bitter arguments over proper- children experi ty and other divorce-related issues. "The rewards for getting involved are that, nobody loves BLOOM you," pointed out Dr. Waller- stein. "It's a no-win situation, PAPv o even though the the problem for r(SAYS T-AT IN A the adult child is that a divorced 0 FUNPAMENT parent often really needs sup- RUSSNS AS IH port. So you walk a thin line." "IT TOOK ME by surprise, the force of the emotion," recalled C7 Sara, "and it made my own marriage weird." A professional, married to an attorney, and the mother of a toddler, she found herself wondering: "Will this happen to us in 30 years?" Sara became convinced, she H I 1NA an attorney, was parents' divor- d been married s sort of assume that whatever is the way it's So the break-up k: "They were ts. The kind who t of thing. I felt e, he explained, en burrowing in- hile fiis mother, ething more, eply involved in ses. "He felt like a cannon eck," Marshall ronically, when e withdrew from His father, he d long been in- er woman. [O believe that rce until the f the home may - and even in- e painful con- divorce experts. Wallerstein, lors report that ve an especially arental divorces yafter they have Far from feeling e process, these ence guilt: "I COUNTY went away and see what hap- pened...." For 33-year-old Steve B. of Palo Alto, Calif., "what really hurts was that after the separation there ensued a real battle over common property. This changed my perception of my parents; seeing them fight like children over something either of them could have done without. There was some need to 'get even' that shocked my sisters and me." For a time, Steve said, his father, an artist who worked at home, ac- tually paid rent to his mother. Only when the house issue was settled did both parents begin to reconstruct their lives. One of the most regretted effec- ts of these divorces, for children and for grandchildren, is the loss of an anchor for family gatherings. Special occasions, holidays, and birthdays are thus transformed from dependable rituals into logistical problems. Marshall celebrates Hannukah with one parent, Christmas with another. "Both seem pretty mature about that," he says. But Tom C., who lives in a small vorce no 7sier for wn children By Rasa Gustaitis Louisiana town, finds the dif- ficulties remain great five years after his parents ended 41 years. of marriage. "There's a festival here where they pick a 'Golden Age' king and queen," he related. "My father was picked king, and he invited us to the celebration, but we didn't want my mother to know. "We used to have 100 peoplefor Chriktmas,'" Tom said. "Jaw ,maybe he's with my broth'brand we'd be with my mother. Or he might spend it ' with his lady friend. He's 75 and he's gone through two girlfriends already. When we invite him we don't ask' her." In fact, all of those interviewed admitted to problems relating to their parents' new mates - especially when the mate was closer to their own ages. "Having to confront my father as a sexual person, a person with those needs at age 60, was rough," said Mar- shall. His father's new friend was 154 years younger than him, and Marshall felt like "one of your equals is somehow being glued to the family, kind of poaching on your turf." For most children, however, these and other traumatic effepts of divorce gradually yield to ac- ceptance. "Maybe part of Qur problem is that when people split up, we tend to perceive it as a 'failed' marriage, and a kid can't4 help but feel part of that failure," said Sara. "But finally, I have to remin.dmyself that we did have those wonderful times." Gustaitis wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of the Daily. by Berke Breathed azsz .:". i . _ ( y. r' , 3. / 5U'M5S, PP A 5P'EECH TO .' REAT EfIt FCh1IRE." 5! 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