4C - New Student Editions The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Resident advisors don't get pleasure from writing you up I I By MARIANNA ANDERLE De SYLOR On Dorm Life Sept. 26, 2007 -- Four a.m. is a time for sleeping. It is not a time forMIPs or DPS. It is an hour when my duties as a resident advisor should have paused, and it is certainly not an hour for fire alarms. But there I was, putting on street clothes to go round up my freshmen. A quick secret: All resident advis- ers hate fire alarms. They hate the bureaucracy of the whole ordeal - the standing across the street in the cold, the checking of every room for stragglers and the subsequent $450 fine. RAs - all of them, from the ones who hand out MIPs every day their back-to-school - outfits, I was if you're thinking about banging to the ones who don't care enough alreadypreparingfortheschoolyear. on the vending machine at 2 a.m. to hand out a single one - hate fire RA training started early. By the end, because you know that shaking it alarms. not only was I an acronym fiend, but just a little more will loosen that But as I stepped into the hallway along with my 40 new colleagues, I temptingly cheesy, crunchy bag of and saw the smoke creeping out of had endured the Community Learn- Cheetos, resist. If you're thinking room 4026, I quickly saw that it was ing Experience (the CLE), created there's no place like the hallway no false alarm. door decorations and planned Com- after-party for your spot-on cater- It's a difficult balance - you want munity Building Activities (CBAs). I pillar imitation, desist. Your resi- to be cool, and at the same time, you tried not to appear overeager as the dent adviser, no matter how cool need to maintain the authority that first residents arrived. The Kellys you think he or she may be, is legally pays your room and board. and Jessicas came streaming in, fol- obligated to address any issue that At the beginning of my junior lowed very closely by the minors in violates the community peace. And year, I was assigned to that bunker possession (MIPs). although calling for "backup" (i.e. of bunkers, the cement kingdom on It's not as though RAs enjoy writ- the Department of Public Safety) is the hill, Mary Markley. I thought I ing you up - you almost always earn (in most cases)the resident adviser's was prepared. your punishments. The bottom line prerogative, there are many times Two weeks before most of my is, as much as I hate to do it, it's my when you, the belligerent resident, peers had even started to think about professional duty to catch you. So leave us with no other choice. With the case of the billowing smoke that night, I ignored it. I banged on the door until I felt sure there was no one in the room, and then did mybest to shepherd the rest of the residents out into the street. And while at first it had looked like smoke fromweed,the moreofitthat billowed out from under the door, the more unsure I was. During the year, the seemingly constant fire alarms and smoke in the halls were actually the least of myproblems. Thatyear,"3 a.m.lock- out" was my middle name. I accom- panied residents to the ER more times than the cafeteria has served chicken broccoli bake. I called the Ann Arbor Police Department about Friendly, expert tailoring from jeans to formals Come see what everyone is raving about! a handgun and spoke with the bul- let-proof-vested SWAT team that arrived two minutes later. The truth is, I wasn't much of a badass during my two-year stint as an RA. Although I called DFPS a few times, I only wrote up one per- son myself, and that was because I found her unconscious, tangled in the dirty, community bathroom pipes at Markley. Theoretically, I spent 20 hours a week being an RA, the other 148 being me. But I found I often put my real life on hold - homework or social appointments were second- ary to medical or emotional crises. In a sense, I'm an RA for life, even thoughI felt like an asshole at first. I notice it when I show up at an undergraduate party and am mobbed by throngs of unbeliev- ing ex-residents or when I wake up to early-morning distress phone calls. I had had no idea I could learnto be so clear-minded during emergency situations, a calm mediator to angry disputes, authoritative in the face of inso- lent confrontation. . I now live in an apartment with a very forgiving fire alarm. I can burn candles and incense and even my food. But the strict 'institutional life I led at Mark- ley will remain a crucial part of who I am. The fire alarm turned out to have been set off a group of unruly knaves who unleashed the fire extinguisher, causing huge damage. They didn't really get in trouble. But the boys from 4th Butler, who tried it the next night, did. TAXI From Page 3C Mexican," said Linda, who is Indian. "They get into my cab and throw out every Spanish word they know." Linda said students don't always acknowledge that they're acting racist after making assumptions like that, though. "Everybody thinks of them- selves as noble," she said. Last year, a law school stu- dent said to her, "You must have dropped out in the third grade." Once, a football player got in her cab and said, "OK, so you're a crack whore, right?" Apparently, that one player mad enough of an impression Sqon Linda to make her resent the whole team. "I really love it when the foot- ballteam gets spanked," she said. She still drives the cab, she said, because after putting her- self through school, debt has lim- ited her options. "I am actually held hostage by student loans," Linda said. "That's why I started driving a cab, because I was taking my exams without books." THE MELTINGPOT Ifa statistician were to try to predictwhereUniversitystudents come from based on the sample of studentswhoride withthem,their results would likely be skewed. "If you count every person that goes to school here, it's gotta be fifty percent of the popula- tion coming out of Long Island," Linda said. "How diverse can Long Island be?" Johnson said the diversity among University students was oneofthemostprominentfeatures of Ann Arbor. From the blend of ethnicities to the wide variety of subjects students pursue, Johnson said he has seen it all. "I got a dancer in here one day, a nationally-ranked tennis player in here another and someone in med school doing breast cancer (research)," he said. Despite Johnson's 'rosy out- look on the University's diversity, he said it's far from the ideal mix he would like to see. "The saddest thing I've seen is how few black students there are here," Johnson said. "And it just breaks my heart." Because of this, Johnson, who is black, said he worries that if his teenage daughter doesn't have a flawless academic record and ster- ling recommendations, she may not have achance to get into auni- versity she wants to attend when it's time for her to apply to college. Johnson said that one of the worst incidents he's seen while driving a cab involved racism. He once drove a student home to a fraternity after a football game. When the student got out, a meter maid was issuing a warn- ing because of trash on the lawn. "He talked to her like a dog," Johnson said. "His disrespect for her really ticked me off." He said he couldn't help but thinking that disrespect had to dowiththefactthathewaswhite and she was black. Johnson, who volunteers at a non-profit organization through his church providing mentors for young African-Americans, said that usually when he encounters University students he feels con- fident that they'll contribute to the greater good when they leave the University. "But this guy scared me about our future," he said. "I thought, 'Wow, will this be our governor someday?'" NEED HELP WITH YOUR WRITINGf SWEETLAND WRITING CENTER CAN HELP! Meet one-on-one with Sweetland faculty or peer tutors to work on writing from any course in any discipline. The University of Michigan Thirteenth Annual ONLINE WRITING LAB For online writing feedback, within 48-72 hours, go to http://www.Isa.umich.edu/swc/undergrads/support Visit http://www.sa.umich.edu/swc for more information about the Sweetland Writing Center. Campus Informatior wwwcss.snre. umich.edu www.energymanagement.umich.edu 734 764-INFO www.umich.edulinfo