4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, October 19, 1984 The Michigan Daily The students' inevitable adversaries FIM By Robert Honigman It is really difficult for students to find their place in the modern univer- sity. On the one hand there is a smarmy * paternalism that lulls them into accep- ting the institution as a substitute parent, or at least a legitimate authority that knows best and directs the rules of the game. On the other hand, there is a penetrating realization that the institution is essentially cold and uncaring - the individual is lost and ignored within its halls. Students coming from warm and loving homes take the university to be an extension of the real world, and hen- ce their confusion is compounded by wondering whether the real world is in- deed like this. A large part of this -problem of adjusting is that there is a hidden adversarial relationship bet- ween students and the university that is seldom discussed. AN ADVERSARIAL relationship is not the same thing as calling faculty or administrators evil or labeling them as bad people. In a tennis match there is an adversarial relationship - but the person on the other side of the net is hardly an enemy. In fact, both players need each other in order to make up a game. Landlords and tenants are ad- versaries, but not enemies - they need each other. Merchants and customers' have conflicting interests, as well as mutual dependencies. The relationship between employer and employee is ad- versarial as well as one of mutual cooperation. Woven throughout the fabric of our society are relationships which are adversarial in character, based on situations and roles that create conflicting interests, but not real enmities. Thus, for students, the problem of finding themselves involves recognizing the adversarial character of their relationship to other con- stituencies in the university, without necessarily disliking or belittling these other groups. Some of these adversarial interests are easy to recognize. In seeking high salaries and reduced teaching loads, the faculty naturally support higher tuitions. In promoting research - which costs more than it brings in in revenue - administrators must take money out of educational funds. These are the financial aspects of the university's adversarial relation- ship to students. Less obvious are what I call the in- stitutional conflicts of interest. For example, there is one which I call the "good" student complex. Nothing makes a university easier to run as an institution than "good" students - they see more that ten percent of their football and basketball teams staffed by black students. These are the "good" students who never make trouble. IF YOU GO to a university to become a "good" student, welcome to the Night of the Living Dead. You are going to have an interesting time there because 'If you go to a university to become a "good" student, welcome to the Night of the Living Dead.' products on an industrial scale, they are bred to be tough and resilient. Thus, for example, the tomato is bred to have a firm pulpy flesh that will resist splat- tering when dropped from a certain height or if handled roughly. Then of course, the tomato becomes hard and tasteless - but the administrative ends of efficient processing are met. In much' the same manner, the university encourages a breed of rough, hard students designed to be processed through the system as efficiently as possible and to be sold to a mass market that looks for durability in han- dling rather than flavor. The tough student is prized in the modern univer- sity - the student who can be dropped from a considerable height without any damage, even if the resulting student is narrow, selfish, and lacks the inner core of a caring and growing human being. THESE IDEAS of the loyal "good" student and the resilient "tough" student, create a current, a deep sea current that erodes a student's self- confidence and sweeps the student through the system as quietly and quickly as possible. If you fight this current, you will soon discover that, it is much stronger than you and you wil run the risk of drowning throug exhaustion attempting to swim against it. On the other hand, if you merely swim with the current, you will never develop the self-confidence or the muscles you need to save yourself in the broader waters of society. What then can the average student do? The most difficult thing is to fight your adversaries with affection and compassion - but for the average student, it's really difficult to keep yourself academically afloat and fin enough time for a reasonable social life, much less fight a powerful and well- organized adversary. The only things to do, I guess, are to have compassion for people with thin skins who bruise easily and try yourself not to become too tough and hard; sup- port those who fight honestly for your interests; and perhaps just be aware that in the syrupy sea of paternalism that washes through the university, there's an undertow of adversarial in- terests. people who accept high tuitions, over- crowded classes, poorly run dorms, and other neglect, with cheerful smiles - people who never question how their tuition is spent or where their state money goes. These people believe that those in authority always know best and accept the fact that the University can't recruit more black students, even when all the stage directions and major decisions in it will be directed by someone else off-stage. The other aspect of the university's hidden message, is what I call the "tomato processing" goal. This is a function of all large bureaucracies that deal with people en masse. We are all aware that in order to process our farm Honigman is Sterling Heights. an attorney in - -------- . ..... Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair Vol. XCV, No. 38 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Doily's Editorial Board -.w ,.. f - r'/ WONDERIN& WOL Al I J Sharing Tutu's prize Al 0 THESOUTH African leaders who operate under the racist policy of apartheid should have heard the strong message coming from Oslo, Norway Tuesday. But they chose to ignore it. When the organizers of the Nobel Prize selection committee awarded Bishop Desmond Tutu the Nobel Peace Prize for his non-violent actions opposing 'apartheid, the South African leaders should have opened their eyes and ears. Unfortunately, they reacted as they have, in the past, by closing their minds and pretending that their racism is not abhorrent and immoral. And indeed, the South African government will continue to be able to pretend it is deaf and dumb and that its system is fair if no one opposes them. Until there is concrete international action to force the government to open its eyes, Tutu's mission will be incom- plete and his prize diminished in significance. Here are Tutu's minimum demands of the leaders of apartheid: guarantee equalC civil rights for all citizens; abolish the country's pass laws; work toward an integrated educational system; and put an end to the forced removal of blacks to impoverished "homelands." It is depressing that these requests have to be made. Tutu, the first black General Secretary of the South African Council of Churches, has felt the oppressive weight of the government, as have many of his black countrymen, yet he has peacefully resisted. Tutu's church has been investigated by three official judicial inquiries and his passport has been repeatedly withdrawn. As a child he recalls that blacks had to rummage through garbage cans in search of food rejected by white schoolchildren. His mission is to spread the word that such a way of life for South Africa's blacks is unjust. And he wants the gover- nment to realize that "justice is going to win. Those who have suffered, felt, and lived with the evil of apartheid would share his prize, Tutu said. The South African government has shown it does not know how to share. But this nation and others, as well as this University, do have the capacity to share the prize. This University has already moved toward a just position by divesting of around 90 percent of its stocks in South Africa. But more can and should be done. The University still holds stock in five Michigan companies doing business in that nation. The United States has a very loose relationship with South Africa and this is subtly supporting its separatist policies. The University and the United States, as well as other nations and institutions that value human rights, should more carefully consider and act upon Tutu's words: "What we have to say to those who invest in South Africa, is that your in- vestment is a moral as well as an economic issue." SUW'P PV SIBEELECTRIC ?AiE o Our ?A1 22m -- o ATACT NEW iNDUSTRY I m? REVENUES ' CME ouNJ A / Pro~A~1HRGAFFER;~ kacnoM~ONS C /q A new battle against cheap cocaine A ,Jr l; 0. \ I-," r Y Y. r : - ,, o O a. 1.. -' rj ._;_... . ' i ._ 1 ,, ., , -t ' r By Charles Thurston SAO PAOLO, BRAZIL - A new front has opened in the cocaine war. And unless it is checked, it may provide a new, lower-priced flood of the white drug into the U.S. market. The battle already pits the governments of Columbia, Bolivia, and Peru - as well as U.S. agents - against cocaine producers in those countries. Now, cultivation of a tropical species of coca called "epadu" has spread alarmingly into Brazil's Amazon basin. INDIAN FARMERS, lured by the hard cash paid for epadu=- a gangly cousin of the Andean coca bush - have become snarled in a web quickly spreading into the virgin wilderness of the world's last great forest frontier. On one sortie earlier this year, Brazil's federal police, aided by army troops, slashed and burned some 500,000 epadu plants in an effort to stamp out the region's cocaine crop. "It made a hellacious lot of smoke," said a drug enforcement agent who took part in the outing. Several such operations have taken place over the last year, but so far police have not kept up with growers. Brazilian efforts to keep the cocaine industry out of the Brazil's Amazon basin covers an area larger than the whole of neighboring Bolivia. It is linked by myriad waterways and bush plane airstrips to Peru and Colombia, from which coca buyers regularly emerge to buy up epadu from the native Brazilian "caboclos," as the poor farmers of mixed blood are called. These isolated farmers nor- mally subsist on the cultivation of cassava, or manioc root, the starch staple of the region, but can only expect to earn about a nickle a pound in trade for the tuber, even when it is pain- stakingly toasted. "GROWING EPADU is definitely an economic incentive to these people," says police chief Joao Fulano, seated in his tiny office in the usually quiet lit- tle town of Tefe halfway between the Colombian border and Manaus, the river capital of the Amazon. He raises his hands in despair over- the vast area he tries to patrol without arcar or boat. "When I go out to the villages, I have to putt out there in a borrowed 2.5-horsepower fishing boat. But the Colombian drug runners buzz down here from Leticia in 1,000-horsepower speedboats. Can you imagine me trying to chase somebody like that?" Fulano often pays costs in- curred in his enforcement duties out of his own pocket for lack of government support - and often findstraffickers back in the town square a few weeks after he has sent them to the state capital for trial. "I catch these guys and have to talk boat captains into a free ride to deport them, but they drift back here. It's tough to get rid of them," he says. THE EPADU plant, long cultivated by Brazilian Indians for use in religious rites, contains only some 40 percent of the active chemical found in the Andean variety, but grows to a height of several meters, dwarfing its cold- climate relative. Colombian cocaine refiners, feeling the heat of enforcement pressure in their own country, have fostered a growing market for the crop in Brazil during the past year or two. Brazilian an- thropologists discovered the problem when they noticed previously unsophisticated In- dians wearing jeans and listening to transistor radios. Diplomats from countries in the region recently met with the aim, of establishing a Latin American police agency like Europe's Interpol to pursue bor- der-hopping criminals. But the talks so far have not produced a working force. If the governments do not move quickly enough to eradicate the problem, traffickers could establish a widespread base for the crop in the Brazilian jungle, an area which is nearly im- possible to police effectively. For now, as one Brazilian drug enforcement agent was recently quoted as saying, "In order to find epadu in the Amazon, all you have to do is look." Thurston wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. t S I 1 t 1 ,. _, _-- = ,, \ \ . ti j ' tz. , i : ;t , t ' .a "' , _ r . .i Unsigned editorials ap- pearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily 's Editorial Board. Iml M 1L nAv T TY ti_. .._., .. _.....,.., .. _..1