4A - Wednesday, March 20, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, March 20, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS ANDREW WEINER and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS 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. Colleges, not corporations Universitypresidents need to focus on education first niversity presidents have some of the most prestigious posi- tions in academia. With that comes immense responsibil- ity and the ability to change the face of higher education. John Sexton, president of New York University, was named one of the "10 Best University Presidents in America" by Time magazine in 2009. However, he has recently come under fire by his own faculty for running the school like a corporation instead of an education- al institution. He has been accused of bypassing the faculty board when making decisions that affect the entire academic body. Trans- parency is a huge issue for any large-scale organization, including our own University. University President Mary Sue Coleman is set to leave office in 2014, and with the continued controversy over the role of a university president, the University needs to take NYU's situation into account when choosing its next leader. I've heard so many times from survivors 'You're the first person I've ever told.'Once you create a space for people to talk, they will." - Annie Clark, a North Carolina graduate and activist against sexual assault, said to The New York Times. What makes the mitten? Sexton has been an integral part of NYU's campus expansion to Greenwich village, a reform to which many faculty have object- ed. More broadly, the faculty dislikes Sex- ton's inconsideration for dissenting opinions and unwillingness to include the faculty on important university decisions. The prob- lem goes beyond Sexton's lack of leadership qualities. Mark Crispin Miller, a professor of media, culture and communication in NYU's Steinhardt School of Culture, said, "We see NYU as a school; we see our mission as edu- cational. Sexton and the trustees who sup- port him view NYU as a bundle of assets whose value they will apparently do anything to maximize on paper. We believe that this approach is destroying this university." This problem is not unique to NYU. Universities across the country have been accused of a lack of transparency and a business-like men- tality toward running their respective uni- versities. This is a trend we should be wary of, especially when choosing the next leader of our school. Communication between the University faculty and administrators has been under scrutiny in the past year.When expanding the Big Ten to include the University of Maryland and Rutgers University, University Athletic Director Dave Brandon failed to consult the EDITORIAL BOA Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine Megan McDonald, Jasmine McNenn Paul Sherman,Sarah Skaluba,Michael Advisory Board on Intercollegiate Athletics before making his decision. Instead, he simply informed the board of the result. This decision affected the game schedules of student athletes by increasing travel time, thus increasing the strain on student athletes as they spend more time out of the classroom. This expansion may bolster the Big Ten's profits at the expense of the University faculty's main goal of educating students, athlete or otherwise. The new president should be an essential part of completing the University's main goal of educational improvement. Transparency is central to this improvement. The regents had one fewer public meeting this year because of a trip they took to California. They also have a rope and security surrounding them at pub- lic meetings, separating them from the public. University presidents should not be insular and be committed to academia, not corporations. A new University president will generate change throughout campus, good or bad. How- ever, we need to ensure that these changes translate into substantial educational and administrative improvements. NYU has dem- onstrated that there has been a shift in higher education goals that resemble those of a profit- maximizing company. Our future president, and presidents at all universities, should focus on educating students. ARD MEMBERS Belmont, Eli Cahan, Jesse Klein, Patrick Maillet, Aarica Marsh, y, Harsha Nahata, Adrienne Roberts, Spaeth, Luchen Wang, Derek Wolfe often teach an essay called "Michigan." In it, Mohammed Naseehu Ali details his journey from Ghana to Michigan to attend Inter- lochen Center for the Arts. Duringthe long winter months, he sharpens his outsider's eye to JOSEPH identifythree types of Michi- HORTON ganders: "...there is the Poet, who spends lots of time observingnature and writing about it; the outdoors man, men and/or women who engage the elements through skiing, ice-fishing, and hunting through the sullen months of winter; and the Sports Fanatic, the ordinary Michi- gander who passes endless hours watching sports on television." My classrooms full of students - both native to the state and new - are quick to say there's more to the Mit- ten. Plenty more, they say. But when talk turns to what Michigan actu- ally is and to defining what being a Michigander actually means, the classroom splits - alliances form, tempers flare, claims are staked, and authority and credibility are invoked to the breaking point. For the outsiders, summarized in broad terms, Michigan is distilled into a parade of opposites. The state becomes a contrarian collection of everything left behind at home. Californians point out the "con- stant" gray, "absolutely freezing" temperatures and the delightfully empty highways - no, no, they're "freeways," you know. East Coasters note, en masse, on how polite and "nice" everyone is, and Southerners wonder why everyone is so reserved. International students - a category so broad as to be often unusable - do regularly share common ground in comparing their home cuisines to Michigan's big-portioned, less- flavorful attempts at replication. For most of the newly arrived, an appreciation of Mitten geography the podium and culture is passing and general: Canada's close, Detroit's a disas- ter and there are a ton of big lakes around. Not only have many never been to the Upper Peninsula, but also a not-insignificant number have no idea that Michigan even has an upper peninsula - and just forget pronouncing "Mackinac." Natives and long-timers, then, frequently find themselves left to defend or dismantle Michigan's stereotypes, and I've found this at first produces surprising una- nimity. Yes, they say, we do point to where we're from on our hand, but only in response to the blank, "you're-from-where?" stare. No, not everyone owns a boat, but everyone knows somebody who owns a boat. Yes, we have plenty of great lakes, and we can name at least four with- out an acronym. Sports are a major unifying component of Mitten life, and yes, part of beinga Tigers fan is appreciating (if not secretly enjoy- ing) suffering, but fandom is frac- turing too: the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry seeps into all facets of life, from high-school graduation cliques to families divided blue and green over generations with neither side giving ground. Yes, we have two peninsulas, and of course the Upper Peninsula is weird, but it's our weird, so back off. But there is one issue that vexes the Michiganders. As this schizo- phrenic Michigan March drags on in its cruel game of bait-and-switch and guardedly optimistic conversa- tions inch toward cabins and cottag- es and trips "up north," the question is collectivelybegged: Where, exact- ly, is "up north?" Past Midland, some say. Or Mount Pleasant. Just any- thing above the thumb, insist oth- ers; if you draw a line flat across the end of the thumb, that's north. Some draw a higher line - Traverse City or Gaylord or.Grayling and above. A few even venture that north really means above the bridge only. No agreement. No compromise. Consider, then, that our Univer- sity not only serves its state but also serves to introduce a huge num- ber of outsiders to the state. What responsibility do native and long- time Michiganders have here in shouldering Mitten identity? What introduction should natives offer the new, and whatgood is that introduc- tion if basic geography, "the north," is so divisive and variable? I thought Faygo was a cleaning solution. I'm not in a position to say, since I'm an outsider. I'm from Colorado, which on the Michigander radar generally appears as a single giant mountain rearing up in the Far West populated solely by Bronco-jersey- wearing, John-Denver-humming skiers with Coors beer-helmets and handfuls of GORP. Before moving here four years ago, I'd never heard of a powder puff game or Sweetest Day. I thought Faygo was a cleaning solution (and, really, isn't it?) and a "Michigan turn" was the acquired patience of driving forever in a one- way wrong direction. But as a teacher of writing, I believe that process is as valuable as the product. For me, the truth that "up north" is a state of mind - the enduring definition, offered up by a student semesters ago, is the won- derfully simple, "'up north' is where your cabin is; 'up north' is where you go" - suggests a private space in a public conversation, a place bounded by tradition yet boundless in idea, that helps me better appre- ciate Michigan. Here, understand- ing can't always be found on a map, but you'll know it when you're there. Or, as a good Michigander friend of mine says, invoking his grandfa- ther, "Michigan's adestinationstate. There's no reason to be here besides being here." - Joseph Horton can be reached at jbhorton@umich.edu. 0 CONTRIBUTE TO THE CONVERSATION Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor and viewpoints. Letters should be fewer than 300 words while viewpoints should be 550-850 words. Send the writer's full name and University affiliation. to tothedaily@michigandaily.com. ANJALI BISHT AND CHELSEA JEDELE 1 Where are all the women? Sophia's Study-A-Blog: Elaborate mosaics, bronze sculp- tures and huge marble columns are all features of the beautiful Moscow subway. To find out more about what characterizes this historic transport system, read Sophia's blog. Go to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium 0 As two seniors, we couldn't help but be disappointed at the announcement of Dick Costolo as the 2013 Spring Commencement speaker. Sure, he's the chief executive offi- cer of one of the most monumental social movements of our time and a 1985 University alum. There's no doubt that Costolo has all the qualifications necessary to make a mean- ingful and memorable address, one we will undoubtedly enjoy and remember. But Costo- lo represents yet another layer of a disturbing pattern in commencement speakers. In the past 24 years, 71 percent of spring commencement speakers have been male. In the past 10 years, only two speakers were female: Jennifer Granholm (as part of the tra- dition of the Michigan governor speaking), and Christiane Amanpour. But what's most disturbing is the fact that in the past 24 years, out of the seven total women who have spo- ken, only one - Antonia Novello who spoke in 1994 was an alum. This sends the message that even though women have been admit- ted to the University since 1870, almost none are accomplished enough to serve as a com- mencement speaker. A commencement speaker not only serves as a role model and a purveyor of the Uni- versity's missions and values, but also offers inspiration to students as they step into the world. For women and men heading into their careers, a female speaker demonstrates that women can - and do - succeed in leadership and offer alternate perspectives. We're frustrated that the selection com- mittee has seemed to overlook so many great female candidates in the past decades - there is certainly no lack of impressive women. For example, Alexa Canady, a 1971 gradu- ate, is the former chief of neurosurgery at the Children's Hospital of Michigan and the first African-American woman to become a neurosurgeon. Melinda Gates is co-chair of The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation - the largest private foundation and an instrumen- tal organization in initiating global public health interventions. Or, perhaps in keeping with this year's business theme, there's Ursu- la Burns, the chief executive at Xerox and the first African-American woman to head a Fortune 500 company. There's also the for- midable Barbara Walters, an American icon since the 1970s. This list, impressive as it is, only scratch- es the surface of available female leaders to inspire graduates of the University. Is it truly that difficult to find a female commencement speaker who demonstrates women - not just men - can be the leaders and the best? Anjali Bisht is an LSA senior. Chelsea Jedele is a Ross senior. JESSE KLEINI Lifelong commitment, not an end goal In Jennifer Xu's column on Monday ("Weighing in on Diets," 3/18/13) she recommends funding for research on a Japanese canker sore drug that has been shown to increase weight loss in mice. She endorses trying to see if the drug could help humans combat the obe- sity epidemic sweeping the nation. While there's scientific proof backing up Xu's claims, I'm still very skeptical of any drug pro- duced to stimulate weight loss. Maybe it comes from the thou- sands of infomercials that feature before and after pictures and a too tanned, too toned muscle-head saying, "And you don't have to change your diet at all!" Quite sim- ply, I don't believe it. More importantly, a magic pill, if it does exist, won't cure the real problem that has led to a massively overweight American population. Fast food, large portions and a sedentary lifestyle have been pro- grammed into our culture and don't seem to be leaving any time soon. Super Big Gulps, Supersized French fries, and the Treinte size at Starbucks are all examples of obscenely large and high-caloric items that have become a normal part of our meals at least once a week. Does anyone really need a 40-ounce soda? The food culture of our society doesn't just affect those who are extremely overweight. A skinny person isn't synonymous with a healthy one. Obesity isn't the only problem: Some of the skinniest people have the worst eating hab- its. Weight loss isn't the only indi- cator of a healthy lifestyle. Muscle weighs more than fat, therefore muscle mass is a better indicator of health than relative weight. As a person who has struggled to lose and maintain her weight since puberty, eating well and exercising have become a part of my lifestyle rather than interim measures to lose 10 pounds. I don't "diet" - not in short bursts, anyway. I eat well and com- pensate for less healthy days with healthier ones later in the week. I exercise because I feel stressed without it, and I make it fun with kickboxing and kettle bell classes. Xu is right. It's hard to change what our bodies consider the norm, our "set point" as she calls it. How- ever, just because eating right and exercising are hard doesn't mean they aren't worth doing. And they're probably healthier than injecting chemicals into our bodies. Secondly, your body seems bounces around that "set point" by five or six pounds every month. It's exhaust- ing to keep track of every half- pound gained or lost. Instead, finda weight that makes you feel good in your clothes, gives you energy and isn't impossible to maintain - even if that's a few pounds heavier than what you would like. A magic pill - even if it's scien- tifically proven to help cut weight - won't improve the way people look at being healthy (a lifelong com- mitment rather than an end goal). Healthy shouldn't be about a goal weight or fitting into a prom dress or being "bikini ready." These are the short-term objectives that can lead to bulimia, anorexia and other eating disorders. Everyone longs for the day when we can take a pill and become a size two, but it's very unlikely that this will make us any healthier. Jesse Klein is an LSA sophomore. 0 FOLLOW DAILY OPINION ON TWITTER Keep up with columnists, read Daily editorials, view cartoons and join in the debate. Check out @michdailyoped to get updates on Daily opinion content throughout the day. A 9 0