OPINION I Page 4 Tuesday, December 6, 1983 The Michigan Dail' I Why students look down around the 'U By Mike Buhler Having been on campus for so long gives me a unique perspective on trend. You see, I've noticed lately; albeit gradually, that when walking around the University,. the majority of people look down. It is found much more frequently in underclassmen than in professors, and the only group that seems to defy this trend are the girls of certain sororities, who look for everyone they know. And if you walk to class with one, you'll find they know nearly everyone. And it becomes noticeable that they are the only ones looking up, or rather straight ahead, as those addressed are usually taken by surprise, as they were looking down. Now several of you will say that I don't know what I'm talking about, that there is no perceivable difference in the number of people with eyes cast down, wandering the campus. NOT SO! Because those of you who were here four or five football seasons ago will not recall posters taped to the Diag. The prime spot used to be five feet off the ground, on kiosks and the stairwells. Only the RC Players and Zuga cultists wrote any messages on the concrete. It probably started with the rape awareness campaign of 1980, and students began striving for information on the way to class. Anyway, what provoked the downcast eyes? And therefore do we need the kiosks anymore? As to the kiosks, we're stuck with them, because they cover up the steam tunnel access holes; or so we have been told during orientation. MAYBE IT was the law providing for barrier free design that started everyone looking down. Those ramps are sure a lot easier to negotiate than curbs. It could have been the rape signs, but those were soon covered with snow. Ah, snow! That's my theory. That, and the burning of the Economics Building in 1981. (By the way, who is the 'idiot who covered up the Econ. Building with trees in the area picture of campus in the Student Directory, which at a buck isway overpriced?).' It is easy to remember the smell as the fire-riddled remnants rotted in the late January sun. But surrounding the tribute to arson was ice. So as everyone negotiated around the Grad and Ugly (sic) they had to look down to avoid an embarassing slip and fall. The in- coming freshmen caught on to the trend as only freshmen do. SO YOU ARE not happy with that ex- planation? Let's try another. Most of the University is from Michigan. Many Michiganders ski. When skiing on water, we squint and smile, looking forward into the mosquitos, horse flies, and boat spray only out of neccessity of balance. When we ski on snow, we don eye protection, allowing us to ski forward without fear of something lashing us in the eye. But at the University, goggles are out. Ray Bans, and more particularly Vuarnets, are in. In wearing normal glasses, an extended downward tilt of the head will cause the glasses to slide off the ears and nose. Those who wear conventional sunglass to class habitually know this to be true, and thus look up. But the Ray Bans come equip- ped with these ear-grapplers, allowing one to look down. THE MAKERS of Vuarnet were so thoughtful as to supply additional protection in the form of a piece of string, to hold 'the glasses around the neck, should the ear-grapplers fail. By now, most of you will have seen through this argument, as it pertains to my snow theory in the preceeding paragraph, because if the head is tilted down, the wind and snow can find their way over the tops.of your glasses and into the eyes, thus eradicating thatT theory. But again, you've forgotten something. Alright, so I didn't come right out and say it the first time you forgot something (the skiing theory), but I've~said it now.. What has escaped your attention is that important item of dress, the "M" painter's hat. SAID HAT has a small visor, which corrects the wind problem. So you see, what really happened was that students like yourself got tired of fighting the wind and snow with your eyes directly, and devised a way to combat this. You out-of-staters; stupid enough to leave your sunny and warm states of the South, will soon enough learn about the Michigan winter. Now the old chicken and egg question comes into play. At this point you may wonder, "Which came first, this writer, or the question?" Maybe some other time, along with Evacuation Day, I'll answer that. You see, the caps really came first. , Long ago, the venerable Don Canham rented the Michigan Stadium to our adopted school, Slippery Rock. SR was to take on'Shippensburg State - their equivalent of OSU, I imagine. It was also a neat way to get rid of Band Day. Don't ask. Every football-going college student has some form of clothing in his school's colors, if not some form of insignia paraphernalia. One of Slippery Rock's colors is green; that year, we were playing both MSU and Notre Dame. So green clothing in Michigan Stadium was out. But those dyed-in-the-wool en- treprenuers, the hawkers outside the stadium, those not selling tickets, devised something to get around the color problem, the SR insignia problem, and the yet-to-be-born wind- and-snow-in-the-eyes problem by selling a, painter's hat with a Slippery Rock message emblazoned on it. So Don Canham caused us to look down, like we do after a loss to Iowa. Buhler, an LSA senior, is an oc- casional contributor to the Opinion Page. Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Downcast eyes are popping up all around campus.. But why! To avoid variousibucket charity drives? To keep the rain or snow out of your eyes Maybe it's Don Canham's fault. I I Edie mdany Micig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Stewart Vol. XCIV-No. 74 420 Moynard St. Ann Arbor, M! 48109 4 I Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board 8 reasons to leave Lebanon E LIE IVEDAWAR, a 44-year-old Lebanese man, said it best: "What are you Americans doing here? What is everyone in the multinational force doing here--the Italians, the British, the French? You say you come to help us. But look at this." The "this" Mr. Medawar was referring to was the wreckage of a downed U.S. Navy light bomber that crashed into a house in the town of Junieh, injuring six people. The plane had been on a retaliatory mission against Syrian positions inside Lebanon. The whole episode, with the recent increase in the fighting in Lebanon which left at least eight more American troops dead, should force President Reagan to answer Mr. Medawar's questions. But Reagan has no answer, just as he had no answer when the troops were first put in Lebanon more than 16 months ago, and just as he had no answer after 239 Marines died in a truck bomb attack in late October. So with no reason for having the troops in Lebanon, it is again time to say they should come home. The bombing raids were in retaliation for increased Syrian at- tacks on unarmed U.S. reconnaissance jets and on U.S. naval and land positions in the area. Certainly, the administration can justify allowing its troops to defend themselves, but that does not give them a rationale for maintaining their presence in the war- ravaged land. U.S. troops simply are not performing any useful tasks in Lebanon. All they are doing is being attacked, fighting back some, and dying a lot. Reagan has yet to face up to the fact that Lebanon is not a coherent society. It is not one nation that can be glued, stitched, or held together by "peacekeeping" troops. As the death toll rises-it now stands at at least 254 Americans-the pressure on the president to get out of Lebanon will probably increase. He is in danger of sucking the United States into a black hole of a conflict. Each American death will make' it more dif- ficult to pull out. But he offers no reason to continue exposing U.S. troops to shell fire. Eight more dead say "let those alive come home." I 4 WE WANT STUDENT REPRESENTATION IN THE UtIVERSITY! WE FE PAYING TO SEHERE AND WE WANT A PART IN THE ECISION- MAKING PROCESS,,, ARE YOU .ISTENING TO M5? ,, LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Daily turning sarcasm into afad A Fit 1r + Y z IE ' To the baily: Is sarcasm going to be denigrated to a fad? I hope not, but your editorial on Theta Chi's "Pimp and Prostitute" party ("Ladies [of the evening] night," Daily, December 2), took a big step in that direction. Your editorial came two and a half weeks after the Wrong Decade's sarcastic endorsement of peace rallies and the Nuclear Saints of America's sarcastic en- dorsement of military research on campus. Your sarcastic endorsement of the campus fraternity's "much needed.. . party" worked. You said such witty things as, "Beach parties are so passe that presumably a more socially relevant theme had to be found. The pimp-prostitute relation cer- tainly fills the ballet." Not only was your style humorous, but it also helped you avoid the socially responsible aura that often isolates newspapers from the general population. right?" Editorial writing is serious business. It challenges principles of objectivity of the press close to the heart of our nation. The Op- Ed page is the one place where a newspaper can let down its guard of objective reporting and ex- press its viewpoint on the news it reports. I don't mean that editorials should never be writ- ten, or even that they shouldn't be written humorously. I mean that they should only be written for a BLOOM COUNTY Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page, represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of the Daily. very good treason, and that reason should be expressed clearly and forcefully. One must conclude that your editorial had no viewpoint, or at the very least, you mistakenly feel that your ambiguous senten- ces mean something. In either case, your primary motivation appears to be gaining attention for yourselves with an amusing but meaningless prank. -John Shaw 4 December 4 by Berke Breathed 'AcA5...6vR 5VCx MFwxw ara JE5TABOr "ABCA KMAN HMAPUAMrR6 70 MO~rMOR-MH ntlCAC AMAGE,. NO, CCE~$hN, -me Q0 5f 715WIUIH ~ UL}COET m ER- %CEVP A5 JIST'A MEANING(-g,55 JOKE.?.. OR IIU-IT SE5K A5 AN APP6;AL 10 NARKOWI - MINPW N~4&01RY AND HWUAO? YES... RIE'IIT... UN 'THANK5. RPICA{.RIGHTf I I fiAl srw, '1' / "I V AVit%&- I .1 I I