4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 23, 1997 fi irijjuu &d"Ig 420 Maynard Street RONNIE GLASSBERG Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editor in Chief Edited and managed by ADRIENNE JANNEY students at the ZACHARY M. RAIMI University of Michigan Editorial Page Editors Unle.6satherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily FROM THE DAILY Community comfort Neal's proposal puts funds to good use NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'Sometimes dreams come true, but in most cases dreams are something we go through when we are asleep.' - Martin Luther King II, in an MLK Day celebration speech Tuesday Yuiu KUNIYUKI GROUND ZERO EEE LETTERS TO THE EDITOR COmMuNITY CHsTi A community redefined by electronic mail 4 ' Tr : a little more than a week, Lee Iillinger will replace Homer Neal as Uni esity president. Although Neal's tenure: as interim president was brief, no one: an accuse him of passively sailing throgh his six-month administration with little contribution to the University. For his latesteffort to establish the President's New Centtiry Fund for Diversity - intended to malte the University's overall climate more conifortable for minority students - Neal desirves commendation. With this gesture, Neai has extended the University's commit- meqt to diversity; Bollinger should make the :most of this program to improve the atmZ~phere for minorities in the University coniunity. The fund, which Neal announced on Mattri Luther King Day, is designed "to cretp programs that will accelerate the University's progress toward many-faceted goal for diversity at the (University of Midiigan)." Although the University Board of Rgents'has not decided on specific pro- posits or programs, the fund has an allot- met' of $450,000 to fulfill its goal - as well as the support of incoming University President Lee Bollinger. sNeal said the fund will support "action anaction-research efforts that advance the goaIs of the Michigan Agenda for Women and ; the Michigan Mandate." Former University President James Duderstadt cre- ate both programs, which, in part, strive to in ase enrollment of minority and women st ients as well as to create a more com- fodable atmosphere for all. Although overall minority enrollment F. A trues America will miss Ap iece of America died Saturday, as ^,i-former Sen. Paul Tsongas (D-Mass.) 1&st a long, hard-fought battle with lym- phoma, a slow-growing cancer of the lymph system. The 55-year-old Massachusetts n tive, best known for his front-runner sta- tus in the 1992 presidential campaign, will be'a sorely missed champion of American politics. Tsongas began his political career on the City Council in Lowell, Mass., where he serve d from 1969 to 1972. In 1974, after a brief stint as county commissioner, he b6eame his district's first Democratic mem- ber of Congress in almost 90 years. A mere four years later, he beat the Republican ir oumbent to capture one of Massachusetts' Senate seats. On Sept. 29, 1983, he discov- ered his cancer, and he subsequently retired .fr the Senate. Tsongas made a return to the political aenia in the 1992 presidential campaign. IDiring the campaign's primaries, Tsongas fqrced the rest of the Democratic candi- dates, including Bill Clinton, to tackle iriportant issues with real solutions. Unlike Est modern politicians, he condemned the uie of meaningless rhetoric. After winning the New Hampshire primary and faring q ite well in other states' primary elections, he withdrew in April 1992, after campaign aides misappropriated funds. Although brief, his campaign for presi- dent helped other candidates focus on bal- ancing the budget, and the looming bank- ruptcy of Medicare and Social Security. While Clinton was promising the middle class a questionable tax cut, Tsongas was preaching a more realistic form of politics: fiscal responsibility. Clinton has since adopted much of Tsongas' rhetoric - has increased to 25.4 percent of the student population, the University must continue to emphasize the recruiting and retaining of minorities. The recent decline in Latino/a and Native American enrollment suggests that the University has a lot of work to do. One reason for the drop in enrollment is the discomfort that many students of color experience on campus. The University must use the New Century Fund to combat any perceptions or realities that the University is an unfriendly atmosphere for minority students. As more students with varying back- grounds and cultures continue to attend the University, diversity has become an impor- tant part of campus life. An increase in stu- dent diversity benefits every segment of the University. Students and instructors have the opportunity to learn about and interact with people of all different backgrounds, enriching the intellectual and social cli- mate. But for the most effective results, the University must feel like an open and friendly environment to students of color. The University has again signaled its com- mitment to this goal with the creation of the New Century Fund. The community should applaud Neal for his efforts and innovation during his short term as interim University president. The fund is another example of the active and positive role he has played within the past six months. When Neal officially leaves office Jan. 31, the community will remember and miss his energy and enthusiasm for excellence at the University. Tsongas' integrity tion, Tsongas stood on a podium to announce that he had developed another type of lymphoma and said: "I would love to be standing here today as president-elect. The fact is a lot of people who should have run for president didn't. There was a med- ical problem with gonads, not lymph nodes." His candor and honesty are under- appreciated values in modern American politics. After the campaign, Tsongas did not quietly fade into private life. He became a friend and mentor to many fellow citizens. When another Lowell native suffered from a similar disease, or a local family lost a loved one to cancer, Tsongas often comfort- ed and counseled the families. Also, Tsongas continued to work on public policy. Along with former Sen. Warren Rudman (R-N.H.), he created the Concord Coalition, a nonprofit, bipartisan group that focused attention on the budget deficit and other economic problems. In this role, Tsongas traveled around the coun- try preaching his ideas. One of his favorite constituencies was college students. In October 1994, Tsongas spoke in the base- ment of Amer's on State Street to educate University students on the the budget deficit and its future implications. At the Concord Coalition, he advocated a three-part plan to eliminate the deficit: raise taxes, cut down on social programs and instate a comprehensive entitlement means test, which would gradually reduce entitlement payments. Although these solu- tions are not the most popular, they are sen- sible and characteristic of Tsongas' approach to public policy. Honesty, sympathy and courage are all words commonly used, yet rarely practiced Daily should publish on M LK Day To THE DAILY: I absolutely disagree with the Daily's decision not to publish an issue on Monday's holiday. Among many other great things, Martin Luther King Jr. was an educator - largely of ignorant peoples. If the Daily truly claims to be committed to informing the masses - at least here on campus - then the decision not to print papers is an aber- ration. As a devoted activist and messenger, King was highly educated (unlike Malcolm X) on many levels and highly compassionate (unlike Farrakhan). Yet on a day when we honor his memory, the Daily chooses to close up shop, or diseducate the people by not freely printing discourse for which King gave his life. This argument is by no means new, but warrants reit- eration. If the Daily has ulteri- or motives, like thinking that advertisers do not want to shell out big money on a day when comparatively few stu- dents will be milling around campus buildings, then at least be honest about it. To not publish under the guise that the paper, too,his honoring this great man's memory just does not wash, or make any logical sense. Remember, King not only spoke, but also wrote exten- sively until his life was cut short by someone (or some faction, depending on what account you believe) decided that he had overstayed his welcome, said and wrote more than his peace. Still, the Daily chooses to follow the misguided path paved by other lost minds that somehow justify putting on hold education that the proactive King civilly fought to keep forwarding despite vehement opposition. The irony is thick enough on which to choke. I hope that it was worth it, but sadly think of such decisions as further obstacles to real edu- cation. CHAUNCEY HITCHCOCK LSA SENIOR Protest undermines diversity To THE DAILY: Before this Tuesday, I never bought into the idea of reverse discrimination. But Tuesday, with the first ever "Day Without Diversity" cel- to dress in black clothing and wear white gags over their mouths, supposedly to make "people on campus realize what this campus would be like without people of color." This, no doubt, is a powerful and effective mode of non- violent protest, in the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr. However, as stated in the "Day Without Diversity" publicity material distributed by e-mail before the event, the protest was exclusively for "people of color" "Non- participants (or non-people- of-color)," as the e-mail read, were encouraged to partici- pate only in the limited capacity of "conducting hon- est discussion about issues of race and discrimination." Who is to decide that "diversity" is a concept limit- ed to "people of color?" What about people whose diversity is in the form of religion, sexual orientation, language, national affiliation, or some other equally signif- icant but not outwardly visi- ble form? Diversity is a cause that people of all col- ors can, and indeed must, support if discrimination is ever going to be truly abol- ished. The restriction of this campus-wide protest to a select group of people is entirely contrary to the pur- pose of erasing lines of dis- crimination. 1 don't know if I speak for all non-people-of-color, but as for myself I felt as if the founders of "Day Without Diversity" were effectively isolating me from their movement, as if to say that I wasn't part of their diversity and that diversity and anti- discrimination were their issues alone. If we are ever to reach the harmonious world of the Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream, such isolationist protests must come to be truly universal. I hope that next year's "Day Without Diversity" will accept me and people of all colors as active participants in and genuine supporters of the movement. JENNIFER 1UCHOLZ LSA SOPHOMORE Ebonics is educational apartheid' TO THE DAILY: The views of such African Americans as Jesse Jackson, Oprah Winfrey, Maya Angelou and various University students be damned, Prof. Rosina Lippi- Green ("Clarification," 1/21/97) knows what's good for black folks. She condescendingly groups than Jesse Jackson! She says those confined to speaking Ebonics are "refus(ing) to be in the main- stream." In reality, they've been barred from the mainstream so long and been left so high and dry that they can't even find the water to wade in. Jackson and most other blacks know quite well not only how and where to speak country and urban dialect and slang, but also the fate of those who can speak nothing else. Sure, Lippi-Green can find some Ebonics champi- ons. I can find Native Americans who say they like the name "Washington Redskins." Identifying the most une- ducated and financially strapped elements of the black community as the "true blacks" is an old paternalistic practice; it survives today in the notion of the hip-hopping "authentic black" so attrac- tive to insecure black and white middle-class youths and intellectuals. African Americans are as complex as any other ethnic group, with a full range of social strata characterized by a range of modes of speech, behavior and styles. Do Phillis Wheatley, Frederick Douglass, Bessie Smith, Louis Armstrong or Leadbelly or Ebony maga- zine express themselves in Ebonics? Lippi-Green is right that to condemn or ridicule those who speak ungrammatically and unclearly is deplorable. Belittling students because they bust verbs is an educa- tional crime. But training and hiring teachers who are inca- pable of teaching English is a worse crime. To institutionalize the non-language of Ebonics may bolster the popularity of some educators, but it would also prolong the shoddy edu- cation in the many poor, pre- dominaptly black schools and other underfunded urban or rural districts in the richest country on Earth. Ebonis is a shield for ignorance and an opportunity for grant-grub- bers. No one told the European or Asian ethnic groups that their "broken" English was some hallowed linguistic worthy of enshrinement in the curriculum. And no one attempted to convince them that they were incapable of learning standard English because they had inherited "foreign" neural processes that barred them from mas- tering English grammar. To exalt so-called Ebonics is to confine multi- tudes of blacks to a base- metal counterfeit linguistic coinage while the rest of the nation aspires to earn con- vertible currency, real money thtnon hP mant onto, ,l-oa There is certain information to which some of us just shouldn't ever have access.' Take me for example. I don't know who showed me the "finger" corn mand, but clearly they didn't know me very well. A sample of my knowledge abuse might go like this: My friend Kate and I e-mail just about every week- day. So one ran- dom Thursday I e- mail her - an urgent e-mail. ADRIENNE Fifteen minutes JANNEY later, I have gotten no response. So I finge her, and see that she's logged on at her desk con- sole. I get worried and dash off a se- ond, more urgent e-mail: "k. - did you get my last e-mail? - a." Five minutes later, no response. I become enraged. Hurt. I throw things. I breal my favorite vase. I'm-never speaking to her again. She doesn't want to be my friend anymore. Years of stable friendship down the drain over just one unanswered e-mail! Time to put the plug back in that drain. Just as I hear the vase fall to the floor, my computer blips, and there's a response from Kate. (Some people just can't handle information.) Not you? Whatever. Admit it. You d it, too. You finger people, you trac them, you "ytalk" them. (Just don't admit it, for god's sake. It's embarrass- ing to hear about people like that.) Aside from vase-destructive behav- ior, the far-reaching powers of our newfound computer toy have bigger and meaner implications. Take the for- ward command. Uh-huh. Don't even have to explain, do I? Or blind copy. Or carbon copy for that matter Contemplate the speed and the poten- tial lack of forethought accompanying such gestures. Yipes. E-mail is deceptive. It's a new form of communication that draws on some of the earliest concepts of language, pushing it's furthest' barriers with its stark nature. It's an elite technological advancement that exists in an often- tedious, rudimentary form compared: to other technologies. E-mail is a para- dox. That paradox is part of a University student's daily life. We're as addicted to e-mail as we are to espresso. Suddenly, we have turned over a large portion of our communication to a realm virtually sans emotion. So, we've even adopted a new lan- guage of sorts. For example, :) means you meant that in a friendly way (as opposed to an unfriendly way, o course). The wink symbol ;) flags joke or irony. In a flippant mood, users may find some more creative faces like :*) ("I'm smashed") or surprise, <:0 with the open-wide and furrowed brow. However, :) if the writer overus- es ;) the symbols, they can get to be ;) annoying :) and useless :(. (You get the point.) And they are not appropriate to. every type of e-mail correspondence. - business e-mail transactions woult not tolerate cutesy gestures. Nor are: there faces to convey different shades of anger or hurt, although SHOUT- ING AT PEOPLE IN ALL CAPS is considered rude by most standards. Granted, hand-written correspon- dence has some of the same limita- tions - no facial expressions,tno tone of voice. But it's also slower to reach the recipient, more formal, carefully thought out. How many times hav4 you dashed off a particularly angry e- mail to someone, only to regret press- ing "control-x," "y?" More of us, . should learn to control-o to postpone the heat of the moment and stop to think. Those who communicate on e-mail frequently and at length can be divided: into two groups: Necessity and supple.- ment. Necessity is directly related to, the long-distance phone bill; supple ment is that background dialogue tha accompanies some of your relation- ships. Every time you sit down at a computer, you have at ongoing con- versation waiting for you. And e-mailcan make us brave. You can e-mail people you wouldn't dare call ... and work your way up to the, phone. You can face conflicts on e- mail that you wouldn't face in person (chicken!). You can send an e-mail o4 and hope for a favorable response at a later date - sort of like lighting.a con- stant prayer candle or praying to a- saint. (Please, please, please, God of; Cyberspace, let my professor receive this message in a good mood and give 7 ^x i .} .5' -5