Monday, July 30, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com C, he Ifficbioan Dailu ALEXANDER HONKALA Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedailv@umich.edu IMRAN SYED EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrationsrepresent solely the views oftheir authors. Let's get ethical Senate regulates financial aid practices Finding the terms "ethics reform" and "U.S. Sen- ate" in the same sentence is about as likely as avoiding hearing about the end of "Harry Pot- ter and the Deathly Hallows." However, that's just what happened last week as the Senate passed its final legisla- tion to reauthorize the Higher Education Act of 1965 and reform ethics codes on the relationship between college officials and student loan companies. JENNIFER SUSSEX A sick medi Among the many new changes, the bill prohibits loan compa- nies from providing financial aid officers with trips, gifts or other incentives in exchange for advan- tages in the student loan market. It also cuts almost $19 billion over five years in private educational lending subsidies, adding most of that money to low- and middle- income students. Finally, the bill simplifies the FAFSA from seven pages down to two and requires that growth in tuition and fees for all universities be reported. At a time when students are being hit with rising tuition costs and dwindling financial aid, this new bill is a big victory. Not only does it make the student lending industry more competitive and less criminal, it adds a much- needed increase to student grants and reduces loan payments for students who are suffering from Congress's previous negligence. However, the effectiveness of the law's other stipulations will largely be determined by how they are implemented. Decreas- ing the number of FAFSA pages may be more convenient, but the priority is to create a financial aid application that will gauge an individual's ability to pay for col- lege through questions like how much a student's parents will contribute to tuition. Unless the government chooses to reevalu- ate the form, it's likely that the shortening of the FAFSA will only aggravate this problem. Likewise, forcing colleges to release tuition increases for scrutiny helps the public monitor exorbitant price hikes and hold educational institutions account- able. But forcing universities to report price hikes does nothing to stop them from raising them steadily but surely. Finally, while marshalling the relationship between lenders and financial aid officials is an obvi- ous way to prevent the scandals that have riddled student lending, this legislation may not have gone far enough. After all, the scandal within Columbia University's financial aid department last year didn't involve gifts, but rather officials owning stock in a compa- ny classified by the university as a "preferred lender." This bill does nothing to prevent such conflicts of interest in the future. While the Senate's new ethics bill could use some tweaking, it is at least some good news for stu- dents and an encouraging sign of long-overdue competence from Congress. Popular provocateur Michael Moore was recently featured on CNN's "The Situation Room" to promote his newest docu- mentary "Sicko." The interview opened with a preemptive seg- ment that, according to the tex- tual headers on the bottom of the screen, purported to be a "real- ity check" and a "healthy look at the facts." However, this entire CNN segment employed blatant techniques of misinformation at a time when the American public needs accuracy in mainstream news coverage - not the evoca- tion of phantom WMDs or other scare tactics designed to perpe- trate political ideology. The show opened with a clip in which CNN correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta informed the audience that Moore's support of Cuba's tax-based health care system is ill-advised. Cuba has actually slipped to number 39 (two rankings below America) in the World Health Organiza- Dingell blocks solutions TO THE DAILY: U.S. Rep. John Dingell's fail- ure to be pro-active in stopping global warming leaves Michigan in a very dangerous position. We know that global warming is heating the planet in perilous and unpredictable ways that will change the lives of Americans for the worse, yet Dingell seems tion's rankings of data on the medical systems of 191 countries - an irrelevant factoid that dis- tracts the viewer 'om Moore's point that Cuba has more read- ily accessible services and cheap prescription drugs. Although Cuba may rank slightly below America, that hardly means that America can't explore the benefi- cial practices that Cuba employs in its facilities. After this, "The Situation Room" put up a smokescreen of statistical data that denigrates from what could be a platform for discussion about America's low-ranking position on the list. Gupta reported that America has the shortest waiting peri- ods for non-emergency electri- cal procedures, which is a moot point. What difference do long lines make when many Ameri- cans cannot even afford cover- age to get in the door? The entire segment served the purpose of silencing Moore's message before >uTube is a website it allows kids to net- rk with one another id make friends and ontact each other." - Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, confusing YouTube with MySpace atan ice cream social in Story City, Iowa on Thursday. a he was even interviewed. When WolfaBlizter gave Moore an opportunity to respond, he remarked, "That report was so biased. I can't imagine what pharmaceutical ad is coming up right after our break here." Moore demanded that the media provideunbiasedreportingtothe public, not something sponsored by a corporate conglomerate. Despite this, immediately after the interview, Lou Dobbs remarked that Moore is "more of a left-wing promoter than Hugo Chavez." This semiotic comment aligned Moore with someone who the media depicts as a sort of radical Communist; the aver- age viewer sitting at home was alienated as CNN attempted to minimize his political message under the subterfuge of stereo- types it had already invoked. Jennifer Sussex is an LSA sophomore and a member of the Daily's editorial board. I 6 6 6 SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU content to roll the dice and worse yet, is serving as a roadblock to proactive solutions. What Rep. Dingell should be doing is leading Congress to work on realsolutions,like reducingpol- lution, funding renewable energy resources like wind and solar power and increasing fuel effi- ciency standards for cars. Instead, he is standing in the way of these efforts. He should be ashamed. In Michigan, global warm- ing will fuel dangerous summer heat waves and lead to higher concentrations of asthma-caus- ing pollution. Winter weather will also become less predict- able, threatening tourism and recreational opportunities like ice fishing and snowmobiling. Please visit www.michigan- hotseat.org to find out more and to volunteer to make a differ- ence. You can contact Rep. Din- gell at (313) 278-2936. Rebecca Sobel The letter writer is a member of Greenpeace 0 Editorial Board Members: Mike Eber, Kellyn Jackson, Jennifer Sussex, Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya