I OPINION Page 4 Thursday, October 16, 1986 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVII, No. 31 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Welfare r PUTTING WELFARE into the hands of the federal government will abolish state determination of payment amounts and criteria, thus reducing disparity among states and creating a fairer system. A federal base welfare payment would adjust benefits for cost of living in each state and would provide uniform requirements. For example, a mother of two children receives a maximum of $164 a month in Arkansas, the second poorest state in the nation, while she could receive $579 a month if she lived in ,Suffolk County, N.Y. Twenty-six states refuse payment to families when the father lives at home. This situation encourages migration to higher benefit states, such as Michigan, where the average Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) payment topped $419 last summer, considerably higher than Illinois and other surrounding areas. Federal standards would correct Wiesel APPROPRIATELY, Elie Wiesel, a survivor of the Nazi death camps, has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In his books and lectures, Wiesel has sought to recount his personal experiences and losses during the holocaust, in an effort to maintain an awareness of Hitler's atrocities and deepen an understanding of human suffering. It is important, however, to recognize Elie Wiesel's commitment to oppressed peoples everywhere, as well as to the memory of the Holocaust victims. He has made it his responsiblity to address existing injustices in the world, encouraging universal tolerance and peace. Wiesel has appealed to the Soviet government for 21 years to allow the emigration of Jewish and non-Jewish dissidents from the Soviet Union. e spons1 1 such inequities. High benefit states such as Michigan and New York will be less attractive to those running away from unemployment and insubstantial welfare in lower- paying states. People who feel they are paying for other states' poor, pressure local politicians into cuttting welfare. It is politically expedient to cut payments since welfare recipients are not a powerful voting bloc. But decreasing high-welfare states' payments hurts the poor in that area rather than addressing the national problem.. Making the federal government responsible for meeting the needs of the people will broaden the welfare base and force the issue to the top of the national agenda. A potentially united welfare constituency could be a strong lobbying power with a central - target, the federal government. S prize He also had attempted last year to prevent President Reagan's wreath- laying ceremony at the Bitburg cemetery in West.Germany, where former members of Hitler's SS are buried. He has tried to draw attention to the suffering in Cambodia and South Africa, as well. Wiesel is a professor of the humanities at Boston University, and spends time lecturing at other universities. During his visit to University of Michigan last year, Wiesel made few comments about the Holocaust directly, and spoke of current events and attitudes. He sought to inspire his listeners to have faith in the good that exists in human nature, and not to despair in the face of intolerance and persecution. It is a message to take to heart. Hunger By Nancy Johnston Maybe an Ann Arbor streetperson isn't as pity-inspiring as a wide-eyed African child, but they are both malnourished and hungry. And maybe it's more heart- rending to think that an entire town or region, or even country is starving than to think about the people on line at the local soup kitchens. This isn't to downplay the problem of world hunger, but to point out how much we desensitize ourselves to the hunger that we live next to. In 1985, the same year that USA for Africa raised millions of dollars to combat world hunger, the Physicians Task Force found that 20 million people in the U.S. "may go hungry at least some period of the time every month." This hits every section of society, every race, ethnicity, and region of the country. It could be a starving family of ten, it could be an elderly widow living alone. It could be someone who is unemployed and unable to move to places where there are jobs, or it could be someone who is working full time trying to support themselves and their dependents (two million people classify as full-time "working poor"). It could be the people sleeping at Briarwood mall, who found themsleves being stepped over by scores of people boarding buses last May 26 to go to HANDS ACROSS AMERICA in Bowling Green, Ohio. The only factor they may have in common is that they are all hungry, below the poverty line ("the cost of a minimally adequate diet when funds are extrememly low") and that they are not in a position physically, emotionally, or socially to do the fighting needed to change their situation. Even though the number of people below the poverty line has risen steadily since 1979, social programs for the hungry have been faced Johnston is member of PIRGIM'S Domestic Hunger Task Force. with funding cuts since 1981. The burden falls to private organizations whose limited resources are being overloaded. Hunger doesn't only affect the hungry, either. Hunger has been linked to mental retardation and to crime. Anyone who pays taxes is then funding the consequences through law enforcement and jails and state homes for both the mentally retarded and crime prone. It would certainly make more sense, and be far more humanitarian to fund programs to eliminate hunger and poverty in the first place. Programs for the needy do exist, but are downplayed in the media and in legislative sessions. Instead of looking at the impact of the programs (food stamps were depended on by 21 million people in 1984) and the successes they have accomplished in providing aid to the poor, the abuses in the system are talked up and people are led to believe that these programs are unnecessary and expensive to the taxpayers. Problems do exist, of course, but the answer isn't to annihilate these programs! WE need to straighten them out, or find alternatives, but we must not just let our fellow citizens starve. Everybody can help find solutions to fight hunger, and to support what measures are already in place and working. Besides the obvious of helping at soup kitchens, donating to organizations and fund-raisers, or participating in events such as CROP Walk or food drives, there are many long- range things to be done. Two local. groups -PIRGIM's (Public Interest Research Group in Michigan) Domestic Hunger Task Force and WHE-AC (World Hunger Education and Action Commitee) --are workling together on HUNGER WATCH, a project to document hunger in Michigan. The Hunger Task Force will also be doing educational outreaches on Oct. 15 and 16 in honor of World Hunger Day (as proclaimed by the United exists at Nations), including several classroom presentations and distributing fact sheets. On these two days also, the Task Force will be running a postcard drive. This will make a show of support for legislation in the Congress called the Hunger Relief Act of 1986. It will allot $1 billion to food assistance program improvement. home . Li Right now, this legislation needs co- sponsors, and the post cards which will be sent to the representatives should help to show the popular support for this bill, and encourage legislators to support it through votes and co-sponsorships. It only would take a moment for people to t sign a postcard, but would mean a lot to helping passage of the legislation. Everyone should at least take the time for that, and pick up a fact sheet and educate themselves on the extent of hunger in our country. For those interested in getting further involved, PIRGIM'S Hunger Task Force meets every Monday night at 8 p.m., in room 4107 Michigan Union, phone 662-6597 (Wendy Siedon, project coordinator). WHE-AC Meets every Mon. night also, at 6:30 p.m., room 4202 Michigan Union, phone 663-3560 (Jean), or one can get involved in HUNGER WATCH by calling Cindy Phillips at 662-9765. Ten years ago, the U.S. Congress passed the Right to Food Resolution, stating that every man, woman and child has the right to a nutritionally adequate diet, and pledging U.S. support (monetary and otherwise) to achieve this. It's time to make this happen, not with words, but with actions. It is a shame that so wealthy a country can't seems to help solve this societal crises, making ourselves aware of the problem is the first step in discovering ways to alleviate it, and the intense suffering that goes with it, and hopefully people will take at least a moment on World Hunger Day to take that first step. IM1N14L N& of "TECKS1NOSYL AC(- ' FN I - (LvtV{ 11" l5 4S ~&OFFSNDEt 41D OUT12&KP L r WMFAift -ft IT EAVES vusPk CONCS To IaLy FVRO?rN I FUSLI COINI ONTo OUR SIDE wA VLL, \WE'LL lAKE CAR~E OF THXT r/ &l - Coloring perspectives OCTOBER IS a full-fledged fall month - there's no denying it. September is usually classified as the beginning of autumn, but it never really lives up to its reputation. It is in the month of October that fall is truly realized: the tops of trees are brushed with gold, red, brown; the air is crisp; students are serious. This cooler weather brings with it a certain clarity. As leaves drop to the ground, bare branches are defined against the greying sky, eliminating the ambiguity of summer foliage. Similarly, students become more focused, seeing their obligations and commitments sharply outlined. Mid-terms approach and time becomes short. Students must put more thought into how they structure each day. As academic pressures mount, attitudes among students naturally feels freer to move -and freer to experience new things. The summer sun encourages relaxation. All too soon, those warm breezes give way to harsher autumn winds, and students retreat to the indoors, into smaller, confined spaces. In the process, perspectives narrow as well. Academic responsibilities, deadlines, and job pressures are absorbing , taking an unjustified portion of time and thought energy. One can lose sight of those things that are truly important -time with friends, correspondence with family - in the constant shuttle between classes, dorm rooms, and the library. On campus, students walk with their heads down, fighting the wind -and fighting the pace that college life dictates. The student, however, does have a choice in all of this. One can allow the weather and schedule f - JI r Letters: Rambo To the Daily: Last Saturday night, after the U. of M.- M.S.U. combat, a friend and I were walking down State Street, just north of N. University. Coming our direction were a well-dressed couple of student age, the male half of which was clearly intoxicated. The woman was in tears and cowered in a doorway while he shoved her and abused her verbally. I stopped to ask if everything were okay, knowing full well that everything certainly was not okay, but I have found that a third-party intervention will sometimes mentality Come on then!" I refused the offer and the women with us kept him at a sufficient distance to prevent any further incident. I wonder what happened when he took his date home. The point of this story is the fellow I encountered is not (simply) a goon or a jerk; he is, judging from his attire, a contemporary American gentleman, probably successful and quite normal, given our current definitions of those terms. I suspect his concept of masculinity derives mostly from a combination of Rambo and Dirty Harry movies, which seem to be encourages rape'.c change in national policy, but I do want to suggest that sexual assualt between people who know each other is much more prevalent than we often realize. The rapes reported by the media are usually stranger rapes, but these account for less than one quarter of all sexual assaults. Nearly one in four women on college campuses are sexually assualted by an acquaintance, and because of our reigning norm for masculinity, many of theseassailants do not even realize that they are rapists. The effects of this macho mentality are obvious. Less evident, perhaps, are the effects on men. We are as stultifying gender roles, and substantial (albeit not yet sufficient) progress has been made in breaking those chains. But no comparable force has had significant impact on the constraints binding men. Perhaps the solution lies in greater publicity of the prevalence of date rape. The more women - and men - who say that abusive aggressivity is not acceptable, the greater the chances that individual men will examine their own behavior and realize that there are alternatives superior to machismo. Men's groups and gender workshops can help, but too often they