4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 19, 1999 Uje AMidsigiu & iig 420 Maynard Street HEATHER KAMINS Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editor in Chief daily.letters@umich.eduE Edited and managed by JEFFREY KOSSEFF students at the DAVID WALLACE University of Michigan Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority offthe Dailys editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. The Naked Mile - There are certain time-honored traditions that college students like to engage in. Students at Wellesley College celebrate the first Sunday of the school year with a multi- cultural ceremony of song, music and dance. Liquor and nudity don't mix -L __ Students t at Morehouse celebrate alumni achievement by raising money for scholarships and char- ity. And students at Michigan State University celebrate their sports teams' vic- tories - and losses - by drinking beer and burning furniture. Not to be outdone, we at the University have our own tradition - The Naked Mile. Our tradition began about 13 years ago when the crew and Jus the begnning, Admissions survey should Initiate dialogue Since the University was first sued for its a series of panel discussions has already admissions policies in the fall of 1997, been sponsored by various campus groups affirmative action has been the focus of since the lawsuit against the University was intense debates on campus and nationwide. first filed, many of these have been criti- Both affirmative action proponents and cized for being slanted in favor of a partic- opponents have claimed to represent the ular stance. Whether such allegations are collective opinion of the student body as a true is irrelevant. If students suspect an whole, but Friday's release of The Michigan event was biased or manipulative, it is like- Daily's student survey marked the first ly they will distrust the information and comprehensive scientific poll of University arguments presented and maintain their cur- students' attitudes towards the University's rent opinions. admissions policies. Perpetuating falsities and half-truths is The survey, which was conducted in detrimental to the causes of both affirma- conjunction with the Department of tive action proponents and foes. The Communication Studies and the Institute validity of a position can be proven only for Social Research, took a representative with arguments firmly grounded in fact. sample of 87 percent of the student body. Activists must make a more satisfactory Graduate and undergraduate students par- effort to raise the quality of debate on ticipated in the poll. Almost 51 percent of issues surrounding race-based admissions respondents said they object to the use of policies. race as a factor in undergraduate admis- As an initial and cursory examination sions, while about 41 percent supported its of student's opinions on race-based use. The remainder of the participants was admissions policies, the recent survey either unsure or refused to answer. should be regarded as the beginning In addition to revealing student opin- rather than the end of the argument. With ions on affirmative action, the survey also the amount of misinformation that is exposed widespread ignorance in regard to obviously circulating campus, it would be the admissions process. More than 48 per- grossly premature for groups or individu- cent of respondents thought the University als that advocate ending affirmative used racial quotas to determine whether action to claim final victory. Only when candidates are accepted or rejected. an informed student body has heard sev- Quotas have been illegal since they were eral qualified individuals argue for and banned by the Supreme Court in the 1978 against affirmative action will a poll be University of California Regents vs. Bakke able to draw an accurate portrait of stu- decision. dents' ideological alignment. The issue of The ignorance of nearly half of the sur- affirmative action at the University is far vey respondents can, in part, be attributed from settled. This survey should be used to the amount of rhetoric on both sides of as a starting point for dialogue on this the affirmative action debate thus far. While controversial issue. Too powerful a Independent counsel law should be eliminated Scott Hunter Roll Through the aor of your choice and type in "Naked Mile"). There are the shady guys who try to reach out and grope unsuspecting runners. And there are the expert investigative reporters from shows of "Hard Copy"caliber. Needless to say, this event has evolved into more than a student tradition. In this evolu- tion, the event lost much of its innocence. Then, of course, there's the problem of alcohol. Somewhere early on in the evolution of the event, someone discovered that it was just about impossible to conceive of running bare-assed through the Diag before 10,000 spectators unless he or she was stone-cold drunk. While the liquor might make the expo- sure a little more bearable, it presents prob- lems of its own. After all, everyone knows that all sensibili- ty, street smarts and common sense evaporate after downing a couple liters of Colt 45. Now put these things together: A bunch of sketchy old people and a bunch of drunken, randy kids. You've got a guaranteed disaster. Last year, several people were rushed to hos- pitals in ambulances. Dirty old men got into fights with angry students who didn't want their packages on tape. The Diag suffered $13,000 in damage. And there were reportedly several instances of harassment. But Ann Arbor is not alone in its shame. Students at Princeton University this year held what will likely be their final Nude Olympics. This decision was reached after the school faced many of the same problems that we continue to face: property damage, injuries and fighting. Plus, there were reports of four men groping an unconscious woman and of couples having sex out in plain view. So, it's not just that Wolverines are especial- ly randy and rowdy; it's that there's something inherently lethal about the whole liquor/nudi- ty/old-dirty-pervert mix. It's a great big safety hazard. And despite all the valiant efforts taken by DPS, MSA and various student organiza- tions last year, disaster still struck. People were still groped and fights still erupted. So, does this all mean that we should end the whole Naked Mile? Should we send all of Larry Flynt's disciples packing and spend the last day of classes curled up with Orgo books and cell maps? Well, maybe. Certainly if nothing improves, we can't seriously consider continuing the event. The safety costs outweigh the benefits. To some, ending the Naked Mile is the best solution. In fact, I just got a letter from the almighty University President Lee Bollinger the other day, begging me not to run the Naked Mile (Don't worry, Lee. My mama raised me better and besides, I cannot run a mile without my lungs exploding). Actually, all seniors got the letter. And in it, Bollinger urged us to seri- ously consider the possible consequences before we rub. Sounds fair enough. So this year, before you toss your Fruit oo the Looms to the wind and before you unleash Victoria's secret, just remember to be smart. This means it might be a good idea to lay off the Colt 45. This means keeping the tempers in check. This means no walking around alone. This means keeping your hands to yourself. Remember: All the volunteers, DPS offi- cers and free T-shirts in the world can't do a thing to protect us unless we protect our- selves. The whole student body is probably aW little more educated on the dangers of the event this year thanks to the Michigan Student Assembly's pamphleteering, discussions on the event and some great reporting. So, we've got no excuse for a big riot this year. If we don't all make the event safer, it'll be gone sooner than we think. - Scott Hunter can be reached over e-mail at sehunter(aiumich.edu. track teams decided to peel through the streets of Ann Arbor stark naked. In subsequent years, other students - jealous of the crew team's newfound coolness - decided that on the last day of classes they too would run around campus naked. And a harmless stu- dent tradition was born. But somewhere along the way, things went awry. When word got out that all of us teens and 20-somethings were running across our campus buck naked, shady people crept out of the woodwork and thronged to campus for the event. We're talking dirty old men with high-pow- ered zoom lenses. We're talking professional internet pornog- raphers willing to sell pictures of your bare bosom for people to download (by the way, if you don't believe me, go to the search engine Genocide in Kosovo resembles Holocaust Rape camps, murder, genocide, ethnic cleansing ... if these words don't trigger your moral consciousness, we don't know what will. Shocked and saddened are we to know that there are people like the author of the recent letter to the editor, "Peace with bombs in Kosovo is a hard sell" (4/13/99) actually supporting the genocidal maniac, Slobodan Milosevic. For those wondering how Milosevic can be compared to Nazi Germany's leader, Adolf Hitler, ask the vic- tims of the Jewish Holocaust. Without doubt, Milosevic is the Hitler of our times. The three-finger Serbian salute resembles the Nazi salute. The world vowed it would never allow the likes of the Holocaust to occur again. Ever since grade school, we have been reminded of this great tragedy, in the hopes of learning a lesson from it. As we approach the 21st Century, it is all too clear that we have failed to learn such a history les- son. No doubt, history is replaying itself before our eyes. Precisely the same ethnic cleansing and brutal repression that occurred in Europe just a few decades ago was permit- ted to recur in Bosnia and Croatia, and again today, in Kosovo. Yesterday, the victims were one religious group; today, it is another. Just a few years ago in Bosnia, more than 250,000 innocent civilians were butchered, 50,000 women raped and at least two million refugees were left stranded. Anyone familiar with the Balkan region will know that Kosovo does not equal Serbia. The Kosovar Albanians, being the descendants of the ancient Illyrians, are an indigenous population of the region, compris- ing more than 90 percent of Kosovo. Indeed, the conflict between the Serbs and Kosovars has been brewing for years. In 1946, the Allied powers forcibly incorporated Kosovo into Serbia. Ever since 1990, when Milosevic ter- minated autonomy (which was granted in 1974), the civil rights of Kosovar Albanians have been systematically denied. Today, the Kosovo Liberation Army seeks independence for its people. As participants of the rally in the Diag, our one aim has been to call for an end to these horrific crimes: where at least 100,000 young Albanian men in Kosovo have already been killed, where 700,000 refugees are starving to death inside Kosovo, where children are burned alive and where mutilations of human bodies occur. The point here is not a matter of bombing or not bombing. The point is that this vicious and systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing and massive forced exodus of Kosovars must CHIP CULLEN be stopped immediately. If you have peaceful suggestions as to how to do this, name one that will work. Milosevic's past actions have shown that the term "peace" does not exist in his vocabulary. We see only two solutions. Either arm the Kosovars so they can defend them- selves against Serbian aggression, or else fight* a quick ground war and bring an end to this humanitarian catastrophe before it is too late. If anything, we are saddened by the fact that so many students on this campus and elsewhere choose to remain indifferent about such a great tragedy. As we marched, hun- dreds of students on the Diag chose to watch idly, rather than join in. It was this same apa- thy exhibited by people before WWII that allowed the Holocaust to occur. As Martin Luther King, Jr. stated, "The tragedy is not the brutality of evil, but the silence of good people." What has happened to our sense of humanity? Remaining silent and inactive in the face of such brutal and blatant violence against our fellow human beings negates our duty as civilized members of a world com- munity. - This viewpoint was written by School of Public Health students Umbrin Ateequi and Jenny Babcock. GRINDING THE NIB One of the most infamous men of the late '90s testified before the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee last Wednesday. Kenneth Starr told Congress he does not think the independent counsel statute, which expires June 30, should be re-instituted. This only confirms the absur- dity of such a law that should have been eliminated long ago. Starr told the committee the Justice Department should be given the jurisdiction currently held by his office. This would restore the balance of power that was shifted by the statute. The independent counsel is essentially a fourth branch of government that sits somewhere between the Executive and Judicial branches. This disrupts the framework of the Constitution that allows for impeachment of high officials, a process that is supposed to involve the Judicial and Legislative branches. The checks and bal- ances that are so important to the way our government is formed are non-existent with an independent counsel. Starr even said the powers he exercised should be left "where our laws and traditions place it, on the attor- ney general." This fourth branch of government, with little accountability, is too powerful. The office was created after the Watergate scan- dal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. Most of the initial investi- gation was done by newspaper reporters, without whom Nixon's criminal activities would never have surfaced. But in the midst of the public outrage surrounding the scan- dal, too much power was granted to this office. During the past two decades, the independent counsel has evolved into a bloated legal entity that has used, with lessly invaded the president's private life. Starr's five-year investigation began as an investigation into the president's and Hillary Rodham Clinton's real estate deals in Whitewater, Ark. After spending $40 mil- lion dollars, intimate details of the presi- dent's private life had been exposed to the national press, bringing about the second impeachment in United States history. The Constitution stipulates that impeachment is to be used when an official commits "high crimes and misdemeanors." This is to protect the nation from a presi- dent who abuses his or her power and poses a threat to the well being of the country. Starr made his case for impeachment alleg- ing perjury by Clinton regarding his affair with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky. National security was not threat- ened. But this did not matter to the inde- pendent counsel. This uncontrolled investigation in the t end yielded a 435-page collection of dirty stories and lurid details about Clinton's pri- vate life. The impeachment brought about by Starr's investigation produced a political debacle defined by party lines. Everyone on Capitol Hill knew the Senate Republicans would not muster the two-thirds majority required for removal from office. By the time of the actual vote, they could not even come up with a simple majority. In the end, more than $40 million was wasted, and all that was left to show for it was a lengthy dirty book. Starr is a glaring example of why his office must be removed. His investigation was misguided, uncontrolled and biased to the point of being unethical. The indepen- dent counsel law is unconstitutional and Secret societies waste University resources To THE DAILY: OK ... Doesn't anyone get the point? The fact that Michigamua and Adara are co- ed doesn't matter for squat! They still repre- sent the petty, self-congratulatory views of traditional elitism, which have traditionally drawn lines between grou ps based on the "high quality" of their "leadership and char- acter." 'Gama, Adara and Vulcan are a net cost to the campus. Basedron some arcane con- tract with the University during the con- struction of the Union, these organizations get to control the fifth, sixth and seventh floors of the Union - the Tower! How many other organizations could use that space for some good other than shouting and playing drums Monday nights before heading off to Rick's? The rationale for their control of the Tower (based on the words of a Michigamua alum who will remain nameless, of course) is that the members of the organization represent the cream of the campus crop - that they are a better class of people, in whom the University should invest more resources - after all, they're the campus "leaders." I have no gripe with the secret societies' members -they are good people, and indi- vidually have done a lot for campus. I have considered a number of their members friends over my six years at the University. But during that same time, I've seen their little rituals and rites of indoctrination, heard the drums and shouting echoing from the Tower and gotten generally annoyed by the overly defensive stance taken by mem- bers when confronted with a contrary view 'I 1' ) -- . CiK, , QZ . I t r" 0 throughout college. Many of the people in the Tower are members only because of dynasties - one member of a campus orga- nization "taps" another member of the same organization and passes down the history and love of Michigamua and Adara onto the next generation. In the call for social justice, activists should aim their shouts against structures which fundamentally represent a split between "the people" and "the leaders." All three levels of the Tower are great places to start. CHAD BAILEY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Running the Naked Mile has many from participating in this year's celebra- tions, very little focus has been put on the other dangers of the Mile. With increasing mainstream media cov- erage of the Mile (CNN Headline New4 Channel 7, Channel 4), the number of non- local spectators will continue to swell. What this means to prospective runners has been dealt with extensively, so I'll skip that. My concern is that the attitude that many of the additional "spectators" may bring with them is that our campus is an open house for a party. Don't get me wrong, it's one heck of a party, but those not from our com- munity may not have the same definition o "celebration" that we do. My warning is this: It is our responsibility to protect our campus and community. That doesn't mean stopping the Mile. That means preventing situations that could easily get out of hand and leave our campus in the same state as Michigan State University's. I I