4A - Thursday, October 3, 2013 0)1 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com A. 4C fidt~igan4:al Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. It gets (Led)better 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR ANDREW WEINER EDITOR IN CHIEF Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. FROM THE DAILY Dollars for dining Targeted scholarships address needs of lower-income students January, the University of Michigan, Flint campus will begin to implement a new program, which offers meal-plan scholarships for up to 10 students, on or off of campus. Provided by Sodexo, the din- ing company that services the Flint campus, the scholarships consist of either five $1,400 scholarships or up to 10 meal-plan scholarships of $700. By highlighting specific costs associated with attending college, Flint is addressing costs that disproportionately affect lower-income students. The University should follow suit. Implementing meal-specific scholarships this new program, Flint is ensuring that stu- acknowledges the varied costs students face dents - regardless of financial need - maybe while in college. These scholarships are likely able to be a part of this university community. to target students from lower-income back- Though the criteria for the new scholar- grounds - those who are more likely to be ship will not be entirely need-based, the impacted by daily costs. By allowing students proposed scholarships offer options to those to stay on campus for meals during the day, struggling to make ends meet. For instance, these scholarships will also save students the scholarships could help those middle- time, while ensuring access to healthier food class students whose parents' income leaves options. For students who struggle to pay for them without full financial aid support. food on top of tuition, books and other aca- Currently, the UniversityhereinAnnArbor demic costs, unhealthy meals may be the only has more than 200 financial-aid scholarships, affordable option. But with the food-based but none are category-specific. Following scholarships in place, students can gain Flint's lead, the University should implement access to nearby, healthy food options. these tailored scholarships. Tuition isn't the Furthermore, there are health benefits only factor that makes college expensive; the with eating in a dining hall, aside from the cost of living - including food - can remain a healthier food. Results of a study conducted barrier to those with fewer financial resourc- at Kansas State University revealed a corre- es. One University of Michigan campus is on lation between eating in a collegiate dining the edge of innovation through its meal plan hall among peers and higher GPAs as well as scholarship program - hopefully, others will greater-perceived social support. Through take note. CDHILY VSCEHA E C HE VY 1UCA KE vs. CHEVY TRUCK CATEGORY: Horsepower When violentlyrolling downa steep hill,Chevy Chasehas CATEGORY: Torque enough power to knock over at least four large horses. Yetlthe Chevy Tuck has been engineered to get 34 miles for each Its commercials are to elived, he gallnaofgrape dink. AVANTAGE:EYASE C heylTrack bassenoaghltorqae tadrag,aon on a good day, 47 andone-half Chevy Chases. However, Chevy Chase was onceaddicted to CATEGORY: T"p Speed painkillers hetook for fallingltoo manytimes Chevy Trucks, on average, canreach95 miles perhour. on SNL ADVANTAGE:CHASEMASTER Occasionally, Chevy Chase's amnesia will cause himto hallucinate being backon "The Chevy Chase Show", causinghimtofleethat god-awfulprogramatlan impressive two miles an hour. ADVANTAGE: TRUCKS THE WINNER IS: CHEVY CHASE MARGAUX STANTON W Male student blues can't say why the scattering of professors, adults and stu- dents were at Lilly Ledbetter's speech Wednes- day night, but I have a guess. Her name is now synonymous with the first bill President Barack Obama signed into law, the Lilly ADRIENNE Ledbetter Fair ROBERTS Pay Act of 2009. When t told my friends that I was going to see Ledbetter talk, they gave me a weird look and I quickly had to follow with, "Oh, you know, it's that woman whose name is on that one bill Obama signed about fair pay." She's almost a quasi-political celebrity now, and I went to see her speak for the same reason most other people probably did: to say I saw her talk. This woman has very little in common with me except that she's vocal about feminist ideals: She's 75, from a small town in Alabama and worked as an overnight supervisor at Goodyear. I doubt that many stu- dents on campus, including myself, can say that they strongly identify with her. Yet, as she told her story, there was one part specifically that many students can identify with. When Ledbetter found out that she was making less than half of what her fellow male employees were mak- ing, she understandably just wanted to quit her job. But because she had student loans to pay back, dinner to put on the table and bills to pay, she couldn't fathom not receiving a paycheck for even o seniors out there,1 ally be us in six mor right? The prospe able to quit a job be afford to not work i And then, addc if you're a woman ate, you're probably cantly less than yon 2012 report by the ciation of Universit that women one ye working full timev average, 82 percen male peers were making. After controlling for "occupation, college major, employment sector, and other factors associ- ated with pay," the pay gap does shrink, but it doesn wage gap isn't a p for women who gre South in the '40s. well affect many of year's time. However, the p complicated than making less than t terparts. It's that likely to work in c- cally pay more, suc and finance. Universities, for trying. For examp Business School r with their women were falling behind quickly. Additionall female junior facu ne week. For the 2006 and 2007. this could liter- Harvard decided to give "itself nths time. Scary, a gender makeover." The school ct of not being tried to change the way students ecause you can't spoke and socialized with each s frightening. other by installing stenographers on the fact that in classrooms to guard against college gradu- biased grading and providing pri- 'making signifi- vate coaching to untenured female ur male peers. A professors. This was met with some American Asso- backlash, and after implementing y Women shows the changes, one male student said ar out of college it had "been a painful experience." were making, on So much for progress. t of what their The problem is sadly societal. Leg- islation can only pass if people As we enter the actually rec- ognize and are workforce, there's no discouraged by guarantee that we're this discrimi- . nation. Most going to get paid fairly, don't - and sex discrimination is being actively 'Ct disappear. The perpetuated everywhere, from a roblem reserved Goodyear plant to a Harvard Busi- w up in the Deep ness School classroom. Ledbetter's This could very talk reminded us that, as many of us us in less than a enter the workforce in the next few years, there's no guarantee that we're roblem is more going to be paid fairly. And there's women simply also no guarantee that we're going heir male coun- to recognize this, let alone be finan- women are less cially stable enough to quit our jobs areers that typi- if we do. What's encouraging is that h as engineering the University is bringing people like Ledbetter to this campus. As much their part, are as we might not readily identify with le, the Harvard her specific situation, even her pres- noticed a trend ence causes a conversation that we students: They all need to be having. their male peers y, a third of their Ity left between -Adrienne Roberts can be reached at adrirobe@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, James Brennan, Eli Cahan, Eric Ferguson, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine, Patrick Maillet, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Harsha Nahata, Adrienne Roberts, Paul Sherman, Sarah Skaluba, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe Asking the right questions Every September, the University of Michi- gan campus in Ann Arbor comes to life again. Incoming students from all over the world arrive eager to embark on their new college adventures and ready to start their indepen- dent lives away from home. For many of these new students, excitement fills them; how- ever, for many others, stress and anxiety may also occur. As the school year quickly picks up pace, students often find themselves feeling home- sick and overwhelmed with the academic rigor at Michigan. They experience difficulty making friends and stress over how to bal- ance their new lives. Many students begin to adapt and readjust, whereas others find themselves facing depression. Depression is found worldwide and affects everyone regardless of gender, age, race or any other demographics. A 2011 study from the American Psychological Association revealed that the rates of depression among college students are steadily increasing. Fur- thermore, although it has been found to be more prevalent in women, according to the National Institute of Mental Health, more than 6-million men face depression each year. Research has also shown that men are often unable to recognize their own symp- toms of depression or feel embarrassed by their depression due to the stigma behind it. So even though free resources for treat- ment of depression are available through the University's Counseling and Psychological Services, because men are often less aware of their symptoms (which can vary from women's symptoms) and feel ashamed about seeking help, men frequently leave their depression untreated. During my freshmen year, a close friend of mine expressed to me how he felt sadness for varying reasons, found himself lacking any motivation, had problems concentrating and was feeling helpless. I suggested to him that he speak with someone at CAPS, but he did not know what CAPS was and was skeptical as to how the office could help him. More- over, he felt that his symptoms weren't signif- icant enough to seek the help of professionals and he believed that he could simply "handle it on his own." The stigma behind depression, the lack of education regarding depression, and the trans- parency of resources around campus continue to affect many students, specifically males. When depression goes untreated, students may see a significant drop in their academic performance, relationships can be strained, risky behaviors may increase and, at the most extreme, students may attempt suicide. As a caring and close-knit community, the University needs to address this problem. Similarly to the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center on campus, CAPS should organize and conduct workshops for each incoming freshmen class. This can be done through required residential hall meet- ings at the start of each school year or during orientation sessions throughout the summer. The workshops and presentations should focus on educating students on the causes and symptoms of depression, as well as the treatments and free resources available on campus. They should also divide groups of students by gender for a portion of the workshop to address gender-specific issues regarding depression. Specifically for our male students, it's important to address the stigma behind depression in men and the varying symptoms that men can face. With CAPS providing our students, specif- ically our male students, with awareness and education regarding depression, we hope to increase our students' academic performance as well as increase their ability to flourish as well-rounded individuals graduating from the University. Equally as important, we hope to promote healthy physical and mental lifestyles here in our community. Margaux Stanton is a Social Work graduate student. " Jf they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers." This little "proverb for paranoids" - the third of five in Gravity's Rain- bow, a book by 1 Thomas Pynchon - succinctly points out a cru- BA Y cial element of all critical think- BELMONT ing: There are right and wrong questions to ask of this world, and knowing which is which makes all the difference. In fact, it's the very essence of critical thinking. Just as right and wrong answers exist for many questions, so do right and wrong. And yet this fact is rarely acknowledged, discussed or entertained with the exception of conmen and congressmen. Worse still, there are those who would have us believe that all knowledge is relative and that any way of gath- ering it is as justifiable as any other. This is wrong both in its diagnosis and prognosis of the situation - not all opinions are valid. Those who might think that I'm perhaps too dismissive of other positions or unfairly characterizing what it means to be relativistic in this context must, at the very least, be claiming that my opinion is in some way wrong. That's fine. It might be. And that's the point. I can be wrong. I have been wrong. I'm probably wrong about at least a couple dozen things in my life at this very moment, and some of them may even be espoused in some of what I write here. Butthese are things I can correct by as being asked the right ques a very real sense, the cast of incorrect opinions is th method for being less wr hopefully, being more corr To this end, the impor questioning far outweigh facts. Facts without con meaningless, but questions purpose are wasteful. An o fact often does little to di from matters at hand: Franklin D. Roosevelt was or 33rd president of the States won't typically dete sations about the modern r of the New Deal's poliice over, facts are easily ame objective arbitration: We numbers into calculators, quotes and pinpoint dates.I be known with or without call- ing upon our I critical-think- hav ing skills. The same is proba not true of ask- OfV of ing questions. Asking ques- tions is at base king and who has long stopped listening to tions. In proffered answers lies an optimal ing away balance of questioning and accep- he surest tance, knowing and not knowing. Ong, and, Unlike a fact without context, ect. a question, however ill-posed, is tance of liable to hijack our cognitive appa- s that of ratuses. Questions spark investi- text are gations, and send our minds off without searching for solutions, looking rphaned for reasons and figuring out new stract us questions to ask. Our brains were Whether equipped long ago to be pattern- the 32nd seekers. To seek a pattern means to United ask what pattern may exist and go r conver- about finding it. We can go beyond elevance this base level ofthinking by asking s. More- further, "How might we go about nable to findingthat pattern?" or, "How will can plug I know if a pattern is meaningful?" look up Questions are the filters we use Facts can to separate signal from noise. If we fail to recognize that this sort of can be wrong. I positive inquiry been wrong. I'm is the process of extracting mean- ibly wrong in some ingful informa- vh w h tion from an at I write here. otherwise inco- herent mess, we will fail to avail all there is to our critical thinking skills. If our thinking didn't require rigor there would be no motivation to question any part of it. Therefore, the very nature of critical thinking stems from the fact that we're ques- tioning our reasoning in an effort to be less wrong and vicariously more right. But just as not all opinions are valid and not all facts are relevant, not all modes of inquiry are cre- ated equal. Somewhere between the incredulous silence of com- plete complacency and the inces- sant, bottomless 'whys' of a child ourselvesofourmosteffectivemeans of figuring outthe world around us. So, "Where have I gone wrong?" is a more powerful question than "What facts have I gotten wrong?" because it encapsulates a broader context of thinking as a process of analysis and not merely as a recita- tion of facts. However, let us remember that this can all be wrong. And the only way any of us can ever know is by knowing the right questions to ask. -Barry Belmont can be reached at belmont@umich.edu. A f 1