4A -- The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 27, 2000 hbr Lirbigan g hg Shakespeare and calculus can't teach these lessons 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily.letters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MIKE SPAHN Editor in Chief EMILY ACHENBAUM Editorial Page Editor 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. Tinte T he University requires us to take classes in writing, quantitative reasoning and foreign languages, whether we like it or not. Usually, most students are on the side of not." But the administrators argue that these requirements build mature adults with a wide range of knowledge. Unfortunately, the University graduates too many people who lack maturity. You might be one of them. Many students leave this school with knowledge of the arts and sciences, but they lack basic manners. They run around campus like mon- keys. Untrained mon- keys. They hope their Jeffrey top-notch education Kosseff will cover for their ignorance of all Beet New social standards. Style I have a simple solution to this prob- lem. The University should require all stu- dents to take a class on manners. This proposal sounds draconian. The last thing we need is another requirement, you're thinking. But after four years of observing the lowest and most primitive forms of behavior, I know this is the only way to save our school's reputation - and the nation's future. Lesson One: Contain your fluids. Some people can't even control their bod- ily functions in public. The most egregious perpetrators are spitters. I've gone through 21 years without ever having the urge to share my spittle with the world. But countless students at this fine University walk down the street, spit- ting compulsively. Saliva spreads germs, from meningitis to the flu. Please keep your germs to yourselves. And this weekend, a student got out of his car, urinated in front of my apartment building and drove away. I guess he couldn't wait until he arrived at a gas sta- tion. We live in a college town, not a zoo. In public, bodily fluids should stay inside the body, except for medical emergencies. They're in your body because nobody else wants them. Lesson Two: You're a University stu- dent. Get a vocabulary to match, and lose the trucker lingo. I live across the street from a residence hall. Instead of walking up the stairs and knocking on their friends' doors, many stu- dents yell from the outside of the residence hall. Visitor: Hey, asswipe. Get the hell down here. Resident (yelling out his/her window): Fucker, wait a minute. That's a far cry from Romeo's beckon- ing call to Juliet. It's a far cry from any semblance of civilized life. That brand of dialogue is quite regular on my street. I don't mind cursing, but the entire block doesn't have to hear your idiocy. When I hear it, I truly become embarrassed to attend the same university. Election scandal reflects poorly on MSA Lesson Three: The world is not your garbage can. Some students believe the entire campus is theirs to trash. They leave garbage every- where, expecting the servants will take care of it. I guess it comes from years of having mommy and daddy pick up after their sorry selves. Someone even threw a raw chicken breast onto an awning in my apartment building, where it now is decomposing. Until you earn your big bucks with a B- School degree and can hire a servant to clean up after you, have a little personal responsibility. Lesson Four: Only drink if you have an ounce of self-control. I live down the street from some frat houses and I've seen the occasional drunken brawl break out at 3 a.m. That was cool in junior high, but not here. Your primitive combat skills only impress yourself. Put down the Miller Lite and take a breather, tough guy. These are just a few of the nuggets of wis- dom the manners class would impart upon the student body. The professor would test the students by secretly spying on them and evaluating whether they use the lessons in their public life. I'm not excited about a new requirement, but it's necessary to uphold the reputation of our fine school. This class would set an example for the legions of idiots at the Uni- versity who never knew it was inappropriate to spit, curse, fight, urinate and yell in pub- lic. Monkey see, monkey do. - Jeffrey Kosseff can be reached via e-mail atjkossej@umich.edu. TENTATIVELY SPEAKING M SA elections struggle to attract attention around campus. Still, voter turnout has been up the past two years. This year, 8,393 students cast ballots online. Unfortunately, nearly one-third of these votes will be can- celled. The Wolverine Party candidates for a number of schools, including presidential and vice-presidential can- didates, were eliminated from the elec- tions for campaigning and election violations under the MSA Compiled Code. The Wolverine Party and MSA should be ashamed that student gov- ernment at the University continues to be clouded by allegedly illegal actions. The news of the latest MSA scandal is especially stinging due to record voting numbers this year. Most on campus do not hold MSA in high esteem. It is not visible enough and students often feel that MSA actions do not apply to their lives. Increased interest in this election shows that Uni- versity students can be intrigued by MSA issues. It's disappointing that desperate and petty tactics rear their head again in an MSA election. The accusations center around a few members of the Wolverine Party's alleged campaigning techniques, such as asking students to log into their computers and proceeded to direct them to vote for the Wolverine Party. Wolverine Party defenders point to the fact that the Elections Board, which oversees campaign violations, is composed primarily of Blue Party members, a Wolverine Party competi- tor. They are appealing the decisions made by the board to throw out their votes. It is difficult to say who is right and who is wrong. But scandals or not, it seems that independent candidate Hideki Tsutsumi would have won by a landslide. Hideki won without resort- ing to illegal campaigning or even spending much money. His campaign was above the scandal. His campaign was clean, straight-forward and the most student-friendly one we've ever known. He won fair and square - jus- tice served. But even with a student-supported president heading into his term, MSA should not forget the embarrassment associated with another election scan- dal. MSA can be important to students. It allocates funds for student groups and serves as a link between the administration and the student body. But in order to earn respect from students and the University communi- ty, all MSA members (or MSA wannabes) need to respect themselves and the students whose trust they wish to win enough to stop illegal actions. They only confirm student suspicions that MSA is pathetic. THOMAS KULJURGIS I~p~ - -.-1-j.' Y~L- Through the cracksa All HIV/AIDS patients deserve equal care A t age 13, Ryan White was told he couldn't go to public school because he had AIDS. His love for education prompted him to become an important national role model who helped to educate the world about the realities of HIV and AIDS. Although he specifically fought for his right to attend public school, his ultimate goal was to eliminate the discrimination against people with the virus. After his death in 1990, a program was started to alleviate economic discrimination by giving individuals with AIDS, but without enough money to properly treat the disease, the ability to receive financial assistance from the govern- ment. It was named the Ryan White Act in his honor. Sadly this law, named for one who campaigned to end discrimination, is now accused of being implemented in a biased manner. A report to be issued by the General Accounting Office this Thursday will document that under the Ryan White CARE (Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency) Act, African Americans, Hispanics and women with AIDS are not getting the same quality of care as whites or males with the disease. The report claims these groups receive substandard care in doctors' visits, emergency room visits, hospi- talization and drug therapies. Clearly this differential treatment must be stopped to ensure that everyone has an equal opportunity to fight back against this deadly virus. It is most likely that the reason for this differential treatment has to do with the way in which the program allocates funding. It puts emphasis in fighting cases of full-blown AIDS over those with HIV. The result is that new cases of HIV infection, which have not had enough time to progress to AIDS, are not being treated with the same quality of care as AIDS cases. Thus the fastest growing groups of individuals with HIV or AIDS, such as minorities and women, do not receive the quality care they so desperately need. We need to make sure that pro- grams aimed at treating those with HIV and AIDS are not blind to the new populations acquiring the disease. Given the current state of the AIDS epidemic, it is especially disheartening to discover that these groups are the ones receiving substandard care. Even though blacks account for only 13 per- cent of the American population, the Department of Health and Human Ser- vices documents that they account for about half of all AIDS deaths. AIDS remains the leading cause of death for African American males age 25-44. Additionally, Hispanics account for 18 percent of AIDS deaths. These statistics illustrate that these groups who are especially at risk for the virus are the most in need of quali- ty health care. It is unacceptable, therefore, that the Ryan White CARE program treats them as inferior. The intention of the bill was to help out disadvantaged people with AIDS. Yet the most disadvantaged people in the U.S., minorities and women living in poverty, are exactly the ones who received unequal treatment. The inferior treatment of African Americans, Hispanics and females with AIDS must end. Treatment pro- grams do not intend to be racist or sex- ist, but such problems are the result. Ryan White devoted his life to break- ing down discrimination and promot- ing equality. The government must make sure that it doesn't forget his ideals when implementing the program dedicated after him. Class aims to teach 'U' about the gay community TO THE DAILY: "They might study to learn more about their cultural heritage, but no one has to learn how to be something they cannot help being." I would like to thank Mike Carrier for helping to lay the foundation for my argument against him ("U' class: Homosex- uality is a 'learned' lifestyle," 3/24/00). In Carrier's viewpoint he chose to substitute the term Irish into the course description for Prof. David Halperin's lecture. I believe that by doing this, Carrier proved that homosexu- ality is not a learned trait. He could have sub- stituted any term other than gay, describing how someone is born and the argument would have worked just as easily. To clarify my point, let me use his example with Irish. Carrier might have been born Irish, but he would have had no idea how to be Irish unless his parents taught him the culture and values that create an "Irish man." Without knowing the history and culture of Ireland, Carrier could very well be Irish and practice some of the Irish values, but he would do so in ignorance. I would also argue that if , not being Irish, were to learn all that Carrier is ignorant of, I still would not be Irish since I was not born that way. Following this idea, if one learns all the practices, beliefs and histo- ry of homosexuality he can better understand and value homosexuals, whether he was born one or not. 1 believe that the goal of Prof. Halperin's lecture is to provide the intro- duction, or "initiation," that one receives upon encountering the gay community for the first time. Again, using the Irish exam- ple, it would be very similar for anyone ignorant of the Irish heritage to encounter an Irish community, that he had never before interacted with, for the first time. Being a homosexual is nothing that is learned, it is an inherent trait that one is born with. However, becoming a integral part of one's community and understanding the community is learned. It is this aspect that I believe Halperin is trying to teach the University community, not teach how to be attracted to the same sex. In offering this class, which explores all the positive and negative aspects of the gay community, Halperin is creating an avenue of under- standing and respect for any member of our community. BENJAMIN MUMFORD ENGINEERING SENIOR MSA elections not nationally important TO THE DAILY: Jessica Curtin, the Defend Affirma- tive Action Party Vice-Presidential Can- didate, told the Daily on Friday ("Election publicity mobilizes students," 3/24/00) that "students realize the impor- tance of these (Michigan Student Assem- bly) elections ... the outcome of these elections is of national importance." T~e ?eESt 4A-L Pgeim ms- M?,JMX: TLED1 z ~ AE'TM SEtaiSEE'lU. IE HOQ.S tO~uVNE ATA NPTY - TASTY LAW NA14Y CAOICES. r% ever read. Mike Carrier stated his case and fully backed it up. He did an excellent job of standing up for what he believes in, and I admire that. I simply don't understand this University sometimes - now a professor wants to teach students how to be gay? Excuse me, but what the heck does that have to do with English? Has anyone in this city ever heard of the fall of Rome? It is outra- geous to ask taxpayers to pay for a class that would teach such things as "... diva-worship, drag, muscle culture, style, fashion and interi- or design." In fact, it's totally absurd. If a class titled "How to be straight" were offered, LGBT would fight like hell to cancel it, right? AMY OLSZEWSKI RC JUNIOR Editorial contradicts abortion stance TO THE DAILY: I had to gasp in surprise and laugh at the Daily's editorial on March 24 concerning the abandoned infant legislation now pending ("Sad but necessary"). You came out strongly in favor of this. I was very surprised. Why would you support this legislation when you are so unalterably opposed to any law or statute that would limit abortion in any way? Please enlighten me -just what is the differ- ence between a baby that is living in the womb and a baby that in born a few minutes later? You would enact laws to protect the baby when it's born but support legislation enabling a woman to abort that very same baby when in the womb. I wonder if you can see the moral absurdity of this? The point of the pro-life stance, is that all life from con- ception until natural death is worthy of being protected. I have to admit I am glad that your editors are not enacting the laws of this state, given their apparent moral illogicality. GREGORY HAMILTON RACKHAM STUDENT Feminism is 'highly overrated' The South was misrepresented by Achenbaumn N 11tN WUS At' 600E 5EWE ltomtmut4os AuvPIT SCCRES~ 'TIE ANI COURSE, c0MStSrN& MERT AUI VTPO KwrS 111AT TO THE DAILY: This letter is in response to Emily Achenbaum's column "Get them in the crosshairs: Vote for Hideki," in the March 23 issue of the Daily. While I have no issue with the main premise of Achen- baum's column, I found that a certain ele- ment contained in her argument left me dismayed, disturbed and even a little angry. Speaking of the great risk (as Achen- baum perceives it) that Hideki is taking with regard to his pride, she asks who would want to do that to themselves. Then she states, "After all, if we lived in Texas or Alabama instead of Ann Arbor, Hideki would have been beaten up months ago:' I cannot help but wonder what Achenbaum's reasoning is here. Why is it that he is more likely to be beaten up in Texas or Alabama rather than in Ann Arbor, or Idaho, Cali- fornia or Maine for that matter? If her point is that such an incident would be racially motivated and therefore would of course have to happen in the South, then Achenbaum needs to realize that racism in unfortunately present in every state in the union. If her point is that the South is less tolerant of people who are different than the rest of the nation, then I have to ask how Achenbaum actually knows this. Has she ever visited or lived in the South? Does she know many people who are from that region? Though I can't be sure, my guess is that the answer to these questions is no. And if the answer is yes, them she ought to know better. I happen to be from Tennessee. I was raised in the South from the time I was nine years old. I have spent approximately seven months in Ann Arbor as a first-year law student and it is the first time I have really had occasion to experience an area outside the South. In the past seven months I have found the majority of the University community to be open-minded and fairly well informed. But this message of toler- ance and understanding that the University tries to convey is lost on people like Achenbaum. Her statement is prejudicial and quite indicative of her ignorance. In fct. it makes her no hetter than those she 0 TO THE DAILY: I would like to comment on Michelle L2.lL A --^' ^^' -rv ' "P"- -^'o - -n -:-