4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 7, 1998 altE fit"trilluan ttilg 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 'Heroin Is an attractive drug because the rush has been likened to orgasm.' - Deb Kraus, a clinical psychologist at the University's Counseling and Psychological Services Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Counting the hours Immigration laws harm international students I n the wake of the Asian economic crisis, many U.S. universities are experiencing a decline in student enrollment from Asia. Contrary to this trend, the University has experienced an increase in the number of Asian undergraduate students. But there are a number of currently enrolled internation- al undergraduate students who are experi- encing financial difficulties. While the University is taking some action to aid international students, it should do more. In addressing this issue, the University has lobbied with the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service to relax the interna- tional student laws. As a result, the University has introduced a new policy, allowing international students to take fewer credits and find employment in order to ease their financial problems. This is a good move on the University's part in trying to assist students facing finan- cial difficulties. But international students should evaluate the long-term educational and financial benefits of this policy before deciding whether to exercise this option. Currently, all international undergraduate students are required by immigration laws to take a minimum of 12 credit hours. But as a iesult of taking fewer credits, there is a greater chance that a student will need more than four years to graduate. Assuming that the average tuition rate for international undergraduate students is approximately $10,000 per semester and that this figure remains the same for the next 10 years (which it highly unlikely), a student graduating in four years - eight semesters - will have to pay roughly $80,000. Students who take fewer credits each semester because of finan- cial difficulties will have lower tuition rates, but if a student continues to enroll as a part time student, they will require more than four years to graduate. For these students there miay be-no financial benefit, because the total sioney, needed to graduate wilt be greater than that of a student graduating in four years paying the higher tuition each semester. Other than the problem of taking the required credits, international students must deal with immigration laws limiting their employment. International students can only seek employment through the University and can only work a maximum of 20 hours per week-a limit that the policy change will not affect. This simply means that international students can only hold jobs such as working in residence halls or in the library. While this requirement is not likely to change, perhaps the number of hours an international student should be increased. Increasing the maximum working hours could help students earn an extra $200 per week - assuming they can manage the extra workload while still devot- ing the necessary time to their studies. The University, rather than trying to assist students in such a passive method, should take a more active approach toward assisting inter- national undergraduate students. Currently, many international students have to pay full fees with the only source of financial support through parents - and not all international parents are wealthy, especially with the Asian economic crisis creating such financial tumult. Scholarships for international gradu- ate students are plentiful, but undergraduate scholarships are not abundant. The University should begin by providing more scholarship opportunities for international undergraduate students to ease their financial problems. The University treasures its diverse campus, and if current trends continue unchecked, but cam- pus may lose its international influences strict- ly because attending the University is too financially taxing. Many students - regardless of their back- ground - need some sort of financial help to attent the University. But international under- graduate students, due in no small part to eco- nomic crises around the globe, likely face an even greater financial challenge than some of their peers. Adding scholarships can allow international students an opportunity to ease their financial problems and at the same time concentrate on their studies. IWHEN WE WORMl TWO END) SMYU TELEMA ETING PRACTICES IN 16, AL, I DIDNI I 4lNk WE WERL TAKING ABOUT YOU. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The butcher's bill U.S. should make reparations for discrimination Ticket price hike is not Berenson'S fault To THE DAILY: I just wanted to respond to the Berenson bashers out there. While nobody likes the hockey ticket increase, it sure as hell isn't Red's fault. Decisions like that are above him, and it is his job to work within those parameters. What's a shame is that his true sentiments on the han- dling of the situation didn't come through in the Daily's story. In his letter to Dekers club members, he comment- ed on how it's a shame that the Athletic Department decided to do the price increase all at once. It would have been much less infuriat- ing if they had increased the price incrementally over a few years. What's true is that we're payingaan average price now. Michigan State hockey tickets cost as much as $12 a game, and they can't even win a championship, let alone two in recent years! I'm not happy about this any more than the next guy, but I will definitely say that this program is worth it and am proud to have my seats for this season. JOSH KEOUGH SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING A proposal to make GEO fair To THE DAILY: Eric Dirnbach's attack on me and defense of the GEO ("GEO Stands for GSIs' rights," 10/5/98) requires immediate correction. Dirbach assumes that I have no understanding of the ben- efits that I get "from the union"' My two children were born here, so I am very familiar with the health and other benefits that GSIs have. But I dispute his claim that the GEO is responsible for those benefits. Four of five graduate programs I was accepted at had the same or similar benefits without unions. That is a factortof the program I chose, not the uni- versity or union. GEO cannot claim credit for getting me benefits I would get anyway. I acknowledge that the union is my negotiating agent with the University and am not asking for a free ride. My complaint is that the remu- neration is unfair and exces- sive. I don't know the actual percentages that the union spends on various activities. It is certainly spending a lot of my money on things I don't want to be a part of, percent) of the union dues. If you want to be in the union, with all that includes, you can join the union. If all you want is to be represented in negotiations with the University, you can pay the reduced representation fee. That is fair. I think my proposal could actually lead to a stronger union. If everyone who joined the union actually wanted to be in the union, the union is in a better a position for their strikes and days of action. But most importantly my proposal gives GSIs the freedom to choose if they want to be involved or not. STEVEN CURKE RACKHAM Cash should be punished for his inaction TO THE DAILY: In reading the viewpoint of Sept. 30, "Berkeley wants student to get out of town," I. was utterly shocked and appalled that David Cash had apparently no conscience to stop what he was witnessing. What is wrong with people today when a 7-year-old girl is being raped to death by a college student, and his friend does nothing? When this little girl is dead, and Cash is only concerned about his reputation and enrollment at Berkeley, I think that something needs to be done. Expulsion isnot enough. Not only did Cash not say any- thing, but he watched it hap- pen and didn't even try to stop his friend. I cannot believe that he even has the gall to brag about making money off of this incident, or that he feels the need to call a local radio station and com- pare this incident with the plight of starving children in Panama. Hopefully, we can all try to realize when our fellow man is in danger and intervene. CHRISTOPHER DEVRIES LSA SOPHOMORE Viewpoint was damaging to efforts for peace To THE DAILY: I am writing in response to the viewpoint printed on Oct. 5, "Daily ignores Israeli violations." I am dismayed that the Daily would print an article containing language that seems to call for vio- lence. A newspaper's editorial page should serve as a public arena to exchange views terms is like yelling fire in a crowded building. Specifically, I object to the use of terms that refer to the Israeli army as "machine- gun-toting racists" and the comparison of the Holocaust with the conflict between Israeleand the Palestinians. While I recognize the legiti- macy of the Palestinian strug- gle for justice, it is historical- ly inaccurate and an affront to morality to compare Palestinian hardships to the Holocaust. For the Daily to permit its esteemed pages to be used for such propaganda defies understanding. Hitler presided over the systematic destruction of six million Jews. Nothing that the gov- ernment of Israel has done to the Palestinians remotely approaches the Holocaust. The issue addressed in this viewpoint - the Daily's lack of coverage of this group's recent event - may be a valid complaint. But coupling that complaint with a cacophony of unfounded allegations stated in fighting language only makes the situ- ation worse. I am not saying that the Palestinian people have not suffered, they surely have. But no good will come out of situation until the name-calling ends and fair and honest dialogue begins. It is time to stop the name-calling and start deal- ing with the challenging issues that divide each side. I call on both sides to stop using the Daily's editorial page as a forumto file griev- ances against one another. Instead, let us sit down, examine the facts, and draw informed conclusions about the situation. MICAH PELTZ LSA SOPHOMORE Daily should not use the word 'victim' To THE DAILY: Daily staff reporter Katie Plona uses the word "victim" 19 times in her Oct. 2 article ("Brooks sanctioned under Code"). Although this term may be Daily policy, it is degrading and unacceptable and perpetuates violence against women. The woman mentioned is not a victim, she is a sur- vivor. "Victim" implies pas- sivity, and although the defi- nition of "one who is injured" may apply, the 19 repetitions bombard the read- er with images of helpless- ness and lack of action. The Daily should not affirm this message; by rein- forcing the notion of the . weak "victim," all women are hurt. Clearly this survivor is neither passive nor lacking strength - she is coura- geously seeking adequate punishment for her assailant, Music the righteous people enjoy see them resenting me. In class. In the Diag. Everywhere. The White Girls are ticked off. I have seen the hurt in the eyes of a "few earnest sophomores who were wounded that I so coldly dissected an illuminated their idiosyncratic and bril- liantly eclectic camp mix tape pathology (thank you, Lawrence.) They accuse me. "Okay, Mr. Too- C o o l- F o r- Everything. If you're better than all us people who listen to the Violent Femmes, what do1 AME you think is good? MILLER Huh, smartypants?" M 1 R I'm glad you ON I'A asked. 1) Sam Cooke. Everyone knows a few of his songs. "Chain Gang" is very popular, as is "Cupid" and "Twistin' the Night Away." If these songs were the whole of his recorded output, he would have a comfortable place in the po pantheon. As it happens, Sam is one or the greatest singers ever to draw a breath. Keith Richards once said that for a period of two years, he listened to nothing but Sam Cooke. Jerry Wexler, the legendary Atlantic producer of Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles, said that Cooke was the "the best singer ever. Unequivocally." He may be right. In the history of pop and R&B singing, there has not been a single person who has been able to cop* him. People of surpassing talent love him; but they cannot imitate him. Sam Cooke is one those singers who doesn't just make you think about Her, he makes you want Her back. 2) B.B. King. It's more than a little unfortunate that his most famous song, "The Thrill Is Gone," is his most over- produced and most hokey. Not that there's anything wrong with it. But typ ing Riley B. King by the sound of thaw one song is ridiculous. Every year since 1954, King has played at least 300 dates a year. He began his career filling in for Sonny Boy Williamson on Memphis radio and at last count has seven Grammys, not including the lifetime achievement award. He has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame. He aso holds honorary doctorates from Ya and the Berkeley College of Music. More colloquially, everybody who has started playing guitar since the mid- sixties would play differently if King had never lived. Everybody. In the realm of singing, only one or two other bluesmen can be mentioned in the same sentence with him. On the landscape of American music, B.B. King is, in the words of his biographer David Ritz," grandfather, calling to his children." 3) Stevie Wonder. The 20th-Century American answer to Mozart. From Saginaw. You get the idea. Stevie Wonder is one of those artists whose scope of talent and influence is almost too huge to discuss. From Little Stevie Wonder and "Fingertips, part 2" through the inspired "Songs in the Key of Life" and beyond, few musicians have been able to be so creative and original with each album and still main- ~tain such a large base of popularit* Wonder's music can make it impossible not to dance, impossible not to sing along, impossible not to remember and impossible not to cry. He, along with Marvin Gaye and the Temptations, was responsible for creat- ing a sense of social conscience and activism in music that rivaled-that ofthe hippie movement occurring concurrent- ly. He can generate pure, caustic funk; seamless ballad, an R&B tone poem a protest song, put it all on a record and make it sound like it would be foolish to have it sound any other way. And why is all this necessary? All this hipster, doofus idol worship in which I am indulging. Because, in the words of a great philosopher, "People put any- thing in their earhole." In the modern rush not to make anyone not feel bad about themselves, not to make any value judgments, we are losing +somethin This is not to say that music made ao 1975 is automatically meritless; witness my shameless crush on Lauryn Hill. New music is not, by definition, bad music. But, just for a minute, think about the music press and television that called the 17-year-old Fiona Apple "the next Queen of Soul" on the basis of one album and a Calvin Klein underwear model physique. It's not passion anymore. It's no love and it's not soul. It's focus groups and marketing. It's Ani DeFranco's hackish, adolescent whining passing for ... I'm not sure what the hell it's supposed to be. It's that in our time, music is a cultur- al weapon. Something to put on your Since 1863, when Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, this country has made great strides in civil rights and racial equality. Encouraged by strides over the years, the Harlem Renaissance to the Civil Rights Acts of the 1960s, most African Americans are now closer to achieving equality - but thou- sands have been left behind. From the mid-1800s until the early 1990s, the U.S. Department of Agriculture in particu- lar partook in outright racist actions toward the black community. As a result, the number of black farmers has decreased from one million in 1900 to less than 10,000 today. Though they once owned 15 million acres of land and pro- duced 10 percent of the annual gross domestic product, African Americans now farm only 2 million acres and produce less than 1 percent of the total commodities product. What is most absurd about this whole situation is that the problem persists until the present day. While the rest of the nation tried to alleviate racism from the United States the 1960s, the USDA continued its horrendous practices up until the end of the Bush administration. In fact, the most prevalent occurrences happened after President Reagan dismantled the USDA's civil rights office in the early 1980s. In response to the department's long- standing racist discrimination in farm loans, almost a 1,000 African American farmers have filed a class action suit against the USDA. Their claim includes the delays and sures, accelerated payment schedules and significant differences in the amount of loans and grants to blacks compared to whites. The suit also states that the government ignored hundreds of their discrimination complaints about this treatment outright. Meanwhile, hundreds of black farms are still being fore- closed on every year. The USDA itself has admitted to the racism they practiced, but no one has been punished and no actions have yet been taken to remedy the damage they caused. President Clinton promised the black community a variety of remedies, including settlement of the suit, participation in agri- culture programs and loans where they have previously been barred. To date, Clinton's legislation has not been passed. If the USDA wishes to be known as a non-discriminatory organization, then it can no longer ignore the racist actions performed by its employees. Although steps have been taken by Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman to ensure that racist practices have ceased, more must be done. Investigations should be conducted to punish those involved and remove them from their posi- tions. Each individual grievance must be dealt with on the merits of the case and full reparations made to those who have been hurt by decades of discrimination. The November elections present the perfect opportunity to make the plight of black farmers an issue. If this is a country that truly believes in civil rights and equality, the decades of USDA discrimination can no