4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 18, 1999 (he Iidtigan ltafi||lg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily. letters@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. "; ,.:. .. e ; C .%5k Why waif is wrong and other beauty myths "I'm sorry but Iam not a maiden fair I woman over 20 is gonna have a hard time heads? I'm sure primordial woman just am not aprettygirl, Idon't really want to be matching the supposed elegance of a pre- hit herself with a rock until they fell out, a pretty girl. I want to be more than a pret- pubescent teen. The girls in these mags but all she has to do now is put a Band- ty girl."-Ani Difranco have bony angles that you can only mea- Aid on her nose, and yank hard until she never met a woman who was happy sure with a protractor and a ruler. They're removes 20 layers of epidermis. There is with her weight, about a decade from developing any type a bright side - the pore strip can also of course I never of curve. There's a reason you don't see reduce snoring and helps you breathe bet- met one who was Claudia Schiffer or Rachel Hunter any- ter if you play in the NFL. Beyond the happy, but that's more, they actually became women, and pore strip, I'm sure the ridiculous another column. I who wants that? These magazines do have Summers Eve commercial doesn't need also never met a girl articles on healthy body image and the further explanation. who was haute cou- dangers of eating disorders, but right next Marketing has convinced men that our ture, heroin chic or to some girl who doesn't eat. (Do not women must match up or be relegated to pret d porter. (Of worry - she's hooked up to a Glucose IV the post party hook up. After all, you can- course I don't speak drip between shoots) . not really have a real relationship with a French, which may The Cosmo Website actually has an woman if she's not in the Sports have something to advertisement for Jenny Craig, which Illustrated Swimsuit issue. Women, don't do with this.) Cut asks "Are you overweight?" This is about pay attention to this. Men are stupid me some slack, I'm Michael as ridiculous as wallpapering an sometimes and while we fall prey to pop- not a womens stud- Nagant Alcoholic's Anonymous meeting hall ular media too, we also have serious hor- ies major either, but with Absolut ads. mone issues. (Apparently so do women, I've got some prob. .fe You expect the worse from glamour see Sarah Lockyer's Tuesday column.) We lems with the popu- Serial mags, but not media like the New Yorker will salivate at anything in a bikini, and I lar media's tired por- or Rolling Stone. It's amazing what pass- guarantee if you put Drew Carey in a trayal of the ideal woman. es as a serious profile of a female musi- Victoria Secret Angel Bra, we'd think Public enemy number one is the "glam- cian today. twice. our" magazine. I'm sick of the mythic A typical piece on Jewel usually Finally, lets just lay off Calista nymphette who slinks her doe eyed angst includes the phrase, "despite her crooked Flockhart and Kate Moss. While they across the cover of any glossy mag. If the . teeth, Jewel is very well endowed; oh, exhibit the body types of which I am popular idea of a woman is oil can and she has a new album out too." speaking, they are body types. It is possi- slathered mascara and a figure that would Male writers especially seem to focus ble that they have really "good metabo- make Skeletor jealous, count me out. on Alanis Morrisette's nude video, rather lisms. The climax of an Ally McBeal Take a look at any fashion spread and all than asking why the hell is she thanking episode should not be, "is she gonna eat you got is soft porn, drug abuse and gun- India? that sandwich?" It doesn't help much to toting Lolitas. John Keats says truth is Television is even worse. If the booty keep harping on those people who may be beauty, and the truth is these women real- shaking ghetto queens in Foxy Brown different than us. All we do is generate a ly don't exist. A friend of mine who videos don't reinforce my point, then just stereotype of what's normal by our stan- interned at a modeling agency informed watch commercials. The men in corporate dards, and this is the basis of all great dis- me that the majority of their clients who boardrooms have caught on to the trend crimination like racism and sexism. front the covers of Elle and Vogue are 13- of selling product by making women - Ifyou would like to lead a mass mili- 16 year olds. These girls would make insecure. As a case study, let's look at the tant movement against Cosmo this Humbert Humbert think twice. This Bior6 Pore Strip. For the past 200 years, summer e-mail Mike Nagrant shouldn't come as a surprise, but any what did we do about those nasty black- at mjnagran@umich.edu. 0 Improvements target life sciences programs B rilliant minds coupled with intense research and laboratory experimenta- tion help bestow doctors with the power to heal. This simplified equation for produc- ing the miracles inherent in modern-day medicine often begins at the college level. Countless hours of study from devoted pro- fessors and students offer hope to sick peo- ple everywhere. Keeping pace with the sci- entific advances of the new millennium, University President Lee Bollinger plans to improve vital programs on campus. The 19- member Life Sciences Commission, released proposals last Friday that will have direct effects on the University and life beyond. The report focuses on five science topics: genomics, neuroscience, structural biology, biocomplexity and biotechnology. The topics may sound overly complex, but they represent essential medical disciplines on the rise. The University currently ranks as No. 21 nationally in the life sciences field. The report "Challenges and Opportunities in Understanding the Complexity of Living Systems" outlines how to improve the pro- gram, which will bring us closer to the fore- front of medical understanding. Proposals entail great strides for students and profes- sors alike, such as establishing an Undergraduate Science Center. Allowing more undergraduate courses and concentra- tions, this facility will broaden opportunities to explore science. In addition, the commis- sion wants to construct a complementary research site that bridges the Medical Campus with the North and Central campus- es. Tentative locations for the buildings exist in the commission's plans along with ideas for hiring new staff. Bollinger anticipates recruiting about 45 people to bring knowl- edge to each science topic. Also the numer- ous Michigan Workshops detailed in the commission's 158-page report call for first rate scientists from around the globe to help examine key topics. By augmenting the life sciences pro- grams, the University can become a more reputable place of higher learning. Acclaimed professors and scientists will be drawn to the new opportunities for research, thus increasing the overall standing of the University. Since the commission looks to have definitive plans by fall, incoming class- es will be increasingly more attracted to what the University has to offer. Significantly, Bollinger, Vice President for Medical Affairs Gilbert Omenn and Provost Nancy Cantor welcome feedback from faculty and students at the core of the departments who partici- pate in proposal discussions. Most people involved support the pro- posals, but some staff members like biology Prof. Steve Easter believe too much empha- sis is placed on biomedical areas. Yet, this attention to medicine is necessary. The University lost many high level geneticists in the early '90s to rival research centers. Zoning in on medical studies will reassert the University's esteem, recalling a more productive time such as the late '80s when University researchers located the genes of fatal diseases including cystic fibrosis and neurofibromatosis. To better the future for all, the University must delve deeper into life science today. Anti-affirmative action speech sends wrong message By the staff of The Lantem (U-WIRE) COLUMBUS - Bringing a speaker to campus who claims racism doesn't exist is a strange way to celebrate Black History Month. That's exactly what's happening Tuesday, with author Dinesh D'Souza speaking at the Ohio Union on why affir- mative action is unnecessary. D'Souza is the author of "The End of Racism" and worked in the Reagan White House. The speech is in part sponsored by the Ohio Union Activities Board, a group that brings a broad variety of speakers to cam- pus. As shown by former Vice President Dan Quayle's paid stump speech in the fall, the board has become a tool for conserva- tives to use Ohio State's money to help fund right-wing speakers. Although it's still a stretch, a case could be made that Quayle has some sort of broad appeal as the former vice president and butt of a 1,000 late-night jokes. No such illusion exists with D'Souza. The premise of D'Souza's latest book is that Ronald Reagan has done more positive and lasting than any other individual in the 20th Century. An Indian immigrant who came to the United States in 1978, D'Souza is a darling of conservatives who love to tout his background as a sort of per- verse credential. His major claim to fame is the book "The End of Racism." Among the book's arguments is that slavery was not a racist institution. D'Souza suggests because there were thousands of slave owners who had at least partial black ancestry, and that in some cases those owners were more cruel than whites, slavery couldn't have been justified by racism. Another argument used to support D'Souza's assertion that institutional racism doesn't exist is that whites have nothing to gain from oppression. He claims instead that the "civil rights industry" oppresses poor blacks as a way of continuing programs of racial preference and set-asides. D'Souza's rhetoric builds to a crescen- do with his solution: Repeal the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and replace it with a new law that prohibits any recognition of race within the government, but allows it in private industry. In other words, make discrimination legal to cure racism. D'Souza conveniently turns criticism away from those who dis- criminate toward those who try to solve the problems of racism, albeit with imperfect solutions. Bringing D'Souza to campus is a good thing. Ohio State should be a place where students have a chance to hear from speak- ers of every political persuasion, right- wing extremists included. But the activities board isn't supposed to be about just bringing in political speakers, much less only those from only one side of the aisle. That makes it twice as offensive that the speech falls right in the middle of Black History Month. It's an affront to black students, and holding a panel discussion afterward is a mere afterthought to appease critics. The board has removed any doubt that it's anything other than an arm of the College Republicans. An upcoming change in its leadership must ensure that it is not controlled by someone with a political agenda. D'Souza is part of a bigger wind blow- ing through this part of the country. California and Washington have banned affirmative action, with Michigan targeted next. Ohio might soon follow, with state Senator and OSU faculty member Eugene Watts leading the charge. People need to speak against people like Watts and D'Souza now, before we have what has taken place in California: A devastating drop in minority enrollment at state universities. D'Souza's arguments are their own undoing, but using the university coffers to legitimize such people makes a bad statement about OSU's commitment to minority students. - This editorial ran in The Lantern, Ohio State University's student newspaper; on Monday. TENTAT'.Y SPEAKING I Discrdio ad Drug provision must be removed from act In October 1998, President Clinton signed the Higher Education Act into law. The details of this act are currently being finalized in order to implement the plan. One of the provisions of the act is that it suspends federal financial aid to students who have been convicted of drug-related offenses under federal or state law, although they can eventually regain eligibility for financial aid if they complete a drug treatment program and pass two drug tests given without prior notice. This provision is unfair for sever- al reasons and should be eliminated immediately. Withholding federal aid from students with previous drug convictions denies these students a chance to obtain a quali- ty education. Seeking a college education indicates a desire for self-improvement; denying someone that chance is counter- productive. This regulation does not account for many students' desire to change their lives for the better. Students who have already been penalized for drug use should not be punished again by losing their financial aid. In addition, this plan would likely prove most harmful to minorities and people from low-income areas - often those who are most in need of financial aid. For example, blacks make up only 12 percent of the U.S. population, but account for a disproportionately large 55 percent of drug convictions. This could have an adverse effect on campus diversi- ty, at a time when a diverse student body is becoming increasingly difficult to arhie ve Adding to the detrimental effect of this resolution is the fact that many students are not aware of the way in which it will affect them; For instance, some people may plead guilty to a minor drug-related offense in order to receive a lesser sentence. But because of such a plea, they may become ineligible to receive financial aid. In addition, not everyone may be aware that they could lose financial aid that they are currently receiving. This law does not only target serious offenders. A person who experimented with marijuana in high school would be equally liable to lose their eligibility for financial aid. A minor offense such as this should not have such serious long-term repercus- sions. Smoking one joint should not lead to the same kind of punishment that would be given to, for example, a heroin dealer. Denying financial aid to students because of drug convictions, while appar- ently a way of dealing with drug use among young people, does not really treat the underlying problem. Allowing students who have been con- victed of a drug offense in the past to receive financial aid would give them a chance to attend college and improve themselves; withholding financial aid denies them that chance. And this regula- tion likely will disproportionately affect minorities, which is not only harmful to minority students themselves, but to higher education as a whole because it could threaten campus diversity. For these reasons, this financial aid provision of the Higher Education Act of 1998 shnuld h everturned. THOMAS KULJURGIS A VISUAL ATTACK RVESE4fTA IONor: I1ZAS ITS NF16#90M~'. , THKFAr To Students must choose their own identities TO THE DAILY: I remember when I first was enrolled in this school. I was so sure of everything, where I was going, what was in store for me, who I was. I think now that I was sore- ly mistaken. Even now, I have no idea where I stand. It's easy to be confused. From the Diag preachers, to the sororities and frater- nities, to the preppy kids, to the school clubs, to those people who always seem to be wearing black, I wonder how I made it this far without being totally confused. People have tried to get me to join their clubs or groups, even the people who said that no one should be in a club wanted me to join their group. I always told myself that being in a group would not be an integral part of my life, nor the exclusion of all groups either. I figured that my beliefs and hobbies were my own and would not be affected whether I found myself in a group with similar tastes, or found myself with a hobby like no other person had. Now, I don't know what to do. Maybe it's the brain rot from watching too much television, or the burn out from my classes or maybe even the fact that I too seriously considered the courses of other people's lives, but now I feel like a lost soul wandering through campus. I never claim to be the best or the worst at anything. I know that for some reason there are those who find comfort in thinking that they are the .t htt I Adn't .sM bhid 'strul ois i the 10 - <~-~ iuIjog s b tlli OY i" *1 v know that you're not alone in the world. If nothing else, there is me. JONATHAN ZAGEL ENGINEERING JUNIOR Affirmative action has many benefits To THE DAILY: I am writing in response to Julie Hermann's letter to the editor ("Affirmative action must be discontinued," 2/15/99). On the surface, her question "Why must minority groups - who insist on equality - demand special preference?" sounds valid. But people score that they feel was not graded fairly. Especially where it has adversely effected their overall grade in the course. What do they do if they're really angry? They state their case as to why they deserve a better grade. Special preference in this context is the professor taking time out to listen and respond accordingly to your defense, because the fact of the matter is that the pro- fessor does not have to listen to us at all. Opponents of affirmative action argue that a professor should not even take the time out to listen and respond accordingly. Now do you think that is right? Are stu- dents wrong in defending their exam answers? The fact that we expect professors to listen and respond to students' complaints is exactly why proponents of affirmative action demand authority figures to listen and respond to I