OPINION Page 4 Thursday, November 29, 1984 The Michigan Daily A Confessions of a University tour By Steve Haddad On a typical, quiet summer evening in Ann Arbor, under the security of an oak tree near the Diag, the serene at- mosphere is occasionally shattered by the stomping of 50 pairs of shoes. A quick glance down the sidewalk reveals an orientation group of bewildered freshpersons lost in a mass df campus buildings. Try to ignore the pang of fear passing through your body as you search for the one pre-med in the group certain to wreck the curve in Biology 985. But there is a far more dangerous individual present: The campus tour guide. To the untrained eye, this person may appear quite harmless. Upon closer examination, though, this is not the case. Campus tour guides come in all shapes, sizes, and sexes, but they have one characteristic in common: an in- credible capacity to talk for hours without saying anything of substance. For purposes of shortening this story, let's follow the unfortunate case of one tour guide, I'll randomly select the name Steve, to document the potential for corruption behind this activity. Please, if you have a weak stomach, stop reading now. THE EVOLUTION of a tour guide (though Darwin said individuals do not evolve, this is probably the only known exception) is a catastrophic story but is one that must be told. Steve started his career as most guides do, studying diligently on the 3A stack of the Graduate Library. One evening, while immersed in a text of organic chemistry, studying how to synthesize ethanol, I believe, Steve looked over and noticed a stack of old Michiganen- sian yearbooks gathering dust on a shelf. As the legend goes, Steve sud- denly heard voices inside his head, leading him beyond his control toward the awaiting books. The trap was sprung, and it's all downhill from this point. University encyclopedias, history books, and strange but true stories were all consumed by Steve in a short while, leaving in his wake bat- tered librarians desperately searching for more fact-filled texts. Now, this wouldn't be so bad if it was confined to a few demented individuals, such as Steve, but the problem is magnified as the tour guide begins in- flicting the new-found knowledge on helpless campus visitors. You see, we are not just dealing with a harmless pastime here, Terminal Tourism is a progressive disease. In its final stages, the victim can be seen shelling out Mr. large as one people. Steve's friends no longer visit the campus for fear of get- ting the expanded five-hour tour. Friends that are students on campus cringe as they walk past a University building with Steve, realizing that at any moment the number of bricks or 'Campus tour shapes, sizes, guides come in all and sexes, but they have one characteristic mon: an incredible ca talk for hours withou anything of substance.' in com- Marathon in two hours and fifteen minutes, but even he only lasted to the James McDivitt-Edward White Corner. He never had the opportunity to hear the recitation of the 179 college coat-of- arms lining the windows of the Law School Library. Indeed, something had to be done to stop this madness, so the government stepped in. Campus in- vasion? Conventional weapons? Not exactly... IN RESPONSE to the Surgeon General's warning that the spread of Terminal Tourism must be stopped before it reaches epidemic proportions, the University moved its collection of yearbooks and University history paraphernalia up to 6 South. This bold and nobel gesture may work well in the long run, but I fear that the move came too late. On any given hour at the Alumni Center an individual infested with Terminal Tourism will break through the doors with a pack of naive parents and their children, bombarding them with enough facts and figures to make the Apple IE blow its gaskets. As Foreigner would say, the damage is done. Anyway, you may be interested in discovering what happens to these guide organisms teeming with Michigan history (teeming, what a great biologist's word). Steve's case is like most others. Every night he curls up next to the fire with a glass of wine and The University of Michigan: An Efi- cyclopedic Survey. He is currently on Book VI of the nine volume set. And what about the future of these star tour guides. Well, Disneyland actively recruits the campus every year for future "Cinderella's Castle" guides: But for those at the top of the class, the cut-throat competition is resolved with the winner receiving the ultimate prize: the chance to tour at historic Williamsburg in Virginia and wear a "neato," old-fashioned costume. University tour guides who can often be spotted in characteristic student tour guide garb-jeans and a t-shirt-can only dream of sometime being promoted to the bigtime tourist joints.. Haddad is a senior honors biology major. He is afflicted with "Terminal Tourism." pacity to it saying T dolls to entice seven-year-olds to go on his or her tour. Steve's case follows a similar path. On any given day he can be seen walking backwards in characteristic tour guide form in front of groups as name of the architect's sister-in-law may be thrust upon them. Tours build to the six and seven hour range, and finally they emerge as the deluxe weekend package tour. Sure, Orlando Pizzolato can run the New York City Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman Vol. XCV, 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor. MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Another blow to MSA A~ourT To?cRZM\ A R Vo TiONA'QY ((_ M 9CAP~9FoGEUR2E W ttT STAE Gw OF -EXPKANCY?~ 4 ab A RECENT amendment to the Mich- igan Union Board of Director's charter, which gives the chairman of the board sole power to appoint studen- ts to the Union's governing body, represents a successful attempt to un- dermine the influence of the Michigan Student Assembly in guiding the management of the Union. By taking away MSA's voice in determining who sits on the Union board, the- board has sacrificed the broad student interest as represented by MSA, to the administrative ef- ficiency of a hand-picked board. This type of maneuvering to get around MSA's input-maneuvering that is also seen in the administration's lack of willingness to honor regent's bylaw 7.02-signals a frightening trend toward an administration of Univer- sity services and rules that disregards the independent student voice. MSA's input is desireable not only because it represents the student body as a whole, but because it is an organization in- dependent of the Union Board. Union Board Chairman Michael Perigo explained the need for the amendment saying, "We just thought it would be more efficient this way." In other words, the board now has the ability to "inbreed", to select mem- bers that it feels will further the aims of the board as it now exists. Diversity of viewpoint most likely will not be en- couraged since conflicting ideas don't make for managerial efficiency. The fact that MSA is independent in- sures that the broadest student con- cerns are represented. It is too bad that representation will be lost since, after all, the Union exists to serve the students. The board's ability to in- breed does not necessarily spell doom for the direction of the Union but it will stifle a valuable diversity of opinion concerning that direction. What needs to be corrected is the at- titude that MSA's input is irrelevant or in some way "inefficient." MSA exists to represent the concerns of the student body and should therefore be treated as a necessary and valuable voice in the formulation of University policy, whether that policy be a code of conduct or the management of the Union. MRIR xENtAIL JT I NTION 1 . ' isSNc-R 0 0 6 0 U $1 i4' ,-.O i pf Stale politicians do no harm ' __ T Cy, " i _ R r l ./ . - E , ._ , l ' .. " n w / ' t , , o o ti, t i ti t " , rJ By Franz Schurmann If the recent presidential elec- tion demonstrated anything con- vincingly, it was that the American political scene is barren of new ideas. Walter Mondale's platform never was anything more than warmed over liberal notions of government leadership and social interven- tion. Ronald Reagan's conser- vatism offered only spruced up versions of free enterprise and old-time religion. Historically, the absence of political innovation has meant either that things were working so well that new ideas were not needed or that the civilization was decaying. But today, neither of these conditions pertain. Things are not working par- ticularly well and-apart from politics-Western civilization ap- pears to be robust and strong. The puzzle is: Why is this creativity so conspicuously lacking in politics. A HUNDRED years ago, in an era somewhat like our own, the West was being revolutionized by astonishing new ideas in science, technology, and culture. Politics kept apace with the rapid change, dnre.nn n lha 4nlin4o ac no thropology and psychology, came into prominence. The faith in these new political ideas remained strong despite the horrors committed in their name. In 1917, millions of Russians were convinced that socialism would rescue them from op- pression. War and all of Stalin's horrors failed to shake that faith. Yet today, a swath of political apathy stretches over the Soviet Union where few people appear to believe that the Kremlin can do much to improve their lives. Nonetheless, Russian science and technology advances, even while hobbled by socialist bureaucracy. And new cultural forms are arising in that coun- try's underground society. DURING the last two decades, the way we live, work, and think has changed more rapidly and radically than in any period of human history. In a mere generation, the traditional place- bound family is vanishing, most of us in the West work not in fac- tory or farm but in service oc- cupations, and the advent of the electronic revolution is bombar- ding us with every variety of new idea. BLOOM COUNTY Significantly, these ideas arise from a far-flung variety of sour- ces. There is no handful of prestigious universities generating the innovations. They come from many different schools and many different coun- tries. Much of the biotechnology revolution, for instance, has come from small, makeshift labs, where scientists work with small grants and simple dishes of biological cultures. What we see today is an astonishing democratization of innovation in all areas-save politics. So why do we need politics? Judging from the elec- tion, people seem to believe that politicians should do no more than manage the basic functions of government-things like keeping the peace, protecting the country, assuring the value of the currency and, as voters showed in electing a middle-of-the-road Congress, maintaining most of the modern welfare state. In the end, the barrenness of ideas in American politics may not be so bad after all. It may serve to drive home the lesson that, rather than leadership, government's proper role today is that of competent and honest service of the people and guar-1 dian of the realm. Schurmann teaches history and sociology at the University of California, Berkeley. He wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. Unsigned editorials ap- pearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. S by Berke Breathed I i . mq 1