4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 19, 1996 e diigarn ilg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan RONNIE GLASSBERG Editor in Chief ADRIENNE JANNEY ZACHARY M. RAIMI Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion ofa majority ofthe Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAmyl A fa'r exchange Residence hall meals are not economical NOTABLE QuorABLE,, 'You can all be sex-goddesses of the world.' -River Huston, woman living with AIDS and AIDS educator, urging University students to enjoy safer, more creative sex JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST ~r L-ETo [No r C VOL) MtlST 8E CH .. F e... .ETTERs To TEDITOR No c risis ine Budget P riorities Committee E ach day when the dinner bell rings, thousands of University Uousing resi- dents take advantage of the meal plans the residence halls provide. This often compli- cated system - most likely designed to make living at the University easier and more enjoyable - tends to break down. When Students in residence halls benefit by be- ing able to dine without leaving the building. But they deserve greater financial freedom when choosing where and when to eat and how to pay for their meals. Now that Entree Plus is no longer accepted in the Michigan Union, students without MCard accounts - who don't want to shell out cash for meals - are forced to dine in residence halls. students miss meals or must us means of payment to pur- chase food in the dorms, the University's meal services become a detriment to stu- dent life and finance. Most University Housing residents opt to use the pro- vided dining choices in the cafeterias, located in most residence halls. Housing de- signed a variety of meal plans: a full 18 meals per week, 13 meals, nine meals or the two newest plans, 115 meals per semester or zero meals. Any plan with less than 18 meals per week adds amount of money to students' e alternative IkI Restrictions on meal credit usage must be lifted. In the current system, once a credit is used for a particular meal, no other credits may be de- ducted until the following meal period. Residents are forced to eat only the food offered in one location at one time - an unfortunate pre- dicament if a menu is particu- larly unappetizing or food is not filling. By reducing the value of a meal in the snack MATT WIMSATT/Daily a pro-rated Entr6e Plus accounts. Students may use meals any time during the week. If students miss meals, they may redeem a meal credit in Bursley's Northbar, the Markley Underground or the South Quad Down Under. Snack bars also accept Entree Plus as payment for meals. However, stu- dents using Entree Plus instead of a meal credit in a cafeteria will find the decision costly. Current rates for cafeteria meal tick- ets bought with cash are $6 for lunch and $8 for dinner; Entree Plus gives a slight dis- count. Furthermore, meal credits applied to food purchased in one of the snack bars are only worth $3.35 for dinner, less for lunch. The value ofa meal in a cafeteria is more than twice the value of one in a snack bar - an unaccaeptable discrepancy. bar, students must use Entree Plus or cash to make up the difference. Students effectively pay for the same meal twice - in their tuition and in the snack bar. Meals should translate into a full credit in the snack bar - not a portion of a hamburger or a pint of Ben and Jerry's. Likewise, meal credits should be available at all operating hours of the day, all days of the week - especially for students whose busy schedules prevent them from dining by the respective cutoff times. Dining in University cafeterias may not be the most enjoyable experience. However, by restructuring its meal payment program, University Housing would make eating in the dorms a more appealing and feasible option to residents. Housing's function is to ensure the quality of dorm life. For as much as students pay, residence halls had better be one enjoyable experience. TO THE DAILY: I have been reading the articles in the Daily regarding the so-called "crisis" that exists on the Michigan Student Assembly's Budget Priori- ties Committee, including the editorial on Feb. 14, 1996 ("The BPC 'non- crisis': MSA's poor planning causes a budget crunch"). I am appalled at the incorrect and rude statement that MSA "must hone their arithmetic skills to plan efficiently." As a member of the BPC, I assure you that my math skills are up to par, and if all else fails I have a perfectly good calculator to fall back on. Although BKC has already allocated much of its funding for student groups this year, I can not see this as a crisis. More thann $83,000 will be given to student groups by the end of the school year. This is an increase of almost $20,000 . from the past year. How can this be a crisis ? As a result of MSA and BPC, many excellent events will be able to be held on campus this year. BPC spends a lot of time deciding which groups that come to us for funding deserve funding, and also the level to which they deserve funding. These decisions are not arbitrary and are very important to us. In the Daily editorial, BPC is criticized for our seven hearing fiscal appropriation process and suggests a four hearing solution to the problem. This shows to me a lack of understanding of the lengths to which BPC goes to assure that student groups are funded fairly. Currently, each hearing includes presentation by 16 student groups in a period of four hours often followed by an additional hour where decisions are made regard- ing our recommendation to MSA as a whole, after which other committee business must be taken care of We often give up weekends and evenings to ensure that student groups are given the consideration they deserve in funding them fairly. It is impractical if not impossible to reduce" the number of hearings given by BPC. These hearings would then stretch to eight to 10 hours each. If any student is will to spend the amount of time that we do in the process, I welcome them to apply to be part of BPC, as committee positions are open to the whole student community. I agree that it is unfortu- nate that some student groups will remain un- funded. Each event has its own merits. But the truth is that there will be always be a lot of"groups that apply to MSA for funding, and there will never be enough money to fund them all. Just remember that $83,000 will be going directly to student groups. BPC has taken great pains to assure funding for all, but ultimately I can only speak for myself. I know I havei spent many hours toward helping student groups make sure they have the funding they need. As I see it, there is no crisis with student group funding. And as a B PC member there are no regrets. BRYANT WU - MSA REPRESENTATIVE, MEDICAL SCHOOL BPC MEMBER THE DOUBLE X I have what shes having' The joys of eager young cousins For my younger cousins, my entry into college signalled my ascen- sion to a new level of coolness. More than ever before, I am teetering on the edge of adulthood in college, young enough to understand them ,. and sympathize with them, but old enough to have shed most of the rules. No one stops me if I want to stay up all night eating Frosted Flakes, but, unlike their parents, I'm young KATE enough to want to EPSTEIN do such things. My almost-adult status gives me authority in my cous- ins' eyes. They look up to me. They wear my hand-me-downs a lot, as if being on my body gives clothes a worthiness. I hope that my attention and respect for my cousins helps them see their own worth. My cousins are 16 and 13. They could be quite a bit younger, and they would probably still look up to me. But it wouldn't be the same if we didn't share gender. For one thing, they wouldn't wear my hand-me- down clothes. More importantly, in today's society, they wouldn't iden- tify with me and take me as a role model if they were boys. Ifthey were boys, relationships like ours might be less important. Ac- cording to the 1991 report of the American Association of University Women, less than a third of girls in high school-and the younger of my cousins will enter high school next year-strongly agree with the state- ment, "I am happy the way I am," compared with nearly half of boys. There are reasons. Girls my cousins' ages have had enough time with male- centered curriculum and Barbie and TV shows with cute girl characters and active boy characters to suffer. They are at an age when they may begin to experience sexual harass- ment and other forms of sexual vic- timization, and, in my cousins' so- cioeconomic group, to be at risk for eating disorders. My cousins are at an age when a multitude of changes, both physical and personal, make it easy fora sexist society to tell them who they are and what they should be. Because they are girls, their changes are anything but subtle. They get whole new bod- ies, complete with metabollic changes, menstrual cycle and body hair. They literally carry a new body part around in front of them - in a spot that's hard to ignore. At all hours of the day, they know they are chang- ing. I know how it feels for my cousins to go through allthese things because I have always recognized myself in both of them - myself at 12, for example, listening to musical group "A-ha" because my teen-age babysitter said they were cute. I want to save the 12-year-olds they were from turning into me at 16, when I believed that having a boyfriend was the answer to everything. I thought boyfriends were the an- swer because of, among other things, teen movies and magazines, which depicted adolescence as a game where the object was to get a date. Changes make it hard to know who they are and what new things like sexuality should be like. It makes sense, some- times, to look outside yourself for the answers to these hard questions. I'm trying to be one of the places where my cousins get positive an- swers for their questions, and to steer them to other places with positive answers. My age makes it easier for me to formulate answers and to rec- ognize the questions. Not only is my memory for these experiences more acute than for people further from adolescence, my experiences have more in common with my cousins' because we are of the same genera- tion. My age also makes it easier for them to identify with me. The older one, with whom I have been corre- sponding regularly for longer than five years, says that she likes to re- read the letters I wrote her when I was the age she is now. She says it helps to read about me when I was going through what she's going through now. She knows if I coped, she can. When I wrote those letters, my cous- ins were following me around every time they visited, waiting to order at a restaurant so they could get the same thing as me. They believed in me enouwh to imitate me. and that lol Lite choices City employee residency requirements needed M aintaining vested interest in one's work, and its subsequent outcomes, is of paramount concern to all involved. That's why many communities across the state set residency requirements as a condition of employment. The Michigan Senate disre- garded this notion when it voted last Wednes- day to remove such restrictions. In the pro- cess, legislators interfered with the practices of local communities - and put the commu- nities at great risk. The Senate approved a bill forbidding communities to require their employees to live within city limits - where they would work and receive paychecks. The residency provision applies to all public employers, including school districts and police depart- ments. The legislation also prohibits require- ments that employees live within a specified distance or travel time. At least 76 communi- ties around the state impose such residency requirements. The residency requirement is only logi- cal. Communities have the right to decide whether to adopt such measures. The city benefits from having employees residing in the city -all public employees would have astake in the community in which they lived. employees could monitor the quality of gov- ernment services because they too would receive them. More important, by serving as a city's eyes and ears, public employees can ensure the safety of the environments in 'which they work. Detroit, the largest community to impose a residency requirement, has had a residency - and it works to benefit the city. The nearly 17,000 people it employs compromise a con- siderable middle-class taxbase, which is es- pecially important in a city that has lost many citizens. The requirement allows municipal revenues to recirculate within the local economy. It also maintains a good relation- ship between the public and the police. Hav- ing officers live in the neighborhoods they patrol gives them more of an incentive to keep the area safe. Until now, the residency requirement has been a decision of local communities. In many instances, it has been the result of popular local vote. Ann Arbor has a require- ment for the city administrator and all depart- ment heads. If this legislation were to be- come law, Ann Arbor's new city attorney, Abigail Elias, would not have to move to the city. She currently resides in Detroit and has been allowed by the City Council one year to move to Ann Arbor. Elias will be able to do her job most effectively if she moves to Ann Arbor. The statewide legislation will go to the House before it reaches Gov. John Engler. Representatives should defeat the legislation - allowing local communities to make the decision to maintain residency requirements. The requirements enable cities to use their own resources to the fullest. Proponents claim the requirements intrude on personal free- dom. However, ifthe workers know that such requirements exist, it becomes their own choice to accept the position or not. Legisla- tors would like to allow employees this choice - conmmunities must have a choice as well. Civil rights at 'U' are precarious TO THE DAILY: The state of civil liberties is precarious, indeed. Recent passage of the censorship laden communications bill, along with talk of passing an anti-flag burning amend- ment and lenient interpreta- tion of the Fourth Amend- ment, only act to jeopardize the rights of citizens as stated in the Bill of Rights. On a more local level, the students at the Univer- sity have found themselves subject to an unnecessary Code of Student Conduct. With the development of the latest version of the Code, there is concern over whether or not this Code works for or against students. Of course, with an established legal system, the Code is not only unnecessary but gravely antithetical to civil rights. In addition, the recent censorship of art at our own Art and Architecture Building proves that civil liberty infractions can affect us all. The Univeristy chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union has been formed in response to these infringements of civil liberties. The UM-ACLU endeavors to act as a resource for the University LETTERS POLICY The Michigan Daily welcomev letters from its readers. Alllettersfrom University students,faculty and staffwill be pri"ed space providing. Other materials will be printed at the editors' discretion: All letters must include the writer's name, school year or University affiliation and phone number. We will not print any letter that cannot be verified. Ad hominem attacks will not be Melerated. Letters should be kept to approximately 300 words. We reserve the rigt to edit for length, clarity and accuracv. Longer "Viewpoints " may be arranged with an editor. Letters should be sent via e-mail to daily.letters@ umich.edu or mailed to the Daily at 420 Maynard St. Editors ean e eached at 764-0552 or by sending e-mail to the above address. UM-ACLU needs all the help it can get. GREG PARKER CO-CHAIR, UM-ACLU PAMELA SHORT CO-CHAIR, UM-ACLU CHRISTINE MILLER TRUSTEE, UM-ACLU W imsatt cartoon is not funny TO THE DAILY: Mr. Wimsatt's cartoon for ("Mookie's Dilemma," 2/8/96) appears to be accusing the Big Three of not encouraging electric vehicle technology. Perhaps he should consider researching his subjects a little. Anyone who was at the Detroit Auto Show this January probably noticed the Saturn display. Cen- vehicle. General Motors will soon be selling this production vehicle at a Saturn dealership near you. Ford and Chrysler are not big angry companies either. Both sell EVs for fleet use and heartily support research in alternatives to gasoline. Why, you barely have to look hard to see projects here at the Univer- sity like the Solar Car and the FutureCar. These student projects are sponsored by the "evil" auto manufacturers that Mr. Wimsatt depicted. In conclusion, I think a previous writer summed this cartoon up the best: "Mookie's Dilemma" seems to be more one of meeting deadlines than putting a humorous slant on current events. Perhaps Wimsatt should take a lesson from "Sharp as Toast" and "University X," two genuinely funny Daily cartoons. ,'n,,r~mPtt in nlare fo~r mohre tha~n a centuirv I i r