OPINIoN Page 4 Friday, April 19, 1985 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Initiation with the braves Vol. XCV, No. 159 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Ml 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Economic pressure A nnouncing in advance his op- position to any economic san- ctions against the apartheid regime of South Africa, Secretary of State George Shultz declared on Wednesday, "The only course (for dealing with South Africa) consistent with American values is to engage our- selves as a force for constructive, peaceful change." He is, of course, mistaken that "con- structive engagement" is an effective means of pressuring the South African government to repeal its racist policies, as the current worsening situation indicates. Blacks will eventually gain their rights in South Africa. They comprise the vast majority of the population and have been working to win their rights for more than a century. With last month's banning of the National Defense Front, the largest black nationalistic organization since the African National Congress was outlawed in 1960, the situation is precariously close to exploding. The question is no longer one of whether the apartheid government will remain in power, but how long it will remain in power, and how the black majority will claim its rights. Many in South Africa claim that the apartheid system has lasted so long, and has built up such hostilities bet- ween the races, that there is no longer any alternative to revolution. It does seem, however, that there is still some slim chance that change can come through evolution of the present system. Since evolutionary change would avoid the death and destruction caused by revolution, the United States should do all it can to pressure the South African government to work for change. And "constructive engagement" is simply not enough. The most effective means the United States has to put pressure on South Africa is to apply economic sanctions. In spite of Shultz' warning, several Congressmen have already submitted bills that would bring about these san- ctions. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.) and Sen. Lowell Weicker (R.-Conn.) are among several spon- sors of a bill that would deny bank lonas to South Africa, ban imports of South African gold coins, prohibit new investments in South Africa, and prevent all computer sales to the South African government. Shultz claims that economic san- ctions will weaken U.S. influence in South Africa. That influence is useless, however, unless it is used to work for the rights of South African citizens. With the Reagan administration set against economic sanctions, and the bipartisan Senate bill already submit- ted, there is sure to be heavy fighting in Congress over the sanctions. That. fighting may be just a prelude, however, to the fighting that will occur in South Africa if the U.S. government is unable to convince the South African government to grant full rights to the black population. By Bill Spindle Last Monday night the Fighting Braves of Michigamua rolled up to a corner near the Union in a U-Haul truck and loaded 25 Young Bucks into the back. Dressed in war paint and beating drums, they began "tapping night," the longest night of the year, the date of the secret society's annual moonlight initiation ritual. Forthe next four hours 25 men who were chosen because of their prominant standing among junior students were driven about town by another 30 or so seniors who are sup- posedly the leaders of this year's graduating class. The initiates were asked to kiss a tree, an especially sacred tree one would assume. They had their backs and faces painted Native American-red with brick dust. They did a few sit-ups-while sitting in five or six inches of the Huron River, which tends to run fairly cold this time of year. They had ice- water poured over their backs. It was a rather warm night for April, about 50 degrees, but that didn't stop many of them from getting damn cold and neither did the campfire which the Young Braves intermittently were allowed to warm themselves at, according to several who were there. At least one was con- cerned about hypothermia (by the way, you're not supposed to know any of this, it's all part of a secret ritual). But when the U- Haul rolled into the Union about 2:30 a.m., all 25 were one step closer to joining the tribe, the mighty Michigamua tribe of senior men From what I hear, all each has to do now is find a squaw for the tribe's semi-formal and meet her there-barefoot, with his socks in his mouth, the last part of the initiation. All in all it was a good night of hazing, maybe not even thatamuch different than the "hell weeks" many fraternaties put their Spindle, an LSA senior, is a former Daily editor in chief. pledges through or the rigamarole one has to go through to join many elite groups. Nobody froze to death, nobody got hurt, nobody even complained publicly, although a few grum- bled in private. Another secret brotherhood was formed, and that was that. Forget that it may very well be a violation of the University's hazing policy and possibly even of state law. No blood, no foul. Perhaps you have heard of the tribe, best known for its major contribution to building the Michigan Union in 1919 and more recently for pissing out the fifth floor windows of that same building during their meetings. Union Director Frank Cianciola apparently put a stop to that practice several years ago. Those two occurrences, in fact, typify the riches-to-rags history of Michigamua, a once- respected and powerful service organization now better known for its rowdy beer drinking and table-banging Monday night meetings. Established in 1902 by a group of Literary College seniors, Michigamua vowed "to foster a spirit of loyalty for our Alma Mater and promote good class fellowship," accor- ding to its charter document. And as it drew members from nearly every campus group, that promise was kept for many years. The group became a creative center of behind-the-scenes action, graduating leaders that not only made Michigamua look good but also the whole University. Gerald (or "Flip- pem Back," in tribe nomenclature) Ford is a member. So is Don "Skywalker" Canham and was Bob "Running Nose" Ufer. Michigamua made real contributions to the quality of student and University life. In recent years the group's reputation has tailed off, but it still attracts a fair number of student leaders. And this is why Monday's initiation is so distressing. Michigamua is not just any campus group, it's a group of student leaders. Two members of the Michigan Student Assembly, a Michigan Daily editor, and senior members from next year's football and basketball teams were all along for Mon- day's ride, either as Young Bucks or Fighting Braves. These people aresupposed to be preventing this type of thing, not' participating in it. The University community officially condemns hazing practices as requirements for joining any organization, defining hazing as "willful; acts, with or without the consent of the in- dividual involved," including kidnapping,, physical injury, humiliation, mandatory ser- vitude, abandonment or intentionally placing a person at risk of severe mental or emotional harm. MSA helped write this policy. The Daily gave it strong endorsement. The basketball and football teams are bound by it. And Michigamua's initiation certainly resembles some of the acts described within it. Five days have passed and the public has heard nothing of the* incident. MSA has no plans to look into it, nor does the Daily. You had to turn past four pages today just to read about it from an unknown LSA senior who obviously carries far less credibility than either of these two organizations. But certainly it could be worse, someone could have been hurt and actually wanted to complain publicly. He could have appealed to MSA-and then looked around the chambers to find people who were there Monday. He could have gone to the Daily, the independent student voice-and found that the person editing the story was also there. He might give up at that point. That didn't happen this time, but wh4t about when it does? What happens when someone wants to complain about a similar incident; whether it involves Michigamua or not? Can he expect MSA or the Daily or any other organization with its leaders in Michigamua to back him up? Can the public expect these organizations to deal with hazing. openly? It's really a shame, if you think about it: an organization which once did so much for the University community, now seemingly working against its interests. The price of 'hotel dorms' oftersdec al iscm Environmental first aid T his week in Crisler Arena and on North Campus Commons, chemical companies, health depar- tments and other experts met to ex- change ideas about implementing locally based hazardous waste awareness programs, and hazardous waste collection sites. The Great Lakes Regional Household Hazardous Waste Disposal Conference was open to students and other concerned citizens who realize that this underpublicized program is significant to the preser- vation of the environment. The Wastenaw County Health Department sponsors hazardous waste collection days, but the disposal of hazardous waste by individual homeowners represents only one part of a serious individual effort to take responsibility for the conservation and protection of natural resources. Ann Arbor overflows with opportunities to get involved in the protection of the environment. The Ecology Center this year extended its services to include. curbside pickup of recyclables that coincide with trash collection days. Food Co-ops are particularly con- scious. Packaging is minimal and stocked products are generally manufactured, grown, or processed through environmentally sound procedures. Shopping at or joining one of the city's Food Co-Ops help to sup- ,port alternate methods of production and promotion and encourages their continuation. The passage of Proposal A, Weatherization as Responsible Main- tenance, in the recent elections suggests a willingness on the part of the Ann Arbor community to weigh environmental costs with economical considerations in an effort to conserve energy. The bottle bill in this city is another example of responsible action that discourages unnecessary waste by providing a practical, workable alter- native. Awareness promotion by the Great Lakes Conference and other organizations is a basic and necessary aim. Knowledge of an existing problem hopefully leads to responsible action that will affect change. By learning how to dispose of lawn chemicals and other potentially hazardous garbage, and by taking time to recycle, and con- sider the effects of personal actions on the environment, every person. contributes to the quality of life in Ann Arbor. By Robert D. Honigman Second in a series of three In response to the increased enrollments of the early '60s, many institutions borrowed millions of dollars to construct modern complexes and high rise halls, some housing as many as 3,800 students under one roof. In designing these facilities, architects placed relatively little emphasis on the user behavior of student oc- cupants, especially with regard to their individual needs and interaction patterns. Con- sequently, by the late '60s, students fled the new struc- tures unless constrained by residence regulations or higher - housing costs in the local community. Reasons for student dissatisfaction were numerous and included lack of privacy and opportunities for solitude, roommate conflicts, inability to control personal space, enforced sociability, and the absence of oppor- tunities to change the in- stitutional atmosphere through a process of per- sonalization. - Charles C. Schroeder, Journal of College Student Personnel, September, 1976 The hotel-like dorm populates most major campuses. The University's prime example is South Quad with its perennial son problems and rowdyism, but Markley and the two North Cam- pus dorms are not small scale either. The philosophy of the hotel-like dorm is very simple - pack as many students as possible into as little space as possible to save money. The hotel-like dorm represents the triumph of administrative ex- pediency over education. To meet the post-war baby boom, univer- sities around the country expan- ded as rapidly as possible, and to find accommodations for in- coming freshmen, the hotel-like dorm was born. At the University, the post-war baby boom meant abandoning The Michigan House Plan, an that a residential community lay at the heart of undergraduate education. World War II provided convin- cing evidence that the German university - after which America's research and graduate universities were pat- terned - failed to educate its students in democratic or even human values and ideals. But as the memory of the War faded, so did the Michigan House Plan. The "baby-boom" is over, but the hotel-like dorms remain, and will probably dominate student housing for another 30 to 40 years. Sadly, the price students pay for these dorms is more than just the discomfort of freshmen and other students who live in them. The University has always been afraid that if off-campus housing became too attractive, it would drain off students from existing dorms. As a result, the Univer- sity has little motive to remedy some of the long-standing com- plaints about off-campus housing - high prices, poor quality, and inadequate transportation and parking. It wants to keep its dor- ms full. Thus, all students, not just those who live in the hotel- dorms, find the University un- cooperative and unresponsive to their housing needs. Since the student population is not expected to increase substan- tially in the coming decade and no new housing is planned, the only solution to the problem of the hotel-like dorm is to consider ways of converting them to a more useful status. The following ideas are not in- tended as final recommen- dations, but only as potential programs which merit some con- sideration. Some of the most serious defec- ts of the hotel-dorm are not inherent in its physical structure - these are the problems of high turn-over, the pre-paid food system, and parking. Most residence halls on main campus have a freshman population of over 50 percent, with the result that the quality of life within these dorms is fixed on a juvenile level. A large number of these freshmen are just passing through - they join the Greek system or make plans to move to off-campus housing - with the result that the social life BLIOOM COUNTY of the residence halls posed of older students is com- trying to enjoy the. relative peace and stability of on-campus housing and a large transient population just passing through. Serious consideration should begiven to setting aside certain residence halls exclusively for freshmen and allowing the remaining halls to serve those who desire a long term residence in University housing. Harvard has successfully used an all-freshmen dorm for over a quarter of a century as part of a well-thought out and highly respected House Plan. Since non- freshmen residence halls will need less advisors, extra ad- visors can be assigned to fresh- man dorms to take the place of missing upperclassmen. A second proposal is for a pay- as-you eat food system for non- freshmen level residence halls - at least on a modified basis. It's demeaning to always be penalized for failure to attend a meal or to be chained to a food system that has never been more than barely adequate, and while it is. administratively, convenient to run a pre-paid food system, a food system should serve people, not people serve the system. A third proposal involved parking. The City of Ann Arbor presently gives out more than 50,000 parking tickets a month, bringing in a revenue of over a quarter of a million dollars a month - and I'm sure students pay a large share of this as defac- to parking fees. Presently, however, University housing officials say that new parking facilities near main campus would be too expensive and that parking is not a high priority matter compared to other needs, such as insulating dormitories, renovating older facilities, etc., but here I think, an argument can be made that the question of priorities should not be made on the basis of sound business judgment (i.e., cost ef- fectiveness). Parking is an integral part of a residential as opposed to a com- muter university. No one would dream of building a first class shopping center and then stinting on parking because it would ruin the effectiveness of the center. But what's the sense of having a world class university if students. who live off campus come as in- frequently as possible, and for as short a time as possible, to main campus? The problem with ad- ministrative values is that you can buy a cheap shirt, or a cheap pair of shoes for someone and tell them you are saving them money - but you may in fact be con- veying another message, that they:. are not worth spending much money on. When the University wanted a new ad- ministrative building it built one with University bonds repaid out of student fees. The ability of students to pay is apparently not a problem if a goal is important enough. A last proposal combines some of the earlier ones into a single program. Post-freshmen residence halls can serve not merely as residences, but also as on-campus social clubs (e.g., dining clubs) for off-campus students. If each post-freshman residence hall provided special parking for non-resident students adjoining the dorm, with free parking going to first year alum- ni of the house, the effect migh* be rather like a fraternity house where not all members need live' in the residence to enjoy social opportunities and group mem- bership. In addition, by providing parking to non-residents (but no residents), dorm-dwellers would be encouraged to move out of the dorms as soon as they had a net- work of friends and an off- campus place to go. Nor is there any reason why fraternity an* sorority members who live off- campus - for a reasonable fee - shouldn't also have dual mem- bership in these residence hall dining-associations with parking privileges. The idea would be to integrate all students into a social network, without restricting their freedom. These are some of the ide* that could transorm even the hotel-like dorm into an in- tegrative force in University life. 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