4 - Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4 - Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4 ( l e fitichioan l 4:3atip MAGGIE MILLER E-MAIL MAGGIE AT MAGATHOR@UMICH.EDU Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MELANIE KRUVELIS and ADRIENNE ROBERTS MATT SLOVIN EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR The 'nevers' and the 'haven'ts' ANDREW WEINER EDITOR IN CHIEF Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. '12-'13 Edgar Awards Keeping it baseless and tasteless since 2003 W Back when J. Edgar Hoover, that infallible defender of our constitutional rights, was playing dictator and spy- ing on Americans as head of the FBI, The Michigan Daily's editorial page handed out the Edgar Awards annually to individuals and institutions best embodying his many admi- rable characteristics. Of necessity, we revived the tradition in recent years. And so, without further ado and to no of sweatpants, Terrapins. applause, we present the 10th Annual The Spring Breakers Award goes to the Edgar Awards. Board of Regents, for ditching their boots. The I'm Shmacked Award goes to Uni- for bikinis as they jetted off for California in versity President Mary Sue Coleman, who January, forgoing one of their public meet- announced on Thursday her plans to retire in ings for "sprang breaaaaaak ... " come early. Ann Arbor. We'll see you at Skeeps - if they Rumor has it that Regent Laurence Deitch's don't reject your fake. rendition of Britney Spears's "Every- The Most Likely to Understand time" was absolutely haunting. the Theme Semester Award goes a The Denard's Pitch at the Tiger's to the University's chapter Pi Kappa Game Award goes to the Cent-al Alpha fraternity's All-American, Student Government's presidential teabagging-the-flag party invitations, election. Influencing students to vte? which captured national attention 'I Central Student Judiciary hearings? and resulted in the fraternity's tem- Way to drop the ball, y'all. porary suspension. Hey, at least they The First Annual Kondescend- weren't racist. ing Kerrytowner Award goes to irate The Nate Silver Award for Most f - Michigan State fans after reports of Predictable Plot Twist goes to soph- couch burning in Ann Arbor surfaced. omore guard Trey Burke, who recent- Yeah, we know - you've been torching ly announced his decision to leave the S sofas way before we ever did and took all University men's basketball team for the cool out of it. the NBA. Not sure what was louder: The Justin "Stroke My Ego" Bieber the campus's collective sigh or ESPN's com- Award goes to none other than the Daily's edi- munal "duh." torial board for sincerely 'beliebing' campus The Adolescent Erection Award goes to still gives a hoot about Page Four. But seriously, the Big 10 - erm,12 - uh,14 - for always get- did you know Anne Frank was a huge fan of ting bigger when you don't want it to. Be wary the Daily? EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Kaan Avdan, Sharik Bashir, Barry Belmont, Eli Cahan, Eric Ferguson, Jesse Klein, Melanie Kruvelis, Maura Levine, Patrick Maillet, Sam Mancina, Aarica Marsh,. Megan McDonald, Jasmine McNenny, Harsha Nahata, Adrienne Roberts, Paul Sherman, Sarah Skaluba, Michael Spaeth, Daniel Wang, Luchen Wang, Derek Wolfe i JOHN BURKHARDTI Administrative action required I 'm scared. I'm scared of all the things I never did and never will. I'm scared that I didn't spend enough time in the Arb and sad that I never learned to long- board. I wish I had hooked up with a few more ANDREW girls and experi- mented a little ECKHOUS bit more with drugs. I never was the president of a club, and I never made the front page of The Michigan Daily. I never played pin- ball at Pinball Pete's, and I never ate hippie hash at Fleetwood Diner after the bars closed. I haven't lived in Kerrytown or'!a co-op, I never took a class with Bruce Conforth, the American Culture Professor and I definitely did not have sex in the stacks. Then, what did I do while I was in Ann Arbor? How did I spend my four years here? I think I did more than drink and eat and procrasti- nate. I'm fairly positive something worthwhile happened here, but at this moment in my life - two weeks . to graduation - I can't help but fix- ate on the nevers and the nots. I never went to an away foot- ball game. I never told Denard or DeShawn or Manny.or Darius that they kicked ass, and I never talked shit to opposing fans on game day. I never partied at the Metal Frat or SAE, and North Campus is a foreign country to me. I have a habit of speaking in superlatives when I shouldn't, but I can say, unequivocally, that the hardest part of graduating for me is understanding that the end is not the end. No matter how many times seur of whiskey, both cheap and I reassure myself that the end of expensive. I realized that I could college is not the end of life - enjoy- be charming, and I realized that I able life, at least - my mind keeps could be an ass. wanderingback to that image in my To say that these four years head. The one where my35-year-old have been "the best years of my self sits withering away lifelessly in life" would be a tragic understate- a cubicle, imprisoned by tidal waves ment. They were more than "the of progress reports and hordes of best." They were the years full of Bill Lumbergh look-alikes, wonder- triumphs and frustrations. Years ing where it all went wrong. where I was told I was a terrible I never went to UMix drunk,. kisser, and eventually worked my high or sober. I never devoured bar- way up to halfway decent. The becue at Satchel's. I never donated years where I learned to do my own blood for Blood Battle, never relay- laundry, and the years where I had ed for life and never danced at a love/hate relationship with the " Dance Marathon. dining halls. I've made friends, I've I envy my classmates who don't lost friends and I've concluded that feel this way, the that's OK. I began kids who aren't chiseling away at marooned in a the marble of my sea of uncertainty Now that I'm life four years ago, without a paddle. a i ngIc ' and while I'm still The insufferable graduting, I a work in progress, overachievers who help but think about I'm much more snagged that con- sure of who I am sulting gig at IBM what I didn't do. and who I'm not. or the fellowship I came into col- in Namibia. The lege with dreams ones who my par- of "van Wilder" ents tell me about, not knowing that parties, and I leave with an appre- each sentence tightens the vice grip ciation for introspection. I thought of anxiety already surrounding my I would run college - a silly notion delicate ego. in retrospect - but found out that I never painted The Rock. setting expectations will usually But I'm tired of my self-pity. leave you disappointed. The end of school means the end I drove Santa Claus to the gas of training wheels. I may not have station when his car broke down. accomplished all I wanted to here, I lived in Madrid for a semester. I but there is life after the University. burned bridges, I ate a lot of Jimmy I'll miss living in decrepit student John's and I made the best friends I housing with all of my degenerate ever could have asked for. friends, but our inevitable diaspora Are there things I would change? will give me places to visit.I may Probably. But I can't, so I'm just not be walking out of Ann Arbor trying to look forward and live with a 4.0, but I've learned a lot. without regrets. I snuck into the Big House. Twice. I learned how to make righ- - Andrew Eckhous can be teous tacos. I became a connois- reached at aeckhous@umich.edu. Walk it out .4 nn Arbor is for walking best to take Each year, approximately 65,000 students graduate from American high schools and find themselves prohibited from pursuing further educational opportunities because of their undocumented immigration status. These students came as minors to this coun- try as a result of decisions made by their guardians, and the United States has been the primary country they have called home. While many undocumented students gradu- ate near the top of their high-school classes, many more are simply good students seeking an opportunity to enter into the employment sector and contribute to civic, community and family life. As a member of the School of Education faculty, I am struck by the unique circum- stances surrounding these students. The law requires that they be educated through high school, citing it as a public benefit. Other laws (and often institutional policies), forbid them from receiving education beyond high school in public institutions, arguing their opportu- nity would somehow threaten public security or economic and cultural interests. The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the right of undocumented students to receive free public k-12 education in 1982, but it didn't address access to postsecondary education. Writing for the majority in the Plyler v. Doe decision, Justice William Brennan stated, "Paradoxically, by depriving the children of any disfavored group of an education, we foreclose the means by which that group might raise the level of esteem in which it is held by the majority. But more directly, 'edu- cation prepares individuals to be self-reliant and self-sufficient participants in society.' " Edutation, Brennan contended, presents the most promising path to avoid the "specter of a permanent caste of undocumented resident aliens, encouraged by some to remain here as a source of cheap labor, but nevertheless denied the benefits that our society makes available to citizens and lawful residents." The existence of such a shadowed popula- tion doesn't befit a country committed to the principles of equality under the law any more than the denial of educational opportunity befits our nation's great public universities, of which ours is certainly one. Public opinions and politics shift, but we know two facts will hold true: First, the changing demographics of our nation and those within our own state demand the attention of policymakers and institutional leaders on this issue. Second, polls and politicians won't admit students or provide them the financial aid many need to enroll - institutions will. A small group of student and administrative leaders has carefully considered the potential of the University providing in-state residency tuition benefits to undocumented students, and the Board of Regents is currently providing this group's recomtsendations equally care- ful consideration. To rank among the leading public institutions of higher education on this issue, however, the University must take its place among peer institutions as one that rec- ognizes this as an issue of equity and opportu- nity - and consistent with our core values. We live, work and learn in a different state policy environment than our colleagues in California, Texas, Maryland, Illinois and other states who have moved to welcome immigrant and undoc- umented students. Our fundamental values of academic freedom, educational opportunity and service to the public good, however, are the same. The University must not only hold true to those values, but demonstrate them through a larger, more public discussion that begins with recognizing the existence of undocu- mented students, understanding their unique life histories apart from the attributed politi- cal rhetoric and assuring them opportunity to pursue the educational experiences that will enable them tomake their full contributions to our state and nation. The U.S. Congress is poised to debate a bill that will provide a path to citizenship for many of the students who have been described as "undocumented," a term that will soon pass into history as being more foreign and indiffer- ent than the young people it has categorized. We're a community that's capable of examining assumptions, interrogatingideas and managing the implications derived from what we learn. our students are already leading the move- ment for tuition equality at the University. Tl* time has surely come for faculty, staff and othe. leaders of our university to engage this issue in a public way that exemplifies our roles and responsibilities as educators and citizens. John Burkhardt is a School of Education professor. of that - or at least I thought I did. I walk to class; I walk to buy groceries; I walk to the library; I walk just to walk; I walk because I never learned to drive. But I soon realized I a city made looking down to text I could avoid . And I try my awkward eye-contact with well- full advantage meaning men's Glee Club members handing out fliers in the Diag - I'm slammed with work and so sorry I can't make it to your show! And while contemplating why Ann Arbor - despite the statistics, well-paved sidewalks and lovely landscaping - doesn't feel like this great walking city, I realized: I was ZOE the problem. STAHL All this texting and listening to my iPod were undermining the benefits of this walkable town. didn't feel as expected. Everyone else continued to listen to music and to text. And I soon realized, with our ear buds in and our fingers typing, it isn't just safety that we lose, but also human interaction. You rob yourself of keen, unique observations and memories: You don't overhear a construction work- er tell his co-workers that "When you go out to breakfast with the boss, you just don't order the steak and eggs. It's etiquette, man." You don't see the dog that looks exactly like her owner either. wasn't walking right. - According to the Michigan Eco- nomic Council, Ann Arbor is the most pedestrian friendly city in the state. Even more, Walk Friendly Communities, a national program committed to promoting walkable cities in the United States, has des- ignated Ann Arbor as a Gold-Level community - for its commitment to crossing amenities and traffic- calming programs, as well as a host of other initiatives. And though we may not think much of it, we're lucky. With such a walkable city, Ann Arborites reap significant economic, health and environmental benefits. More walking means less money spent on gas and more foot traffic for local businesses. More walking means less driving and, therefore, cleaner air. More walking means increased physical activity and all the accom- panying benefits: healthier hearts, stronger bones and clearer minds. It sounds great and all, but as I walked to class, listening to my iPod and responding to the occa- sional text, it didn't feel so great. Sure, I felt supernaturally calm as I listened to Simon and Garfunkel. And I can't complain that while To echo thoughtful moms everywhere, it just wasn't safe. With my headphones in, I couldn't hear the cars approach- ing as I crossed Hill Street: When I looked down to text, I wasn't only dis- tracted, but I also mi and was nearly hit. City, the texting-v epidemic has becon spread and danger Department of T has started stencilin the crosswalks of he tions in hopes of r distracted gazes. So, I decided to qu key. I wouldn't lister text. I decided to walk held high and eyes I started to notice th know that there's an to Dennison? Or that, relief on the water fou on the corner of Sta North University Ave. Despite my best e Even more, you miss out on poten- tially meaningful Ear buds social interactions: It means not stop- undermine the ping to say "hi" to benefits of this Fhe kid who lived down the hall from walkable town. you freshmen year. It means not tak- ing the time to chat with your friend ssed the light and then deciding to go to Domi- In New York nick's forthe rest of the afternoon. while-walking These interactions - this spon- me so wide- taneity - are valuable to anyone in ous that the any city, but even more to University ransportation students who live on and around a g "Look!" on campus that can feel overwhelming ctic intersec- and vast. rerouting the So, let's all take out our ear buds and put those phones away, too. it - cold tur- Because as the great urban thinker n to music or and writer Jane Jacobs once said, :withmyhead "Lowly, unpurposeful and random forward. And as they may appear, sidewalk con- ings. Did you tacts are the small change from anchor next ' which a city's wealth of public life there is a bas- may grow." On that note, I'll see you ntain thatsits at Dominick's later? te Street and nue? fforts, it still Zoe Stahl can be reached at zoestahl@umich.edu. 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