PERSPECTIVES The Michigan Daily Thursday, September 29, 1988 Page 5 The University's favorite word BY LISA POLLAK It's a game kids play; they pick a word, say it out loud, and then quickly say it again and again - and after a while the automatic rapid-fire of sound becomes jumbled and meaningless, the original word indistinguishable to their own ears. Though it's a game kids play, you don't have to be a kid to play it, and you especially don't have to be saying the word yourself to be a player. "Diversity," for example, is a word we hear often at the University, and one we can expect to hear even more often in the future. Before we arrive on campus we are promised a "diverse student body made up of diverse interests in a diverse town." In December 1986, then-University President Harold Shapiro wrote in the University Record of his "renewed commitment to diversity" - one that was "renewed" twice more the next year, after campus racial turmoil attracted media attention. This process of renewing the commitment has, of course, involved repeating the word. In speeches and University literature over the past two years we have heard extensive data about the commitment to diversity, the focus of diversity, the path towards diversity; we read pamphlets full of diversity programs and diversity efforts and diversity * goals. This year alone we can attend lectures on "the challenges of diversity," "diversity defined," "diversity in the workplace,"~ "diversity for returning students." And if we need still more informa- tion, we can consult Harvey Reed, the University's newly-appointed Diversity Agenda Coordinator. As one student said, "It's like the word Hair Styling with a Flair S7 Barber Stylists for MEN & WOMEN - NO WAITINGM DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 was actually created, rhyme and all, to sit neatly next to 'university' in any sentence, and it does." Certainly the word "diversity" is not the University's only catch-all, automatic rapid-fire word. And cer- tainly we have all heard such words emanate from sources other than the University. "Diversity," however, seems an especially unique and unfortunate example. A word that outside the context of the University is positive and encouraging, some students say, inside has become jumbled, mean- ingless, and indistinguishable These perceptions are worth not- ing, for next week University Presi- dent James Duderstadt will formally introduce his Michigan Mandate - primarily an affirmation of current minority recruitment and retention programs and goals - which states the "commitment to the achievement of diversity is the key element in our efforts to build a University for the 21st Century." The Michigan Mandate is a 23- page document. It mentions the word "diversity" 32 times. How will students react? "You hear about the administra- tion's new diversity plan, you know, and everyone moans inside," said LSA junior Delro Harris, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Minority Affairs Committee. "I'm RESUME SERVICE For a resume that can do the job, depend on Kinko s. kinko's- the copy center 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 1220 S. University 747-9070 Michigan Union 662-1222 (open early. open late) just worn out with 'diversity.' When you say it I think about someone saying 'Yeah, I like to wear a som- brero and eat egg rolls or something. "It frustrates me to hear people running around preaching 'diversity' as the goal," he said. "What does it mean to say a campus is diverse? It doesn't mean the students are equal. It doesn't mean they respect each other. It implies a whole bunch of random things with nothing connecting them." "The word on this campus is a joke," another student said. "Minorities see diversity as an ideal situation that has not yet and may never arrive here on campus. Majority students see all the different faces and think that it has." "If 'diversity' is the main goal then we've already reached it," said graduate student Todd Shaw, a Black Student Union and Minority Organization of Rackham member. "'Diversity,' okay. But there are words we just aren't hearing. Is this diversity for a select few? Why aren't we hearing things about opportunities for working-class people? Is it a diversity of the middle and upper classes?" Shaw and other students were in- troduced to the Mandate in a Black Leadership Dialogue on Sept. 14. "I don't remember many of the specific ideas," he said. "My first reaction?... Duderstadt was talking too much. It was 30 minutes of preface, ten of substance..." It's just how the game always worked. Repeat the word over and over; it becomes jumbled, meaning- less, intentions indistinguishable. Reed - who admits he doesn't like his title - says he sympathizes with students who complain the goal of "diversity" obscures the fight against institutional racism. But to those who drafted the Mandate, to the Office of Minority Affairs, to the administration, Reed said, the word is undeniably optimistic. "In a sense, the word is cos- metic," Reed said. "But no matter the term, the idea is making the University more hospitable for mi- nority students, faculty, and staff... If people don't want to hear the concept, the word doesn't make a bit of difference." But when people do want to hear the concept, it does. Last summer the University ap- proved a proposal for a "Diversity Day," a student holiday on Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday. Mem- bers of MOR and BSU protested the day's proposed title. "Martin Luther King has nothing to do with diversity," Harris said. "That's not what he preached; he focused on equality and people working together." The University responded to their concerns with a vague guarantee that "Martin Luther King, Jr." would be part of the day's as-yet-undecided official title, although "diversity" may still be mentioned - a response Shaw calls "unsatisfactory." In fact, there aren't a whole lot of places on this campus anymore where the word "diversity" is used in what Shaw and many other students would consider a satisfactory manner. Vagueness and insincerity surround it like parentheses. "It's an umbrella to mask the real problems," one student said. "It's not a perfect word," said Joseph Owsley, director of News game and Information Services. "And no one wants too much repetition. But we don't want to sacrifice clarity; if we use a lot of different words we risk confusing people." So the University played the game. They picked a word, a good word, a word that celebrates the world's differences. They used it, and used it, and used it again - and pretty soon it was not only jumbled, meaningless and indistinguishable, but all-purpose as well. That's how R it ended up 32 times in the Michigan Mandate, and worse, that's how it became the working title for Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday. But maybe, when the University slows its rapid-fire, they'll realize what the kids always do - after a while, the word will start to make sense again. And maybe when that happens, some people will decide that "diversity" isn't necessarily the word they wanted in the first place. After all, there are many goals, and many words to describe them. I'd say the choices are diverse - but I'm not sure you'd know what I meant. WANTED USHERS For Major Events Concerts MASS MEETING Thursday, Sept. 29, 8:00 p.m. Anderson Room Michigan Union VETERAN USHERS- Those who have ushered Major Events concerts in the past. NEW USHERS- Those who would like to usher Major Events Concerts. 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