4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 3, 1997 ti firtrb i gun 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH WHITE Editor in Chief ERIN MARSH Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Risig voes Editorial page stands for students NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'So it's a great institution. I think It can get greater. I think there's plenty of room for Improvement.' - University President Lee Bollinger, in selection-process interviews with the University Board of Regents JIM LASSSEERHARP AS TOAST HOW AM7 7 CONNA T7IEL. i-IE ) Cf WEAR ADIDAS... 1t 4rA 4T 4 *s~/~ A *l s long as there have been dissenting opinions, there has been a public out- cry for a forum in which to express them. Obstacles in the path . to free expression never really seem to disappear - they emerge with every technological advance- ment and every new method of communica- tion. No sooner has society conquered a previously thought unconquerable frontier than there arises a myriad of regulations to limit it. Recent forays into computer tech- nology - expanding communication options to include the Internet and electron- ic mail - have resulted in not only unprecedented options, but a storm of pro- posed legislation to restrict, confine and otherwise sculpt expression. "One hundred and six years of editorial freedom" - the phrase is more than just words at the top of our front page. It holds enormous meaning for the Daily's philoso- phy and our ability to serve the community; editorial decisions stand with 106 years of editorial freedom supporting them. Such freedom has been the Daily's saving grace through times of oppression and turbulence. The Daily editorial page stands for and belongs to the students. We will do our best to bring you local information that matters - be it a University Board of Regents vote on tuition increases, a Michigan Student Assembly proposal to reallocate student group funds or an Ann Arbor City Council proposal to increase the fine for parking citations. This page represents the concerns that students face now and will in the future; it should ultimately represent students' best interests. The views that the Daily espouses stand for justice, civil rights and equality. The editorial page is a forum for debate, discussion and opinion. It is a distinct priv- ilege to share information and student voic- es with the University community. As regu- lations on expression and information abound, we take great pride in an editorial page that promotes open exchange and allows student voices to resonate. The University's concentrated student popula- tion is a significant force - students must recognize and embrace their power. Whether they fight for improved student loan programs, maintenance of affirmative action or responsible legislators who will recognize their needs, students must step up and challenge those who would silence them. In its broadest purpose, the editorial page will continue to check the powers that be to include the voices of the future. But that which checks must not itself go unchecked. Students must continue to keep an eye on the Daily - and if they don't like what they see, the door is open for response. The ultimate goal of any editorial page edi- tor is to make decisions that will represent and reflect the best interests of the commu- nity for which she or he works. Occasionally, we may fall short of the goal. Try as we might, the page cannot realisti- cally represent every aspect of the University's rich palette - the Daily has never claimed to fit every philosophy. We look to the student population to fill in the gaps as it deems necessary - columnists, cartoonists and letter-writers all place dif- ferent pieces of the community puzzle. We are pleased and proud to bring you a small part of the world every weekday. Many attempt to evaluate the value of indi- vidual voices. We at the Daily maintain that they are invaluable. - Erin Marsh Editorial Page Editor -r - LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Welcome, Bollinger New 'U' president faces challenging tasks Last week, the process that began in autumn 1995 came full circle. The pic- ture of interim University President Homer Neal is on the Union's presidential wall, and he left the president's office for a research project in Switzerland. Symbolically, Neal is also taking with him the anticipation and preparation for new University President }Lee Bollinger. Talk of searches, candidates, ,interim office-holders and the president- select is now noticeably absent from cam- pus. Everything seems to be settling back into the usual state of affairs, and Bollinger has taken the helm. Welcome, President Bollinger. Fundamentally, the presidency must lie on the relationship between Bollinger and the University's various constituencies. Bollinger must foster close ties with stu- dents, staff and the outside community and be able to draw those diverse elements into a cohesive and progressive assemblage. There is a certain amount of tradition that Bollinger must continue. The Michigan Mandate and the Agenda for Women, which started under former University President James Duderstadt, have set the tone for minority relations. Increasing minority enrollment and reten- tion must remain of paramount concern. Bollinger must also make sure the University can remain competitive in fac- ulty recruitment and retention. One of the real tests of a university is the quality of the employees who want to work there - the University must uphold its standards for faculty and staff. However, immediate to Bollinger's suc- cess is his relationship with the University Rn-r.Aof Rapntc t i, if c' hvcygdiim ythvt the chief executive should have a close and amicable working relationship, but recently that has not been the case. When Duderstadt resigned in 1995, Gov. John Engler immediately hurled accusations that the regents forced Duderstadt out. While both sides denied the validity of Engler's comments, it was no secret that Duderstadt and the board had strained relations. The University benefits most from a president and board that are willing to work together and compromise toward the best possible outcome. Though former Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor), the only regent openly opposed to Bollinger's selec- tion, was not re-elected to another term, it does not mean the new board will progress beyond issues of personal politics that can divide University leaders. Apart from the communicative skills a University president should possess, the community expects something else from Bollinger: a focus on learning. Clearly, Bollinger is not of the same blood as his predecessor, who stressed the University's infrastructure above all else. Bollinger has pledged to make education - specifically undergraduate studies - his prominent tar- get. It is through his focus that Bollinger can change the University into the institu- tion he envisions. Though large endowments, federal grants and high national rankings can help improve the University, the community will ultimately judge it on the quality of the stu- dents it sends out into the world. Fundamentally, the road to quality begins with leadership that accepts students as the primary concern and the University's ulti- mati- vnrnriwt That tn~ ne m.t -,nand from State's public education system needs reform To THE DAILY: Why do we as a nation rant and rave about the fail- ures of the public educational system and yet, propose no real solutions? We have either not learned to practice what we preach, or we really do not understand the gravity of the problem. Gov. Engler's proposal for reforming education is a dis- grace, as well as the one in the editorial section of the Daily ("Educational takeover," 1/30/97). The weakness of their solutions does not lie with what they said; it lies with what they did not say. When a nation is the mother to a catastrophe as big as public education, state takeover, disciplinary actions, or increased funding are sim- ply not enough. Millions of dollars and minds have researched U.S. education and have presented viable solutions for its restoration,such as changing teaching techniques and teacher certification. The point is that these solutions, or the like, will literally transform the system. We - as citizens and as the future generation - should not accept anything less than a full effort to fix the major obstacles of this nation. Education is not a prob- lem that can be waited on. We need to act now, for the sake of today's children and all future generations. MARION DIXON LSA FIRST-YEAR STUDENT Daily should not hold stories for Rush Week TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to Joshua Gordon's letter ("Daily exploits negative Greek stories," 1/29/97). What Gordon seems to forget in making his argu- ment against the printing of the article about a Nebraska chapter of Sigma Chi is that the purpose of a newspaper is to print what is new. He claims the Daily showed poor judgment in running the arti- cle during the frat system's precious Rush Week. When would he like this article run? After rush? Not at all, I sup- pose. What he fails to realize is that the Daily was simply doing its job as a newspaper, reporting the news in a time- ly fashion. Had this article run next week, it would no longer be newsworthy, as it would be old (which, the last I heard, is still the opposite of new, and thus not a function of a news- paper). In addition, he claims that the article could shed a bad light on the University's Sigma Chi chapter. I would argue that this is why the original article's title included the word "Nebraska." If, as he claims, each person has their own beliefs, then no rational person should equate the University of Nebraska's Sigma Chi chapter's actions with the University of Michigan's Sigma Chi, since they are obviously totally separate entities. JASON MILLNER LSA SOPHOMORE Many ways to improve Crisler Arena atmosphere To THE DAILY: This letter is concerning Barry Sollenberger's article on the men's basketball band ("Men's basketball band needs to add more pep," 1/27/97) and Mark Berquist's corresponding letter to the editor ("Band tries hard to pep up Crisler," 1/30/97). I must concur with Berquist in the fact that the band is not to blame. Sollenberger uses the band as a scapegoat to a pitiful crowd and arena. Let's face it, Crisler is just not a very good basketball arena. What doCameron Indoor Stadium, Assembly Hall, Breslin Center and Rupp Arena all have in com- mon? The fans are on top of you. Crisler is just not designed for that. It is a multi-purpose arena. It's for gymnastics, assemblies, any- thing they can book. The amount of room between baseline and the fans is ridiculous. Implement a new seating policy - too many passive people who go for social rea- sons sit close because they have purchased tickets for three years. Make it so the fanatic, crazy fans are close so they can cheer and make noise. Go back to the first-come, first-serve method of my freshman year. Yes, it sucked to wait four hours for St. John's, or eight hours for MSU, but the real fans got the best seats. And for the lesser games, at least every- body was as close as possi- ble. If the University does not want to do that, go to a semi- first-come, first-serve sys- tem, where all students receive vouchers. At each game, hand out seating for next game. Everyone who came to the game would be assured the same seat or bet- ter. If the band seems so out of it, it's because they are. They are stuck far in the cor- ner. And the two-bowl system just doesn't work. It moves fans further back and loses that feeling of fans every- where. When the players look up, they see all this space, and if they squint, they can see fans beyond that space. But only a few fans. That brings me to my final point: The fans just aren't very supportive. Fans say that if the team played better they would come and cheer more. The players say if fans came, they would play harder. We could argue who is right all day, but it should be that the fans come all the time. Are Michigan fans real- ly a bunch of bandwagoners who jump on and off every time the team wins or loses? Why not start a student group, like the "Cameron Crazies?" During purchase of tickets, you also buy a t-shirt for $10. The University would make additional money and I don't think most students would mind the extra few bucks. The shirts could have a theme, like "Fisher's Catch," or "Fab Fans." Anything. The athletic department needs to make a lot of changes; they need to commit to basketball like they do football. But they won't do that until the fans showthey are committed to basketball too. JEFFREY GOFF LSA JUNIOR Generation X produced many more workers than whiners T he better half of Generation X is ready to take the nation by storm. And this is not the group of slackers with the 10-second attention spans. This is today's college population. A recent study found that first- year students around the country areĀ° more stressed and feel more pressure con- cerning grades, jobs and success than the classes before them.MEGA That this year's SCHIMPF figures are con- p a~u l ONS tinuing a trend shouldn't surprise anyone. What should be surprising is that the same people who say they are "over- whelmed by all I have to do" are lumped into the same generation as the people who whine about how miser- able and empty their lives are. And this is the irony: The most sig nificant thing Xers do may be creating the stronger leaders who follow. Does it really matter what generation we are included in? It's a matter of arcane labels, anyway. But Baby Boomerstdobseem to care, and they happen to be the ones who slamn Generation X and its varied members. So, in all fairness, they should care about the struggles and triumphs of college students. Researchers hay. "found" recently: *The UCLA study of first-year stu- dents found that students feel more stressed than ever, are concerned about financing their education and, for the most part, work at least part- time during school. *Other surveys have found that salaries for liberal arts graduates are rising and job market prospects are improving.9 Doesn't seem like we're unemployea and whining. But, for some reason, today's college students are still grouped with people who are in their 30s - former "Singles" stars who don't seem to be able to find the drive that students have almost too much of. So the second Generation X is emerging. Call it "Generation Y" or maybe just "freedom-challenged," but be aware this is not your older broti er's group of friends. The UCLA study's results are com- mon knowledge for students who spend their days in classes, meetings, libraries, labs, jobs and studying. Students toting thick planners every- where must be planning something. Someone has to be running the more than 550 University student groups, and not all e-mail groups are circles of friends. People don't have time toe sleep, study, work and be involved a once, so something - usually sleep- ing or eating - suffers. In any case, we're not sitting on the couch all day. - So some of this you can attribute to resumes and applications that have to be filled in when we graduate - the more you can do and still get decent grades, the better your chances. Busier lives usually coincide with busier resumes. 0 Thankfully, UCLA also managed to confirm this for us: First-year students are now more interested in getting a good job than making money. (Never mind that the two usually go hand-in- hand.) And some of this you can chalk up to this University, which is unquestion- ably populated by more overachievers than, say, the schools in South Bendo Columbus. But while University" stW dents did participate, 493 other schools also administered the study. And because we can't set the curve in everything, someone else out there must also be too busy to breathe. What we should ask for, instead of a study that confirms what we already know all too well, is some recognition of the fact that we now schedule free time. Then, the grown-ups might final- ly realize they have shaped us into tl stressed 20-going-on-50-year-olds we have become. While college may be the last time we have this much freedom, that lib- erty is slowly being eaten away by worries about jobs, money, the future and morality. And these realities grew out of Generation X's failures and whining. By complaining there were no good jobs, they convinced us to take t4 "right" courses and look to the future with jaded eyes instead of rose-col- ored glasses. By moving back home or living in less-than-ideal apartments in less-than-ideal areas, they have taught us to learn to manage our money now WHAT'S AFFECTING 'U' THIS WEEK MONDAY Quilting bee for AIDS Memorial Quilt Michigan Union, Pond Rm. 4-7 p.m. TUESDAY MSA meeting 3909 Michigan Union 7:30 p.m. WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE OUR W