PNe STiDin aTig NEW STUDENT EDITION ,. ... _ Y x - ., .. Section . Wednesday, September 3, 1997 Let go, open up, iscover new paths in college Campus activism ar from a dead issue "Everything our parents told us was good is bad: sun, milk, red meat, col- lege." -Woody Allen, 'Annie Hall," 1977 hile we're all aware of pre- mature aging and high cho- lesterol, even comic genius Allen missed the boat on the popular conception of college. It's a truly unique experience, no matter if you're on the "four-years-is-all-I-can-stand-please- get-me-the-hell-out-of-here-ASAP" plan or you intend to milk higher educa- tion for all it's worth. For most students, college is their first chance to determine a schedule of work and play, set their o curfews, and exanine the possibili- t f subsisting entirely on beer and Skittles - a time for drafting their own declaration of independence. In the process, you may well discover that a good number of the things your parents told you were good are bad; political ideologies, religious beliefs, ideas of a "worth- while" degree, '1re and perspectives on sex, feature films and the job market are all likely to waver from the gospel ERIN according to Mom MARSH and Dad. MARSH Going home MADNESS again will proba- bly not be the same. Lots of people and places you found delightful amusing are no longer so delight- and amusing. You might face some flack from the home team for the ways in which you've evolved, but remem- ber: The growing you experience grad- ually is a sudden shock to the crowd that's missed the transition. It doesn't have to be a problem. Changes are often accompanied by some degree of stress or anxiety - and at times this anxiety is a powerful force - but part emerging from the University an llectually mature person requires some challenging. Your University experience may include heavy-duty examination of yourself, your parents, your plans and your dreams. That's OK. That's the way it should be. A lot of it is about letting go. No one is exempt from this. Somewhere right now, First Daughter Chelsea is packing up her posters, giv- a last look around her White House oom, and kissing Bill, Hillary and Socks goodbye. Chelsea's already made strides: She bucked Yale (the perennial favorite of presidential offspring) to soak up some rays at Stanford. Consider yourselves lucky - you don't face the daunting task of defying a dad who leads the free world. But Chelsea - like the rest of us - will inevitably choose different paths and take on new perspectives when she leaves home. 'I refuse to live in a place where the only cultural advantage is that you can turn right on a red light."-W Allen Part of the challenge and discovery will happen as a result of mingling your views with those of others. These late-night, informal, occasionally intoxicating (or intoxicated) debates can run the gamut from serious to Oiously hilarious; some can inspire great conversation and insight, while others, um, won't. Predictions: You will insist it's "soda" or insist it's "pop." You will engage in the East Coast vs. Midwest discussion maddeningly frequently, and eventually realize that - guess what! - everybody comes from some- where and somewhere is not located all in the same state or region. Wielding a e polo mallet in such discussions I get you nowhere, nor will pledg- ing inferiority or superiority win points. Give others the same freedom of opinion for which you strive. Enjoy your differences. Save the insult-swap- ping for issues of importance, like the Michigan-Ohio State football game. Moreover, the variety of people you encounter will open doors and open your eyes. Do a lot of listening, and serve carefully - the subtleties of human interaction will probably teach you more about life than anything you'll record in a blue book. The most startling, amazing and important lessons I learned at the University will not be inscribed on my diploma. Most of all, use this time to assess the roads that have brought you here By Partha Mukhopadhyay Daily Editorial Page Writer If you look beyond the United States, dramatic images of student activism remain in full flight. From the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989 to the streets of Seoul and Sarejevo earlier this year, massive showings of student power have graced American television screens. But here, at home, where the streets lack similar activity, stu- dents are compared to the previous generation, and found lacking. And the question, "Is student activism dead?" is tossed around like a football. In a way, asking this question is unfair - the previous generation had a civil rights movement in full swing, an undoubtedly corrupt president and a wildly unpopular war to protest. This generation, on the other hand, is left with the spoils of their tri- umphs, however small, and the relative comfort brought about by their efforts. According to those who believe student activism has breathed its last breath in the United States, that paradox is the very problem with student activism these days - the overrid- ing concerns present in earlier days have largely vanished, leaving today's students few obvious issues to contest. By way of compari- son, "Have cause, will protest" might well have been a motto for the 1960s. The issues were very public, protests very easy to join and very attractive to stu- Student a has not d rather, a else, the activists of the 1960s and early 1970s worked on truly national issues - civil rights demonstrators in Washington or Chicago marched to change conditions for black Americans across the United States. Protesters against the Vietnam War worked to end a conflict affecting both U.S. mnetropolises and isolated Vietnamese villages. As the 1960s ended, and the Vietnam Wa'r slowly wound ledbut down, the face of activism - especially college students' ivolvedE involvement in such activities - changed. In 1970, the first Black Action Movement occurred on the University campus. Beginning March 20, activists proclaimed a general strike against the University. Over the next 10 days, class attendance dropped severely, as black activists lob- bied on behalf of minorities. For compelling the University to set a goal of a 10 percent minority population, BAM I is considered among the high points of student activism in Univcrsity history. The action's goals and effects. as compared to another campus activism highlight - the Vietnam War teach-ins conducted during the 1 )C0s - serve as an early sign of the direction student activism was to take. Protests against Vietnam concerned an issue affecting the whole country., By way of comparison, the direct effcts of BAM 1 served only to improve and expand the role of minorities on the Ann Arbor campus. While the action may have helped stu- dents at other universities, the goals set by those activists were local, rather than national in scope. Over the subsequent 27 years, student activism has largely followed the example set by RAM I and the tenet, "think globally, act locally." In the 1990s, student activism rarely puts forth a con- certed effort against national issues. Even when See ACTIVISM, Page 2B dents. Furthermore, the causes attracted sustained interest. Protests over the war lasted from its earliest days to its bitter end. Minorities and their supporters struggled throughout the 1960s and into the next decade to receive the rights accorded them under the Civil Rights Bill of 1964. Perhaps above all EoUALIZING OPPORTUNITY .... ........ . i Mill I " or the University to achieve excellence in teaching and research in the ears ahead, for it to serve our state, our nation world, we simply must achieve and sustain a campus community recognized or its racial and ethnic diversity." - Former University President James Duderstadt Taken from the foreword to "The Michigan Mandate," and the March, 1990 ' should fight for campus diversity By Jack Schillaci Daily Editorial Page Writer The University likes to brag about campus diversity. Reading through the dozens of flyers and bulletins first-year students received this summer, they no doubt read about the University's efforts to enhance the learning experience by seeking out a diverse campus popula- tion. Campus diversity is important - it contributes significantly to the University's academic mission. Diversity has made a significant enhancement to campus by expand- ing students' learning experience beyond the classroom. It allows stu- dents to learn about the wealth of unique cultures, beliefs and ideas of people from a myriad of different backgrounds. But campus diversity comes neither easily nor without opposition. In many ways, maintaining it has proven to be a constant battle. Protests, arguments and heated shouting characterize the debate sur- rounding affirmative action, one of the backbones of the University's diversity University campus vastly more diverse and have opened up previ- ously unavailable opportunities to women and underrepresented minorities. The mandate has helped diversify the University campus by increasing minority enrollment by more than 10 percent between 1988 and 1994. The programs' detractors claim that what the two programs implement is' lit- tle more than reverse discrimination - giving minorities the upperhand over non-minorities that previously enjoyed benefits of institutionalized racism and sexism. Opponents of affirmnative action view anti-discrimination laws as ample to guarantee a gender- and color- blind world. If onlyit were that simple. Making discriminatory policies illegal does not eradicate their requisite beliefs. Vestiges of previous racism and sexism such as the "good old boys' network" exist today, making it difficult for women and minorities to get equal opportunities, despite anti-discrimina- tion laws. University admissions poli- cies look go beyond measuring appli- cants based on test scores and grade FILE PHOTOS Above: Marchers proceed down South University Avenue on Martin Luther King Day. The University is home to one of the country's largest Martin Luther King Day commemorations, hosting a variety of speeches, forums and panel discussions, as well as a tra- ditional march moving down South University Avenue to the Diag. Right: Engineering senior Delano White gags himself with a white cloth last January as part of "A Day Without Diversity," an event organized by some minority students to protest what they saw as a dishonest discussion of race by students and administrators. Rep. Deborah Whyman (R-Canton Twp.) called "clearly illegal" policies factoring race into admissions deci- sions. Whyman and the other three - Reps. David Jaye (R-Washington Twp.), Michelle McManus (R- Traverse City), Greg Kaza (R- Rochester Hills) - have set out to find an affirmative-action martyr. They want someone who feels they Court of Appeals decision in Hopwood v. University of Texas Law School. In the case, the court decided that using race as a factor in higher- education admissions violated anti- discrimination laws. But the legislators do not pose the only judicial threat to affirmative action's continued use. In the U.S. Supreme Court's next term, starting in October, it will face a case that could But without such programs, all of the benefits of diversity are blocked. The University of California system ended the use of affirmative action in admissions more than a year ago and since, the number of minorities in the university's graduate programs have plumetted - proving that affirmative action does indeed support a diverse campus. Beside the barrage of attacks being I r