4A - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 9, 1998 aloe , lCirl i ttzt BatlL, 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 4'.',.- n.. LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor 'Ten hours in the car really bites the big one.' - LSA first-year student Eric Allmendinge, who had to drive from New Jersey because of the Northwest Airlines pilots'strike 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 U' should make book lists available to all KAAMRAN HAFEEZ As IT FITnNS Low AT 2 TK K THE RATtNt. IT'S A A LEGAL SWENSE A DOCUMENTARY 'ITS AN ADULT SUM-W p'HtHAPS? FRDMBCf KATORE. MYSTERY The first couple of weeks of the semester are always a stressful time for students, regardless of class standing. Students move into new homes, amend schedules and purchase all needed sup- plies. Of the numerous rituals in which students partake, buying books rates as one of the most burdensome tasks of each semester. The current system students use - procuring texts from a small selection of outlets - certainly could use a measure of revision. A few substantial but practical changes could make purchasing textbooks a more palatable experience for students. The expense of college texts is the most straining aspect involved when buying books. To lift some of the financial load, more competition should exist between -bookstores selling textbooks. A lack of competition is present because Ulrich's Book Store, Michigan Book and Supply, and the Michigan Union Bookstore run the Textbook Reporting Service. University professors use this service to order the books they want for each class. The list of necessary books, 'which is not made public, gives the three main textbook stores a large chunk of the University market. Instead of allowing the bookstores to run the ser- vice, the University should compile the list itself and make it public. With a public list, there is a good chance other area bookstores, even large chains such as Borders or Barnes and Noble, would begin selling some text- books. Bookstores are able to return books they do not sell to the publisher without financial loss. Considering Ann Arbor's large student population, many bookstores likely would jump at the chance for extra revenue. Making the list prices public would give students more places to shop, increasing competition and thus driving prices down. Also, chain stores, if given the opportunity to sell to students, might offer discounts to attract business. A public list also would give students the ability to shop for some of their course materials at home, before they arrive on campus. For this to happen professors would have to turn in their lists of books in a reasonable amount of time before the semester. Of course, time is the other major dif- ficulty involved when purchasing books. Students sometimes waste a good deal of time the first few days going from store to store looking for books that may not be available. Even if they are, lines are almost always long. The University, as a part of developing a more computerized campus, should look into including book availability as an addendum to the online courseguide. Ideally, the books needed for each class could be posted with the course descriptions. Also, area bookstores that carry the titles could be listed. Perhaps in the future, students could access the inventory of each particular title and its availability at area stores from the University Website. Buying textbooks has long been fraught with difficulties. The current sys- tem is far too inefficient and costly for students. The University needs to play a more active role to encourage greater affordability and organization. In doing so, the University will protect student interests, which should be its greatest concern. 11± - , VIEWPOINT Research enhances underg~ad education BY FREDERICK C. NEIDHARDT Welcome to the University of Michigan, and welcome to one of the most productive and exciting centers of research excellence in the world! Michigan research and scholarly activity has touched your lives in many ways already. Our researchers and scholars have, for instance, developed new approaches to music and dance, new ways of looking at history and human evolution, proved the effectiveness of the Salk polio vaccine, developed a gene deliv- ery system for molecular medicine, recently discovered the gene for cystic fibrosis, pio- neered the field of fiber optics and holography, invented the technology underpinning the Internet, discovered many chemotherapeutic agents, and the list continues to grow. All of this activity provides a rich environ- ment for you to learn and to grow intellectual- ly and provides additional ways for you to con- nect to our outstanding faculty. As our Provost Nancy Cantor has pointed out, a truly great university integrates teaching and research for all of its students at all levels of experience and expertise. The University faculty - engaged in the most innovative and creative research and scholarship - have the advanced knowl- edge to offer you the special advantages of a Michigan education. As you start your University career, I invite you to explore the opportunities and chal- lenges that a research-intensive institution like ours provides. Are you curious about the incredible societal changes in South Africa as that country moves from apartheid to democra- cy? Are you interested in the origin of the uni- verse and the fundamental properties of mat- ter? How about the development of democracy and capitalism in China? Would you like to learn about the construction and use of large telescopes? Or how genes can be captured, modified, and added to an organism's genetic potential? Are you concerned about global warming and the effects of rising carbon dioxide content in the atmosphere? Does the increased partici- pation of women in occupations and profes- sions previously dominated by males hold a special attraction for you? Are you concerned about the Great Lakes and the quality of the inland water resources of the nation? Does AIDS, or the decreasing effectiveness of antibiotics against disease-causing microor- ganisms engage your concern? Are you curious about how University forecasters provide the nation with an annual outlook on the country's economic health? Do you want to understand the national debate on the public support of the arts and humanities? Do the problems faced by children growing up in the inner city of Detroit engage you? All of these questions and more are being explored by University faculty, and you can take part in this work in some way, even as undergraduates. Learning through involvement in research and creative work has many pay-offs. Many research endeavors involve work in teams that might include faculty members, graduate stu- dents, technical staff, postdoctoral fellows and undergraduate students working on a project together - the very kind of collaboration seen in all areas of work today. Many students find that engagement in research provides a context and meaning to their academic program; course material makes more sense once a connection to the real world is recognized. Frequently, students find their grades rising. Students learn as much about their strengths and interests as they do about some new area of study, making future career choic- es easier. I know this personally. Had I not tast- ed research as an undergraduate, I would have followed a career path into medicine rather than research - for me, a grave mistake. On the other hand, some of my friends learned through participation in biomedical research that clinical service as a physician was exactly the right path for them. Like mine did, your research experiences will expose you to facul- ty and others who can serve as valuable guides and counselors - mentors who will be in strong positions to write meaningful letters of recommendation to future employers. And remember, your engagement in research can take many forms. For some of you, a credit research course is appropriate. For others, summer research makes more sense. Some faculty members can offer paying jobs on research projects. Talk to faculty and graduate students about their work, check out the hot research topics in your areas of person- al interest or simply visit the lab or studio down the corridor. In particular, check into the widely acclaimed Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) for the chance to join a research team during the first few years at the University. For other leads on research-based learning for undergraduates, go to the Website, http://www.undergraduatere- search.edu Again, welcome to the University of Michigan. Welcome to the opportunities to participate in research, scholarship and cre- ative activity. Frederick C. Niedhart is the vice president for research. Buying a sport utility vehicle: A drama in 1/2 act (Ext.: Car dealership in suburban America. A young man ruffles his Caesar haircut with a hat brim. He tugs at his rugby shirt, examining the cars on the lot. A salesman sidles up next to him after checking him out and begins his rap.) S alesman: That's a fine machine you're looking at there. I say 'she' to make it sound like we're looking at battleships. Young Man: Oh yeah, it's dope, man. Those joints from Ford are tight, yo JAMES S: You just MILLER bought the Puffy anthology, didn't you? Y: Fuckin'A! S: Fabulous. Listen, Y - can I call you Y? Good. Y, as a salesman I pride myself on being able to size up people fairly quickly. Y: You could tell I'm still wasted? S: No, no, not that. I can tell that you're a man of taste and class. Except for the vomit on your hat. Y: Dude, it's not my vomit. Last night night, Dave and Mark crashed in my room like totally wasted ... S: Whatever. Look, Y, I'm not going to waste your time figuring out your price range or what the best car for your specific needs might be. If your family was that practical, you would have been killed and eaten before you could swing a seven iron. You're here for a car that will make an impression. A car that says I'm better than my neighbors.' A car that says 'I deserve the fruits of my father's medical degree and/or idiot middle management meatball job.' You're looking for a Compensator. Am I right? Y: Absolutely, S. I was talking to my dad and new mom and he said it was September and time for me to get a new car so I could drive home a couple times a year, drive to the bar, haul stuff, drive to Backroom, pick up my friends, drive to class, drive to the bar ... anyway. I know some like, poor kids, who have old cars that just sorta do what they need them to and get like, mileage and stuff. But what is that shit? Drive around in some little hatchback? Who am 1, my little Mexican gardener or something? S: Too true. There are just too many little satisfactions that a car like the Compensator can provide for you. Do you like to menace people at cross- walks? Fly out of the alley net to Rick's? Just this model year we've added a row of burnished steel spikes to the front grill. And, if I may, only the Compensator keeps you a full 18 inches higher off the ground than you- brothers. Y: Excellent. I'm like totally diggin' this car. What about the sound system? S: I'm glad you asked, Y. You know, a lot of car makers would just fill up their high-end models with woofers and bass tubes. Frankly, I think that makes you looks a little, shall we say, ethnic. (Y shudders.) Well, you won't find that on the Compensator. The sound engineers at Execuberry are in' touch with the musical needs of today' little Aryan listeners. The Compensato comes with a stereo system that fea- tures both little red lights and little black buttons. The speakers are designed to yield the highest quality sound across the spectrum. Anything from Matchbox 20 to Rusted Root will sound like they're right in the back seat with you. Y: Kick ass! What if like, my Hookup wants to listen to like some Indigo Girl or Bob Dylan or some shit? S: No problem. ThetCompensator's system is programmed to automatically adjust to any kind of white music. Y: Sweet. S: Y, I'm glad you mentioned the fair- er sex. Y: Who? S: Women Y: Oh. S: Y, I'm going to be honest with you. The lacrosse team has given you nic9 little pecs and a cute waist. The over- powering, whitebread nature of your heredity has left you hairless and toothy. I'm guessing you do pretty well with the ladies. Y. At least the drunk bitches. Or the dumb ones. Or the ones who like, feel bad about themselves and will do things to like, make you like them and stuff. S: Close enough. I'm not going to make any promises I can't keep, but1 think that if you leave the lot driving a Compensator, you're success with the ladies will not suffer. Catch my drif?. Y: Totally. S: Good. The Compensator's on- board computer comes equipped with 10 digitally stored songs that can be FDA ar protection FDA approves the 'morning-after' kit T wenty years ago, women were given T the right to practice greater control over their reproductive capability. But until last week, women still did not have access to many of the options available for pre- venting an unwanted pregnancy. On Sept. 2, the Food and Drug Administration added one more option when they approved the PREVEN Emergency Contraceptive Kit. Before this announcement, many women were kept in the dark - never presented with all of the medical know-how surround- ing pregnancy prevention. For years, Planned Parenthood offices, some campus health centers and rape crisis clinics offered morning-after pills, but the drugs and the technique used - a series of pill-taking - were never widely accessible, nor dis- cussed. Women now have more options, and rightly so. The kit is $20 and will be available by prescription at the end of September. The pills work up to 72 hours after having unprotected sex, prevents pregnancy 98 percent of the time and have a shelf life of up to one-and-a-half years, allowing easy storage at home. The ease, reliability and accessibility of this form of contraception give women a back-up to consistent and regular contraception. Opposition to the mass sale and market- ing of the kit has already been voiced, par- ticularly by religious leaders, which claims it is another form of abortion. But the PRE- VEN kit does not terminate an established pregnancy, it prevents or delays ovulation, prevents fertilization of an egg or prevents implantation of a fertilized egg. Yet it is this type of moral opposition that successfully stopped contraceptive manufacturers from selling nills that the FDA annroved as safe and effective morning-after remedies in 1997. Finally, what has been deemed safe and has been available to women in Europe for years is now available to women in the United States. What the United States has yet to approve is the French abortion pill, RU486. This pill actually ends a pregnancy up to several weeks after conception. While side- effects often include nausea and vomiting, this pill is yet another effective option that the United States keeps from all women. For women to fully take advantage of their right to choose, every medically based and approved option to end or prevent pregnan- cy should be available. But with this new option comes a higher degree of responsibility. Though the PRE- VEN kit prevents pregnancy, it does not prevent sexually transmitted diseases. Regular use of condoms - the only form of contraception that can prevent the spread of many STDs - should always be a part of any sexual relationship. This morning-after option should not be used as standard con- traception, but instead for emergency situa- tions only. This milestone for women's reproductive health needs to be dealt with responsibly. The newly approved kit could reduce half of the 2.7 million unintended preg- nancies per year and could significantly reduce abortion rates, experts say. But women still deserve more options. The right to control their own bodies and reproductive responsibilities should be total and complete. While this FDA approval and later mass distribution is a step in the right direction, it is not enough for the millions of women in the United States. LETTER TO THE EDITOR White males suffer great discrimination TO THE DAILY: I will always remember Justice Lewis Powell, who recently died at the age of 90, as the swing vote on the Court that was responsible for one of the greatest injus- tices in the history of this country. Since the civil rights laws were passed in 1964, establishing the right of all people to equal justice under the law, there had been those who attempted to usehthese laws as a cover for inflicting racism and discrimination against white males. Quietly, programs and policies began to sprout up all over the country giving preferences of one kind or another to the face of the civil rights laws, they were allowed to continue. What Powell and the Supreme Court did in 1978 (through the Bakke decision and later through the Webber decision) gave legal sanction to these racist policies. The Supreme Court basically established two classes of individuals in this country, women and minorities who are accorded unconditional protection from discrimina- tion in all facets of society, and white males who are denied such rights. Today, discrimination against white males is ram- pant throughout our society. From school admissions to scholarship awards to busi- ness recruiting policies to job promotions, white males are routinely discriminated against. American white males have grown so accus- without affirmative action. In interviews taken since the 1978 rulings, Powell expressed surprise that these affirmative action decisions caused so little uproar among American white males. I suppose he felt white males accepted these policies because of guilt and feelings of deserved punishment. It is time that this complacency end. Americans of all class- es who believe in true jus- tice should stand up and demand that discrimination be ended once and for all. Through the political process, political protest, and organizations such as the American Civil Rights Coalition, Americans must stand up together and demand an end to Powell's filthy legacy. i