4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 28, 1999 cie £rbtiguu &ig Take me out to the ballgame, take me out with the crowd. 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 daily.fetters@umich.edu Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan HEATHER KAM1INS Editor in Chief JEFFREY KOSSEFF DAVID WALLACE Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Dailv's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Branch out Students often ignore campus diversity L ast night completed a season of last nights spent at Tiger Stadium. Sure, the last fans got to turn out the lights. but I doubt it held more meaning than anyone else's last game spent at the park. I made my last visit three nights ago, to see the double- decked washtub one last time. I went to plenty of games this ? year, but always with' the mentality that I could go once more, to actually say good- bye. So my dad and I got bleacher tickets and went downtown David late Saturday after- - Wallace noon. I thought ofjE 3 going myself, or with y friends, but no. Father and son at the ball- park. We sat in the front row, dead center, behind the wire fence keeping anyone having too much to drink in the stands. I watched the game through diamonds of intersecting wire links. It was the deepest centerfield all right. the center fielders stood at least 100 feet clos- er to home plate throughout the game. Listening to the crowd, most voices spoke of Tiger Stadium memories: first games with fathers, grandfathers or uncles. Reminiscences of school trips and days for safeties. I asked my dad about his memories of the park, and he obliged. For some reason. I never asked him about his first visit to Tiger Stadium until our last. The time and place weren't right. I have plenty of good memories of the park. but my baseball memories recall Tiger Stadium in the distance, behind the neighbor- hood games of kids all dreaming of playing there. When I was young. the group of kids in the neighborhood played baseball until the street- lights came on \e rarely kept traiCk of innings: we just phlyed until we had to stop. The streetlights snaled the end: our moth- ers-forces we could not control-- called us in, and we had to go. The streetlights snapped reality to us made our longing hearts come in dragging bats and gloves. Everyday during summer. myself and the guys woke up early to play our first games in shoes whose toes turned a darker color run- ning through the dew morning grass. We went home only to eat, then back to the game, to a continuation or a new one. The games made a grand spectacle of mak- ing due. Frisbees subbed for bases. Sometimes a tree or a porch filled inat third. We created the field from backyards running together. We set the homerun mark an unheard of three-and-a-half lots straightaway. It was not the roof in Tiger Stadium s right- field. No one ever cleared it. The games taught us a variety of baseball skills. We dropped extra base hits into flower- pots and planter boxes. We learned to play the carom off the aluminum siding. A runner on second might slide the base closer to third with no one watching, to score on a single. All underemployed strategies at the major league level. Roofs were in play - catch the ball as it rolled off for an out. A gutter swallowing a roofshot awarded the batter a ground rule double and a time out while we found a new ball. A routine pop-up? Yell "DROP IT!" at the right moment and a kid likely would. And we argued. scrapped, accused each other of the worst cheating ever and settled all with the inarguable "do-over!" We've played all the games now. There has- n't been a season in years. I wish I could say we had one last series before everyone split like the Florida Marlins, but no such luck. I don't remember the last game we played together. Now, new neighbors who never saw us play have no idea their houses sit on out- fields instead of lots. High school, jobs, dri- vers licenses all turned the streetlights on. Recent reports by the U.S. Census Bureau show an overwhelming increase in minority demographics in the United States since the early '90s. The Latino/a and Asian American populations have seen increases by more than 35 percent relative to the ROUs overall population. Statistically, the University is one of the more diverse campuses in the Dialogues nation. Students originate from Phone: all 50 states and more than 115 countries. But, many students www : ' do not take full advantage of MESA this diverse campus. Phone 763 Wbste- This has led the University and various organizations to create classes and programs in IGRCC the hope of educating and pro- Phone moting awareness of other cul- Website: tures and ethnicity. But the pro- grams are ineffective when stu- dents isolate themselves in their own com- fort zones, unwilling to associate with peo- ple different from themselves. Students enrolled in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts are required to take a class in race and ethnici- ty. In the ever-changing demographics of America, the college is trying to help break down the walls of cultural ignorance, to promote diverse interaction and to foster communities of different backgrounds. Multiethnic Students Affairs, Intergroup Relations, Conflict and Community and Dialogues on Diversity have similar hopes. They offer many programs to help educate students beyond the classroom and broaden their learning experiences. MESA currently is planning the Martin Luther King Jr. symposium titled "The demographics of the new pluralism: dimen- sions of change." Dialogues on Diversity often brings in guest speakers from around the world to speak on current issues sur- : rx.9 4tl ock 6- rounding diversity. IGRCC offers inter- group dialogue classes - a great opportu- nity to explore differences and work on building alliances among groups. While these programs help bring the issue of diversity to the fore- 1OMOT1No front of discussion, they still HT THW have a long way to go. Just - -- look at a typical residence hall ierstycafeteria. Scattered about in 2655 distinct groups are the blacks, the Asian Americans, the sm wnwedu° Latino Americans and the international students. )044 I Some campus clubs and organizations add to this eth- 7II>Iesf assnic and cultural separation. Organizations that recruit members solely based on eth- nicity sometimes exclude oth- ers who might contribute. It is understandable that people like to feel comfortable. And it is also important to have organizations that pro- mote certain cultures and beliefs. But peo- ple often create inclusive ethnic and cultur- al cliques that destroy a diverse and grow- ing community. Students can help to transform this cam- pus by joining various clubs to meet new and different people, getting involved in multiethnic organizations and even taking the time to meet new people in classes. Students should take more time to explore the options offered by IGRCC, Dialogues on Diversity and MESA. Programs and methods do not work if people refuse to change. It starts with open-minded students willing and wanti- ng to work with different people. No matter how statistically diverse this school is, there will never be a rich envi- ronment of diverse thinking and ideas when people are unwilling to break out of familiar territory. making part of our childhood come in. These were the thoughts I carried watching tha, last game t Tiger Stadium. None of us ever made it to the park any other way. I was on the field once. as part of a tour group. The crowd delighted in pleasures previous- ly taken for granted. We did the wave a final time. I watched a 70-year-old man stand up and hold his hands high. Everyone wanted a piece of tradition. Doing our duty. we bleach- er creatures heckled Carlos Beltran, th* Kansas City Royals' centerfielder. "Beltran, you're a loser!" "Wif stinky bret' added an undersized fan. who would have fit well with my group a decade ago. A younger part of me crept out as I yelled "DROP IT!" on a Karim Garcia pop-up. and it worked one last time as Beltran misplayed the ball and two runs scored. The game ended in a rout. 11-3, and the fans rejoiced in seeing a win on their last visit Then they didn't leave. My dad asked me. "Why's everyone stick- ing around?" He was sticking around too. i heard stadium police say maybe people thought there would be fireworks. But I knew why we remained. With last looks, fans put themselves on the field, turn- ing double plays with friends now long gone, or hitting game-winning homers in the World Series. It was the last look at a friend. the last look at a dream. We owed it to the stadium* and the stadium owed it to us. We emptied the stadium crunching peanut shells underfoot as hot dog wrappers blew down the ramps: walked past the souvenir stands, to the corner of Michigan and Trumbull. up Trumbull for a picture with the Cobb plaque, gazed on the famous lumber- yard. over the freeway to the car in the lot. and home. All the time, something called to the departing crowd's remaining childhood, as it was everywhere under the streetlights. O David lluace can be reached over e-maila datidm{ea umicedu. CHIP CULLEN I 50, MR. A"D IAR . CAAW~rTr1 ARE TIRE fh C RIM IAL Expesive cuts Tax breaks are expensive for higher education T he notion of reduced taxes always gar- tners popularity. But everyone must con- sider the results of tax cuts: some vital gov- ernment programs receive less-than-ade- quate funding. Last Thursday, the U.S. House heard a proposal that could cut work-study funding at universities nationwide by about 6 percent. The end product of this tax cut does not justify the means. Cutbacks in education spending would hurt numerous students, uni- versity-run programs and grant-funds. If the proposed bill becomes law, colleges and universities would see immediate changes in their student bodies. For many students, the gates of higher education would shiut. The proposal could damage ethnic diversity, as many of the brightest minority students in the country rely on financial aid. -tudents preparing for life after college should not lose the crucial experience of interacting with people from all backgrounds - both ethnically and financially. Under the proposed bill, about 62,000 students would not receive the necessary aid to send. them to college. This means that these students would have to receive scholar- ship money through their universities or another scholarship fund, or they would have to seek grants. But Pell Grants, the largest federally funded grant program for individ- ual students, also stand to take a tax cut of $ 2.37 billion. To cover for less students receiving money, the maximum grant has money being overly distributed to students who don't need the money as much as others. Overall, financial aid programs, the basis enabling underprivileged students to attend universities and colleges nationwide would lose up to $99 million. In addition to cuts in financial aid, the bill proposes cuts of up to $140 million allocat- ed to higher education. In response, colleges and universities may need to substantially decreasing programs. This financial uncer- tainty unnerves administrators attempting to plan a budget on a year-to-year basis. Congress likely will not finalize budget bills for another two or three months. During the additional time these proposed cuts to higher education should undergo significant revision. The Appropriations Committee needs to recognize the ever-increasing costs of higher education. Regardless of people's desire for tax cuts, the nation's representa- tives must respect the needs for funding for higher education. Many national leaders and ordinary citi- zens bemoan the state of education, but then choose not to pay to improve the educational system. Before the federal government and the American people get excited about tax- cuts, they should realize everyone pays in other ways. The motives behind many of these cuts looked to take it easy on the upper- class. But in doing this, we harm many learn- ing institutions and deserving students that Michigan fans do not use Florida State cheer TO THE DAILY: In response to a letter by Tony DiGiovanni ("Michigan fans must close hands in 'hail' cheer." 912099), I would just like to point out that Michigan fans are not doing the Tomahawk Chop. We are signaling a first down for our team. We're not copying the Seminoles, we're copying the referees. Try to remember this next yout're at the Big House with the Michigan fans. We'll be the ones signaling a first down for the Maize and Blue. JAMES COTTON ENGINEERING JUNIOR 'U' should mandate course stressing campus conduct TO THE DAILY: I don't know exactly what percentage of people have had sexual assault and crimes similar to it affect their lives in some way or other, but I do know that I am now included in that percentage. This upsets me terribly. To see someone I care about affected by the thoughtless actions of a moron just makes me sick. Since I had never seen the problem first-hand, I didn't think much about it. Out of sight, out of mind. Now, I must wonder, exactly what action is the University taking to. prevent these things from happening? Voluntary meetings, run by student groups, which would only attract good people who would never think of committing such an act? These types of things are not adequate at all. Something has to be done to educate individuals with the potential to commit such acts. If the University can require us to take an English course or its equivalent, they can make all incoming students and transfers take a one or two credit course on campus conduct. Perhaps it could discuss not only conse- quences of sexual assault and rape for both victims and perpetrators. but also for racism on campus, religious bigotry and anti-gay actions. I see only good coming from a course devoted to this and believe it should be seri- ously looked into. Action needs to be taken before these horrible acts are committed. A.J. WILSON ENGINEERING SOPHOMORE T-shirts should not reflect poorly on Greek system , w . .. r s - r . r r - ' r I I"1OATAG r-~te ) Il l r t -... ; obviously not endorsed by the entire Greek System. We are not all "contributing to (the) destruction (of society)" There are actually many positive aspects of the Greek System and its members. We often contribute to the bettering of society. A few idiots in t-shirts should not affect a person's decision to join the Greek System. HARPER GOULD LSA JUNIOR JILL PETERSON ENGINEERING SOPHOMORE KATIE INMAN LSA SENIOR Reinterpreting Amendment may cost other rights TO THE DAILY: As a supporter of the Bill of Rights, I find it hard to believe that a newspaper would advocate the reinterpretation of any of the Bill of Rights ("Right to bear arms?" 9/22/99). Once the government reinterprets the Second Amendment, it sets the prece- dent for the government to reevaluate any of the other parts of the Bill of Rights, includ- ing the First Amendment. The Daily claims that "no amount of gun control will ever be sufficient" which means that it assumes that adults cannot make informed decisions about whether or not they can own a gun, and therefore we need a government institu- tion to make that decision for us. Yet, the Daily is pro choice. How can you advocate choice in one case and not in the other? They are the same - both situa- tions deal with the involvement of the gov- ernment into our daily lives. I hate to use a cliche, but "guns do not kill people, people do." Gun control alone will not stop vio- lence. suicide or accidental death. There needs to be an element of educa- tion that is lacking in American society. It Diversity is not the responsibility of TV networks TO THE DAILY: In response to the Daily's recent criti- cism of the level of diversity in popular tele- vision shows ("Color TV?" 9121/99), would like to ask a few questions that I believe have gone unasked. First, does anyone really think that "Friends" is realistic? All racial makeup aside, the cast is not even a representative sample of white people.sFor that matter, the cast isn't even a representative sample of human beings in general. In the past, the "Cosby Show" was criti- cized for portraying only affluent Africa Americans. The problems that Theo Vanessa, Rudy and Denise encountered were right out of a fantasy world. I recall in particular the episode in which Dr. Huxtable wouldn't let Theo buy a very expensive designer shirt. Denise offers to make a similar shirt for Theo. and in a tri- umph of feminism, fails miserably. The family ties hold together, though, when the shirt that Denise made wins Theo praise from his peers and turns out to be even more trendy thanthe one Theo had original ly wanted. I don't know about you, but I don't think that scenario typifies Americans of any ethnicity. Upon hearing about the recent outcry, one of the first things I did was feel guilty about liking "Seinfeld" (a show which con- tains no non-white main characters). However "Seinfeld" does feature a fair bit of Jewish culture (and New York culture) woven into the plotlines. Last time checked, neither was completely main- stream. Whether a cast consists of the same demographic makeup as the nation as a whole is not the issue. Nor is the issue the realism of the show in question, since few shows are actually realistic by any stretch of ,- I ' 61 .-