4A - Monday, January 25, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com E-MAIL BELLA AT BELLZ@UMICH.EDU c fiict 19a114 at'b Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu BELLA SHAH pp- --Mqqmwp- I t F F ftu Ki'GS A C's NM w LLt7 et 'tent U .L JACOB SMILOVITZ EDITOR IN CHIEF RACHEL VAN GILDER EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR MATT AARONSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views ofntheir authors. Aiding diversity 'U' must make financial help accessible to those in need hile the University may claim to hold a strong commit- ment to diversity, its actions haven't always support- ed that claim. A recent study by The Education Trust group found that the University of Michigan was one of several universities where levels of accessibility and success of minority and low-income students is on the decline. Though many of these public universities, including the University, assert that they value diversity, the study shows that they aren't backing up their words with action. A diverse student body is important to a comprehensive learning environment and the University must act upon its declared commitment to diversity by increasing minority outreach programs and directing financial aid to those who need it most. Preparing a flatter world The report, which was released last week, rated the accessibility of financial aid to minority and low-income students at public universities from 2004 to 2008. The Education Trust group revealed that in recent years, many public universities, including the University, were awarding more financial aid to well-off students and less support was being given to students of low-income backgrounds. As reported by the Daily last week, the study identified the University as one of the worst public institutions in the nation for its decreased accessibility to financial aid. Part of the worth of attending a large uni- versity is that students gain knowledge of a diverse population. But with racial diversity at the University continuing to decline, stu- dents are losing a valuable opportunity to learn. And it's a slippery slope - as diversity decreases, the University is less appealing to a diverse group of students. Officials at the University have claimed that they are doing everything in their power to foster diversity, according to a Daily interview with University Senior Vice Provost of Academic Affairs Lester Monts. But since the ban of affirmative action at public universities in Michigan in 2006, the University has clearly faced new challeng- es. But its responses haven't translated into success. There have been outreach initia- tives by University officials within the past year like the Wolverine Outreach Workshop held in Detroit in late 2009, but these pro- grams haven't produced the desired results - minority figures at the University have dropped every year since 2006. The Univer- sity needs to scale up existing programs and investigate new ways to attract a diverse student body. But the real shock of the Education Trust group's study was that the University has been, in recent years, giving more money to wealthier students. It's alarming to learn that the University hasn't been directing as much aid as possible to the low-income students who actually depend upon it to pay for tuition. There is no acceptable explana- tion for spending less on students with more need and giving more to students who don't actually require aid. The Office of Financial Aid has a responsibility to ensure that the students who need aid the most have access to it. The office should redouble its efforts to offer more aid to low-income students. The University must remember that proof is in results, not rhetoric. It needs to increase outreach and aid to minority and low-income students to make sure that the next time a financial aid study is published, it isn't at the bottom of the rankings. love Ann Arbor, but my favorite part of college took place about 2,200 miles away from the Diag, the Big House and Rick's. I had want- . ed to study abroad since high school, and in May 2008, i went to Costa Rica as part of the Ross School of Business's a' three-week study abroad program. Even though the COURTNEY trip was everything RATKOWIAK I could have hoped for, Costa Rica was never one of the places where I had been itching to live and learn about international business. But I went to Alajuela because as a Ross student, my options for study abroad were limited to just three locations. Rankings show that Ross is one of the best business schools in the nation. (The 2010 U.S. News rankings have us ranked fourth, which is a disap- pointment after being ranked third for years.) But in terms of pushing stu- dents to learnmore about global econo- mies and international business issues, it's clear Ross isn't even atthe top of the BigTen - and that's ridiculous. There are a lot of reasons why busi- ness school students can't just leave Ann Arbor for a semester like many of our LSA counterparts, BBA Program Director Scott Moore explained to me. The biggest is the school's sequential structuring, where every core class (for example, Marketing 300) has to be taken during a certain semester (first semester, junior year). Even though I understand the need for prerequisites, the strict scheduling for every single class - like being required to take mar- keting a year after accounting, even though the classes aren't related what- soever - unnecessarily limits students' study abroad opportunities. Moore also raised the point that with on-campus internship recruit- ing during junior year and full-time recruiting during senior year, it would disadvantage Business School students to travel during those years unless they had jobs lined up before leaving. It's also almost impossible to get Business School credit for non-Ross study abroad programs, and the only sponsored programs for credit are the three-week trips to Costa Rica, Germany/Slovakia and China. That means that if students want to go abroad during the school year and join an LSA program, they will prob- ably end up staying at the University an extra semester or two to make up for lost credits. The way I see it, though, most of those issues are just logistics, things that the Business School administra- tion could work around or change - if it wanted to. But with an intense focus on job placement and mov- ing up that rankings ladder, the real problem is that promoting study abroad opportunities just isn't high on the priority list. In my internship last summer, working for a multinational company, it didn't take long for me to wish I had the same international opportunities as fellow interns from other busi- ness schools. Two of the girls I met on the first day, one from Purdue and one from Indiana, had returned from semester-long trips to Spain less than a week before. My friend from Indiana's Kelley School of Business worked 11 hours per week at an internship and also earned 12 business school credits taking classes like International Operations and International Marketing. Now, with a full-time job offer in hand, she says our summer internship "felt like a breeze" after working in Spain because she had already learned how to handle herself in an unfamiliar business set- ting, where she had often felt lost and confused because of the culture differ- ences. Michigan should take a few lessons from Indiana's business program. Kel- ley has an "International Dimension" requirement, for which students need to take a minimum of six credits in international business classes or study abroad classes. Ross doesn't have any-- thing close to that. (The foreign lan- guage distribution requirementdoesn't count - I learned nothing about Span- ish business while sitting in the MLB as a freshman.) To be fair, Ross is trying to catch up. Moore estimated 80 to 100 students this year have signed up for the three- week summer study abroad programs. And while talking with Leslie Davis and Vicki Simon from the Ross School of Business's Center for International Business Education, I learned about interesting options I didn't know exist- ed, like CIBE-funded international summer internships and the fact that business students with international studies minors receive up to $750 in funding toward the three-week study abroad programs. Ross should offer more international opportunities. But for Ross students who truly want to immerse themselves in another country's business culture, three weeks just doesn't cut it. The fact that I didn't know about the other CIBE options - even though I've studied abroad once already and have been in the school for three years - means that a lot of other students probably don't either. And that's where Ross falls far below the elite standards it has set for itself. It's obvious that the world is becom- ing flatter every day, as Thomas L. Friedman detailed in his book of a similar name. Every business school student knows that - we had to read the book for our Business Informa- tion Technology core class, after all. But compared to other schools, Ross doesn't encourage us to get out there and experience that flat world. If Ross took the time and energy to make international studies a graduation requirement, maybe we'd be graduat- ing from one of the premier business schools with a little more knowledge of what goes on outside of just Ann Arbor and Wall Street. - Courtney Ratkowiak was the Daily's managing editor in 2009. She can be reached at cratkowi@umich.edu. The Daily is looking for a diverse group of writers to join the Editorial Board. Editorial Board members are responsible for discussing and writing the editorials that appear on the left side of the opinion page. E-MAIL RACHEL VAN GILDER AT RACHELVG@UMICH.EDU FOR MORE INFORMATION. WILL BUTLER| The progressive puzzle LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Letters should be less than 300 words and must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. Letters are edited for style, length, clarity and accuracy. All submissions become property of the Daily. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. 0i Change beyond party lines Had I been writing a Facebook status at the time of Scott Brown's victory in Massachu- setts, I surely would have typed an incoherent "ajdasghgyg!!" to express my extreme displea- sure and unhappiness at the election outcome. In the land of the late Democrat Ted Kennedy, in the state with the most progressive health care in the country, I struggled to grasp how a Republican was elected. The whole thing seemed like one bad dream. While the Republi- cans were shouting how "the nation's voice had finally been heard" and Democrats were scram- bling to try and figure out a plan for health care, I began thinking about how our brief and relatively unproductive era of progressive dominance was over and why it seemed that we could never fully get the upperhand. The Nobel Prize-winning economist and The New York Times columnist Paul Krugman expressed this idea when he stated in his blog, "He Wasn't The One We've Been Waiting For," in reference to President Barack Obama. After the 2006 midterm elections, when Democrats finally took back Congress, and the historic 2008 elec- tion, it seemed as though our time had finally come. Progressives finally had their chance - with all the power in hands of the Democratic Party - to implement the legislation we had been pushing for. Progressive deliverance and salva- tion had come with Obama, but we have yet to see any tangible results. Why is that? Despite the statements of naive cynics, it isn't the fault of Obama or the supposed "ineffective" Congress led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). It is merely the political environment of today and the realities of beinga progressive on the left. Whether majority or minority, being a pro- gressive is the most difficult political position to have. It represents change, reform and the constant perfection of policies. Being a pro- gressive means working for the ideal and being idealistic. Compare this to conservatives on the right, who merely have to defend the status quo and the reality of the system today. Isn't it much easier to fight for what already exists than for what could be? The public understands the inadequacies of current structures, such as the health care system, but is fearful of reform. After all, the devil you know is better than the devil you don't, right? Progressives fight for the interests of the underprivileged and underrepresented, the least socially and politically mobilized. It is always said that interest groups have a wealthy upper- class bias, so how much easier is it for conserva- tivesto rep'esentthe needsofcorporatebusiness, with enough capital to invest in their own politi- cal interests? This becomes especially true now, as the Supreme Court has most recently decided to rid corporations of any limits on campaign funding. Your vote may soon become void to the benefits of large companies who buy legislation. On the contrary, when progressives work to fight poverty, they are generally advocating for groups with little electoral benefits. Conservatives have the luxury of enjoying a platform that feeds the interests of greedy and economically unhealthy self-interest. How much easier is it for the public to hear "tax cut" than "the hard and difficult road ahead to economic stability?" Such is that of the progressive puzzle and why it may never be solved. It is simple enough to understand that the political policies of conservatives on the right are easier to sell despite the many times they are not in the best economic or social interests of the country. Progressives may never have the upperhand politically. The only consolation that can ever be had from being a progressive is that eventu- ally reform will come. It is only inevitable. With all the frustrations that come with pushing and working to change the system, progressives can always keep in their minds that it is not in vain. However slow or however prolonged, progres- sive goals will be achieved. Will Butler is an LSA freshman. f you believe everything you hear, then Republican Scott Brown's victory last week in a special elec- tion to choose Ted Kennedy's succes- sor as senator from Massachusetts was an Earth-shatter- k ing event. But even those of us who are too smart to buy that nonsense must- admit that Brown's victory does kick IMRAN off a very impor- SYED tant election year, especially here in Michigan. With Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm ineligible for re-election due to term limits, a crowded field of potential candidates has emerged. While the list will certainly be pared down well before the August prima- ry, the muddle that currently exists is very telling of where this state stands politically. Granholm - a perpetually unpopu- lar governor who miraculously won two terms - inherited a state on the verge of ruin. She stood tall atthehelm through what was certainly Michi- gan's toughest decade in a long time. She will leave the state in its most fam- ished condition yet,but her failure was really a failure of circumstance, That unemployment is unforgiv- ingly rampant in the state, and that its most powerful corporations have been brought to their knees is no secret. As a result of the poor economic out- look, Michigan will likely lose elec- toral votes after this year's census. As troubling as those situations are, an equally important consideration here is Michigan's political identity. Like most of America, Michigan has a reputation for being a little right of center. The influence of labor unions and a large urban center like Detroit often push the state into the blue, but the general perception has always been that this state is closely divided. Today, Michigan has eight Democrats and seven Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives. Even accounting for some skillful ger- rymandering, it doesn't get more even than that. Considering the events of 2009, it seemed that while Michiganders may retain their centrist values, the state would not go red in a major election any time soon. As the Detroit auto- makers struggled to survive and the Obama administration considered a bailout, national Republicans engaged in an alarming line of rhetoric that surely dissipated support their party may have otherwise had among blue- collar Michiganders. Following the strategy of squealing against anything Obama did (not to mention the jobs brought to their own states by foreign automakers), southern Republicans railed against the bailouts for American automakers. As Michi- gan bled jobs, resources and a sense of well-being, many national Republicans turned their backs, even goingso far as to speak of the Big Three's troubles as necessary and long overdue. Michigan's workers surely would never forgive those who hung them out to dry at their darkest hour. And for that reason, it's hard to imagine even today that Michigan will go red in a presidential election any time soon. But that does not mean that Republicans are a non-factor in state level races in Michigan. Contrary to what the national media has said about Republican vic- tories in Massachusetts, Virginia and New Jersey, those events will not cause a snowball effect in places like Michigan. If Republicans win the gov- ernorship in 2010, it will be because they were smart enough to distance themselves from the national party and remain relevant to Michigan's suffering middle class. Regardless of national Republican victories, the real factor in Michigan will be who voters trust to turn things around. On the Democratic side, no one associated with Granholm stands a chance. For that reason, Lt. Gov. John Cherry's decision to leave the race came as no surprise. That's also why there has been so much buzz around the race's potential wildcard, Univer- sity Regent Denise Ilitch. Red/blue won't matter in the governor 's race. 0 0 Ilitch is exactly the type of hybrid candidate the Democrats need to retain the governor's mansion. Repub- licans have hammered Granholm on jobs and her relationship with busi- nesses. Of course, no such allegations can be hurled at Ilitch, an accom- plished businesswoman who can couple her familial fortune with her moderate progressivismto bethe ideal candidate in 2010. But Ilitch may not run at all, in which case other contenders like state House Speaker Andy Dillon and Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero will have to step into a similar hybrid position to counter what the Republi- cans offer. Republicans for their part can do no wrong, so long as they avoid making this a national race. Regardless of the ultimate out- come, the muddled and disparate nature of the current pool of candi- dates is indicative of where this state stands at the end of a brutal decade. Michiganders aren't so worried about what party their potential savior may come from: We just know we need to get it right. - Imran Syed can be reached at galad@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Nina Amilineni, Emad Ansari, William Butler, Nicholas Clift, Michelle DeWitt, Brian Flaherty, Jeremy Levy, Erika Mayer, Edward McPhee, Emily Orley, Harsha Panduranga, Alex Schiff, Asa Smith, Brittany Smith, Radhika Upadhyaya, Laura Veith A