Published on Tuesday, July 8, 2003 by the Raleigh News & Observer (North
Carolina)
New Book, New UNC Controversy
Group Says 'Nickel and Dimed,' the Assigned Reading for Freshmen, Has a
Liberal Bias
by Jane Stancill

UNC-Chapel Hill officials might have thought a book about the economic
struggles of America's low-skilled workers would be a safe pick for
their freshman summer reading assignment.

But the summer book choice is stirring up trouble again, a year after
the emotional debate over an assigned book about the Quran.

A coalition of conservative students calling itself the Committee for
a Better Carolina is protesting UNC-CH's assigned book, "Nickel and
Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America," by Barbara Ehrenreich. The
book chronicles the experiences of its author, who traveled to three
U.S. cities and worked low-paid jobs as a waitress, cleaning woman,
nursing home assistant and Wal-Mart employee.

The Committee for a Better Carolina says the book has a liberal bias
and presents a radical perspective of the U.S. economy.

"It's intellectually dishonest to present only one side," said Michael
McKnight, a senior from Roanoke Rapids and a leader of the student
group. "That's not what education is all about."

The students said that they would buy a full-page advertisement in The
News & Observer for Wednesday and that they plan a news conference at
the General Assembly the same day.

Incoming freshmen are expected to read the book and attend discussion
sessions during the first week of the semester in August. UNC-CH
Provost Robert Shelton said a group of faculty, staff and students
chose "Nickel and Dimed" as a way to get students talking about the
issue of the income gap in this country.

"That's a topic very worthy of discussion," he said.

He said he's glad students are already debating the book publicly.

"I'm pleased that a group of students is looking at it and formulating
their views," he said. "That's exactly what the program is designed to
do."

The students say they're not looking for a repeat of last summer's
Quran battle, when several students filed a federal lawsuit against
the university and the legislature moved to strip funding from the
reading program. They say they just want the university to present
freshmen with a balance of viewpoints in future reading assignments.

McKnight met with Republican representatives and senators on Monday.
He said he expected about a dozen legislators to join students at the
news conference.

The group also bought a full-page ad in the June 27 campus newspaper,
The Daily Tar Heel, which was mailed to all incoming freshmen and
transfer students. McKnight said the ads are financed by donations
from the John William Pope Foundation in Raleigh.

McKnight and his fellow protesters point out that Ehrenreich is listed
as an honorary chairman of the Democratic Socialists of America on its
Web site.

"She describes Wal-Mart in horrible terms," he said. "She really
bashes Wal-Mart, and Wal-Mart does so many good things for
communities."

Zach Clayton, a freshman from Raleigh, said the university would have
been smart to require both "Nickel and Dimed" and "Sam Walton: Made in
America: My Story," the autobiography of the Wal-Mart founder.

"I think it's silly to ask students to engage in meaningful discourse
without examining both sides," he said. "There's a difference between
doing something to indoctrinate students and giving students the
opportunity to examine two different approaches to the economy or
social issues."

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