a6 OPINION -p Page 4 Thursday, September 27, 1984 The Michigan Dciily Trying to escape the impending flood rte i i \rr/ By Jackie Young The other day I walked out of my apartment and realized that it was raining: I wanted the rain to stop but I knew that I did not have any power over the rain. Resigned to the fact that there are some things which you just can't con- trol, I proceeded to walk to my class. The rain drenched my face, hair, and clothes, for I had neglected to put on a raincoat. It's easy enough to do. Day by day one can sit back in his or her cozy dorm room or apartment, eating, sleeping, partying, and studying-doing the things that get you through those college days. And when there's a down- pour, one can either take it in the face, put up an umbrella, or protest to the rain gods. LATELY, I have become used to taking the rain in my face. Sometimes I even enjoy it. I could be wrong, but I feel there are a lot of University students who feel that completing their homework assignment for class the next day is more important than protesting a rainshower or, even more annoying, the arms race, tuition hikes, poor TAs, Republicans, and all the tyrannical elements in life, or forces of evil, which individuals often are powerless to con- trol. Every time you talk to alumni it seems they bring up the point that the campus seems so dead these days-even the fans at the football games-compared to the student ac- tivities so prevalent when they attended the University. Maybe it's the weather. The pages of the Daily back in the six- ties told the story. Students protested this and that and held sit-ins and teach- ins for this and that cause. Students of the late sixties, why they had this silly notion that they could somehow change the world in which they lived. This week, in fact, commemorates the 15th an- niversary of the sit-in which brought about the student cooperative Univer- sity Cellar bookstore. AND WHAT of the students of the eighties? Perhaps we are all too secure, nothing really bothers us but an error on our resumes or a lost job oppor- tunity. Yet, is this so bad? I don't think it is. But just as rain which keeps on without ceasing may bring about a flood, being apathetic towards the world around you can lead to a loss of power over your environ- ment. In the case of a flood, in our modern day society we have "flood-watchers", better known as the National Weather Service-those annoying people who put small pictures of tornadoes on the screen or interrupt your favorite television show to inform you of bad weather conditions. Most people are probably not very grateful to the "flood-watchers" these days, or maybe it's more a case of not really thinking about the lives those people save or the valuable service they perform. I believe the same is true with student activists on campus today. THAT HANDFUL of all the thousan- ds of students who attend this Univer- sity who are willing to risk missing a class to protest the administration's budget-cutting policies, military research on campus, or the proposed code of non-academic conduct seem to carry out an important task. And, like the "flood-watchers", if people really took the time to think about the service such individuals perform, they might show some respect. However, I doubt that a great many, or even a majority of students on campus, even if they little else. The same is true of rny feelings regarding student activists. I dread their extinction, though I admitI do little to support them. SO I WORRY what would happen if the "flood-watchers" give up their oK cupation for something more profitable or entertaining. I suspect that too many of my fellow students are keeping their noses buried in textbooks, going to resume workshops, throwing too manty parties, having too much pure fui without supporting any cause, and spending their spare time following soap operas instead of the latest political election. But I am not going to be self. righteous, for once, and claim that we. should all become campus radicals and. press our cause above all else. Partyin is fun. Studying is educational. Guilt s painful. And there are a lot of really stupid causes that people take up, often to the point of fanatacism, whicliS. detest. How should students live their lives Of course, this is a ridiculous question". Everyone must choose their own pat_ to success and happiness. IN OUR spare time though, it would. be reassuring to me-one who fears floods and oppressive regimes-if we all took a closer look at the world out side of our apartments, houses, and dorm rooms and at the people who par- ticipate in rallies and sit-ins. Then, we might have a safer University en- vironment. Right now, I feel as if a whirl-wind or a tropical storm is just around the cor- ner. I can't see it yet and probably neither can you. It's time we do some watching so that, we can see the storm coming before i hits us in the face. Young is a Daily Opinion Page editor. Daily Photo Students have taken to ignoring the world around them to such a degree that when the rain comes, some may put up umbrellas but most will stare solemnly at the ground and try not to let the water hit them in the face. it's no wonder students don't turn out to protest these d have the potential to be in sympathy with those activists, are actually glad such concerned individuals exist. For most students are just not informed. Herein lies the danger: what if there were no "flood-watchers" or student activists looking out for the best in- terests of the whole campus com- munity? Maybe this seems improbable. There will always be the "fuck authority" types to pester good- intentioned University officials, some might argue persuasively. Though I think the number of such types has dwindled to a point where they deserve to be put on the endangered species list. Maybe I'm just a bleeding heart liberal, but I can't stand to see those names on the endangered list. I give money to the National Wildlife Federation in a futile attempt to stop the death of certain animal species. (By the way, the Wolverine is on the list.) I read all the literature showing the valuable jobs these species perform and I fear for their extinction but I do Sinclair Gte 3idtorjan n atlQ Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCV, No. 19 420 Mayndrd St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Doily's Editorial Board fl E klBo~11ON CuNt~ICS OF RIA4.P FAEAPN, WHO +AS sMADE MWI*aRiISM~ p CIEN~TPECE OFlHIS CAMflMIrN 2 1* Snapping out of summer. Lmook AT IT TH' WAY,._. %T W REAT TiA(N L.ASt iTME?.. 4? '-N- PE icIT SFewN*N&, -RI QHN1?...._... -A THE FUN AND relaxation of sum- mer have a way of taking the momentum out of things. September is h month of still wishing it was August, not a month for ju'mping right back in- to the more tedious and taxing of life's pursuits. A victim of this end-of- summer malaise has been the protest surrounding the proposed student code for nonacademic conduct. Last spring saw widespread protest involving petitions, rallies, phone-in campaigns, and a general questioning of the ad- ministration's motives. But September has seen virtually no discussion and dissension. Which is why it is especially hear- tening to see the Michigan Student Assembly attempting to bring the issue back into debate. Tuesday night the assembly called for a public forum on the code and emphasized a need for the administration's accountability. MSA President Scott Page correctly com- mented that University President Harold Spapiro is "completely sheltered " from student opinion. He went on to ask that Shapiro demon- strate his knowledge of and concern for the code. This kind of communication is desperately needed. The ad- ministration has too easily ignored the student voice and failed to give their own justifications. If they won't hear the students, then the students should at least be able to hear them. Regents' bylaw 7.02 provides the assembly with veto power over a change in conduct rules but there is some question surrounding the regen- ts' willindness to honor it. There is more possibility that the regents would alter the bylaws in order to skirt student opposition. The ad- ministration's proposals also include a judicial system for the regulation of punishments under the code-such a system is not covered by 7.02. In order to guard against a loss in student input, the assembly also passed a resolution Tuesday night asking the administration to give MSA the right to approve the proposed code and its accompanying judicial system. While this may be wishful thinking, it nevertheless frames the issue well. The administration must now openly deny the student government's right to regulate the formation of the code. MSA also has some big plans for the football game on Oct. 13. Balloons, banners, cheers, and a "big surprise" are in the works. This homecoming hype might seem a bit artificial but it had to be done. The University has got to snap out of the September doldrums, even if it takes a "no code" wave to do it. , iJ mss- 4 / - Isvk&o i LETTERS TO THE DAILY Cuba has laudable health ca The Author replies: In response to Manuel Utset's let- ter "Politics is the Study of Fac- ts", (Daily, Sept. 20), I would like to offer a few "facts" of my own. After surveying a variety of sources, I am of the opinion that Utset is the only authority that feels Castro has made no gains in education, health care, or nutrition. Cuba, in fact, has the best health statistics of any Latin American country. More* in- terestingly they are comparable to American statistics. Consider, fnr examnle these 1974 Cuban Batista : a treasury emptied by fleeing ministers, a public debt over one billion dollars, and a budget deficit of 800 million dollars. Recall also that in 1958 about 70 percent of Cuba's expor- ts were to the U.S., while 70 per- cent of its imports (of food and other goods) also came from America. With the Castro takeover, this prime source of business dried up; by 1964, the Russians and Chinese only ac- counted for 50 percent of Cuba's exports and imports. Utset may laud the high GNP of the Batista years, but the praise is uncritical. The Batista economy was bolstered by hun- dreds of millions of U.S. dollars re system as well as by the fact that Batista,.' unlike Castro, had no commit- ment to social welfare. Facts are fine, but one should remember Nietzsche's quip: "It.O is precisely facts that do not exist, only interpretations." -Brian Leiter September 20; hr Rvke reathed- .......... ....................... ............ RLOOlM COUNTY