Qpinion 4A - Wednesday, April 9, 2008 4 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Nl Id iigan 4aily Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of theDaily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. The Daily's public editor, Paul H. Johnson, acts as the readers' representative and takes a criticallook at coverage and content in every section of the paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions and comments. He can be reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. FROM THE DAILY Not getting the message Signing up for alert system is easy and important f a major chemical spill occurred on Central Campus, you'd think most people would want to know about it. And yet, according to the Department of Public Safety, only 17,000 peo- ple have signed up for the emergency text message alert system - a mere half of them students. While some of the apprehensiveness is understandable because the-University made initial blunders in its implementation, nonetheless, this is an important effort that calls for far greater student participation. With the University working hard to address the lingering concerns on its end, it's now up to stu- dents to embrace the program and allow it to take flight. NOTABLE QOAL It is time to take the training wheels off, and time to take our hands off the Iraqis' bicycle seat.' - Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), at yesterday's Senate Armed Services Committee meeting, quoting a senior U.S. military official he met while touring Iraq, as reported yesterday by the Washingon Post. ROSE JAFFE E-MAIL JAFFE AT ROSEJAFF@UMICH.EDU ;4 Findrt you0100 gr r wn r 9 /Y Nationally, text message alert systems began receiving serious attention following last year's shooting at virginia Tech. The tragedy, in which 32 people were killed, exposed serious concerns about students and faculty being unaware of dangerous situations on campus: Gunman Seung-Hui Cho took two hours between his rampag- es. During that time, many students knew nothing about the situation. Here at Michi- gan, similar flaws were exposed following the fatal shooting near North Campus at the beginning of winter semester. Although administrators sent out e-mails warning students of the crime, some of them took up to 10 hours to circulate. In response to these concerns, the Uni- versity launched a text message alert sys- tem about one month ago to ensure that students find out about emergency situ- ations in a timely and efficient manner. Unfortunately, the program hascad prob- lems so far getting off the ground. Accord- ing to a recent statement by DPS, only about 2Q percent of students had sigW up,com- pared to averages of 28 percent and 39 per- cent found by two different companies that provide the service to 800 campuses across the country. Part of the blame falls on the University for mistakes made in setting up the pro- gram. The initial e-mail sent out by admin- istrators, for example, led to an electronic labyrinth on Wolverine Access that made matters far more complicated than they should have been. Similarly, greater efforts could have been taken to spread the word about the new program on campus since many students simply didn't understand what they were signing up for, and some hadn't heard of the program at all. To its credit, the University has tried to resolve these issues, streamlining the sign-up pro- cess and sending another e-mail to students following these changes. More work may be needed, but you can't blame the University for lack of effort. A more pressing problem, however, seems to be student apathy. Whether the University has made things easy or not, 20 percent is an embarrassingly low figure for such an important program. While it's easy to assume that it's unnecessary, events in the last few years have proved otherwise. In case a mass shooting does occur at our university, no one will want to risk waiting 10 hours for a University e-mail to arrive. With roughly 90 percent of college stu- dents carrying cell phones, text messag- ing is an effective method for preventing greater disasters. Some effort is still needed for this pro- gram to reach more of the student body. Without going to unnecessary lengths - like mandating enrollment-the recentpro- posal to introduce the system at freshman orientation is a good idea. In the meantime, responsibility falls on the current student body'as well. The University is offering a program that could prevent a major tragedy without much effort from students. Typing your phone number into Wolverine Access isn't difficult, and students must take the initiative before they regret it. 4 To most kids, being left in a department store by Mom is either a sign of extreme dis- obedience or paren- tal negligence. But to Izzy, it was a sign of independence. Repeatedly nagged by her nine-year-old son Izzy to let him take the subway home alone, New E York Sun columnist EMMARIE Lenore Skenazy HUETTEMAN decided to conduct an experiment. She gave Izzy a subway ticket, some money and a map and left him at the Bloomingdale's in Manhattan, telling, him that she would see him at home. He survived the New York City sub- way system, and she wrote about it. Despite focusing her column on the reason she decided to encour- age her son's independence - recent statistics show that New York City is among the safest in the country - Skenazy received a lot of criticism for the decision itself. "Half the people I've told this epi- sode to now want to turn me in for child abuse," she wrote. "As if keep- ing kids under lock and key and hel- met and cell phone and nanny and surveillance is the right way to rear kids." According to 52 percent of the respondents to aninformalpoll posed by MSNBC.com, though, that is the right way to rear kids - at least under the guise of "Even if I trust my child, who knows how many crazies there are out there?" But when should parents put aside their sensationalist fears about cra- zies in favor ofmore rationalconcerns, like whether they're raising indepen- dent, self-sufficient individuals? With commencement fast approaching, these qualities seem to be hanging like an albatross around the necks of my graduating friends. We couldn't get out of high school into the "real world" of college fast enough, but now some of my peers just want to hold off for another year on entering the real "real world." From my observations, it's actually a fairly common sentiment. The fact that so many college students don't feel ready makes me wonder if gener- ational parenting choices should take some of the blame. If unsupervised subway travel is a good gauge, then I didn't reach inde- pendence until age 16. My friend and I had decided to audition for a profes- sional theatre company in downtown Atlanta, and my parents had run out of excuses to keep me off the subway: It was daylight, Ihad a buddy and the evening news hadbeen relatively vio- lence-free recently. With cautions of "be yourself" and "make good choic- es," they let me go. I felt the same way Izzy said he did when asked about his adventure on the "Today" show last week: "I was like, 'FINALLY!"' Butmaybe16was alittlelate.While my parents had only the best inten- tions and encouraged my indepen- dence in other ways, I always wished they would give me the freedom to learn a few more things firsthand - within reason, the opportunity to make more mistakes and put the values I had learned to better use. I didn't really get the chance to miss my stop on the subway and find my way home until I was old enough to drive home anyway. Five years later, my mom still worries when I walk home alone, and I'm already worried about what will happen when I grad- uate next year. In many respects, this seems to be the root of the problem for many of us: Our parents didn't let us fail. We're the generation who reveled in certificates of participation. We got trophies even if we lost the soc- cer game. And now the thought of not finding a job that pays six figures immediately after graduation scares many of us. When these fears came rushing out to my parents recently, I remem- bered that my parents were once ner- vous graduates, too. My mom pointed out that she hasn't worked in her field for years. Aside from my dad's only There's something to be said for being a lone rider half-joking, experienced advice that graduate school is the best place for new graduates in a struggling econ- omy, he reminded me that his field didn't even exist when he graduated. I encountered one of the great virtues of this generation of protective par- ents: encouragement. There's a fine line between protect- ing and coddling. After all, while Ske- nazy's experiment in baptism by fire and public transportation is hardly exemplary parenting in practice, it makes a decent metaphor. When it's time to find my way after graduation, I'll be glad my parents left me with a map. Emmarie Huetteman is an associate editorial page editor. She can be reached at huetteme@umich.edu. 4 I EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Emad Ansari, Harun Buljina, Anindya Bhadra, Kevin Bunkley, Ben Caleca, Satyajeet Deshmukh, Milly Dick, Mike Eber, Emmarie Huetteman, Theresa Kennelly, Emily Michels, Arikia Millikan, Kate Peabody, Robert Soave, Imran Syed, Neil Tambe, Matt Trecha, Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Rachel Wagner, Patrick Zabawa. TOR SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU The important role of the fair-weatheredfan in sports TO THE DAILY: How come when I came across Scott Bell's column Monday (Relax, the Tigers will be fine, 04/07/2008), it was predictable that "fair-weathered fans" would be mentioned in the opening paragraph and Bell would once again portray himself as the antithesis of this fan? This isn't the first time the hometown slappies at the Daily have cowardly avoid- ed criticism while attacking other fans. This past fall, I grew tired of every column defending Lloyd Carr and proclaiming that anybody who called for his head was a "fair- weathered fan." We live in a what-have-you- done-for-me-lately world, yet nobody at the Daily dared talk about the four-loss seasons that led some to say that the "M" in Michi- gan stood for mediocrity. Now back to this recent column. Why is there no reason to be concerned about the Detroit Tigers, who have the second-highest payroll in baseball and have lost consecu- tive home series against division rivals? Bell isn't a little bit worried when a baseball team hasn't won a game in a week? He pointed out that last year's World Series teams lost a lot of games too, but the champion Red Sox never lost more than four games in a row. Being from Ann Arbor, I can comfortably say that I am one of the biggest Michigan/ Detroit sports fans out there. I won't deny that there are fair-weathered fans and agree that we should not panic about the Tigers. But criticism is OK, and it doesn't just come from "so-called die-hard fans." Without criticism, we settle for mediocrity, whereas real fans expect championships. Like many, Bell must have been rejoicing after our football team won the Capital One Bowl against Florida. On second thought, he may have been the only one, since apparently he was the only passenger on the bandwagon after two season-opening losses and another loss to Ohio State. Bell may calleveryone else a "fair-weath- ered fans," but we can only be envious of his world where the sun always shines. Wei Kung LSA senior Looking beyond stereotypes when covering the Greeks TO THE DAILY: For three years now I have been holding out hope that eventually the Daily would attempt to coverthe Greek community asjust that - a community composed of smaller, close-knit organizations sharing much of the same goals and passions in life. But Monday I was let down yet again by an article about the Interfraternity Council's proposed alco- hol policy (Alcohol policy gets mixed reviews at frats, 04/07/2008). Instead of shedding light on how the Greek community is trying to improve its image and increase safety, the Daily once again painted Greeks as drunks who only have one thought: "Me want beer." This news story came on the heels of yet another opinion column blaming the IFC for bad media relations (Giving Greeks press, 04/03/2008). Coupled with the articles pre- dictably run in the Daily each fall criticizing Greeks, these articles just add to the divide between those who choose to go Greek and those who don't. I will continue to hope that one day the Daily will cover the Greek community's other efforts in support of various charities, instead of drinking, hazing or medi.a rela- tions. I challenge the Daily to move beyond the stereotypes, and I promise that if it does it will find engaging and intelligent individu- als seeking to become what every other stu- dent here strives to be: "The leaders and the best." Stephen Evans LSA junior The letter writer is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. WANT TO BE AN OPINION COLUMNIST DURING THE SUMMER OR FALL? E-MAIL GARY GRACA AT GMGRACA@UMICH.EDU ! YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM IN The war at home Let's face it: War is never want- ed, desired or even deserved by any country. However, war is an unpop- ular reality that America, Israel and the West must face today because extreme radical groups using the peaceful religion of Islam as a tool to wage genocide against "non- Muslims" have declared war on us, a Holy War. And like it or not, this is the reality. So why don't all Americans and their allies at the University sup- port National Radical Islam Aware- ness Week? Why isn't this campus appalled by the jihad - this Holy War that has been declared against the West? The anti-war protesters, the liberal professors, the Demo- crats - who claim to be anti-fascist, anti-sexist and progressive - why are theynot disgusted bythe sancti- fying ofmurderers as holy"martyrs" whenMuslimterroristskillinnocent Americans, Christians and Jews? Why aren't these people outraged by the genital mutilation of women in countries like Nigeria, Somalia and Yemen, or the sanctioning of wife-beating under Islamic law in Pakistan and other Islamic states? Across America, Women's Studies programs will teach students about the oppression of women in Peoria and Ann Arbor, but not in Teherap or Riyadh. Why not? The fact is that so many students are ignorant of these horrific reali- ties and trained to believe that the Bush administration is the reason America is fighting in the Middle East. Yes, Bush put troops in the Middle East. And yes, many would love to be at home with their fami- lies and wish they did not have to fight this war. However, I ask you this: Did the New Yorkers on Sept. 11, 2001 wish for the desecration of their city? Did the morning com- muters riding the London subways on July 7, 2005 desire for their train to be destroyed? Do Israelis want to fear leaving their home in terror that they might not ever come back? National Islam Awareness Week is a way to educate students about the genocidal agendas of the global jihadists and the fact that these radical ideas are far more main- stream in the Muslim world today than most Americans are willing to believe. It is also to remind stu- dents not to forget about Sept. 11, to remember what our troops are fighting for: Our freedom, the same freedom that allows you to learn at this university without the fear'of attack because of who you are. Our group, the Young Ameri- cans for Freedom, is expecting and has had protests against our views. However, we are familiar with the way the Left wages its political wars on conservative students. If someone happens to disagree with its position on racial issues - if one believes, for example, that govern- ment-enforced racial preferences are misguided or immoral - the Left will denounce that person as a "racist." The Left's only logic Is emotional, and the character of that emotion is hatred - hatred for those who want to raise aware- ness of the threats we face from radical Islam. This hatred has only one purpose: to silence those who oppose the jihad. We see members of our genera- tion ready to put their lives on the line to defend our freedoms. We know that this war is being waged at home as well, and we will not let our brothers and sisters in uniform shoulder the burden alone. This viewpoint was written os behalf of the University's chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom. 4