4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 31, 1999 LA, , II wAktcb aq m at(till 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily. letters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan HEATHER KAMINS Editor in Chief JEFFREY KOSSEFF DAVID WALLACE Editorial Page Editors 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. Good1 I'm not wearing April Fool's Day is easily one of our most underappreciated holidays. First, there really isn't any merchandis- ing to go with it. There's no phony senti- mentalizing, no awkward lunches like bosses' or secre- taries' day. There's no tremendous out- lay of cash like Valentine's, and to a f lesser extent Sweetest Day. No one has to buy anyone an April Fool's Day card. Intriguing notion though. "Dear dad, you mean so much to James me, I just wanted to Miller tell you that when Il wrecked your car, the police found the O#Tap heroin I was selling, and I told them it was yours. Only kid- ding! April Fool's! Dad? Dad?" Nor are there any decorations that go along with the day itself. Which is nice because it gives the holiday industry a chance to take the week off before charg- ing into the bunny rabbitlchocolate/ death of Christ on the cross Easter extravagan- za. But the real reason that April Fool's Day is a great holiday is because it's just like diplomatic immunity for the mean- spirited and childish. For example: My freshman year, my roommate, a sadist, arranged to have the most beauti- ful girl on our hall come into our room when he wasn't around and flirt with me. Heavily. Something short of a lap dance. any pants ... April Fool's 0 Anyway, she left before any virtues were sullied. He comes into the room a few minutes later and asks why I'm so flus- tered. I tell him the story as his smile widens and when I ask him why, he just' smiled and said "Um, April Fool's!" I chased him across half of East Quad with a nightstick. He slept in another room for two days. But the point is that if he had done that on any other day, I could have killed him, and rightfully so. That's the magic of AFD. Secondly, I had this friend Marc who when we lived in East Quad would always leave things in my room. For days. Shoes, jackets, books, papers, backpacks and just leave them their forever, cluttering up the already cluttered room and irritating my roommate and 1. So, on the magical day, we got him out his room using a confederate. In his absence, we took apart his bed and desk and moved them into my room. We took his posters, appliances and anything that was on the floor. We stuffed his clothes into the closet and closed the door. We even swept his half. The only thing left in there was his laptop with a scrolling mes- sage that read "Marc, I think you left something in our room." On any other day, we would have been arrested. What a terrific license this is. Professors are, of course, a tempting target. This is very challenging though. There's very little that we do that they have to take seriously. Say you have a paper due that day. Turning in five pages of his tax return is funny. He will look at and say: "Hmm, oh those kids and their shenanigans. Ellen, flunk him please. And get me DPS on the phone." No net effect here. Water polo, soccer promoted to varsity status GSIs are a bit easier to monkey with because they have to have more and clos- er contact with students. This is a start. Discussion sections, already known to be hotbeds of misbehavior, can erupt on April Fool's Day. Have everyone respond to different names. Swear there is no mis- take. Look at the confused GSI like they've suddenly developed massive retardation. Snicker. 1t'8 better to have the people in greater positions of power to attempt the prank, as they have actual leverage. Professors: Walk into class and start the lecture with, "Okay, everyone turn in your papers and we'll get started with the rest of class." Ignore the whines of protest. Make an altered syllabus to prove that you're right. Be prepared for tears, especially if you have pre-med students in your class. El Presidents: You sir, have a unique position. It could be awesome. Send a mass e-mail to all the EECS and Engineering students saying that starting fall semester, all virgins will be asked to leave the University permanently. Stress that it is in compliance with a new state law and there's nothing you can do about it. Start a bar fight at Rick's. Threaten to expel all the Kinesiology students who can't spell "Kinesiology." Announce that graduation speaker Kofi Annan will be replaced by Kathy Lee Gifford, and be sure to include "If we all give her a warm round of applause, she might just treat us with a song!" These are only a few suggestions. This could be huge. - James Miller can be reached over e-mail at jamespm@umich.edu. SOME KNU CKLIE7%E ADS i T he University has a rich tradition of highly popular and successful varsity athletics. Athletics have been one of the University's strengths and will be further strengthened next year, when men's soccer and women's water polo receive varsity sta- tus - a decision made last week by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. The Board should be commended for making this decision because it will allow both of these sports the opportunity to further develop their respective programs. This decision also is beneficial to club sports, which deserve recognition and the opportunity to receive the benefits of being a varsity sport, including scholarships, expense-paid trips and equipment. Both men's soccer and women's water polo are two competitive club sports pro- grams. Men's soccer has been incredibly successful, winning numerous club national championships and tournaments in the past two years in addition to achieving a grow- ing fan base and following within the University community. This decision will allow the program to build on its current success as a club team and compete at the highest level in collegiate athletics. Soccer is the world's most popular sport - 4,000 youth in Ann Arbor alone play on organized teams. Granting men's soccer varsity status reflects upon the University's support for the team - a decision that men's soccer has been vying for since 1989. Although it is not as popular as men's soccer, women's water polo is nevertheless currently ranked No. 14 in the country, ahead of 27 varsity programs. For the past decade, the team has been one of the top 10 teams in the country. The sport is not short on success, but it lacks the necessary resources to continue building on this. Receiving varsity status will enable neces- sary changes to take place that will further develop the program and increase the popu- larity of this sport. Athletes participating in these two sports previously have had to pay to compete in a club sport. With varsity status, the University will provide the necessary fund- ing to run these programs - and in a more professional manner. This move will open up greater opportunities for students to obtain athletic scholarships, which are only open to athletes who are competing in Division I sports. It will also allow the opportunity to boost their programs by pro- viding scholarships to potential athletes. In addition to men's soccer and women's water polo, women's lacrosse and women's ice hockey were also considered by the board but not selected. These two sports should not give up their pursuit to receive varsity status. Club sports members have long been paying their dues to compete. It is espe- cially difficult for these clubs to run suc- cessfully with limited funding. Funding for University athletics is clearly based on a sport's popularity and ability to generate revenue - football will always receive more funding than varsity soccer, no mat- ter how many championships the latter may win. Clearly, the Department of Athletics is not short on cash - especial- ly now that the price of season football tickets for alumni were recently dramati- cally increased. While that increase seemed unnecessary and unfair to stu- dents, some of the increase's revenue will be used to fund the two new varsity teams. Promoting athletes who play less well- known sports opens up both athletic and educational opportunities to a group of students that might otherwise go unno- ticed. ScoTT RoTHMAN GlaIs ceiling Academia is still male dominated A recent study conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that gender discrimina- tion is still prevalent among that universi- ty's faculty, particularly in the fields of mathematics and science. The report shows that not only is the ratio of male to female faculty greatly out of proportion (in the science department male faculty outnumber women 235 to 31), but women in the faculty are far behind in salary, teaching assignments, committee mem- bership, awards and tenure. At a time when women should be given treatment equal to men, it is disquieting - though not entirely surprising - that such dis- crepancies continue to exist. The results of the MIT study demon- strate that academia, particularly math and science, is still a male-dominated field. Many of the women interviewed for the study admitted to feeling marginal- ized. Given the relative numbers of male and female faculty members, combined with the lack of women in top positions among the staff, this is hardly a surprise. And MIT is certainly not alone in show- ing such a disparity; women have tradi- tionally been underrepresented in math and science. In fact, the University of Michigan has never had a female depart- ment head in any natural science-related department. And the dearth of women in the field, is surely not because they are less qualified. Discrimination is still alive anti mr .ati g nmathinoF unst he dune to One of the more positive outcomes of the MIT review is that some administra- tors are now taking steps to amend the inequalities revealed by the study. The dean of MIT's School of Science, who has championed the cause of women faculty members for several years, has been aid- ing the committee that conducted the study in seeking ways to alleviate the problem. While discrimination will not go away overnight, this is clearly a step in the right direction. Because sexism is clearly still present in the academic community, other univer- sities should devote some of their resources to conduct studies similar to the one at MIT. Barring that, they might also bring in observers from outside the uni- versity to examine differences in salaries, number of tenured professors and other areas that currently show a disparity between men and women. After all, gen- der discrimination is not always blatant, and a study of its manifestations on cam- pus could ultimately prove to be helpful. As MIT is doing, faculty and administra- tors could begin taking steps toward elim- inating the discrimination. The University of Michigan should follow MIT's lead in conducting a com- prehensive study of women's salaries and appointments in all academic depart- ments, and specifically in the natural sci- ences. As a leader in research with many academic programs of similar quality as MTT's denartments the University should United States should learn from recent history To THE DAILY: I remember as a boy asking my father with tears in my eyes, "Why did this hap- pen'?" as I viewed grainy footage of bull- dozers pushing skeletons loosely covered with skin into a pit at Belsen. My only comfort at that time was the psychologi- cal protection offered by the poor techni- cal quality of the film of the day and the grotesque distortions of the corpses. Distortions that somehow, in some way, made these victims seem something other than men and women, children and fathers. My father answered; he explained that people did not know that such horrible things were happening until it was too late. Dad went on to explain that a horri- ble war was being fought, and until the Nazi enemy was nearly defeated there was nothing anybody could have done for the millions who died; starving in ghettos, machine gunned in the fields and forests of Russia, gassed in the death factories of Poland. As a boy I was happy with this expla- nation. I learned that Jews now had their own state, and that a United Nations led by America had been formed that they and others would protect the world from any further genocide against Poles, Russians, Gypsies, Koreans, homosexu- als, the mentally deficient, Jehovah's Witnesses or little boys. America is strong, her people basical- ly decent and moral, our armed forces are the strongest and most adept the world has ever seen. Our allies are powerful, our legitimate and credible adversaries few and militarily weak. I can read CNN on my desktop com- puter. Peace negotiator Fehmi Agani, news- paper editor Baton Haxhiu and dozens of other prominent intellectuals have now been arrested and executed. Hundreds of villagers have been reportedly massacred and thousands are missing or shipped to concentration camps. Fully one quarter of the popula- tion of Kosovo reportedly are now refugees fleeing the Serbian murderers that roam their land Kosovo is a little place, but how many bodies will it take before the United States and her Allies will act in a mean- ingful way to stop genocide? Troops must be deployed now, before the only thing they will be able to do is digitally film bulldozers shoving dirt over graves filled with Albanian men and women, children and fathers. If not, what am I to tell my son? STEPHEN HIPISS UNIVERSITY STAFF Running for MSA requires support of manV friends and trust duringan election. You find out who is willing to take risks for you and be there for you. Therefore, I want to shift the spotlight to those who stood behind me, supported me and practically ran for MSA with me: Brian, David, Rory, Micah, Kym, Ankim and friends99. Regardless of the results, I will never forget your kindness and the dedication you showed me. SARAH CHOPP LSA SOPHOMORE Sanz did not consider lives of civilians TO THE DAILY: Branden.Sanz's recent column, "Ignorance, naivete and plain old stupid- ity - the 'U,'" (3/29/99) takes a hard- nosed and uncompromising view of activists on campus. Unfortunately, it is full of unsupported sweeping generaliza- tions, contradictions and paints a roman- ticized portrait of the world he claims others to be naive towards. In claiming that activists are such due to "a combination of an overactive mind, lack of common sense, assurance of ones own moral propriety and a total lack of exposure to the real world," he spares no room for exceptions or exemptions as if there is a standard rule of what an activist's life experiences are. I can assure all that he does not have the knowledge or insight to substantiate this statement even though most University students are expected to support claims they make - for some reason, hyperac- tive columnists think they are granted immunity. He goes through the various grim realities that he thinks activists are blind to, but are just chapters in his vast book of understanding. Arrogantly, he describes the plight of many domestic people then uses that fact to delegitimize activists who are disgust- ed with the sweatshop conditions employed by U.S. corporations. Then, he makes the case for the United States' role as the world's police- Sanz really believes that it should be and is "the strongest that survives." But, that is only because his mom doesn't work at a sweatshop. The irony in his naivete is that he thinks he is actually more deserving than the child whose village is being bombed by U.S. airplanes at night. Well, guess what? He isn't. Sanz did nothing to land himself in the position that gave him the opportunity and the resources to become a University stu- dent. e just as easily could have been born in Bangladesh, where his fingers would be used to assemble soccer balls instead of typing on word processors. It is a waste for him to use the reali- ties of the world as reasons why activists are stupid. Looking at the changes in these realities (for example, apartheid in South Africa) initiated at the campus level, it becomes clear that this Darwinist approach is just as naive as the phony picture Sanz paints! In the end, I would appreciate it if Sanz attacks the actual issues and not the proponents of them. After all, Sanz, a college student who is using his own logic, would therefore have no idea about the real world to even sup- port his claims about its brutality (of which a sober and level-headed approach would reveal is not as simple as Sanz pro- poses). See, his logic causes real prob- lems. Acv' . mjdt b ue, f~ l0* V4 VWa A j6-6 r 0 WILL YOUMANS BUSINESS JUNIOR Letter was not meant to offend student groups To THE DAILY: I would like to apologize to all those who 1 offended with my letter on student activism ("Student activism is getting out of hand," 3126/99). The intent of the letter was to be funny, not to be a criticism of those groups who attempt to change the university for the better. After rereading the letter during publica- tion, however, I realized that criticism was exactly what the letter was. While I do find the actions of some