4A - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 15, 2003 OP/ED Ulie g 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 LoUIE MEIZLISH Editor in Chief AUBREY HENRETTY ZAC PESKOWITZ 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. NOTABLE QUOTABLE (Suck itup fatso, and stop taking 100 pills a day or whatever ... and employ some self-discipline in your life." - Talk-radio personality Don Imus, on Rush Limbaugh's announcement last Friday that he will be taking a leave of absence to battle a four-year addiction to prescription pain killers, as reported by the New York Post. I SAM BUTLER THE SOAPBOX ! Y~ -I ^ f,> 'i E fl I l'Y~oi53 {YI ; 3 :;.l £t~a1 i i i Y Yi . 4 Sif ? "'. "..,, ' . I 2k =t'K ° t a:sr'''~ti:~t'.er # ; < I.-s .<^t-Rii ..+" a"r". vvwwwr I I Amwn.. A new breed of presidents JASON PESICK ONE SMALL VOICE Mary Sue Cole- man did not have an easy first year as University president. Not only did ' she face two lawsuits at the U.S. Supreme Court challenging the constitu- tionality of the Universi- ty's admissions programs, but she took the reins of an insti- tution facing acute budget shortfalls, a large number of senior administrative vacancies and a men's basketball program under strict NCAA scrutiny. Even after dealing with all of these challenges, Coleman has been unable to improve the lukewarm attitude that many on campus have toward her. Students and faculty members continue to grumble about their president and wax nostalgic about the University's golden era under former President Lee Bollinger, while mourning what might have been had interim President B. Joseph White moved into the old white house on South University Avenue. The campus press has been brutal, highlighting every perceived mistake on Coleman's part. The Daily even went so far as to endorse White for president long after Coleman had taken over. I asked Coleman if she knows why she is not adored on campus, but she declined to hazard a guess, saying that she just doesn't know. To be sure, Michigan's two consecu- tive losses to Iowa on the gridiron have not helped, but primarily, I believe that the dis- like can be traced to something much more pervasive: Coleman is just very different than the image of a president most people at the University were expecting. The University Board of Regents shocked many in the University community the spring before last by selecting Coleman to replace Bollinger. After all, White had become so popular among the student body that Students Organizing for Labor and Eco- nomic Equality liked him even though he was a business professor. Following a state Supreme Court ruling allowing universities to conduct searches clandestinely, the Regents carried out the search behind closed doors. The typical story of Coleman's selection goes something like this: The regents picked her because at Iowa she proved to be an able fundraiser and she is a female scientist, which would boost the University's billion- dollar investment in the life sciences. The regents would also have more power with Coleman as president because she would be weaker than Bollinger, a master political operator. After all, why would they look to Iowa? Coleman doesn't even have any Ivy experience. It became almost en vogue not to like the new president. Unlike the confrontational Harvard president, Lawrence Summers, Coleman is a small, humble woman with a moderately noticeable Southern accent. She lacks a commanding presence, and for some rea- son looks more like a scientist comfortable in a lab than a public intellectual used to traveling the world and sitting on panels broadcasted on C-SPAN, where the likes of Bollinger learn the art of removing (for purposes of gesticulation) and then replac- ing their reading glasses in an attempt to look even more scholarly (see Bob Novak). Coleman does not even try to speak in a British accent of mysterious ori- gins (see William F. Buckley Jr.). On top of this, all those e-mails that Coleman sends out in an attempt to stay connected to the student body annoy at least as many people as they please. Lee Bollinger fit in well at the Universi- ty. He was an ambitious and renowned legal scholar always looking for ways to expand the University's prestige. Serving as presi- dent during prosperous times, Bollinger was able to literally go crazy with his construc- tion plans (see Arthur Miller Theater). But where Bollinger had a deep and abiding dedication to himself and to his own advancement, Coleman has as strong of a dedication to public education. During the interview, she became passionate about state budget cuts and the importance of having an educated populous, not only for the economy, but because she has a Jeffer- sonian belief in the value of education to the survival of a functional democracy. She asked, "What is the cost of abandon- ing higher education?" and stressed the importance of renewing society's dedica- tion to public institutes of higher learning. Coleman seemed to me genuinely con- cerned about the same issues most students are: improving facilities, residence halls, the arts, tuition, financial aid and the undergraduate experience. She could prob- ably improve her report among students, for example, by amending the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities to allow students to have a lawyer represent them in proceedings. She could try to teach a course, even though it would have to be on subject matter that doesn't become outdated as quickly as her native biochemistry. There's no way to know if she'll end up being a better president than B. Joseph White would have been, but in time, stu- dents and faculty will likely adjust their views of Coleman, realize she's not Lawrence Summers or Woodrow Wilson and become accustomed to having a scien- tist lead the University. 4 Pesick can be reached at jzpesick@umich.edu. LOUIE MEIZLISH / IN PRINT Mary Sue and her fight U.S.A. uber allies ARI PAUL I FouGHT THE LAW Fourteen months into her tenure as presi- dent of the University, Mary Sue Cole- man has an agenda. She spent the first fourteen months finish- ing up where Lee Bollinger left off- literal- ly left off- for an Ivy League presidency. With Bollinger's unceremonious depar- ture, the two scientists Bollinger signed up to head the Life Sciences Institute, Scott Emr and Jack Dixon, decided they didn't want the job without Bollinger, and two executive offi- cers - the vice president for development and chief financial officer - figured they'd rather be at Lee C.'s Columbia than stay here. So upon taking over in August 2002, Coleman had to find replacements for those positions, as well as the job of provost (vacant since April 2001), and soon after she had to fill the LSA and Law School deanships. And then there was defending the Univer- sity against the admissions lawsuits - no small task. But now the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled, the undergraduate admissions system has been modified and Coleman's team has been assembled. So, what to do? During a meeting last Thursday with Daily editors, Coleman seemed to have a found an area in which to take the initiative. "Do we want as a nation to have public universities as equal as good private universi- ties?" she said. "I think we do." "I want to shift the conversation from people saying, 'What is the cost of going to university?' and shifting it to, 'What is the cost of letting this go?'" Coleman is right in that declining fman- cial support from the states and the feds has meant schools have had to cut back on pro- grams and raise tuition. But tuition raised at rates higher than increases in inflation, as has been the practice, will cause enrollment to drop - and the University will suffer. Recent projections that the state will have to cut $700 to $900 million out of the current 2003-4 budget is bad news for the University, Coleman conceded. State Rep. Mike Pumford (R-Neway- ing for universities and community colleges, . said that if the state does not change its tax system, Michiganders will suffer. "If we were to balance that budget on a 5- percent cut" - without raising new state rev- enues - "we'd have to cut $127 million out of health, $81 million out of corrections, $81 million out of higher education, $70 million dollars in revenue sharing, $12 million from state police, $14 million from community col- lege," Pumford said (read: fewer indigents receive health care, prisoners released early, fewer cops on the beat and fewer troopers on the road). "The list just goes on and on," Pumford said. "There's no fat left to be cut out there." A deficit of that size guarantees that the University will see some cuts. That means students can expect higher tuition, larger class sizes, more graduate students and adjunct fac- ulty teaching courses and, oh yeah, some pro- grams might be cut. "It's hard for me to imagine with every- thing we've gone through to think we can hold everything harmless," if the state cuts University funding, Coleman said. As we all know, politicians don't like rais- ing taxes, and taxes will have to be raised on at least some people if the state - and maybe even the feds - are to give more support to the universities. So this is an opportunity for Coleman to "show real leadership," as they say, and she has vowed to do that. One of her ideas is to get corporations to lobby lawmakers for more support of the universities, similar to the way in which the University solicited amicus briefs to support its arguments before the Supreme Court this year. And it's her job to do that, not to handle day-to-day management issues, but to look out for the long-term interests of the Universi- ty. In other words, this is what the University Board of Regents hired her to do. Coleman has some convincing to do. Now let's see if she can pull it off. NEW YORK - t's obvious to a lot of New Yorkers that the Giuliani days of clean streets and police gunning down unarmed black men are coming to an end under the uninspiring and often aggravating leader- ship of Mayor Mike Bloomberg. However, the legacy of "Benito" Giuliani remains in New York. It is a legacy that, sadly, is currently sitting in the White House, ensconced in the American middle class and is possibly the biggest threat to the struggle to establish a democratic political structure. The legacy of which I speak is a political philosophy that is deeply embedded in American cultural and political life but is not often recognized. It is the legacy of a form of authoritarian right-wing government called National Socialism, commonly referred to as Nazism. Unfortunately, what is not discussed in many of our history books is that many of our influential political institutions, like Giu- liani's Manhattan Institute, the Bush dynasty and American industrialism are riddled with connections to the Nazi ideology and the Germany hate party itself. Giuliani drew many of his beliefs from the Manhattan Institute, which was founded by future CIA Director William Casey and was inspired by European fascist ideology and eugenics. Giuliani's targeting of minori- ty communities and his disregard for police brutality imposed upon black men show that this institute's Nazi leanings carried over into his policymaking. And we are seeing the influence today. We have already lived through John Ashcroft's Kristallnacht, where thousands of Arab and Muslim men have been detained and even deported - denied the American right of due process - not because of proba- ble cause, but due to their ethnic and reli- gious affiliations, all under the pretense of "fighting terrorism" after Sept. 11. As we saw in the critically acclaimed CBS mini- series on the rise of Hitler this summer, the Nazi regime justified curbing civil liberties in the early days of the Third Reich by say- ing the new laws were to protect national security and fight terrorism after the burning of the Reichstag. Also in the series, Hitler was cited as stating that any opposition to his tyrannical measures would be taken as a rejection of patriotism and disloyalty to the republic. Sound familiar? It's also well known that America's most hailed industrialist, Henry Ford, was a flag- waving fan of Nazi thought. But a more pen- etrating insight into Ford's legacy yields even greater concern to the freedom seeker. Fordian capitalism fused with America's Protestant work ethic has created a culture that forces us to put our work before every- thing else, and we are taught that nothing but a devotion to hard labor and seeking its rewards is what separates the happy from the miserable, the winners from the losers. It sounds almost too much like the proverb, "Work shall make you free," which was inscribed on the gates of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz. It's not a coincidence that this edict hap- pened to be branded onto a compound designed for the purpose of slaughtering whole nations. The ideology that is so endemic in America to caste away our desires, passions and aspects that make us individuals provides for a society that in a cultural and spiritual sense is a machine that systematically robs life from most Americans. We also see overt Nazi outrages through- out modern American history. When Martin Luther King sought to desegregate housing in Chicago by staging a march through a white section called Gage Park, the locals rebelled Southern style with excessive vio- lence and signs with swastikas and "White Power." This is proof that even in the so- called "free North" a challenge to the white hegemony proved that many white Ameri- cans still harbored Nazi tendencies. We'd all like to think that America fought as Hitler's enemy in World War II as the good-guy. But under that war there were too many hidden exchanges between the German murderous thugs and the Amer- ican elite that has left a scare on the face of what is ostensibly the world's greatest democracy. Maybe I'm being a little oversensitive about the whole thing. Maybe I get on this kick because I vote to the Left. Maybe I fear our country's dark political roots because I have family who survived the Holocaust. Or maybe I'm just an American who loves his liberty. 0 4 Paul can be reached at aspaul@umich.edu. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Adams' column grounded in hypocrisy, reflects a lack of maturity obviously right? With regards to the T-shirts: They are not designed to "create the appearance of a united pro-Israel group on campus," rather, confrontational? Absolutely, and thank God. Confrontations, we find, ultimately bring us to the very truth Adams so fer- vently tries to avoid. You as~k what is ulnderneath theshirts. i I j