4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 15, 1999 ullie Airb|{wn 1a{lg Milestone birthdays showcase typica 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. Equald seaing Luxury boxes would reduce collegiate spirit T he time quickly approaches that I will take a step as inexorable as Greg Norman missing putts at the Masters. No, I'm not writing a "goodbye column." Rather, in little more than a week, I turn 21. As you mightg expect, I've never had a 21st birthday before. From what I can tell, it's essen- tially the beginning of 10-year milestone birthdays. Here's what I think will happen: Someone will come to my door, realizing that I am an DaVid inexperienced drinker Wallace and partier. He will Exl be dressed all in black and wearing ManarSt, dark sunglasses. He is not Johnny Cash, though I'm sure he would help. I've watched "The X-files," so I ask him what clandestine government organization he's from. He tells me he is from a group known as Helping Americans Live Lives Made Amusing, Relevant and Kindred. "There are certain things you need to identify yourself as 21-years old," he says. From under his arm he produces a shoebox cantaining everything. He hands me a beer mug, a champagne flume and a martini glass. Then, he provides enough alcohol to impress Dean Martin. One poster of an attractive woman in a bikini, and one poster of a Ferrari follow. Party supplies complete the deal. I smile at the truth and absurdity of it all. "Enjoy yourself," the man says. "Have a great birthday." I close the.door behind him and begin the rest of my 20s. The night before I turn 30, I anticipate another visit. Sure enough, the man dressed in black comes to my house. This time his voice echoes sarcasm as he reaches in his box. "Congratulations, Mr. Wallace, you're no longer cool. Here's your collection of smooth jazz CDs, and these are the keys to your Saturn." He smiles and shakes my unoffered hand, leaving the keys in it, and finishes his spiel before I can talk. "You are no longer 'hip' or 'with it,' though you will use those terms. And from now on, every- thing you like will be considered 'kitsch.' Nick at Nite is channel 42, and you'd bet- ter hurry up and have kids. You're not get- ting any younger." I am less amused with his honest barbs, but I take them with reasonably good humor. "Happy birthday anyway, he says as I close the door. I pop a Sade CD in my changer and live my 30s. A few days after my 40th birthday, I again meet the familiar visitor. "I have to confiscate your smooth jazz. Here are your new CDs, which are the ones you listened to back when you were 21. They are now called 'classic rock."' I look on, surprised. He produces a set of keys as he did a decade before. "These are to your minivan, which you will use to take your kids to soccer practice," he tells me. I grin. The kids are 5 and 7, just beginning to show an interest in sports. "I also have a spare tire for you, but it doesn't go with the car:' I close the door in his face. I've had it with the overweight and over-the-hill jokes. "Happy belated birthday," he yells, muffled through the door. I put on the Dave d life changes Matthews Band's greatest hits compilation and slide gracefully into my 40s. He returns as I begin to gray around my temples. It is my 50th birthday. In the fourth decade of his appearance, I realize he will always visit me. Again, his shoebox greet- ing bears the witty insights and gentle sar- casm that is his hallmark. "I'm not confiscating any CDs this time," he says. "Now I'm here to adjust your stereo so it can't be turned up too loud.' I know there are other jabs coming, and he wastes no time. "You now think that 'The Lockhorns' cartoons are funny." Then, he digs deeply into his box and produces a letter and a rub- ber glove. The letter is from the AARP. That I get. I hold the glove up and cock an eye- brow at him. "Prostate exams,"he says matter-of-fact- ly, the corners of his mouth slightly upturned. "Prostate exams," I groan. This guy's quite a card. I make an attempt to salvage the day. "Don't I get a mid-life crisis angle? How about a convertible?" "Sorry," he said, genuinely. "I don't pick the sentiments" I see him off. "Happy birthday, old timer," he says. As he walks away I ask, "You're not from any secret agency, are you?" "No, I'm not" "Then who sent you?" He turns around and smiles widely, with an implication that I should have known. "People who care enough to send the very best:'7 think for a moment, staring at the man from H.a.l.l.m.a.r.k. "Tell them to include money next time." - David Wallace can be reached over e-mail at davidmw@umich.edu. 0 E very fall, students, professors, alum- ni and University administrators alike bring themselves to sit on the same level - the hard, cold Michigan Stadium benches. Recently, it was rumored that the University planned on ending this tra- dition by adding luxury boxes to the sta- dium. These speculations were put to rest this week by University President Lee Bollinger when he announced on Monday that there were no plans to make any fur- ther additions to the stadium. In this time of worry about the integrity of the Athletic Department, Bollinger made a move in the right direction to help pre- serve the true spirit and tradition of colle- giate athletics at the University. In recent additions to the stadium, seats were added to three sides of the sta- dium, leaving six missing rows of seats on the east side. This seemed like a per- fect place for luxury boxes. Many people were already upset about recent additions, especially the large maize and blue "halo" around the top, believing them to be expensive, unnecessary and a step away from the collegiate nature of the stadium. Many feared that money and the Athletic Department's desire for a professional setting would corrupt the sport. Bollinger's decision is one of many made this semester concerning the Athletic Department, showing the University is attempting to maintain a hold on the prin- ciples of amateur athletics. The Athletic Department recently upgraded two club sports - men's soccer and women's water polo - to varsity status. This change was sorely needed, as the soccer team had already won its champi- onship multiple times, and the water polo team was a strong competitor. Although it is important to note that the football team brings in millions of dollars in revenue for the Athletic Department, this money should be earned in a manner befitting the amateur status of collegiate athletics and spent to meet the needs of the depart- ment. Michigan football should not see its tradition and integrity usurped to earn more revenue. The Athletic Department also took an honorable action when it lowered the cost of alumni tickets by $4 this semester, rather than raising it by 30 percent as planned. Such an increase would have been too much, too quickly. It is impor- tant that the University realized its mis- take and took the proper steps. In another important decision, the University turned down an offer to install free scoreboards within the stadium, because it would have violated the no-ads policy in Michigan Stadium. By rejecting the idea of luxury boxes at the stadium, Bollinger is making yet another attempt to distance Michigan ath- letics from the commercialism of profes- sional sports. If the University leadership were to allow Michigan athletics to become more commercial, the sport would slowly separate itself from the University. When players get this compet- itive and improvements become this large, it seems like there is a fine line between amateur and professional. In a time when the Orange Bowl is called the "FedEx Orange Bowl," and "Tostitos" is seen in larger letters than the words "Fiesta Bowl" that accompany it, Bollinger's decision is a correct and wel- come contrast. 0 Controversial scholars should not be censored By Nick Woomer Daily Editorial Page Writer Next fall, students at Princeton University will be able to take a class entitled "Questions of Life and Death" from a person who some call "the most dangerous man in the world today." When it hired Peter Singer, Princeton was probably not counting on being found guilty by one writer in The Wall Street Journal of "jettisoning ... the understanding of man's dignity that has defined Western civilization for two mil- lennia." If we are to take the word of some writers, activists and academics, the Antichrist has a degree from Oxford, founded the International Association of Bioethics and wrote "Animal Liberation," one of that movement's finest intellectual achievements. Singer hasn't even started teaching, and he already has some groups vowing to pick- et his classes. As one might expect, you need to have some pretty unconventional views to become evil incarnate, and Singer def- initely has unconventional views. In accordance with his fellow utilitarian thinkers, Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill, Singer believes in the doc- trine of achieving the greatest happiness for the greatest number. But Bentham and Mill didn't advo- cate euthanasia for infants born with dis- abilities such as spina bifida, severe mental retardation or hemophilia. Nor did they equate the killing of an infant to the killing of a dog or cow because each shares a similar capability for emotions and rationality. A closet neo-Nazi with an academic disposition? No. Singer, who is working on a biography of one of his three grand- parents who were killed in the Holocaust, is concerned with relieving suffering - sometimes by means of euthanasia - for all living things, human and animal alike. The emphasis is on quality of life, not life for its own sake. Try as he might to be understood, Singer has plenty of vocal detractors in the academic community who approve of efforts to silence him. In a recent article on Singer, The New York Times quoted Cambridge philosopher Jenny Teichman saying, "False philosophy can be danger- ous and ... if circumstances prevent its being refuted in print, it is probably all right, in extreme cases, to silence it in other ways." It isn't necessary to agree with Singer to find these reactions disconcerting. History has shown that common people react to thinkers who have the audacity to reject western civilization's most sacred principles with outrage. Usually scholars brush these mis- guided sentiments aside - there have still been no serious calls for Princeton to strip Singer of his position. But if Teichman's attitude reflects even a small trend within academia - to simply cen- sor views that cast doubts upon what many consider to be indubitabe - the university community must be wary. Once we begin to tell our best thinkers, "Question freely, but just don't go here," progressive thought is bound to plunge down the gutter. No matter how intrinsically true or good a belief may seem at face value, enlightened people must continue the process of asking hard questions and deal with the sometimes painful answers. - Nick Woomer can be reached over e-mail at nwoomer@umich.edu. TENTAIEL SPAKN Rescuing Kosovo NATO must exercise caution in intervention 0 THOMAS KULJURGIS The words of one ethnic Albanian refugee to the Associated Press indi- cate the magnitude of the atrocities com- mitted in Kosovo: "Dante's allegory of hell is nothing compared to this." Americans have witnessed three weeks of NATO bombings, three weeks of diplo- matic stalemates and three weeks of a defiant Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. It is quickly becoming evident that NATO leaders face tough choices in the future. But as an alliance of some of the most powerful and advanced countries in the world, NATO must continue to act upon its moral imperative to force a swift resolution to the tragedy in Kosovo. The daily reports of atrocities commit- ted by the Serbs ought to make the case for intervention self-evident. British sources say 100,000 young and middle- aged men are conspicuously absent from the stream of refugees fleeing Kosovo, and unconfirmed reports of looting and systematic, brutal rapes and killings com- mitted at the hands of Serbian soldiers are flowing out of the region. Aerial pho- tographs of what look to be mass graves give credence to the charges of ethnic purging. One such report charged the Yugoslavian army with raping young eth- nic Albanian women at a training camp in the southwesterly corner of the region and murdering 20 of them. The effectiveness of the current airstrikes is debatable; NATO strategists must be able to evaluate their tactics and amend them to bring the situation to the but it is imperative that those planning missions and defining objectives take every possible precaution to alleviate the deaths of innocents. The primary objec- tive in the campaign must be to prevent loss of human life and cannot become muddled by unrelated factors. NATO must remain resolute but flexible in diplomatic efforts to hammer out a solu- tion to the crisis. NATO's polices must account for the international repercussions of carrying out its mission. Primarily, decision-mak- ers cannot afford to downplay the role of Russia in the conflict. With a sagging economy and a churning political climate, with growing fascist and nationalist move- ments, Russia is a wild card that has to be regarded with sensitivity. Ultranationalist leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky told Russia's representative body, the Duma, "The Third World War started on March 24," the date of the first NATO airstrikes. The tumultuous history of the Balkans, whose conflicts tend to expand far beyond the region itself- as happened after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914 - is impossible to ignore. NATO commanders cannot only consider strategic and military factors, but need to be keenly aware of the atti- tudes of other nations in the region. The dire situation in Kosovo demands a firm international response. When an aggressive, implacable government per- petuates a humanitarian disaster of this scale, and diplomacy is exhausted, mili- THE JOYS of CRISP Nudity at 'Mile' should not be treated as a crime TO THE DAILY: TheNaked Mile is one of thoseAnn Arbor traditions that's not likely to go away any time soon. In fact, it only grows in popularity each and every year. It's one of those great college experiences that students love to tell their parents, but most likely will never, ever, tell their kids. I understand the University's concern for students' safety, and I also understand why University President Lee Bollinger is writing a letter to seniors discouraging their participation. The Naked Mile has lost popularity with local University and government officials, due primarily to its sheer size and safety concerns. Ineffective as his letter might be, at the very least, Bollinger needs to save face. At best, he's concerned for the safety of the students. I respect that. What I fail to see is the reasoning behind threats to convict students partic- ipating in the Naked Mile on sex crimes. The article on the front page of Tuesday's Daily ("Bollinger to send letters against Mile," 4/13/99) states that "if convicted of state indecent exposure laws, students could face up to a year of jail time, in addition to having to register as a lifetime sex offender." I will argue with anyone who tries to tell me that college students seen naked at the Naked Mile (god for- bid) should be thrown in jail and bran- dished as lifetime sex offenders along with the rapists and pedophiles of the etat of irhian ,Ann _ eppthe nin ?LEASE HOLD OM.. ,T CLASS IS, FULL 'N k.. ris __In fmN Sl kuLioUtpalon'~" ICC~kuirgdpum4r - office for days. Nude, if need be. Well, maybe not. MIKE MAcFERRIN ENGINEERING JUNIOR 'U' administration should not discourage running in Naked Mile TO THE DAILY: I am disappointed by the University administration's radical change in policy regarding the Naked Mile in comparison to last year. I find it almost hvocritical in danger of assault, I say: of course they are; they're running naked in public. But a well-prepared runner can minimize that danger by being prepared. Active protec- tion measures such as squirt guns or even pepper spray are a prudent idea, as well as having a friend meet you at a preset spot with your clothes or a ride home. I realize that some Naked Mile runners are intoxicated, and that they might not be rational enoughto think of these options when the last day of class finally comes. But like the underage drinking that occurs on campus, the naked mile will continue to* be run despite threats of legal action or the disapproval of the administration. The University's only hope to keep its students safe is not to discourage the Naked Mile, but to embrace it, possibly setting guide- lines that regulate the number of spectators ni. the . th f the .n. Th; i, ,i *h. . i