A POT NTI COUNTERPOT NT Going pro? With Batman and Superman You can tell a Martha Cook girl a mile away / Because she looks so sweet and blase / She always performs with the greatest of ease / And her motto is she aims to please. - Song "You can tell a Martha Cook girl" from the 1946 Martha Cook annual By Batman A much as one claims to love the apparently "untarnished" and "pure" college sports environment, such trite sentiment hides the truth: col- lege athletics simply aren't as vital, powerful or engaging as professional athletics. Like the way I dispense justice, pro sports offer unadulterated per- formance with no pretenses. I assume you will preach about the glorious equality of college sports, the Ii ii REC SPORTS INTRAMURALS The University of Michigan Department of Recreational Sports Intramural Sports Program www.recsports.umich.edu 734-763-3562 .e REC SPORTS INTRAMURALS Greco-Roman idealism of the student- athlete and such related clap trap. Ah, Superman, always confused, always straining for the illogical and impossible. Professional sports are the brutal perfection of athletics. I don't want my athletes to be young, half-formed and stuck in a murky twilight of col- legiate athletics that's at best tainted. There are no secrets in pro sports: the athletes are groomed machines, breakdowns on the field and off are in full view of the public domain and there utter transparency toward the creeping intermingling of money and sports. College sports are just another shadowy den of crime. Boosters give millions to "amateur" athletes, untold sins are made in the lecture halls and libraries by young men and women who believe themselves higher than the laws confining the "mortal" students. So, I say take your dirty pool of college athletics Superman, the ide- als of athletics are dead, and in their stead I say celebrate the pragmatic and bloody warriors of professional athletics. These men and women know their role in society, they have no pretenses, they are citizens, not puffed up children. 11 PIrCoSeason Entries due: Wed, 10/19 4:30 PM IM Building Entry Fee: $35 per team Manager's Meeting: MANDATORY Thurs, 10/20 6:00 PM IM Building Tournament dates: 10/21 - 10/23 Mitchell Field Flag Football Entries taken: Mon, 10/24 ONLY 11:00AM --4:30PM IM Building ( Entry Fee: $55 per team Manager's Meeting: MANDATORY Wed, 10/26 7:15 PM IM Building Play begins: Thurs, 10/27 IM Building Wallyball Entries taken: Mon, 10/24 ONLY 11:30 AM -4:30 PM IM Building Entry Fee: $90 per team Manager's Meeting: MANDATORY Wed, 10/26 6:00 PM or 9:00 PM IM Building Play begins: Thurs, 10/27 Mitchell Field Flag Football . Superman While your "groomed machines" run around their playing fields and pretend to moon crowds or run into the stands to try and maim people who throw plastic cups, the real ath- letes of the world are out busting their asses on their respective play- ing fields. Then again, what would Batman know about exceptional athletics? You can't even fly, let alone stop a train with your bare hands or have hours of mind-blowing sex with Lois Lane ... or any woman for that matter. Anyways, much like that find- at- the-bottom-of-a-cereal-box excuse of a utility belt you have, profes- sional sports are a joke. Since when are middle-aged men with 15 knee replacements and 30 illegitimate children considered warriors or heroes? The only thing heroic I see about them is their ability to battle through their swelled egos and the ill-effects of steroids to somehow find the strength to lie to Congress. How admirable. College athletes play for free (real colleges, that is. That excludes you, Columbus). They are the true war- riors of the game, taking on all com- ers for only the love of the game. And when they're done giving their blood, sweat and tears for their respective institutions, these model citizens and gods of academia bend over backwards in the classroom. Pro athletes may do some bending over backwards too, but most of that consists of the bending over back- wards that Eugene Robinson did with a hooker he picked up during Super Bowl week a few years back. (No really, I heard he's quite flexible.) So Batman, take your "powerful" pro athletes (Shawn Bradley) and I'll settle for my weak little amateur ath- letes (Matt Leinart). Not only would Leinart kick Bradley's ass, but I'm comfortable enough with my sexual- ity to say that he'd look handsome while doing it. I mean, for God's sake, he got with Kristin from "Laguna Beach." from home for the first time. The 1932 Martha Cook Building bylaws reveal a world in which telephone conversations were limited to five minutes and residents had to tidy their room each week in prepara- tion for its weekly cleaning. Week- day curfew was 10 p.m., and women could return as late as 1:30 a.m. on Friday nights. In the 1940s, men could visit residents' rooms once a year for two hours on a Sunday afternoon, and Chernow recalled that residents "redecorated to get ready for the big day." Most Uni- versity residence halls were co-ed by the late 1960s, but according to current Board of Governors presi- dent and former resident Catherine Davis, who lived in Martha Cook from 1968 to 1970, men were still only allowed on the upper floors on Friday and Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons. Appearance was also regulated in Martha Cook. For years, entrance to the Gold Room and dining room required askirt, and pantsuits were not permitted for sit-down dinners until 1972. Connie Amick lived in Martha Cook during the mid-1950s and said that her hall director had "strong feelings about what was proper" and did not permit residents to cross their arms while waiting in line for dinner. Today, very little remains of the curfews and dress codes that kept previous generations of Cookies in line. But, as is well known around campus, men are not allowed in the upper floors at night, and all guests must be escorted by a resident. Some students might shudder at the thought of being subject to these restrictions, but the women of Mar- tha Cook hardly seemed to mind - many prefer knowing they can walk down the hallway at night without running into any men. Tea and tradition The Messiah dinner, Friday after- noon teas and formal dances form the core of the Martha Cook expe- rience but some classes have tried, with varied success, to establish their own traditions. In 1919, seniors started Ivy Day, on which students would head to the north side of the building to plant ivy. The ivy refused to grow, and residents abandoned the tradition only a few years later. May garden parties dated back to the late 1920s, when, according to the 1946 annual, "someone realized that both the terrace and the sweep of the lawn offered infinite, possibilities for a spring party." Recently, resi- dents have re-introduced a once-lost tradition to their sit-down dinners by placing a spoon turned upward or downward above their plate to indi- cate whether they want coffee or tea following dessert. The Lawyers Tea is one of the building's most important annu- al formal teas, originally started because Cook wanted "future law- yers residing in the Law Quad to meet good, respectable wives who would at the time reside in the MC building," according to an e-mail from LSA senior and assistant resi- dent director Londisa Halili. Indeed, the general absence of men has made them focus of sig- nificant attention in both Martha Cook's traditions and daily life throughout its history. The rooms facing the Law Quad were once cov- eted for the view they offered - of male law students livingacross the street - the 1946 annual - the Martha Cook yearbook - bragged that former residents were more likely than average to get married. Current residents joked that some women can pick up the slightest hint of cologne if a man is present in the hall, and Halili described a recent mealtime debate over which group of men on campus is the most attractive. Today's women are far less hurried to get married than in the past, but even so, "A lot of girls here get engaged their fourth year," Halili said. Martha Cook myths are a tradition in themselves. In 1916, editors of the Martha Cook annual were among the first to attempt to dispel such misconceptions regarding the girl's preparation for the outside world. They entreated critics to visit the hall. "They will gaze in astonish- ment at the straggling line of hungry looking girls who are precariously balancing trays andareceiving their daily dole of soup," the editors wrote. "My friends, this is the bread-line, and your fairy princess in engaged in that most plebian of occupations - indulging in a self-serve lunch." Despite their humble lunches, resi- dents still had their rooms cleaned and linens changed weekly. Today, Martha Cook's women do their own laundry and clean their own rooms, but they still laugh about the rumors surrounding their charmed lifestyle. They've heard rumors that women must wear gloves PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily ABOVE: The statue of Venus de Milo which sits in Martha Cook conveys a sense of properness and elegance. RGH T elgne IH:Residents of Martha Cook follow a variety of traditions, including Friday afternoon tea and formal dances. Entries taken: Mon, 10/24 ONLY 11:00 AM-4:30 PM IM Building Entry Fee: $90 per team Manager's Meeting: MANDATORY Wed, 10/26 8:00 PM IM Building Play begins: Thurs, 10/27 Yost Ice Arena Broomball The entry deadline for the Cross Country Meet is Thursday, October 27, at 4:30 PM. Officials are needed for Flag Football and Broomball. Please contact Nicole Green at 764-0515 for more information. ____ ______________________________+'..g The Michigan Da 12B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 13, 2005