4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 4, 1999 ahr firtichwm ti Idile Doing lines with Jagger and other post 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily. Ietters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan HEATHER KAMINS Editor in Chief JEFFREY KOSSEFF DAVID WALLACE Editorial Page Editors 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. Bad reaction Plan to combat binge drinking lacks proper focus S top doing the crossword and imagine this. 6 a.m., you stumble half-dead into the shower, slog down some Star Bucks and speed like a boozed up Mario Andretti only to break an axle on a freeway pothole, while trying to find National Public Radio or that Pearl Jam Greatest Hits CD in your trendy eurocar (VW Beetle). You prac- tically rear end the back of a two-hour traffic jam only to be two min- utes late for work. You hide in your cubicle for 10 hours trying to fig- ure out exactly what the cost/benefit analysis of the two-week vs. one- Michael week pay period is, Nagrant while hatching diaboli-L cal plans to abscond with the company's serial post it note supply. At the end of the day, you sprint to your car, only to find you locked the keys inside. While wait- ing for the locksmith to jimmy the lock, you bum a cigarette from him, developing a seri- ous nicotine habit to cope with stress and the fact that you cannot understand why rent is due every month. Then you try to speed home, but again traffic doesn't seem to cooperate. You are chasing the setting sun, hoping that maybe if you roll down the car window you'll get a tan since the fluorescent office lights have given you pastier thighs than Bill Clinton. Finally home, you flop down on the Ikea furniture wondering if you actually have the stamina to boil water for the Ramen. Instead, you call for Chinese takeout, but then you realize you can only afford a fortune cookie, but at least you don't have to make it yourself. Then by some stroke of luck it's must see TV time. So you flip on "Beverly Hills, 90210." Yes, it's still on. It's the mid-life crisis years and Donna's implants have leaked. Dylan has killed himself three times and he still some- how gets resurrected for the Christmas episode as the ghost of Bob Marley. Brenda and Kelly realize that they really love each other, and everyone's cool with it except Steve Sanders. They all have trust funds and time to hang out and do whatever they want while winning Pulitzer Prizes and staging retrospec- tive fashion shows. Soon, Party ofTen, and the Golden Years: Return of Fred Savage have fin- ished and it is now 11 p.m., and you have an excuse to go to bed. On the nightstand lays a copy of the new self-help book by John Grisham entitled "Men are High Paid Defense Lawyers and Women are Underpaid Prosecutors: How to Reconcile your Differences in a Court of Law." Too tired to read the 20-page pop-up book, you pick up the Dilbert comic strip. The problem is you begin to weep uncontrollably, because like all things funny, it's all true. Sleep, Wash, Rinse, Repeat. Doesn't sound like too much fun, does it? While we are pulling all nighters strung out on Espresso Royale, plotting to kill the CRISP lady and trying to decide how we are going to make the world safe for democracy, this is the world that might await us outside. Sure maybe you were pre-med or pre-law and your cubicle comes with leather seats, Italian marble or those cool green scrubs, but it's all the same. Maybe you have kids, divorces, a couple of ferrets and think as David Byrne sings "How did I get here?" Maybe you become famous and you make phat bank and can finally pay all your Ann Arbor parking tickets, but then all you do is develop a drinking problem or do heroin with Mick on the Stones' Steel Wheelchairs tour while getting jet lagged on the flight to Paris in your personal jet. College is the time to save ourselves from this mindlessness. I know, you think I'm a cold hearted cynic, or you're a business major who knows this is all true, but the signing bonus is too hard to pass up. college possibilities Actually, I still think that with hard work and a little luck I could still be President the United States. I still think that I can save the world from population disaster or Bill Gates or whomever is plotting against us. Despite being Catholic, I still attend church on Sunday and think the pope is just misunderstood, but what I'm saying is that we need to be careful in the choices we make. If f ever get to be president, I don't want to bomb Iraq to make the population problem disappear. I want them to find th cure for AIDS and cancer just like everyone else. (Unless of course I invented AZT or chemotherapy.) We need to start thinking about how we will achieve these things, instead of letting life guide us like it could in the example above. Let us not bow to our parents expectations of law school, med school or engineering. Let's do it because that is our choice. Let's not take our liberal arts degrees and sell out to Arthur Anderson, because that's the best pay we can get with- out a professional degree. If you're an artis@ do it for the purity of art, not because it wil award you fame or a Madison Avenue con- tract. Do it because you have confidence that your ideas really can change the world. Follow the real reasons you came here as an idealistic freshperson, not reasons of money, greed and avoidance of therapy. Don't look back in 20 years and realize you got from point A to point B because everyone else was doing it. Stop the madness by slowin down and let everyone else catch up to yoW I bet you a slice of Backroom that if we stop believing the propaganda that we are the lazy X/l/me generation, or that we no longer have barriers to conquer like our forefathers, we will go farther, faster, stronger and higher, and we will be happy when it's all over. - If you think Michael Nagrant is crazy, not because your friends do; e-mail him at mjnagran@umich.edu Representatives from Michigan's 15 pub- lic universities met Tuesday to discuss the implications of college-age binge drink- ing. James Haverman, director of Michigan's Department of Community Health, present-; ed Gov. John Engler's plan to attack college binge drinking, which suggests ways state government, universities and local law enforcement can help change binge drinking behaviors. The plan includes an unclear "mentorship program" and a media blitz to inform college students about the dangers of alcohol. The most misguided and severe idea presented was Haverman's urging of univer- sities to take a strong stance against college binge drinkers by either informing parents or guardians of infractions, expelling those who have excessive drinking behaviors or "drying them out" by helping students remain sober. In the wake of alcohol-related deaths across the country and the resulting obses- sive media coverage, politicians and univer- sity administrators alike have been desper- ately searching for a way to control students' alcohol consumption. Despite endless stud- ies, task forces and conferences - all in the best interest of students - the key point is still eluding higher-ups such as Haverman. College students' personal habits should not be controlled or influenced by their universi- ty. While classes and professors may shape the minds of students, universities simply cannot take a moral stance on the actions of students. Expelling excessive drinkers would be a huge step out of bounds for university administrations. Furthermore, all the expelling, dog-sniffing, wrist-slapping and chastising in the world does not solve the underlying problem - drinking habits are culturally ingrained. As a form of rebellion and independence, young adults have always wanted what they Girlop Program improves cannot have - often in excessive amounts. In the United States, often the desired object for young adults is alcohol, simply because it is forbidden. Many countries do not treat alcohol as puritanically as the United States, and subsequently alcohol does not have a forbidden mystique. As a result, people learn to drink responsibly from an early age and avoid the drinking problems common in the U.S. Developing a certain degree of accep- tance seems to be a better approach than cur- rent methods of alcohol education. Students know perfectly well that alcohol can make them throw up, pass out and get into a fair amount of trouble with the law - that has already been made abundantly clear. Beating a redundant message into students' heads simply confirms to many that if authority frowns so harshly upon drinking, there must be something desirable about it. If lawmak- ers truly want to stop the reckless consump- tion of alcohol on college campuses, they need to change their approach. Rather than play parent to thousands of college students - searching their rooms for alcohol and expelling them for a nightcap - education aimed at changing the culture of drinking should be implemented, in addi- tion to lowering the drinking age. Eighteen- year-olds will drink regardless of whether it is legal for them to do so or not. But if drink- ing is made legal for most college students, the thrill of getting a fake ID, sneaking a keg into the residence halls or partying until the AAPD raids a fraternity house will be great- ly reduced. Thus, the amount of alcohol con- sumed will probably drop as well. Lawmakers should take note: it is not neces- sarily beer that college students are enam- ored with. It is the social significance that goes with it. ower girls' self image Carole Lapidos and psychotherapist Sally Wisotzkey, understand the need for girls to gain self-confidence during the grueling years of puberty. Both with children of their own, these associates have spent time teaching par- ents how to support daughters in today's con- stant struggle to fit in and feel comfortable. The adult workshop became the first step in allowing females to maintain a healthy lifestyle. The rest of the neighborhood soon caught on and answered Lapidos and Wisotzey's request for a grant to improve their program. The $15,000 given to the initiators has helped better the lives of the teenage female participants. Resulting adolescent self- awareness has prompted new assertiveness and happiness. Twelve University students in women's studies classes and Project Community serve as mentors in the program. The mentors and teachers plan to expand the program of now more than 20 sixth- and seventh-grade partic- ipants in upcoming years. Proposals have been discussed for a program tailored espe- cially for boys. In the current program, the mentors actively work with the adolescent girls by communicating with them through fun activities and discussions addressing issues of adolescence such as peer pressure, sexual harassment, stress, proper nutrition, drugs and alcohol. This weekly arena for encouraging teenage confidence has brought the Ann Arbor com- munity closer together. By allowing the daughters of today to openly share their con- cerns and grow, the women of tomorrow can feel spiritually stronger as the nation's new role models. MSA - Is this a disposable democracy? We all love to talk about how awesome democracy is. Its great openness, its resilient recognition of minority opinion and its pro- vision of equal representation are features we love and preach. But as recent reactions to the Michigan Student Assembly's Iraqi reso- lution demonstrate, these freedoms are quickly and conveniently abandoned when things get hot. The arguments being used to quell these freedoms are irrational and irrel- evant, people get angry and feisty, and in the end, the greatest casualty is the set of princi- ples and freedom we all love to praise. Constitutionally, MSA grants that its solemn duties are "to help foster and pre- serve an enlightened, free, just and democra- tic- academic community" and "to assure equal and effective participation in student government to all members of the student body." There is no fine print saying "except for international issues" or "unless they are a minority" or that these only apply for issues that are directly "involving the relationship between the University students and the administration" as The Michigan Daily asserts. No, MSA is a democratic legislative institution that invites groups of students to bring qualms, issues and voices, to be heard and voted on. How can we stand by and decry this openness? How can we say that certain students should decide the pertinence of all issues, and prioritize issues? Anyone with any moral backbone will agree that the death of 1.4 million Iraqis is an important issue that needs to be addressed. And the University is, historically, the leader at con- fronting these issues. I challenge the Daily to apply its criticisms to MSA's past battles against apartheid in South Africa, the Vietnam War and the brutal massacres in El Salvador. There are many myths in this whole mess. The Daily's completely anti-constitu- tional piece "Off Course" (2/2/99) constructs the ridiculously false dichotomy of interna- tional issues or campus issues. MSA meet- ings operate on an agenda. That means that the Iraq issue was added to that night's dis- course. Therefore, it dispossessed nothing, it was not a waste of MSA's time because that* time was an extension of the regular meeting time. By addressing the humanitarian disas- ter in Iraq, MSA did not drop any of its other projects that the Daily commends. The passage of this resolution does not MATT WIMSATT change any of the MSA's successes and car- rent programs. It still will run the coursepack store, defend students' rights, seek to have a student regent and most importantly, grant all students the civil liberties and democra freedoms that are their rights; even if tI means passing resolutions which many do not agree with or consider relevant. The MSA did the truly democratic thing. It embraced a minority's view and gave it a legislative forum where democrat- ic processes, are encouraged: by debating, not by condemning or ruling out. All this nonsense about MSA's role is non-debatable and "unchallengeable." It serves as an inclusive representative body. The MSA did and will do as its constitution mandates@ you feel that is wrong, propose a change. The student body and the Daily need to rec- ognize that democratic freedoms are not disposable and that the sanctions' effects of 4,500 Iraqi kids perishing each month needs to be acted on. This viewpoint was written by Will Youmans, an MSA represent* tive. He can be reached over e-mail at wyoumans@umich.e A LOOK BACK n a society where the dangerously skinny supermodel poses as a female icon, it is essential for growing girls to learn how to accept themselves naturally rather than starve emotionally. Since treatment from others bears a direct relationship to self image, young girls' feelings tend to correspond to how their peers view them. Adolescence marks the perfect beginning for embracing personal appreciation so positive relationships can form and optimism endures through the college years. An innovative new program in Ann Arbor's Forsythe Middle School is help- ing to facilitate that process.- The way women handle and regard them- selves in college depends largely on their development as an adolescent. In middle school, all the excitement of budding friend- ships and new experiences also brings new dilemmas. Along with tender teenage rela- tionships come frequent heartache and taunt- ing. Both boys and girls feel personal conflicts as they reach puberty, but the two sexes cope with such feelings in marked differences. Adolescent girls tend to direct their frustra- tions inward. Poor self esteem in girls during middle school often correlates with depres- sion and eating disorders later on in life. Luckily, with some help from the University community, one middle school has taken measures to reduce such trauma. The Forsythe Middle School of Ann Arbor understands the trials and tribulations girls find during maturation. Two insightful female members of the area created a remarkable program, It's Great To Be A Girl, which runs this year for the first time. The founders of the after-school organization, social worker Daily's does 'finejob' providing reports on local issues TO THE DAILY: I would like to take a moment to respond to Geoffery Stanton's Jan. 26 let- ter entitled "Daily's sports coverage is excessive." My biggest problem with Stanton's notion is the fact that he seems to fail to realize that the Daily is a campus newspaper, therefore it should cover cam- pus events. The Daily does it pretty well, its fine editorials are generally focused on cam- pus issues, as is its news coverage. Occasionally itsfalterssbut every newspa- per does. And since one of the larger events on campus is the University's athletic pro- gram, the Daily should cover it extensive- ly because other newspapers do not, and let things like world events and the like be covered by the media outlets that have the resources and the wider paying audience to do so. If you have issues with the lack of world events, turn on Headline News, read a Reuters news summary online, or drop 35 cents and pick up a Detroit Free Press or The Detroit News. For a free campusrpaper, the Daily does a fine job, and its sports coverage is excellent. CRAIG BARKER LSA SENIOR Opponents of MSA ----SEE RR/ -i..--- 9/% GE))(1 1 + IIN --F ยง you all. As many of you know, the MSA approved, by one vote, a resolution opposing the sanctions in Iraq that are killing children at the rate of one dead every 20 minutes. As many of you may also know, it is the United States that is the rallying force behind these deadly measures. Many representatives say they did not vote for the resolutionybecause they believed that the assembly had no place in such issues. I would tell them that when more than 20 students take time from their busy lives to attend a three-hour long MSA meeting so that they may see the passage of a resolution that is important to them, it is a student issue. I urge the students of the University. not to re-elect the following students as they had neither the courage nor the for- titude to stand up for a just and justified Please do not re-elect these people as they either voted against or abstained from voting on a humane and moral resolution I ask you to travel to the MSA offi read the resolution and see for your , that by voting against it or abstaining~, these representatives displayed a lack -of courage and an acceptance of the mass killing of hundreds of thousands of inno- cent people in Iraq. One last note. David Burden, as for you, words fail me in describing my pure distaste for your politics and ultra-conservative views. But I will give it a shot. Your anti-progress tactics have, for a long time, affected stu- dent interests in a purely hurtful way. You have finally committed your first act of public service in resigning your position on MSA. I sincerely believe that if it were up to you. everyone on this campus would be