LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Michigan Daily - Monday, August 7, 2006 - 5 Wake up and smell the coffee JOHN STIGLICH STI A SAY Luxury boxes could mark beginning of disturbing trend TO THE DAILY: I applaud the Daily's coverage of opposition to the proposed luxury boxes in Michigan Stadium. Yours is perhaps the only publication currently doing so. The boxes threaten our venerable Michigan tradition with the permanent defacement of a University icon. Projected to be 82 feet in height and running from end zone to end zone, these hulking appendages to the classic contours of our stadium will rise higher than the present scoreboard - likely casting premature shadows on the field, presenting a visage more akin to that of Lambeau Field and threatening to give new meaning to the name "Big House." Although traditionally known as "leaders and the best," the University has now become followers of institu- tions like the Ohio State University and the University of Wisconsin. And those schools have taken professionalism one step further in assenting to the corpo- rate naming of sporting venues on their campuses. Might something similar lurk in our future as well? Gary Gillespie Alum U' should exercise caution in stadium- renovation plans TO THE DAILY: I appreciate the need for renovations for our historic but aging stadium. But I'm highly opposed to building a con- course level that includes differentiated seating (better-quality seats compared to the rest of stadium) included in the club and suites levels thatpermit corpo- rate boxes or blocks. The University has a long history of being independent of corporate influence - protests against human rights violations by Nike and the Coca-Cola Company are just a couple recent examples. The University also has a rich appreciation of diversity, which is prevalent both in the student body itself and in the required curric- ulum that mandates that students dis- sect the impact of segregation across racial and socioeconomic classes. The proposals for the club section of the stadium contradict both traditions. Will corporations that the Univer- sity is protesting be allowed to sponsor suites? Will alcohol be allowed in pri- ority levels, but not among other fans? Is Michigan Stadium considered a cash cow to fund an administrative agenda, or is it a playing field for students to demonstrate their talent? Will we now follow the lead of all our collegiate peers down any road they take, or will we seek to create our own unique path? Any changes beyond those of safety should be approached very cautiously. I see a complete disregard for caution and the long-term consequences in this entire process by the athletic department and the Regents. While Michigan foot- ball has a life, following and tradition of its own, it's important to remember that this is just a grass field that brings together kids who came to this educa- tional institution. It's not a profit center, a platform for corporate marketing or a place to flaunt egos. While Irespect the efforts to improve the stadium, the fans and alumni of the University - its financial backers - will have to live with the consequences afterward, and they should have a say in the current administration's vision for betterment. Andrea Finger Alum uppose that tomorrow when you went to purchase your morning coffee, the govern- ment mandated you buy from the clos- est Starbucks to your home. When you enter that Starbucks, you notice the line is abnormally large and filled with all your neighbors. When you taste your coffee, it's the vilest sludge you have ever put your lips on. You attempt to complain to the staff, but your complaints fall on deaf ears. You ask for an explanation and the staff tells you the product will improve if you can convince your local congressman to increase funding. If that fails, they say, encourage the rest of the people in the store to donate more of their hard- earned money. When you ask for your money back so you can take your business elsewhere, the Starbucks staff informs you that your taxes paid for the coffee and you cannot receivea refund. Like any good consumer, you leave disgusted. Vowing never to drink that coffee again, you travel to the closest Dunkin Donuts - which is not under govern- ment control. Not only do you find the coffee far superior to that served at Star- bucks, but the doughnuts are fantastic and the service is efficient. When you reach the cashier, she informs you that unlike Starbucks, your taxes do not pay for Dunkin Donuts's products. To purchase the fine products at Dunkin Donuts, you have to pay more than you are comfortable paying. In addition, your taxes will continue to sub- sidize Starbucks regardless of where you prefer to get your coffee. Now you must decide between consuming Dunkin Donuts while subsidizing Starbucks or learning to tolerate the sludge that Star- bucks serves. While the aforementioned situation seems far-fetched, it's very analogous to our public education system. Gov- ernment has a monopoly on education in this country and we allowed for its creation. We stood idly by as govern- ment created its own supply by mandat- ing children between six and 18 attend school. We complain bitterly about the failing product our youth must consume, and the only solutions that politicians and educators agree on are the need for more money and more teachers. If more funding per pupil and small- er classroom sizes were truly cures for the ills of our education system, why does Washington D.C. continue to rank near the bottom in student per- formance? According to the District of Columbia Fiscal Policy Institute, D.C. public schools spend nearly $14,000 per student and George Mason Uni- versity Prof. Walter Williams notes the average student to teacher ratio is 15:1 - the lowest in the nation. Yet Washington DC public school students consistently perform near the bottom in reading and math proficiency on standardized tests. Attempts to break the government monopoly by reducing demand for pub- lic education are doomed. Current fund- ing policies mandate parents that choose to enroll their children ina private school or home school must fund the public education system anyway. Those politicians brave enough to support a publicly funded voucher program - so parents can afford to educate their chil- dren privately - are met with hostility from politically powerful teacher unions and public-school boards. For those of you who like the public education system, have you wondered why it's funded through impersonal methods of tax collection? If funding public education relied upon citizens dropping off a check every month in the local principal's office, citizens would be more likely to demand a bet- ter product from the principal during the visit. This exposure of monopoly management to consumers can only hurt the monopoly. Monopolies have no incentive to see consumers create a public demand for a better product because someone just might rise up and heed the calls. The brutal truth is that if the Secu- rities and Exchange Commission reviewed education as a sector of our economy, it would declare the gov- ernment's monopoly illegal. It would force educators to adopt more effi- cient and effective ways of educating our children. The SEC would encour- age competition and seek market correction. Government and teacher unions would lose the political muscle they hold so dear and we might see some real reforms in the American education system. Remember, the power for reform ultimately lies with the people. It's time America woke up and smelled the coffee. Stiglich can be reached at jcsgolf@umich.edu. A resurgence of American innovation? TINA HILDRETH WELCOM T"C ) y: BiUBBE KIM LEUNG THE. TA.-<;UT Box WV4E 0 ' Cy LA5 A N o0 Last week was yet another dim seven days for Michigan's manufacturing industry, with sev- eral auto compa- nies again posting quarterly losses. But in the cloud of gloom that has become the rooftop of Detroit's economy, there's one cause for hope, and it comes in the form of a fruit - an apple, to be exact. This past week, Detroit's two big automakers did one of the smartest things they have done in a long time - they embraced the iPod. Starting on next year's models, cars made by Ford and General Motors will have ports to plug in portable digital- music devices. Drivers will be able to smoothly transfer their music from home to work to school to car, only having to pull out their earbuds and plug in their iPod to continue their con- stant stream of tunes. This, more than all their restructur- ing plans or talks of international alli- ances, gives me hope that maybe, just maybe, Detroit's economic backbone will be able to creep back into the black once again. I don't understand the inner workings of the auto industry, but this move shows one thing: Ford and GM are finally getting it. Miracle of all mir- acles, it turns out that in order to stay competitive, producers have to respond to consumers' demands. In the days before $75-a-barrel oil, domestic automakers had the intuitive sense to follow the market, building millions upon millions of the now-infa- mous sport utility vehicles. As soon as they rolled off the line, American driv- ers bought Explorers, Suburbans and Trailblazers in hoards. Drivers loved them for their off-road capabilities and their ability to carry an entire soccer team quite comfortably. Domestic auto- makers became drunk on their profits, reaping the rewards of a seemingly unending supply of oil. But then that all changed. Now $3 is not only the price of a cheap cup of coffee at Starbucks, it's also the price of a gallon of gas (if you're lucky). Amazingly, gas guzzlers are suddenly unpopular. As sales of SU~s slip out from under the feet of the Big Three, their knack for making cars that sell is also no more. But with this iPod announcement, it seems Ford and GM are catching on. iPods are some of the fastest-selling products on the market. Rarely can you walk across campus without seeing at least six students intently entangled in an iTunes-induced haze. It only makes sense to make cars compatible with this commercial phenomenon. The problem is, it's probably too late. Several foreign automakers already offer iPod hookups, and their designs are much more user-friendly. Henry Ford may have been the father of auto- motive innovation, but that title has since flown away from D-town. Now, it seems, the Big Three constantly play pick-up, slightly modifying what other countries have already sold. They missed the boat on hybrids, and now they have missed it on iPods. That doesn't mean it always has to be that way; Detroit automakers can reclaim their glory. They might not be able to get back to the time when the Motor City ruled the auto world, but they can at least return to respectabil- ity in the industry. But they're going to have to pay more attention than they have in the past. WhenthenextiPod-like phenomenon comes along, they'd better be ready. If they're not, there's a good chance that our generation won't hear them. Hildreth can be reached at childret@umich.edu.