MMMI 4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 20, 1998 t1ie £lirbi~twn 3&dIg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Dailys editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily FROM THE DAILY Too little, too ate ITD's plan does not solve allocation problems NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'Capital is like horse shit. If you build it up in one place, it stinks. If you spread it out, it makes stuff grow.' --Kevin Danaher; founder of Global Exchange. on probems with the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank KAAMIRAN IHAFEEZ A% 1 - A155Al MI ogw STS - q0 Lv* s1it .al # GAlore 1+o v... t A s ATAL' . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR D iversity is a valued aspect at this University, and the administration has demonstrated its commitment to maintain- ing a racially and ethnically diverse student body. And yet, the University's Information Technology Division is less tolerant of stu- dents' diverse needs. ITD eliminated the freedom previously available in the basic computing package to allocate specific dol- lar amounts to students for each computing service, many of which are only used by a fraction of the student body. In an attempt to alleviate the difficulties caused by this change, ITD has more than doubled the number of pages that students may print and has made available additional dial-in hours. But these changes do not correct the origi- nal problems in the basic computing pack- age and come too late in the term for their benefits to be fully realized by the student body. ITD's new computing package allows each student to print only 120 pages before charging them eight cents per page. This number is ridiculously low and has been exceeded by the vast majority of the student body. But ITD's addition of 180 pages to student allowances will not great- ly aid the situation. The 180 pages are to be used between last Friday and April 30. Only those students with final papers rather than final exams will need to print anywhere near that many pages in such a short period of time. If ITD believes that students print that many pages in such a short period of time, why is the allocation for the entire semester so unrealistically low? Additionally, ITD will cease to charge students for dial-in access between the hours of midnight and 3 p.m. for the same two weeks. These hours come too late in the semester to be fully utilized as well. ITD has conveniently waited until most of the student body has already CRISPed and students have already spent hours searching the incredibly inconvenient online course guide. Most students will be studying during the next two weeks - not spending hours each day online. The addition to the dial-in allocation will only benefit a small portion of the student body. These new allocations, courtesy of the Office of the Provost, do not solve but only temporarily alleviate the problems caused by the present computing package. The fatal error of the package is the lack of flexibility for students. Students who live in residence halls or log in from Angell Hall do not need dial-in access and should not be forced to pay for ser- vices that they do not require. Instead, they should be allowed to divert those dollars unused in other portions of the computing budget toward areas in which they are falling short, such as printing. The previous system allowed such flexi- bility, but according to ITD, was too expensive to maintain. So, instead of real- izing that the benefits of a flexible system are worth the added costs, ITD increased its funding by charging students for ser- vices that they are not using. Whatever the case, students are being charged for services that they are not using under the present system, and ITD is mistaken if it believes that its basic computing package is sufficient and is satisfying the needs of the student body. The computing needs of students are varied and diverse - the University should not limit the options tuition-paying students have when they boot up a computer. Limited choices Task force looks into living-learning programs R ecently, the Residence Hall Association announced the formation of a task force to study the status of living- learning programs in University residence halls and provide a report to the Office of the Provost. This comes on the heels of a proposal to expand the current six living- learning programs to a total of 11. While the creation of the task force takes a posi- tive first step toward pinpointing and cor- recting specific problems with these pro- grams, the proposed expansion most likely will just create new troubles. In their current state, most of the University's living-learning programs have problems that must be worked out in order for their students to have a more rounded education. Living-learning pro- grams require their students to live in a certain residence hall and register for a specific group of classes. Such restric- tions create a group of students somewhat separated from the rest of the University. Students in the living-learning communi- ties see many of the same people in their classes, creating a small clique within the larger student body. Also, the required curiculla may prevent living-learning stu- dents from taking courses in other University departments. A glaring problem with the living-learn- ing communities is that students choosing to leave a program must still reside in the residence to which they were assigned for the duration of the year. This policy causes students no longer wishing to be associated with the community to remain with their former classmates. These students are then isolated among students taking a common curriculum. nities to nearly twice their present size can only further complicate these issues. Increasing the number of these programs will result in more students taking a restrictive curriculum that prevents them from taking advantage of the rest of the University. In addition, the five new pro- grams will require additional residence hall space, perhaps resulting in non-liv- ing-learning students forced to live among groups of students linked through common academic programs and inter- ests. The newly formed task force should recognize these problems and work toward a solution that gives living-learn- ing students greater freedom and a bal- anced academic experience at the University. Ideally, living-learning pro- grams should ease their restrictions so that students may choose from a number of residences and enjoy greater control in designing their studies. It is essential that these problems be addressed before any expansion to preserving the integrity of these programs. The life of a University student is about personal development, both acade- mically and socially. A student learns how to deal with all sorts of problems inside and outside of University classes, both of which play a part in the formation of his or her identity. In their present state, the majority of living-learning programs limit aspects of University life that would aid their students' growth. These pro- grams, and the University as a whole, should seek to provide students with the widest spectrum of options available so that they are well-prepared for life out- Letter slighted engineers' contributions TO THE DAILY: After reading Pak Man Shuen's letter "Career mind- set of LSA students is 'wrong"' (4/14/98), I became confused. Maybe I should blame my "glorified trade school" training; perhaps it has left me without the skills needed to decipher Shuen's prose. I do wonder what Shuen means when referring to LSA students as those who "ask the right questions for others to come up with the solutions." I can just imagine, near the turn of the century when some LSA grad came up with the brilliant question "Wouldn't it be cool if man could fly like a bird'?" To he or she, I am eternally grateful for the airplane. The point I'm trying to make is that maybe Shuen doesn't comprehend what role the engineer plays in our soci- ety. What I like to believe sep- arates engineers from just someone good at science is that the engineer has the cre- ativity to pose and answer a question. I don't suppose Shuen has taken an engineer- ing course (few LSA people do, unlike engineers who take LSA courses from various departments); if Shuen would, then maybe the picture would become a little clearer. Shuen also confused me by stating that shareholders are the ones who originally had the idea and have liberal arts degrees. First, I believe most companies start out pri- vate and then go public. Therefore, most of the share- holders cannot be the ones that created the idea. Second, Yahoo's founder was an engi- neer, as was Intel's, Hewlett- Packard's and Sun's. This list is not complete, and I do not say all of those who "originally had the idea" are engineers, but Shuen's let- ter makes it sound as if a bunch of LSA grads are start- ing companies being fronted by engineers and MBAs. That's simply not the case. DAVID GRANDA ENGINEERING SOPHOMORE 'U' community dismayed over election TO THE DAILY: During the past weeks, our community has been involved in an intense debate related to the completion of the Michigan Student Assembly elections for the 1998-1999 academic year. We feel it nec- essary to address issues con- cerning the tenor and content of some of the publicity pro- vided by an MSA candidate. lates values so"important to our sense of community. Some of the campaign materials, both printed and electronic, have offended many individuals and groups by their racist, sexist and demeaning tones. A thorough evaluation of the complaints filed about this election pub- licity has concluded that there has been no prose- cutable violation of the University's Code of Student Conduct, the guidelines on groups as monitored and enforced by the Department of Public Safety. But that does not mean that we, as a community, must find these to be acceptable expressions. As we look to the 21st Century, it is imperative that all of us in this community work together toward a shared vision. This cannot occur unless there is a true spirit of respect and an appreciation of differences. A true spiritof community is forged not just by making certain that we exercise all of our basic rights to the maxi- mum. It is instead created and nurtured by an awareness of others around us and by a mature appraisal of the con- sequences of our behaviors on others who also comprise this community. We recognize the pain this campaign has visited upon the African American com- munity directly and the other communities of color by extension. We also recognize that the lack of respect demonstrated in this cam- paign affects and diminishes all of us in this community. Our hope is that we can pro- vide support to those individ- uals whose historic struggles have been trivialized and mocked. We also must recog- nize that we are all lessened when any group in our com- munity is harmed. We wish to invite all groups to continue to express and assert their concerns in a constructive and productive fashion. We realize that this letter, the latest in the many campus communications dis- tributed during the last cou- ple of weeks, is part of this ongoing dialogue and debate that we wish to foster and support in these difficult times, MAUREEN HARTFORD VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS E. ROYSTER HARPER ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS Ramphele's importance not recognized TO THE DAILY: I was pleased to read your article about Mamphela Ramphele's visit to this institu- tion, but rather surprised that enmP, c, A0,,t v int nra.,iu atin racism should be very excited to hear a speaker of this cal- iber, who has managed to rise above the harshest limits placed on her by apartheid, to one of the top academic posi- tions in South Africa. So what if somebody on the street wouldn't recognize her name? Isn't that a rather shallow basis on which to judge someone's character? For anyone who would like to further explore what sort of person she is, I recom- mend the University of Cape Town's Website at http://wwwuct.a.za/. More specifically, a short summary of Ramphele's history can be found at http://wwwuct.ac.za/depts/dp a/execbios/vc-biog.htm. PHILIP MACHANICK UNIVERSITY FACULTY Daily lacks coverage of club sports TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to John Gekas's letter that appeared in the April 10 issue of the Daily ("Daily does not cover all club sports"). Having been a member of a club sport at the University, I too have experi- enced the frustration of try- ing to get my sport covered in the Daily. I have competed with the U of M Waterski team (yes, Michigan has a Waterski team) for four years. In September of 1996, the team qualified to compete at nationals for the first time ever by placing second in the Midwest region. Since the team was only six years old at the time, had no coach, and paid for its boat and other equipment on its own, this was quite an accomplishment. When I called the Daily about getting this event cov- ered in the paper, I was told that they had just changed their club sports policy and no longer covered any of them. Two days later, a story about the women's rugby team ran in the Daily. The story was not about them winning any titles or qualifying for any major competitions; instead, it was simply about a game they had played. When I subsequently called the Daily to ask why there was a story about a club sport after their policy change, I was told that "the story had already been given to the writer before the policy changed so they didn't want to take it away from her" I'll buy that, but why for the next year did I continue to see sporadic articles about other club sports in the Daily? If the Daily sets a policy, it needs to stick with it. Many club teams could use the publicity of a story in the Daily for recruiting new members, and I'm sure that Beatin gIvy Envy and other 'M' maladies Fou rsdow n day to go in colege. and I ve just overcome the painful am ition from which I and thousand s o t her people on this cam- pus sufer-- a diease I call Ivy Envy. Oine of mynumerousRMichigan T shirts reads. ''Ilarvard, the6 Michig n ok the Last ."Ira l yer ply on theelhst. suggestisnhthat any "good" Schol 51not ~ the fiarL rd (read: the bestsosC impressiv e institu ion) Ofmits rcipeee- ine reg ion. Iunder- JOSHUA stand there; are sine- RICH4 der itemns at Duke rs and Stanford z d k n ivesint is, but I don't think students at those schoo l suffer from Ivy Envy as severely as ie do. Their colleges arenrel- atively snall - and private. As a pubic school that also happens to be a top-notch academic institution, Michigan has a hard time explaining itself to tie greater American intelli- genisia. When US. News & WorldO Report's college rankings come out, for example, we alxwars cry foul because our stellar academic reputation is over- shadowed by our grand size and lack of private monetary endowment. That's Ivy Envy at its worst, Besides, our dominant sports prowess further tarnishes our image: We aren't just football- and hockey-playing brutes, we are the epitome of the brutes. Since I'm a typical out-of-state snoby who always frowned on large state col- leges. I used to feel that way. I'm from de East Coast I'm more Jewish than Christian (although I don't believe in (od, uatch), and I drive a Jeep Grand Cherokee. I went to adsmall, preppy private school in Washington, RC~, that didn't have a football team and I have been surrounded for most of my life by rich, pretentious people, many of whom speak French fluently. ew around here seem to understand that I'm an rlitist by nature, not by choice. Few around here seem to under- stand the degree to which hailing from such a privileged environment - where children are placed in particular nursery schools to ensure their acceptance at I-arvard, where my graduating class nmumbered 110 and where my peers included children of g.S; senators and oreign diplomats made venturing to the= Midwest difficult (especially since the commencement speaker at my high school, the direcor of the Central Intelligence Agency, was infinitely more ipressive than any Michigan graduation orator in recent years). Most kids in my high school apply to Ivy Leaigue colleges, not so much because they are especially smart or wealthy, hit because that is just what we do. To make matters worse, the 4 University tends to accept most appli- cants from my high school who conse- quently consider Michigan - get this --- a "fall-hack" Needless to say, plagued with Ivy Envy, I've spent many hours malking excuses for the fact that I attend this gigantic public institution. Still, now I know that if anyone longs for a smaller school where academics are priority one, then spending a Saturday in October at Michigan Stadium with 107,000 other people of . all shapes and sizes probably isn't their cup of tea. It's just their loss. Of course, had I not been rejected by the I ould've been my loss, too. Ive amed a few other things about the w while in college -surprising, considering that Im now living here in the dreaded simple Midwest. I've found tthere exist countless schools, like Mihigan State. Ohio State and Purdue, whh pide fine educations that put wrrounded people into the world ecome from, the term "Michigan n't exist in the vocab- uu Moreover, I've found that a lot of the myths with which I grew up and brou ith me to Ann Arbor are mis- W s to say tht smaller classes are pero Ma prfessors would argue, I er class offers a broad- e range o ewpoints and opinions. Wot os t a s nts do better by, IyLauedctoshan those of other antastic job that I'll soon bbecause I a e ono Columbia. one needs to be n t oram," the single ele- ment o vrsity that East Coast sb tox their attendance here, e many suffered endles oer their 'reat Books" s of h Ihad already read) and Senior T I took my time in my studis g lenty of -A's and enjoyed life. W educated just the same. While wahing Ohio State beat Yale and Michigan deeat Princeton in the I