4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 12, 1995 aIJE idtig~tui &dlgt JA TWENGE TmE ERASABLE PEN 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 -Edited and managed by students at the University of M ichigan 1 1 MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES M. NASH Editorial Page Editors Even afterShannon Faulkner, a treehouse mental~y' thrives Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Textboks Despite 'U' efforts, they stdl cost too much As another semester begins, students are once again forced to reach deep into their pockets to cover the cost of course materials. While books are sold in the open marketplace and prices are consequently at the market's whim, the University has the powerto help drive down bookprices through a few simple measures. The University, previously uninvolved in the relationship between professors and book stores, advised professors to submit book lists on time in a letter to academic units last spring. The letter was effective, increasing by 30 percent the number of book orders submitted on time. Encouraging professors to make their book lists available months before the beginning of the semester should save students a great deal of money. If book lists were made avail- able for fall semester during the spring, stu- dents would receive a significantly higher value for their used books. A book store would obviously pay more for a book that it knows it can resell in the fall. However, when these book lists are not available, the buyback price ofused books declines signifi- cantly. In addition to making book lists available at an earlier date, the University is beginning to make book lists available on Wolverine Access immediately after they are given to the University. Making book lists widely available at an early date will serve three main purposes. First, by making them ob- tainable to all bookstores, newfound compe- tition should lower the costs of some books previously only carried by one bookstore. Second, by making book lists available to students before they go home for summer recess, students can shop at home at local discount stores. Finally, textbook prices in- crease late in the summer - if professors made their book lists available early enough, this extra cost could be avoided. Students who have already unloaded a good share of their cash may be doubly shocked at coursepack prices. Even while that battle is still being fought - in a long- standing lawsuit over publishers' royalties - the University can help rein in wasteful coursepack purchases. Many professors as- sign coursepack reading the first days of class, but coursepacks are non-returnable. By assigning readings from coursepacks dur- ing the first weeks of school, professors are impeding on students' ability to change their classes. Those students who do decide to switch classes are often forced to swallow the costs of coursepacks, which can cost $50 or more. The University can help alleviate the problem by asking its professors not to assign coursepack readings during the first week of class, or promoting several smaller coursepacks in the place of one for the whole term. Although students would have to trudge over to copy shops more than once in the semester, professors and students alike would benefit from the added flexibility of being able to include current materials in the coursepacks. While the University has taken some strong first steps, many students still find the cost of textbooks and coursepacks exorbitant. The University should discourage professors from ordering new edition text books which often have very few changes and eliminate stu- dents' opportunities to sell back or buy used books. Only a concerted effort can work. Y ou've just finished your first week of classes at Michigan. You've dealt with the moving, the wait lists for classes, the ongoing construction, and the growing workload of classes. It was probably diffi- cult enough - now imagine doing it all while receiving death threats, while being the only woman in your class, and while going to a school that sued to keep you out. Shannon Faulkner did all of this at The Citadel last month, and it's a wonder she lasted as long as she did. Faulkner first applied to the all-male military academy in 1993, when she had her high-school counselor omit all references to her gender from her application. The Citadel admitted her but later withdrew their accep- tance after officials learned she was a woman. After a 2 1/2-year court battle, Faulkner finally joined the entering class in its ritual "Hell Week" last month. After two days of exercises in sweltering heat and a three-day stay in the infirmary, Faulkner couldn't keep any food down and was ready to quit. When she returned to her barracks for her belong- ings, she found they had already been packed - at least one person was more than eager to see her go. Faulkner's critics claim a universal les- son from her experience: Women can't hack it. It's a strange conclusion considering the 20 years of women's successes at the more prestigious military academies. More im- portantly, her short stint at the country's most famous all-male bastion yields many other lessons about men, women and the society we live in. Faulkner is not the first high-profile woman to resign from a hard-won victory for women. During the 1970s, the first fe- male umpire in professional baseball quit after less than a week. Like Faulkner, the death threats, media attention and high ex- pectations destroyed her desire to be the only woman in a fraternity of men. In both cases, it wasn't that women can't handle the pressure - it's that anyone ex- pected to be perfect will necessarily fall short of the mark. More than anything else, Faulkner's iso- lation spelled her demise. "Maybe it would have been different if there had been other women with me," she said after quitting. Her statement expresses more than just a desire for girl-talk and late-night jam sessions: It seems to be the universal lament of all pio- neering women. Many women claim that universities and colleges harbor a "chilly climate" for female students and faculty. Especially for female professors, this climate is often caused by isolation. Many departments have a single "female slot" for faculty; as a rule, profes- sors who are the only woman in their depart- ment leave after less than five years. The slot becomes a revolving door for women who enter the job and quickly leave it under the incredible pressure of representing an entire gender and trying to meet unrealistic expec- tations for performance. Two women hired together fare far better in academic departments, as do women in engineering or science who take classes with a critical mass of other women. As for Faulkner, her fate may have been different at another academy - when West Point first admitted women in 1976, there were 119 of them, 9 percent of the class. When it came to Shannon's fellow stu- dents, however, even one woman was too many. Cadets at The Citadel were exuberant after Faulkner's announcement, doing celebratory push-ups, punching the air with clenched fists, and generally rejoicing at the preservation of their single-sex paradise. Outside the campus, bumper stickers ex- horted passing drivers to "Save the Males" at The Citadel. The men at The Citadel are like a group of little boys with a coveted treehouse: They posted a "No Girls Allowed" sign, and no one was going to stop them from enforcing it. In the treehouse, like in The Citadel, the group must have a sense of exclusivity to be meaningful. Getting in to the group must mean something: like you're popular, or smart, or, well, male. . That was Shannon's real mistake. Doing push-ups in 100-degree heat is easy com- pared to the vicious onslaught of2,000 males with a wounded sense of manhood. If there were girls in the club, the students appar- ently thought, going to The Citadel would no longer mean they were Real Men. If any old woman can do it, why put up with 6 a.m. calisthenics and being yelled at every day? By most indications, The Citadel men had better get used to seeing women on the front lines: More than 200 have written the school asking to be enrolled. The treehouse won't be all-male for long - all Shannon Faulkner really needed was a larger raiding party of girls, ready to storm the fortress and never look back. MATT WIMSATT MoouGE's DILEMMA °TrnE LN VEFS '1Y WILL ViDE Yo0u WITH 'fEMfs uP HEE, HoWdES CANl BE OAKEN 4AT- MAgICLP~y IAL~L NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'This country is a party country. There is no magic independence of people who are just able to stand up and magically produce a govern- ment.' -House Speaker Newt Gingrich, remarking on a possible presidential bid by Colin Powell Politics of conformity Plans for national language smack of elitism Last week Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.) announced his support for a bill that will make English the national language. While this idea has roots in the earliest days of the American republic, Dole's crusade is rooted in the politics of today: mean-spirited and subtly racist. Measures to stamp English as the official language have been on the agenda of many right-wingers for the past several years - Pat Buchanan endorsed it in his '92 presiden- tial campaign. Dole has not seized on the issue until very recently, raising the question of whether he really believes in the cause or is pandering to a constituency. Dole seems to fear the potential candidacies of Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas), Buchanan and Gov. Pete Wilson of California much more than "eth- nic separatism" that he claims necessitates such a bill. Announcing his intentions at a speech in Indianapolis seemed like an at- tempt to knock off the weak candidacy of Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) in his own state. Dole is feeling the crunch from what was previously his own backyard. For the first time in his career he is being criticized for being too liberal, too willing to compromise and too soft. However, in throwing this token biscuit of conservatism to the barking dogs set upon him by the far right, he has set dangerous mechanisms in motion. His canine-like op- ponents will likely only nip at his heels in his run for the Republican nomination. Support- ing this bill not only sets up a dangerous pattern of appeasing extremists, but places serious social and even constitutional ques- tions on the line. This summer a judge in Texas issued a court order telling a young Hispanic mother that she could only speak English to her infant child - a very serious attack on free- dom of speech and rights to privacy. How- ever, such actions may be very plausible under the flag of a uni-lingual nation. Very likely one of the first targets under such a system would be bilingual schools, which allow students to continue learning while being assimilated into a primarily English- speaking educational system and culture. Without federal funding, many of these pro- grams will close. Republicans certainly have no intentions of replacing them with Head Start programs or other means ofteaching the "only acceptable form of linguistic expres- sion." There has even been speculation that the bill might include provisions to force all federal and even public businesses to con- duct all transactions in English. While English has become the national language of convenience, it must not be fed- erally mandated. The motives of the bill's most stringent supporters seem to lie in reac- tionary fear and a desire for the cultural conformity of the past, where social differ- ences were physically beaten into submis- sion. The bill is in direct contrast with the purposes of this nation, a country of immi- grants. For 219 years this country has sur- vived without a national language. Now is not the time to cling to one in fear of what we refuse to understand. VMwPoNT From ashes, hopes for peace in Bosnia By Jason Lichtstein For three years now, the Daily editorial page has advocated a more active U.S. diplomatic and military response to the Serb ter- ritorial grab in Bosnia-Herze- govina. And today, it is likely that scores of NATO aircraft are fly- ing combat sorties over Sarajevo, Pale and other Bosnian cities in support ofthe U.N. mission in the Balkans, targeting Bosnian Serb ammunitions depots and com- mand-and-control sites. This move - NATO's first coordinated military action in its history - is long overdue. For far too long, the Bosnian Serbs have engaged in a war effort to slice off a hefty chunk of Bosnia- Herzegovina (internationally rec- ognized in 1992) - purged of Muslims and Croat Roman Catho- lics. (Bosnian Croats too have engaged in ethnic expulsions and alleged human rights violations, but lately have been on the West's good side.) Finally, after an indiscrimi- nate artillery shell - fired by Serb forces ringing Sarajevo - killed 38 civilians, the West implemented a modesttbut intel- ligent plan to punish Bosnian Serb aggression and jump-start peace negotiations. For more than a year, Serb snipers have been picking off civilians in line for food and water, and gunners have been shelling Sarajevo residents, hit- ting apartment buildings, street corners and marketplaces. But strategically, the time was right for U.S. intervention, and world We all have an interest in tran- scending the primal distinctions of ethnicity and encouraging peaceful coexistence in Bosnia. encouragement from the United States to bring a fair solution about, especially in this part of the world. Balkan history is es- sentially an issue about humanity and the darker realities of human nature, and we all have an interest in transcending the primal dis- tinctions of ethnicity and encour- aging peaceful coexistence in Bosnia. We should also be reminded, that before Serb nationalistic poli- ticians fueled the flames of"dif- ference" in Bosnia and offered up a nascent "Greater Serbia" as the answer to cultural uneasiness, Bosnia-Herzegovina was peace- able, multiethnic and multi-cul tural. Reality wasn't political, it was in the everyday. Like our own Ann Arbor, outdoor coffee shops and conversations over warm drinks flourished not too long ago in Sarajevo, a beautiful international city surrounded by snow-capped mountains and home to the 1984 Olympic Win- ter games. Yet the specter of an ethnic Serb minority in a nation largely ruled by Muslims caused more than consternation to Bosnian Serbs - it led to a brutal war, unspeakable atrocities and a world community stumbling to respond. It led to forced expul- sions, mass rapes, and the delib- erate and arbitrary murder of ci- vilians. This is the sad reality and the hard facts ofthe four-year-old Balkan affair, and of centuries of ethnic discord. No nation is inno- cent, and all have been guilty of savage ethnic cleansing. flut in the e nd the Amercan resolving this European dispute, containing the conflict and bring- ing war criminals to justice. It is likewise crucial that all of us en- gage in this debate and become a real part of this discourse. To date, the Clinton adminis- tration, NATO and U.N. com- manders have been right to de- mand the end of the Serb en- circlement of Sarajevo. Still, a more fundamental question re- ritorial Bosnia, Croatia and Yu- goslavia cannot be left ambigu- ous if there is any hope of quell- ing the war and leaving the ethnic passions behind. This includes all contested land, including East- ern Slavonia in Croatia. Like the Russian Federation, a loosely aligned Bosnian federa- tion - but with democratic, free, internationally monitored elec- tions and a formal, agreed-upon How TO CONTACT THEM State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith I