page 4 - The Behrend College Collegian. Thursday, January /5, 1998 The Behrend College Collegian published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College Features Editor Krim McKim Layout Editor Nathan Mitchell Business Manager Donn Greenhouse Assistant Layout Editor John Groper Office Manager Gina Gaskey Postal Information: The Collegian is published weekly by the students of Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; First Floor, The J. Elmer Reed Union Building, Station Road, Eric, PA 16563. The Collegian can be reached by calling (814) 898-6488 or (814) 898-6019 (FAX). ISSN 1071-9288. Alternatives to bookstore prices The beginning of each semester welcomes the students of Behrend with a slap in the face from the rigid, calloused hand of book prices. It is understood that this is not entirely attributed to our bookstore's local management. They are constrained by Barnes and Nobles, the company in control of the prices of books sold on campus. The bookstore's outra geous prices come as a result of a situ ation similar to the one students face with food prices and Housing and Food Service. Barnes and Nobles bookstore is soley in charge of the books sold at the campus bookstore, and therefore is at liberty to make such markups on the book's prices. University Park has two bookstores in addition to the Penn State Book store. Competition between book stores would lead to competitive pric ing. Students seem to have few choices when it comes to buying books. There is the option of buying books from students who have had the class previously. However, since professors often change editions and textbooks, usually most books have to he purchased at the bookstore. Student Government is looking into creating some sort of student-run alternative such as a book coopera tive or book swap. A book coopera- Time to the IRS? by Fred Hiatt=(c) 1998 Washington Post With President Clinton having ap propriated so many Republican is sues - the balanced budget, caring about families and so on - you might think thßepublicans would be in a bind as this election year begins. But Rep. Bill Paxon, R-N.Y., their tele genic rising star, thinks he has a so lution. Americans don't like paying taxes, right? Okay, let's abolish them. Americans don't like the IRS, either - so let's abolish that, too. A bad joke, you say? A parody of political pandering? Not at all. Paxon in September introduced a bill that "prohibits the imposition of any tax by the Internal Revenue Code" after Dec. 31, 2000. It exempts - in an unexplained moment of weakness - Social Security taxes. It already has garnered 87 co-sponsors in the House. "We (would) eliminate the over whelming majority of the 5.5 mil lion words in that Tax Code," Paxon said, "and, frankly" - please note that frankness - "eliminate the need for most, if not all, of the 113,000 folks who work at the Internal Revenue Service." You may recall Paxon as the hus band of ex-congresswoman Susan Molinari, now a television person ality, and the father of baby Suzie, one of the stars of the 1996 Republi can convention. In case you don't, Paxon would like to remind you, fre- Editor in Chief Andrea Al Zedrant Managing Editor Anne IN Rajotte Sports Editor Dylan Stewart Associate Editor Brian Ashbaugh Advertising Manager HI Freltn Photography Editor Jason Blake Assistant Photography Editor John Hotlernv Advisors Alan Parker Robert Speel Letter Policy: The Collegian encourages tenets to the editor on news coverage, editorial content and University affairs. Letters should be no longer than 400 words. Letters should include the address, phone number, semester standing and major of the writer. Writers can mail their letters to behrcoll2@aol.com. tive might involve Student Govern ment or a student organization buy ing books from the publishers and selling them without making a profit. Also, with the extension of the pub lic water system to Behrend, it is pos sible for an independent bookstore to open near campus. The competition this would create between the two would be a great benefit for students. Another, lesser known alternative is buying books over the internet. There are sites that sell used books, and publishers or distributors may also sell books on the web. The cam pus bookstore would have to recon sider its prices if buying online be came popular. The bookstore is yet another mo nopoly on this campus. Students are forced to eat what is available from Housing and Food Services, use only one type of computer operating sys tem at the computer center and have only one way to obtain hooks. In ad dition we pay high tuition and room and board fees without having a great deal of choice over what we get in return. Books cost in the range of $2OO to $4OO for a semester. To have some alternative to paying these outrageous prices would be a benefit to all stu dents. Abolish quently. When he introduced his bill to abolish the tax code, he happened to mention that "my wife Susan and I are very proud parents of a 16- month-old daughter, little Suzie. And every night, as she is sleeping' look in and feel that it is our job to make certain that her future is better than the ones that our parents handed to us." How will Suzie's future be more secure without federal taxes? Doesn't Suzie want America to have an army, a border patrol, a national cancer institute? It turns out that Suzie's father isn't really against those things, nor against collecting taxes. He just wants a different system of taxes, one "that allows the greatness of this country to flow from the American people, not from Washington, D.C." How this new and improved tax sys tem would be administered without the help of some of those "113,000 folks" at the doomed IRS Paxon, frankly, doesn't make clear. Now, no one would disagree that the tax code is too complicated and the IRS is too often rude, inefficient and even abusive. Everyone wants tax reform, everyone wants tax sim plification. But very few taxpayers favor abolishinthe tax deductions and tax credits that benefit them. That applies to Republicans like Paxon, who, for example, have fa vored taxing capital gains at a dif ferent rate from other income. It ap- Taking a wife, and her name By Paula Span=(c) 1998, The Wash ington Post I'd like to propose a toast - those champagne flutes, please - Brande and David Stellings. Not just because they're hotshot young lawyers who, trailing Ivy League degrees and academic honors, are working at two of New York's most prestigious firms. Not just because they were married recently at the TrißeCa Grill in Man hattan, where 105 guests ate fabulous pasta with goat cheese and wild mush- No, this toast commemorates a single sentence that appeared in their wedding announcement on the New York Times's society page the follow ing day: - Mr. Soskin will take Ms. Stellings's surname." David Soskin is now David Stellings, relinquishing his ... well, there isn't a term, no male equivalent of a woman's "maiden name." The Encouraging development around Behrend by Anne Rajotte managing editor Before the semester break, plans for extending the the public water system to areas surrounding Behrend were redrawn. The new plans, which ex tend the water system past Behrend to 1-90 were approved by the Harborcreek Township Board of Su pervisors. There was opposition to this deci sion from many local residents. Sur rounding areas would like to preserve what they call the "rural atmosphere." By allowing businesses, especially businesses that would profit from col lege students, such as convienence stores and fast food restaurants, to move in, the look of Station Road would he drastically altered. Under standably, this would upset some of the people that live on Station Road. However, over one thousand Behrend students also iiv c along Station Road, plies to Democrats like Clinton, who every other day seems to propose amending the tax code to promote child care, college education or some other social goal. It applies to businesinterests, whose contribu tions Paxon spends so much time so liciting °behalf of his GOP col leagues, and it applies to his ordinary constituents, who treasure their home mortgage deductions, their charitable contribution deductions and so on. Paxon acknowledges that Con gress is responsible for having made the tax code so complicated. That's why, he says, the only way to get true reform is to blow the whole thing up and force Congress to start from scratch. But blowing up the system, and pandering to people's natural dislike of the tax collector, carries risks of its own. Consider Russia, where few people honestly declare their income or willingly pay their taxes. In the first six months of last year (the most recent period for which figures are available), 10 Russian tax collectors were killed in the line of duty, 40 were injured and two were missing not to mention 520 cases of arson, death threats, document thefts and other crimes against the Russian IRS. Russia, as a result, can barely func tion as a state. Its soldiers are under fed. Its teachers go for months with out being paid. Its nuclear power plantsdeteriorate day by day. Russia is an extreme case, but many other countries struggle to pro mote tax compliance. In the United States, 83 percent of taxpayers file honestly and on time, never having run-ins with the IRS, a record that is "pretty much the envy" of other countries, says Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who spent a year soberly studying the IRS and how it can be improved. The American compli ance record stems from a combina tion of civic obligation, fear of audit Editorial point is, instead of Brande Stellings changing her name to Soskin, or both parties keeping their last names, David Soskin changed his to hers. He says he likes Stellings better anyway. This is a bold act for a man - and apt to prompt shock and snickers, as David Stellings is learning. "They said, 'What are you, crazy?' People invariably thought I was joking," he reports. They warned "that it would be really annoying, having to change my credit cards. change my business cards. Flow would people \\ ho knew me before find Of course. these are the very annoyances new brides are supposed to be delighted to en counter. Less-approving colleagues deemed him thoroughly whipped. "They view it as an assault on patriarchy," David Stellings says. Almost 30 years after contempo rary feminism bulldozed the social landscape, the proportion of women rgirmq and the appearance of stores and res- The addition of business in the area taurants within walking distance would be such an advantage to recruit would be a welcome sight. ing and retaining students. Behrend It is inevitable that where college students transfer to University Park students and full time residents live mainly for their major, but also be together, there will he conflict. In cause there arc so many things to do State College, there are numerous dis- right off campus. One of the biggest putes every year regarding student complaints about this campus is the housing and the downtown area. State lack of social life. It isn't that there College residents don't seem to want aren't things to do on campus, but to yield to students' demands and staying on campus every night ohvi don't want student housing oust leads to boredom. Students con neighb.orcioc4s. Becage of Behr tAing conidcf - aNy smaller and luck of' at the academic aspects of this school. „ , , I N such a I)k_! (il look- housing, the conflicts have heen feww. With Behrend's growing size, and the plans for Knowledge Park, there will probably be some dispute about the future of Station Road. The extension of the water system will hopefully attract businesses to our area. The administration should back this with all of the power they can. and confidence that everyone else on the block is chipping in, too. Remove any one of those, and you could quickly undermine the whole sys tem. Portman and Sen. Bob Kerrey, D- Neb., led a commission that roundly and justifiably criticized the IRS and produced a series of recommenda tions to make it "fair, efficient and friendly." Paxon, on the other hand, proposes no alternative. "Some of us make choices and take sides in the debate," he noted, and then added - with apparent and inexplicable pride - "I do not." Some people like the idea of a flat tax, he observed, while others cham pion a national sales tax. "Now, those are two good ideas," Paxon toler antly allowed. "I am sure there are many more out there out across this C k 4 11 0eAtC.4 who don't adopt their husbands' names is about 10 percent, according to a study done for American Demo graphics magazine. (That includes those who hyphenate or adopt com binations like Hillary Rodham Clinton.) The young and the college educated are more likely to keep their names, hut even among women with post-graduate degrees, more than three-quarters change their names. This supposedly romantic tradition he "gives" her his name - reflects the British and American common law of "coverture," under which a woman lost any legal identity the moment she married. She could no longer own property, enter contracts, sue or be sued," explains Deborah Ellis, who teaches the course "Women and the Law" at New York Univer sity law school. "She had no right to custody of her children. And taking his name exemplified that." American legislatures began dismantling cover- ing for a college that the administra tion should do everything it possibly can to encourage the development around Behrend. "That Strange House on Station Road" will appear every three weeks in The Collegian. country." So Paxon's proposal (to stretch that word) is to let the Ameri can people ("our employers") de cide. How exactly would this abdication of leadership work? Again, Paxon isn't clear. "The only solution is the solution that moves this country for ward to give ourselves a better fu ture," he said. Can't argue with that. As for fleshing it out a bit - well, maybe Suzie has some thoughts. Letters to the Editor should be no longer than 400 words long and must include the name, phone number, semester standing and major of the writer. Letters can be mailed to the Collegian office or sent via e mail to Behrcoll2@aol.com ture 150 years ago, but we're still stuck with this name business. And of course, there are pragmatic career considerations for sticking with your name Understand that I'm not unsympa thetic to the rationale people usually offer for a name change: two individu als, one name, symbol of commitment and unity, etc., etc. It's the unidirec tional nature of the change that bugs me. If a shared surname is about one ness, why don't half the guys who get mai ricd chance their names? I also acknowledge that we haven't come up with an entirely satisfactory answer to the question: What are you going to name the children? Hyphen ating is a short-term solution, un wieldy for one generation and impos sible after two. My family's approach is scrupulously egalitarian: We agreed to give a son his surname and a daugh ter mine, with the other parent's name as a middle name. Thus, our daughter and only child is Emma Katz Span. But I have to say this idea never caught on with other couples, perhaps because of having siblings with dif ferent names. Most separate-surname couples throw in the towel and give the kids the husband's name. Hence this toast to the pioneering Ms. and Mr. Stellings. One could grow morose about how rarely that happens - rethinking out dated traditions - but this is supposed to be a happy occasion. More champagne? TO THE To the Editor, I would like to respond to a letter that Jonathan Kolbe wrote to join the Collegian on December 4,1997. I feel very sorry fpr.,Mr. Kolbe because he has closed himself off from a large segment of our society and he obvi ous!), has .1 lot of anger built up in side of himself. Often when people arc not doing as well as they wish to they want to blame other people or take it out on other people. In this case Mr. Kolbe seems to be taking his anger out on an entire race. He should not be trying to point the finger or lay blame, he should be trying to take action to make his own life better. Maybe he is having a very difficult time trying to make the grades he needs to be a chemical engineering major. If that is the case then maybe he should walk over to the office of the National Society of Black Engi neers and see if they might be able to help him with some tutoring. They are always willing to help. Thank you for your time, Heather E. Jones Operations Management