4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 9, 1995 ~be kI~igrn ai M N 04 k Mm 'A-lk MA-18 WW Oltk:g K AV& WUM A& Oft 0- I wl 114 1111101 W 1I I s w a r w . wow w r- Mi is I 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Jessie Halladay Editor in Chief Samuel Goodstein Flint Wainess Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. 'White students need to see minorities in positions of responsibility so when they see a Black man walking down the street they don't immediately assume that he is a serial rapist.' -Senior Associate Librarian Charles Ransom L AWFUL NI CE O-FT-HTE- &OVE RNME N TTo 'PRovID S 'PJESTS0WI TH AL (O)'V )WN -L9 I ,995 th NE7NGRIkH * (Oa d-(---- Breaking the monopoly Book exchange provides A t the beginning of the fall and winter terms, the Student Book Exchange (SBE) offers a book-buying/selling service to stu- dents, vastly different from the profit-minded commercial book-buyers. A student may set the selling price of a book sold through the SBE, and if another student buys the book, 85 percent of the set price goes back to the student. Try to beat that at Ulrich's. The Student Book Exchange was once a service of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity, but is now a sovereign group recognized by the Michigan Student Assembly. At the beginning of each fall and winter term, the SBE opens its doors in the Union two days before the first day of classes for students to consign their books, and then for the following two days the books are showcased for purchase. Students who consigned their books may return the follow- ing Tuesday to receive either their unsold book(s) or a check from the SBE. Books not recovered are given to charity and checks not recovered are sent to students. The program benefits the student-buyer as well. Each book purchased may be returned within 24 hours. The problem with this service is that few students are aware of the service before it is too late. Why does no one know about the exchange? Of the 15 percent held from a student's payment, six percent goes to a sales tax, leav- ing the SBE with a 9-percent payoff for each book sold. A meager gain, in spite of an average term sale involving $20,000. Overall, valuable service the SBE comes out with just under $2,000. This money goes toward publicity, the main- tenance of a bank account and rental of com- puters to ensure proper payments. Exchange spokesman Ron Pacis feels that the advertising for this term's sale was not up to par. He and other members of the volunteer fraternity, Alpha Phi Omega, posted the dates on kiosks and in dorms at the end of last term. He noted that a banner at the Union and advertisements in the Daily are more effec- tive, but the funds and general volunteer man- power are just not there. With a frigid winter and many potential volunteers returning late, widespread publicity is a distant goal. Clearly, the SBE is a wonderful service to the students at the University. It is admirable, indeed, that such an extravaganza can be pulled off solely by volunteers on a nonprofit basis. In the future, students need to be better informed and take full advantage of the SBE. There are several ways this can happen effec- tively. An unfortunate but perhaps necessary option would be to raise the profit margin the SBE takes from students, to cover more of the cost of publicity. An even better solution lies within MSA, whose role is to act in the best interest of students, to make this invaluable service more accessible by supporting the SBE with an annual allowance for publicity. Whatever the method, the group could use some help in informing the student population aboutits worthwhile service.The funds needed are few, but the rewards reaped are many. Bude imbalance 'W ith the opening of the tion would set a dangerous precedent: Legis- 104th Congress, Republicans are do- lators who seek a politically palatable solution ing their best to show that their The 104th to acomparatively recent prob- Contract with America is forelem need only etch their solu- real. Already in the hopper for Con ress tion into the Constitution. The quick debate and passage is a foundation of our republic thus constitutional amendment re- Third of a series becomes a repository for po- quiring a balanced budget. Somehow, it has litical schemes that may appeal in the short become thepolitical vogue to echo the thought- term, but whose long-term viability is ques- less slogan: if American families can balance tionable at best. Undoing the work of the their budgets, why can't the government? But 104th Congress will be tricky if ingrained in the worst aspects ofthe balancedbudgetamend- the Constitution. ment transcend ideology; in practice, imple- If the amendment were to pass and even mentation of the amendment would be an be effective, another problem would arise: absolute fiasco. At best, the amendment would Sometimes deficit spending is advantageous mask a deepening budget crisis; at worst, it to the nation. When the economy is down and would decimate the integrity of the budget- federal revenues are low, going into debt with making process. stimulus spending can help nurse the economy The federal deficit has rightly been at- back to health, thus raising federal revenue to tacked in the past as a liability. That both help cover the amount it went into deficit. If a political parties are concerned and want to do balanced-budget amendment were as effec- something is a positive change. However, a tive as the Republicans claim, then this valu- balanced budget amendment would be a cos- able economic tool would not be at hand for metic solution. It does absolutely nothing to the next recession. confront the real problem: The federal govern- All the talk about a balanced-budget ment spends more money than it takes in. amendment simply does not add up. This Tacklingpork-barrel funding andentitlements, "quick fix," which is more quick than fix, is and fostering general efficiency should be the irresponsible. There are only two ways to first steps to a balanced budget. Simply telling balance the budget, either by lower spending Congress to balance the budgetis the easy part. or higher revenues. With Republicans and But if the amendment passes, won't Wash- Democrats alike brandishing their respective ington be forced into fiscal responsibility? tax cuts, the only remaining possibility is to Unfortunately not. A number of states already decrease spending. Solutions along this line have balanced-budget amendments written into include cutting off subsidies to farmers and their constitutions. However, this usually poses big business, means-testing Medicare and rais- just another hurdle in the budget-making pro- ing the retirement age on Social Security cess. On paper, the budget may be balanced, benefits. The bottom line is that each member but items beyond the limit are simply omitted of Congress must be willing to accept certain from the budget. In addition, any economist cuts in his or her state or district. will explain that tinkering with numbers can In the end, a balanced-budget amend- magically make any budget work on paper. In ment would make the federal budgetary pro- the past, balanced-budget amendments on the cess more gimmick than it is now. The federal state level have been a motive for exaggeration deficit will not go away and needs to be and fiscal smoke and mirrors to make every- addressed. This increasingly bi-partisan trick 'U' claims of racial justice ring hollow To the Daily: With MLK Day approach- ing, the University is giving full-time lip-service to "multiculturalism" and aca- demically eulogizing Martin Luther King Jr. But these hypo- critical holiday speeches are nothing but a thin cover for the actual racist policies of the University administration. While with one hand the Uni- versity pats the heads of the anti-racist fighters of the '60s, with the other it fires employ- ees fighting racism on the job today. On Dec. 2, three Black AFSCME workers from the Dental School were framed and fired for taking union action against a racist white supervi- sor. In September, Theresa Atkins, Dawn Mitchell and Delano Isabell (all University employees with more than 10 years seniority) started new jobs at the Dental School and since then have faced constant racist harassment. Delano was re- ferred to as "boy" by one per- son in management, and the direct supervisor of the three Black employees repeatedly used terms such as "you people" to address them, even after be- ing told that such language was racist and unacceptable. Her first day on the job, Dawn was told she was to blame for bro- ken equipment. Delano was told in front of other employees that "they had never wanted him there," and Theresa was told that she could "go back to where they came from" if she didn't like the way she was being treated. Their comings and go- ings were constantly monitored while white workers came and went as they pleased. Minority workers were expected to do the dirty work that white work- ers with the same job title weren't expected to touch. As a result of standing up to management's racism by re- peatedly filing grievances, when the three employees came to. work on Dec. 2, they were met by management and po- lice and escorted off the pre- mises. They weren't told what the charges against them were until Dec. 8, when they were informed they had allegedly falsified their time cards. Dawn, Theresa and Delano have wit- nesses to prove the complete falsehood of these purely fab- ricated allegations. The truth is, these three workers were fired for standing up to racism on the job! All anti-racist students and workers must stand up against the outrageous firing of these employees! To turn away from this outrageous attack on Black University employees in the midst of MLK Day celebra- tions would be a disgusting parody of anti-racism. We must use the celebration of MLK Day to mark the beginning of a renewed militant movement against racism at the Univer- sity. We call on all students and workers to attend the 7 p.m. Tuesday (Jan. 10) forum in the Parker Room of the Union, and come to the 4:00 Thursday march, starting at the Diag, to fight for the reinstatement of Theresa, Dawn and Delano, and the firing of the racist man- agement. We must fight to win elected worker committees to investigate and organize action against racism - obviously management, guilty in this and in other cases of the racist ha- rassment of employees, can't be entrustedto investigate and take action against itself' We must fight to win free tuition and open admissions to recruit and retain Black students at the University and for the hiring and tenuring of more Black professors. Jessica Curtin National Woman's Rights Organizing Coalition RC sophomore Review does not condone intolerance To the Daily: I usually refrain from writ- ing the Daily, because as a worker at another campus pub- lication, I understand that one can never please every reader. But when one of your readers labeled me and my colleagues at the Michigan Review as rac- ist, I feel the necessity to re- spond to these untrue and irre- sponsible accusations that have been hurled at us. As the editor of the Serpent's Tooth column, I assure you that no racist material has ever been published, or even submitted by our staff. The current staff of the Review abides by high pro- fessional standards. If Mr. Arwulf found past material of- fensive, he has no right to con- demn the current hard-working staff at the Review. I wonder if Arwulf has read any current issues of the Review; I assume he has not. Anyone who has read one of our recent issues knows that we are dedicated to the classi- cal liberal ideas of civil liber- ties, individual rights and lim- ited government. We defend the ideals of free speech, free- dom of religion and a right to privacy. In short, we consider ourselves an outlet for intellec- tual and humorous insights not traditionally heard on college campuses. Pick up one of our recent issues, you may be sur- prised. (Incidentally, recent Serpent's Tooth columns have been tougher on Newt Gingrich than anyone else.) In short, we have no align- ment with the moralistic pedantics of the religious right, the ideologies of William F. Buckley and the dim-witted philosophies ofNewtGingrich. In fact, we are blatantly op- posed to some of their stances. To align us with this right-wing rhetoric is unfair, as is the im- plication that we perpetuate deplorable racist thought. If anything, Mr. Arwulf, it is your negative, unsubstantiated hurl- ing of sundry epithets that has turned American into a burning ball of cynicism. Finally, please try to remem- ber that Serpent's Tooth is a humor column. Ourgentle tears and barbs at American political and cultural figures have hit everyone from sorority girls to engineers and from Newt Gingrich to Bill Clinton. Some things in our society need, to be laughed at, Mr. Arwulf, so pick up the latest copy of the Review and enjoy it, savor it, or else you might become as paranoid as Rush Limbaugh. Relax. Dean Bakopoulos Will our scars outlive rapist? So I guess we're saved, eh? We can all breathe freely. They've got a man in custody and evidence seems to point to the fact that he may be the one we've been fearing, shutting our doors against, carrying Mace to deflect, Police said Friday that DNA tests link Ervin Mitchell, arrested last week for purse-snatching, to at. least four of the violent rapes in. Ann Arbor in the last two years. He may be the serial rapist. Now we don't have to carry spikes when walking home. We can dim the lights in the Diag so it no longer looks like day at night. We can open our doors and once again live without fear. Do I seem sarcastic enough?. Sorry. Vacation was way too short and it's too cold out to write a column that isn't cynical. But this entire rapist scare has rubbed me the wrong way since the start. The entire shenanigan has re- vealed some of our most frighten- ing societal flaws and turned us all into what looked like a scared, reactionary community. It turned Black men into sus- peets and women into victims. Over 100 men were DNAtested and since an award was posted, 600 men were named as suspects. Meanwhile, women were made prisoners in our owntcommunity. Families began to scrutinize Black neighbors - is he the rap- ist? - and we all began to look out for someone meeting the vague description put out by the FBI: an anti-social, dark-skinned man, 25- 35 years old, who shows hostility toward white women. The message: be on the lookout for a Black man who seems alittle strange. Turn in your neighbors, co-workers - anyone, for that matter, who has pissed you off. We as women were told: Don't walk home alone. Don't go out at night. Not that this isn't good ad- vice, but why in the world was it assumed I was more at risk this past year than previously? It was viewed by my friends and family that because there was a highly publicized serial rapist on the street, the risks I faced as a woman were somehow intensified. Everyone insisted on helping. Well, I'll ask for help when I want it and, as I've said before and will say again, I will not live like a victim. That is not living at all. My parents say this approach is stupid. But so is living in fear of one man who has attacked before and who represents the very atti- tude intended to keep women infe- nor to strong men who can protect themselves. As a result of such thinking, women have been barred from high-paying jobs seen as "too dan- gerous," been kept out of high- ranking military posts and are be-. littled into the oft-used category of. "women and children." So is it over now? If Mitchell is the rapist - and pray for him if it turns out he's innocent - does that mean the big threat is over and we can return to life as it was? For the past year, we as a com- munity have behaved like children: pointing fingers, accusing one an- other, hiding from our neighbors. We have allowed the most savage of tendencies -hatred and fear- to emerge from the depths where they ought to have been stored. They have haunted us more than any one man ever could and for this we will be scarred and, in my opin- ion, shamed Whether or not the man in cus- tody is the rapist, our streets are no safer than they were before- there will always be creeps willing and able to take advantage of inno- cents. Rape will not disappear. But one thing is certain: It's time to make amends if it's not already too late. We have a lot of apologizing to do and we better make damn sure that the next time. shit like this threatens the serenity o~f nr i1ttler Bht-raltowin we wocn' Comment misrepresents RHA To the Daily: I am writing in reference to your article about the Residence Halls Association (RHA) that ran in the Friday, Dec. 8, 1994 edition ("RHA votes to ban grapes in dorm cafeterias"). More particularly, I take issue with your choice ofquotes. Near the end of the article, you quote Heidi Naasko, a representative to RHA from Henderson House, describing RHA as "an apathetic organization." Regardless of her opinion that "it's salvageable," Naasko was grossly out of line, and incorrect, in making that state- ment. First off, RHA is any- thing but an apathetic organi- zation. This is evidenced by the rnnntipcc C I'nrCc nant byinnvflI ing. While Naasko is entitled to her opinion, she is not en- titled to slander RHA as she sees fit. If your reporter were to ask any of the other representa- tives in attendance at the meet- ing how they feel about RHA, you would have found out that there are a number of devoted, hard-working, non-apathetic members who feel radically different from Naasko. Naasko's comment is not the sentiment of a vast major- ity of RHA representatives. If the reporter would have taken the time to properly survey the representatives, she would have found that apathy is far from being a correct adjective to de- scribe RHA. I would person-