4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, January 15, 1984 English prof. spins off from Top-40 days S:.. : ' By LAURIE DELATER The office door swings open and English Prof. Bob Weisbuch appears with a colleague, laughing and offering pointers to his friend, who will be on a radio talk show the next day. "Don't chew gum," he said. "Oh, and don't wear a tie!" he jokes, straightening his own. WITH A CLAP of his hands, Weisbuch welcomes his next visitor, one in a long series that afternoon, into his office. The former disc jockey, now associate chairman of the University's English department, explains that his PROFILE long-time love is top-40 radio. "I hate progressive rock disc jockeys...They sound like they are on Quaaludes because they are so quiescent," he said. "I always wanted to be the screaming, funny d.j." Funny and outspoken he is, but students who have him as an instructor for 19th century American literature or one of the department's core courses consistently rank him as their favorite. At 37, Weisbuch also wins praise from his colleagues as both an educator and as the department administrator. WEISBUCH'S CURLY reddish- brown hair, wire-rimmed glasses, animated mannerisms and hunched walk suggest a cross between Harpo and Groucho Marx, but the disc jockey in him wins out. His voice is clear, crisp, and quick. In class "he talks, talks and talks and just can't get enough out of the material," said LSA senior Leslie Shapiro. "I imagine that, when he is 55, he'll still have all that energy." Students say Weisbuch's lectures are intense, packed with interpretation and details, and demanding of student in- put. "I LIKE there to be a breeziness, a lot of give and take, and plenty of action," Weisbuch said. He tries to get students to challenge his interpretations and support their own opinions. But some students say Weisbuch forces his views so strongly sometimes that hecan be intimidating. Weisbuch's teaching method grew from his own college education during Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF English Professor Bob Weisbuch ponders his past days of disc jockeying and his present days of teaching and challenging students to support their own opinions. ' cThe New York Time& I RODWYFREEI S A N D WiN C NH, [2224 WASITENAW ODWAYI DE" , MI PH~ONE: 3 ~ S N Buy any sandwich USr73with two large drinks I Beer, a 1..A Wine & and receive Cocktails the identical I sandwich FREE!I Iun.-Thurs. 7 a.m.-3 a.m. ExIires 1/31/84 ii,&Sat. open 24 hours E %m m m mm mm oo oooooooomm# the turbulent 1960s, when college students across the country spoke out against social norms. AS AN UNDERGRApUATE at Wesleyan, a small "progressive" Eastern college, Weisbuch said, "I was always mad at professors who played hide-and-seek and never really came out with their opinions." He says his decision to teach English evolved from his conviction that "if you get people to think more clearly then it would be better for society. One of the ways to do that and learn how to ex- press oneself is through literature." "As a student, I was feeling a lot of anger toward my land," he said, lowering his voice to underline his seriousness." Literally, when I woke up in the morning the first thing I would think about was the war, whether I would go to jail. I'd have nightmares about killing people. "I had never read much American literature, so I started to read Hawthorne, Whitman and Dickinson, and in them I saw another America dif- ferent from the politically con- stitutional one. I saw it as one that is deeply-thinking and idealistic... I found my country," he remembers. WHEN HE CAME to the University from Yale with his doctorate in 1972, Weisbuch was only 25. "I kept thinking, 'Why am I here? I'm too young.' But I was here because people in my generation didn't have the choice to take a few years off. You would have been drafted," he said. A doctor's excuse kept Weisbuch out of the war, but he recalls friends who resisted by fleeing to Canada or sitting in jail. "Today none of us feel good about what we did," he said. During his first year in front of a classroom, Weisbuch said he tried to imitate the subdued nature of his for- mer professors. "But I was so uncom- fortable, so nervous that my legs would be shaking," he said. After a year, Weisbuch tossed aside the established image of an intellectual as "an elite, a separate person. I found that kind of personality formation ab- surd." He began to integrate personal experiences, humor, and references to popular culture into his lectures, ear- ning him student praise and two teaching awards. STUDENTS SAY they remember Weisbuch's lectures because he com- pares literary figures with those from the modern mass media. Stuart Racey, an LSA senior, said Weisbuch once compared the reputation of English poet Alexander Pope in the eighteenth century to rock singer Mick Jagger. Others say his interjections of phrases such as "groovy" and "what a gas" add flavor to his lessons. Weisbuch speaks with excitement of one class that was so unusually free- thinking and challenging he would leave the room after each meeting "with a terrific high. The students were energetic and demanding. I never looked at my notes because the. material they brought to class was so much better." When students ask what he expects in a paper, Weisbuch says he tells them: "What's needed outside of hard work, is for people to take a big gulp and be daring. "IN THE PAST few years I've noticed a timorous quality in students' papers," he said. As an undergraduate, Weisbuch sat on student-faculty curriculum commit- tees and, when he went to Yale in 1968, he helped renovate the graduate. program, bringing admission requirements into line with student needs. According to the English depar- tment chairman John Knott, Weisbuch's fervor for curriculum im- provement helped earn him appoin- tments as undergraduate chairman and then associate chairman three years ago. Knott commended Weisbuch for his ability to put together course selections which are accomodating to both professors and students. "The department's curriculum is the best it's ever been," said Knott. "What really fascinates me, though, is that he loves doing it." Weisbuch will step down as associate chairman this spring. He says the position has erased his 60s-era distrust of college administration and has refreshed his interest in teaching. This summer he plans to complete a book about the literary impact of the hatred between 19th century British and American authors. He will also return to Middlebury College in Vermont for a second summer this year to teach in a masters program for returning high school English teachers. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports McDonald's founder dead at 81 SAN DIEGO - Ray Kroc, a paper cup salesman who transformed a ham- burger stand into the miltimillion-dollar McDonald's fast-food empire and planted the golden arches in 32 nations, died of heart failure yesterday. He was 81. Kroc, who died in Scripps Clinic's Green Hospital, also turned the San Diego Padres into a popular local attraction after buying the baseball team in 1974. Thanks to an aggressive promotion campaign that included the San Diego Chicken, the team drew an audience of at least 1 million people for every season but one in the 10 years that Kroc owned it. His death was announced by McDonald's Corp. spokesman Dick Starmann in Oak Brook, Ill., where the company is based. Kroc had entered the hospital on Dec. 5, suffering from diabetes and the effects of numerous strokes in the past four years, said Ballard Smith, Kroc's son-in-law. Kroc suffered a stroke on Dec. 23, 1979. He said his required medication was "incompatible with the use of alcohol" and as part of his treatment he entered an alcohol rehabilitation center. Pope calls for new arms talks VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II appealed to the United States and the Soviet Union yesterday to revive talks on limiting nuclear arms, war- ning, "not a single day can'be lost." It was his strongest plea yet for such a dialogue. "Anybody who backs out of such negotiations would face great respon- sibility before humanity and history," the pontiff said. "We are convinced that there is a grave duty on the part of all interested parties in the negotiations." John Paul discussed a wide range of international issues in a traditional New Year audience for some 200 diplomats and their families at the 16th- century Sala Regia in the Apostolic Palace. In the 40-minute speech delivered in French, the pope also denounced human rights violations and demanded "an absolute ban" on arbitrary trials, torture, abductions, banishments, forced separation of families and executions with hasty trials. Kidnappers threaten to kill U.S. soldier to protest nukes AALEN, West Germany - Police said yesterday that presumed anti- nuclear protesters kidnapped an American soldier attached to the first U.S. artillery unit equipped with new Pershing-2 missiles and have threatened to kill him. The Army identified the soldier as Liam Fowler, 21. His home town was not immediately known. The U.S. Army's Mutlangen Base, on the outskirts of Schwaebish- Gmuend, has been the scene of protests by anti-nuclear demonstrators who have attempted to break into the base in recent months. "He has telephoned his wife to say that his kidnappers are demonstrators who have threatened to kill him unless the U.S. media is informed that Ger- mans don't want American nuclear missiles in their country." "The soldier told his wife that his car had been rammed by a group of Germans who then kidnapped him and drove him to an unknown destination. He told his wife the police should not intervene and said he had no idea where he was speaking from," the spokesman said. Lebanese militia commander dies TEL AVIV, Israel -.Lebanese army Maj Saad Haddad, commander of the Israeli-backed militia in southern Lebanon, died yesterday. Israeli of- ficials said the 48-year-old Haddad died of cancer in his hometown of Mar- jayoun. Haddad was hospitalized in the northern Israeli city of Haifa for five days until Jan. 5, when he was flown home. Observers here said he apparently wanted to die on Lebanese soil. The death of Haddad, Israel's most unabashed Arab ally, complicated Israel's search for a proxy force in south Lebanon that would enable the Israeli army to speed up its withdrawal from the country it invaded 19 mon- ths ago to rout Palestinian guerrillas. For five years, Haddad's 1,000-man force of Moslems and Christians protected Israel's northern border from raids by Palestinian guerrillas. Israel Radio reported that Col. Elias Khalil, a Lebanese Christian from the Sidon area, would succeed Haddad as militia commander. Israeli news media identified Khalil as a colonel in Lebanon's regular army and a former classmate of Haddad at the Lebanese military academy. Democratic hopefuls to debate HANOVER, N.H. - Front-runner Walter Mondale braced for political potshots while the long-shot Democratic hopefuls looked for national recognition in the first presidential debate of 1984 - a three-hour marathon today that kicks off the longest series of such confrontations yet. The debate, co-sponsored by the House Democratic Caucus and Dar- tmouth College, brings all eight Democratic contenders onto one stage for the first time, five weeks before the Iowa caucuses and six weeks before the New Hampshire primary. It will be televised nationally by the Public Broadcasting System. The cast of candidates brings together Mondale; Sens. John Glenn of Ohio, Gary Hart of Colorado, Alan Cranston of California, and Ernest,Hollings of South Carolina; former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew; former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern; and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. Askew's aides said they think the debates will give him the exposure he needs. "Anytime you can get the so-called 'dark-horses' on the same set with so-called 'front-runners,' the voters can see there is not substantive reason for that difference," said Askew press secretary Jim Bacchus. 01 be Mtdjigan 'Wan1 Vol. XCI V-No. 87 Sunday, January 15, 1984 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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