pinion Page 8 Wednesday, May 20, 1981 The Michigan Daily Hillsdale: Somewhere in time I You've just arrived at Hillsdale College, and the first sight you see is pickets. Funny - pickets at Hillsdale. Like seeing tropical birds at the North Pole. Maybe a dozen of them, carrying ban- ners and signs protesting the commen- cement visit of Secretary of State Alexander Haig. You've returned to - _~ - - _ - Coming Apart lB Christopher Potter your alma mater to cover the secretary's graduation address, and at first you wonder if you've landed in the right town. A closer look at the demonstrators reassures you of locale. The participan- ts aren't really demonstrating at all: no chants, no marches - no movement whatsoever, in fact. They're not even waving their placards. They stand forlorn and silent, self-consciously aware of just how out of place they are in this particular setting. For Hillsdale is different. You drive into this tiny community (pop: 8,000), and you realize you'd forgotton how astonishingly lovely the place is. The town nestles bucolically in the low hills of southern Michigan - Untouched, unchanging. If there's ever an atomic war, Hillsdale will survive - no one will ever find it. The town's high trees arch privevially over its quiet streets - their branches so thick and lush they touch at mid-street, forming a dark, green cathedral that almost blots out the sun; Ann Arbor's fabled elms and maples seem callow sprigs by comparison. Hillsdale is an inveterate seductress; you feel you're driving through a resplendent time warp - an American Brigadoon. The college itself is no less mermeric. Hillsdale's campus spans little more than one, large square block; its snythesis of modern and 19th-century red-brick buildings never clashes, merely heightens the silent aura of the scores of trees that envelop the college like a giant womb. One strolls through this serenity, and instinctively senses T he Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 11-S Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Am~rerica alone HIS COUNTRY'S refusal to sign a proposed international code restricting the marketing of infant formula adds little lustre to an American foreign policy already tarnished The code, which contains no legal force behind it, urges individual nations to reject high-powered sales campaigns by formula- manufacturers aimed notably at the populations of Third World countries. Critics of infant formulas claim the effect of such super- salesmanship has been to discourage mothers around the world from breast-feeding their babies, thus depriving them of the most nutritious form of infant nourishment. Moreover, the critics assert, the lack of clean water and adequate medical knowledge in many developing nations adds grave health peril-formulas improperly mixed or blended with contaminated water can trigger serious and even fatal infant diseases of varying kinds. The United States stands totally alone among all nations in opposing the new code. The Reagan administration abhors the philosophy of corporate regulation, either at home or abroad; to urge international restric- tions-even without the force of law-on the policies of private companies apparently strikes the White House as the height of in- decency. Free enterprise is free enterprise. America thus stands exposed to the scorn of the world-impervious to human suffering, ap- parently beholden only to the claims of the rich and powerful. And we wonder why terrorism flourishes. Equality for all To the Daily: I am responding to the comments of Karre L. Slakin '(Daily, May 7) in which she responded to the letter from Ms. Malika A. Mutakabbir (dated April 17). Ms. Mutakabbir states that because of her undergraduate experience at the University "as a minority" having been permeated with racism, she can "understand why Leo Kelly Jr. allegedly reacted the way he did!!" Slakin responds by saying, "What nonsense!" any by ex- pressing her "great pity" for Ms. Mutakabbir. Well, Ms. Slakin, keep your pity beacuse we brothers and sisters don't need it. What we do need is equality! In reading the write-up in the Daily concerning the history of Leo Kelly, Jr., I noticed that his home was firebombed while he was in Houston. Coincidentally, an article appeared in the paper stating that the Vietnamese who had settled in Texas were likewise having their homes and boats firebombed by the KKK. The Klan now threatens further violence if the Viet- namese do not vacate the premises by mid-May, when the shrimp season begins. Now I ask you, if one of these Vietnamese were to return this violencehborn of racism to the white com- munity at large, would he be a criminal? Or would he be a racially persecuted person "whose actions might be "un- derstood" by others? As it is difficult for the vast sea to realize or even care that a single fish in its depths is starving, so is it likewise dif- ficult for the majority race to realize its minorities are star- ving: starving for freedom, for equality and happiness - and yes, even starving at the University of Michigan.. -Jasper F. Ferguson May 12 there has to be something special about Hillsdale. The college's overlords agree. They think Hillsdale is very special - so special they never cease talking about it. You arrive at the press area of last Saturday's commencement exercises, and the college PR flack immediately hands you a publicity packet. You begin to read, and you swiftly realize that nothing has changed at Hillsdale since your own days of matriculation - nothing at all. "Since 1975 Hillsdale College has been courageously waging a principled battle against the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to preserve its private autonomy and freedom ... . "(Hillsdale) has never accepted governmental funding of its operations... freedom of the mind it- self is at stake .. . "Pervasive, uniform governmental control means a monolithic oneness, a sameness, an enslaving conformity that denies individuals the freedom to ho different." Whew.Still fighting the good fight. Hillsdale would simply lose its purpose if it couldn't e a martyr The school has been playing the sufferer's role for years, righteously milking the David vs. Goliath mystique for all it's worth in publicity and in alumni contributions. You see, Hillsdale doesn't accept federal aid. Not one penny. To do otherwise would go against the school's doctrine that the federal government is the malignant personification of all that is evil in our nation. No intrusive regulations, no stifling dicta - Hillsdale toughs it out on its own. It's enough to warm the cockles of every heart on Wall Street. And warm they do. A lavishly colored brochure overflows with tributes from conservative luminaries: "Hillsdale is one of the truly exciting liberal arts colleges in America, vibrant with en- thusiasm for learning" - Williai F. Buckley, Jr. "I take my hat off to the school" - William E. Simon. The brochure declares with prim self-congratulation: "From New York to Honolulu, we have come to be regar- ded as one of the nation's most exciting campuses." In still another leaflet, Hillsdale president George Roche III assures us "Hillsdale College will con- tinue to fight the battle to preserve the individual's secular and religious right to be different, to make choices, and to follow the honest and moral dictates of his or her own heart." Funny. That's not the Hillsdale you remember.Might not a college so stridently, flamhoyantly political be obscuring the educational purpose it ostensibly exists to serve; more crucially, can an institution so locked into a rigid ideological mindset really pursue "the individual's secular and religious right to be different?" No, it can't. The doleful memories come flooding back, as you sit waiting for Saturday's ceremony to begin, and you ponder how difficult it is for an orgnization to practice what it presches. End of Part One Christopher Potter is the Summer Daily editorial direc- tor. Y i t ---,r+e . i > V U _. ! 1 ' . . 6