The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, January 10, 2008-5A Banished from the Big House MSA REPRESENTATIVESV. 1 One way to speak out The University of Michigan familyhas called the Big House home for generations. Not only is it home to the winningest football program in college football history, it is also the greatest symbol of Michigan tradition. The decision to hold the 2008 Spring Commencement ceremony away from the Big House and away from our campus is unacceptable to stu- dents. We are disappointed to see the lack of student input and disregard for this crown- ing celebration of our achieve- ments. As members of the Michigan Student Assembly, we are equally outraged by the lack of foresight demonstrated by the University. We are actively engaging the University administration and seeking a solution to this problem. We will fight to have ALEXANDER HONKALA the University re-evaluate every possible option. In this re-evaluation process, there must be greater transparen- cy and a strong united voice. There is strength in numbers, and even for students not in the Class of 2008 the Univer- sity's final decision will have an effect. As Wolverines, we all look forward to our chance to walk across the stage and sing "The Victors" one last time as stu- dents in the Big House. Join the effort and sign the petition to force the Univer- sity to honor this Michigan tradition. Sign it at: www.big- housegraduation.com. MSA Rep. Gibran Baydoun, MSA Rep. Stella Binkevich, MSA Vice President Nate Fink, Former MSA Rep. Jen Hsu KATE TRUESDELL A Michigi I can remember as a child pulling on boots, mittens, snowpants and atleast20 other pounds of winter gear, making the journey to Ann Arbor and sitting outside for hours in the snowy weather as the scent of Wild Turkey whiskey wafted through the air - all to watch my first Michigan football game. This was my introduc- tion to the University, the first encounter in my long and com- plicated relationship. My family has been literally bred, born and raised maize and blue - my grandparents met as students here, as did my parents. Being the black sheep of the family, I wasn't so will- ing to accept this legacy simply because it was expected. After freshman year at the University, I made the scan- dalous decision to transfer to Michigan State University. My family is Catholic but their true religious affiliation is Wolverine, and this decision was tantamount to breaking a sacred covenant. They came to accept and support my deci- sion during my first semester in East Lansing, but in that same span of time I came to realize that I wanted to return. I made this decision not simply because of tradi- tion; I knew that here I would receive an education that has been heralded as one of the best in the coun- try and the world. I didn't return simply because of our football (that relationship has been rocky at best). I knew that here I would have the chance to learn with students from across the world with infinitely unique and valuable perspectives to offer. I am a Wolverine not simply because I was born to be; I am a Wolverine because , I chose to be. I didn't in ending return simply because I love Ann Arbor, this little hippie haven. I returned because, even though this school con- tinues to kick my ass, I knew all the hard work would pay off that day I finally walked across the stage to accept my diploma in the Big House, the same place where the Univer- sity and I first met. But now I'm being told that that isn't going to happen. My desire to graduate at Michigan Stadium has nothing to do with athletics. The place is iconic. It stands for some- thing. For many, including myself, it represents a long and strong history that has always characterized the University. But more importantly it repre- sents the tremendous struggle and accomplishment over the past years for graduating seniors. Our battle was fought here on this ground, not miles away on another campus. This is where we should graduate. The death of Bo Schem- bechler last year and the retirement of football head coach Lloyd Carr this year has been a tremendous blow to the spirit of the football program because these two individuals truly represented Michigan football. Now,withcommence- ment being moved from the Big House to another university's campus, I can't help wonder- ing if the rest of the University is starting to follow suit. For this reason, I ask everyone -- seniors, other undergraduates and the campus community at large - to join together to speak out against moving com- mencement. Show the Univer- sity administration that being, a Wolverine still means some- thing. Kate Truesdell is an LSA senior and a member of the Daily's editorial board. JUHI AGGARWAL We want answers Shocked, hurt and confused. That was my initial reaction to hearing the news late Tues- day night about the decision to move Spring Commencement to Eastern Michigan University's Rynearson Stadium. I suspect that many of my fellow seniors felt the same way. Without fur- ther explanation from the Uni- versity administration, we may never move past that initial reaction. Within 12 hours of my launching an informative web- site (bighouse08.blogspot.com), more than 40 other students as well as some parents and alum- ni contacted me seeking further information and clarifications. Like me, they were upset and wanted to take action. Over the next few days, we will create a forum for students to voice their opinions and questions, and we will take our concerns to the administration with a unified voice. I don't want to picket the Fleming Administration Build- ing. Nor do Iwish to bea divisive force between the administra- tion and the students. However, I am not content to sit back and complain about what "they" did and demand that "someone" do "something." As four years of living and loving Ann Arbor and the Uni- versity draw to a close, I seek understanding. A detailed explanation of the decision- making process that took place over the last month is neces- sary. We need transparency. The administration, I am sure, has weighed the pros and cons of moving the ceremony off-campus. They are forced to walk a fine line between a long- standing tradition, doing what is financially feasible and con- sidering the wishes of the fam- ily members and friends who eagerly anticipate commence- ment as much as graduates do. Administrators claim that they only found out about these con- struction plans in mid-Decem- ber, and I'm sure blame could be shifted around to, the con- struction contractors as well. Yet where is the evidence of this careful decision-making? Why was the situation only rec- ognized last month? Was this year's commencement not on the calendars? To what degree were students involved in this decision, and how was student reaction considered? I would like these questions answered. Once these questions are answered, the decision to hold commencement off-campus must be re-evaluated. It may be possible, though costly, to make part of the Big House useable with power generators, porta- ble restrooms and an accessible seating area on the field itself. If the ceremony as current- ly planned will be shown on screens in Crisler Arena, why can't a similar plan accommo- date guests who would be with- out seats in a mid-renovation Big House? I am responding with sug- gestions to the points of con- tention the administration has referenced; I would have more substantial responses had the administration provided more substantial reasoning. I want a chance to be on my university's field as I graduate with the entire class of 2008, to look up and know my family is somewhere in the stands. Like my peers, I have been eagerly awaiting my turn to walk with pride as I graduate from the University. If the administra- tion says I must do it at Rynear- son Stadium, they'll need to convince me first. Juhi Aggarwal is an LSA senior and creator of the blog "Michigan Graduation 2008 ... Not at the Big House?". >, .. . ' , l<, s ' ; $ $ ' . , s ^ . 4 IFS L ETT ER S'TTEEITORSEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU As alumni students should not donate TO THE DAILY: I have spent at least the last decade fantasizing about the day I would graduate in the Big House. Imagine my surprise to see the Daily's storyyesterday that gradu- ation would not be held there. I had two immediate thoughts. First, why is the University going on with a construction project that is currently in limbo because of litigation by the U.S. Depart- ment of Justice and a veterans' rights group? Second, how does a construction project whose sched- ule had recently been set possibly interfere with an event that had been known for years? I looked forward to my final moment at this University during whichIcould celebrate my modest achievements and a bright future with my family and friends in the stadium where I have spent some of my happiest and most exciting moments. While the place where yougraduate is insignificant inthe long run, the symbolism is impor- tant to me and I am sure to many of my peers. It is this symbolism that drives my desire to walk down the bleachers painted in the maize and blue of my beloved college instead of the green and white of an institution whose name means nothing beyond the border of this stagnant state. This is the straw that broke the camel's back. I intend never to donate directly to this institu- tion after I graduate. I only hope that my peers will join me so the University remembers that its primary mission is to research and educate, which is made pos- sible by alumni donors. Students become these donors, and we are the ones to whom the University must cater. If nothing else, the University must allow us to graduate with dignity at our beloved Big House - before its great mutilation. Kevin Wilson LSA senior A disappointment 0 forparents too TO THE DAILY: I am writing to voice my dis- pleasure over the news that the Big House will not be available for my daughter's commence- ment in April. While this is an incredible disappointment already, to hear the news that students will not graduate on their campus is obscene. I have paid more than $130,000 for my daughter's out-of-state tuition. To be told four months before graduation and not to be notified formally by mail is unthinkable. I am deeply puzzled bywhy the University administra- tion cannot find an alternative to the Big House that is on campus. If I had wanted her to graduate at Eastern Michigan University, I would have sent her there, where they allow Ohio residents to pay in-state tuition instead of the out- of-state tuition we paid at Uni- versity of Michigan. Certainly, on a campus of more than 41,000 enrolled students, there must be some place to hold commencementto give this year's graduates the same send off as those who have graduated from the University before them. Please reconsider this decision and give our students the com- mencement they deserve. Leslie McNamara The letter writer is the parentofa Uni- versity student. EMUwiIl be unique, get oVer yourselves TO THE DAILY: I wish to submit my support for the University's decision to hold commencement at a site that can accommodate enough people. It will be a great story to tell for years to come: How this year's senior class was the only in recent memory to hold commencement off campus. David Freiman School ofMusic, Theatre andDance senior Would Coleman want office in Ypsi? TO THE DAILY: I respect the fact that there is construction going on in the Big House. I respect the fact that the University has to accommo- date more than 6,000 graduating seniors. I only wish the Univer- sity would respect my desire to have a proper graduation. I grew up in a University of Michigan family and saw my brothers and cousins graduate from this uni- versity. I saw these commence- ments from the comfort of a seat at the Big House. If you recall, this is a seat I paid more than $200 to sit in at football games each year I've been a student here. I do not want my last mem- oryofthe Universityof Michigan to be in Ypsilanti. I ask you University President Mary Sue Coleman, how can you rob us of our last Michigan expe- rience? What if they put your office in Ypsilanti? Meghan O'Neill LSA senior Green and white don't make blue TO THE DAILY: I was outraged to discover that the University's Class of 2008 won't be graduating at Michigan Stadium, or even on our own cam- pus. As if it weren't bad enough that our iconic stadium is going to be marred with ugly, costly sky- boxes, we are now being pushed off our own campus for what is supposed to be the zenith of our time at the University. The Big House represents much more than a practical venue to hold the University's thousands of graduates and guests - for most of us it has been an emblem of our college careers since the moment we got here. We've worked hard here in Ann Arbor and expected to at least be able to graduate on our own campus. It's nothing personal East- ern Michigan: But no amount of "maize and blue-ing" at Rynear- son Stadium will make us feel at home. Jane Elizabeth Braun LSA senior Priority must be students, not money TO THE DAILY: During winter break, I spoke with my family and friends about higher education. Some claimed that universities care solely about money, using donations and tuition to fund private projects that boost reputations. I disagreed with these people and defended the University of Michigan spe- cifically, believingthat the admin- istration uses its money to help better the campus environment for its students. Unfortunately, the University took a step that makes me ques- tion this belief - the relocation of Spring Commencement. I find it hard to believe that this detail would remain unnoticed during the years of debate about addi- tion of the luxury boxes to the Big House. I can understand that moving graduation might have been necessary. However, why is it that this information was only revealed now? Were any students consulted before mak- ing these rearrangements? Is Eastern Michigan University, an institution that shares little more than proximity to the Univer- sity of Michigan, really the best available option? The University did not reach out to the students affected by this event. For a university that prides itself on leadership and concern for its students, I think that the poor decisions and lack of com- munication shown yesterday by the administration suggests that perhaps my critics were right: Maybe priority number one is our checkbooks. Layne Scherer LSA senior football more than academics, but. this is beyond ridiculous. The con- struction plans are going to take until August 2010 to complete. If the work can't be held off until the Monday after Spring Commence- ment, then certainly it could have been scheduled in a way that the graduation crowd could have still been accommodated. If restrooms are the issue, leave a few bath- rooms open or rent some portable bathrooms for a weekend. These renovations seem more important than properly honor- ing the University's graduates on the campus of which they are so proud. I assume football will still continue in the next few seasons during construction, showing that football is more important than the current students and alumni, both of which have financially support- ed this construction and cheer for the players who won't be inconve- nienced by this project. To properly honor its gradu- ates, the Big House is the only venue appropriate for commence- ment. The University owes stu- dents this. Catherine Herzog LSA senior Snafu telling of misguided project season on time than allowing our graduates, who have worked so diligently for years, to graduate at the institution they have come to know and love. Graduation is the culmination of a student's most intensive educational endeavors: To force that joyous occasion to occur anywhere other than the university at which that student has labored, played and grown as a person is unacceptable. Samantha Walls Kinesiology senior Tradition atBig House mustprevail TO THE DAILY: At the University, we pride ourselves in tradition. The announcement that commence- ment will not be held at Michi- gan Stadium is a slap in the face. The University Board of Regents needs to sympathize with the students and push back major stadium construction until after graduation. If they are plan- ning to change the tradition of our stadium, the house that Yost built, please do not change the commencement tradition. I owe everythingto this univer- sity, but I refuse to end my years here at Michigan like this. With student, faculty and community support, we can change this deci- sion. Please voice your opinion. Don't let the Class of 2008 be cheated out of the greatest tradi- tion in Michigan history. Rachel Embree LSA senior TO THE DAILY: Having to hold graduation at U'dtdn'tforget to a completely different university is just one more reason why con- plan forfootball struction on Michigan Stadium was an ill-conceived and poorly- TO THE DAILY: planned project. It is shame that I've always shrugged off jokes in we are more concerned with the past about Michigan favoring being able to start the football