4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 13, 1998 he mr4tottn 3 420 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 'All students ought to be concerned.' Retro politicians are a solution for our collectve attention deficit. Hey, remember when the Clinton presidency was gripped by moral dilemma? Maybe your answer is, "Do you mean last week, last month or last year?"-o "Yeah I couldn't l4 Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. ,Al1 other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. ROM TI ECommu ast August,t American He 4wareness of speci ai.ect the black c egree than other 'ention was final its of diabetes, hpmicide, infant m Aiices among the i etance, diabetes a oajenwide, yet Af percent more likely 6di. * esults from si African Americanv d face higher mo ftied by others. Ev have alerted many health problems fa zens. The results prom grams designed to munity about speci increased efforts to ties and find possi grams, along with their creation, shou encouraged to cont the improvement health. Building on the mit, the Task Forc Health was rec Washtenaw Count ing these health c rough draft of a plan was release describing the goa wants to createa accept grants and d lish a quarterlyn health issues, spo Buyoi R unning the sin that prove ne week soon may bec might also become recently been ann Corporation will 1 Drugs, Inc., for $1 Arbor, which is C Detroit, will make store chain in ther of stores and sale part of a continuin the drugstore ind like CVS and Rit regional chains. Th because it enables nate the market, higher prices. Since Arbor cur cent of the Metro wilj likely inherit< consumers. In fac sumers spend the of money nationv CVS plans to capit ing 150-200 new s1 chains' 1998 rev exceed $15 billionr 12 percent of all ret nation. It is quite p sition of Arbor increase its domin market, a move tha in the long run.' smaller regional ch al chains shrinks t the fewer number, nies to raise their p Becas of the HE DAILY Healthy steps nity should unify to fight health risks the first-ever African for young children, and use an effective alth Summit increased media campaign to inform senior citizens fic health problems that about various health resources. ommunity to a greater The task force has excellent ideas groups. Much-needed about what to do for the community but ly given to the higher this should not be a one-way effort. Some heart disease, obesity, proposals require financial assistance, but iortality and teen preg- the majority just require willing commu- black community. For nity members ready to make an impact on ffects 16 million people people's lives. The task force and its goals rican Americans are 55 can only prove productive to the degree y than others to be dia- that the black community contributes to its effectiveness. milar studies show that The final plan will not be presented to women with breast can- the public until Feb. 24; it is important for )rtality rates than those all community members to support the ents such as the summit task force and voice their opinions - all people to the various input should be welcome. cing this group of citi- The University also needs to take a stand on health issues affecting the black ipted the creation of pro- community. The University is a large part educate the black com- of the Washtenaw County community and fic health concerns and it has a wealth of resources at its dispos- identify health dispari- al. Professors and students can combine ble solutions. The pro- the education process with tackling one the people involved in of society's unnoticed problem, and help ld be commended and many people along the way. inue their efforts toward In addition, one of the major causes of of African American disproportionate health rates is the lack of early detection. Access to health care is a momentum of the sum- severe problem affecting the African e on African American American community. The University has ently established in one of the largest and well-respected y focusing on address- medical facilities in the region - it needs oncerns in the area. A to play a greater role in the health of long-awaited strategic African Americans and others that have d this past Monday notoriously lacked access to proper health ls of the task force. It care. Through the cooperation of the a nonprofit group to University and the task force, much can evelop programs, pub- be accomplished. The entire Ann Arbor newsletter about vital community and the University need to nsor health screenings take on this challenge. Drugstore warm uts bode poorly for competition nple and cheap errands small chains to remain competitive. In cessary throughout the particular, the technology upgrades often ome slightly easier but required to compete nationwide are hard- more expensive. It has er for smaller stores to manage. Larger ounced that the CVS chains also have a better chance than buy Troy-based Arbor smaller ones of obtaining contracts with .48. The acquisition of health care insurers, especially due to ;VS' entry into Metro their high number of stores, larger clien- CVS the largest drug- tele and more readily available services. nation in both number as a result, regional chains often must volume. This deal is turn to nationwide chains to financially ig trend of mergers in survive. ustry, as large chains The CVS-Arbor deal will also nega- e Aid buy up smaller tively affect some local Arbor employees, ie trend is problematic as CVS plans to close Arbor's Troy head- large chains to domi- quarters. This means that 150 employees eventually leading to will either be relocated to Woonsocket, R.I. - CVS headquarters - or be laid rently controls 45 per- off. CVS claims that no other Arbor Detroit market, CVS employees will be affected by the acquisi- a large share of these tion. Still, the termination or relocation of t, Metro Detroit con- any employees, is extremely detrimental fourth-largest amount to local economies. wide drugstores, and While the merger might not cause any alize on this by open-- immediately noticeable changes, the loss tores in Michigan. The of another regional chain does not bode enue is expected to well for the future of smaller drugstores and sell approximately or their patrons. Customers could find not tail prescriptions in the only increased prices but also less per- robable that the acqui- sonalized customer service. In addition, will allow CVS to this deal could have an adverse effect on ance in the drugstore some of Arbor's employees. And because t could increase prices CVS will gain control of a substantial The incorporation of part of the Metro Detroit prescription- iains into large nation- drug market, prices could increase over he market and allows time, affecting customers nationwide. In of competing compa- the long run, this deal will probably end )rices. up hurting, instead of helping, more peo- nverherina nature of nie who are simnly trying to run their - State Sen. John Schwarz (R-Battle Creek), on the ramifications of Gov. John Englers proposed 1.5-percent increase to state colleges and universities YUKI KUNIYUKI G ROU ND ZE RC Getz, M su yN b - a v bo 7Ja Q a .. S~I, I %U I I believe he slept with Monica, what will Ross and Phoebe think?" But if you are like most of the television-viewing public, your response was simi- lar to this: "Dilemma? I sense no dilemma. What's a dilemma? And who is this Clinton man of whom you speak?" FINI SHL U Ox O 4 Woo! B(4r Wyy t5 EvERYol3E Rup+Ntn3G, MdAY I/ a 1 V --A An 7 wukg PAULO SERILLA >e a W4U ' $Luf HE'S NOT DUE UaNTIL T}14 6atMMEe! v vi G. .9 a Q LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Daily failed to cover debate TO THE DAILY: I was very displeased to see no mention of the debate on the existence of God that occurred on Feb. 5. This event featured a University philosophy professor and drew more than 1,400 people - mostly students - to Rackham Auditorium. In fact, there were so many peo- ple that the organizers had to close the doors and turn peo- ple away. Yet there was no mention of this in the Daily. Smaller events that con- cerned fewer people received front-page placement while this debate received not a word of coverage throughout the entire paper. I feel that if the Daily is going to be a paper that is on top of what is going on at the University, it needs to have coverage of events that are important to students. BRYAN BERGHOEF LSA SENIOR Student participation in marathon is important To THE DAILY: After attending the final two hours of the Dance Marathon last weekend, I felt the need to share my personal perspective of what this event was like. Though I did know a little about the event, I went pri- marily as a spectator in sup- port of the cause. Not know- ing what I would find when I walked in, I was incredibly impressed by what I saw. Here was this collection of dancers, volunteers and planners who were 28 hours into the event and still hold- ing the energy of people who actually had gotten sleep. As I sat in the stands and watched the dancers, the morale boosters and all the activity, I couldn't help but be taken over by the energy in the building. Later, as the families spoke and the last dances continued, not only was the energy high but I could feel the emotions of success, happiness and relief. And I know that if I felt this as a spectator for two hours, I can only imag- ne what the marathon's Central Planning Team, the dancers and the volunteers felt after more than 30 hours. When the marketing, promotion and planning begins for the 1999 marathon, which I believe will happen just as soon as everyone gets some well- Ar -v reset T n I nP fl, nessed. And because I'm graduating in May and probably won't get to see next year's marathon, I want everyone else who will be around to strongly consider getting involved. Congratulations to the planning team for an out- standing event. The partici- pants, dancers and volun- teers should know they did- n't just make a difference in the lives-of the families and children they raised money for. JOE GUTOWSKI RACKHAM Letter's analysis was 'flawed' TO THE DAILY: I feel compelled to com- ment on John Caraher's letter ("CEO's study was pseudo- scientific," 2/3/98). 1 find it ironic and somewhat amusing that Caraher attempts to refute a statistic as being "pseudo-scientific" by con- structing such a remarkable and creative example of pseudo-science himself. Consider that he predicts 5- percent chance of admission for a white student with shaky numbers. He states "Clearly, it is mathematically impossible for anyone to be 174-times as likely to be admitted since the best chance the hypothet- ical minority competitor could ask for is a 100-percent chance of admission." He is right, this is mathe- matically impossible but totally irrelevant as it is not at all what the statistic is saying. His example asserts that the total probability of admission for an African American applicant can be derived by multiplying the probability of white appli- cants' admission at constant numbers exclusive of non- white applicants by the aver- age ratio of admission of African American to white applicants at constant num- bers inclusive of all appli- cants. This example is non- sense. Caraher must understand that these statistics, even if they were drawn from the same data set (which they are not), would still be mutually exclusive and therefore could not be multiplied in any meaningful fashion. So no conclusion may be inferred by any relationship between the two. That includes all inferences regarding the validity of each individual statistic. I caution everyone from blindly accepting, and worse yet, drawing conclu- sions from an arbitrary sta- tistic. Even though there are many well-understood m.athnrc fr ctticina) nrii assured tone - such a ridiculous and obviously flawed analysis. CHARLES LOWELL LSA SENIOR Headlines need better checking TO THE DAILY: As the principal daily newspaper of the University, students expect the Daily to at least make sure that the headlines are without mis- takes. In the article "Assassins in Ghandi plot found guilty" (1/29/98), noti- fying that 26 people were convicted and given the capi- tal punishment in the Rajiv Gandhi (ex-prime minister of India) assassination case, the headline spelled his name "Ghandi." Pronunciation or ignorance is one thing, but putting it to print in a head- line in the Daily is another. I am sure it was careless proof reading, as the name was spelled correctly in the story. The Daily should exercise more care and thoroughness in the future. DHRUBA CHATTERJEE UNIVERSITY STAFF 'U' should ignore the myths of homelessness TO THE DAILY: Homelessness is a prob- lem that society has let go for too long. Lack of affordable housing and high unemploy- ment are major causes of this problem. The homeless in Ann Arbor are considered "undesirables" because they are considered non-tax-pay- ing citizens by the city. I was in a shelter for a long time. So I know the ins and outs of homelessness. The homeless are ridiculed and harassed by University police, as well as Ann Arbor police. But the fact remains that the majority of the homeless do have jobs. Students at the University, educate should educate them- selves and ignore the myths about the homeless - they just feed more negativity. To homeless people, everyday is a struggle and for some, a struggle that ends in death. The Homeless Power Union has been an active organization around the cam- pus and in Ann Arbor. It has accomplished much for its small size - its goal is to fight for the rights of the homeless. While the media is still scrambling to interview the head cook from the dubi- ous intern's third grade summer camp ("She always got to the mess hall early on Tuesday mornings because Tuesday is grits day - boy could that girl ea0 some grits."), the rest of the country has seemingly moved on to more pressing issues than the president's alleged sexu- al indiscretions. Yeah, right. It's not that we don't care about the president; on the whole we don't care about anything. Take Iraq, for instance: weapons of mass destruction, thousands of civilian and military lives on the line, and Americans don't care about it on bit unless we get to see another one those homing missiles go down another chimney. This week the stock market hit a new high and unemployment and inflation are at the lowest levels in recent memory. With that kind of econ- omy, most of us wouldn't care if the United States were preparing to bomb Iowa, much less Iraq. The Olympics are another news-day snoozer. But I am watching because, have a feeling that little elf girl Lipinski is going to whack someone with a tire iron, and I heard she and the president are quite an item (you say Lewinsky, I say Lipinski. Oh, let's call the whole thing off). The problem is, I am not sure that the nation can shake this communal case of attention-deficit syndrome (what was I talking about?) We no longer watch the news, we just wait for the juiciest detail of the day's current events to be con densed into a Fox special (next week they are showing "When Presidents Attack 11 "). As a nation, I think we need to start thinking about how we are going to address our inability to stay focused on any one topic for any significant amount of time. But let me put that aside for a moment. It also seems to me that the recent interest in the moral fiber of th* commander in chief has made As ques- tion what we want in a president next time we get to "choose" one. If the economy is doing well, most of us will probably ignore the broader implica tions of the year 2000 race and fall back on the party we traditionally suppot. Therefore, that whole lack-of-focus thing will pop right back up and bite us in the butt because we will once again know nothing about the dolt we have elected (for further insight on this topic reference the Reagan years). The way I see it, we need to cut the work down for ourselves and get a presi dent we already know. That was the epiphany I had watching the movie "My Fellow Americans" (I also pondered why real life can't be more like HBO). At the end of the movie, two former one-term presidents - one from each party--run together. You know what I am thinking: Put George Bush and Jimmy Carter in thO same room for 20 minutes and you have a winning strategy totally sans parties. First off, they are both well respected, more popular as ex-presidents than they ever were as presidents, and both politi- cally moderate. For you doubting liber- als: Since leaving office, Bush has quit the NRA and confirmed that he and Barb were always closet pro-choicers, not to mention that this is the guy who coined the term "voodoo economics. For you skeptical conservatives: Carte was always on the economic right and is big on private-sector social welfare like Habitat for Humanity. Let's face it, these two have foreign policy wrapped up. Carter is like the Susan Lucci of the Nobel Peace Prize - always a nominee but never getting the medal. Domestically? Sure, it seems a little shaky, until you remember Carter's problem was inflationan@ Bush's was unemployment. Put them together and what do you got? No, not inflated unemployment - a happy equilibrium (maybe). Frankly, that's what this election is all about - Carter and Bush (they could