68 - The Michigan Daily - Weekend, etc. Magazine - Thursday, January 20, 2000 v.. . .r ,... ...0 ... .. --- r .. -- w The Michigan Daily 'Weekend, etc. 11 A TEMPEST IN A T-SHIRT INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE NORTH AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL AUTO SHOW Atib Fourteen semi-trailers are required to carry the 75,000- plus yards of carpet used for the exhibits and aisles at the NAIAS. If the carpet was made into a twofoot-wide run- ner, it would be 66 miles long. With the average home using 125 yards, the carpet used at the NAIAS would cover the equivalent of 600 houses. Equipment needed to setup the show includes more than 1,000 semi-trucks, 14 million pounds of freight, 75 fork- lifts, 18 45-foot booms, 20 scissor lifts and 12 miles of electric wires. In the three weeks it takes to prepare the NAIAS for the media and public, 600 carpenters, 300 teamsters and rig- gers and 150 electricians work on the show setup. It takes many other personnel to prepare the auto show including: 75 stagehands, 200 janitorial workers, 500- 700 catering personnel, 65 vehicle polishers, 135 car porters, 87 full-time Cobo Center staff members and 20 additional part-time Cobo Center staff members. It was an innocent house party. A few people were smoking on the porch. Others surrounded the half- barrel with arms extended, holding plastic cups, hoping for the keg king to take pity on.them next, while the rest of the crowd meandered throughout the house, up the stairs, down to the basement before spilling out onto the front yard. Ben and I were sitting on the porch railing, sipping from translucent plastic cups of Labatts, watching the people milling in and out between us. "It's amazing all the grief that those caused," Ben said. "What?" I said. "See that guy over there," Ben said, pointing his index finger from the half-filled cup of beer by his face. "The one in the blue shirt?" "The guy in the "Freshman Girls" shirt?" I said. "Yeah, the controversy that fol- lowed those shirts is idiotic." "Idiotic?" "Not the shirts themselves. All right, so they're mildly amusing. But the way they became so controversial is downright hilarious, because the whole thing backfired on the self- righteous." "I know about the controversy and the protests, and I read the article in the Daily. I mean it was a frat thing anyway, wasn't it? Since when do frat boys have the right to be self- righteous?" "No, no, no, no. You, like the rest of the University, don't know the whole story. Here, let me tell you what happened. I got an e-mail in late August from a couple of my friends who are fraternity brothers, saying they were selling these T- shirts for $10 a piece. They were blue and on the back it said, "FRESHMAN GIRLS, get 'em while they're skinny." I laughed when I saw it, but I thought there was no way these was going to take off." "Yeah, so much for your foresight. I heard those two kids made a killing" "You have no idea. But the funny thing is nobody cared about the shirts, besides a few guys in this fra- ternity. Then while walking from a football game a couple of the femi- nists on campus saw them wearing the shirts. They wrote a letter to the editor about how offended they were, and how shirts like these only enforce negative stereotypes towards women, while promoting diseases like bulimia, anorexia and depres- sion." "Well, they do. That and the rest of the media." "But the thing is the feminists had the right idea, they went about it all wrong. First off, they had the logo on the shirt wrong. They said it was 'thin' when it was 'skinny.' Then they said that it was a fraternity shirt and pro- ceeded to lam- baste the entire Greek system for it." "Wasn't it a fraternity shirt, though?" "No, not at all. The two guys were inac- tive members of a fraternity living outside their house. That fraternity had nothing to do with it, Jon Zemke St. Michael :peaking "Nah, she was cool about it, because she knows I'm not a pig. But we disagree about a few points. Then again, what do I expect, I am dating a feminist," Ben said. "Such as?" I said. "He's certain that they protested it wrong," Lauryn said. "Come on, what do you expect. Women are sick of they way the media portrays how they 'should be,' so they stood up for themselves." "And the way they did it only made the situation worse," Ben said. "They wrote a letter and stood up for themselves. Good, they should do that. But then when someone responded to it they had to respond to that and then everybody had to get the last word in. This huge issue erupted over a cheap T-shirt, and everyone got defensive. Guys who normally wouldn't have thought of buying this shirt did so just to piss their persecutors off." "Women weren't persecuting guys," Lauryn said. "All they did was speak up for themselves, and so what if they bruised a few male egos." "That's the point, bruising those male egos wasn't the smart way to go. College guys feel threatened enough when it comes to an issue like this. Throw in a protest, a Daily editorial speaking out against these shirts, along with defending them- selves every time the issue comes up, and, of course, the shirt is going to be in high demand. Guys are going to buy and wear it just to piss off the feminists that are giving them all this grief." "But wait, you just said these Pnvs were being persecuted," Lauryn said. "It's true. The two feminists who organized the protest, and the entire charges against these shirts, were in one of my classes. I was berated by them every week, and I agreed with their stance, just not their methods. They just assumed that I was in a fra- ternity, and practically began yelling at me, giving me lectures on how bad the shirts and the Greek system was. They even demanded that I tell them the names of the guys who made them." "Well, that wasn't..." "Right? Of course it wasn n't do anything. I wasn't one. Hell, I even agreed with a point. But all of those let editorial, the protest so close er? The next thing you know guys are on the front page Daily, sitting back, lookin with the shirt for the whole see. The next thing you knox body wanted one. "They licensed the shirt an selling them all over. A f mine said the first time he was when he was in India' football game. Dozens of were asking me to hook 1 with one, and the guys wh them laughed all the way to t So, in the end this part of th- male population that 01 might have sympathized v unfair portrayal of women wearing one more piece o degrading them." "If you're so opposed to the issue was handled, wh David Katz/DAILY - Source, North American Internation Auto Show except that a couple of the brothers bought a few. The feminists said, in a campus-wide publication, that Greek letters where imprinted on the front. The shirt said, 'Michigan Welcome Week."' "But still, the fact remains the shirts were made by a couple of frat boys." "So... Quit stereotyping. The opin- ions or actions of a couple of broth- ers doesn't represent the way the rest of the fraternity, let alone the Greek system, thinks. Everybody ran away with the stereotype. The next thing I knew I had my back against the wall, defending my fraternity for some- thing it had nothing to do with." "It's not like they didn't get what they had coming to them," Lauryn said, sitting down next to Ben on the railing. "Your girlfriend must have given you a lot of drama about those shirts," I said. I I}; Last chance to come to a mass meeting for the Daily! Tonight at 7in the Student Publication Building at 420 Maynard. 308 S. 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