4- The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 3, 1997 ~be fgi~idgin ailg 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 NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'We need to look at things for the future - for 100 years from now - to consider what our University campus might be like, what Its character should be.' -University President Lee Bollinger Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion ofthe majority ofthe Daily s editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. YUKI KUNIYUKI FROM THE DAILY Camnaidn tral snn 'U' should continue hanks to a record-setting fundraising . initiative, University coffers are teem- Ing with cash. The Campaign for Michigan gan five years ago, with a goal of raising t$ billion. It exceeded even these lofty !pectations - collecting almost $1.4 bil- lion. The funds make additional scholar- lips, departmental funding and facilities ossible - and puts the University's endow- ,,Vent on par with those at other premier high- e learning institutions. Alumnus Ira Harris suggested extending the Campaign to the year 2000, with a new goal set at $2 billion. University officials should heed his advice and use a substantial portion of the new ending to improve undergraduate education. Z The Campaign raised $340 million for the _Vniversity's endowment - increasing the inumber of endowed professorships from 125 to ;226. With this luxury, the University can now pay more competitive salaries and attract a greater number of esteemed faculty members. Moreover, students now have more opportuni- ties to interact with professors. LSA has fund- ing for almost all first-year students to partici- pate in small-enrollment seminars. These sem- inars allow intellectual growth while easing the transition to college. Future fundraising efforts ';,hould aim to make these types of seminars w ailable to all undergraduate students. The Campaign enabled the University to :grant more scholarships than ever before. For istance, the University established the Colton Leadership Award to give full fund- i ng to dozens of outstanding leaders with -limited financial resources. Donations to :endow professorships and scholarships have an additional benefit - they hold down edu- wgational costs. Previously, faculty salaries aiid student scholarships came out of the - . . 3..- focused fundraising University's general fund. Now, with endowed funds paying for more of these ben- efits, the University's financial burden is less and tuition increases remain low. This year's tuition increase was 2.9 percent, as com- pared to previous years' double-digit hikes. The list of further Campaign benefits seems almost endless: The School of Information overhauled its curriculum to adapt to today's changing technology. The College of Engineering was able to estab- lish a Department for Biomedical Engineering. The Medical School built the Cancer and Geriatrics Center. General Electric donated funds to encourage women and minorities to pursue studies in the phys- ical sciences and engineering. The Campaign officially ended on Wednesday. Its success was rooted in its design. Five years ago, the Office of Development consulted with deans to deter- mine what each of their schools needed in additional funding. The campaign then aggressively sought out alumni of the various schools to donate money for specific pro- grams. Judy Malcolm, director of communi- cation for the office, said all the Campaign's goals were reached or exceeded. Fundraising efforts will continue - although fundraisers may no longer seek to achieve specific goals. The Campaign succeeded due to is specifici- ty. The new means of fundraising lack focus - and may flounder. The Office of Development should once again meet with deans to form a new set of objectives. The Campaign helped to improve all segments of the University - its continuation would further enhance what the University can offer to faculty, students and the public at-large. 'TH'IN o P 'OVtE 14V01". --APD OF COu~sa HECIN JJ -l,meE CoL4LtD TtcY H4ve,)A'T" H#W4UEfgJoK5 Foc MAsco1. E'VEN JMElTfOA)ED o aNo L+K6 C"5P LE~rERS TO THE EDITO -THE-YD NJEED ,r --ro ADD) C Hoi c C t.c T IF Yo'.4 MAKE A B~b G..so " lI r a OF 000 P(E aT)h1NK )r Fr t" rN *1T A stab in the back' Gerlach, Gartner threaten college journalism This week, The Michigan Daily celebrat- ed 107 years of editorial freedom, but college newspapers around the country face a less promising future. The Ames Daily Tribune, a 10,000 circulation paper in Ames, Iowa, sued the Iowa State Daily, claiming that the Daily, a recipient of Iowa State. University funds, is a source of unfair adver- tising competition. This lawsuit creates a chilling scenario, not only for the Iowa State Daily, but for college papers nationwide. Leading the assault against the Iowa State Daily are university faculty members Gary G. Gerlach and Michael G. Gartner. Gartner -- a former NBC News president and Pulitzer Prize recipient - along with Gerlach, own and run the Tribune. Their law- suit would force the Iowa State Daily to work below potential and restrict news coverage and advertising strictly to the campus area. Because the Daily receives university funding - mainly for distribution - it is, by definition, part of a governmental agency. To Gerlach's and Gartner's advantage, an arm of the government cannot compete with a pri- vate company. Using the Iowa Freedom of Information Act, the two men attained the Daily's advertising and distribution records. Citing unfair competition, Gartner filed a lawsuit against the university. The problem is riot with the letter of the law or how Gerlach and Gartner used it, but rather with the cor- rupted spirit of the lawsuit. Iowa State students constitute almost half of the Ames community. Limiting the Daily advertising and distribution to cam- pus is unfair to the student readers who live and work off-campus. A university paper is also responsible for reporting news and running advertisements that effect the stu- runt hndv, __ h,,htir nn nr nr mac Gerlach and Gartner hold a responsibility to their students, many of whom work at the Daily. The student journalists, sales coordi- nators and editors strive to be the two men's future colleagues. However, instead of teaching their students, they are suing them for their success. The news industry exists because of competition; whether reporting or advertis- ing, the paper with the best of both will suc- ceed. In Ames, however, the paper with the best of both is being sued. Gerlach and Gartner hold a valid legal point but the Daily is first and foremost a college paper - it exists to inform the student body of newsworthy events, voice student opinion, and unite the campus community. It runs with the hard work of dedicated students and in most cases, supportive faculty mem- bers. Gartner claims, "I love the kids at the Daily ... I just don't want them to stab me in my back when I put out my paper and sell my ads." Gartner needs to make a choice - teach and push students to succeed at the Daily or operate a competitive local news- paper. Clearly, his dual career presents a conflict of interests. Perhaps more important, however, is the repercussions this lawsuit could have on student newspapers across the nation. While this lawsuit does not seek to destroy the Daily, it would severely handicap it. This precedent must not be set, whether or not the student paper conflicts with local businesses such as Gerlach and Gartner's. College papers need the freedom to educate students to join the profession. Here is the opportunity for these two esteemed journal- ists to place the ethics of journalism above their own petty pursuits - only then will thp, vs, havi ini-dtir ;oiantc to h issct There are no benefits to alcohol use TO THE DAILY: In the wake of yet another student death due to alcohol (Scott Krueger of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology), I ask this: How many more need to die before we understand the seriousness of drinking? In the Daily's article about underage drinking ("Alcohol common for students under 21," 9/30/97), 1 read shocking statistics about the percent- age of campus crimes and other problems that are alco- hol related, yet I perceived no sign of concern from the stu- dents quoted on the matter. I suppose that the majori- ty of students agree that alco- hol can cause problems but feel that they can be prevent- ed by "responsible drinking." To me, this phrase sounds like an oxymoron. Once a person starts drinking, his or her judgment abates. As an advocate of absti- nence from alcohol, I realize that I am in the minority. Because of my Islamic beliefs, I can proudly say that I have never consumed a drop of alcohol and I do not feel that I am "missing out." I have fun just by being in the company of good friends. I don't need a chemical com- pound to induce a state of merriment and neither does anyone else! EYASS ALBEIRUTI LSA SOPHOMORE 'U' should reject BAMN TO THE DAILY: I am writing in regard to the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary and its behavior at the hearing spon- sored by state Rep. David Jaye (R-Macomb) in Shelby Twp. I want to applaud the police officers who did not hesitate to curb the rude, malicious and illegal actions of BAMN during Jaye's hear- ing. The members of BAMN obviously have no respect for opinions that deviate from their own. As stated in the Daily article, Jaye gave the members of BAMN an opportunity to voice their opinions. Nevertheless, the members of BAMN wanted only their opinions heard and refused to allow any useful debate or deliberation on the issue. It is evident that BAMN, both by its name and its behavior at this hearing, is an unreasonable and militant band of fanatics with no same goal - to eradicate racism and ensure equal opportunity for all. Both par- ties disagree on the means to reach that shared goal. Thus, it is important that both groups share ideas in an intelligent manner. BAMN is counterproductive to this end and should therefore receive no further support from the University community. I hope that supporters of affirmative action do not allow BAMN to be the sole voice supporting affirmative action, for if it continues to be so, affirmative action will certainly be abolished at the University withoutany pro- ductive deliberation. Groups like BAMN may make some noise and attract attention, but they do not help their causes. So, I challenge sup- porters of affirmative action on campus to form a legiti- mate, civil and open-minded group so that we can leave extremists like BAMN in the street to have temper tantrums while reasonable people solve the issue at hand. GREGORY HILsoN LSA JUNIOR Rivalry story left out 'U' of Illinois TO THE DAILY: I thought Nicholas Cotsonika's article on the University's football rival- ries ("Rivals instill the pride and tradition of football spirit," 9/25/97) was a well- written exploration of one of the things that makes being a college football fan so much fun. However, while I realize that these designa- tions are somewhat arbi- trary, I disagreed with his choice that the University of Minnesota was a historical rival while the University of Illinois was not accorded this same status. His description of Illinois' fans behavior struck a chord with me. As an Illinois undergraduate, the game on the schedule that everyone got worked up about was, of course, the U of M game. My friends and I thought that this was pretty silly, since we surmised that to U of M fans, Illinois was just another team. A pretty easily beatable one at that. In terms of cur- rent football rivalry, it is very true, Illinois is no rival to Michigan. Illinois fans might want a rivalry because for years, Illinois has been in the shad- ow of U of M, both athleti- cally and academically. When a closer look is taken, the University of Illinois is in many ways comparable to Michigan, more than some U ball that resulted in the suc- cess of the National Football League. (Their past rivalry is excellently described in an advertising section of this season's Sports Illustrated College Football Preview Issue.) Cotsonika wrote that in a 1995 Michigan-Illinois game, Illinois was defeated, "by a team that had no regard for them." This kind of no- respect attitude from the Wolverines has cost Michigan games against "blow-off" teams over the past few seasons. It was also evident in a 1993 game, when the Fighting llini came to Ann Arbor, spoiled Michigan's undefeated season and dropped them in the polls. It would take only a few similar performances for people to begin talking about the resurrection of one of college football's greatest rivalries. WILLIAM HOLT RACKHAM Daily tried to justify' murder TO THE DAILY: As an alumna of the University, I was grieved to hear of the murder of Tamara Williams on campus. I am enraged that you have given valuable space to attempts to justify her killer. Criminals always have some excuse or explanation for their actions, some account that they give to themselves about how their crimes are justifiable. Treatment programs for bat- terers and sexual offenders focus on stripping away those rationalizations and helping offenders to confront the real harm done by their actions. It does not help when members of lawful society accept or condone these excuses. Neutralizations of moral wrongs pervade American society. "Never give a sucker an even break" justifies fraud. "Don't let yourself be whipped" justifies abuse. "Sometimes you just have to defend yourself" justifies letting disputes escalate to assaults. One result of all this justification is that we have the highest rate of vio- lence of any industrialized country in the entire world. No place else comes even close. So, when some imply that Tamara Williams' refusal to put out sexually on demand from her abuser is some sort of justification for her homi- cide, it becomes part of the problem, not part of the solu- tion. Maybe the killer thought that he was entitled tn Willi;m' bdv Mav hi; Ifgraduation is approaching, why am Istill dumb as dirt? t hit me just the other day - I don't remember what I was doing and I don't remember where I was becaus the gravity of my realization burn out all other details of the moment. I take that back, because I remem- ber my girlfriend Julie was there (and yes, she is real, not just one & of those literary- device women made up to add character to a bor- ing anecdote) and I blurted out my PAUL weird little SERILLA epiphany. I told SERILLA her, "I just had the WARFARE weirdest little epiphany ...." Julie just said, "Huh? When did you come up with that?" Wait, more of it's coming back to me, because I also remember one my other friends, Herman, was there. (Herman? Yes he's real, how about showing a little trust for the ... Well, all right, you caught me. Herman is entirely fake, purely a figment of my imagination, basically created for a one-liner - what are you going to do about it?) All that Herm-man could say was, "Epiphany, yeah, I remember her, I had her record and my sister and I went to see her sing at the mall. Yea it was cool" After explaining to my friend that an epiphany was a great realization, not a bubble-gum pop artist of the late 1980s, I tried to grab hold of what my sudden insight really meant. All Herman could say was, "Yeah, well, I don't think it was her I saw anyway, I always get her con- fused with Debbie Gibson. 'Electric Youth' and 'I Think We're Alone Now,' are basically the same song, it's a mi take anyone could make." My apologies to you, the reader. I guess I have digressed a little - you probably want to know what this amazing, life-defining synapse fire really was, don't you? Brace yourself, because here it comes. This is my third year of college. No really, that's it. This is my third year of college - that was the cranial thunderbolt that sparked me to writ this column. I suppose I should explain why this is so important. For the sake of clarity let me show you roughly in the form of a seventh-grade mathematical proof., Given: This is my third year of co lege. And given: I am graduating this May after only three years of undergraduate education. Then: I am missing out on an entir year of college life, basically throwiI it away'-cashing it in on an extr year of adult responsibility. Therefore: I am a class-'A' moron. It took me three years to figure that out; I think I deserve a refund fror that advanced placement credit com- pany because they told this University I was smart and I am just a stupid schmuck. If all those credits I had coming in as a freshman were really worth anything, I would have know that U of M - and I suspect all co- lege campuses - are anomalies of physics. An undergraduate education is the only known thing in the universe that passes by faster than the speed of light - blink once and its gone. Sure, I can remain a student, go to grad school, study abroad or whatever, but it isn't the same, because my path is already in motion and it's leaving Ann Arbor in about eight months. I am scared that I am going to miss out on something;that I have not max- imized my time in Ann Arbor to its fullest. Around every corner lies the possibility of something I'll regret. Maybe it's just a restaurant I always meant to eat in, a person I meant to get to know better, a class I should have taken, a book I should have read (and several I should have returned for a complete refund). I guess I could have lived here all m life and still be worried about missing out on something, but I still feel kind of pressured to pack a whole lot into the next several months. Just last week, I went to the Arb for the first time. It was something I always meant to do and just never made the time for until last week. As far as southeastern Michigan goes, it's absolutely gor- geous - the river, all the trails, tre and wildlife - I hate to think that easily could have detoured my college career around that experience for a Lions game or "South Park" re-runs. In the long run, I doubt I'll regret the three-year plan, but I would never rec- ommend it to anyone. My advice: Slow down, smell the fragels, say hi to post-