4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 25, 1994 cbeflkigan taiIg 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DuIow Editor in Chief ANDREw LEVY Editorial Page Editor F ,.. 1 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. TH 000?N i++SIS THAr A UNS ALS /fp'Z J M AW CASH-f~~IN 0ON1THE NE V~ESr__________ j~d~rHT.3Q rte our I 01 Why I'm the I maybe the only fan Tonya Harding has left. It's not that I've followed her career beforenow-like many people, I heardhernamefor the first time after the attack on Nancy Kerrigan.: Unlike most< people, I liked her the moment I read about her life story. What hap-Jge pened to Nancy Kerrigan is deplorable, and I do not intend to condone the attack against her or anyone connected with it. Yet the way Harding has been portrayed in the press has acted as a social spotlight of sorts, illuminating many of our deeply entrenched ideals. The picture spread in Time shows Harding with her arms outspread, the powerful muscles in her shoulders con- trasting with the flesh-colored mesh and dainty sparkles of her low-cut skater's outfit. In the opposing photo Kerrigan cries in pain after her attack. The article goes on to describe Harding's tough childhood - the ab- ject poverty, her mother's six mar- riages and divorces, her marriage at 19 to a man who physically abused her. The strongest figure in her life was her father, who taught her "to hunt and fish and fix a transmission." As Time put it, she is "neither politic nor polished, sociable nor sophisticated. Instead, she is the bead of raw sweat in a field of dainty perspirers ... the pool-playing, drag-racing, trash-talking bad girl of a sport that thrives on illusion and politiesse." She was also the first woman to land a three-and-a-half spin jump in competition. last Tonya Harding fan Although Kerrigan also comesfrom a working-class background, her par- ents have always been behind her and her life has been more stable. Her coach describes her as "a very dependent person;" she did not move out of her parents' home until she was 23. She is known for chickening out and omitting jumps in competition. Yet in this sport of skimpy cos- tumes and pre-competition trips to the hairdresser, she possesses a most im- portant feature: she is beautiful. The male writer who covered the story for Newsweek gushed praise for Kerrigan and seemed on the verge of falling in love (lust?) with her. People magazine voted her one of the "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" last year, and Time's caption for a shot of Kerrigan's winning smile is telling: "Pretty as Gold." At least in theory, women's figure skating is not a beauty contest -it is a sport. Its participants are athletes who train endless hours and lift weights to strengthen the upper body-Harding's shoulders, strong as a swimmer's, are testament to that. In any other sport, Harding would be the obvious winner. In football, hit- ting someone to disable them is not illegal - it is the object of the game. Strength, grace under pressure, gritty determination, and raw sweat are what it takes to succeed as an athlete, not what gives one a bad reputation. Pool- playing, drag-racing, and bad-talking are not out of place but some of the normal pursuits of an athlete in the off- hours. At least they are for a male athlete. Figure skating contains elements of art and involves hours of dance training, true, but it has long been acknowl- edged that men's figure skating is more dependent on athletic ability. The emphasis on feminine beauty is one of the things that gives women's figure skating its television and show popularity. Like women's gymnastics, it is more popular than its male counter- part because it showcases beautift women who wear very little. (Wh one male gymnast was asked why women's gymnastics was more popu- lar, he said "One word: leotards.") And so we have the story of the strong athlete, pretty yet tough, and the "dependent" beauty. One gains a repu- tation for crudeness; the other grows famous for being a victim, her gor- geous face twisted with pain like all of those beautiful women killed in horro movies. Whether Harding is connected with the crime against Kerrigan or not, her sentence was written before the attack occurred. Her crime is being too masculine. Harding has not avoided many of the more dangerous feminine pitfalls - until last week, she was still living with a man who beat her (and who, if she is innocent, may have wrecked he career). Yet with the beautiful andfem nine Kerrigan as the perfect foil, the girl who learned how to fix a transmis- sion became a woman who, as Time says, "would make an unlikely role model." There is no excuse for Harding if she was involved in the plot against Kerrigan, and she has been variously described as gruff and rude. But the descriptions the media has offered Ce her and Kerrigan are so thinly veiled in gender meanings that I can't help but feel a little bit of sisterhood for the tough girl from the trailer parks. So here's to you, Tonya Harding. Your dreams may have been shattered, but youwill always have your strength. Kervordan should speak at next commencement To the Daily: The January 19th edition of the Daily carried a front page article on Rackham sophomore Dennis Denno and his quest to have Dr. Jack Kervorkian speak at our Spring Commencement. I agree with him 100 percent and applaud his efforts at making this proposition a reality. It seems that in this day and age, there are few national heroes for college students to admire. There are few people who stand up for their what is morally right regardless of the personal consequences. But there is one man who is fighting for human rights today right here in Michigan ... and that is who I would like to see at our commencement. Dr. Kervorkian is willing to go to jail because he believes that human beings have the right (and deserve the respect and decency) to choose to end their own lives in time of terminal illness coupled with great pain. He believes that a cancer patient with maybe one painful month left to live would be allowed to choose an honorable death over anguish, suffering, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in moot medical costs. Kervorkian is no criminal, he is the closest thing to a "hero" their own warped morality on others rather than respect individual rights. Kervorkian says, "No!" because he believes that individuals (not the state) are the sole proprietors of their own bodies, to maintain as they, not the courts, see fit. By supporting Jack Kervorkian, Dennis is taking a stand for individual human rights. If he succeeds in bringing him to the University, Dennis will help us show the courts that one of America's finest institutions stands behind Kervorkian, and human rights as well. JARED LEVIN LSA senior health care." W "Poor women have the right to an abortion." "Students have the right to a college education and a decent job." * "HIV victims have the right to public funding for AIDS research." As if these things grew on trees! The American Constitution gave a nation of people, for the first time in history, the opportunity to pursue@ all of these desirables, not to have them provided to some individuals at the expense of other individuals via force. Every woman has the right to the opportunity to pay for an abortion, not for the government to grant her an abortion by forcing other Americans to fund it through taxes. We have the right to the opportunity to obtain health care, not to force doctors to heal while paying them money forcibly extracted from other citizens. The same concept applies to all of the afore mentioned "rights." Some students (and professors) here advocate forcing some individuals to work for other individuals, as though some people should be merely the means to other people's ends. The next time they have an idea for a brilliant government-funded remedy, ask "at whose expense will this be enacted?" "By what means?" If people answer these questions honestly and they truly respect every individuals rights, then they will insert their plans in the trah instead of the TDaily Pornography is a necessary evil... Pornography is a necessary evil for all lovers of the First Amendment. In a rehash of the old debate, author Catherine MacKinnon and journalist Carlin Romano went head-to-head in an argument between feminism and pornography. MacKinnon;in hernew book"Only Words," states that pornography is equal to rape, adding that "saying it, is to do it." In 1992, MacKinnon was instru- mental in the Canadian Supreme Court ruling stating that while freedom of expression is granted under the Cana- In a perfect world, women would not be lowered to the status of sex objects. Unfortunately, protecting free speech Is not always a comfortable stance to take. Oh, and hIhave one other thing to say... To the Daily: Every morning on my way to class, I prepare for a daily bout with nausea. No, I am not pregnant - it's just that I read the Daily editorial page. Every morning the Daily is riddled with complaints about our society coupled with demands that the government do something about it. This stems from a skewed philosophy many people share pertaining to the inalienable rights of human beings. Here are some nr'snrrnla " It was a seemingly huge win for women, although the ruling caused an outbreak of censorship affecting mate- rial fromhard-core porn to such serious writers as David Leavitt. And with pornography safely tucked away, it is still unclear whether women are pro- a portrait of the author as a victim, but to take her entirely seriously. Blunt and baiting controversy, Romano went on to criticize MacKinnon's blatant disregard for free speech. Once again, the distinction between