4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 2, 2000 tĀ£iip &zieg Delirium: Without sleep, but at least Axl's at my side 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. Mental illness deserving of campus attention Saturday, 3 a.m. -- It was inevitable that I'd end up writing a column slightly intoxicated and very tired, seeing how I'm usually one or the other and by the end of the weekend I'm definitely both. This evening my night ended with the house party dissolving before me, many a beer sloshing in me; I was loaded like a freight train, flyin' like an aeroplane, feelin' like a space brain and Axl's whis- pering in my ear: Taaaaaake meeeeeeeeeee hoooome. I need sleep. I'm Lloyd Dobler and I've Emily found my version of AChenbaum Diane Court: I like sleeping. Sir, that's D m di what I want to do Rough with my life. I'm good at it. People smirked at Lloyd for pursuing kickboxing and Diane but it made him happy. I like sleeping and music (Axl's spent an unprecedented four straight weeks in my bedside C.D. player, bouncing words off the swerve of his hips and into all aspects of my life. Bless his little heart, because life is far more amusing when you have a soundtrack to emphasize your emo- tions.) So why can't I just do my own thing and devote my life to listening to G 'n' R and passing out in my glorious, overstuffed bed? AxI gets up around whenever, he used to get up on time. Can I get a job doing that? Mmm probably not, but I can incor- porate it into a column. Like many other seniors in college, we're at the point where the novelty of school is wearing off. I've seen everything imaginable pass before these eyes. I expect few surprises from either a discussion sec- tion or a night at Skeeper's. Sleep, one of the greatest things in the world, always surprises me by how consis- tently enjoyable it is. Look around at your classmates. We're all so exhausted. We could be spending these four years in bed. The waste. The harsh truth about student life is that it puts my boyfriend Sleep and I on the rocks. A steady, monogamous relationship with Sleep is impossible. I love Sleep very much, although I don't always show it the way I should. I could spend more than the recommended one-third of my life with him, but I don't. I make excuses - a paper to finish, HBO to watch. Sleep and I haven't been seeing much of each other and it sucks. I tell myself yesterday was Tuesday maybe Thursday you can sleep but school starts much too early. Nine a.m. classes and 12 noon foot- ball games have made for some nasty part- ings from bed. Who am I to skimp, to cheat on Sleep? Even though tonight's house party got broken up and the Wiscon- sin game was boring, today won't be a total bust because I get to go to bed tonight - and every coming night. Life is grand. Sleep is going to be good: My bed, like a puppy, is always happy to see me. I always get the side of the bed by the wall. I can barely hold down Sleep as a steady, so lord knows with a boyfriend I would get even less Sleep. And what if the boy doesn't work out - think of all the Sleep hours lost trying to make that relationship work. I hear the other girls all try and outdo each other: I only got two hours of Sleep last night. Yeah well I got one hour and I have to pull an all-nighter tonight. Why is it so bad spend time in bed? Why brag about your under-eye circles the way peo- ple brag about having four midterms in a week? I feel gluttonous, indulgent and anti-feminist for admitting I want to spend so much time with my boyfriend. I day- dream about Sleep, but our afternoon nap quickies aren't enough to satisfy me. A girl needs both quantity and quality. In the morning I hit the snooze button five times, it's a teasing dance (Sleep gets mad when I tease), but I show Sleep I love him more than being showered and arriving on time to classes. Everything seems like a good idea when you're curled up in bed - skipping lecture, skipping Friday, seeing how many references to "Appetite for Destruction" you can put in a column. Unfortunately I can only listen to music while I'm awake (unless I do hear it in my sleep, well well well, you just can't tell.) Don't go rushing from "Paradise City" to "Sweet Child o' Mine," forgetting that "My Michelle" is the gold in-between. Don't skimp on your sleep. Don't find another piece of the action. Sleep's not overrated. In the long run, what is the most consistently fun? Oh Sleep, I can't imagine a better way to spend an evening. - If you can find all nine G 'n' R refer- ences in this column, Emily Achenbaum will sleep with you. Kidding. E-mail at emilylsaCumich.edu, and she might pry herselffrom bed to write back. T his week is national Mental Ill- ness Awareness Week. Many col- lege students struggle with depression, eating disorders, alco- holism or other mental illnesses. Con- sequently, mental health resources should be easily accessible. The same academic considerations given to those with physical illnesses should be extende to those with mental ill- ness. Mental illnesses are no less seri- ous than physical illness and can be successfuly treated through counsel- ing and medication. Unfortunately, an adequate safety net does not yet exist. Me ta A government en4 study released last Awarem spring conducted by Inforf the Centers for Dis- ease Control revealed that ten r percent of college Thursday 10 am- age students have MiChigan LLague contemplated sui- cide, while a 1996ti F survey of college Spotsr ed by stud students found that this.Friday on the only six percent of 15PsychiatrEel college students said they would 24/7 consultation seek help if they byUHS:9964747 thought they had a 3Fr rresources:1 problem with stress Of or depression. Fur- thermore, 2 er. .. . .. . cent of college age Serious menta ilr students thought during the colleg their stress or these events and depression level someone you kn( might be higher mental illness, than normal. Unfor- tunately, some col- lege students succeed in taking their own life; suicide is the third-leading cause of death among 15 to 24 year olds. Serious mental illnesses such as depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia often emerge during the college years, reinforcing the necessity of adequately funded and easily accessible mental health resources. Indeed, a variety of mental health resources are available on campus at no cost for enrolled students. At UHS, clinicians can refer students to psychiatric specialists at no cost and l ti 0e QI Counseling and Psychological Ser- vices offers free counseling services to enrolled students. The University Hospitals also provides services for mental health emergencies: It main- tains a 24-hour Psychiatric Emer- gency hotline (996-4747), which offers free consultation over the phone and assistance to walk-ins at the emergency room. Several mental health eventsrare scheduled for this week: As a p art of Mental Illness Awareness eek, CAPS will be hosting a free depres- sion screening and Ills informational event on Oct. 5th, from ss Week 10 a.m. to 3 po. latIon on the second floor of the Michigan League. The eg: department of Psy- .m, 2nd floor chology is co-host- ing a lecture, "Family Psychoed- ucation: Clinical ant group Mentality and Functional lag. Outcomes Over 20 ;ency Hotlire. Years" on Oct. 4th 'li l at 10:30 a.m. in the otline mainta-Ied Maternity/Child Health Care Audi- IS offers a variety torium on the med- rod studenis. ical campus. Additionally, the student group sses often emerge Mentality is spon- years. Check out soring a series of esources if you or events this week to shows signs of heighten awareness about mental health issues, including an information fair on the Diag on Friday. Because many do not choose to seek help, everyone should be con- scious of behavior changes in their friends and roommates and refer them to help if a problem is suspected. Pro- fessors should treat mental health emergencies with the same deference they treat physical health problems, granting extensions and exemptions for course work as they would some- one physically ill. Virtually all mental illnesses are treatable and students should take advantage of the mental health resources here on campus. 'It's a petroleum reserve, not a political reserve.' -Republican presidential candidate George W Bush on Vice President Al Gore's endorsement of the decision to release oil from the nation 's Strategic Petroleum Reserve. RU-486 is a step toward abortion rights L ast week, with the Diag display by the Genocide Awareness Pro- ject, abortion was the hot topic on campus. This debate is certain to escalate after the Food and Drug Administration approved a pill to induce abortions in women. RU-486, which will be marketed as Mifeprex, has been available in Europe for years. But politics had forced the FDA to test and retest the pill, despite numerous studies demonstrating its high success rate and relative safety. R eg ar dless of this otical pressure, the Ato DA will allow sale of the beneficial ill. credibility RU-486's arriva ony our shores is long 46ite overdue. The .primary advan- ithas beer tage of RU-486 is that it allows women toaal-i have an abortion early b in their pregnancy Eu through a non-invasive ropean process. Most women for more t will be able to take the pill in their physi- cian's office. The pill years is also relatively safe, requiring further surgery in only five to ei ghtp ercent of cases. Eligible women for this pill must have experienced their most recent period less than seven weeks prior. The next step is to consult a doctor, who will provide them with the pill and sign them up for a mandatory check-up two weeks later. If the pill fails to work, doctors will perform a standard surgical abortion. Often lost in the argument is the right of a female to do what she chooses with her body. Rather than having politics dictate a woman's right to control her body - which is able to decide if she wishes to under- go an abortion. The new Mifeprex pill allows more private abortions. Like the 72 hour morning-after pill, it places more responsibility and oppor- tunity in the hands of the people who most deserve to determine what to do about pregnancies. Women will have abortions, regardless of whether abortion is legal. To prevent a return to the days of back-alley abortions, it makes sense to provide a safe, le al alterna- tive. The U. S. Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision is of RU- approaching its 30th anniversary. The fac, rL _, dbut of the new pill oulbe,along with the opening of the first abortion clinic, Roe v. Wade and the debut of the "morn- g-after" pill, one of countries the landmark events in female reproductive liberation. Adding to the cred- ibility of RU-486 is the fact that it has been available in European countries for more than ten years. In France, studies have found that RU-486 has not replaced traditional surgeries as the most common form of abortion and has not increased the number of abortions as a whole. Despite this, George W. Bush, to gain favor with the more conservative voters, has vowed to ban RU-486 should he be elected president. Rarely has such a pill undergone so much scrutiny, enduring attacks against all medical logic. Abortion is legal in the U.S. And abortions should be as safe a medical procedure as possible. The Library's new computer policy cuts down on porn TO THE DAILY: I would just like to thank the library system for putting out its new policy restricting use of computers on the 3rd and 4th floor of the Undergraduate Library (Science Library). For as long as I can remember - but worsening significantly this year - many patrons completely lack- ing any affiliation to the University have been using these computers (16 on the 3rd floor, one on the 4th) for personal use with disregard for academic purposes. They use our resources to view pornographic materi- al and gamble at online casinos, and more benignly, to "chat." Most disturbing is the fact that no one is allowed to restrict the information these patrons view, so that they can - and do - view pornography, much to the chagrin of library staff and other patrons. The new policy becomes effective Oct. 3rd and states that only two of the computers on the 3rd floor are to be used by non-Uni- versity patrons and that even those must be forfeited should a student or staff member need them. (Previously, the staff member on duty would have to request that the patron get off the computer so that the student/fac- ulty could use it, and oftentimes the request would be refused.) These patrons were a hindrance to many students and I myself endured more than a few confrontations, after which I felt com- pletely powerless and indignant since there was summarily nothing that could be done. So I congratulate the library system on this new policy and extend my apprecia- tion for their initiative. LUKE REDMAN LSA JUNIOR Men do perpetuate the glass ceiling TO THE DAILY: Jim Knapp's letter to the Daily on Sep- tember 25, "Quandary of the Straight White Male," struck me as ignorant and naive. He states that the attitude of women on this campus is such that if "John Q. Whiteguy has a complaint about the way things are going, he is told to stop crying." He then goes on to state that it is a stereotype of white males to assume that "they have it eas- ier than everyone else." He then backs up this claim with the obviously fabricated sta- tistics that "neither himself nor 90 percent of the other white guys out there have ever racially oppressed someone or done their part to perpetuate any kind of glass ceiling." So I'm asking Knapp to please explain to me the following: The alarming number of occurrences of male violence towards women, the general salary difference between men and women and whites and Knapp to take his race and ethnicity requirement with an open mind and learn a little bit about people that are different from himself. KATIE MACFARLANE LSA SENIOR Affirmative action deserves support TO THE DAILY: I'm writing this letter to express my support for the University in its fight against the lawsuit to end affirmative action. Without affirmative action, a great many of the teachers on this campus sim- ply would not be here. Without affirmative action, if you are female, you wouldn't be here either, especially if you are non- white. Stand up and support your Universi- ty! It is your school, and the University deserves support for its stand against racism. Learn your history and defend affirmative action for all people. SCOTTANEWELL LSA SENIOR Concert review was off the mark TO THE DAILY: I am writing on behalf of School of Music Jazz Department faculty and students, as well as the vast majority of jazz musicians and fans in attendance at Keith Jarrett's per- formance at Hill Auditorium on Sept. 23. While I certainly appreciate the fact that a review of an artistic endeavor will necessari- ly reflect the opinions and, in this case, prej- udices of the individual reviewer, ("Jarrett: Blahing the blues away at Hill," by John Uhl 9/25/00) there is a certain level of objectivity which ought to be maintained in the process. At the School of Music, Uhl's review of the concert was met with shock, disbelief and eventual merriment as, one by one, knowledgeable jazz students and faculty got to read his invective-laden diatribe. I wouldn't even dignify his extremely silly review with a response, except that I would hate for unsuspecting readers of your paper to be left with that review as their only con- nection to a concert that was, for everyone in the audience except Uhl, a magical event. Spontaneous standing ovations and wild cheering aside, the complete and utter quiet which enveloped the capacity audience dur- ing the performance was just one measure of the level of musicianship and artistic excellence on display. Not content with insulting Jarrett in inappropriate and ignorant fashion, Uhl also proceeded to insult the audience, describing them as "tight-assed." I am assuming that he does not plan to have a career in journalism as that sort of imma- ture pronouncement does not bode well for his future literary endeavors. I would also like to correct Uhl on a few of his "facts." As a professional jazz pianist I can assure him that occasionally singing or humming along as we improvise is not a "fetish," i.e. it is not a practice "whose real or fantasied presence is psychologically neces- sary for sexual gratification" (Merriam-Web- ster Dictionary). The ECM Record Label has the enormous respect of every jazz artist and connoisseur that I know, even those who may not always be a fan of the music recorded by the label, as they have slavishly allowed artists to perform their own music under the most ideal recording circumstances possible - often at a serious financial cost to the compa- ny. This concert was also certainly not an example of the trend to feature "blockbuster jazz names" on the same ticket in some arbi- trary fashion. As he correctly pointed out, Jar- rett, DeJohnette and Peacock have been playing together religiously for 20 years and are one of the most highly regarded piano trios in the history of the music. If Uhl feels that jazz can only be per- formed authentically in whorehouses and that it has to be "dirty," I guess that is his preroga- tive. Fortunately there are millions of us out there who love hearing the myriad evolutions that the music has gone through since the early 1900's and who can actually enjoy and appreciate the musical genius of artists like Keith Jarrett in a variety of settings, from con- cert halls to jazz clubs. 'I would hope that U~hl can learn to temper his pompous assertions with a bit of objectivity and to not try and pre- sent opinions as fact. It will allow his readers to take him more seriously. ELLEN ROWE ASSOCIATE PROF. OF JAZZ STUDIES SCHOOL OF MUSIC :: 9; a. a,. a,, T" L h, a' R' ax a DANE BA RNESLD ": ." B : SLEEP SIi II 4 4