4A - Thursday, September 6, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 74C MIiigan 4aly u Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu KARL STAMPFL IMRAN SYED JEFFREY BLOOMER EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. FROM T HE D A',Y' Deconstructing campus Campus improvements don't target needs f you feeling like campus is very different from when you left last spring, you're not alone. With two major entrances to the Diag torn apart, a mammoth steel skeleton standing where the new Ross School of Business building will be, the Frieze Building demolished, Michigan Stadium renovations scheduled for next year and a whole host of other construction projects going on, it seems like all of campus is in a state of flux. These latest changes to the face of campus raise important questions about the right and wrong way to approach improvement. I've got God's shoulder to cry on. And I cry a lot." - President George W. Bush in an interview with a biographer, as reported by The Associated Press. CHRIS KOSLOWSKI I 1UT TO PAST"E You have any plans this s . week? What a coincidence! rm Em attending an Anti-Auto. planning to fiebomb that Milker ralysponsored by thery!a National Organization of Cows. You?,nntA 5 - - - - - - - --- --- --- - % Adthen there was one.. Using the awesome power of hypote- nuses, the Diag is the University's express- way of foot travel. It's tough to get around quickly without it, and more importantly, it's simple enough that it allows students to learn their way around pretty quickly. It makes little sense to block half of the entrances to the Diag, especially at the beginning of the term. Some projects, like the addition to the art museum, have obvious benefits. The same doesn't hold true for the bottomless pit that was dug up in front of the Shapiro Under- graduate Library. Few people know how to get around that mess efficiently enough to still get to class on time. When a project is causes this sort of much everyday inconve- nience, we should at leastbe know what the reason for the inconvenience is. The Diag maze is just the beginning. Alum Stephen Ross's $100-million donation in 2004 led to the demolition of Davidson Hall, a building comparatively younger and in better shape than many other University buildings, to make for an even newer build- ing. Meanwhile, right next-door, Lorch Hall, a building that can leave you with dandruff from drywall and chipped paint, continues to fall apart. But money talks, and Ross got his way. The business school's new building is a great example of a myopic construction philosophy that fails to allocate resources in the way that is best for the University as a whole. Instead of at least minimally improv- ing the existing dorms, which have gone decades without improvement, the Uni- versity opted to build a new one - North Quad. A few lucky students will get a brand new facility while the rest are crammed into decrepit places like Mary Markley, where you can have a bat as your third roommate. As much as the University sells itself as an egalitarian institution, nothing could look more elitist. Many of these projects look like wasteful spending and could doom the University's lobbying efforts in Lan- sing. While the state deals with a financial nightmare, the $226 million the University is spending on the Big House looks pretty unnecessary. It looks even worse when you consider that the entire athletic depart- ment at Appalachian State only has a bud- get of $9.5 million. Private donors like Ross have every right to stipulate how they want their donations used. However, if the demands of some donors are not in line with the best inter- ests of the University as a whole, perhaps it's time that the University restructured its donation policy to retain more authority in deciding how best to use the money. Most alumni would surely wish their alma mater to benefit in the best way possi- ble from their donations and should under- stand such a change. Perhaps some alumni would turn away, but the marginal benefit for the University at large from donations going where they are most needed dictates that the University must rethink its policies and start doing what is best for all of cam- pus, not just the few. WYMAN KHUU 11 00 SA L V Viewpoint Policy The Daily welcomes viewpoints from its readers Viewpoints have one or several authors, though preference will be given to pieces written on behalf of individuals rather than an organization. Editorswill run viewpoints according to timeliness, order received and available space. Viewpoints should be no longer than 700 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit for length, clarity and accuracy. Sendviewpointsubmissionsto editpage.editors@umich.edu, orcontacttheeditorsatthataddress to arrange one in advance. Editorial Board Members: Ben Caleca, Mike Eber, Brian Flaherty, Emmarie Huette- man, Kellyn Jackson, Gavin Stern, Jennifer Sussex, Neil Tambe, Radhika Upadhyaya. COLUMNISTS WANTED LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Daily Opinion is looking for new columnists to fill out Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the its columnist roster. Columnists are expected to turn editor. Letters should be under 300 words and in a column of 650-750 words every other week. Inter- must include the writer's full name and University ested parties should contact the editorial page editor affiliation. All submissions become property of at syed@michigandaily.com right away. the Daily. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. W henAttorneyGeneralAlber- to Gonzales announced his resignation last Monday, everything in the Bush Administra- A tion is coming full circle.Startingback in 2004, the first to jump ship was y then Attorney Gen-F eral John Ashcroft. Then a host of dis- gruntled cabinet GARY members left in what seems to be a GRACA complete overhaul of the administration, rather than just the outing of a few bad apples. Most people, especially liberals, couldn't have been more delighted. Finally, Karl Rove - master political strategist, Democratic kryptonite and architect of disasters like the war in Iraq - was resigning. Likewise, The New York Times editorial page must be celebrating Christmas in August now that Gonzales is out the door. It spent the last year calling for either his resignation, impeachment or assassination - whichever was most convenient. As President Bush's inner circle wilts away,nthough, we need to remem- ber that there is still only one person to blame for the mistakes of the last seven years: The Decider himself. It's tempting to believe that Bush has the intelligence of an oyster. He fumbles his way through speeches. He talks with a John Wayne-like stub- bornness that crowds out reason. He praises his guts over his brain. And if you've ever seen one of the caricatures where his face is pasted onto a mon- Michigan has the classiest fans of all TO THE DAILY: Michigan fans, on behalf of every- one from Appalachian State in atten- dance Saturday, I want to thank all of you. Having not been to a game at Michigan before, many of us weren't sure of the reception we would receive. Before and after the game, you proved to be the classiest fans I have ever been around. We sat inthe middle of Michigan fans supporting our team loudly and never heard a negative word from anybody. After the game it was all congratulations and handshakes. In a college sports environment where opposing fans have to brace for bad treatment from fans of the home team, you guys were incred- ible. I speak on behalf of all Moun- taineer fans in attendance when I say we will be cheering for Michi- gan the rest of the season. Murphy Post The letter writer is a graduate of Appalachian State University. Henne shares blame with Carr, both must go TO THE DAILY: Amid the cries for Lloyd Carr's head, there is one question that has been overlooked: Why is no one call- ing outquarterback Chad Henne after another poor performance? Henne's game has not improved at all since his freshman season, and he is probably the biggest fraud at the position ever perpetrated upon the program. If he hadn't been surrounded by an aston- ishing amount of talent during his four years (Braylon Edwards, Steve Breaston, Jason Avant, Mario Man- ningham, Michael Hart, and others), he would have beenbenched long ago. Having no ability to carry his team through its struggles and an inability to consistently throw the ball deep are both major liabilities, especially with the type of offense Michigan runs, all its other faults aside. Henne is truly a case where sta- tistics do not tell the whole story of a quarterback's performance. If it weren't for Hart also coming back this year, I would suggest starting key's body and he's scratching himself with a stick, he has anuncanny resem- blance to Curious George. This image of the president has led many to believe that Bush is nothing more than a marionette, with a hand- ful of powerful henchmen pulling the strings behind the scenes. But that gives these men too much credit. Bush isn't that dumb. What Bush is, however, is a bad manager. It's everyday business for presidents to allow cabinet members and advisors to manage their own functions and make their own deci- sions. What is unusual about Bush is his inability to stop and reassess the situation when his staff is getting out of hand. Instead of judginghis advisers by the quality of their work, the Decid- er has repeatedly trusted them for the quality oftheir character. Although it's cute, warm, fuzzy and all-that good stuff for a president to surround him- self withgenuinely nice, honest people, it hasn't produced results. There is no better example of Bush's destructive Texan loyalty than Gon- zales. Widely recognized by close offi- cials and most of the media as a "nice guy," Gonzales's actions as attorney general and White House counsel have been anything but nice. Probably anything but legal, too. As the legal architect behind much of the war against terrorism, including the notorious Patriot Act, warrantless wiretapping and the legal black hole at Guantanamo Bay, Gonzales made decisions that polarized the country and compromised the world's support for America after the tragedy of Sept. 11. He even had the gall in a January 2002 memo to the president to write that the new terrorism threat "renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners." Not a particularly great way to make friends. But since his days as governor of Texas, Bushhas kept Gonzales around. First he was counsel to the governor; then he was Texas's secretary of state, a justice on the state Supreme Court and White House counsel. Finally he ended up as attorney general. Ifa few things would have gone his way, he might have even been a justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. No scapegoats left in Bush's White House. The same scenario is true for Bush loyalist Harriet Miers, who Bush nom- inated for the Supreme Court (and then withdrew that nomination under pressure). Instead of reining in these two officials as their decisions became greater political liabilities and danger- ous mistakes, Bush stayed true to his friends. While his loyalty is honorable, there must have been one Texas lesson Bush forgot to learn:You have to know when to hold 'em and whento fold 'em. A little Texas loyalty may have never hurt anyone, but it sure has left Amer- ica reeling Gary Graca is an associate editorial page editor. He can be reached at gmgraca@umich.edu. SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU freshman quarterback Ryan Mal- let and working toward next year. Thankfully Michigan football will be rid of both Carr and Henne at the end of the year. In fact, Carr's dogged loyalty to a player that should be rid- ing the bench is another of his weak- nesses. Michigan fans had to suffer through three years of John Navarre before being "rewarded" with a 10- 3 senior year that included a classic Lloyd bowl loss. Given Carr's predict- ability, it shouldn't come as too much of a shock that he is once again allow- ing a mediocre quarterback to drive the team into the ground. Athletic Director Bill Martin should be sent out west with a wheelbarrow full of money and a mandate not to come back unless California head coach Jeff Tedford is on the plane with him. And if Tedford wants the plane, he can have that too. Fred Vescio Alum No reason to blame Carr more than others TO THE DAILY: I feel the pain that washed through Wolverine Nation on Sat- urday. What I don't understand is all the negative comments pointed at head football coach Lloyd Carr. If he really hated The Maize and Blue, why would he still be coaching? It just seems as if fans are looking for a scapegoat and Carr is the easiest target. Why blame the players for being cocky and believing that the game would be an easy win? Is it that hard to congratulate another team? Are we that stuck up? There are more games to play, and that is what we should be focusing on. There is no guarantee that a new coach would do better. Jennifer Johnson LSA freshman Carr represents old school at its worst TO THE DAILY: Let's not mince words here. Lloyd Carr is a lousy coach. Sure, he's a nice man and he runs a clean program, but he is still a lousy coach. Let the record speak for itself. He has some- how managed to lose the last two games of the season three years is a row. Of late, he is 1-6 against Ohio State and 2-3 against a generally so- so Notre Dame squad. He now has the distinction of being the first coach of a ranked Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I-A) school to lose to a Football Championship Subdivi- sion (formerly Division I-AA) oppo- nent after Saturday's disgusting loss to Appalachian State. In an interview after the game, Carr took full responsibility for the loss, although he was not specific enough regarding how he was to blame. He just rambled on about how "we didn't do this and we didn't do that." Even though he took the blame, he kept emphasizing the word "we." Let's be more specific: Carr alone is the one who has failed time and time again. InSaturday'sgamethereweremany things that went wrong, but Michigan still could have won in the end. On Michigan's last possession, it could have hung on for a 32-31 win if the offense had gotten just one more first down. Yet Carr went ahead with his usual predictable plays, and we failed to pick up the game-clinching first down.Afterafailedfield-goalattempt, an unprepared defense allowed the Mountaineers to slice through it like a hot knife through butter. When you can't afford to concede yardage and first downs, you must put pressure on the quarterback. It's analogous to not having to defend against the home run in baseball if a long fly ball will beat you anyway. But Carr has shown several times over the years that he doesn't get it. He is old-school football at its stub- born worst. There is speculation that Carr may retire. If he does, Michigan must not make the mistake of simply bringing up another assistant from within the program. The Athletic Department needs to clean house and get a com- petent coach like Florida did when it brought in Urban Meyer. The Wol- verines have the most storied football program in the country and plenty of money to spend. They owe it to the 107,000-plus fans who show up every week to do what is necessary to win in the 21st century. Robert Fairman Ann Arbor A 0 I 0 0