Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 28, 1987 Students urge study abroad (Continued from Page1)' senior who spent winter term her junior year in York, England said Americans are often seen as "loud, obnoxious, showy people with a camera strapped around their necks and money flying out of their pockets." THE only other portrait they have of Americans is the wealthy characters in "Dynasty and Dallas," Guggenheim said. "You can't fault them for what their media portrays as American." She said she went abroad determined to break down these stereotypes by showing, through her own example, that not all Americans are dollar-driven and loud. "Because you spend a lot of time breaking down stereotypes, you're forced to be more patriotic," Gug - genheim said. The students had little difficulty adjusting to new educational systems. While pursuing their studies as economic majors in England, Jacobson and Gursky said they had the chance to "interact with all the best minds in the country, if not the world." Instead of meeting in crowded University auditoriums, they met privately with professors. And rather than a syllabus and text - books, the students read from a list of recommended primary reading sources. BUT living so far from home does have drawbacks. Elisa McCabe, Residential College senior who studied in Seville, Spain for one year said it was hard to form intimate relationships with for - eigners. The American students lived together in a dormitory and "it was really closed off. We didn't speak that much Spanish inside. If you wanted to learn Spanish you had to make the effort yourself." Sometimes she felt homesick and lonely. Freilich said she occassionally had problems dealing with foreign philosophies. When she visited Morocco, the son of a hostess assumed she was Jewish because he said "the U.S. sympathizes with Israel," therefore all Americans must be Jewish. When she tried to explain, he retorted: "why are you talking? You don't have an opinion you're a woman." But some foreign folkways were easy to adjust to. Among Freilich's favorite traditions are eating a big meal at 2 p.m. and then resting for two hours during siesta. Studying abroad also has practical applications in the job market. "Business is screening for people with a broad liberal arts education and study abroad is part of that," said Kathi Davis,. administrative associate at the Center for Western European Studies. "FOREIGN study is in. I can't imagine any student nowadays graduating from a university such as the University of Michigan without having had the experience of studying abroad. I think it should be a prerequisite," Davis said. "The economies of all our coun - tries are so interwoven. Nothing happens in this world that doesn't affect other people, other countries. I don't see how we're going to survive unless we educate young people to be able to deal with it," she said. According to Davis, the admin - istration is enthusiastic about establishing new programs in a variety of places. Professor researches American culture (Continued from Page 1) "anthropology appealed to my sense of adventure." His first trip to the village of Arembepe, Brazil was in the summer of 1962, between his junior and senior year at Columbia College. He was part of a field study program and there met the woman who later became his wife. SHOR T OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Betty was an anthropology major at Barnard College in New York and a native of Brazil. KOTTACK'S devotion to his work is concealed when he discusses it, but a quote from Assault in Paradise, his book on Brazil,, shows his attachment to his work and to the people he studies. "They are the kind of people that few outsiders will ever have a chance to meet. The anthropologist's special obligation is to tell their story for them." According to Kottak, "Anthropo- logists are more adventurous and also more alienated from their culture and more dissatisfied with their own culture than other people are, so they do like to travel and get to know other cultures." Liberty off State Maple Village . . ..668-9329 ..761-2733 Rent a Car from Econo-Car Kottak's anthropological interests extend beyond today's technology. "If I were alive in the future and if there was intergalactic travel I would be a crew member on the starship Enterprise" to seek and study new civilizations, he said. "Sometimes I think I was born 50 years too late or three centuries too late to see the cultural diversity that an anthropologist could have studied. Or I was born too early to study the intergalactic diversity that may exist," he said. Kottak has two children, a 15- year old son named Nicholas and a daughter Juliet. JULIET, a first-year student in the Inteflex program here, said her father misses Brazil. "At home he sometimes speaks Portuguese; little sayings, kiddingly," she said. "My father likes fitting in well and uses Brazilian jargon (when in Brazil)." She said many of her father's re - search projects are based on their family life. He wrote an article on socio-economic class and swimming that was "a direct result of my father going to swim meets with my brother here and in Brazil." McDonalds, a place where the Kottak family ate when Juliet was a child, was another of Kottak's research projects. Juliet said her father found that Americans go to McDonalds because it is ritual, such as going to church. Americans say certain things, like 'I'll have a Big Mac,' 'can I help you?' and 'have a nice day.' Kottak is currently writing a book and leading a research project based in Brazil. One of the subjects in his book is a cross-comparison of mass media. He thinks American media controls public opinion. An example is the how the media decides what the major issues facing the U.S. are today. For instance, it is ironic that drugs are now the national problem since consumption of drugs such as heroin and marijuana has gone down, Kottak said. LAST year, the problem was child abuse and missing children. "One very interesting thing is that all of the missing children on the milk cartons (last year) have been replaced by football players," he said. Kottak teaches a graduate level class about Madagascar, a Cultural Adaptation course, an American Culture class, and once a year teaches an introductory anthropology course. "I think that it's important that full-time professors teach undergraduates," he said. In his American Culture class, he said, "I want you to imagine a school in a country like Brazil with no extracurricular activities... no bands, orchestra, sports, no school spirit, no jocks, burnouts, or brain." His students laugh while he describes cultural differences. Kottak came to the University immediately after his research in Madagascar. His wife recalls when he was preparing his lectures fQr his very first course at the University in 1968: "He prepared and prepared and spent hours and wrote up long notes for every lecture," she said. He wanted to incorporate so many of his experiences that "he talked way over the kids' heads." During the summer Kottak taught a smaller group; Betty said that's when he learned to teach. According to Kottak's students, he learned well. "He's good, interesting. I like the way he brings in other cultures as examples," Rajal Patel, senior anthropology major, said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Shultz: U.S. halted Iran talks WASHINGTON - Secretary of State George Shultz told Congress yesterday the Reagan administration stopped talking to Iran about U.S. arms after a meeting last month in West Germany, but that it has other ways to discuss mutual interests in containing Soviet expansion. Shultz testified that the Dec. 13 session in Frankfurt was authorized by President Reagan to underscore to Tehran "that any thought on their part that there were going to be further sales of arms, was wrong." He assured the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at an open hearing that there no longer was "any contact in that channel." But, Shultz said, there are other points of contact, including a tribunal in' The Hague, Netherlands, which is considering claims stemming from the takeover of Iran by followers of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeni in 1979. Waite's location still unsure BEIRUT, Lebanon - Fears grew yesterday for Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite, last seen eight days ago when he left for secret talks with Shiite Moslem kidnappers to seek the release of hostages. One report yesterday said Waite was still negotiating. Another said he was placed under house arrest by the Moslems he went to bargain with. Archbishop Robert Runcie of Canterbury said in London he was "greatly concerened" about Waite's safety. Waite arrived in the Lebanese capital on Jan. 12. Since then, 11 more foreigners have been abducted in Beirut. The latest, a Saudi Arabian, was grabbed by gunmen Monday night. Police evacuated eight French teachers from Moslem west Beirut to Christian east Beirut yesterday. Gorbachev suggests system for 'fresh forces into the Kremlin MOSCOW - Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, striking at the heart of the Kremlin power structure, suggested yesterday that the nation needs a system for replacing aging members of the leadership with "fresh forces." In a speech that lashed out at his political opponents in the old guard, Gorbachev called for multiple-candidate lections to regional party posts and suggested a review of the parliamentary election procedure. He also proposed new laws to put teeth into his programs of reform, including legislation allowing people to sue the government and one that is rumored to give the state-run media guaranteed access to officials. Fire forces prisoners from cells PITTSBURGH - Inmates evacuated from their cells because of an accidental fire set blazes throughout the prison yesterday, battled guards and each other and then barricaded themselves inside an auditorium where they started a major fire, authorities said. At least 25 inmates and three guards were injured from fighting or suffered smoke inhalation before all the fires were extinguished, said Thomas Seiverling, spokesman for the State Correctional Institution at Pittsburgh, also called Western Pen. All the inmates were stripped, searched and returned to their cells by early afternoon, officials said. A fire official said bricks were hurled at firefighters from an outdoor exercise yard where guards had held 700 to 800 inmates. EXTRAS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK + __ ' .i r ' ' __ r WEF RENITTO 19 YR. OLD SWUDENTS! " Choose from small economical cars to fine luxury cars. * Special weekend rates. * Pick up services upon request. 0 We accept cash deposits. ECONO-CAR 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ANN ARBOR 4 -'IL gmhe &tso f ?fie Lniversitij L ,brwij C"&44 L9invite ou to hea noted iiuth" an tn4 hma " " * " " " " " "< t' " S "*1 In Pleasing Brides' We feature gowns as shown in Modern Bride and Brides Magazine and all the latest styles. Ca#4&u &4&C4.546 e44e i 0 e " " " " " " " " " Federal court flushes appeal, Carson sitting pretty CINCINNATI - A federal appeals court has upheld a $31,661 award to entertainer Johnny Carson, who successfully sued a Michigan company that used his "Here's Johnny" introduction to promote its portable toilets. A three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously rejected an appeal by Here's Johnny Portable Toilets Inc. In 1983, the appeals court ruled that under Michigan law, Carson has a right of publicity to the phrase "Here's Johnny" used to introduce on his NBC television show. Carson has used the phrase to endorse a line of apparel, and he filed his lawsuit in Jan. 1977 along with the company that markets the apparel. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. (1 e M tchtigan B at! Vol. XCVII -- No.84 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-=-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub - scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. la G 3360 Washtenaw Avenue Mon -Thurs 10-830 Fri. &Sat.10 to 6 "'971-6455 THE BU S STOPS HERE 0 x""9""0e I Editor in Chief............ERIC MATSON Managing Editor...................RACHEL GOTLIEB City Editor.............................CHRISTY RIEDEL News Editor.............JERRY MARKON Features Editor............................AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: Francie Allen, Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura A. Bischoff, Steve Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Brian Bonet, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen, John Dunning, Rob Earle, Leslie Eringaard, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Katy Gold, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Steve Knopper, PhilipI. 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