4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 11, 1995 ![ir gttn i ttitg JORDAN STANCIL; LAST-DITCH APPEAL 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES M. NASH Editorial Page Editors Harmm 1 Mcard uan rnsufferarne di grace to U' 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. The fierst year Efforts to imp rove exeriencee deserve praise T ast week, during the LSA faculty meet- L ing, Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Education David Schoem presented a report made by the Joint Faculty-Student Policy Committee. According to the report, stu- dents feel isolated from the University - and existing student services that could alleviate this problem are being underutilized. Using information from the report, the committee will work toward solutions to the problem, specifically directing improvements at help- ing first-year students assimilate more quickly into the University. The aims of the commit- tee are noble, but must remain in check lest they become patronizing and parental. The issue the report raises is an important one. Most first-year students do feel isolated and confused at the beginning of the school year, and most of the student services avail- able to help them are either unknown to them or are too difficult for confused novices to locate. Orientation and the numerous pam- phlets the University mails to first-year stu- dents are only slightly helpful. To address the concerns raised in the report, the committee made several recom- mendations, ranging from creating commu- nities of students to increasing faculty in- volvement in academic support services. With the implementation of programs like learn- ing communities and first-year student inter- est groups, first-year students should be able to get help more easily and to feel more at ease in the University environment. These recommendations - if implemented cor- rectly - would make student support ser- vices more accessible while helping the first- year student fully experience the University. However, the University must consider the effectiveness of any program before fol- lowing through with it. The current living- learning programs - one of the University's flagship attempts to acclimate first-year stu- dents - are, with the notable exception of the Residential College, largely a waste of time and money. If new programs are imple- mented, like student interest groups, how can the University ensure that they will be any more successful than previous efforts? Furthermore, the recommendations can help only if they do not blunt the full impact of the University experience. Making choices despite the overload is an important skill for students to learn outside the classroom - and the University must not impinge upon this process. If the University pigeonholes first-year students, the new experience of independence will disappear in an attempt to shield them - to the extent of replacing the parent and removing decisions from stu- dents' hands. While this is clearly not the committee's intent, the danger lurks if such attempts are carried to an extreme. Despite these potential problems, the University is taking an important step. It should do all it can to help first-year students assimilate into campus life with more ease and less confusion. Discussion should con- tinue about this report and its recommenda- tions, and the University shouldbe applauded for recognizing the problem and taking ac-j tion to alleviate it. This University actually advertises its own ID card to students. Even as you read this, Theodore M. Cardman, grotesquely leering out from some advertisement, is si- lently accosting an unsuspecting freshman in a bathroom stall. This ad campaign would be absurd, except that it represents the fur- ther penetration of drivel, so prevalent in the real world, into the one institution, the free university, that is supposed to be drivel- resistant. The University now advertises that you can check out library books (and do other neat things) with your new Mcard ID. Now, some things are just dumb. This is one of them. Apparently, I was wrong to expect that a university, especially an expensive and prestigious one, would be free of such inanities. Further, the propaganda spread by the University and First of America makes it seem like you need to have a First of America account to check out library books. Of course, they never say this explicitly, because it's not true. But they make you think it. The now-infamous top-10-list ads say that you should use Mcard because "graduation re- quires at least one library visit per year." At the bottom of the ad are the First of America and AT&T logos. The University is allowing private corporations to create the appearance that they somehow sponsor our education. And, even though you don't need a First of America account to go to school here, everyone is led to believe that the First of America connecting bar code or chip or whatever it's called is supposed to come with your ID card, that you therefore need it just as you need the ability to check out library books, and that you really need to open a checking account at First of America, which incidentally does not have the most student-friendly checking accounts. I'm not suggesting that there's some sort of shady set-up between the University and the bank. The point is that the ad campaign is a shameful injection of corporate pabulum into a once-venerable educational institu- tion. Mcard and all its attendant hoopla dem- onstrate like nothing else the fact that a student body is no longer seen as a body of students, but rather as just another market of consumers. The corporate culture of adver- tising has become so pervasive that it's ines- capable even in the ivory tower. Some ge- nius with a business degree realized that the ivory tower is a market. When these people find a market, their job is to get that market to buy, buy, buy, spend, spend, spend. We expect this kind of behavior from business hustlers. First of America and AT&T are doing what they're supposed to do. Sort of. But the University shouldn't be their accomplice. The new University of Michigan ID card is just another ploy to encourage students to spend money. The most insufferable element in this disaster is, of course, that eponymous frat boy, Mr. Cardman, who got the munchies at 2:30 a.m. Mr. Cardman is a Cool Guy, not just because he has Mcard, but also because his face displays that painfully hip, happily insincere and highly skeptical expression of vacuousness which is the "shadowed livery" of our faithless, materialistic culture. Theodore Cardman, with his top 10 list, is cheap corporate hipness run amok. He's the advertiser's picture of us, a carefully crafted archetype, to whom some advertising indus- try mouse expects us to relate. Apparently, it worked. If Diogenes were here today, he wouldn't even bother trying to find an honest man. It'd be enough of a challenge to find a freshman without a First of America checking account. - Jordan Stancil can be reached over e-mail at rialto@umich.edu. JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST -TH15 ?W(--RAltACON TAIN VIOLENCE, DESTRUCT-ION - NDP AKAC~EpON.~ WE LCOMF To TH E --1.,.WEATHER CiANNE L . yr )I NOTABLE QUOTABLE "People In Ann Arbor are taxed to death." -David Kwan, Republican candidate for the 2nd Ward City Council seat Targeting AIDS Government should fund needle exchanges LETTERS s a result of old government restrictions against the possession of drug para- phernalia, the rate at which intravenous drug users acquire the HIV virus has skyrocketed. Soaring rates can be directly attributed to the fact that users share blunt, contaminated needles. The National Academy of Sciences has found that independent needle-exchange pro- grams have led to a reduction in the spread of IHIV - while not encouraging or increasing the use of illicit drugs. Lifting the ban on funding for these preventative programs and restructuring the current laws are desperately needed if the rising rates are to be contained. A program in New Haven, Conn., found that the rate of needles contaminated with flIV had dropped by one third since it began exchanging needles. The incidence ofneedles tinged with hepatitis, a precursor to HIV, fell eightfold in a study conducted at another exchange program in Tacoma, Wash. Clearly, clean needles are an effective means ofcom- bating the further spread of AIDS, the dis- ease caused by HIV. There are now 75 programs in operation that disseminate clean needles and/or a bleach solution that has been proven to kill the HIV virus on contact. The programs, through com- munity outreach, establish a dialogue with the IV drug-using population. Given this contact, with proper support further preven- tative treatments could be implemented, such as drug rehabilitation programs or education on safe sex and condom use. As these pro- grams are staffed largely by volunteers, the programs would require very little direct funding - making them a cost-effective solution to a potentially expensive problem. Addressing and treating a costly and deadly disease before it strikes is well worth the initial minimal investment in prevention. A fresh hypodermic needle costs a mere 10 cents. With no known cure for the lethal virus, it is outrageous that society is not taking every effort to avoid its transmission - but this is precisely the case. In its effort to eradicate illicit drug use, the government continues to target "deviant" behavior, at- tempting to squelch it by limiting the supply of hypodermic needles. This plan has back- fired. Cutting the vehicle for safe drug use does not reduce the demand. For the addict, physical need for the drug supersedes any issues of safety. Catch-22 laws now in effect serve only to sentence a subculture to death. The initial aims of the puritanically naive just-say-no policies have not been met. Ille- gal drug use is on the rise and the past combative measures have only accelerated the transmission of HIV. Recognizing the clear routes of transmis- sion and thus preventing the spread of HIV by providing clean needles is not a form of condoning drug use - it is a means of saving lives. The time has come for society to con- front the issue of AIDS realistically and solve it practically, subsidizing a lesser threat in order to combat the disease. Allowing AIDS to fester and spread in a community where inexpensive interventions are easily implemented is criminal. Ignorance will not slow the spread of AIDS - clean needles will. Citadel is not an easy trial To the Daily: I congratulate Christina Doster on the many achievements she lists in her letter of 9/28/95 ("The Citadel is no place for physically unfit cadets"). However, may I ask: How many death threats Ms. Doster received; how many times her parents' house was vandalized; and whether she had to ask a lawyer to argue for her admission to Officer Candidate School train- ing, while she stood by for 2 1/2 years, waiting for an education and training for which she had already been deemed well-quali- fied? Mr. Wan ("Faulkner not fit for Citadel," 10/3/95) - do you feel you would be here today had you experienced the same to join the University? Allan C. Chubb Engineering graduate student Seek truth To the Daily: Why is it so common among academics for intellectual integ- rity and critical thinking to be set aside in matters of meaning, mo- rality, destiny and spirituality? Imagine if the common "stan- dards" used in evaluating matters of faith and philosophy were ap- plied to our scholarly endeavors. Imagine using these statements at your professional conferences: "Believe whatever makes you feel good," "If it works for you, then it's true," "What's true for you differs from what's true for me." Where is the search for real and enduring truth in that? I am encouraged that this week's Veritas Forum lectures and seminars address this deeply rooted problem. It is my hope that many in this community will pon- der issues of deep and fundamen- To the Daily: On Oct. 4, 1995 hundreds of University students, at the behest of University Activities Center and the Major Events Office, at- tended a free screening of the new 20th Century Fox movie, "Strange Days." Although 20th Century Fox plans to market the film as a futuristic sci-fi action thriller, what students saw that night was pornography. For those of you who are un- familiar with the plot line, the premise of "Strange Days" is that there is a new technology that allows people to record their ex- periences and then replay them for others in such a- way that the other people feel as though they are having the experiences them- selves. The main character makes his living peddling other people's experiences to his all-male clien- tele. A big portion of his business is selling the experiences of men having sex with women and women having sex with women. In other words, he sells pornogra- phy. Unfortunately, however, the technology falls into the "wrong" hands and a woman-hating-rap- ist-psycho-killer ends up using it while he rapes, tortures and then murders his female victim. As if that weren't enough, the psycho also uses the technology to inflict a new form of psychological tor- ture on the woman before she dies, forcing her to simultaneously experience his experience of tor- turing, raping and murdering her while she is being raped, tortured and murdered. In other words, she isn't simply raped, tortured and murdered (as in most slasher . movies) - she also has to expe- rience her rape, torture and mur- der as if she were doing it herself. All of this happens during the first half of the film. I don't know what happens during the second half because I walked out. I object to the Oct. 4 showing of "Strange Days" on three grounds. graphic, the content was obvi- ously going to be experienced as threatening and derogatory by a significant percentage of the University's population. Even Heidi Fehrenbacher, the public- ity coordinator for Marketplace Media who coordinatedpreviews of the movie for 20th Century Fox, admitted that the rape scene in the movie was so disturbing that "no woman would want to watch it." In this respect the University's promotion of "Strange Days" belies its stated commitmentto improving the sta- tus of women at the University. Youdon't make women feel more secure about their place at the University by sponsoring movies that depict women being abused in such a violent and graphic way that the women watching the films feel emotionally traumatized themselves. Second, I object to the way 20th Century Fox and Market- place Media, with the tacit ap- proval of the University, inten- tionally exposed naive students to emotionally traumatic mate- rial for the purpose of advancing their market research. My discus- sions with Kevin Gilmartin, di- rector of the Office of Major Events, and the people at Market- place Media left me with the dis- tinct impression thatwthe public- ity for the film on campus was vague precisely because 20th Century Fox didn't want students to know what the film was about before they saw it. In this way, they were able to get a represen- tative (that is, not self-selected) audience of students who could provide a great deal of informa- tion about who would and would not like the film. In other words, 20th Century Fox wanted me and other women at the film precisely so they could find out whether or not we would walk out. Some- how the fact that they emotion- ally traumatized us in the process didn't matter. Finally, I object to "Strange 'Strange Days' showing at 'U' offends viewers simply drive the material under- ground. However, that doesn't mean that 20th Century Fox, and other members of the movie in- dustry, don't have a moral re- sponsibility to not produce films that degrade, victimize orencour- age crimes against women (or any other group in our society). Exercising good taste, judgment and compassion are not the same as censorship. As I see it, "Strange Days" serves only two purposes: It titillates and excites some men who may get off on derogatory images of women and it makes movie executives rich. Neither purpose justifies the role it plays in perpetuating the culture ofvio- lence against women. Whether you agree with me on all these points or just one, whether you are a man or a woman, I strongly encourage you to make your opinion on this is- sue heard. The University, 20th Century Fox, MCI (which also sponsored the film on campus) and Marketplace Media will lis- ten to us if we take the time to speak. Karin Tamerius Rackham student To the Daily: I am writing to express my objections to the showing/spon- soring of "Strange Days," an ex- tremely pornographic and violent film being marketed to Univer- sity college menaandsothers. As a university, we are supposed to speak out for the equality and safety of all peoples, including women. Murder, rape and torture should not be promoted by show- ing support for this film. I do not advocate so-called free speech which is in reality license to in- timidate and terrorize, just as I do not advocate killing women for sport. Please have this movie re- moved from sponsorship by the University; and lend your sup- port to having it removed from -oW TO CONTACT THEM President Bill Clinton The White House I