4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, December 2, 1983Ti The Michgan Dai A time to begin thinking about being dead By Jonathan Ellis Now that we have given thanks for being alive, it seems time to think about being dead. While talking about death, I want to celebrate life. The television movie The Day After presen- ted a mild version of how we all may die in a nuclear war-maybe in the next few years, maybe later, maybe never. The first questions the film asks are: will this happen? How much longer do we have? I CANNOT write more before answering: we have today. We have the people we love, whatever is dear to our hearts, the earth. We are still here. We have not died. To confront death-and in a nuclear war not only our own, but perhaps the death of everyone, the death of the future - brings fear and even despair. After these, with work, comes hope. If the bombs go off, it will be darker than we saw last week on television. Carl Sagan said the burning cities could send up enough soot and smoke to block 95 percent of the sun's light, cooling much of the planet to sub-freezing temperatures. "THINGS WOULD be pitch black in the target areas within a few days," said Sagan. Another commentator quoted in The New York Times added: "You wouldn't be able to see your hand." No good for TV shots. So, it will be worse than we saw in the movie. and each added detail can bring in a new wave of fear. This is the second question The Day Af- ter asks: will be let ourselves feel afraid? "You guys can't have a nuclear war; I have an exam on Tuesday." Why ask us to be afraid when we have work to do? Won't the fear paralyze us? I WAS MOST afraid watching the missiles go off, more than when they landed in the film. For me, the most frightening part is the time in between, when we know that death is coming, those thirty minutes - or with the Pershing II and submarines off the coast, only ten minutes or even less. One can avoid the paralysis of fear by tur- ning away, or by looking straight at what we fear. When we can face fear, then comes the next challenge, despair: to walk around, to sit and talk, eat, study with the thought that the worst is not only possible, it is likely. Many believe we have come to the point - so many warheads, so little reaction time, so much. distrust, so little communication - that The Day After is not far off. DARK HUMOR is one reaction to despair: "almost" only counts in horseshoes and nuclear warfare. In spite of the fundraising 'Raise the question of how to prevent nuclear war as the first item of business in every meeting you attend, no matter what the group or subject.' "Campaign for Michigan," there will be no new Chemistry Building after a nuclear war, not even an old one. No job after all those "As"; no faculty raises after all that research.' But it may be necessary to feel personally, both fear and despair - to imagine the mushroom clouds over us, in order to stop them. Says Elizabeth Kubler-Ross: "There are five different stages a person will go through when he faces the fact of his own death: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. These stages will last for dif- ferent periods of time, they will replace each other, or exist at times side by side ... But the one thing that usually persists through all these stages is hope." WE CAN HOPE because this is still the day before; with action comes hope. What we each decide to do to prevent nuclear war may be dif- ferent, as we are, one from another. But there is one action I hope we all will take. Let's not put this away any longer. There is an immediate threat to all our lives, and to the lives of all who would come after us. This threat of annihilation in a nuclear war is as real as all the things on which we focus instead, and more important. The first action is to open our eyes and our hearts to the kind of death just ahead of us. And then to live. The problem of how to prevent a nuclear war is so complex that possible individual actions may not come easily. Here are some simple ways to begin. If we start with the simple and the obvious, more can follow. * Raise the question of how to -prevent nuclear war as the first item of business in every meeting you attend, no matter what th group or the subject, everytime friends gather at all activities in which you participate, ever service, every class; " Go out and find an organization you feel doing something concrete to prevent nuclea war and join it. Start looking today; join thi week; -. " Write one letter every week to one of thos people who control nuclear weapons, their fun ds, research, production or use. Tell them Wha you feel; " Make a decision about electoral politics. 4 you believe in it, go to work for a candidate wh will make nuclear war less likely than it i today; " Consider the more demanding alternativd Civil disobedience, for one, is a non-violen path which people have chosen in the mos serious of situations; " Set aside one hour, go for a walk, make yot own list of possible actions, share them. Lastly, allow yourself to breath in all of life Then send it out more fully than you took it in If life is the answer to death, total life must b the answer to total destruction. Live. Ellis works at Canterbury Laft. Stewart Edte d tuaten t f ig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIV-No. 71 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 YITZI-AK, I THINK E~ SHOULD SERIOUSLY DISCUSS CONCESSIONS ON THEWESTR ANK AND GAL STRIP ETTLZWM HS,, ,, SOVE-T IN I Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Administration lp service 40 A E LVIS COSTELLO sang it best: "Lip service, that's all I ever get from you." After listening to LSA Dean Peter Steiner at Wednesday's Campus Meet the Press, students in the college should be singing that disconcerting line. Steiner said student voices on the college's decisions are important, but not at the most influential levels. "Student input into decision-making can be very viable in certain areas," the highest ranking administrator in LSA said. But that does not mean students deserve a vote on the LSA Executive Committee - the group that makes or recommends all the crucial decisions for the college. If Steiner is willing to grant that students have some important things to say about the policies of LSA, why not give them the full voice they deser- ve? The executive committee is the powerful guiding force behind decisions that have direct import on students. It formulates recommen- dations for the regents on tenure. It makes final decisions on course of- ferings and the diversity of the college's programs. Though all of these decisions affect LSA students these students have no impact on them. LSA Student Government has been fighting for just such a voice for years. Its leaders have tried and tried again to get a full voting student member on the executive committee. The college's and University's administrators, in their infinite paternalistic wisdom, keep saying no to such a move, as they do for the vast majority of similar student pushes for deserved votes on University policy. Eric Berman, the newly-elected president of LSA-SG, made gaining a student non-voting member on the executive committee one of his main goals. His hope is that once Steiner and the committee members see that a student can formulate rational, sound, and well thought out arguments, they will be more willing to go one step fur- ther and give the' student member a vote. It isn't a bad strategy, but Steiner's comments Wednesday make the goal seem a little more distant. Steiner ap- parently recognizes the importance of listening to students. He said he is willing to allow students to sit on departmental -committees - where they won't be able to impact the truly influential decisions. But it appears that Steiner believes that the "viable" student voice ends when it matters most. J) of WHAT DO YOU AIA.E NEED- A LOAN? 4FWENCE, TANKS? ROCKET- t-AUNCI1RS J? NT FIGHTERS? -yOU NAME ir!,, ,w43 I I rfJ . t 1 p? ,a K LETTERS TO THE DAILY:. Not a fad; Saints' Ladies (of the evening) night ECAUSE THERE'S just nothing else to do in this town, and since all the old ideas have already been used, Theta Chi, a campus fraternity has kindly invited all the women on campus to attend a much-needed "Pimp and Prostitute" party. Par- ticipants have been urged to "dress appropriately and come ready for a night full of fun," according to leaflets posted around campus. Though it is unclear how a prostitute might dress appropriately, it does promise to be a good time, as the exploitation of women is feigned by the light-hearted partygoers. Beach parties are so passe that presumably a more socially relevant theme had to be found. The pimp- prostitute relation certainly fills the ballet. Sure, it's all in "fun," mimicking the institution of prostitution, the world's oldest profession. With any luck, a wide range of services will be rendered at low cost. All of it is understandable, of course. Ann Arbor doesn't have anything else to offer. No films, no theater or music, and no athletic events to brighten the ,dismal social calender on campus. So the chance to dress up like a sleaze has to sound appealing. Pimps can be nice guys in disguise and prostitutes can be fun-loving young women under a lot of makeup. Sure, male-dominant, sexist attitudes are reinforced by this creative role-playing, but that's alright. It's only for one night, right? To the Daily:- Contrary to the view of the Daily, two politically effective sit-ins do not constitute a sit-in fad ("The sit-in fad," Daily, November 16). The meaning-of the Nuclear Saints of America's recent intervention in military research and the issue of academic freedom are larger matters than the Daily editorial implies. As an observer, not a par- ticipant, of this pointed satire, I was amused and intrigued by the relative ease with which the Sain- ts exploded the cult-like mythos of scientific objectivity and value-free, "pure" research through a critical exaggeration of both its logic and attendant psychology. The French have a word for it: detournement, i.e. turning the thing on itself with an eye to revealing its essense. Prof. Senior himself was caught in the reverse mystification, identifying with the NSA and, for a time, thinking it to be a parody of the PSN sit-in a week earlier. Nevertheless, the event required him to make a revelation of his own: with an en- tourage of campus security and Ann Arbor police he appeared at 2:30 a.m. to evict or arrest the NSA. It may be the case that "pure" scientific research is immune from the control of those who pay for it; it may also be possible that resources and people resulting in hunger, disease, war, and death for the many and priviledge for the few. Academic freedom is not an absolute right. The defense of research which endangersthe lives of millions by appeal to academic freedom is analogous to the justification of shouting "fire" in a crowded theater by appeal to free speech. The question posed by NSA is not about absolute academic M' fans ignore U; cheer only for themselve5 sit-in effective freedom but about academic selves. In sum, the freedom for whom and for what treme logic, maintena purpose. surd roles and refusa The NSA demanded that clean as to their actual students with investments in should be seen as a r defense industries be given the equally absurb log tuition tax credits to make tran- Senior and the DOD a sparent the University's fiscal to convulse the woi and research policies. The NSA's horrors of nuclear remaining demands - which the while speaking of Daily must have received yet has peace, and every other not printed - fall within the same turn inside out. spirit of questioning received - Eri truths by turning them on them-. N NSA's ex ance of at al to com. i objective evelition a gic of Prof s they pla orld Jit apocalyp freedom r value the; cSchnaufe ovember 1 To the Daily: Another terrific University of Michigan football season is in the books, and best of all, the Wolverines dumped the Buckeyes to end the season on a great note. Worst of all, some negative things happened November 19th that really did not need to hap- pen. I'm speaking of the fans and several incidents that reflect nothing positive about the school. I will not expound the incidents themselves, the Detroit media has taken care of that. Rather, I want to discuss the attitudes many of the students seem to come to the game with. Sitting in the stadium, it ap- pears to me that many students are not concerned about whether Michigan wins, but are concer- ned about creating attention for themselves. They are not into cheering for the University, they are into looking for opportunities to be animalistic. When the crowd rushed the goal post, no one seemed to realize, or care, that Ohio State Univer- sity still had a legitimate chance to win the game. They are not in- to cheering for our team, they are into jeering the other team. Did anyone notice that the first cheer on November 19th was not "Let's Go Blue," it was "Ohio State Sucks." Granted, the majority of the students are not like this, but it is the minority that caused one of the Michigan assistants to say after the game, "I'm glad this game wasn't on national TV." There is nothing wrong with having a good time at the game, but it seems that the fans are disregarding their duties of spor- tsmanship and loyalty to the principles of a great universit They are taking advantage of the fact that no PA announcer, polic force, or security group can con trol them if they are unified. This is a classy school, with a classy athletic program anc classy students. They should b 100 percent behind their teams and forget about attacking th other school or officials, nomat ter what the circumstances are Let's prevent this thing from t ning into a South American soc cer melee. Basketball season is upon u and it should be truly exciting Let's use 100 percent of out energy to back Michigan, noimat ter-who we are playing. : -Bob Sac November 2' -w Q me«i -- r . Q~s a t