0.. 9 TeMc iga . Noemer ,S.0 U U U U 0 -w-- - - -W - v Choosing road over resume BykTait Morris ver the past summer, I had the fortunate experience of taking a seven week road trip in a cherry red 1979 Mercedes- Benz station wagon that runs on vegetable oil. It's possible, although it does involve driving slowly, and some- times aimlessly, through towns across the United States. In each city, we asked Chinese restaurants for hand outs of cooking oil, and when we got a yes, went into the standard routine. We pulled out the greasy oil gear, pumped out the tank, re-packed the car, drove to find a suitable place to filter, took our shirts off, got filthy and put the finished product in a gas tank bur- ied under our packs and food. At about 23 miles per gallon (diminishing to nearly single digits in the Rocky Mountains due to the Mercedes's 77 horsepower), a full 25-gallon tank covered about 575 miles of our 2,180-mile trek to Seat- tle from Petoskey, Mich. Those seven dirty summer weeks aren't going to help me land a job, but I learned more riding around with three and sometimes four other shirtless guys in a constantly cramped and smelly station wagon that I ever could have with an internship. My parents instilled in me a great appreciation of both nature and experiential learning. See- ing, climbing and hiking the great American West fulfilled the first. I realized our scale and surround- ings: the natural things around us are amazing, and we (and our petty problems) pale in comparison. We saw deserts, snow, mountains, and rock: beauty right in our country. We had ups (hiking mountains in Colorado) and downs (having to drive on diesel for a few hours on a late Wisconsin night), but we learned how to adapt. My newfound outlook on life involves worrying less, allowingsit- uations to take their natural course and being constantly aware of my surroundings. On at least 10 occa- sions, It car was g violent b the sidec but to hi port and l" 19' T V But it nev Smalle be equall few wroi detours,I times ov did we h was fully certain that the deadline (and one was for a drive-in oing to break down with a movie). We lived carefree. With the ang, leaving us stranded on car's top speed at around 60 mph, of the road, with no option we had no other choice but to take tchhike to the closest air- our time. buy a plane ticket home. My friends and I embraced our youth. Gawkers at our car told us they were jealous, wished they would have taken our trip. Lessons We basked in the interest strang- ers showed in our adventure. The earned in a thrifty lifestyle I adopted gave me ,79 M~ercedes the confidence to emphatically pro- nounce: this is who I am and this is doweed b what I do. w e Y The owner of the car had traded egetable oil his functional Volkswagen Jetta for the Benz and spent $1,500 of a lim- ited budget in order to convert the car. Environmental reform needs to actually happen with our genera- ver happened. tion. We will be inheriting the prob- er worries turned out to lematic planet. Our commitment to ly insignificant. We took a learning by doing made the trip a ng turns, a few hour-long wild success. but we arrived. Only three It was fine that we didn't know ver our seven week trip when we were going to find more ave to be somewhere on a food, where we would sleep on any given night, or where to get oil. These things excited us. We solved these questions with clear rationale and rolled pastthem; we lived in the moment. We took it all in. Opened our sense to America and tuned in. In return we met an array of people and heard their stories. Our Ann Arbor perspectives were constantly challenged and I nowhave agreater knowledge and appreciation for our country. We smiled at the shining sun, washed in rivers and lakes, cooked with the same oil we put in the car, listened to truck drivers and stuck our heads out the window - all to the tempo of Creedence Clearwater Revival and beautiful Colorado afternoons. It's true, what I did last summer can't be summed up in concise bul- let points on my resume, but that's part of the reason why it was worth doing. -Patrick Tait Morris is a junior in the Ford School of Public Policy THE LAST PUFF HOW CLOSE IS MICHIGAN TO BANNING INDOOR SMOKING? U PAGE 4B b a The likelihood of an indoor smoking ban in Mich. SMOKING BAN, FROM PAGE 5B who've never purchase their a very social context," she said, own pack, aren't really smokers - lighting the cigarette in her hand they're social smokers, and Ann and taking the first long drag. "It's Arbor is full of them. terrible." But other students, like LSA Any student at the Univer- sophomore Jessie Lipkowitz, are sity must understand the health anything but social smokers. risks of smoking. They grew up "I have one when I wake up in in a decade when anti-smoking the morning, have one in the after- efforts brought posters showing noon, it'spart of my daily routine," grotesquely destroyed lungs and she said, sitting outside the UGLi celebrities who poo-pooed smok- with a fresh Parliament Full deli- ing with lines like "kissing a smok- cately placed between her fingers. er is like licking an ashtray." Lipkowitz, 19, picked up her "I know smoking is inextricably first pack five years ago, and has linked to heart disease, lung can- been smoking ever since. "In the cer, emphysema. That is all true," beginning I started smoking on Engineering sophomore Matt Zielinski said. "But I still choose to smoke. "It's just like drink- ing alcohol is linked to depres- sion, liver problems. People still choose to drink alcohol. It's a self- destructive behavior. (Smoking) is something I choose to do because of what I get out of it." Students say it's the sense of community - cigarettes as con- versation starters - or the chance to slow down - cigarettes as mini- rewards throughout a hectic day - that keep them puffing away. "It definitely releases stress, too," Zielinski said. "It's a very intense, high-paced atmosphere and smoking a cigarette just calms you down." Lipkowitz and Zielinski, who both come from states that have already enacted smoking bans, believe that the decision to permit smoking should be left up to indi- vidual businesses. "A private business should be able to decide whether or not it wants to allow smoking within its establishment," Zielinski said. "It's unconstitutional." But regardless of whether the ban passes, Zielinski and Lipkow- itz don't believe it will affect them much, they are used to not being able to smoke indoors. Even if the state of Michigan passes a flat out ban, outlawing smoking in every establishment across the state, the smoking com- munity would likely keep puffing away, just out in the cold. As the cigarette's ubiquitous presence on campus shows, the desire to smoke runs deeper than government interference. "I've made it a part of my life- style," Lipkowitz said, flicking the last glowing embers of her ciga- rette to the ground. "I think walk- ing around with a cigarette makes me feel more, well, me." N/ WHAT'S YOUR PERSONAL STATEMENT? E-mail submissions to TheStatement@michigandaily.com