4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, October 3, 1984 The Michigan Daily Torn between action and distraction 4 a By Cheryl Baacke Friday night some friends and I were sitting in our living room trying to find a party or something to do that evening. There wasn't much going on so it took a while to come up with anything. "If we'd been here fifteen years ago, we'd all be sitting around smoking pot.", "Yeah, wow, I would have been four years old." EXACTLY. Fifteen. years ago, almost every undergraduate at this University was younger than seven years old. So why are students today almost obsessed with the way things were then? The Big Chill, a story of seven University alumni who were here at the height of student activism, was probably the most popular film on campus last year. And just about every party you've attended since school started this term has featured music from the early Jacksons, the Supremes, Marvin Gaye, and the Tem- ptations. In some contorted way, all of us seem be wishing for the early '70s to return. It must have been such a glamorous time - marches in Washington, class boycotts, hunger strikes. But actually, students today seem to be more ob- sessed with what people were like then, than with what they did then. If we had been here fifteen years ago, not only would my friends and I have been sitting around smoking pot, we would probably. have been involved in the sit-in which resulted in a non-profit bookstore for students, or discussing a plan of action for forcing the University to increase black enrollment. BUT INSTEAD of doing any of those things, we went to happy hour at the From Deadheads... major in philosophy and English - traditionally "unmarketable" fields - enjoy what's going on in Ann Arbor, and take a job for less than $20,000 a year before deciding that an M.B.A. is the only course of action that could possibly make you happy for the rest of your life? Interviewing for jobs in the junior year, worrying about the perfect resume, and reading volumes about the best law schools on the Eastern Seaboard takes time away from too many other things - like smoking pot and drinking and organizing protests, to the pursuit of classic knowledge and simply having fun. In the course of the discussion, one of my friends said, "We're the envy of the world. Here we are at a Big Ten school, it's a Friday night, we have money in our pockets, but we can't find anything to do." It is a privilege to be at Michigan. All through junior high and high school we followed the football team on national television, even staying through half- times to watch the five-minute profiles on the school. We couldn't wait to get there, where we actually could sit in Michigan Stadium and walk through the ivy-covered law quadrangle - just to be part of the whole college at- mosphere. WELL, NOW we're here. And now we watch the six o'clock news saying, I can't wait until I'm that established lawyer running for public office, or in- vestment analyst on Wall Street, or physician isolating a virus strain. Certainly it's wonderful to have high aspirations. And no one can argue the fact that the tail end of the baby boomers must work hard to get even to the middle, let alone to the top. The problem isn't that people are more unaware of what's going around them than students were in the '70s. Most students have heard of . the proposed code of conduct, and everyone is quick to offer their opinions of what is wrong with the University. But it's dif- ficult to live in a society where people are thinking about careers at such a young age. It's hard to set priorities, or do anything well, if while you're studying you feel like you should be gaining experience with a part time job, or if while you're working you feel you should be studying to bring up your grade point average. Remembering the protests of the '70s or wondering what life will be like in Baacke is a Daily managing editor. 4 another 20 years is important from a; historical point of view, but those things interfere too often with things that could be accomplished today - like having fun or protesting the code. Maybe people in the '70s sat around, every weekend wondering what to do. We'll of course never know because we weren't there. But what happens when these future doctors, lawyers, and bankers decide they wish they were back in college ... you know, the good old days when there was nothing to worry about but what to do on a Friday night? Holiday Inn and discussed what kind of drinks help make the right impression when you go out for a business lunch. We weren't worrying about what's going on at our campus right now - the fact that the University still hasn't met the quota for black enrollment, the danger that the Voter's Choice proposal might pass and cause our tuition to skyrocket in the middle of the term, or the fact that the administration and regents are oil the brink of adopting a student code of conduct with virtually no student input. Instead we talked about how much money we could make someday, what it takes to "make it to the top," and how to impress prospec- tive employers. Not only did our discussion center around the professional world, it was also conducted in a place frequented not by throwbacks to the flower children of the '70s, but by yuppies who are notoriously interested only in clim- bing the corporate ladder and knowing the proper time to drink Perrier as op- posed to California Coolers. The point isn't that students should necessarily go back to the age of protests, standing up for anything that resembles a "cause". The point is that students are caught between yearning for the return of those days of protest and planning for their futures as executives. ENJOYING drinks at a semi-elite restaurant and talking about which graduate schools are "the place to be" points to the fact that students today are so concerned about their futures they don't have time to think about the present. Why would it be so bad to 4 A ... to pre-meds. Are students out of touch with their radical roots, or is the rebellion of youth only hidden behind a veneer of professionalism? I Wasserman 0ie 3diiqat ldatlyi Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 4 Vol. XCV, No. 24 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent amajority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Coming down on apartheid ARVARD University decided Monday that it will keep stock in companies doing business in racist South Africa. Although the University resolved to urge the companies to op- pose laws restricting where nonwhites may live and work in the apartheid nation, this social statement isn't loud enough. Educational institutions, just governments, and fair people do not do business with racist regimes. And in- deed it is the responsibility of those who can see the tyranny of racism from their ivory towers to shout in protest. On April 14, 1983 this University listened to the voices of students shouting from their towers and the Board of Regents voted to sell about 90. percent of the stocks in companies with apartheid connections. This too, however, was not enough. Although the University divested of those stocks last June, it still retains stock in five companies because they do a significant amount of business in the state of Michigan. Whether or not those companies employ large num- bers of state citizens should not be the issue. The moral values that this university and others stand for - the foundation of the ivory towers-are endangered by supporting directly or indirectly such corrupt principles. It doesn't seem inappropriate or unreasonable that university presiden- ts, faculty and administrators-as representatives of a community which believes in equality of all poeple-should do all they can to stand behind the values they try to teach students in the classroom. Why is it this University hold on to those tainted stocks and President Harold Shapiro hides within his tower, refusing to take concrete action? It is apparently because Shapiro is not alone in seeking shelter. Derek Bok, president of Harvard University, said in a statement accompanying Harvard's decision not to divest of the stocks, "Much as I oppose apartheid, I strongly believe that universities should not attempt to use their power .to press their political and economic views on other organizations and in- dividuals beyond the campus." Such a statement could just as easily have come from President Shapiro. Such a belief is rooted in hypocrisy and un- dermines the very integrity of the U.S. educational institution. This university and Harvard University are letting their students down by refusing to stand up for im- portant principles and worst of all neglecting to act upon them. After all, what good is the ivory tower to society if its occupants refuse to leave it even for the most pressing cause? 'JIrMAwY GARTER OVER THE~ OF NAERICA.? -- - - --_E NEY- \WNT CMU V/OUDo??~ Q. N U) CTS 4 TNRE BOft 30OD IFAD'- d , °Y I ( LETTERS TO THE DAILY { Educationalpriorities from the student i off{.1 CUE t aicAT -it) "ET WKI Nu 0 GRctO IF IT ML U WAR? MUT EN WWWA To the Daily; In his haste to become a Pied Piper of undergraduate unrest, Robert Honigman in "The shor- tchanging of the undergrad" (Daily, Sept. 28) neglects some important facts. For example, he does not mention that a significant amount of the cost discrepancy between fresh- man/sophomore courses and graduate level courses can be ac- counted for by recognizing that graduate student instructors - the recipients of those assistan- tships that Honigman seems to resent as an unnecessary luxury - teach large class sections in underclass courses at a cost to the university that is a mere frac- tion of the cost of maintaining a faculty large enough to carry the entire teaching load. Without the available to the students, and is in fact incapable of an objective evaluation of the same. It hap- pens that, along with its' reputation for quality scholar- ship, the University is known throughout the academic com- munity as a school where "teaching counts." There is really no question, then, that the University faculty is committed to the importance of quality in- struction.. The question that should be asked instead is whether that commitment is being matched by an equal commitment to learning by the students. Merely deciding to attend a university with a prestigious name and reputation for academic ex- BLOOM COUNTY cellence is not enough - the responsibility for earning an education falls upon each in- dividual, alone, and requires that he/she make a lasting commit- ment to certain- standards and sacrifices. Judging from Andrew Har- tman's editorial "The need to crack down on cheating" (Daily, Sept. 28) it is not at all clear that much of the undergraduate community has demonstrated this responsibility. Perhaps a closer examination by Honigman and his would-be followers of the meaning of education and the processes by which learning and discovery take place is in order - small classes and personal atten- tion from faculty members are nice, but they are far from a panacea from the host of problems that arise from a failure to realize that education is an opportunity, never a right, and that it is up to each student to take full advantage of that oppor- tunity. Before Honigman and the "shortchanged" students he speaks to call for a change in the University's priorities, they should consider some changes in their own priorities that would make them true participants in and beneficiaries of the academic community that the University is trying to create and to maintain. - Loren Butler October 2 by Berke Breathed I I I I I I i I I -I. I IA