4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 12, 2001 ~e aIirbipun Daill 420 MAYNARcSTREEd ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. ktters @umich.edu Are we Harvard? Michigan's identity crisis EMILY ACHENBAUM DIAMOND N TE ROUGH 0 EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief MICHAEL GRASS NICHOLAS WOOMER Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority ofthe Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily hat if, what if: What if Uni- versity Presi- dent Lee Bollinger's name had been in the Harvard presidential search committee's enve- lope? Crimson-blooded economist Lawrence H. Summers' name was announced as Harvard's next president yes- terday, culminating weeks of a three-man fraternity rush where campus has waited to see if Harvard would pick Bollinger - and if he would pick them back. After all, can you turn down the presidency of Harvard? Nobody would want Bollinger to leave the University, but there's a tiny part of us that wanted him to get picked because he's a winner, a leader and the best, and we at Michigan not only like winning but demand it. Bollinger's courting by Harvard has resulted in coffee-group and study-group therapy as campus tries to solve its sudden identity crisis: Is Michigan Harvard, or at least Har- vard-esque? Now Mom always told us to just be our- selves and not draw comparisons to the pret- ty, popular girl with new Guess? jeans, but a little narcissistic analysis is always fun (and inevitable). And so some people are puffing out their chests, pointing to the business and medical schools, chanting "Harvard: the Michigan of the East." Others register on the opposite end of the self-esteem scale, wondering what we could do to be a better school - the kind where when choosing between Harvard and Michigan, turning down Michigan's presidency would be debatably nuts. Why be so obsessed with becoming - or proving we already are - Harvard? Yes, competition breeds excellence, but I find the hang-up to be completely pathetic. It's simple: Money creates opportunity and develops prestige and we're a public school that will never have the endowment of a top private school, let alone that of Har- vard's, the nation's richest school. Because we rely on state funding, roughly three- quarters of the University's students have to come from Michigan. And as bright as the top students from the state may be, there's no comparison to being able to draw entire- ly from an international pool. We are not, and cannot, be Harvard. And then it gets more complicated: Defining "best." So we might not be the "best," but let's not forget that the "best" education is found at the school where the student is most enlight- ened and challenged. That might be at Har- vard, that might be at Michigan, it might be at Oberlin or Swarthmore or Washtenaw Community College. Even if Michigan is not the "best," it is clear that our president is. The Bollinger-fan smarm disclaimer: I'm not looking for a law school recommendation, I have never taken his class and I serve on zero committees (a certain search committee included). I'm a big Bollinger supporter because he deserves admiration for being the president he is now and the legacy he will leave, be it next year or a decade from now. There's a small but reasonably vocal minority that dislikes Bollinger, mainly because their opinion nar- row-mindedly rests on his handling of the Nike deal - perhaps forgetting that chang- ing international labor laws, although noble, is not the primary role of a college presi- dent. We are a great public school. Emphasis on public. Harvard is a great private school. Great for Harvard. We have a fantastic president (next year's pay increase will be significant, hmmm?) who could have been offered a position more prestigious than the presiden- cy of the University. Ouch? Let's get over it. I hope Bollinger wouldn't have stayed just to make us feel better about ourselves. Michigan is Michigan, not Harvard. And there's nothing wrong with that. Emily Achenbaum's column runs every other Monday. Give her feedback at http://www.michigandaily.com/forum/or via e-mail at emiylsa@umich.edu. : I I i I i 'I think it came down to the fact that Harvard couldn't pull the trigger on a candidate who didn't have a Harvard degree.' - Regent Dan Horning (R-Grand Haven) on the announcement that University President Lee Bollinger will not be Harvard University's next president. Election Board foolish, motivated by politics; let DAAP back in race To THE DAILY: I think that it is atrocious that candidates for the Michigan Student Assembly can be thrown off the ballot for missing a meeting. I have been to a dozen of those election meetings and they are all the same. Every year the Residence Hall Association comes and complains about how candidates violate housing policy. These four year dorm residents/wannabe MSA reps whine about how students are annoyed and how posters are a waste. Big deal! I don't like the Defend Affirmative Action Party, but if their candidates are not allowed back on to the ballot a serious injustice has been done. For years now the MSA Election Board has been composed of partisan know- nothings who get off on writing arbitrary poli- cy - usually designed to help their friends get elected. It is time to reign in the Election Board and come up with a comprehensive election policy - supported by the students. For all the bitching MSA does in regards to the evil Code of Student Conduct, you would think they would create an election code that is not based on the same principles - control, censorship and Big Brotherly love. God help me ... let DAAP run. RORY DIAMOND LSA senior The letter writer ran for the Michigan Student Assembly p residency under the Wolverine Party last year. Diamondalong with other members of his party were tossed out of last year's election by MSA s Election Board. DAAP didn't respect the rules, 'must sit this round out' To THE DAILY: For a long time now I have listened to the political ramblings of the Defend Affirmative Action Party and its members here at the Uni- WE'D LIKE TO KEEP OUR{ ' PRESIDENT.. ..ABUT CAN WE INTEREST YOU IN A BASKETBALL COACH? CARTOON BY AARON BRINK versity. In all honesty, I am very tired of the incessant political opportunism taken by some of the members of this party in its attempts to gain seats on the Michigan Student Assembly. Affirmative Action is indeed a serious issue here at the University and DAAP's continued use of this issue to put a spotlight on the key members of their party is irresponsible and extremely inappropriate. Last Tuesday a mandatory candidates meeting was called which several DAAP can- didates did not attend. It was a simple request. The failure of these candidates not to inform the necessary officials in the necessary time frame shows a lack of responsibility on the part of those candidates. This lack of responsibility for the rules established by the election board should show all of us that DAAP is unworthy of being a dominant party on MSA. Yes indeed, this is a democracy, but a key aspect of that democracy is that everyone must follow the rules. This is not an anarchy where rules can be disregarded or made on a whim. DAAP did not respect those rules and should not be given a second chance by the Central Student Judiciary. I am sorry, but for those that@ chose not to attend, you must sit this round out. In the meantime I am sure that DAAP will continue to shout "racism" at everyone who stands in its way. It's time to stop such foolish rhetoric that is being used for political gains. If DAAP truly cares about what it says it stands for then they should constructively address problems at this school instead of incessantly tying up MSA meetings with an issue that they know well and good they cannot do any- thing about in a small student assembly. I encourage them to continue to promote public awareness of the trials, but keep the racial pol- itics out of MSA and let MSA deal with solv- able and realistically addressable issues that affect students on a daily basis. The election of our student officials should be taken more seriously and the first step to achieving that goal is to not listen to the political oppor- tunism of DAAP. MIK CARROLL LSA first-year student 0 Between stone relics and 20 years of suffering VIEWPOINT Two weeks ago, Afghanistan's Taliban government announced it was destroying numerous ancient Bhuddist statues carved into cliffs in the region's central Bamiyan province. As expected, the "international community" lashed out in harsh condemnation, describing the action as "a tragedy for the Afghan people and for the world." The United Nations warned the Taliban's actions would cause "international outrage." One headline read, "Worldwide horror as Afghan Taliban begin smashing ancient statues". While the Taliban's decision to destroy statues that had- until now been preserved through 1,200 years of strong Islamic influ- ence in the region is indeed an issue of con- cern, what should strike any observer is the blatant hypocrisy of the "international commu- nity" with regard to Afghanistan. Because of an "international community" that is more concerned for statues than human life and 20 years of suffering, Afghanistan must endure even more suffering at the hands of the same disease or starvation. Pakistan has declared it will no longer accept Afghan refugees, over 1 million of whom are expected to die of famine. Those who have been so vocal about the statue destruction remain silent over these effects of the war and sanctions. There has been no "worldwide horror" over the loss of innocent lives. Instead, lies and exaggerations regarding the condition of women dominate much of the Western media's coverage of Afghanistan. Many of the stories being circulated tell of women being stoned in the street, locked up in homes with painted windows, forbidden from seeking employment or education, and forced to veil from head to toe. Interestingly enough, however, journalists and activists who return from fact-finding trips to Afghanistan tell a different story. Freelance reporter Cindy Law notes that contrary to reports in the Western media, schools for girls do exist in Afghanistan in mosques and in private homes, and that numerous women are employed in health care and education. Dr. Raza Khan, a Canadian physician who managed a clinic in Afghanistan reports that many women walk ing to remove their Islamic headscarves. In another example of hypocrisy, the strongest condemnation of the statue destruction was voiced by India, whose ruling BJP party was responsible for the destruction of the Babri Mosque in Ayodhya, India nine years ago (at the time, the Indian government described the matter as an "internal affair" and insisted that no one had the right to interfere). However, since the status quo in Turkey, Tunisia, France, or India does not threaten United States inter- ests, there has been no "international outcry" as there has been with Afghanistan. For a decade, the Afghans bravely fought off invasion by the Soviet Union and, at that time, were hailed as "freedom fighters" by the United States. It was during this period that the United States. gave the Soviet Union the green light to invade Afghanistan, then trained and 0 financed various Afghan factions to fight a guerrilla war against the "Evil Empire." After the Soviets withdrew, the U.S., along with Russia, India, China and Iran prolonged the conflict by continuing to support the different factions as they fought each other for control during the subsequent civil war. Now that the