4- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 10, 1993 c 1 e ttrl r ttn ttt1 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DuBow Editor in Chief ANREw LEVY Editorial Page Editor I ey, JESSE, IYvE sEENI v'EAE t'~O E AT MICHI t , 4 rN> i HE Et &Mj cW QpPO-r aNJ.T y MHERE' AN! '.4f 'ETA, ,VCHtA W(XATI ON 4 'eJEAT SNEEDANOTH - TE~GAEo FWE SN IELVMAKEifs 74#MOS T 2Ag. , C1-S PAY/N& ' ' 2 T. v'. cF lN ) j'' t Fo GOHE k ! 9/1 'I Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. .BNEANT. AEOTA E-fOCKEY7 Students comment on Mo's coaching J Things have taken a similar course during this year's debate over funding to the Ann Arbor Ten- ants Union. An employee of the tenants union claims an MSA representative has repeatedly ha- rassed and threatened her, these actions even oc- curring outside of assembly meetings. And the disrespect extends to the University administration. Our MSA representatives are the average student's only liaison to the folk in the Fleming building. The people who run this institu- shape our campus - issues on which they will make vital decisions. And these antics are what we get from the representatives who even bother to come to MSA meetings at all. Absences are staggering, with the assembly failing even to make quorum several times during the past year. Simply put, our repre- sentatives can not even spare two hours on Tues-= day evenings to help make the University a better place. Many members of the Michigan Student As- sembly do not conduct themselves with the dignity expected of regular students as a highly selective university, let alone the modicum of respect that should be expected from student leaders. For that matter, they don't even act like adults. To the Daly: With the recent loss to Wisconsin, we, the superfans, wish to present an alternative to losing - Ditka. It is self-evident that the current head coach cannot effectively motivate and inspire the football team or the university to play well enough to win every game that we are capable of. Ditka can fill the hole left by the immortal Bo. Ditka is the man who restored pride to the great city of Chicago, and he can bring the punch back to football Saturdays. Ditka vs. the Big Ten? Ditka. Ditka vs. Ohio State? Ditka. Mini- Ditka vs. Michigan State? Ditka. Ditka vs. Penn State? Ditka. Ditka vs. Notre Dame? Ditka. Clearly Ditka is the choice for Michigan football. So before another superstar athlete leaves the team for personal reasons or we suffer another humiliating loss to another sub-par Big Ten football team, get the coach (Ditka). MAX EFFOEN ROCK FOWLER LSA seniors To the Daily: Michigan football coach Gary Moeller was quoted in a recent edition of the Ann Arbor News as stating, "The win against Purdue ... was one of the biggest victories I've had since I've been here." This shows what a loser mentality our 0 MICHELLE GUY/Daily In aain, out Main NCAA should let players test waters, return to school coach has. Hey, coach, Purdue is now 1-8. They are not a powerhouse. Moeller, it's time to get some gynelotrimin because your yeast infection is spreading to your brain. Hey, Moeller. Halloween's over. Time to take off your mask and see reality. Hell with the Rose Bowl every year. It's time for a national championship. Play number 6 against Minnesota and Ohio State. He's really good - I swear. Moeller, I bet I can guess your play calling for next game. First T he National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) should consider a proposal that, if enacted, would finally grant long-overdue rights to players. This proposal would grant college basket- ball and football players a one-time exemption that would allow them to enter the National Basketball Association (NBA) or National Football League (NFL)draft, without jeopardizing their eligibility to play college athletics. This means that players who are not picked for the draft, or who do not sign with the team that chooses them, would still be allowed to return to their college team. Currently players lose their eligibility as soon as they declare for the draft, whether or not they are picked, signed, or ever play professionally. This new proposal would grant play- ers the right to look at their professional interests and test their marketability without being penalized. This proposal could encourage some athletes to leave school early. Opponents of the proposal say that anything that encourages or even allows stu- dents to leave school before graduating is against the educational goals of universities and hence should not be allowed. But this argument is unfair. These players only have a few years to play professionally, but they have a whole lifetime to get an education. Also, many people fail to realize that it is our current system that actually undermines education. We all know and remember the big name players like Shaquille 0'Neal who left college early for NBA success. However, we need to consider the players who were in college, entered the draft and were not chosen, and who, consequently, were un- able to return to college because they lost their scholarships. Another reason people object to the proposal, is that it will hurt both professional and college coaches. A common argument is that NBA and NFL general managers would have the problem of drafting play- ers who then decide to return to college. However, general managers confer with the players exten- sively before they draft them and have a strong idea of what conditions the athletes would accept before the draft takes place. People also argue that the proposal would cause college coaches to lose top players who leave their teams early in order to enter the draft. However, players like Sean Higgins, who left Michigan after his junior season for the 1990 NBA Draft and was not chosen until the final pick, would likely return. Of course, under this proposal would be more inclined to leave school early. It is understandable that coaches want to have their best players for as long as they can. But if players want to leave, they should have the right to do so without sacrificing their eligibility. The concerns of coaches should take a back seat to the freedom and rights of students. Student athletes should be the ones who benefit most from their talent. Coursepacks a ripoff; make them yourself To the Daily: Tell me if this makes sense. On Nov. 1, I bought a coursepack at Michigan Document Services. The coursepack was "highly recommended" by a political science professor, and we students were advised it would cost between $4 and $5. This particular coursepack was not a random scattering of newspaper articles or essays, but instead an instructional manual on how to perform a computer simulation. The coursepack cost $5.95 plus a 96-cent surcharge the shop uses to pay its court costs in fighting the now-famous copyright royalty rule. With tax, my total came to $7.19. So what? This coursepack contained a whopping 48 pages with a total of 84 copied sides. It was not even bound, although it did contain to pretty, blue covers filled with self-promotion and a big, fat staple. Making this purchase was totally illogical. I can check it out at the reserve desk, take it to Kinko's or another copy place, and duplicate' the entire thing at five cents-per-copy. Presto, I just made the manual myself for $4.20. I save $3 and I didn't break any copy laws. Why are students forced to pay so much? Coursepack printers have a long running joke they've been telling. Students are the unlucky butt of it. JEFF KIRKEY LSA junior society not to blame Republicans has a legitimate argument concerning the educational aspects of the letter. AIDS, as a social disease, is spread most prominently through irresponsible sex and drug use. This could be "cured," slowed or prevented if people were more responsible in their own actions. The facts: people refuse to buy into these empty arguments that society is responsible for individual acts. If you are truly concerned with "saving a school kid's life," shouldn't you go with sure winners such as abstinence from sex and drugs, instead of trying to be so "understanding," because that can't do anything for them once they're infected. RACHEL ROUSE LSA junior HIV counselors rebut AIDS morality claimS To the Daily: This is a response to the posters with messages such as "Want to cure AIDS? Try Morality," and "Family values cure AIDS," put up by College Republicans at the beginning of AIDS Awareness Week. As health professionals who do HIV counseling and testing for University students, we take issue with these posters. First, as most of us know, there is no cure for AIDS. While there are medical and environmental interventions that can prolong health once one has been infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, no one has yet figured out how to cure down: run up the middle. Second down: run Wheatley short-side so he can't utilize his agility and speed. Third down: pass. Fourth down: punt on the opposing team's 30-yard line for a 10 yard net or put in Pete Elezovic, who has the best accuracy of any kicker. He can hit the cross bar and bounce the ball of it from any range. Hey, Michigan, it's noon on Saturday. Do you care where your football team is? ASHER STOLLER LSA senior they are acting out of a sense of respect for themselves and their partners. While abstinence from sexual intercourse and refraining from sharing IV needles are two ways to reduce risk, there are many others that may be more appropriate for some individuals. G EN STEWAiRT Program Coordinator University Health Services Counseling and Testing Program (Letter was signed by several members of the counseling staff) 'Not all vegetarians are chickens' To the Daily: In a wonderful example of Hegel's dialectic, Mitchell Szczepanczyk ("You can't eat chicken and be a vegetarian," 11/4/ 93) criticizes Daily columnist Jean Twenge's ideas on vegetarianism ("Not all vegetarians are hippies," 10/19/93). In doing so, hie unwittingly (perhaps) help to illustrate her point, and highlights the "cunning of reason" present in her work. I submit that the synthesis of these views will produce a new concept of vegetarians which shall be entitled: "Not all vegetarians are chickens." JOHN SEEGER Public Health graduate student Wrtes heDaly Letters shouldbe olsege RoUndup f U r n SOW * S r DaW 6 Michigan State University football i layers, coaches and students showed admirable restraint Saturday in the fight during the last seven seconds of the r orthwestern game. In the final stretch of the fourth q.°arter, the Wildcats' quarterback threw an incomplete pass into the end zone. Scuffles broke out between line- men, turning into a big fight that was labeled a "melee" by the Detroit News and Free Press. A Northwestern player h tSpartan defensive tackle Aaron Jack- evading some Wildcats. In an event that could have turned into a disaster like the one during the Wisconsin-Michigan game, the Green and White showed they were above the fray, largely because of George Perles and the other coaches. The coaching staff held the team back and kept them on the bench. Their effort was rewarded with an extra 15-yard penalty and respect in the eyes of the fans and people around the state. tans look restrained and the Wildcats look like unruly cretins. The credit, however, goes to the coaches. Had the coaches stepped back from the bench, the team probably would have rushed the field to support its fellow Spartans against the enemy. But Perles and his assistants held their ground. If the players had gone, the fans very well may have followed. In light of the skewed presidential search and the myriad other scandals that have been plaguing the university,