r OPINION )age 4 Friday, March 25, 1983 The Michigan Daily Wasserman Edie madita atig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCill, No. 137 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board d w c Athletes deserve better r WE CMANNOT CUT WE RQUESTC-D 1N 1984 '1$N'T 'IT JUST AS L1KEL Y TE SOVIETS I,, ji T111S MAOUNT 1s 'PRUAETOE SOVETSTO Iu~t , /THHR UII.DUP A LL THAT IS perverse in college athletics was displayed this week when Jerry Tarkanian of the Univer- sity of Nevada-Las Vegas was named "coach of the year" by United Press International. In choosing Tarkanian, the UPI panel of sportswriters and broadcasters reaffirmed that fair recruiting practices and worthwhile education count for little in the battle for dollars and victories. To be sure, Tarkanian's record on the court is impressive. This year his team won 28 games and lost only three. At one point, the Running Rebels had garnered 24 wins in a row. The team earned a position in the NCAA national ,championship basketball tournament by winning the Pacific Coast Athletic Conference championship, but lost its first NCAA tournament game. Tarkanian is also the winningest active college coach on a percentage basis. But his other statistics are im- pressive, too. He has been at UNLV for nine years and only five of his scholar- ship basketball players have .graduated. In 1977, UNLV was put on / NCAA probation for two years for recruiting violations. The school was ordered to suspend Tarkanian for the same time period, but to date has suc- cessfully fought the suspension in court. In 1973, he left Long Beach State University just before that school was put on probation for three years for similar recruiting violations. Tarkanian is far from coach of the year. He has failed as a leader of young people who deserve a lot better than to be exploited and glorified because they are excellent basketball players. A far better choice would have been 'someone like Princeton's Pete Carril. His team won the Ivy League cham- pionship and even its first game in the NCAA tournament. Pete Carril's players, though, will graduate at the end of their four years at Princeton. In Ivy League athletics, that's the rule rather than the excep- tion. Pete Carril is part of a program that emphasizes college athletics for what it should be - part of the learning experience. In many schools, that principle has been forgotten. w ;e W\LL RESPoNb )NIT f%% A &(7( BL(oUi)( LETTERS TO THE DAILY: 2 TM1PT(&TUSSW4TO Oup, 3VtD&T Fop,~ ' 1985 r ( 'Jungle 'party shows racism at 'U' I Misleading the Senate T HE RECENT disclosures that Pres- ident Reagan's nominee to head the nations arms control agency misled the Senate during his confirmation hearings further demonstrates that the p esident has chosen the wrong person for the job. In response to senators' questions about what personnel changes he might make if confirmed as director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Kenneth Adelman said he hadn't thought about the situation at all. Recent memos obtained by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, however, shows that Adelman has his eyes on eliminating several soft-liners on the agency's staff. The implication is clear that Adelman misled his questioners and he has yet to fully explain why. This brings up the issue of whether there are other activities Adelman has failed to make the committee aware of. One issue Adelman has made the committee painfully fully aware of is his ignorance of arms control policies and initiatives. Asked by one senator what he would do if the Soviets proposed to eliminate nuclear arms, Adelman replied he'd never thought of the idea, though presumably that is the ultimate goal of the arms control agency. Are the Soviets, cheating on current agreements another senator asked. Again Adelman had no answer. Adelman's misguided assertions to the Senate, his tenuous grasp of arms control issues, and apparent refusal to do homework necessary to answer even basic questions, make him inadequate to head the nation's already lethargic arms control efforts. The agency is currently in a turmoil with many personnel problems and needs not only a strong leader, but a knowledgeable one. Coming to Adelman's defense, Republican senators have labeled the tough scrutiny by the committee a "witch hunt." But in light of the Senate's failure to adequately screen candidates for Reagan's top cabinet posts, the nation has been saddled with the likes of Anne Burford and others who mismanage and bungle gover- nment policy. Under the threat of an ever burgeoning nuclear arms race, the Senate cannot afford to be wrong again.____ To the Daily: It was very honest of The Michigan Daily to report the latest comedic episodes of one of Michigan's very own "Animal Houses." The "Jungle Party", hosted by Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity is yet another exampleeof the disrespect and discriminatory at- titudes that are typical of whites towards blacks at the University of Michigan. And you wonder why there is a declining rate in black enrollment? While the fraternity's social chairman (Steve Cohen) and president (Jeff Libman) feel that the party reflected tradition and not racism, they must have con- sidered the possible ramifications of its theme. Where does this fraternity think that blacks come from anyway, the moon? No, let me refresh your memory. Several hundreds of years ago, blacks were brough over to America from the jungles and villages of Africa. Saying that "the people who are upset have no relation to the jungle" is. an excuse (and a poor one) made in embarassment by the frater- nity after receiving news ex- posure. It upsets me. to see whites idolize, glorify, and praise a black athlete (only when it suits their purpose) with banners above their fraternity entrances displaying, "THANKS, A.C.,WE, LOVE A.C., A.C. IS #1!" and later act so insensitively as to throw a "Jungle-Party." Anthony Carter is black too! Do you think that he or any other of the black athletes that the whites "brown- nose" during football season would have joined in the festivities (had they even been invited)? What next, a "slave auction" or a "minstrel show"? How would the Sammies feel if some frater- nity threw an "Anne Frank Holocaust Party?" I feel that this would be insensitive, cruel and reflect views of anti-semitism. I hope that unlike Sigma Alpha, Epsilon (at the University of Cin- ncinati) and Theta Chi (at Michigan State University), Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity is severely reprimanded and gets their charter revoked. Perhaps disciplinary action will force Sigma Alpha Mu and other whites to be more considerate, develop healthier attitudes, and to 'put away racist ideas before it becomes too late for mere apologies. I suggest that fraternities like Sigma Alpha Mu should spend more time and money plannin constructive social events (like fund raising for charities) and less time around the keg. -Carol E. Alexander March 2 A n offer to the Sadm mies To the Daily: My credentials are, I hope, reasonably impeccable for the promise of help this letter publicly offers to the Sammies, to Messers Cohen and Libman, and to the "tradition" that is not a ''party.'' Birth place: nine degrees north of the equator; color: rather dark complex; af- filiation: research center of the midwest. 'What I propose is simply a way of exalting into even grander design the slogan between those two tribal members of Sigma Alpha Mu that appeared (in the Daily on March 22: "Jungle Par- ty '83" it's not just a party it's a tradition." The offer consists in adding a special brand of literate dignity, as ought to be ap- propriate in a university setting, to Jungle 84. I have been told I have a fairly good voice (notwithstanding), and on thatnrecommendation would read, from the ancestors, matters that may be relevant the next tribal gathering: excerpts from Hegel on "Africa proper;" from Freud on the totems and taboos of virtually all the "savages" of Africa, aboriginal Australia, and Asia; and from Albert Schweitzer, antique "elder brother." and, closer yet to the heart of an English professor, the exquisite poetry of Wallace Stevens' "Like Decoratiog~s in a Nigger Cemetary" or, less elegant but more rhythmic fun, from Vachel Lindsay's "Congo." Others, possibly-depending on the benign neglect of time and libation. Should- the "Frat Party" niot take place as your average "Jungle '84"-given Mr. Cohen' "if' somebody said something, it would definitely stop"-all need not be considered lost, however. The Daily, in its reasoned sense of priorities in photography and news coverage (front page), may simply wish to publish the relevant pages of what I would have read to the tribe, perhaps with choreographed notes? There would seem to be no point at all i letting anything so vital go to ,waste, not even in 1984. A tradition is, after all, not just a party. -Lemuel A. Johnson Dept. of English March 22 Daily sensationalizes issue Traditions of prejudice V S1 i. t. 1 M 9[rtlt AMFJ PITATO?$I'I WCAN f' f To the Daily: In the recent Daily story, "Frat Party Draws Accusations Of Racism," (March 22) the studen- ts of Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity justify their "Jungle Party" by tradition and, they believe, in no way is the party theme racist. However, the "tradition" the students refer to is itself racist. During the 1950s, the period when the "Jungle Parties" originated, the United States was one of the most racist and segregated coun- tries in the world. Jim Crow laws were common place and their purpose was to keep black and white people separate from birth to death. As Patrick Mason said, "It should be shocking that sup- posedly intelligent people let this kind of act go on. The fact that it's going on proves this country has a long way to go in its racial at- titudes." This is very true. It is sad that "narrow-minded and insensitive" people do not take advantage of their stay at the University of Michigan, with its wide spectrum of people -of every nationality and culture, and learn about other groups besides themselves. Also, the most depressing aspect of this in- cident is that these people, with their prejudice attitudes, will be the business and political leaders of the next century. -Deborah D. Holloway March 22 To the Daily: Glen Young and The Michigan Daily have gone too far. The front page article, "Frat party draws accusations of racism" (Daily, March 22) was a slap in the face of the black community. As one of the black student leaders contac- ted by Young for his article, it was obvious that he was attem- pting to create an issue. First, I have been informed by Young himself that the Daily knew of the party some time before it occured and yet waited until after the event to contact black students and others for his article. Secondly, although the theme of the party is questionable, it seems ridiculous to condemn an entire fraternity for having an affair of more than 200 individuals in which onl three of the individuals acted in a derogatory manner. Finally, in printing such an ar- ticle and its accompanying photographs, the Daily has belit- tied and insulted the very serious questions of racism that exist on this campus. By avoiding and/or ignoring real examples of racism faced by blacks and other minorities on campus to instea focus on trivial, sensationalized hype, the Daily has once again struck a blow for racial dis- harmony. I can only hope that the next time the Daily finds itself lacking for front-page material it will relieve itself at someone else's expense. - Rick Jones Vice president, minority affairs Michigan Student Assembly * .. fl 4. . -- - ; . 1 ie irony jostereotyping Party had no racist intent I To the Daily:. Isn't it ironic that some of the same people who were offended by Phillip Lawes' article " 'Japs': Are They Fact or Fic- tion," painted themselves black for the Sigma Alpha Mu "Jungle Party" Saturday night? -Steven Marks March 22 h To the Daily: In an article on Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity's annual "Jungle Party" ("Frat party draws ac- cusations of racism," Daily, presented the occasion and drew some elaborate and poor analogy. All of the fraternity members quoted in the article stressed the lack of any racist in- J it t:%Si::v :: %i ii i:",:i.' :": %ii:v'i:: ... .... ;i'<%Si':i:::::Y Y_ I ~=3I EI