w w W- w w v VV w s 8B - The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL SATURDAY - Friday, October 12, 2001 Friday, October 12, 2001-- FoOTB IJbije 1tkIgitm1DIlg 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. letters@umich. edit Y LETTERS TO THE EDITOR BATTLE OF BIG TEN UNBEATEN EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief So, Lee is leaving M' takes roar out of Nittany Lions 0 0 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MICHAEL GRASS SINCE 1890 NICHOLAS WOOMER 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. By Jon Schwartz Daily Sports Editor Columbia? Been there. Done that. To THE DAILY: Of course I wish President Bollinger well and congratulate my alma mater, Columbia, on the wit and wisdom of its choice of a new leader. After all, one of the reasons I came to Michigan this year was that Lee Bollinger is president. How can I begrudge my old school seeking the best? But even though he received his law degree in Morningside Heights, I thought it might be worthwhile for one Columbian to remind another about life on the Upper West Side - just in case he forgot. 1. If you think parking is bad in Ann Arbor, forget the Heights. Broadway? Riverside Drive? Impossible. As for the side streets, every other Columbia faculty mem- ber is trolling them, too. Even College Walk, one of the grandest entrances to any campus in the country, is wall-to-wall cars. And don't expect special favors. I once watched the Emperor of Japan's limousine waved ,away by a Columbia guard. 2. Nicer house? True, you can't beat Columbia's President's House for space. It's one of the last free- standing mansions left in Manhattan, and designed by McKim. Mead and White to boot. But as Mike Sovern, one of your predecessors, discovered, the neigh- borhood is so boring that it was bet- ter to keep his place on the East Side, a mile away but eons beyond 116th Street in prestige, amenities and access to big donors. And I understand that the ghost of Dwight Eisenhower, who never liked being Columbia's president (it was easier winning World War II), haunts the place. 3. And as for the prices! Dinner for two at a so-so Midtown restaurant: 300 bucks! Monthly charges for indoor parking (if you can find it): So high that some people ask if they can sleep in their cars! Housing (because you won't want the President's House): S5 million-plus for a Park Avenue apart- ment with a dining room big enough to invite a trustee and his wife over for a meal! 4. Fewer pesky undergraduates? Granted, there are only about 3,000 of them at Columbia, a fraction of the number at Michigan, but what they lack in quantity, they more than make up in whining entitlement (as in they all should have gotten into Harvard). I know: I was one of them, then returned to teach them, spending much of my time hiding out from them. (It's no acci- dent that location shots for Seinfeld's coffee shop, that nexus of New York neuroses, were taken a block from cam- pus.) Then there's Barnard College FILE PHOTO Lee C. Bollinger, the University's outgoing 12th president and soon to be Columbia University's 19th president. across the street! 5. More generous alumni? Not after taking care of bare necessities. (See No. 3 above.) 6. Collegiality? You'd think facul- ty at an Ivy - especially tenured fac- ulty - would be serenely confident of their place in the world and conse- quently gentle and high-minded. Well, don't confuse Columbia for Dartmouth. In a city full of billion- aires, power brokers and celebrities, university types fall near the bottom of the social pyramid. Stand clear of any New Yorker denied a table at Elaine's, which at Columbia is just about every- one. 7. And yes, Columbia's graduate student assistants are organizing. President Bollinger, may your ship sail happily east and may alma mater envelope you in her warm embrace. Just keep your eyes open. (And while you're at it. please look into the situa- tion at the Columbia Club on 43rd Street. Sharing a house with Princeton is tacky.) Roy STRICKLAND The letter writer is the director of the master of urban design program at the Universitw. A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. Regents should find minority to lead University To THE DAILY: The University is one of the most diverse college campuses on this plan- et. It's time we extend that diversity from our student body to our adminis- tration. The University needs a presi- dent who can specifically relate to the problems, needs, strides and successes of minorities. The University needs a minority president. Brown University has a new African American female president and has experienced great success already less than a year into her term. Bowling Green State University, a MAC school, has experienced such great success under its African American leader that the Board of Trustees havegiven him a raise more than two times already. It's time the University does what it does best, and set a precedent for the rest of the coun- try to follow. The University is doing so in its pending affirmative action cases, it has done so with its Life Sciences Initiative. It's time to do it up top. With the anticipated absence of current University President Lee Bollinger next year, the Board of Regents will be meeting time and time again to seek a great replacement for an unfortunate loss. f I suggest that our Board of Regents do as Columbia University did, and seek out a more than qual- ified candidate - a minority candi- date, and not simply review appli- cations. I am sure it will be more difficult to locate someone other than a typical WASP. However as Brown, Bowling Green, and many other institutions- nationwide have experienced great success and fortune, I am confident. the University will be well pleased with a minority president. RAi KUMAR PERRY LSA freshman STATE COLLEGE - Probably more because of the Penn State name than anyone wearing the blue and white this season, Saturday's game had a lot of dangerous possibilities for the Wolverines, who came into the game ranked 15th with a 3-1 record. They were playing a school that had lost the last four games in the short grid- iron history between Michigan and Penn State. They were facing a coach looking for a record-tying victory. Perhaps most notably, the Wolverines were staring across the line at a team desperate for its first win, always a more concerning opponent than one with a single win under its belt. The pesky Nittany Lions wouldn't go away. The winless team made Michigan pay for every inch. But hard work and heart couldn't get Penn State into the endzone - by the time the sun had set behind Beaver Stadium, the Nittany Lions faithful were dwelling on another loss, this time a 20-0 shutout. "They gave us a run for our money," Michigan tailback B.J. Askew said. Legendary Penn State coach Joe Paterno had never been shut out at home in his 36 years at the helm. But early on, it was clear that his team was out of its Purdue, survves Hawkeyes at ho-me WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) - Purdue coach Joe Tiller used a tactic last week he rarely uses to motivate his team -- he publicly criticized his defense. The Boilermakers responded. Ashante Woodyard returned an inter- ception 86 yards for a score and Travis Dorsch kicked three field goals as No. 21 Purdue beat Iowa 23-14 last Saturday. Tiller said Purdue's play was unac- ceptable and threatened lineup changes after allowing 406 yards of total offense -- ncluding 241 on the ground - two weeks ago against Minnesota. The Boilermakers responded. by allowing the second-fewest yards (207) in a game since Tiller took over in 1997. Akin Ayodele and Joe Odom each had two sacks and Craig Terrill and Matt Mitrione added one each. Mitrione also had an interception. "The last few weeks we didn't step up as a defensive line," Ayodele said. "We took it upon ourselves to improve our game and make some plays. Everyone had sacks today." Boilermakers quarterback Brandon Hance avoided being sacked but corn- league. Take its first drive: Quarterback Zack Mills - the first Penn State quarterback to ever start a game as a freshman -- threw to Eddie Drummond. Dropped. On the next play, he went to Bryant Johnson. Dropped. On third down, he passed to tight end John Gilmore. Dropped. Three passes, none of them broken up, and only the third required any effort from the receiver. But after three good passes, it was fourth-and.10. Michigan's Anthony Jordan partially blocked the ensuing punt. "The freshman kid goes in there and throws three perfect passes to start the game," Paterno said. "All were dropped." "Those were three great passes that were catchable," Gilmore said. "Even though they were great passes, we have to make the play." After the'game, Paterno was at a loss for words -- no surprise considering the fact that his team got shut out on a day that Michigan's offense looked anything but efficient in the first half. The Wolverines were inside the Penn State 25-yard line five times in the half, but came away with only 13 points on two Hayden Epstein field goals and a Marquise Walker touchdown. "The first few series, we came out flat," Walker said. "It was just a matter of us getting that one good play to get the offense going. We had plenty of chances in the red zone to get three points or six points, and I think we have to do a better job of that." Michigan also benefited from another touchdown on the two-niinute drill. Up 6-0, quarterback John Navarre drove the team 80 yards in nine plays, with an acrobatic Walker touchdown catch giv- ing Michigan its first touchdown of the afternoon. The drive took only 55 sec- onds. "It was a huge momentum swing in the game," Penn State defensive end Michael Haynes said. "Personally, I was a little disappointed. We kept coming after (Navarre), but he kept releasing the ball too quickly. It's frustrating, because there is nothing much you can do, because we don't have enough time to get to him." Six times this season, Michigan has run the drill, and all six have resulted in touchdowns. With a Ron Bellamy touchdown catch on the first drive in the third quarter giv- ing it extra insurance, the Michigan defense kept the Nittany Lions at bay. Led by junior defensive end Dan Rumishek, who. recorded three sacks and a forced fumble, the defense again made its opponent one-dimensional, Michigan's swarming pass rush burie allowing Penn State only 25 rushi yards. As a unit, Michigan is allowi only 51.8 yards per game on the grour "You have to give a lot of credit to c D-line," said inside linebacker Lai Foote. "They just dominated the gan They set the tone and they stopped 1 AP PHOTO Jeremy Allen scored a touchdown after a Purdue offsides on fourth down. THE BOONDOCKS AAR(JNMtWL4A 'AS THE ATTOR~NEY GENER~AL, IT_ S MVY T OPROTCAMIEI(A AGAINST TERRORISM WHILE F ROiECTiNG THE RiGHTs or) AL AEICANS, INCILUDING THlOSE OF y WIDDE-EASI1IiN DESCET r-- "SO IWOULD LIKE TORE ASSURE CONGRESS TH1AT M WHH WOUL ALLWTEFITO CVRL LN OUT ARAV OR MUSLIM AMERICN. pleted only 12 of 26 passes for 80 yards through three quarters and Purdue (2-0 Big Ten,. 4-0 overall) trailed 14-13. Hance started the fourth quarter with 25- and 14-yard completions to Seth Morales that helped the Boilermakers move the ball to Iowa's 4. After two straight incompletions, Hance dropped back to pass before scrambling down the middle for a 4- yard touchdown run with 12:07 left in the game. The Iowa defense, ranked 11Ith in the nation and first in the Big Ten in total' defense, held the Boilermakers to 217 yards - their lowest output this season - and completely shutdown the passing game. Hance, who threw for 308 yards last week against Minnesota, was 17- for-33 for 147 yards with one intercep- tion. Purdue had 70 rushing yards on 30 carries. "We need more consistency with our offense," Tiller said. "We had too many dropped balls. We can't do that in our offense. Once we got going, we were resourceful." The Hawkeyes (1-1, 3-1) were even worse offensively, finishing with 215 total yards. They had their only lead of the game in the third quarter after safety Bob Sanders intercepted Hance's pass and returned it inside Purdue's 20. A defensive penalty after the interception brought the ball back to Iowa's 31. McCann found Hill for a 7-yard touchdown reception with 6:38 left in the third and a 14-13 lead. v