ANNE- a ..e 0 0 -- 0 _ - __9 The wrong woman for the job Why Harvard should have chosen the most qualified person for the top job, not the most politically correct I assess Wednsda, Fbrury 1, 007 - Te ici D. QUOTES OF THE WEEK Scrotumsounded "(It)is just a wrong way to Sc u characterize the commander to Lucky like some- in chief's decision to do what thing green that is necessary to protect our comes up when you soldiers in harm's way." - PRESIDENT BUSH on the allegation that he is trying to provoke Iran and that the administraion cough too malready has plans to invade the country. - SUSAN PATRON in her children's book "I loved her ... It was real." "The Higher Power of Lucky." The use of the word "scrotum" in a book meant - KENNY CHESNEY on his relationship with actress for child h d Rene Zellweger. The country music star was fryoung chdrenhascausedsome responding to questions about his sexual orientation. librarians to try to get it banned. rew Gilpin Faust, like her literary namesake, must have made a deal with the devil to become president of Har- vard University. How else could a Civil War and gender studies expert with just five years of administrative experience take the reins of the nation's most prestigious univer- sity? After previous Harvard Presi- dent Lawrence Summers's sug- gestion that women might be inherently inferior in math and science, Faust appears to be a candidate apologetically chosen by a Harvard search committee desperately trying to maintain the school's reputation. The question remains: Why pick Drew Gilpin Faust over a candidate like Mary Sue Cole- man, president of the University of Michigan? Was it politics? Popularity? Regardless of the search committee's thinking, it was a dubious decision. Coleman, despite her constant pub- lic insistence that she wasn't interested in the job, would have been a bet- ter choice. Coleman has more than 10 years of experience as the presi- dent of the University of Michigan and the University of Iowa. At Michigan, she oversees a $5.7 bil- lion endowment, more than $300 million in annual state funding and thousands of employees. As dean of Harvard's Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Faust currently supervises 81 staff members, 15 professors and a $16 million budget. A career academic who has written several books about the American Civil War, Faust took charge of the Radcliffe Insti- tute in 2001, just two years after the former women's liberal arts college merged with Harvard. She is also the current chair of Harvard's $50 million Task Force on Women Faculty. Before coming to Harvard, she was chair of the women's studies program at the University of Pennsylvania. Members of the search com- cies are wildly successful, Faust's gender will likely overshadow her accomplishments in the eyes of Harvard faculty and adminis- tration. Some higher education experts have publicly questioned whether there could be such a thing as too much feminism. "Dr. Faust comes to the presi- dency of the world's most distin- guished university out of a career whose foremost characteristic has been its strong feminist bent, So you didn't get into Harvard? At least our president is better. rather than executive experi- ence," said Steve Balch, president of the National Association of Scholars, in a written statement. In a vitriolic column in the City Journal, columnist Heather Mac Donald criticized the Radcliffe Institute as "one of the most pow- erful incubators of feminist com- plaint and nonsensical academic theory in the country." Although critics have labeled Faust as merely a political choice, Faust has been quick to defend herself. "I'm not the woman president of Harvard, I'm the president of Harvard," she told the Associated Press last week. Perhaps she could learn a les- son from Coleman, who estab- lished herself as the first president of the University of Michigan with poise. Like Faust, she played down the importance of her role as Michigan's first woman presi- dent. "This is a hard job, a stressful job - for men and women," Cole- man told The Michigan Daily after she was named president in 2002. "I think the pressures are SHAY SPANIOLA/Daily LEFT: Drew Gilpin Faust is Harvard's new president. She's a popularschoice internally, hat sawn wonder it she was the most qualified candidate. RIGHT: University President Mary Sue Cole- man, was just the type ot woman Lorry Summers torget about when he wade the comments that got him fired. the same." Although Coleman could also be called a feminist - she has often preached the importance of achieving gender equality in higher education - she's a differ- ent kind of feminist. Rather than writing about discrimination against women, Coleman overcame that discrimi- nation to become a prominent laboratory chemist - a field tradi- tionally dominated by men. While Faust is known for books with titles like "Mothers of Inven- tion: Women of the Slaveholding South in the American Civil War," Coleman authored or co-authored hundreds of scholarly papers with titles like "Characterization of purine nucleoside phosphorylase from human granulocytes and its metabolism of deoxyribonucleo- sides." Notice a difference? Disregard- ing the merit of each woman's work, Coleman's can't be dis- missed by cynics as femi- nist ramblings. Coleman could have lent a scientist's perspective' to Har- vard, which is currently preparing to begin construction on a new campus for groundbreaking sci- ence research in the Allston area of Boston. Imagine what critics will say when Faust gets involved in debates about the new science campus. "What does a women's studies professor know about sci- ence," some will ask. "What does any woman know about science?" the less abashed ones will shriek. By choosing a relatively inexpe- rienced candidate from an often- disrespected field, Harvard left the door open for critics to assert that Faust was chosen more for her gender than for her skills. Faust's experience in academia and administration has smeared her reputation in a society where contempt toward feminism has taken the place of contempt toward women. What Harvard really needed was a woman like Coleman, who rose to the top of a respected scientific field without drawing attention to her sex. Harvard is ready for a woman president. It just isn't yet ready for a wom- en's studies presi- dent. TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. Iran 2. The possibility that Iran is lending Iraqi insurgents weapons, including the deadly roadside bombs termed explosively formed penetrators (E.F.P.) 3. Fox's Half Hour News Hour And three things you can't: 1. Britney's new hairdo 2. Midterms 3. The Daily Show BY THE NUMBERS Percentage of Russians who have little to no confidence in Russian President Vladimir Putin Percentage of Americans who have little to no confidence in Putin Percentage of Americans who have little to no confidence in Bush Source: Surveys conducted by the Pew Research center in December YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK Why biology class was better when drugs were OK When the liberated decades of the 1960s and '70s petered out, Americans lost fake eyelashes, tol- erance toward destructive mind- altering drugs and great Bob Dylan music. We also lost something else: Entertaining educational videos. In 1971, Stanford University's Robert Weiss put together a short film on protein synthesis for the biology department. It features at least 50 students playing molecules that are forming a protein, align- ing themselves in the appropriate formations for an overhead camera Like a jubilant, but ill-disciplined marching band. The voice over explainswhat'shap- pening in verse littered with imagi- nary words, reminiscent of Lewis Carrol's poem the Jabberwocky: "Oh frabjous day. Callooh! Callay! The protein chain came streaming out!" the narrator exclaims. It's strange, and vaguely sexual, but it beats the hell out of the bio lectures we sit through today. ANNE VANDERMEY See this and other YouTube videos of the week at youtube.com/user/michigandaily L THEMED PARTY SUGGESTION Recuperation from Mardi Gras - Last night you were probably living it up, so celebrate the beginning of Lent with a stiff screwdriver and a little penance. WIKIPEDIA ARTICLE OF THE WEEK Frottage Frottage is sexual activity without penetration that can include any form of sexual rubbing, whether naked or clothed, for arousal or orgasm. Frottage can include mutual genital rubbing, sometimes called geni- to-genital or GG rubbing: *penile-vulval rubbing without penetration for a male-assigned and a female-assigned person * frot, penile-penile rubbing for two males * tribadism, vulval-vulval rubbing for two females Also nonmutual genital rubbing: * intercrural intercourse, also known as interfemoral intercourse, placing the penis between a partner's thighs, from the front or rear * mammary intercourse, putting the penis between the other person's breasts oaxillary intercourse, putting the penis in the other person's arm- pit (Also known as 'Bagpiping') * rubbing genitals against any part of the partner's body, such as clitoris against thigh or penis against abdomen.