4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 14, 1999 cbe 3ib4igun gaillg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor 'Tobacco is not allowed inside buildings on this campus, yet we make money off it.' - MSA Rep. Vikram Sarma, in support of a resolution calling for the University to divest its shares of tobacco company stocks THOMAS KULJURGIS TENTATIWEY SPEAKING Kl C9 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 Athlete gambling damages the 'U"s image L ike it or not, the University's repre- sentatives to the general public are not world-renowhed professors or even its many alumni. When most people think of the University, images of Rose Bowl vic- tories and a crowded Michigan Stadium come to mind. The startling results of the Athletic Department's recent gambling study are upsetting, not because fears of rampant gambling among athletes have been confirmed, but because the ensuing negative publicity has the potential to damage the entire University. As a public entity whose governing body is elected by Michigan residents, the University is far more vulnerable to public opinion than many other institutions of higher learning. Perhaps more importantly alumni may decide to decrease or simply not give monetary gifts to their alma mater in the wake of a pessimistic media blitz. Fundraising is especially vital to the University; the recent three-year Campaign for Michigan raised almost $2 billion. In some ways, the athletes' poor reputa- tion is not altogether undeserved. The most upsetting fact revealed in the report is that more than five percent of male student ath- letes willingly admitted to providing inside information on games for the purposes of gambling, betting on a game in which they participated or accepting money for poor performance in a game. While the ethical and psychological impacts of gambling in and of itself are debatable, placing bets on games in which one has direct involvement - or accepting bribes in return for a sub- standard effort - is completely inexcus- able. The report concluded that 72 percent of the student athletes who responded to the study admitted to gambling in some way since entering college, with those who gambled through bookmakers putting an average of $225 on the line monthly. Student athletes must understand their unique roles as University representatives before most of the world. They do not have to live up to superhuman standards, but they should certainly feel an obliga- tion to the University community to con- duct themselves just as any other impor- tant representative of the University is expected to do. No one is asking athletes to sign away their rights, not sign petitions or shy away from expressing controversial views. Gambling is illegal, and it is hardly too much to ask those who play a vital role in molding the public's perception of the University to abstain from involving them- selves in illegal activity - especially ille- gal activity that is directly related to games in which they play. Having established that gambling among student athletes is a problem, the Athletic Department should take an active role in discouraging gambling by dealing with athletes who bet on or accept money for their respective teams' games severely. One of the main consequences of the University having a first-class athletic program is that athletics have come to define most of the world's perception of it. As such, athletes are obligated to ensure their behavior does not reflect poorly on the University. Athletes need to make a better effort to act in accordance with the law to ensure the perpetuation of the public's favorable impression of the University. PRO4AIF E 2 0 \'- R LETTERS TO THE EDITOR DPS officers should not ticket cars in the snow To THE DAILY: In light of the recent weath- er, I would like to say that I am very comforted with the knowledge that Department of Public Safety officers have the time to write "not a designated parking space" tickets. This occurred in a University parking lot cov- ered with inches of fresh unplowed and unsalted snow. Nevermind the piles of snow several feet high pre- venting people from parking in the "designated" spaces. Perhaps, in their spare time, these officers can assist students and staff by shoveling the snow out of the lots so that the "desig- nated" parking spaces will be more clearly defined. JONATHAN MEZZADRI LSA SENIOR U "s snow removal has been 'amazing' TO THE DAILY: In the Daily on Jan. 12, the paper claims the snow removal service by both the city of Ann Arbor and the University has been poor this year ("Pick up the Slack"). While it's hard to argue for the city in this case, the University has done an amazing job of clearing the snow to make sure commuters can get to cleared parking lots and students can walk between buildings, at least based on the removal that I have seen on North Campus. On Monday, Jan. 4, after the big storm hit, I had to spend an hour shoveling my car out before getting onto the roads, then an additional 45 minutes to travel what normal- ly takes only 10 to get past the poorly cleared Huron Parkway. I figured that the Glacier Way lot would have been a complete shutdown, but to my surprise, almost all of the snow had been cleared to make more than sufficient parking in this lot. In addition, the trail leading from the cor- ner of the lot to the EECS building was cleared suffi- ciently to make the walk easy instead of the pain of walking through a foot of snow. Even on Jan. 13, I noticed that most of the roads and sidewalks on North Campus were cleared of snow and only wet. On the other hand, Huron Parkway still remains danger- ous. I can imagine the trouble Central Campus must be going through, as most of the roads are not a priority for basic University functions and thus are not serviced by them. Instead responsibility falls onto the shoulders of the city's removal crews. If anything, fingers should be pointed to the city for lack of preparation and not the University. And, as an aside, one of the complaints in the editorial was that "only narrow walks have been shoveled, and even those are slippery' To give some credit to the University, a foot of snow fell on Jan. 2 and another foot accumulated over the following 10 days. With limited removal equipment, priorities have to be assigned to major pedestrian paths first. But even if it is a narrow walk between the snowbanks, this is at least some sign that the University is trying to keep up with the task. It is certainly much better than their last win- ter storm. MICHAEL NEYLON COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING 'U' is also to blame for tragedy To THE DAILY: As a University and Phi Delt alumnus, I have paid close attention to the news stories in the Da'ily concern- ing the Courtney Cantor tragedy. I feel that the stories that have appeared in the Daily have failed to address some critical issues concern- ing Cantor's death. These omissions are not surprising considering that the Daily has shown an anti-Greek bias for years and doesn't seem too intent on changing it. The paper seems fixated on the fact that Cantor was underage and therefore incriminates the fraternity for supplying her with alcohol. What is not focused on is the fact that this tragedy proba- bly would have occurred if Cantor had been 21 years old. It seems convenient for the University that the focus has shifted from the safety of the residence halls to the fra- ternity members supplying alcohol to a minor. The issue of poor design of the win- dows at Mary Markley resi- dence hall seems to have been swept under the rug. The Daily also fails to look at the overarching prob- lem of college drinking. It is not as if drinking just arrived on campuses in the last 10 years. College and drinking have been tied together since well before "Animal House" hit the screens. Tragedies like Cantor's could occur at a house party, tailgate, bar - the list goes on. Only when students begin to drink more responsibly will the tragedies on college campuses become a faded memory. The University should take a hard look at college life in general instead of going on a witch hunt at fra- ternity houses. Even if there were no Greek system, the party would just move some- where else. Another tragedy will occur unless the core of the problem is addressed. JASON SMITH UNIVERSITY ALUMNUS Millennium approaches: A ! progress report AImost every day brings a cata- strophic new vision for the year 200. And every one of these new visions involves scary computers hav- ing nervous breakdowns and endin* life as we know it. Thankfully, the problem has a nice, sleek name: Y2K. Y2K is fun to say - what R2-D2 and C-3P0 might call their love child, what an auto com- pany might call a futuristic new model. Stylish, JEFI modern and excit- ELDRIDGE ing ... the 5 1.} A D Volkswagen Y2K. S. 'ToN This is not the first time predicted computer mal- functions have been viewed as a threat to everyday life. A few years ago, the press reported on the Michaelangelo Virus with near-equal vigilance. For those who don't recall, th* Michaelangelo Virus was an exciting little ditty that threatened(as they say) to crash the nation's computers on the birth date of the celebrated Renaissance genius. The predictions made then were a lot like the predictions we hear now. Dire consequences portended for computer users - indeed, all human beings. The world would stop. Industry would be paralyzed. We all would die. Then,inothing happened. We all forgot. The evil computer virus was a bigger bust than "The Godfather, Part 111." So I didn't think much of the immi- nent Y2K devastation until the new year. But with 1999 on the scene, Y2K (it's fun to say) is downright unavoidable. Newscasts warn of it. Compute geeks and financial gurus debate aboW it. President Clinton gives a speech when the Social Security system is saved from it. I saw an MTV VJ get into the act. She implored viewers to party like it's 1999, because as soon as the year ends, we will, too. Late Sunday night, I found the strangest explanation of all. I didn't mean to watch it; I didn't quite enjoy. watching it. But there on cable television was a pair of rubbery televangelists bellow- ing about how crashing computers would prompt a one-world govern- ment and the Second Coming. The spectacle carried on for a con- siderable amount of time. Behind glassy eyes, they calmly explained dis- jointed theories that linked the Euro, biological weapons, the Y2K phenome non and the nouveau riche. At a time when profitless Internet stocks create billionaires, Bill Gates is worth $75 billion and an article on the Drudge Report can help impeach a President, it's fitting that we're conceiv- ing the end of the world coming from a computer bug. A lot of weird things have hap- pened in the last 10 years - terrorist bombings, violent little wars, the L.A. riots, serial perjury, El Nio an "Titanic" Disaster is the name of thW game. These disasters tend to be deeply weird. So as the decade comes to a close, everyone's getting primed for the biggest, weirdest disaster of all -rdeath by technology. My computer knowledge doesn't extend far beyond writing a term paper and checking e-mail. Despite my attempts to follow thi issue, I know little about how thes damn computers confuse 1900 and 2000, the implications of this confu- sion, and what might be required to fix it. What I do understand is that for the last decade computers have been sold as world-changing devices, utopian breed- ers of new information, new economies and a new world. A lot of people are uneasy with this. I'm uneasy with it, and l've been usin. a computer since first grade. We're to figure out whether Windows 95 or the newest Netscape offer information panaceas, or whether they're overhyped Crisco. Outside of a small community of experts, I'd posit that most of the commotion surrounding Y2K stems from technological uneasiness. The conspiratorial, apocalyptic babblings I observed a few days ago confirmed this. A few generations ago, such feel- ings of powerlessness and anger would have been directed at paper money. Forty years ago, maybe it would have been vented toward the United Nations. Flynt should not be controlling D.C. politics arlier this week, pornography magnate and First Amendment notable Larry Flynt claimed U.S. Rep. Bob Barr (R-Ga.), one of President Clinton's harshest moral crit- ics, may be guilty of the same type of mis- deeds that eventually led to Clinton's impeachment last month. The Hustler pub- lisher stated on the CNBC show "Rivera Live" that Barr had an affair while married, and encouraged his wife -- to whom he was still married at the time - to have an abor- tion. Barr, a vocal opponent of abortion rights, denies the charges. The fact that such revelations have become almost common place these days is a poor commentary on the state of American politics. If Barr committed adultery and failed to divulge the truth in his 1986 divorce proceed- ings, as Flynt alleges, it is hypocritical of him to push for the impeachment of President Clinton. And this scandal, combined with the recent resignation of former House Speaker- designate Bob Livingston (R-La.) after Flynt brought to light news of an adulterous rela- tionship in his past, is more evidence that the Clinton scandal really is more about sex than perjury. While it is true that the House of Representatives may be a glass one as far as sex scandals are concerned, it is alarming that sexual issues are being given such an important status in Washington. Flynt is most well known for helping establish a sig- nificant First Amendment precedent after Rev. Jerry Falwell sued his magazine, Hustler, for implying that Falwell commit- ted incest with his mother. But the fact that he has so much influence over contempo- rary political discourse is frightening. The extent to which the U.S. government has become hoaed down in nersonal nolitics is utterly ridiculous. Issues such as adultery that should remain private matters have become cause for politicians to step down from office. This should not be the case in this situation: Livingston should not have resigned and neither should Barr. The Clinton scandal has tarnished both major political parties - at this rate, few will escape unscathed. This kind of person- al mudslinging can only be destructive to the nation as a whole - the leadership of the country should not be determined by sexual ethics. Both sides of this issue are guilty of engaging in personal politics; the Republicans' claim that Flynt is working with the White House is ridiculous -- the worst thing Clinton could do for his already tarnished image is associate himself with a pornography vendor. But since they were willing to investigate Clinton's sexual back- ground in such detail, it is hardly surprising that someone would be willing to bring the sexual misconduct of Republican leaders to light. And it is shameful that the govern- ment has become mired in dissecting the private lives of its leaders and that a pornog- rapher has become one of the most influen- tial people in Washington. These destruc- tive personal politics must come to an end before they get any more out of hand. Flynt must keep his interest in prurient issues out of the nation's capital. He should stop trying to act as the fourth branch of the U.S. government by using his money to act as a sort of moral arbiter. Washington, D.C., power players must do now what they should have done a year ago when the pres- idential scandal broke - stop paying atten- tion to the personal lives of their leaders and resume the duties of their elected jobs - Lrovernini VIEWPOINT Dn't u d1d0local textbookstores BY THE STATE NEWS The introduction of online bookstores should provide local bookstores with a new outlook on their business. Online bookstores such as BigWords.com, varsitybooks.com, efollett.com and dunebooks.com offer students the chance to buy and sell textbooks online, at cheaper prices. This should provide for healthy competition between the new electronic sources and "old- fashioned" bookstores, which hopefully will bring outlandish prices at local stores down. In an increasingly electronic world, online bookstores can be of great help for students simply because of the ease with which they can acquire books for classes. However, online bookstores don't provide the school supplies, magazines, software and Spartan wear that Michigan State University students have come to expect and buy from their bookstores. Jerry Parr, textbook manager at Ned's Bookstore, said Ned's is a place where students ra fin .-in- nh- ta hcn t -apie nr shipping fees to send them back fall on the stu- dents and could be costly. Going to the bookstore and gathering text- books, notebooks and other supplies is a stan- dard practice among college students at the beginning of a new semester, and not one that should be abandoned. But expensive books and minuscule buy-back prices may turn more stu- dents toward the online alternative. It's unlikely that local bookstores would be put out of business by these online services, as many people still prefer to do business in per- son and are not comfortable using the Internet, but local bookstores must recognize the alter- native is there. Bookstores should seriously consider low- ering prices. It would draw more students who can't afford books at current prices and reduce the lure of these online bookstores. If bookstores lowered prices down to pari- ty with their online counterparts, in addition to maintaining all the extra services they pro-