-- The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 6, 1995 (Ttle ,nfirtthYgttn at7iv JAMEs R. CHo BENEATH THE PALIMPSEST 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES NASH Editorial Page Editors As ian Americans and the model minority myth 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. CufCing U' must step in to save campus broadcasting A s Republicans in Congress gleefully slash program after program, it is fast becoming evident that federal budget cuts will bleed down even to the University. Cam- pus television and radio - WFUM-TV and Michigan Radio (including WU0M, WFUM- FM, and WUGR) - must prepare for the unfortunate possibility of funding cuts. In a presentation at the February Board of Re- gents meeting, the stations informed the re- gents how the loss of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) would destroy public radio and television at the University. Their presentation made one thing clear: If CPB does get cut, the Board of Regents - the licensee of Michigan Radio and WFUM- TV - needs to supplement the missing fed- eral funds in order to keep the stations alive. In a more sensible political climate, the responsibility would never fall to the Univer- sity. The proposed federal cuts violate the spirit of the laws passed in 1954 to establish funding for public broadcasting. Ironically, the CPB was formed to "insure the integrity" of the federal funds. It acts as a clearinghouse for public broadcasting money and makes sure that the, funds remain separate from other government spending and unaffected by the programming that stations provide. However, if CPB funding is cut - as is likely - the regents must continue to support the University's public broadcasting stations. Michigan Radio and WFUM-TV provide a valuable service to the University and its surrounding communities. Both stations collect a great deal of their own revenue: Law requires that stations meet CPB funding 2 1/2 times over, and in the 1992 fiscal year the ratio was 3.79 to 1. In other words, the stations are about as self-supporting as they could possibly be. Some regents questioned why the stations could not privatize and still remain "public." This violates their non-commercial license, which prohibits them from generating a cer- tain amount of outside income (money from the University, as their licensee, being from the inside). Thus, legally they cannot be commercial. Furthermore, these stations could never compete in the commercial arena. They carry controversial programs, as well as programs that appeal to a relatively nar- row audience - few sponsors would want to spend their advertising dollars there. To com- pete, the stations would have to change their programming, which would defeat the idea behind public broadcasting. WFUM-TV and Michigan Radio will not last without at least a partial compensation of CPB funds - and legally cannot take too much from donors or from underwriting corporations. Ultimately the responsibility falls back to the Univer- sity. Once changes are made, the University must behave as the government does con- cerning public broadcasting: Hands-off. As public stations, WFUM-TV and Michigan Radio have the unique advantage of being able to express a variety of uncensored opin- ions. At the meeting, Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) asked how these stations will carry the "University's message" if more inside funding is granted, pointing out that one of the stations recently presented an editorial unfavorable to the University. This concern is contrary to the idea of public broadcasting. Though it may be tempting for the University to use these stations as its own voice, that practice is manipulative and con- strictive. For the sake of the community, the University must keep the stations afloat - no strings attached. Jason Wang grew up in Linden House, an apartment complex for low-income families in New York City. Jason, now a student at the University, is the son of immigrant parents from Taiwan. "I knew what poverty was like. I found my parents concerned about money in a different man- ner - accumulating enough," he says. "We're not well-off but we made the best of what we had." Jason is an anomaly. For many under- privileged inner-city Asian American kids, the first priority is not education. Other factors predominate - poverty, drugs, sex, gangs and survival. Some students never consider the possibility of college. Underprivileged Asian Americans, unlike other minorities, face greater diffi- culties because they aren't supposed to exist. The affluence and success of Asian Americans has long been the common perception. (I use Asian Americans to include those Asians who reside in the United States but may not yet have their citizenship.) You always hear stories about Asian American valedictorians vying for spots at Ivy League schools. Poor Asian Ameri- cans, however, go unheard and unrecog- nized. They are swept under the rug and fall through the cracks of government policy. The government, including the University, ignores the diversity within the Asian American community by lump- ing data about them together. By not dif- ferentiating between the various groups, the University continues to tout the latest increases in minority enrollment without recognizing the lack of diversity within the community. The University doesn't recruit Asian Americans, even the underprivileged ones. The Michigan Study, an as-yet-unpub- lished survey of University minority stu- dents who entered in 1990, shows that the demographic diversity of Asian Ameri- cans remains dismal - poor, inner-city Asian Americans simply do not attend the University. The study also shows that most 'Asian Americans on campus are not wor- ried about finishing their higher education because of financial constraints nor do they need to work during their time on campus to support themselves financially. "Asian Americans at the University of Michigan for the most part simply don't come in with the financial burden others face," said Edgar Ho, former chair of the United Asian American Organizations. Underprivileged Asian Americans face a double whammy. Not only are they not recruited by the University, but they are the big losers of the "model minority" and "over-representation" myths. It's an ac- cess issue. The University does not have a mandate to recognize the growing Asian communities in the inner cities, but a stark disparity exists within the Asian groups not only in culture but in socioeconomic status as well. University administrators, however, after much badgering from students, have taken a step in the right direction in revers- ing this trend. For the first time the Uni- versity will provide financial support for a deserving pre-college program that ex- poses underprivileged Asian Americans toy the advantages of pursuing a higher education. It's called Project Lighthouse and has existed with only minimal funding at the University for three years. The pro- gram shows the students that a college education can be a reality. On Friday, 46 Hmong students from Pulaski Middle School in Detroit - which offers an English-as-a-second-language course - will visit campus for a tour as well as educational programming. Many Hmong came to the United States seeking refuge in the face of oppression by the Vietnamese government in the late '70s. While poverty rates vary widely among the different Asian American groups, the Hmong consistently have the highest pov- erty rate. "This program is designed to help Asian Americans who are disadvan- taged and disenfranchised with society. We want to stress the importance of get- ting a higher education," said Mike Chau, one of the student leaders involved in Project Lighthouse. Poverty is a vicious cycle. Project Light- house serves as a beacon guiding under- privileged Asian Americans down a path of opportunities often missing in their lives. Asian American students are mi- norities too. The diversity within our com- munity needs to be recognized. 0 0 I JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST A NEWTC i \nV V ZS, / 3INGRICH FLM A REPUBLICAN PARTY MOTION Starring 8 } },Jesse He and Strom WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT TO BRNG THESE DINOSAURS BACK FROM THE DEAD? PICTURE NOTABLE QUOTABLE "What Hamilton said about Jefferson was he loved the masses because he had nothing to do with them. I am wondering If it's the same for Michigan." - State Rep. Lingg Brewer (D-Holt), on the University's commitment to the Jeffersonian ideal of accessible education Bob Dole, Ims m Thurmond The rigt to strike Executive order protects workers 0i LETTERS The Clinton administration recently handed down an executive order deny- ing federal government contracts to firms that permanently replace striking workers. This is a sound step toward creating an America that is friendlier to its blue-collar citizens. The ability to fire workers for striking gives undue power to management in labor disputes. The practice is time-honored among union busters, and it destroys any semblance of equilibrium in American labor-manage- ment relations. For generations, our nation's leaders have paid lip service to the notion that the ability to strike is a fundamental right. However, if management is allowed to fire individuals who strike, and replace them with non-union personnel, then the right to strike is essentially destroyed. In 1994, Democrats in Congress attempted to correct this injustice. The "striker replace- ment" bill, which banned the hiring of per- manent replacement workers, passed the House. A majority of senators supported it. It died, however, at the hands of a minority filibuster, and the November elections bur- ied the bill for the foreseeable future. Given congressional intransigence, the administration's action is laudable, if over- due. There is a long tradition of attaching conditions to federal contracts via executive order. Perhaps the best examples of this are the efforts of past presidents - from Roosevelt to Nixon - to advance civil rights How TO CONTACT THEM by such actions. It would have been best for legislators to have addressed this issue. Since they will not, the president is right to act. While the executive order will not bring about the sweeping change that is needed - it deals only with government contractors - it will still impact labor relations in important ways. It has been estimated that the president's action will affect nearly all Fortune 500 com- panies. The nation's major firms - the com- panies that define the state of labor relations in America - are heavily involved in gov- ernment contracting. As a result, the impact of this order will be widely felt. This act should help stem the tide of anti- labor politics in the United States. The sad fact is that Americans increasingly see labor as a roadblock to prosperity - in fact, it was unions that brought prosperity to the work- ing classes earlier in this century. Admit- tedly, there are union excesses. Still, the essential ability of workers to try to achieve balance in the workplace must be preserved and advanced - a prosperous middle class helps everyone. That is why this presidential action is so important. The government must act to pre- serve the integrity of all citizens' rights - and workers should not be excluded from these efforts. In many cases, the ability of management to fire strikers and permanently replace them all but destroys the right to strike. The president is correct to intervene and protect this right. Writer alters facts in letter on Kiss-In To the Daily: Although I hesitate to use the word "naive" when describing John Yob ("Congress, 'U' should not give approval to homosexual activity" 3/1/95), his apparent lack of AIDS education and un- derexposure to homo- and bi- sexuals does come to mind. He incorrectly states "that it is ho- mosexual and bisexual men who - more than any other group - are spreading the AIDS vi- rus...." The fact that HIV spread like wildfire first through the gay community in the United States says nothing of the fact that it is predominately hetero- sexual behavior which is respon- sible for this epidemic in Af- rica, southeast Asia, and yes, now even the United States. Mr. Yob consistently states in his letter how "dangerous" educa- tion regarding AIDS and homo- sexuality is. But what is truly dangerous and downright scary are people like him who alter the facts to support their "val- ues" (or lack thereof). John Yob also classifies two males embracing and kissing as "indecent exposure." Come on, if this were the case hundreds of straight couples wouldbe arrested every year at the University. University." I guess I can toler- ate people like Mr. Yob at our University because it is under- informed people like him who contribute to the wonderful di- versity that is part of why the University is so well respected. Bill Malone LSA junior Kiss-In meant to promote tolerance To the Daily: We are writing in response to Mr. John Yob's plead to both Congress and the University in Wednesday's paper. Mr. Yob finds that the "Kiss-In" is a "gross injustice to the U of M reputation and heterosexual stu- dents." The fact that he feels that the sight of two people kiss- ing and embracing is "indecent exposure" is both tragic and alarming. The point of the "Kiss- In" is to provoke an enlightened atmosphere both on campus and in the wider community, and to promote understanding and ac- ceptance of the homosexual community. The goal of the "Kiss-In" is to demonstrate that public dis- plays of affection - whether heterosexual or homosexual - are normal behaviors. Our soci- ety needs to recognize that ho- mosexuals have just as much right to display their emotions to consider AIDS as a gay dis- ease is not only appalling and incorrect but completely out- dated. AIDS is a reality that we all must face. Rather than utiliz- ing his own efforts to become part of the solution, Mr. Yob is exerting his energies to pinpoint blame on an issue of which he is totally unknowledgeable. Finally, it is people like Mr. Yob who "tarnish the dignified and respected image" of our University, not a group of people who are doing their best to edu- cate the community on becom- ing more sensitive to gay, les- bian and bisexual issues. Karen Strobel Rachel Lessem Bridget Smith Naomi Ornstein LSA students Columnist misinterprets gender issues To the Daily: I was both disappointed and angry after reading James R. Cho's article, "Agenda for Women Heads Down the Wrong Path," in the Feb. 27 edition of the Daily. In the article, Cho criticizes sex awareness in prac- tices at the University. In par- ticular, he disagrees with hiring practices that actively seek out women. Cho says, "Open all the would happen. Hopefully, some day men and women will be viewed as entirely equal and will be able to compete with each other, simply as people, in every arena. This aspect of Cho's article, however, did not bother me as much as his "ex- planations" for the shortage of women in so many areas of life, and in particular, areas of the University. Cho argues that studies have shown that men and women consistently show differences in their abilities, with men be- ing better at certain mental skills than women and vice versa. Yes, this is true. However, it is very possible that these differences are socialized at an early age and are not biological differ- ences. This is a theory that Cho ignores. Instead, he proceeds to cite studies that not only en- dorse a biological view of such differences between the sexes, but also those that actually pro- claim a difference "in the brains of men and women"! I believe that Cho is attempting to fall back on science to explain all our social ills. This is exactly the wrong attitude to have in a society that still give little boys trucks and guns to play with and gives little girls dolls and kitchen sets. I realize Cho would see me as an "ardent feminist," appar- ently an evil thing, for writing this letter. I am in fact a person University Regent Deane Baker (R- Ann Arbor) AA C ("ho ,rh PH University Regent Laurence B. Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills)