El w w w w w w .... ........ ............. ..... .. ................ ... ....... .. ........ . . . . . . ..... INTERVIEW Continued from Page 24 There's another daughter who's in the graduate program here at the School of Social Work, and my one daughter has just graduated from New York University. D: Do the traveling and public appearances which fill your schedule as the president's wife make your role as a professor more difficult? S: Definitely yes, that's why I only work part time. You have to understand that I really choose to teach. The University has been very supportive of my own work, and to a large extent I have made a choice myself to participate as the wife of the president. I've learned a lot, and I think it's been helpful to me and helpful to the University. D: Would you say that your position as a faculty member makes your role as the wife of the president different? S: Yes, I think it keep me in touch with students. You forget that you are in a community where the major part is 18-26 years old. I used to say it was sort of like reading comic books- only the reader gets older. It's very helpful to be in touch with what younger people are thinking about things. Also, I hear what faculty people are thinking about as colleagues. Sometimes it's difficult because I'm really mainly a listener; I'm certainly not a doer. I can listen, but I can't really respond. And I don't try to. I think it's best all around if I just participate in my special field. D: Have you found that your colleagues come to you in hope that you'll communicate their concerns to your husband? S: I think they do, but what I try to do is, if somebody really wants to ask me something, I usually try to help them get in touch with who I think they ought to be getting in touch with. D: Your free time must be very limited, what do you do when you r --s Normandie Flowers 1 for 1 Carnations WITH THIS COUPON (Good Until 4/4/87) one customer per week 1104 S. University 9%-1811 have free time? S: Free time is really rare, es- pecially at certain times of the year. Really free time we like to spend with family and friends. We like to bike ride and walk, and we like to travel. D: You are one of a minority of women faculty members at the University, do you think this makes your position at all different than a male faculty member's? S: I'm not the best person to ask about that - I came late to the academic world as a career. I also only work part-time, and I don't have a tenured position. I do think that there are some oustanding women on the faculty, and I think that this year a large percentage of the faculty hired in LSA are women. I do think that they're really valued in the University, but they have to work very hard. They may also be married and have children, and they have to compete in a very equal manner with men. I think they do, but I think it's very difficult to put it all together. D: Do you think the lack of women faculty hurts female undergraduates in terms of having role models? S: I don't know. I think there are increasing numbers of role models. One of the things that I see happening is that many young women do have the aspiration to, members at a University is another issue. I believe that we are responsible to encourage them to get a higher education. D: You are in a unique position as a professor and wife of the Uni- versity's president, do you have any input or say in administrative decisions? S: This is a very complex in- stitution - there are 15 or 17 colleges, and each college is structured with a dean and many decisions are made within the college by the faculty. The kinds of situations which come up there I really don't know much about. But I am very interested in issues of how a community lives together, like the situations we have seen recently. I think it's important to support an environment where people can talk about different things. I try to provide an op- portunity for that. I do, in the sense that the house is a place where people can meet. That's probably not very clear, but the University is a very different kind of organ- ization. It's a body of self- governing groups, so really a president's wife doesn't really get involved in all of those levels of academic or organizational de- cisions. U LOGIE Continued from Page 24 Liberace - No question about it. Furs, rhinestones, rings, feathers, and candelabra everywhere. This man understood the word lavish, and pushed its definition to new peaks. The B-52s - Check the hairdos. Check the goofy skirts. Check Fred in the big-ass suits. And tell me you don't want to look like that, at least some of the time? RUN-D.M.C. - The hats are classic, and the heavy-duty commitment to leisure wear provides a welcome respite from necktie-mongerers. Parliament-Funkadelic - Must be seen to be believed. Check out the album covers next time you're at the local disc-o-mat. The Detroit Tigers at Ti- ger Stadium - They look so good, with the Old English "D" on crisp, white polyester. Normal people should be allowed to go to work dressed like this, but I'd skip the protective cup. Harpo Marx - Nice over- coat, nice hat, nice hair, nice horn. The Gabor Sisters - Cumulatively, these women are the feminine equivalent of Liberace. Gaudy, gaudy, gaudy, but let's face it, a whole lot of fun. Transvestites - Anyone with a shred of honesty will admit that deep down, these people are in to su ac H A in th th D Pi 310 s C z w xU to ABOVE: Party dress, $325. Silver gloves, $18. Both available at Patr a Miles. Model: Kackna Levad. RIGHT: Graphic print dress, $135. Available at L'Lltima. Earrings, $60. Available at Patricia Miles. Model. Shannan Gibb. ommumcate! By Seth Flicker WHEN I WAS IN FIFTH GRADE, I got Dynamite Magazine from the Scholastic Book-of-the-Month Club. In the back of one issue (I think it was the one with the Bay City Rollers on the cover) there was an application to get a penpal. I filled it out and in a few weeks I got a letter from California. It came in this small pink envelope. When I opened it up I found a letter on the same pink stationery with an image of Holly Hobby on it (which I obviously did not admire at the time). The handwriting was small and perfect and its author's spelling was flawless. Needless to say, I was very disap- See PROLOGUE, Page 10 THE BQ $SHOPPE. America's Professional Boxing Team PACKING. SHIPPING. STORING. MOVING. 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