4A - Wednesday, November 27, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, November 27, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 0 Cbe*l Midigan &iIyj Taking control of your body Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 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. More meals, less flexibility The University should offer more options for student dining plans Beginning in the 2014 to 2015 academic year, student dining will be shaken up. Currently, students living in the residence halls can choose between two meal plans: 150 meals and 100 Dining Dollars or 125 meals and 300 Dining Dollars. Next fall, students living in residence halls will receive a dining plan with unlimited meals, a Univer- sity Housing decision that will benefit many students. However, Housing should think about also including a plan that offers more flexibility for those students who don't plan on eating exclusively in dining halls. t all started when I was a soph- omore in high school and my dermatologist gave me a pro- scription for Yaz, a high-estrogen birth control pill that was rumored to cure acne. Unfortu- nately, like many women who ' begin birth con- EMILY trol, that initial PITTINOS visit with my doctor was short. Too short. I don't remember being told many of the side effects and none of the science was explained to me. But at the time, I hardly blinked - I was a painfully zit-faced teen and was completely convinced that smoothing out my skin would change my quality of life. Plus, I had a horny, hormonal boyfriend who was bugging me for sex, and protecting my eggs from his sperm seemed like a wise decision. So I did what a lot of people do: I blindly trusted my doctor. Looking back on the whole event, there must have been some sort of race to prove that Yaz worked as zit-repellant because my doctor didn't just write me a prescription. She practically pushed the pills on me. It was before the Affordable Care Act, so my private insurance didn't cover birth control, and each pack of Yaz was $75. Instead of pre- scribing a generic brand, she gave me 12 free samples and told me to come back in a year. The next year she did the same thing. A few months later, I was home over Christmas break watching "Iron Chef" on my parents' futon and texting my boyfriend like it was my job. I held my flip phone in one hand and ate sugar cookies with my other as a tingling sensation entered my fingertips. I shook my hand, thinking it had fallen asleep, but the tingling only travelled up my arm, my neck and into the left side of my lips. It was like I could feel my molecules danc- ing, or a swarm of microscopic bees were swimming through my blood- stream. And then I felt nothing. Holy shit, I thought. I'm having a fuckingstroke. With my right hand, I parents who were watch Miami" at my grandmoth nearby, and we calmly dro to the tiny hospital in m town. After a couple hour feel my face again and the+ came out clean. The e room doctor told me I w, ing a stroke. It was a migra probably wouldn't be my la I didn't connect my mi my birth control, partly bec of the medical professional over the next few months re any correlation. The thi migraines is they're basica tery to modern medicine hard to study because the gered by all kinds of thi dust to citrus fruit to stres feine - for awhile, I thougl ger was raw red onion. The symptoms are als different, which makes t for labs to track and difficult to describe Ke to someone who's never in had one. Some- times, I know a Y migraine's com- yol ing on when I see a glimmer- ing, like a crack in the glass of my vision, which grows u completely blind for a few Sometimes I puke like I the whole night sneaking the bar, gulping the las strangers' drinks, creatir of alcohol and mysteriou my stomach. I almost al up huddled in a dark rot ing hours of class and wo ing a frozen block of airli: would just fall through r and end my misery. It wasn't until this sumr years after I pocketed my sample of Yaz - that I went versity Health Service for sexually transmitted disea ing and the clinician look chart and said, "I can't beli on birth control; I recom discontinue it immediately. She went on to exp called my women who take hormonal birth ing "CSI: control and get migraines with er's house visual symptoms, like the glimmer- ve 90 mph ing I mentioned, are at high risk for y podunk stroke. Stroke! She showed me data s, I could about every kind of pill and intra- CAT scan uterine device with estrogen and mergency- that each one created extreme risk 0sn't hav- for blood clots and stroke in women ine, and it with migraines of all ages. She said st. the research was relatively new, graines to but in terms of medical develop- ausenone ment that could mean a few years. .s I visited Years! I was 21 and could have had ecognized an actual, real-life stroke at any ng about minute from the time I was 16, and illy a mys- in all of the check-ups and scans . They're and blood work I'd had done in that ey're trig- time, not one doctor had bothered ngs, from to mention this risk. Their confu- s and caf- sion about migraines and constant ht my trig- need to move on to the next patient kept them from providing the care ;o always I needed. hem hard My experience makes me won- der if there is a flaw in the way .ep your doctor most doctors approach pre- the examining scribing The Pill room until all toyoungwomen. This medicine ur questions are has been around for decades, and answered. at this point it's seen as so safe and reliable that until I go it's practically expected that every minutes. woman will give it a shot some time 've spent in her life. However, it might not through be the answer for everyone. Ladies, t sips of if you're thinking of starting The ng a slur Pill, or are going in for a gynecology is spit in exam in the future, I recommend ways end keeping your doctor in the exam- sM, miss- ining room until you get answers irk, wish- to any questions you may have, no ner waste matter how busy she may seem. iy ceiling Ask about your options, including all the different types of The Pill. If mer - five you get migraines, or if all that extra first free estrogen makes you nervous, think t into Uni- about non-hormonal birth control a routine like ParaGard, diaphragms and con- se screen- doms. Those extra minutes of inter- ked at my action with your doctor could make eve you're a difference in your quality of life mend you and prevent potential risk like, you know, stroke. lain that As opposed to current plans that limit swipes, the new offerings allow students to eat unlimited meals. Under the standard cur- rent plan, a student averages between eight and nine meal swipes per week, meaning students could not eat even two meals a day. With the unlimited plan, students have the option of eat- ing three or more meals a day without the fear of running out. Furthermore, since this change will not increase the price of housing, students have this opportunity without paying more. The redesigned meal structure will also positively impact off-campus students. Although the details have not been finalized, new off-campus meal plans with fewer meals should be more affordable. Although the new plan could allow stu- dents to be more flexible, the limited hours that dining halls are open might prove restrictive. Dining Dollars and Blue Bucks provide students the option of eating at loca- tions open earlier in the morning and later at night. Thus, University Housing should con- sider extending dining hall operation hours to accommodate students' busy schedules. Although unlimited meals are beneficial to many, the plan could be more flexible by pro- viding other options for students. With current meal plans, students can choose fewer meals in exchange for more Dining Dollars. Under the new plan, however, students can only obtain more Dining Dollars by purchasing a more expensive meal plan. With making the unlim- ited plan standard, Housing should provide stu- dents an option with alimited amountof swipes and more Dining Dollars to accommodate dif- ferent preferences. Besides providing options within the meal plans, the University needs to consider finan- cially limited students who would benefit from opting out of a meal plan altogether. Forcing students to purchase a plan when other options may be less expensive is unfair. The new meal plan structure has room to improve if more options are made available. However, unlimited meals and more afford- able off-campus dining is a large step in the right direction. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, James Brennan, Rima Fadlallah, Eric Ferguson, Jordyn Kay, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Adrienne Roberts, Matthew Seligman, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe ELENA ROSS I Equity over equality E ,y Is the University a luxury product? At this very moment, there exists a silver spray-painted swastika on the sidewalk of North University Avenue. Directly across the street from some of our academic buildings, a symbol of hatred is lurking, incognito. As a Jewish woman fighting to navigate my identity in this Christian-dominated society, stumbling across this image between classes made me feel scared, isolated and despondent. On a campus where roughly 20 percent of students are Jewish, many of my peers are quick to dismiss issues of anti-Semitism. To many, my life, and the lives of my Jewish peers, seems quite privileged. There are many of us here walking the same halls, taking the same classes and living all-around similar lives to our Christian counterparts. We are a minority population, yes, but we have large representa- tion and equal opportunity here, and therefore our identity struggles are treated relatively dis- missively the moment we step foot on campus. I'll be the first to admit that Judaism has served me relatively well in my ability to main- tain privilege in society. Fortunately for us, many Jews are now considered white in a way that our religious minority peers often are not. However, our ability to "pass" only gets us so far. I am often frustrated by the need to educate my Christian peers on my belief system, or to speak on behalf of the entire Jewish population. There are several spaces on campus in which I might be unwelcome as a Jewish woman, and I feel uncomfortable throughout December as Christmas music suddenly surrounds me everywhere I go. And then there's the swastika on the sidewalk outside Panera. Contrary to popular belief, the life of a Jewish student at the University of Michigan is far from privileged. Real privilege is when there isn't a symbol for wanting you dead. As we continue in our fight for radical change in our campus's demographic make- up, I hope that the University is able to see beyond numbers. The problems on campus do not go away with higher representation, but rather a complete reformation of campus atti- tudes, power dynamics and educational tac- tics. Last week a professor of mine explained to me the true difference between equity and equality. Equality, she said, is a world in which everyone is given the same pair of shoes. Equity is a world in which everyone is given a pair of shoes that fits them per- sonally. It's not enough for the University to enroll more "diverse" students, to give them each a pair of shoes. Racism, classism and many other "isms" are alive and rampant on our campus today. Their existence inherently prohibits minority students from feeling that our shoes truly fit, no matter how many of us are walking around in them. As the University goes forward in its efforts to diversify, I hope that it's remembered that the world is much more complex, subjective and personal than statistics in a handbook. Numerical representation does not eliminate oppression, and handing us all shoes does not make them fit. Elena Ross is an LSA sophomore. Ann Arbor is the new Brook- lyn. Bold claim, you say, to compare Ann Arbor to the borough once considered Man- hattan's infe- rior little sister and now hailed as the land of artisan pickles, handmade felt hats and Etsy ZOE shop-owners. If you think about STAHL it though, it makes sense. Last spring, the independent bookstore Literati opened, bringing Ann Arbor almost nightly readings and more "n+1" magazines than we know what to do with. The food scene - that has come to both represent and measure just how (insufferably) trendy a city is - seems tres Brooklyn,too. There's Babo, the Sava-owned boutique pro- duce market, and then the Wafel Shop, a restaurant solely devoted to specialty waffles, indicating Ann Arbor ranks pretty high on the bou- gie matrix. Retail aside, Ann Arbor's built environment is becoming fright- eningly similar to Brooklyn's. Under New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Brooklyn's waterfront on the East River dra- matically changed: sleek glass high- rises for the 20-to-30-something set replaced the abandoned factories. And with the recently constructed Landmark, Varsity and Zaragon West, Ann Arbor seems to be head- ing in the same direction. It doesn't look as if this trend is going to stop anytime soon, either. On the corner of South Division and Huron streets, another high-rise building is going up. The local hotelier and property developer Dennis Dahlmann plans to build an apartment building com- plete with ground-level retail and restaurant complex over the former YMCA lot, too. Ann Arbor's local government has been working hard to revitalize the city's downtown, and, at first, I was all for this high-density urban devel- opment. As a New Yorker, I would proudly argue the fact that apart- ment living is better for the environ- ment. Less square footage means significantly reduced carbon foot- prints. Apartment units, arranged in closer proximity than houses, allow far less heat to escape. Even more, denser development in Ann Arbor's downtown encourages more walk- ing. Studies confirm what common sense tells us: residents in city cen- ters produce significantly less car- bon emissions than those living in the suburbs. And better yet, this downtown development has helped stimulate Ann Arbor's economy, challenging the widely held belief that what's good for the environment is nec- essarily bad for the economy. Phil D'Anieri, University lecturer in urban and regional planning, wrote in an e-mail interview, "the density repre- sented by these high rises is good for downtown vitality." These high-rises create demand for new shops - gro- cery stores, clothing shops and vari- ous other retail stores - and a more vibrant economic center. But that's where the upside of this type of urban development seems to end. With thinking and behavior. As D'Anieri accurately observed, "the underly- ing trend these luxury buildings represent (is) a university environ- ment skewing steadily away from a publicly-minded sense of itself and toward an identity as high-end life- style product." It seems then that the University has become just as much an exclusive, luxury product as an institute of higher learning. And it's not all together the Univer- sity's fault, either. With funds from the state dwindling, the University increasingly relies on the tuition of wealthier and often out-of-state stu- dents to make ends meet. To what degree is the Univer- sity responsible then? They have worked to create more attractive housing options with the recent and expensive renovations of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall, East Quad Residence Hall and Northwood Apartments. However, while it may be true that these dorms offer alter- natives to luxu- SOPHIAAUSATESll PHSoI I \AhI'9S1 IIAlS@dtUMICHi.EDU T ALL NONFAT VANILLA L A T T E - ir the [s/16 sccr the plethora of buildings active- ly advertising themselves as "luxury" and "embodiments of the good life," this housing trend reflects the ever-sharpening divide between higher- and lower-i students - a rare critical issue consid cent of University Pell Grants. Even more, the market exacerbate: By bringing up the rental-housing stoc apartment compl the already stressf more anxiety-pros seem to ensure s: same income brack Though seemin the University, the rise apartments a wealthy students linked. By admitti dents, the Univei create a demand f luxury choices in housing market. A this increase in hi a greater shift in ry apartments, they simultane- The luxury housing ously play into the nationwide market exacerbates college arms race for higher- the class divide income stu- between students dents, diverting much needed funds from scholarships to income University attract those able to pay full tuition 'ly discussed, but to the University's campus. In leringonly16 per- other words, they are designed to students receive compete with dorms from smaller, elite colleges for the attention of luxury housing students. In turn, large swaths of s this class divide. rising sophomores come to expect cost of all student this form of housing, making them , these high-rise all the more likely to turn to these exes only make luxury complexes after graduating ul housing search from the dorms. ducing, and also At the end of the day, it's a deli- tudents from the cate balance - the University must et live together. maintain a certain level of funding gly separate from to ensure it remains a world-class increase in high- institution. But seeing this vicious nd the influx of cycle, I couldn't help but ask time are intractably and time again: Who is this public ng wealthier Stu- university for? I hope, in the future, rsity has helped the University remembers rankings for these sorts of aren't the end-all-and-be-all: serv- the off-campus ing the whole campus community is. t its heart, then, gh-rises indicates - Zoe Stahl can be reached the University's at zoestahl@umich.edu. I I I £ I &