w w w w w lw mw mw MICH-ELLANY A moment of silence with the TV BOOKS The slow, painful restoration of a city of treasures INTERVIEW Gerald Linderman Prof. worries that students will forget the lessons of America's wars History Prof. Gerald F. Linderman teaches what may be one of the University's most popular courses, "Twentieth Century American Wars as Social and Personal Experience." A Yale graduate with post-graduate degrees from Northwestern, Linderman, 52, worked for the Foreign Service in Africa and India. The Wisconsin native came to the University in 1969 and has since written two books. "All of my work is focused on the ways in which we as a society fight our wars as those ways reflect our values and our social assumptions," he says, quietly, carefully. He was interviewed by Daily staffer Susanne Skubik. Daily: Your class on American wars is very crowded. Students sit in the aisles and demand more sections. Why is it so popular? Linderman: Well, I think that's a difficult question and perhaps it's one better asked of those in the class than of me. I do enjoy immensely the oppurtunity to teach here, and perhaps something of that feeling makes its way through what I say. When a talk works, and when the students participate with you to help make it work, it's extraordinarily satisfying, as satisfying or more satisfying than anything else that I do. It might be too that the topic is a rather important one, both because students wonder whether they'll be compelled to participate in war and because war permits you to teach veryfundamental matters. I think that's one of the reasons that that course is so attractive to me-it permits you to teach power and love; it permits you to teach force and persuasion, collective and individual experience. D: That's important stuff, sure. Is the class getting more popular? L: Well, it was getting out of hand, so that I could scarcely see those who sat in the last rows. And it was at that point that I decided to break the course in two, and to teach first in the early morning and then again in the early afternoon. I think it's working out better, at least that it's no longer so large that I have to worry about the size inhibiting student participation. D: How do you characterize today's student attittudes and how do they compare to those of earlier generations? L: Student attitudes are today are very different from those that prevailed when I arrived. In 1969 and 1970, a significant number of students involved themselves in anti-Vietnam War protests and the Black Action Movement strike and the drive to establish a student-affiliated bookstore, and so on. And the atmosphere was one in which, for example, that stretch limousine filled with sorority pledges that I saw on campus several weeks ago would have been wildly out of place. Some of that -agitation entered into the classroom, so student challenged you as they do not today. They compelled you to defend what you said. They required you to explain yourself at points that you simply wanted passed on. It was sometimes tense, but it was often very Continued on Page 11 THANKSGIVING. A TIME for families to come together, to share. Isn't that why we go home in the first place? To share that closeness with our families? I remember a special moment I shared with my Dad last year. We both looked at the turkey, and we didn't need to say a word. Later I struggled to put that feeling into words: "Dad, doesn't the turkey look good?" He just nodded his head. That is Thanksgiving. But it is something more. Thanksgiving is reflection... Dad: "Remember last year's turkey?" Me: "Yup." Thanksgiving is a time to look around us and be thankful for everything we have. Many families have a moment of silence before they eat their meal, a communal moment of reflection. We decided that every year we'd have our moment of reflection in front of the television. During an important play of the football game we all become very quiet. Turns out that we have two or three moments of silence. And why not? We have a lot to be thankful for. Last year my uncle got a new TV with the "zoom" feature. It gives you a perspective you just can't get with OFF THE WALL I need a date. Good-looking male senior. (replies) ARE YOU ONE? OR ARE YOU LOOKING FOR ONE? It doesn't matter-it is a stupid statement. It is a ridiculous way to try to get a date. Please save this desk for mind-bending statements, not stupid ones. -Angell Hall I am a male virgin looking for a female virgin. I live in MoJo - PLEASE FIND ME!! (in reply) I AM A MALE VIRGIN THAT HAS GIVEN UP. THE WORLD IS A REALLY SHITTY PLACE. -Graduate Library Why did I come? This class is so depressing, it is too sad for words. I do want to cry. Can we leave now Mom? I feel like I'm at the dentist. Oh no, don't do that please- -Angell Hall LIVE EVERY DAY AS IF IT IS YOUR LAST ONE DAY YOU WILL BE RIGHT -Angell Hall Dandelions don't tell no lies Dandelions will make you wise -Graduate Library MIKE FISCH an ordinary TV. Last Thanksgiving my Dad gave a short speech before the meal. Something about how important it was for us to realize that there were people who, even as our turkey was being cut, had nothing to eat. And what a turkey it was. The stuffing was a little bit dry, but with a lot of gravy it was okay. *@" I didn't go to the Michigan-Iowa game, but on my way home from the library that day I saw a family that had definitely been there. The father had on a Wolverine beanie, and the mother was wearing maize and blue plaid polyester slacks. "Who won the Michigan game?" I asked. There were about five seconds of silence before the mother finally said to her husband, "Honey, I think he's kidding." The father started telling me about the game- winning field goal, but the mother cut him off as if he was just being gullible: "C'mon, Dick, he's got a Michigan sweatshirt on." I explained that I really was not at the game, that I was studying for a midterm, but she still wasn't fully convinced. As the father told me the final score shejust shook her head. It just didn't seem possible. Each of the children in my family has a Bar Mitzvah book with his name engraved on it; inside are pictures of his Bar Mitvah that the family can cherish year after year. It's sort of like a wedding book, but instead it documents your Bar Mitzvah, your shining moment. The strange thing about my Bar Mitzvah book is that it has no pictures of me in it. There are pictures of the floral arrangement at the temple, a potato pancake, the bartenders and a group shot of the people who served the hors d'oeuvres. My brother Steven's book has a picture of him on almost every page, which doesn't really bother me because the photographer at my Bar Mitzvah probably didn't know which of us was the Bar Mitzvah Boy. My Mom says the photographer was my uncle, but I only see him once a year-on Thanksgiving. Venice By Peter Lauritzen, with photographs by Jorge Winski and Mayotte Magnus. Adler and Adler, $29.95 Disasterous flood water swirled through the beautiful canals of Venice in 1966 and 1967, flooding the piazzos and stripping frescos from the walls of residences on the lagoon. The threat that this aqua alta brought to the city's historic art and architectural treasures drew international attention. For the first time in centuries, the world became concerned with the long-needed resoration and reconstruction of Venice. Foreign committees began working on raising funds for preservation, but scattered and disorganized, they were ineffectual. Eventually their attempts were joined into a single effort spearheaded by the United Nation's Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). UNESCO brought the project to the attention of the Italian authorities, mobilizing the rescue mission. UNESCO's role was passive. They catalogued the damage, listing hundreds of paintings, sculptures, Preserved frescoes, palaces, churches, convents and schools in need of restoration, and in 1969 published its "Rapporto su Venezia." This was the beginning of the restoration by the Venice in Peril Fund. "Venice Preserved" is a record of the reconstruction funded by the Venice in Peril Fund during the last two decades. The 200 photographs, 100 in color, together with Lauritzen's narrative list, show in great detail the buildings restored by the Fund and those awaiting restoration. Most of the photographs are beautiful, especially the color ones, covering a wide range of architectural periods. There are some shots of "local color" that look like space fillers, and the absence of a city .map is a major shortcoming with the book. Getting a feel for the geography of Venice is difficult. Architecture andsmuseum fans will be interested in the detailed descriptions of the restoration process. The various techniques devised in Venice to clean oil and petroleum from stonework, to preserve statues from pollution from the nearby factories and to clean candle soot from frescoes are all described. As a history of Venice, including the recent times, "Venice Preserved" is a good reference to have. It gives travelers an idea of what the citizens themselves live with, and how they cope with the lack of housing, a bureaucratic government, and the difficulty in obtaining building permits to make repairs or install plumbing. Tourism, Venice's main industry, has faltered due to fears of terrorism, straining already shakey municipal finances. This summer the Venetian government, for the first time, has decided to advertise their city to tourists. "Venice Preserved" is not a book for everyone. The lengthy explanations of cleaning processes are for professionals, although they can be understood by lay persons. Architects and historians will get the most out of it, but travelers to Venice would also learn a great deal about the city from this volume. At first glance, "Venice Preserved" looks like the kind of book you might find on your neighbor's coffee table, but a closer reading will prove that the preservation of Venice is a long and compex story. It's been written about clearly and succinctly in this book, and it's worth a look. -Rebecca Cox Sc Don 't You not time t -Yearbo Four more days Nov. 3- 2209 Mi EN 662-3" CHRYSER ,"A family trod for over 36 y '79 CAMARO automatic, 56,000 miles. $995 '80 PLYMOUTH HORIZON $695 '76 DODGE DART $395 '86 TOYOTA COROLLA LE 4-door. $8995 PRINT FROM THE PAST April 8, 1969: Ann Arbor Councilman Nick Kazarinoff (left) laughs it up with Mayor Bob Harris at an election party. Both were victorious. THE DAILY ALMANAC Buy one Whopper sandwich, get another of Stadium Blvd. m Eisenhower Briarwood * Mal , lg Victors Way I4 15 years ago-October 30, 1971: Tens of thousands of spectators fell silent during the halftime of the Michigan-Indiana football game as an anti-war observance was conducted, in conjunction with that year's homecoming theme: "Bring all the troops home now. Let's have a real homecoming this year." Anti-war veterans released 100 black balloons, each representing 15,000 Asian and American war deaths. The observance was in sharp contrast to the preceeding portion of the halftime show, which featured selections from Lawrence Welk and "Jesus Christ Superstar." University officials agreed to permit the anti-war program in the stadium after a petition signed by 1,500 people-including two-thirds of the football team-was presented to the administration. The other Venice: Factories pollute the city's canals and contaminate the air, damaging art and architecture. PAGE 10 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 31, 1986 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 31, 1986