4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 24, 2002 OP/ED Gibe £i+wu 14uiI 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 JON SCHWARTZ Editor in Chief JOHANNA HANINK Editorial Page Editor 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. NOTABLE QUOTABLE In my view, she's not funny enough to be a spoof. She just sucks." - Dr. Glen O. Gabbard, professor of psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine, on the addition of the character Dr. Wendy Kobler to HBO's The Sopranos. Gabbard criticized the character in a piece in yesterday's Slate. JENNIFER GREENE JE'N N'S CORNER r4 k " " " ~~a\ 1 - -- - ... Mismarketing the world of sportswriting JON SCHWARTZ Two SIDES TO EVERY SCHWARTZ Anew feature on the Athletic Department's website, MgoBlueAuc- tion, offers Michigan fans the chance to bid on "Once In A Lifetime" products. Not a bad idea in my mind - if someone wants to pay a week's salary to tailgate with the department bigwigs, I say take the sucker's money and give him a bit more 'kraut on his hotdog. Honestly, I think the auctions can be a great idea. I think it's good to offer fans road trips or a chance to meet Michigan legends or visit areas of the athletic campus generally off-limits. And signed paraphernalia is always a big seller. But as someone who wants to be a sports- writer for life, I'm a bit upset about the "Sports- writer for the Day" lot, which, last time I checked, was going for an absurd $740. I'll admit, sportswriting is one of the coolest jobs I can possibly conceive of. My office on Saturdays is Michigan Stadium - enough said. But what too many people don't understand, obviously including Michigan's marketing department, is that sportswriting is a job. A day in the life of a sportswriter is competitive, stressful and busy. You're nervous about what the writer next to you has, what Markus Curry might have said to some other guy about why he didn't play, your impending deadline, your completely illegible shorthand and the fact that with about 10 minutes until your story has to be in, you've just finished typing in the byline. And let's not forget about the fact that your salary is about in line with a new employee at your neighborhood McDonald's and your hours are far less stable. Sure there are perks, and I wouldn't trade it for anything in the world, but I'm not sure how I feel about dressing up the sportswriting job and offering a dumbed-down version to the highest bidder, while presenting the opportuni- ty as an "actual" day on the job. This can't help the job's stereotypes - whoever ponies up the most money will undoubtedly go home that night and tell his wife, kids or butler that sportswriting is the easiest job imaginable. After all, he'll say, the game was fun and excit- ing, the food was decent and (you're not going to believe this one) Lloyd Carr spoke at a press conference. Greatest day ever. Of course, I'm not so devoid of self- esteem that I need to go on whining that my job isn't respected enough. It's frustrating that people view what we do as play instead of work, but I can deal with that. And there are plenty of jobs that offer chances to "Be Some- one Important For a Day." The difference, of course, between being the athletic director for a day and taking your try at sportswriting is that when the marketing department auctioned off the chance to follow Athletic Director Bill Martin for one day at the office, they didn't choose a day when he would have to meet with the University Board of Regents, or an afternoon when he would have to fire a coach. Likewise, sports teams don't hold fantasy camps directly in the middle of a title chase - they take place during the offseason. But this sportswriting gig is going to be for the Penn State football game, one of the seven most important days on the football writer's calendar this year. This isn't the spring game, which is covered by mostly hungover writers who realize that they're not writing about any- thing particularly important, this is one of the biggest games of the season. Clearly, the excitement of this offer is not the chance to be a sportswriter for a day. It's not the pre-game tour of the press box ("There's the field, there's a phone, there's a hotdog - that's it, see you after the game"). Rather, it's an opportunity to pay a lot of money for a good seat with a great view. So why not bill it as such? The Athletic Department has long been guilty .of overcommercializing what should be a working press box. Since the mystique of Michigan Stadium does not allow for luxury boxes to be built, several VIP seats are located on the press level, in close proximity to the working writers. NCAA rules stipulate that there can be no cheering in a press box, but I've never seen anyone walk over and ask a big donor to the department to stop vocally sup- porting the team. To me, this is no different than the Athletic Department putting its waiting room in a corner of a conference room, where visitors waiting to meet with a coach would sit in the middle of an important meeting. Sound ridiculous? I agree. These days, you can't get into the student section without an MCard, but the press box is open to anyone and his brother. But these are hard times - the Athletic Department has to make a buck 'somehow. Likewise, the Daily's budget can use some help. Maybe we should sell one of our season passes to the highest bidder. I'm sure the Free Press and the News could also use some extra green. Or maybe we should auction off a chance to be "Marketing Director For The Day," when for a nice sum of money, a fan can follow around Marketing Director ,Tom Brooks, wear all the different combinations of Michigan apparel conceivable and come into close contact with many Michigan athletes. I'm sure that Mr. Brooks would argue that his job consists of much more than that. I respect him enough to know how hard he works, how thankless his job is and how much he'd hate it if we billed his job as mentioned above. So how do you think we feel? Jon Schwartz can be reached atjlsz@umich.edu. a There she is again AUBREY HENRETTY NEUROTIC A realized Saturday and its pageantry; it's jealousy. I'm jealous day and eating nothing but string cheese. evening that I've of the contestants. I no longer care if peo- At this rate, I should be ready for my bikini been going about ple look at me and think, "she's smart," sometime in early 2004. Forget the scholar- this Miss America thing "she's funny," blah, blah, blah, things I ship money; I'll pay my own damn way all wrong. I used to once naively considered important. No, I through school if I have to sell my spleen think it was my duty as want heads to turn when I walk into a on the black market. All I want is a tiny a female newspaper room, to be ogled, hollered at, idolized and waist, a dozen roses and a tiara. Is that so columnist and former crowned queen. Dress me up. Powder my much to ask? sullen adolescent to nose. Direct me to the nearest pedestal and And my IQ continues to plummet. blast the Miss America I'll hop right up in my diamond-studded When it's all over, Miss Illinois and I Organization for all the right reasons. I four-inch heels and sizzling red evening burst into tears for very different reasons. wanted to talk about beauty standards and gown. Ta-da. , She cries because she's superwoman; she eating disorders, stereotypes and illusions, . This is what the Miss America Pageant is talented and smart and drop dead gor- including wry summaries such as "OK, does to me. My priorities get all out of geous and now she's got a $75,000 schol- we'll give you a scholarship, but first we're whack. When host Wayne Brady blithely arship to show for it. She's been through going to parade you around in stage makeup remarks that the contestants are very anx- hell and now she can finally go home and and high heels and a swimsuit and if you ious to get through the night because none eat that prime rib and chocolate cake. I cry fail out of that round, there's no way you're of them have eaten since June, I almost because I can't take three steps in four- making it to the finals. But seriously, um, laugh. Pretty dresses mean more to me inch heels and because I have just decided education and betterment of the world are than platforms, besides which the word this is a bigger problem than the pile of the most important things. Really." "platforms" makes me think of clunky untouched homework spilling over the These complaints are starting to sound shoes and not political agendas. Thirty sec- edge of my desk. hollow, even to me; nobody with half a brain onds seems like a perfectly reasonable I'm supposed to know better than this. I or a functional pair of eyes ever doubted that amount of time in which to answer a com- have talked the talk and worn the cargo good looks mattered to Miss America judges plicated question about solutions to eco- pants, but I still turn green at the very men- at least as much as brainpower. Everyone has nomic inequality or youth violence. Too tion of Miss America. I want to be beautiful, heard these arguments before; they're exactly much, in fact. I'm bored. Is it time for the too. Not beautiful like brilliant with a great what you'd expect to hear from any smug talent competition yet? personality; beautiful like her. I want to college student with a far-reaching forum at I'm not a very interesting person for breeze through complex social issues in 30 her disposal. those three hours. I certainly wouldn't want seconds or less so I can go sing and dance. I don't want to write that column again. to talk to me. Graduate school? What? I'm and eat cake. Because on a very basic level, it's not my not thinking that far ahead; I can't see past social conscience or my cynicism that make my soft stomach and utilitarian wardrobe. Aubrey Henretty can be reached me despise the Miss America Organization Starting tomorrow, I'm running six miles a atahenrett@umich.edu. VIEWPOINT Campaign for divestment is not anti-Semitic BY MOZHGAN SAVABIEASFAHANI The idea of divestment from Israel is not anti-Semitic because it is aimed at ending the occupation, a brutal condition that is dehu- manizing all Semites (Palestinians and Israelis). Occupation is the deadly disease that has been claiming lives of both peoples and infecting the health of the Israeli civil society. Israel continues to be the most politi- cally charged and polarized nation in the region. To the admission of many Israeli Aliyah how she feels about our divestment campaign. She replied, "I support your work." Later in the day as she was address- ing a crowd of mostly Jewish community members the question of divestment was put to her again and she responded with much enthusiasm, "you do it". The goal of divestment is to render non- functional the military machinery (the Israeli army) that creates the unbearable state of utter disrespect for Palestinian and Israeli dig- nity and life. Divestment can prove effective dred other types of bombs that destroy human lives, devastate the environment and tear down foundations of democracy in Israel. Let us defend our own humanity and that of the Palestinians and Israelis. Let us divest from the brutality of occupation at once. I am neither an Arab nor a Jew. But I lived the horrors of occupation for two years in Ramallah. The situation has worsened many times over since then (1992). Today, Palestinians are marching the streets of Ramallah and Gaza in defiance of Israeli cur- ;: -a